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

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if he goe about to perswade vs that wee shall merit eternall life by our faithfulnesse in our Ministry and by diligent instructing of the people committing to our charge q Lib. de obitu Knoxi we must resist the subtill Serpent and defie him and deny his merrits It is the duty of all the godly that haue this Worlds goods to giue almes to the poore especially to the godly poore but if he mooue vs to giue Almes that we may get Heauen or gaine the praise of men we must striue against his tentation and not suffer our selues to be deluded by him For this is as much as if he should say vnto vs I would haue thee pray but thou shalt obtaine nothing I would haue thee giue almes but thou shalt haue no reward Seeing then we are subiect to a double tentation of Sathan who goeth about like a roaring Lion seeking whom he may deuour so that he will if it be possible hinder vs from Prayers or if he cannot will corrupt them with his Leauen of merrit we must prepare to resist him r The meanes how to resist Satan in his tentations both waies Whensoeuer he goeth about to stay vs from praying vnto our heauenly Father we must resist him strong in faith and oppose against him these Meditations Let vs remember Gods most holy commaundement to call vpon him in the day ſ Psal 50 15. of trouble and that wee are continually to watch and pray t Luke 22 40 46. least we fall into tentation We haue together with the precept a promise annexed for our comfort and greater encouragement to this duty that he is neere to all that call vpon him euen to all that call vpon him in truth yea the eies of the Lord are vpon the iust and his eares are open vnto their prayers Let vs consider that there is an absolute necessity of the inuocation of his Name and of crauing his assistance that we may be freed and deliuered from the snares and assaults of the Deuill and that hee would giue vs strength to ouercome them and not suffer vs to be tempted aboue our power but giue a blessed issue of the tentation that we may be made able to beare it And as the necessitie is great to call vpon him daily In whom we line and mooue and haue our beeing so the profit thereof is no lesse it bringeth a blessed experience and tryall of Gods goodnesse and mercy toward vs It encreaseth his spirituall graces in vs and maketh vs zealous in all good workes It obtaineth those thinges that we want and remooueth the iudgements that hang ouer vs or are vpon vs. We haue the examples of all the faithfull as a Cloud of Witnesses to incite vs to this duty And if we put foorth our hands to take and vse any of the Creatures or blessings of God without asking him leaue we are no better then Theeues and Robbers These and such like Motiues serue to kindle our zeale in Prayer to quench the fiery darts of the Deuill which he casteth at vs. If he go about to puffe vs vp with pride through an opinion merriting by any euen our best workes of Prayer or Preaching or Almes-deedes wee must know that all our workes are vnperfect and that the good thinges in vs are his owne guifts Hence it is that the Apostle saith of himselfe and all his labours u 1 Cor. 15 9 10. I am the least of the Apostles by the Grace of God I am that I am and his Grace which is in me was not in vaine I laboured more aboundantly then they all yet not I but the Grace of God which is with me And in another place x 1 Cor. 3 7. Neither is he that planteth any thing neither he that watereth but God that giueth the encrease Againe y 1 Cor. 4 7. What hast thou that thou hast not receiued If thou hast receiued it why boastest thou as though thou hadst not receiued it It is a worthy saying set downe by our Sauiour z Luke 17 10. When ye haue done all those things which are commaunded you say We are vnprofitable Seruants wee haue done that which was our duty to doe Wherefore we must labour in all our workes to see our imperfections to cast downe ourselues in humility before the Iudgement seat of God and to referre all things to his glory The Apostle giueth this generall rule a 1 Cor. 10 31 Whether ye eate or drinke or whatsoeuer ye doe doe all to the glorie of God And if in these ordinary and naturall workes we must ayme at that end as at a marke how much more in the Mysteries of our saluation and the great keyes of our Religion ought wee to giue thankes vnto God for blessing vs with spirituall blessings in heauenly thinges We are not able to inspire Grace into our barren hearts it is the guift of God and therefore he must be confessed the giuer of euery good giuing and perfect guift to the glory of his owne Name And for our selues let vs in all duties of our obedience Prayer Almes or whatsoeuer workes approoued of God prepare our selues to bring humble and broken hearts freed from the Thornes of pride and vaine-glory This is taught by Dauid in the Psalme b Psal 51 17. The Sacrifices of God are a contrite Spirit a contrite and a broken heart ô God thou wilt not despise The like we see Esay 66. c Esay 66 2. To him will I looke saith the Lord euen to him that is poore and of a contrite spirit and trembleth at my wordes And thus was the practise of Daniell in his Prayer d Dan. 9 18. O Lorde encline thine eare open thine eyes and behold our desolations for we doe not present our supplications before thee for our owne righteousnesse but for thy great tender mercies This humility shall appeare to be in vs if we referre the end of all our actions to the honour of God and make that to be the scope Let the principall end be the glory of God the next the saluation of our Soules the third the edification of our Brethren in Christ Iesus Let vs cause our light so to shine before men that they may glorifie our Father which is in Heauen and then let vs follow those thinges which concerne peace and where-with one may edifie another Vse 2. Secondly as by the free bestowing of the graces of God we are taught to giue him all possible praise so it taketh away all opinion of the merits of workes wherein proud flesh is ready to trust For to place Merit and Iustification in our owne workes is to rase down a cheefe Foundation and principall Piller of Christian Religion both because thereby we abolish Grace and renounce saluation by Christ and make euery man a Sauiour to himselfe and so exclude saluation by Christ all which are shamefull Heresies and horrible blasphemies and detestable abhominations As many
God and hate his Brother hee is a Lyar for howe can hee that loueth not his Brother whom hee hath seene Loue God whom hee hath not seene And this Commaundement haue wee of him that he that loueth God should Loue his Brother also Where hee teacheth that the loue of God and the loue of our Bretheren are knit together with such a fast knot as can neuer bee loosed and dissolued the Workes of the first Table cannot be pulled assunder from the Workes of the second Table The Apostle Peter moouing the dispersed Iewes to giue dilligence to make their Election sure and their calling certaine that so they might neuer fall away p 2 Pet. 1 5 6 7. exhorteth them To ioyne Vertue with their Faith and with Fayth Knowledge and with Knowledge Temperance and with Temperance Patience and with Patience Godlinesse and with Godlynesse Brotherly Kindnesse and vvith Brotherly kindnesse Loue. These Christian graces of Gods Spirit he would haue in them and not onely to be found in them but to abound in them and not onely some of them but they must endeuour to get them all and to ioyne one of them to another that so we may bee fruitfull in all good Workes It is not therefore enough for vs to haue one guift alone and then think we are well Let vs not flatter our selues and boast of our Religion to say wee haue Faith or Knowledge or Temperance or Loue. Hee that hath but one of them hath indeede none of them We must haue many or else wee cannot assure our selues that we haue any at all For as hee that is reformed in one sinne is reformed in all knowne sinnes and he that truely repenteth of one truely repenteth of all so hee that hath obtayned one gift hath gotten many One sinne commonly goeth not alone so one Vertue goeth not alone When Fayth commeth there commeth a Traine with it it is as a Royall Queene that neuer trauaileth abroad without her traine Faith layeth holde vpon Christ in whome q Col. 1 19. 2 3. all Treasures of Knowledge Wisedome are hidden Whosoeuer possesseth him and hath him dwelling in his heart hee possesseth all thinges If then wee by attending on the ordinance of God haue gotten Faith r Rom. 20 17. which commeth by hearing and hearing by the Word so soone as Faith is entred a great multitude and mightie Armie of Gods Graces stande about vs and throng at the doore of our hearts as it were striuing and thrusting which of them shoulde enter first and they neuer giue ouer vntill they bee all come in and haue taken vp their lodging there neuer after to bee dislodged and dispossessed of that place Let vs not therefore bee so sparing and niggardly to thinke one grace of God sufficient for vs we serue a liberall Lorde and bountifull Maister that offereth to make vs partakers of all his Treasures and to bestow vppon vs all the riches of his house We may put our hands into his Coffers and store our selues with plenty and aboundance Wee see howe they that couer their houses Å¿ Plaut in Trinum Benefacta benefactis alijs pertegito ne perpluant do lay Tile vpon Tile or Stone vpon Stone or Strawe vppon Straw so thicke that it may not raine thorow and that they may be defended from winde and weather so should it bee with vs that are setting vppe a Christian building when we haue laide a good foundation wee must couer our houses with a strong couering wee must lay Grace vppon Grace and ioyne Vertue to Vertue that though the stormes of tentations beate vpon vs yet they may not preuaile against vs though the Raine of afflictions fall vpon vs yet it may not enter into vs and although the Windes of wickednesse doo oftentimes blow vpon vs yet they may not ouer-turne and ouerthrow vs. Vse 2. Secondly seeing Faith and Loue go together and dwell together we are put in minde of a notable dutie and are thereby directed to prooue our Faith by our Loue and our Loue by our Faith and to make one of them serue to assure the other The cause wil proue the effect and the effect will manifest the cause We may proue fire by the heat and the heat by the fire a good tree by his fruit the fruit by his tree Many wil seeme faithful religious they will glorify that they beleeue boast of their piety and godlinesse yet come to their liues you shal find therein no fruits of mercy no works of charity no tokens testimonies of their loue appearing in them This mans religion is in vaine his faith is in vaine his shew of godlinesse is in vaine for pure t Iam. 1 27 2 16. Religion and vndefiled before God the Father is this to visit the fatherles widdowes in their aduersity to keep himself vnspotted of the world And the same Apostle in the next chapter teacheth That it shal not profit any man to say he hath Faith when his Faith bringeth forth no Good-workes Againe many will shew some fruites of Loue to their Brethren in Almes in liberality in giuing vnto the poore in dealing iustly and vprightly and yet haue no faith they doo them as naturall men mooued by a naturall affection or stirred vp by vaine glory or hunting after the praise of men or constrained by the lawes of Princes or fearing the reproach of the world or seeking the merit of their owne saluation All such haue their reward according to their worke but not according to their hope They haue their reward already they must look for no other they haue it among men they shall loose it with God they haue the applause of the world but they must passe another doome in the life to come Such faith before spoken of without loue is but a shadow of faith and such loue without faith is but a shadow of loue both are naught and nothing worth if they be assunder The roote ioyned to the Tree are both good and make the branches fruitfull but seperate the one from the other pull the root from the Tree and you destroy them both you kill them both This is that vse u Iames 2 18. which S. Iames vrgeth chap. 2. Some man might say Thou hast the Faith and I haue workes shew me thy faith out of thy workes and I will shew thee my faith by my workes Whereby we are taught to try the truth of our faith the sincerity of our loue that we be not deceiued in the one or in the other But how shall this triall be made Surely by making one the Touchstone to the other laying one to the other and waighing one in the ballance with the other For the Apostle willeth the vaine Christian who hath nothing but the name of faith to glory in like a poore Begger that boasteth of great riches to shew the goodnesse of his Faith by the fruits of Good-workes or else his
Borrowers and whatsoeuer we enioy it is not ours onely but ours and the poores they haue their share and portion with vs. A Christian man though hee bee the freest man vpon the earth yet hee is a Seruant to all especially to the Church of God A Christian man is only a Free-man for he hath Christian liberty belonging ●o him a Iohn 8. 36. And he whom Christ maketh free he is free indeed He is freed b Rom. 8 1. Col. 2 16 20. Rom. 6 14. from ●he curse of the Law from the bond of perfect righteousnesse from the burden of Ceremonies from the bondage of sinne He hath a freedome in the voluntary c Luke 1 74. worship and seruice of God in the d T it 1 15. free vse of al the Creatures of God to come to the throne of grace e Rom 5 2. Ephe 3 12. with assurance to be heard for Christs sake and to enter into the Kingdome of glory after this life On the other side a wicked man is the greatest slaue and bondman that can be He is in bondage vnder sinne He is subiect to all punishments temporall and eternall He is in bondage vnder the Deuill f 2. Tim 2 26. who keepeth all impenitent sinners in his snares to do his his will He is in bondage vnder the wrath of God But to let this passe howsoeuer the faithfull are free men yet they are not onely the seruants of God but the seruants of men especially of the poore but most especially of the godly We are not to seeke our owne thinges but to referre the labours of our calling and the blessing of God vpon our labours to the common good of the Church whereof we are members This condemneth two sorts of men First such as seeke for nothing but to settle themselues and maintaine their owne estates to enrich themselues that they may liue in ease and wealth like the rich man mentioned in the Gospel these make no conscience of swearing forswearing lying dissembling oppressing and such like vnfruitfull workes of the flesh Th●se men may alleadge and pleade for themselues what they will but in truth they neuer yet knew what the Communion of Saintes meaneth The Apostle giueth this precept to all the Church g Phil 2. 4. Gal. 6. 2. Looke not euery man on his owne thinges but euery man also on the thinges of other men And in another place Beare yee one an others burden and so fulfill the Law of Christ So the Apostle Iames teacheth h Iam. 4. 3. that we often aske and receiue not because we aske amisse that we might consume the same vpon our pleasures Secondly it reproueth such as wast and consume the good creatures of God in riotousnes in drunkennes and in all excesse and when they are in brotherly loue and Christian compassion admonished do by and by answere what haue you to do with my spending I spend nothing but mine owne I spend none of yours Yes thou spendest that which is thy wiues thy Childrens thy families euen that which is Gods for which thou shalt giue an account at the great and dreadfull day of iudgement For when Christ shall come with thousands of his Angels to make an end of all thinges and say vnto thee i Luke 16 2 Come giue an account of thy Stewardship for thou maiest be no longer Steward wilt thou answere to the Iudge of all the world and to Christ that shall sit vpon the Throne thou hast wasted none of his goodes and abused none of his Creatures Thine owne heart and thine owne conscience as a thousand witnesses will giue in euidence against thee that thou hast taught thy tongue to lie They haue forgotten they are the Lords Stewards and shall giue an account to him as certainly of the bestowing of their substance as themselues take an account of their seruants of that portion of their goods which they haue committed vnto them Vse 3. Lastly seeing we are debters to all men but specially to the faithfull it reproueth such as shew the chiefest fruite of their loue and charity vpon the vngodly and prophane whom it were many times more charity to see punished then releeued and corrected then maintained Many there are among vs that haue no care or compassion of the poore Saintes though they see their wants and necessities yet they can shut their eyes and passe by them k Luke 10. 31. 32. as the Priest and Leuite did by him that was robbed by Theeues and lay halfe dead of his woundes But they will oftentimes be bountifull and shew their beneuolence vpon such as a great deale worse deserue it We see that our collections and distributions are made many times amisse and such as are most prophane are best prouided for Such as are idle Drones beastly Drunkards filthy Harlots and their gracelesse bastardes are more regarded and respected and haue better experience of our Almes then such poore as are godly minded heires by grace Saintes by calling and sonnes by faith This is an inuerting and ouerturning of the order that God hath set and setled to remaine among vs for this is his ordinance which he hath left with vs l Gal. 6. 10. While we haue time let vs do good vnto all men but specially to them that are of the houshold of Faith So the Apostle praieth for the Thessalonians that the Lord would encrease them and make them abound in Loue one toward another and toward all men First it must extend to such as are members of the Church and afterward to all others 1. Thes 3. 12. Loe heere is an Ordinance of God perpetually and inuiolably to be kept as a Law of the Medes and Persians which could not be altered we must do good to the distressed Saintes and poore seruants of God before others and more then to others God indeed is good to all m Psal 125. 9. and his mercy is ouer all his workes but in a speciall sort he n Psal 73. 1. is good to Israell and gratious to them that are pure of heart He saueth man and beast in body but he saueth the soules of his elect for euer He doth not onely preserue them temporally but he will glorify them eternally From hence such as are poore and haue godlines laid vp in their hearts must learne to beare the heauy burden of pouerty with patience seeing that howsoeuer they are neglected of men in the daily ministration yet they are highly respected of God and he vouchsafeth to leaue speciall direction for them aboue others to be sustained The greater our pouerty is the greater should be our piety that the more miserable we seeme to the world the more honourable we may be in the sight of God and of all good men True godlines will sweeten the bitternes of the Crosse which hath the promises of this life and of that which is to come But a poore estate ioyned with a prophane life
Ecclesiastes o Eccl. 11 2. Giue a portion to seauen and also to eight for thou knowest not what euill shall be vpon the earth In all these considerations being compassed about and hemmed in on euery side with a worlde of vncertainties it standeth vs vpon to follow the counsel and aduise of Christ our Sauiour p Luke 16 9 who willeth vs to make vs friends with the riches of iniquitie that when wee shall want they may receiue vs into euerlasting habitations which is not spoken of goods euilly and wrongfully gotten but of goods that may be wickedly and wrongfully taken from vs by open force or secret fraud by violence of Robbers by pretence of right by colour of Lawe or by the power of the oppressor Reason 3. Thirdly the poore cannot recompence and repay again that which is bestowed vpon them but God himselfe will restore it seauen fold into thy bosome We must heerein imitate our Heauenly Father who is readie to shew mercy to all This is the precept of Christ q Mat. 5 42 45 Giue to him that asketh and from him that would borrow of thee turne not away c. that ye may be the Children of your heauenly Father for he maketh his Sonne to arise on the euill and the good sendeth raine on the iust and vniust So likewise it behooueth vs to follow the example of Christ r 2 Cor. 8 9. Who beeing rich for our sakes became poore that wee thorough his pouerty might be made rich This was the greatest grace and mercie that could be shewed Reason 4. Fourthly the poore haue beene in all ages and shall alwayes remain with vs to the end of the world to the end that their bowels may feele our refreshing and their loynes blesse vs and pray for vs. For if it had pleased God hee could haue made all men rich and none to stand in need of the ayde and assistance of others but this difference in degrees among men placing some aboue and others beneath making some rich and others poore setting some on high and others low serueth most for the aduancement of his glory and the maintaining of fellowship and friendship of concord and vnity one with another If all were rich and abounded in outward wealth we should neither know God nor our selues nor our Brethren we would be ready to say ſ Prou. 30 9. Who is the Lord We would be ready to disdaine and despise our Bretheren If all were poore and in necessity there would be nothing but robbing stealing periury and all confusion Wherefore it is the ordinance of God that some should be rich and some poore some wealthy and others in want Hee maketh some poore to exercise their patience and to try howe they will beare that burden and behaue themselues vnder the crosse He maketh others rich to exercise our mercie to be obiectes of our pitty and compassion and that we should neuer want some occasions to shew forth the fruits of a liuely faith Seeing therefore we shal receiue a great aduantage in this life and be recompenced at the resurrection of the iust seeing we are vncertain what shal happen heereafter and know not what euill may fall vppon the earth seeing wee are commanded to follow the example of God the Father who is good to al and of Christ his sonne who being rich made himselfe poore and of no reputation and lastly seeing we must alway haue the poore to exercise the workes of mercy and to releeue their misery it followeth that we are to distribute the outward blessings of this life to those that be in want and stand in need of comfort Vse 1. The Doctrine being thus cleered and confirmed let vs see the vses that arise from hence First this being so necessary a duty required of all men it teacheth a difference betweene the Heathen and Christian religion The Heathenish Religion neuer tooke order for the poore nor required any compassion toward them but the profession of Christ chargeth this duty vpon all true beleeuers and teacheth that iudgement shal be without mercy to those that shew not mercy When Paule departed from the rest of the Apostles at Ierusalem they t Gala. 2 10. warned him onely that he should remember the poore which thing also he was diligent to doe But this was neuer remembred nor regarded nor intended among the Nations that were vnbeleeuers True it is the Painims and Philosophers haue held and deliuered many morrall instructions and spoken well of Iustice Temperance Clemency Prudence and Friendship of obedience toward parents of Gentlenesse toward men of liberality toward the poore of loue toward our Country of Loialty toward Princes and such other vertues He that should deny u Antimachia preface before the second booke their precepts in part to be wel spoken and in part to be wel practised should do them great wrong But the Christian Religion as it hath all these in common with them approuing and allowing of them yea not disdaining to read their bookes and to learne such Doctrine of them as they haue left in writing so it hath lanched out a great deale deeper and entred farther and considered better of the precepts of good life and the practise of good manners then the Heathen and Infidels haue done It was a rule of one of the wisest among the Gentiles x Plato that we are not borne onely for our selues but that our birth is partly for our Country partly for our Parents and partly for our friendes A goodly and Golden sentence much admired and greatly commended and oftentimes alleaged But if it be compared with the Doctrine of Christ and the duty of all Christians it will be found maimed in his limmes and defectiue in his parts neither hauing a good beginning nor making a perfect ending For first of all he prescribeth that our Charity should be imployed toward our selues which they haue well marked allowed and followed which say that a well ordered Charity beginneth at himselfe But this is farre from the Doctrine of Chist and his Apostles Christ himselfe cōmandeth vs y Mat 22 39. to loue our Neigh-as our selues and Paule teacheth z 1 Cor 13 5. that Charity seeketh not her owne things Againe he maketh mention of our Country of our parents and of our friends and rangeth them into good order but what becommeth of the poore where or in what place of this notable sentence doth he place them he speaketh not of them at all let them shift as they can they are quite forgotten the Philosophers Charity stretcheth not to them let them sinke or swimme liue or die feed or starue it was all one to him and to that Religion that he beleeued And indeed a poore person in the time of the Painims had no other meanes to liue and sustaine himselfe and his family then to sell himselfe as a slaue to him that would buy him if no man were found that would buy him
great cheere and bidding the Rich to their Tables whereas the Scripture vnderstandeth by it a courteous entertainement of such poore Christians as are bannished out of their Countries They therefore are much deceiued that commend those to be the onely House-keepers that feede men of all sorts without difference and discretion and releeue idle persons that flocke vnto their Gates and gather together such as are sturdy and vagrant to receiue their Almes contrary to the rules of the word and the Statutes of well-gouerned Common-Wealths These may be said rather to keepe great houses then good houses and to be great House-keepers rather then good House-keepers It were more charity to punish then to releeue such vnruly persons as wil submit themselues to no Lawes nor liue in any Family or society to the ende there may be sufficient for them that are Strangers indeede And such as wander vp and downe and are inccorrigible are no better then Theeues in as much as they liue by the sweate of other mens labours e 2 Thes 3 8 10. and as idle Drones sucke away the Hony from the Bees and deuour that which should maintain the faithfull of the Land and such as labour the thing that is good Let such therefore as haue their affections ready to receiue others into their houses and to make them partakers of the blessings that God hath bestowed vpon them vse it most commonly toward the poore Saints and destitute members of Christ according to the precept of our Sauiour Luke 14. f Luke 14 12 13 14 When thou makest a Dinner call not thy Friendes nor thy Bretheren nor thy Kinsmen nor thy rich neighbours least they also bid thee againe and recompence be made thee But when thou makest a Feast call the poore the maimed the lame and the Blinde and thou shalt bee blessed because they cannot recompence thee for thou shalt be recompenced at the resurrection of the iust True it is our Kinsmen our Friends and rich Neighbours may be inuited and bidden but not they onely as the custome is of our daies we entertaine such as may entertaine vs againe Secondly this meeteth with the corruption of our times we cannot abide those that are Strangers but are enemies to the very name when we heare it But all neglect of them and iniurious dealing toward them is a great sinne and such as are haters of Strangers are grieuous Sinners Such g Gene. 19. Iudg. 19. were the Sodomites such were the men of Gibeah that offered all violence they could to the Strangers that came to lodge among them it was an euident signe of horrible impiety and iniquity that raigned among them They that cry out so much against Strangers and vse it as a word of reproach do shew plainelie that they doe not deserue to be numbred among the Children of God nor to be accounted as members of Christ any more then Dogs and Swine inasmuch as out of their owne mouths they shall be iudged It is a shamefull barbarousnesse for men to haue pitty and compassion on them that are helplesse Among the Heathen and Infidels they were euill thought of that had not this reason and vnderstanding to receiue them gently and peaceably that were cast out of their houses and dwellings how much more is it requisite for vs when we see the Church of GOD tossed and tumbled and tormented by Tyrants and enemies of the truth to giue courteous entertainement to the poore Christians which are banished out of their Countries bereaued of their friends and separated from their Kinsfolkes of whom they might be succoured If we do not these thinges it is an euident token that we renounce God and haue no sparke of true piety in vs. For the Lord doth more rigorously condemne the outrages and wrongs that are done to strangers then those that are done to a mans owne Neighbours The Heathen shame vs nay shall rise vp in iudgement to condemne vs in this behalfe for when they intended to shew that some man was of a wicked and slauish Nature they were wont to say Get thee hence thou art an Enemy toward Strangers and this checke and taunt was more with them then if they had branded a man with the Name of an Whore-maister a Drunkard a periured person a Murtherer or if they had saide Thou art worse then a brute Beast They h Homer Odyss lib. 22. accounted the poore man and the stranger to be both sent vnto vs of God and therefore ought not to be despised They called them to lodge and soiourne i Virgil. Aeneid lib. 1. 8. with them and acknowledge that there ought to be a compassion of the miseries one of another They shewed not a niggardly mind k Ouid. Metamorph lib. 8. but a cheerefull looke and a friendly countenance toward such as they had receiued to their house The Painims haue spoken and practised after this manner what shal then become of vs that professe our selues to be Gods Children when we fight so directly against the order of nature For God hath set one common and generall band among al mankind and it is required of vs to extend our charitie toward all such as resemble vs and carry the Image of God vpon them but especially it behooueth vs to respect such as are more neerly knit vnto vs by the band of Faith and therefore ought to be more deare vnto vs then all others True it is all Strangers are to be warned and admonished for their part that they abuse not that name and priuiledge If a man haue a priuiledge and protection from a Prince and then abuse both himselfe and it so that vnder the colour of that benefit and honor done vnto him he commit some outrage and wicked Act shall he not be worthy of double punnishment It falleth out sometimes that a great number will say they are driuen out of their Countrey for their conscience yet they shew a corrupt conscience defile the Church with their dissolute life giue occasion to vnbeleeuers to blaspheme the purity of doctrine and to haue their mouthes wide open against the professors of it Notwithstanding we must take heed that for the offence of some we do not reiect those that are Gods strangers that we do not leaue them helplesse but succour them as God hath inabled vs. They are among vs to try our beneuolence and charity If we shew mercy to them though they be not able to requite it yet God is both able and willing to recompence our workes of mercy Vse 3. Thirdly it is our duty to take the opportunity offered vnto vs of God nay it is required of vs to seeke the opportunity to expresse our obedience to God and our loue to his people in doing all good to such as stand in neede The practise hereof we see in Abraham l Gene. 18 1. who sate at his Tent doore to inuite such as he saw passing by and had neede of the fruites
18. 13. who beeing in distresse and feare of his life said to Eliah Was it not told my Lord what I did when Iezabell slew the Prophets of the Lord how I hid an hundred men of the Lords Prophets by fifties in a Caue and fed them with Bread and Water These men we see found great comfort to their owne Soules in the practise of this duty If the same fruit of Faith and testimony of loue be found in vs we shall not be left comfortlesse when we desire comfort of God Nay if this entertainement of the Saints whom the profession of the faith in time of trouble hath made Strangers be among vs and doe abound it will make vs that we shall be neyther idle nor vnfruitfull in the acknowledging of our Lord Iesus Christ And that we may yet haue farther comfort and encouragement heerein we must vnderstand that whatsoeuer comfort and compassion we shew to the Seruants of God that are harbourlesse and succourlesse the Lord Iesus doth account it as done vnto himselfe For Christ is oftentimes left without help and harbour in his poore members and in them he wandreth vp and downe from place to place to seeke releefe Thus he shall say in the end of the World ſ Mat. 25 35 40. I was a Stranger and ye tooke me in vnto you I was naked and ye cloathed me I was in Prison and ye came vnto mee for verily I say vnto you inasmuch as yee haue done it vnto one of the least of these my Brethren ye haue done it to me Let this comfort and refresh vs let this encourage vs to loue Strangers and to performe all duties of loue toward them considering that Christ Iesus will aboundantly reward our well-doing and accept it farre aboue the worthinesse of the work albeit it be shewed to the poorest and simplest soul that belongs to his Body On the other side this serueth as a great terrour to those that are without naturall affection and spirituall compassion to consider wisely of the poore Strangers to whom Christ shall say I was a Stranger and ye tooke mee not in vnto you sicke and in Prison and ye visited me not for verily I say vnto you in asmuch as ye did it not to one of the least of these ye did it not to me This serueth to encrease their sinne and to make the iudgements of God to enter into their bones considering that they haue not to doe onely with men but with Christ and the contempt is offered not onely to a base stranger but to our blessed Sauiour He that striketh and woundeth the hand or the foote maketh paine and greefe to arise in the head inasmuch as one part is touched with a sympathy of the others misery The faithfull are all the members of Christes body whereof he is the head if then any of them be afflicted hee suffereth with them he is greeued for them he is hurt through them Let all the enemies of the godly therefore take heede vnto themselues least they kicke against the truth of God and hurt the least of the professors thereof considering that he that toucheth them toucheth the apple of his eye yea toucheth and pierceth Christ himselfe of whom wee may truely say x Math. 21 44 Whosoeuer shall fall on this stone he shall be broken but on whomsoeuer it shall fall it will crush him in peeces Who is it that dareth breake out into this blasphemy to professe that he wisheth to wound Christ to reproach him to defie him to turne him out of doores to suffer him to perrish and to shut vp their compassion frō him But whiles we are ashamed of our poore Brethren we are ashamed of Christ whiles we deny to stretch forth our handes to help them we passe by Christ and looke awry or a squint vpon him Would we haue the Lord of life and glory deale with vs as we deale with them and behaue our selues toward them We liue if not in the persecution yet in the necessity of the Church and Children of God we cannot but see many want If the enemies of the Gospell hate them for the truths sake shall not we loue them for the truths sake If we desire to finde comfort in the great day of the Lorde let vs now shew comfort as God hath blessed and inabled vs according to our abilitie Hee will neuer bee wanting to them that consider wiselie of the wants of them that feare him If wee doe not deny our comfort to them he will neuer deny to minister comfort to vs in time of neede But if our harts be hardned and our hands full of crueltie we deceiue our selues if we looke for any comfort at the handes of God The Rich man and Miser that had Lazarus at his Gates y Luke 16 19 21 24. Clad himselfe in Purple and fared deliciously euery day yet shutting his eyes from beholding the misery and stopping his eares from hearing the cry of the poore himselfe was cast into torments and cryed with a great cry and a bitter and was not heard nor regarded Then his sumptuous fare could not refresh him then his gorgeous apparrall could not comfort him then his resort and retinue could not reuiue him but he continued in endlesse and remidelesse tortures and tormentes If wee follow his example let vs feare his ende and if wee practise his sinne we must looke to feele his punishment If we behold the troubles of the Ministers and Professours of the Gospell driuen out of house and home and cast out of Land and Liuing and we cannot affoord them a good word nor giue them any thing to supply their wants when God hath giuen vnto vs this worldes good wee our selues shall cry and not be heard We shall all stand in need of the mercie of God If we were rich noble if were Kings and Princes if we haue had thousandes that haue required and receiued mercy from vs yet a time shall come when we shall stande at the Iudgement seate of the Almighty and call for mercy at his hands The Lord in that day shall recompence vs according to our workes Haue we delighted in the deeds of mercy and shewed pitty to the poore wandering Saints Let vs be of good comfort wee shall not finde God a seuere Iudge but a mercifull Father and Sauiour vnto vs we shall receiue the fruite of our Labours in due time gather as we haue scattered and reape as we haue sowed On the other side haue we seene the Saintes of God sicke and not visited them Strangers and not harboured them Hungry and not fed them We shall hang downe our heads in that day when we would giue all the world for one drop or dram of mercy to come neere vs z Iames 2 13. For there shall be condemnation mercilesse to him that sheweth not Mercie and Mercie reioyseth against Iudgement Let vs consider these things whiles we haue time It was too late for the Rich man
please the tast of a well-affected stomacke I confesse the fault is in the Cooke that hath prepared and dressed it I would therefore entreat thee to accept of these three Dishes and to consider the person that was the writer the person to whom he writeth and the person for whom he writeth The person that penned it was Paule the Apostle the person to whom it was written was Philemon the Maister the person for whom hee wrote was Onesimus the Seruant Vpon these three as on certaine pillers stand the maine drift and purpose of this whole Epistle heere expounded Touching the first o The person of the Writer of the Epistle which is Paul the Writer he doth not stile himself in this place as commonly he vseth An Apostle of Iesus Christ but The Prisoner of Christ and declareth that he begat Onesimus to the Faith in Prison It is honourable to the Saintes to suffer for the truthes sake The Apostles reioyced that they were p Actes 5 41. Iames 1 2. Counted worthy to endure afflictions and troubles in a good cause They endured imprisonment as Martyrs not as Malefactors as Preachers of the Gospell r 1 Pet. 1 15 not As Busie-bodies in other mens matters as doers of good not as euill doers neuer ceasing to further the saluation of others euen when their bodies were restrained of libertie and yet in this want of enlargement they were mighty in deede and word to worke the conuersion of such as resorted vnto them verifying the saying of the Apostle 2. Tim. 2. 9. ſ 2 Tim. 2 9. I suffer trouble vnto bondes but the word of God is not bound Whiles he pleaded his cause in Chaines t Actes 16 28 hee had Almost caught Agrippa in the Chaine of the Gospell and wonne him to the Faith When he was come to Rome he would not be idle u Act. 28 17 23. but called the chiefe of the Iewes together and then expounded vnto them the way of Saluation testifying the Kingdome of God and perswading them those thinges that concerne Iesus both out of the Law of Moses and out of the Prophets from morning to night Thus doth one say most truely of him When he was bound he was stronger then they that bound him when he was a Captiue he was freer then they that kept him and when his Iudges examined him he examined them and set them at libertie that were vnder the thraldome of sinne and Sathan It is truely said of the Wise-man x Prou. 11 30 Dan. 12 3. He that winneth Soules is wise and shall shine as the brightnesse of the firmament and such as turne many to righteousnes shall shine as the Starres for euer and euer This wisedome is no where to be found no where to be sought no where to be learned but in the Word of GOD which is the wisedome of God and the power of God So then we see it is not the punishment that maketh a Martyr but the cause Some are punished as Malefactors some dye as Martyrs Ioseph was cast into the same y Gene. 39 20 and 40 3. Prison with the Butler and Baker of King Pharaoh They suffered imprisonment in the same place but the cause was not one for which they suffered Iosephs Maister tooke him and put him in Prison in the place where the kings Prisoners lay bound and there he was in Prison but because it was in a good cause and for a good conscience the Lord was with him and shewed him mercy and got him fauour in the sight of the Maister of the Prison The like we might say of Paule and Sylas who were not onely beaten with Rods but clapped vppe in close Prison with Malefactors but they were not without comfort in their sufferings z Actes 16 25 For At midnight they prayed and sung Psalmes vnto God so that the rest of the Prisoners heard them They suffered a 2 Tim. 2 9. As euill doers but not for euill doing And albeit they were Prisoners yet they were Christian Prisoners and when the body was ready to be offered and the time of their departure drew neere forgat b August ser de Sanct. Cypr. not their Apostolicall care of the Churches and watchfulnesse ouer the Lordes Flocke yea we see Paule in this place forgetteth not a base Seruant as shall bee shewed afterward Touching the second point c The person to whom Paul writeth we are to consider the person to whom Paule writeth which is to Philemon crauing at his hands the fruit of Christian Equitie and Moderation to forgiue him that had offended him according to the doctrine of the common Maister of them both Iesus Christ Luke 17. d Luk. 17. 3 4 Take heede to your selues if thy Brother trespasse against thee rebuke him and if hee repent forgiue him and though hee sinne against thee seauen times in a day and seauen times in a day turne againe to thee saying It repenteth mee Thou shalt forgiue him It is a great vertue in thee if thou e Isidor lib. 2. soliloqu wrong not him of whom thou art wronged It is great Fortitude if when thou art wronged thou remit it It is great Glory if thou be willing to spare him whom thou hadst power and ability to hurt As Christ taught forgiuenesse to others so he practised his owne Doctrine and f Luke 23 34. prayed for those that were his persecuters Philemon had bin greatly wronged by his false and theeuish seruant yet Paul craueth pardon for him vpon his repentance toward God and his submission toward his Maister It is the Doctrine of the g The doctrine of the Nouatiā Heretickes Nouatian Heretickes to deny hope of fauour and forgiuenesse to such as are fallen against whom Cyprian hath written a learned Epistle h Cypri ad Nouatian haeretic whereby they go about to kill whereas they should cure them that are wounded and to swallow vp them in despaire whom they ought to raise vp with comfort For they alledge that Christ threatneth k Math. 10 33 Whosoeuer shall deny him before men them will he deny before his Father which is in heauen But he vnderstandeth such as perseuer in it without repentance denying him vnto the end and forsaking him vnto the death such indeede he will disclaime and deny in the kingdome of his Father which plainely appeareth by the contrary in the opposite Member going before l Math. 10 32. where he promiseth that Whosoeuer shall confesse him before men them will hee also confesse before his Father which is in Heauen whereby hee meaneth such as continue in that confession and are faithfull without starting backward Peter being in the High-priests house did deny his Maister that chose him not only to bee an Apostle but to bee an elect vessell to preach the Gospell both to Iewes and Gentiles he denied him that bought him and redeemed him in word with an Oath with Cursing and Execration
we dare do not so much only as we ought to do not considering how lawfull it is but how powerfull we are how weake they are All the prophane Histories are full of worthy examples of many Seruants who are commended for their trust and faithfulnesse Wittinesse and Courage Might and Magnanimity to all posterity and haue not doubted to giue their liues to death in their Maisters quarrell It is not therefore much to bee maruelled at that the Apostle perceiuing how t Heb. 4 12. Mighty the word had bin in Operation vpon Philemons Seruant doth account him as his Sonne and seeketh to reconcile him to his Maister in which respect he was willing and desirous to haue u Phile. 13 14 kept him with him to Minister vnto him He claimeth some authoritie ouer him being his spirituall Father howbeit because he was not only his Sonne but also another mans Seruant he would not retaine him without his Maisters knowledge Let them not therefore for their low degree be contemned nor haue the meanes of instruction denied vnto them Thus I haue set downe to thy view Christian Reader the scope of this Epistle wherein the Apostle in a narrow compasse doth couch together many Mysteries of our Religion which I haue laboured to lay open in this Commentary And howsoeuer the worke is growne in bignesse extended in length vnder mine hands more then at the first I purposed and intended yet I hope the manner of handling heerein obserued shall easily recompence thy labour bestowed in reading I cannot in few words comprehend the matters that are heere and there dispersed throughout the Booke Among many other these points are principally handled Touching affliction for the truth and persecution for righteousnesse sake Touching Christian Equity and Moderation Touching Gods free grace forgiuing offences Touching houshold Gouernment and Priuate possessions Touching the conuersion of Sinners and the Communion of Saintes Touching Faith and Good Workes Touching Friendship and Surety-ship Touching Prayer and Hospitality Touching the Gospell and Almes-deeds Touching Gods prouidence and of the force fruite of the Ministry as is more at large to be seen in the Table of the doctrines Accept I pray thee the paines I haue taken in the discussing of these points pardon the escapes if any be into which I haue fallen as in trauelling so long a iourney it is easie to fall into a slumber and wheresoeuer thou vnderstandest the hand of God to haue beene with me in publishing the truth giue him the glory ascribe the praise vnto his great name to whose grace goodnesse I commend thee Thine in our common Sauiour William Attersoll A BRIEFE RECAPITVLATION OF ALL THE DOCTRINES HANDLED AT LARGE IN THIS EPISTLE Out of the Praeface THe course of the Gospell cannot bee stopped but will haue his passage in the world page 1. The Argument and occasion of the Epistle together with the vses thereof page 7. Verse 1 and 2. Doct. 1. Good things must be followed and sought after earnestly and feruently not coldly and carelesly pag. 9 Doct. 2. It is no disgrace or reproch to the Seruants of God to bee cast into prison for the Gospels sake pag 12. Doct. 3. The persecutions of all true Christians are the persecutions of Christ Iesus when they are imprisoned for Christs sake page 15. Doct. 4. All good duties to God or man are better doone by the helpe of others then alone by our selues pa 21 Doct. 5. A christian friend wil performe any christian duty to his friend page 25. Doct. 6. Christian women should be helpers vnto their husbandes as heires together of the grace of life page 29 Doct. 7. The calling of a Minister is a painfull and laborious a needefull and troublesome calling page 33. Doct. 8. It is the duty of all house-holders to teach and instruct their families that belong vnto them page 38 Verse 3. Doct. 1. The free fauour and mercy of God in Christ Iesus is first and aboue all other things to be desired and prayed for page 48 Doct. 2. Such as are in Gods fauor haue his blessings flowing vnto them and following them page 55 Doct. 3. All blessings temporall and eternall are to be craued from God alone in Christ Iesus page 61 Verse 4 and 5. Doct 1. Men ought to take cause of great ioy to see others growe and proceed in good things page 68 Doct. 2. It is the nature of faith to apply the mercies and promises of God to our owne selues page 76 Doct. 3. It is the duty of the faithfull to pray not onely for themselues but also for others page 82 Doct. 4. True Religion must not onely bee inwardly beleeued but also outwardly confessed and openly professed page 86 Doct. 5. Faith and Loue are the cheefest thinges that commend a man to God and his Church page 95 Doct. 6. Faith in Christ and Loue to the Saints do alwaies go together in all the seruants of God pag. 99. Doct. 7. Christ must be the Obiect of our faith we must looke vnto him and depend vpon him page 106 Doct. 8. The workes of mercy are especially and aboue before others to be shewed to the poore Saints that are godly 111 Doct. 9. Such as truely beleeue in Christ and belong to him are Saints page 117 Verse 6 and 7. Doct. 1. It is our duty to stir vp our selues and others to encrease in good things page 126 Doct. 2. The guifts which we haue receiued must not lye hid in vs but be employed to the good of others 140 Doct. 3. The goodnesse of God bestowed vpon our selus or others must be published abroad and made known to others page 142 Doct. 4. The spiritual graces of God bestowed vpon others doe giue occasion of ioy to the Saints pa. 147 Doct. 5. The workes of mercie are to bee shewed to the poore distressed Saints page 154 Verse 8 and 9. Doct. 1. The Office of the Pastour and Minister of God is an Office of power and authority vnder christ 163 Doct. 2. Gentle meanes are to bee vsed rather then seuere to perswade men to holy duties page 172 Doct. 3. Superiors in guifts or age or both are to bee reuerenced and regarded aboue others pa. 177. Verse 10. Doct. 1. The least and lowest member conuerted to Christ must not bee contemned or condemned page 184 Doct. 2. The same affection that is betweene the Father and the Sonne ought to be betweene the Minister the people committed vnto him 189 Doct. 3. The preaching of the word is the ordinary meanes and instrument of our conuersion and regeneration page 205 Verse 11. and 12. Doct. 1. Christian religion maketh a man profitable and helpfull vnto others that before hath been iniurious and hurtfull page 227. Doct. 2. In godly religious and reformed families are many times vngodly obstinate and vnreformed persons both Children and Seruaunts page 237 Doct. 3. Former Offences albeit great and heynous vppon true repentance are to bee
instruction the Angels are our Watchmen the heauen is our happinesse Christ is our Sauiour God is our Father all thinges are fauourers and furtherers of our saluation It is a comfort of all comforts that we are at peace with God that he is our friend and that hee hath no controuersie against vs. If God were against vs who should bee able to stand for vs or dare take vpon him the protection and defence of vs But beeing iustified by Faith we are at peace with God It is a great blessing to be at peace with men but it is a greater blessing to be at peace with God We are at peace with the blessed Angels r Hebr. 1 14. Who are all ministring Spirits sent forth to Minister for their sakes which shall be heires of saluation They guard vs from dangers they carry vs as a Nurse doth her Childe in her Armes that we be not hurt by the Deuill or his Angels or his Instruments We are at peace with the Church that is with all such as feare God and beleeue in Christ The Prophet Esay speaking of the Kingdome of Christ and of the fruits of the Gospell foretelleth That Å¿ Esay 11 6. the Wolfe shall dwell with the Lambe and the Leopard with the Kidde and the Calfe and the Lyon and a fat Beast together and a little Child shall lead them c. Meaning thereby that when a man is called into the State of grace howsoeuer by Nature he haue the greedinesse of a Wolfe the wildnesse of a Leopard the fiercenesse of a Lyon the cruelty of a Beare hee shall lay away his sauage and brutish Nature and become gentle and liue peaceably with all men We are at peace with our own selues which is the peace of a good conscience when it being washed in the blood of Christ ceaseth to accuse and terrifie and beginneth to excuse and comfort vs when neither Hell nor Death nor damnation nor any daunger doth dismay vs or bring vs to despaire but in the midst of all t Col. 3 15. we haue the peace of God ruling in our hearts as the Apostle speaketh Coloss 3. 15. If a man weare at peace with the Angels with men and with all the Creatures if he had no Enemy to encounter him but liued at peace with others yet if he were at warre and Mortall enmity with himselfe if he felt the terrors of conscience and his owne heart condemning him hee should quickly finde what a great blessing it is to haue a cleere conscience which is a continuall Feast This peace was in Dauid when he said in the midst of manifolde dangers u Psal 3 5 6. I laid me downe and slept and rose againe for the Lord sustained me I will not be afraid of ten thousand of the people that should beset me round about This is of such excellency that it is called o Phil. 4 7. The peace of God that passeth all vnderstanding it is in stead of a guard to keepe our hearts and minds in Christ Wee are at peace with our enemies both because so soone as we beleeue in Christ wee seeke to haue peace with all men so farre as is possible p Rom. 12 18 and as much as lieth in vs and because God restraineth the mallice of the Enemies and inclineth their hearts to embrace peace Thus God brought Abraham and Isaac into fauour with Abimelec King of Gerar that he was ready and willing no onely to receiue peace when it was offered but to craue peace when it was not desired Thus God brought Daniell into fauour with the chiefe of the Eunuchs and sundry others to finde the fruits of loue at the handes of their enemies because he hath the harts of all men in his owne hand to wind them and turne them at his owne pleasure Lastly we are at peace with all Creatures in Heauen and Earth aboue and beneath which are made to serue for our benefite and saluation The Prophet saith q Psal 91 13. Thou shalt walk vpon the Lyon and the Aspe the young Lyon and the Dragon shalt thou tread vnder foot And God promiseth To make a r Hos 2 18. Couenant for them with the Beastes and Fowles that they shall walk safely All these priuiledges teach vs hauing such a large peace with God and his Angels with the Church and our owne selues with our Enemies and all Creatures that it is the most comfortable thing in the world to be vnder the grace and Couenant of God and that nothing is more to bee desired then to feele the fauour of God towards vs for hauing this we possesse all things If wee want him and his fauour though we haue all the world it will not nor cannot content vs but all things are curssed to vs and we to them Vse 3. Lastly seeing all that are accepted of God are blessed with all good things this teacheth vs the wretched and fearefull condition of all such as by reason of sinne are out of fauour with God they shall finde no rest they shall haue no peace heauen and earth shall conspire against them and deny them succour and comfort in the day of Gods punnishment and visitation It is said of Ismaell that his hand should be against euery man and euery mans hand against him so is it with all the vngodly not reconciled to God they shall find no sound comfort in any Creature but shall haue all the World against them This is a great misery and torment lying heauy vpon the wicked and piercing their Soules as the flashings of Hell according to the saying of the Prophet s Esay 57 19 20 21. I create the fruit of the lippes to be peace peace vnto them that are farre off and to them that are nere saith the Lord for I will heale them but the wicked are like the raging Sea that cannot rest whose Waters cast vp Mire and Dirt There is no peace saith my God to the wicked God setteth himselfe against them and all Creatures shall confound them and fight against them vntil they are confounded and ouerthrowne And as the Apostle speaking of the blessed and happy estate of the godly declareth that all things are theirs so on the other side we may truely say of the vngodly that nothing is theirs they haue Title and interest in no creature to receiue any comfort in them or stay from them or protection by them God is become their Enemy the Angels are armed to destroy them their owne consciences conuince and condemne them the Heauen is shut against them death is the gate of Hell vnto them affliction is a meanes of murmuring in them the World is a Snare vnto them Christ is a Rocke of offence vnto them the Gospell is the fauour of death vnto them the mercy of God is made a Packe-horse for their sinnes all the ordinances of God are abused by them and all the workes of Gods handes shall bee Instruments of
iniurie to other men or to make him peculiar to our selues but to leaue him the same to others that hee is to vs as euery man enioyeth the light of the Sunne without excluding others from the vse thereof Vse 3. Lastly we learne that it is no Doctrine of pride and presumption to teach assurance confidence and certainty of Faith that euery one should beleeue that God is his God that Christ is his Sauiour that the Holy-Ghost is his sanctifier that forgiuenesse of sinnes and eternall life shall bee giuen vnto him If we beleeue not this we beleeue nothing if we deny this or doubt of this all our Faith is in vaine For as wee pray for the forgiuenesse of our owne sinnes so we must beleeue the forgiuenesse of our owne sinnes The promises of the Gospell are generall these we are to knowe do belong to vs and therefore must take them as spoken to vs. It is promised y Iosh 1 5. to Ioshua imediately after the death of Moses that God would not leaue him nor forsake him This the Apostle applyeth and maketh it common to all the faithfull whom he chargeth to haue their conuersation without couetousnesse z Heb. 13 5. seeing it is written That God will not leaue them nor forsake them God commandeth vs to call vpon him with promise to heare vs a Psal 50 15 and 4 3. Call vpon mee and I will heare thee This was the comfort of Dauid and the assurance that hee had When I call vpon the Lord he will heare him Christ our Sauiour giueth vs encouragement to prayer because b Iohn 14. 13 1 Iohn 5 14 Whatsoeuer we aske in his name that will hee do that the Father may be glorified in the Sonne Hence it is that Iohn sayeth This is the assurance that wee haue of him that whatsoeuer we aske according to his will he heareth vs And if we know that he heareth vs we know we haue the petitions which we aske of him When Christ sayde to the poore distressed man in the Gospell If thou canst beleeue all things are possible to him that beleeueth He answered c Marke 9 24 Lord I beleeue help mine vnbeleefe So saith the Prophet d Psal 116 16 and 119 125. Behold Lord I am thy seruant I am thy seruant ô giue mee vnderstanding that I may keepe thy Commandements c. The Lord saith generally e Iohn 3. 15. Math. 28. Whosoeuer beleeueth shall be saued Hence the Apostle inferreth this particular to the Iailor f Acts 16 32. Beleeue thou and thou shalt be saued When God saith g Psal 27. 8. Seeke ye my face the voyce of the faithfull doth returne and rebound this backe again Thy face Lord I will seeke God by his new Couenant bindeth himselfe to the heyres of promise saying h Ier. 31 33. Esay 25 9. I will be their God and they shall be my people whereupon they are emboldned to say Loe this is our God we haue waited for him and hee will saue vs we will reioyce and be ioyfull in his saluation God saith vnto vs I am thy saluation our heart againe with vnspeakeable comfort inwardly ministered answeareth Thou art my God So then when we say aright we belieue in God the Father it is as much as to say I beleeue that God is my God and I haue assurance and trust in him for my saluation And to beleeue that God is my God is to beleeue that he is my life my peace my deliuerance my saluation not onely that he is these things in himselfe and in his owne nature not onely that he is these things to other men that trust in him and depend vpon him but that he is indeede the same to mee that his mercy dooth compasse me his power defend me his prouidence watch ouer me and his fauor keepe and preserue me to himselfe in life and death For there are many degrees of faith i Credere deum Credere Deo credere in Deū one step is to beleeue that God is the second step is to beleeue God that is to giue credit to him that al his words which he hath spoken and the promises which he hath made are true the third step is to beleeue in God which requireth trust in God according to his word and promise being firmely resolued that he will do whatsoeuer he hath said Thus it is required of vs to doe in euery Article of Faith in euery promise of Mercy in euery word of grace offered vnto vs we must by a speciall faith receiue it and apply it Obiection If such a faith be required the question may be asked how Infants can be saued that cannot haue this faith of their owne and therefore it seemeth they must be saued by their Parents faith Answere I answere that the faith of Parents dooth bring the Infants to haue a Title and interrest in the Couenant of grace and in all the benefits of Christ but it cannot apply the merits of Christs death his obedience his righteousnesse vnto the Infant For this the Beleeuer and faithfull Parent doth onely to himselfe and to no other but the merrites and satisfaction of Christ and ingrafting into his bodie are wrought by some speciall and secret working of the Holy-Ghost vnto vs vnknowne but effectuall to the Infant and comfortable to the Parent albeit it be not done by his faith and therefore this that men are iustified by a speciall faith holdeth to be true in men of yeares and discretion not in Infants and children who are iustified and saued by an extraordinary woorking of Gods spirit k Iohn 3 8. Like the wind which bloweth where it listeth and thou hearest the sound thereof but canst not tell whence it commeth and whether it goeth so is euerie man that is borne of the Spirit Obiection Againe sometimes the deare children of God faile in this speciall faith want this particular application they are not able to say God is my God Christ is my Sauiour Answere I aunswere this falleth out indeede sometimes in the tentations of Satan and in the infirmities of the flesh so that they haue not a feeling of Gods mercy toward them but euen then they cease not to beleeue We must liue by faith not by feeling A man may haue life in him though the sicke man in extremity do not know it or feele it so may faith bee in vs in some great tentation albeit we feele it not present Dauid lost and wanted this feeling l Psal 151. when he prayed God to create in him a cleane heart and to renew a right spirit within him But was it vtterly lost No for he sayth Take not away thy Spirit from me In this case it shall be good for vs to remember the former mercies of God toward vs and consider how hee hath dealt with vs and thereby assure our harts that howsoeuer God for a season with-holdeth the
his Religion where they cannot but heare God dishonoured his trueth blasphemed his seruants slandred and reuiled and yet make as though they heard nothing or saw nothing or could speake nothing for they stop their eares and close their eyes and shut their mouths to the discountenancing of Religion and the encouraging of euill persons How many are there that make the true professors of the word and the faithfull Seruants of God a common by-word and their Table-talke at their bankets and meetinges Wee are at such times ashamed of Christ of our faith of our religion of any matter that may tend to the edification of our soules but wee are not ashamed of the workes of the Deuill and of the fruits of darknesse We are not ashamed to fill our tables what shall I say with spewing nay worse then spewing with open blasphemy and swearing with slandering and reuiling of our brethren Such were the enemies that Dauid had experience of they reioysed and assembled themselues against him y Ps 35 15 16 and 69 12 13 the verie abiects tare him and ceased not with the false scoffers at bankets gnashing their teeth against him When he prayed daily vnto God and the zeale of his house did euen eate him vp hee became a Prouerbe vnto them they that sate in the gate spake of him and the drunkards sang songs of him When wee see godly men thus handled and their profession in our meetings taunted let vs open our mouths in the cause of the dumbe let vs giue glory to God in the midst of our assemblies and not suffer the faithful to be so foulely traduced and Religion it selfe through their sides to be nipped and despighted Let vs follow the counsell of the Wise man z Prou. 31 8 9 24 10 11 Open thy mouth for the dumbe in the cause of all the children of destruction Open thy mouth iudge righteously and iudge the afflicted and the poore We are willed according to our places and power by all lawfull meanes to helpe the afflicted and to succour the distressed We must not be faint-hearted and afraide to speake for them This is it which the Prophet teacheth a Psal 22 22. I wil declare thy name vnto my Brethren in the middest of the Congregation will I praise thee This is a duty to be practised of vs so often as we see our Brethren reuiled their profession taunted and Religion it selfe slandered I heare of thy loue and faith We haue heard before the commendation of Philemons profession so that Paule being farre remoued from him yet had notice of it Now wee are to consider wherein his profession stoode and wherefore he is commended The things for which hee is praised are these two Faith and Loue. He might haue named many other graces and gifts of God his knowledge his temperance his patience his meeknesse his gentlenesse his goodnesse his long-suffering but these are the cheefe and principall these perfect a Christians mans saluation For our happinesse standeth and consisteth in two things partly in our Communion with Christ our head and partly in our coniunction and fellowshippe with the members of Christ Faith is that which vniteth vs with Christ our head loue ioyneth vs together one with another which are the members of his body Doctrine 5. Faith and loue do commend a man to God his Church From hence wee learne that the cheefe things that commend a man to God and his Church are faith in Christ and loue to the Saints of God Among all the guifts of God which bring vnto vs a good report the principall are to be a beleeuer in Christ and to shew forth the fruits of mercy This appeareth in all the examples of the Fathers and Patriarkes of elder times that liued both before the flood and since the flood euen vnto the comming of Christ for by it a Heb. 11 2. our Elders were well reported of By Faith Abell offered vnto God a greater Sacrifice then Caine by the which he obtained witnesse that he was righteous God testifying of his gifts by the which faith also he being dead yet speaketh By faith was Enoch b Heb. 11. 5. 39 translated that he should not see death neyther was he found for God hath translated him for before he was translated hee was reported of that he had pleased God It is saide of Abraham that aboue hope he beleeued c Rom. 4 18 22. 1 8 and 16 4. vnder hope it was imputed to him for righteousnesse The Apostle speaking of the Romaines saith d Colos 4 1. I thank my God through Iesus Christ for you all because your Faith is published throughout the whol world And afterward he greeteth Aquila and Priscilla his fellow-helpers in Christ Iesus who for his life were ready to lay downe their owne neckes to whome not onely he gaue thankes but also all the Churches of the Gentiles So hee giueth thankes to God e 1 Thes 1 3. when he heard of the faith of the Colossians which they had in Christ Iesus and of their loue toward all Saints he praiseth God without ceasing remembering the effectuall Faith and diligent loue which were found in the Church of the Thessalonians All these examples teach vs this truth that it is faith and loue and such like graces of Gods spirit wherby we receiue a good report as that wherewithall we are accepted of God and become renowned in the Church Reason 1. The Reasons follow to confirme this Doctrine First they giue vs good acceptaunce and approbation with God and man because they are euident markes and notable Testimonies of our election and perseuerance They are as two eare-markes to know and discerne whose Sheepe we are Hence it is that the Apostle making mention of the Thessalonians in his Prayers who had shewed the effectuall faith and diligent loue the patience of their hope in our Lorde Iesus Christ in the sight of God euen our Father hee addeth f 1 Thes 1 4 Knowing beloued Brethren that ye are elect of God So the same Apostle writing to the Phillippians g Phil. 1 6. saith That because of the fellowship which they had in the Gospell he was perswaded of this same thing that God which had begun this good worke in them would performe it vntill the day of Iesus Christ For howsoeuer the faithfull haue a new name giuen vnto them and written in them h Reuel 12 17 which no man knoweth sauing he that receiueth it yet do the godly after a sort know and vnderstand the election of others the calling of others the iustification of others True it is they are assured of their owne election to eternall life more certainly by the inward Testimony of the spirit neuerthelesse wee haue some knowledge of the election of our Brethren by outward signes and tokens Now there are two things to bee considered the knowledge and iudgement whereof is hard and hidden the one
6. Faith Loue do alwayes go together We learne hereby that faith and Loue are allwaies coupled together faith is not without Loue nor Loue without faith but faith and Loue goe together in all the seruants of God and can neuer be seperated and put asunder When Paule praied for the Thessalonians he remembred these two z 1. Thes 1. 3. to be in them their effectuall faith and their diligent loue It is said of the Church gathered together after the assention of Christ a Acts. 2 44. that all they which beleeued were in one place and had all things common Such as were true beleeuers were also commoners together such as had Faith in Christ had Loue toward the Saints This Luke sheweth more plainly afterward b Act. 4. 32. The multitude of them that beleeued were of one heart and of one soule neither any of them said that any thing of that which he possessed was his owne but they had all thinges common Heere we see Faith and the manifestation of Faith by the fruits of Charity ioyned together To this purpose the Apostle saith c Gal. 5. 6. In Iesus Christ neither Circumcision auayleth any thing neither vncircumcision but faith which worketh by Loue. Heere also he coupleth Faith with Loue in one Yoake declaring that Faith is effectuall in the duties of Loue. So the Apostle Iohn teacheth that faith in Christ and Loue one toward another are thinges euer ioyned together d Iohn 3. 23. This is then his Commandement that wee beleeue in the Name of his sonne Iesus Christ and loue one another as he gaue Commaundement And the Apostle Iames speaking of the effectuall faith of Abraham whereby he beleeued and was iustifyed declareth that e Iam. 2. 22. the Faith wrought with his workes and through the workes was the Faith made perfect All these Texts and Testimonies of Scripture serue to teach vs that our faith must be accompanied with Loue and the one not deuided from the other Reason 1. The truth heereof will better appeare to euery one of vs If wee consider the Reasons For first they are as the Tree and the Fruite as the Roote and the Branch as the Fountaine and the Streame as the cause and the effect Faith is the Tree the Roote the Fountaine the cause Loue is the Fruite the Branch the Streame the effect The cause and the effect are Relatiues and haue relation and reference either to other● so that the cause cannot be without his effect nor the effect without his cause and therefore both these must goe together The Prophet describeth the blessed man f Psal 1. 3. to be like a Tree planted by the Riuers of Waters that will bring forth her friute in due season whose Leafe shall not fade so whatsoeuer he shall do shall prosper Reason 2. Secondly faith separated from Loue or Loue separated from faith is a false faith and a false Loue. Faith without Loue or separated from the fruits of Loue is dead and without life a naked name without the thing an empty shaddow without substance a dead carcasse without breath It is nothing worth without Loue. The Apostle saith If a man had all faith so that he could remoue Mountaines g 1. Cor. 13. 1. 2. and had not Loue it were nothing he should be as sounding Brasse or a tinkeling Cymball So we read in the Epistle of Iames i Iames 2 20. That the Faith which is without workes is dead it is a Bastard Fayth a counterfet Faith an idle Faith which is no true Faith indeede but onely in Name For as a painted hand is no hand so a seeming Faith is no Faith Againe Loue without Faith is without his right order yea without his life soule his true cause and forme and so not good but euill not approued but reiected of God k Heb. 11 6. Rom. 14 23. For without Faith it is vnpossible to please God and whatsoeuer is not of Faith is sinne All workes of Iustice Mercy Righteousnesse to releeue the poore to feed the hungry to cloath the naked without Fayth are nothing worth nay all these beautifull shewes are beautifull sinnes except they be seasoned with Faith Againe to afflict thy soule to humble thy selfe to heare the word to receiue the Sacraments without Loue that is to do the duties of the first Table and to neglect them of the second Table is but Hypocrisie and maketh vs abhominable in the sight of God Seeing then Faith and Loue are as the cause and the effect that liue together seeing they loose their Names and Natures being disioyned and diuided one from another wee see it euidently and strongly to appeare that Faith in Christ and Loue to the Brethren as Mother and Daughter are ioyned together in euery true Christian Vse 1. The Vses are now to be considered First seeing these two guiftes are coupled together one with another it followeth that they must neuer be separated in a Christian man He that is ioyned with the head must also bee ioyned with the members and hee that hath his part in the Communion of Saints hath his fellowship also with Christ If it be a generall rule deliuered by Christ l Math. 19 6. that the thinges which God hath coupled together no man must separate it holdeth in this particular that Faith and Loue are not to be disioyned and dismembered forasmuch as God hath lodged them as two ghests in one house locked them vp as two Pearles and Iewels in one Closset It is a rule published by the m Cicer. de offic lib. 2. Heathen that all Vertues are knit together in one Chaine so that he which hath one hath all of them hee that wanteth one of them wanteth all so is it with this worthy paire of Heauenly graces we must not haue a Faith without Workes nor Workes without Faith but our Faith must be fruitfull to bring forth Workes and our Workes must bee thankfull to confesse them to be receyued from Faith Our Faith worketh by Loue our Loue liueth by Faith our Faith respecteth Christ our Loue respecteth the Saints Thus must these two be found in euery one of vs for they meete together in all such as shall be saued This n Titus 3 8. made the Apostle say in his Epistle to Titus Chap. 3. This is a true saying and these thinges I will thou shouldest affirme that they which haue beleeued God might bee carefull to shew forth Good-Workes These thinges are good and profitable vnto men Let vs examine our owne hearts whether we finde these two graces in vs which must bee as two twins that reioyce and take delight to bee together or two Sisters that accompanie one with another like Martha and Marie in one house so must these be two Vertues in one heart Hence it is that the Apostle Iohn saith in his first Epistle o 1 Iohn 4 20 21. If any man say I Loue
threw him into the water to drowne him and at all times sought to destroy him when he beheld with the eyes of a Father that his childe fomed at the mouth gnashed with his teeth pined away in his body and was bruised in his bones hee was tempted with vnbeleefe and this made him cry out with teares a Marke 9 24 Lord I beleeue helpe mine vnbeleefe This is it wherein the Lord forewarned and fore-armed Peter b Luke 22 32. Behold Satan hath desired you to winnow you as Wheat but I haue prayed for thee that thy faith faile not He prayed not that their Faith should not be tried but that it should not be destroyed forasmuch as they must on euery side be assayled But the Faith of many is such that they say they perfectly beleeue and they thanke God they neuer doubted in all their life This Fath is no Faith it is an idle conceite a vaine perswasion a foolish presumption Lastly the true Faith encreaseth by degrees it is like vnto a graine of mustard seede which at the first is the least of all seedes c Math. 13 31 which afterward groweth vnto a Tree that the Birdes of the Ayre come and builde their Nestes in it and therefore wee must d Rom. 1 17. proceede from Faith to Faith But many amongst vs that will needes be in the number of the faithfull neuer feele these Degrees of Faith they see not any encreasing or decreasing any shining or ecclipsing of their Faith Nay they neuer examine themselues whether they be in the Faith or not They neuer consider whether they go forwarde or backeward in the wayes of Godlinesse they can cast vp their accounts euerie Weeke with the worlde but they can suffer whole moneths and yeares to passe ouer their heades and neuer once offer to make leuell with the Lord. If wee will assure our owne hearts that wee haue this true and perfect Faith in Christ let vs obserue the manner and measure of it the steppes and degrees of it how we walke by it and labour by all holy meanes to encrease it in vs. Thus much touching the Obiect of Faith Now let vs consider the Obiect of Loue. Loue toward the Saints The meaning of these words is first to be obserued and then the Doctrines are to be gathred which the Spirit of God offereth in this place to our considerations By loue we are to vnderstand the fruits of loue mercy consolation compassion brotherly kindnes reliefe pity and whatsoeuer fruits of charity we see them want stand in need of It standeth in the affection of the mind in the words of the mouth and in the workes of the hand By Saints we do not vnderstand such as are deade and deceased but those that are liuing not such as are of the Church Triumphant but in the Church Militant not such as are crownd with glory in heauen but those that dwell vpon the earth not such as are inrolled in the Popes Register and stand in redde Letters in the Popish Kalender but the faithfull whose Names are Written in the Booke of life which are the true members of Iesus Christ Thus much touching the true Interpretation of the Wordes We see heere that Loue is described by the Obiect thereof to wit the Saintes For as Christ is not the Obiect of our Charity e Psal 16 2. for our wel-dooing extendeth not vnto him so the Saints are not the Obiect of our Faith but as Faith hath respect and relation to Christ so hath loue reference to the Saints Now we haue shewed already that Philemons loue is commended toward the Saints because he had a principall and speciall care of them True it is he neglected not others but he was most of all mindfull of the godly poore and distressed Brethren Doct. 8. The works of mercy are especially to bee shewed to the poore that are godly We learne heereby that the workes of mercy are especially to be shewed to the poore among vs that are faithfull which may bee accounted of the fellowship and Communion of the Saints Howsoeuer all such as are poore are in their pouertie to bee regarded inasmuch as Christ hath taught vs that the poore we shall haue alwayes with vs yet the Godly poore that haue piety ioyned with their pouertie are before others and aboue others to be respected and releeued In the performance of this duty we see the practise of the Prophet Dauid going before vs a psal 16 2 3. and leading vs the way O my soule thou hast said vnto the Lord thou art my Lord my well-dooing extendeth not to thee but to the Saintes that are in the earth and to the excellent all my delight is in them In like manner also our Sauiour Christ describing the manner of the last Iudgement when hee shall giue to euerie one according to his Workes b Math. 25 40 declareth that the fruites of mercie bestowed vpon the members of Christ beeing sicke imprisoned hungrie thirstie naked and in necessity are allowed as notable fruites of a iustifying Faith and of a true loue and accepted as done to Christ himself So the Euangelist Luke testifieth in the Acts that c Acts 4 32. the multitude of them that beleeued were of one heart and of one mind they had all thinges common no man accounted any thing he possessed his owne but to serue the necessary vse of the Saints The Apostle hauing prooued in the Epistle to the Romanes that we are iustified freely by the grace of God without the works of the Law wherby we are at peace with God commeth to set down the fruits of Faith Chap. 12. Reioycing in hope continuing in Prayer d Rom. 12 13 distributing vnto the necessities of the Saints giuing your selues to Hospitality Heereunto come diuers Lawes which God ordained among his people e Deut. 15 17 If one of thy Brethren with thee be poore within any of thy gates in thy Land which the Lord thy God giueth thee thou shalt not harden thine heart nor shut thine hand from thy poore brother but thou shalt open thine hand vnto him and shalt lend him sufficient for his need All these testimonies of Scripture doo proue that the poore which are godly are most of all to bee succoured and sustained as they that for the most part stand in greatest need to be helped Reason 1. The Reasons heereof are to be considered First it is a fruit of our election which we ought to assure to our selues more and more The Apostle Iohn testifieth this f 1 Iohn 3 14. We know that wee are translated from death to life because wee loue the Brethren he that loueth not his Brother abideth in death We ought daily to gather arguments to perswade our hearts of Gods loue towardes vs which we shall see by our loue toward our brethren The election of God is hidden in himselfe the cause of it is not in our selues but we
of those thinges they enioy no more then of those things which they haue not obtained This made the Apostle say f Heb. 6 11 12 We desire that euerie one of you shew the same diligence to the full assurance of hope vnto the end that ye be not sloathfull but followers of them which through Faith and Patience inherit the promises God is constrained oftentimes to take away the means that he sendeth for our good whē we make no good vse of them he taketh away good Pastors he sendeth setteth vp euill Pastors in their roomes when we do not profit nor are careful to make others profit by vs. This the Prophet Zacharie denounceth from the mouth of the Lord g Zach. 17 16 I will raise vp a Shepheard in the Land which shall not looke for the thing that is lost nor seeke the tender Lambes nor healt that that is hurt nor feede that which standeth vp but he shall eate the flesh of the fat and teare the clawes in peeces This also Christ our Sauiour teacheth in the Gospell h Math. 13 12 Whosoeuer hath to him shall be giuen and he shall haue abundance but whosoeuer hath not from him shall be taken away euen that he hath Furthermore in the parable of the man that going into a farre Countrey called vnto him his seruants and deliuered vnto them his goods we see that the euil seruant that hauing receiued a Talent hid it in the ground brought onely a Talent to his Maister againe hath i Math 25 28. that taken from him and it is giuen to him that had gotten and gained fiue Talents It is accounted an euill Tree not that onely which bringeth forth euill fruit but that also which bringeth forth no fruit It is accounted euill ground not onely that which beareth Thornes and Briars but that also which bringeth forth no Corne for the vse of man He is accounted an vniust steward not onely that wasteth his Maisters goods conuerteth thē to his own vse but he that keepeth them safe and sound without imployment which he had receiued to lay out to dispense and to distribute He is accounted an euill seruant not onely that selleth to others or reserueth to himselfe his Maisters Corne which he should haue sowed in the earth that it might haue brought forth great increase and a plentifull Haruest but he that keepeth it by him and in the end deliuereth it backe in the same manner and measure that he tooke it So are we vnfaithfull seruants vniust Stewards and euill bestowers of our Maisters mony if we let it lye by vs and do not imploy it to some gaine If then they be blamed and vnrewarded that gaine nothing what shall they be esteemed that loose the Stocke and dash away the principall Againe if God haue giuen vnto vs this worldes good he requireth of vs to do good with it to helpe those that are in want and to distribute to the necessities of the Saintes Hath God beene liberall to vs that we should be hand-bound and heart-bound vnto others He hath left the poore with vs that we should be in stead of God to them k Exod 4 16. as Moses is said to be giuen to Aaron in Gods stead as a wise Councellor so we are appointed to be vnto them as a wise distributer supplying that which is wanting vnto them How should God giue much vnto vs when for his sake we will not giue a little If we were in their case and condition and had experience how great the misery of want is and how heauy the burden of pouerty is we would be willing to be refreshed comforted and eased l Mat 7 12. Therefore whatsoeuer ye would that men should do to you euen so do ye to them for this is the Law and the Prophets Whatsoeuer we do vnto them shall not be vnregarded or vnrewarded we sow it in a fruitfull ground and we shall reape it againe with great encrease Vse 3. Lastly seeing we must imploy that which we haue receiued to the benefite of others it serueth greatly to comfort such as haue beene careful to communicate to others rhose thinges that they haue receiued and to make them partakers of the same comfort that they haue reaped by them It is a blessed thing when men haue endeuoured to their power to benefit others to exhort them to admonish them to comfort them to refresh them and haue vsed our guiftes to the profit of our bretheren O what a wonderfull comfort and consolation shall it be vnto vs when we must leaue this world and go the way of all flesh to remember that we haue not spared to do good to others wee haue not failed to benifit others we haue not ceased to scatter abroad a part of that which we haue gathered Let vs lay this to our heartes and apply it to our consciences both we that are the Ministers and you that are the people If we that are made watchmen ouer the Citty of God and ouerseers of the Church shall to the vtmost of our power imploy our guifts and spend our selues to giue light to others God will not forget the labour of our hands but great shall be our reward in heauen according to the promise mentioned in Daniell the Prophet m Dan 12 3. They that be wise shall shine as the brightnesse of the Firmament and they that turne many to righteousnesse shall shine as the Starres for euer and euer Heereunto accordeth the answere of Christ to the question of Peter n Luk 12 42 43. Who is a faithfull Steward and wise whom the Maister shall make Ruler ouer his houshold to giue them their portion of meat in season Blessed is that seruant whom his Maister when he commeth shall find so doing We shall find more comfort of conscience and ioy of heart and gladnesse of spirit when we depart this life that we haue beene faithfull in that little committed to our trust and made others partakers of it as well as our selues then if wee had great abundance of earthly blessings and were owners of the whole world The like comfort shall all faithfull people of God find that haue distributed their Maisters goodes they shall receiue their reward according vnto their worke We see the haruest is answereable to the seed time and they shal reap as they haue sowed Then they shall tast the sweetnesse and reap the comfort of their labor bestowed in applying themselues to the profit of others Their last day shall be a blessed day vnto them when they shall finde God as readie to communicate vnto them his glory as they haue bin to do to others their duty and to bestow vpon them the fruits of mercy and the works of charity The greatest good is to seeke to gaine their soules the next is to giue to their bodies On the other side howe vncomfortable shall that day of our leparture be how wofull and full of trouble bringing
to the rule and line of the word If a man giue but a looke toward the Gospell and do not professe himselfe an open enemy vnto it if he shew the least entertainment to the truth and do not set himselfe against the professors of it though he be a common Gamester a rioteous liuer an vsurer an incrocher and oppressor he hath the name and title of a good Christian he hath the praise and commendation of a good professor What ioy therefore can the Children of God haue in such workes of darknesse and in such workers of iniquity We may wish with the Prophet b Ier 9 1. that our head were full of water and our eyes a Fountaine of teares to weepe day and night for the desolation and destruction that hangeth ouer their heads The Husbandman taketh no pleasure to see Tares and Darnel grow in his field in stead of good Corne. The Gardiner cannot without greefe behold weedes spring vp in his Garden in stead of wholesome Hearbes So when we see the Church of God to bring forth Chaffe instead of Wheat Beanes instead of Fruit vice in stead of vertue and sinne in stead of righteousnesse what greater greefe can arise in our heartes or what greater sorrow can be wrought in vs If we greeue through the wickednesse of our waies and prophanenesse of our liues the Children of God we likewise greeue the spirit of God and quench such good motions as are inspired into vs. Vse 3. Lastly it is our duty to seeke the good and prosperity of the Church by all good meanes and to draw them and moue them to embrace the waies of saluation This duty hath many branches growing from it For seeing Gods graces bestowed giue occasion of great ioy it ought to teach vs to exhort one an other to comfort them that are comfortlesse to reproue them that goe astray to pray for our bretheren to seeke to gaine and winne them to the faith and when they are gained and wonne to reioyce vnfainedly at their conuersion and if we see any hope of their repentance and turning to God to conuerse with them and not to be ashamed of their company Certainly he is not truely conuerted himselfe that doth not reioyce at the conuersion of others He neuer knew what true repentance meaneth that conceiueth no ioy at the repentance of others He is ignorant of the way of saluation that is not greatly delighted and comforted when others begin to be saued that we say of them as Christ doth of Zaccheus c Luk 19 9. This day is saluation come to this house forasmuch as he is also become the sonne of Abraham This doth directly reproue foure sortes of men The first reproofe First such as reioyce in those that will sinne with them and runne into all excesse of riot with them Great is the delight that sinners take in the society and company one of another They ioyne hand in hand together it is their solace and pastime to agree together as bretheren in euill it is as meat and drinke vnto them to follow after vngodlinesse Christ teacheth that the Angels in Heauen reioyce for one sinner that repenteth Our ioy ariseth vpon their repentance Their turning to God worketh our reioysing So long as men flatter themselues in their sinnes and proceed in their euill doing no matter of ioy is offered vnto vs. The second reproofe Secondly such as seeke to draw them to euill to vanity and to all vngodlinesse a common sicknesse that raigneth in our daies when men entise one another to euil These men beare the Image of the Deuil and are transformed into his likenesse For how can they gaine their bretheren to Godlinesse that are meanes to seduce them and so to bring them to all vngodlinesse Hence it is that Salomon councelleth vs d Prou 1 10. when sinners entise vs not to consent vnto them It is a greeuous sinne to be an entiser but it shall not excuse him that is entised Let vs therefore know that we must exhort one an other to piety not to impiety and further one another to saluation not to condemnation bring one another to heauen not to hell The thirde reproofe Thirdly it teprooueth those that enuy and murmure at the calling of our Brethren to Repentaunce and at their bringing into the Kingdome of Christ This corrupt affection was in Ioshua e Num. 11 29. who repined that the Elders had the guift of prophesie bestowed vpon them as well as Moses This was in f Ionas 4 1 2. Ionah when he had preached to the Niniuites and saw the great mercy of God in sparing of them and not destroying them according to hls preaching and their deseruinges was angry and it displeased him exceedingly He regarded his owne credit and estimation among men more then their conuersion and preseruation This was in the elder Brother of the riotous and prodigall Sonne g Luke 15 31 when he saw the ioy of his Father at the receiuing of his Childe and his readinesse to forgiue he was angry and would not go in But his Father perswadeth him that there is no cause why he should be grieued inasmuch as he is not himselfe hindered or indamaged by this receyuing of his Brother into fauour and reproueth him in that hauing no regard of his brother he is sorry for the common ioy conceiued of his returne That ioy did offend him whereof he should haue bin a Companion These two Reasons are to be noted and obserued to root vp all enuy and malice out of our hearts considering that we loose nothing whensoeuer God doth graciously receiue into fauour those which through sinne were falne from him that it is haughtinesse without godlinesse greefe without mercy and cruelty without compassion not to reioyce and be glad when we see any of our fellow seruants restored from death to life raised from sinne to righteousnesse and found who before were lost He then is vnrighteous and vngodly who enuyeth his brother receiued into fauour and he doth peruersely and maliciously which doth murmure at the mercy of God vpon our brethren The fourth reproofe Fourthly it condemneth such as faile in the former duty that neuer exhort their brethren to godlinesse neuer disswade them from sinne neuer comfort those that are in misery neuer praying for them that are in distresse neuer desire God to be good vnto them neuer reioyce with them when God hath shewed mercie We liue in these times when the hand of God is stretched out against many of our brethren they are restrained and shut vp by the contagion of plague pestilence This their woful condition doth cal vpon vs and crie vnto vs to be mindfull of them and to pray to God our common Father to haue pittie vpon them to call in his arrowes that he hath shot against them to remember his olde mercies that he was wont to shew to his inheritance The Prophet exhorteth and
stirreth vp the people h Psal 122 6. and 51 9. to pray for the peace of Ierusalem and that dutie which he requireth of others he daily practiseth himself praying vnto GOD to bee fauourable to Syon and to builde the Walles of Ierusalem according to his good pleasure Let vs examine our selues whether this affection bee found in vs and learne to testifie our Loue towards them by procuring their good and safetie When wee are in miserie our desire is to taste of the kindnesse and compassion of our Brethren Let vs bee as carefull to promote their happinesse God is readie to heare vs his eares are open vnto our Prayers so that wee plainely bewray that wee shall remaine without feeling and sence of their miserie vnlesse wee pray vnto him for them who is the God of all Mercie and the Father of all Consolation Because by thee Brother the Bowelles of the Saints are refreshed These Wordes are a reason rendered of the words going before declaring wherefore he had great ioy and consolation in his loue because the needie Members of Christ were succoured by him This tendeth to the praise of Philemon who by his Charitie and mercifull dealing toward the poore Saints did continually refresh and comfort the bowelles of them that wanted Doctrine 5. The workes of mercy are to be shewed toward the poore Saintes Wee learne from hence that the workes of mercy and compassion are to be shewed toward the poore Saintes It is our duty to be bountifull and liberall to those that are in necessity This Doctrine is proued and confirmed vnto vs by sundry commandements and examples in the word of God Heereunto commeth the charge giuen by Moses a Deut 15 7. If one of thy bretheren with thee be poore within any of thy Gates in thy Land which the Lord thy God giueth thee thou shalt not harden thy heart nor shut thine hand from thy poore brother but thou shalt open thine hand vnto him and shalt lend him sufficient for his neede which he hath Likewise Salomon saith b Eccle 11 1 2. Cast thy bread vpon the waters for after many daies thou shalt find it giue a portion to seuen and also to eight for thou knowest not what euill shall be vpon the earth Also the Apostle speaketh to the same purpose c Heb 13 16. To do good and to distribute forget not for with such sacrifices God is pleased The examples of the Children of God that haue gone before vs in the perfourmance of this duty are many both in the old and new Testament It is recorded to the perpetuall praise and commendation d 1 King 18 13. of Obadiah that he hid the Prophets of God in a Caue from the cruelty of Iesabell and sustained them with food and ministred all thinges necessary vnto them The like we see in Iob e Iob 31 16. who restrained not the poore of their desire nor caused the eyes of the Widdow to faile he saw not any perish for want of clothing nor any poore without couering his loynes blessed him because he was warmed with the fleece of his sheepe The widdow of f 1 King 17 10. Zarephath releeued Eliah in the Famine The Apostle commendeth Onesiphorus g 2 Tim 1 16. because he oft refreshed him and was not ashamed of his Chaine but when he was at Rome he sought him out very diligently and found him The Euangelist Luke in the Actes of the Apostles declareth that Tabitha h Act 9 36. 39 and 10 2. was full of good workes and almes which she did for she made many Coates and Garments to couer the Saintes Cornelius is reported to be a deuout man and one that feared God with al his houshold which gaue much almes to the people and praysed God continually All these Testimonies of holy Scripture teach vs that to do good to yeeld releefe and to minister comfort vnto men especially to the Saintes of God is a necessary duty belonging to all the seruants of God Reason 1. Now as we haue heard sundry commandements and examples to moue vs heereunto so diuerse reasons may be produced to confirme the same vnto vs. The wise man in the booke of Ecclesiastes is plentifull in this argument First he presseth vpon vs this duty in respect of the rich reward that shall be rendred to those that are mercifull to the poore For exhorting all men to i Eccl 11 1. cast their bread vpon the Waters that is euen where it seemeth to be lost where no hope of recompence remaineth he giueth this reason for after many daies thou shalt finde it And in the booke of the Prouerbes he saith k Prou 19 17. Mat 10 42. He that hath mercy vpon the poore lendeth vnto the Lord and the Lord will recompence him that which he hath giuen When one lendeth to an honest man he feareth no losse but hopeth to receiue againe much more may we be assured that God himselfe will restore and repay who is not as the sonnes of men that he should delude or deceiue vs. Reason 2. Secondly he moueth vs to the fruites of Charity and compassion from the consideration of the vncertainty and vanity of all things insomuch as albeit we know what is present we are ignorant of that which is to come All things in this life are mutable and vncertain 1 The life of man is vncertaine we know not how short a time we haue to liue and to exercise our liberallity Wee know not what one l Prou 27 1. day may bring forth and that one minute and moment may cut off all opportunity to shew mercy 2 It is vncertaine whether the riches which now we haue in plenty and abundance shall continue and abide with vs. The Apostle calleth Riches by this title m 1 Tim 6 17 vncertaine riches and Salomon saith n Prou 23 5. Wilt thou cast thine eyes vpon them which are nothing For Riches taketh her to her Winges as an Eagle and flyeth into the heauen Who was to be compared with Iob among all the men of the East yet suddainly he was stripped of them and made one of the poorest It is vncertaine what our estate and condition may be and to what necessity our selues may come wee may be brought to that extremity that we may stand in need of the help of others and be constrained to aske almes and begge our releefe of them when as we by the righteous iudgement of God shal find rich men so affected toward vs as others haue found vs when we had the goods of this world Lastly it is vncertaine what thy sonne and heire will prooue thou knowest not whether he will riotously wast and prodigally consume all that thou hast left which thou hast gotten with care and trauell or whether a stranger shall enter vpon thy labours and vsurpe that which is not his owne This is that reason which Salomon setteth downe in his
the estate of the poore Sain●s or to enquire how they fare Alas how should they offer their helpe of their owne accord and open the bowels of pitty before they be entreated that will depart from nothing but vrged and constrained by force of Law or taxation of others Or how should they extend their compassion to the poore that are absent who are like vnto the rich man that despised Lazarus lying at his gate and woulde not giue him the crums that fell from his table It is noted to the great commendation of Dauid that after the death of Saule he sought not reuenge vpon his issue and posterity but did good to his childrens children said g 2 Sam. 9 1. Is there any left of the house of Saul that I may shew mercy for Ionathans sake So ought we to seek out the seruants of God and to finde out the poor and to enquire after the distressed Saints and say Is there any of the poore yet left to whom we may shew mercy for the Lordes sake For they represent the person of Christ when they come vnto vs Christ himselfe commeth vnto vs and when they aske of vs it is Christ that asketh of vs and saith I am hungry I am thirsty I am naked I am harbourlesse so that whatsoeuer we would do to Christ if he were with vs the same must wee do to them that are among vs. 8 Wherefore although I haue great libertie in Christ to commaund thee that which is thy dutie 9 Yet for loues sake I rather beseech thee being such a one euen Paule an Old man yea now a prisoner of Iesus Christ. The order of the words IN the words going before wee haue heard the preface or entrance of this Epistle consisting partly in the Title of it and partly in certaine Prayers vsed by the Apostle Now we are to proceed to the rest of the Epistle wherein we must obserue two points First the cheefe matter is handled Secondly the whole matter is concluded The cheefe matter is touching Onesimus or himselfe The first concerning Onesimus is handled from the eight verse to the 22. verse The latter touching himselfe is expressed in the 22. Verse wherein he willeth to prepare lodging for him hoping by their Prayers to be deliuered out of prison The former point is set downe in this short speech or sentence I Paule pray thet to receiue Onesimus The parts of which sentence are not barely propounded but amplified and then the whole is prooued confirmed We are therein to consider three partes First the intreating and praying of Philemon Secondly the person praying and intreating Thirdly the person for whom he prayeth and intreateth His praying of Philemon is declared by a diuers reason Although I haue great libertie to command thee yet I pray thee and beseech thee The person praying and beseeching is Paule who is described generally being such a one and then particularly by his old age and by his bonds Touching the person for whom hee beggeth and beseecheth we shall see afterward Verse 10. The meaning of the words This is to be obserued touching the order of the words Now let vs consider the interpretation of them First he speaketh of his liberty in Christ that is as an Apostle and Minister of Christ whose Messenger or Ambassador he is whereby he insinuateth and signifieth that this power is not his owne or of himself but is Christs it is not the seruants but the Lords it is not mans or the Ministers but Gods For euen at Magistrates ordained and sent foorth by the Prince can do nothing in their owne name but in the Kings name so Ministers called of God and fitted to the office wherunto they are called must teach command reprooue and exhort not in their owne name but in the name of Christ their Lord and Maister He addeth That for loues sake he intreateth him Loue in this place may bee referred either to Philemon or to Paule seeing the Apostle leaueth it at large and restraineth it not either to his loue or to his owne If it be referred to Philemon it carieth this sence I do intreat thee and not command thee for thy compassion and loues sake which I haue before commended in thee and thou so diligently and deuoutly shewest vnto the Saints But I do not take this to bee the naturall meaning of the words so that we are to vnderstand them rather of Paules loue toward Philemon that he so tendered and loued him as that he had rather deale with him in kindnesse and by intreatance then roughly and seuerely Lastly he sayth Paule an Old man and now a prisoner of Christ In these wordes is included great force to moue Philemon Wee must vnderstand the first Wordes of his Age not of his Office of his yeares not of his Ministery and hee calleth himselfe a prisoner of Christ that is for Christs sake and the preaching of his Gospell So then according to this Interpretation these wordes are thus much in effect as if hee had sayde Seeing I heare euerie where of thy feruent Loue and exceeding tender Compassion thou bearest to the poore Saintes though I may manie wayes commaund thee in thinges that are right and equall as in that I am an Apostle of our Lorde Iesus Christ in that I am stricken in Age readie to leaue this life and in that I am nowe a Captiue and Prisoner for the cause of Christ and his Gospell yet the loue and tender affection I beare vnto thee do moue me rather to beseech and to intreat thee Now let vs see what may be obserued out of these wordes Obseruations out of these wordes First of all the Apostle would not do that which he might doe and was lawfull for him to doe which may teach the Minister and all men sometimes to be content to depart from their right as Abraham did toward Lot when a strife arose betweene them h 1 Cor 9 4. and as Paule did oftentimes according as himselfe testifyeth in his Epistles Which condemneth those that stand strictly vpon their right i 1 Cor 10. and consider what is lawfull but forget what is fit and expedient For in thinges that are indifferent we are not by and by allowed to do that which is lawfull k 1 Cor 9 12 15. nor to vse our power but must suffer all thinges that the Gospell of Christ be not hindred Likewise the Apostle would not sometimes take any wages of the Church but preached freely and was not chargeable to any because he would not giue occasion of speaking euil against the Gospell Secondly the Apostle publisheth his liberty to command but it is onely in Christ whose Ministers he and we are and not our owne Thus he calleth himselfe an Apostle l Galtath 1 1. not by man nor by the will of man but of Christ This is the difference betweene a ciuill Magistrate and an Ecclesiasticall Minister The ciuill Magistrate may
God went out to warre y Deut 20 10 the Lord commanded them to offer conditions of peace to that Citty if it refuse to make peace they should besiege it smite it and destroy it So should we when we execute our Office first offer peace before we proclaime warre first allure by Gentlenesse before we thunder out iudgements first exhort before we threaten In the materiall building all the stones that are to be fitted to the building are not of one nature some are soft and easie to be hewed and hammered others more hard and of a flintier marble disposition they require sharp tooles strong blowes sturdy armes before they can bc brought into forme or be squared for their place which they are to hold So it is with the liuely stones of the spirituall Temple of God some haue soft hearts of flesh are of humble contrite spirits like the bruised reed or the smoaking flaxe others haue hearts hard as the Adament and cannot easily be brought to feele the strokes of the word of God These are not to be dealt withall and handled alike but after a diuerse māner This is the counsel of the Apostle Iude z Iude 1 22. Haue compassion of some in putting difference and other saue with feare pulling them out of the fire and hate euen that Garment which is spotted by the flesh This serueth to reproue first such as vse vnseasonable lenity when Godly seuerity is required Some diseases require sharpe medicines This is a great sinne whether it be in the family in the common Wealth or in the Church Ely heard many complaints against his sonnes that they sinned against God and caused his people to abhorre his offerings yet he did beare with them and was not sharpe toward them as he ought to haue beene a 1 Sam 2 23. he said vnto them Why do ye such things for of all this people I heare euill reports of you do no more my sonnes for it is no good report that I heare which is that ye make the Lordes people to trespasse He shewed mercy where he should shew seuerity and he winked at those that were worthy to be punished This proceedeth not from a loue to our Children but rather from a loosenesse in our selues and a carelesnesse of their good and saluation This causeth vice to encrease and maketh sinne grow in all places The like wee see in Ahab King of Israell when God had deliuered a cruell enemy into his hand he spared him b 1 King 20 42. and suffered him to escape out of his hands a man whom God appointed to die and thereby is threatned that his owne life should redeeme and ransome the life of his enimy and so the one pay the price of the other The like we might handle in Saule who receiuing a commandement to destroy Agag and his substance together with the Amalekites c 1 Sam 15. he gaue life to those that God would haue him put to death and shewed mercy to such as should be smitten with the sword This negligence in punishing offenders is too common in the common Wealth and is a meanes to increase sinne to see sinne punished It is a true saying of the wise man d Prou 20 30 The blewnesse of the wound serueth to purge the euill and the stripes within the bowels of the Belly Thus it falleth out also oftentimes in the Church When the incestuous person among the Corrinthians was according to the Ordinance of God to be cast out he was suffered in the Church and had not the censures of the Church executed against him e 1 Cor 5 6. so that the Apostle telleth them that their reioycing was not good Know ye not that a little leauen leaueneth the whole lumpe purge out therefore the old leauen that ye may be a new lumpe Such was the carelesnesse and coldnesse in many of the Churches of Asia f Reuel 2 4 they were too milde toward Heretikes and euill liuers and suffered the sword of excommunication to rust in the sheath which should be drawne out to the terrour and feare of all stubborne and vnrepentant sinners Secondly it reproueth such as are too sharpe and rigorous against offenders and forget all rules of Charity toward them All lawes must not be written with bloud The law of God albeit it did not stint what stripes euery offender should haue that deserued stripes yet it limiteth and restraineth what number they should not exceed that the offender might thinke himselfe loued not hated all the Corrections that God laieth vpon his Church come from loue True it is the Pastors and Ministers are to rebuke such as are fallen but when they see sorrow for sinne and repentance from dead workes wrought in them they should begin to raise them vp againe and comfort them with the precious promises of the Gospel least they should be ouerwhelmed with despaire be ●wallowed vp with ouer-much heauinesse Our Sauiour hath set downe an order perpetually to be obserued touching offenders g Mat 18 15. If thy brother trespasse against thee go and tell him his fault betweene thee and him if he heare thee thou hast wonne thy brother but if he heare thee not take yet with thee one or two that by the mouth of two or three Witnesses euery word may be confirmed c. We must proceed slowly and as it were with a leaden foot against our brethen and beware of rash and hasty iudgement The auncient Church in former times offended this way being so austere and seuere against offenders who for small offences enioyned punishment for the space of many yeares This is the sinne of such as are of the separation and haue departed from our Churches condemning our Church to be no Church our Ministers to be no Ministers our sacraments to be no sacraments refusing to heare the word at our mouthes to pray and communicate with our people and to performe other religious duties with vs. Thus they haue noted and marked vs out with the blacke cole of condemnation who deserue rather to be excommunicated by vs had they not voluntarily excommunicated themselues from vs. On the other side it behoueth vs to shew compassion to them that sinne of ignorance or infirmity and to season our admonitions and exhortations with a louing affection let vs beare with them so long as we see any hope of amendment following the example of Moses h Exod 32 31. who mourned and prayed for the Isralites fallen in Idolatry and of Christ i Luke 19 41. who wept ouer Ierusalem to make them weepe for their sinnes who seemed to haue no sight or feeling of them Lastly it reprooueth the Church of Rome who are very Tirants and Tormenters of the people of God for as they haue burdened them from time to time with mens Traditions so for euery slight matter they haue thundred against them with their excommunications and thereby made themselues terrible to the
whole world Hence it is that the Pope and his Bishops threaten Princes chalenge authority to excommunicate them to depose them and to discharge their subiects of subiection and alleageance This is cruelty ioyned with impiety this is seuerity accompanied with Hipocrisie this is cursing and banning contrary to the Christian faith and therefore being causelesse they cannot come Vse 3. Thirdly and last of all we learne for our obedience that whensoeuer entreating beseeching gentle or louing dealing is vsed to call men home to God and to themselues it is their duty to yeeld themselues and to embrace earnestly the mercies of God offered vnto them The sinne of contempt and contumacy is fearefull when the bountifulnesse of God is despised his mercies loathed his patience and long suffering abused If we will not heare when he crieth to vs k Prou 1 28. we shall cry also in the daies of our misery and he will not heare vs in our trouble but mocke at our affliction Our Sauiour remembreth the Iewes that he would often haue gathered them together as an Hen gathereth her Chickens vnder her winges but they would not and therefore their Habitation should be left vnto them desolate First he preached mercy then iudgement first he gathereth then he scattereth first he counselleth then he confoundeth This is the order which the Apostle teacheth to be obserued by the Lord himselfe in the first place by patience and long suffering he calleth men to repentance neuerthelesse if they will not turne vnto him but harden their hearts against the meanes and Ministry that he vseth to call them he hoardeth and heapeth vp wrath for them against the day of wrath This hath beene the dealing of God with vs in this Land more then fifty years he hath preached vnto vs by his mercies he hath intreated vs and prouoked vs by peace by plenty by patience by temporall blessings by spirituall blessings by prosperity which the glorious Gospell of Christ hath brought with it he hath planted his Vine among vs he hath looked for good fruit answearable to such great meanes and long mercies But what haue we perfourmed according to that which God hath expected and how haue we behaued our selues in respect of this bountifulnesse which we haue tasted and receiued Surely we become euery yeare worse then other l Esay 5 4. more barren and lesse fruitfull we are not onely void of good fruits but full of euill fruits bearing nothing but leaues of vanity and shewes of Hipocrisie We cannot deny but God as a carefull dresser of his Vineyard hath often times beene constrained to take his pruning knife into his handes he hath scourged vs by famine and chastened vs by plague and pestilence yea still doth visit vs in sundry places and yet though he haue put vs into the furnace and tried vs with the fire of his iudgements he cannot purge out our drosse or take away our tinne or cleanse away our corruptions from vs but still we swarue from him swarue with blasphemies with oathes with prophanenesse with drunkennesse with whoredome with contempt of the Gospell we abound with the fruits of the flesh and workes of darknesse which agree not with that light into which we are brought The word of God was more reuerently esteemed better regarded and more carefully practised thirty yea forty yeares agone then it is in these declining times in which we liue We haue a long time gone backward and not forward we grow downeward and not vpward wee are farther from the Kingdome of Heauen and not neerer What then remaineth for vs m Heb 10 27. but a fearefull looking for of iudgment and violent fire which shall destroy his aduersaries If he open the Treasures of his wrath and the store-houses of his iudgements if he bring forth the arrowes of his quiuer and draw his sword out of his sheath let vs prepare to meet our God by vnfained repentance let vs forsake our sinnes which bring all curses and callamities vpon vs. If his mercies will not moue vs his iudgements shall remoue vs out of our places The Figge-Tree is first n Luk 13 9. Husbanded and digged about if the digging and dunging of it will not make it bring forth fruite it is appointed to be cut downe The patience of the Lord goeth before denuntiation of iudgement or execution of punishment A Phisition neuer aduentureth vpon a desperate Phisicke but in a desperate disease A Surgeon applieth salues and all possible remedies before he proceed to the cutting off of Arme or Leg So hath the Lord dealt with vs so he doth deale with vs if his word could conuert vs his iudgements should not ouertake vs if his mercy could turne vs his iustice should not destroy vs if his loue could saue vs his wrath should not condemne vs. Being such a one euen Paule aged and now also a Prisoner of Iesus Christ We heard in the wordes before Paules beseeching of Philemon amplified by a diuerse reason of commanding Now we haue to consider the second part of the sentence which is a description of his person generally and particularly which hath great force to moue him and instruct him He mentioneth his age and the tearme of his life now almost ended together with his afflictions and bands for Christs sake and the Gospels thereby to teach him not to be ashamed of him or to be offended at him but to reuerence his person and to and to obey his word Heere then we see that the Apostle doth chalenge much to be due vnto him which he might iustly doe in regard of sundry priuiledges of his calling of his age of his sufferings and imprisonment that he sustained for the cause of Christ Doctrine 3. Superiors in guiftes age are to be reuerenced aboue others Heereby we learne that such as God hath marked out from others by age guiftes or other priuiledges are much to be regarded and reuerenced We must acknowledge it to be a duty belonging vnto vs to yeeld much to such as God hath distinguished and seperated from the common order of men by length of life by greatnesse of guiftes or other worthy respects which they haue receiued The Apostle teacheth that the King and Magistrate are to be honoured a Rom 13 1. Let euery soule be subiect to the higher powers for there is no power but of God and the powers that be are ordained of God And 1 Pet. 2. 17. Honour b 1 Pet 17 2 13 14. all men loue brotherly fellowship feare God honour the King Thus also he speaketh a little before Submit your selues vnto all manner Ordinance of man for the Lords sake whether it be vnto the King as vnto the superior or vnto Gouernours as vnto them that are sent of him for the punnishment of euill doers and for the praise of them that do well Touching such as are superiors in age it is a precept giuen by Moses c Leuit 19 32
with the Kid the Lyon did eate Straw like the Bullocke Seeing then that the conuersion of a man worketh in him the loue of God and man seeing before true conuersion we hate others and other hate vs and lastly seeing after true conuersion we beginne to make conscience of hurting and harming others it followeth that such as by nature were as Beares and Buls as Aspes and Vipers as Wolues and Cockatrices as Lyons and Leopards that is fierce cruell couetous iniurious and vniust being conuerted to the Faith and gathered into the Church are made gentle milde and mercifull Vse 1. Now let vs come to the consideration of the Vses and to the application of the Doctrine to our selues First of all we see hereby that they are greatly deceiued that thinke true godlinesse to be vnprofitable and no gaine at al to returne and redowne to the practiser of it Great is the benefit of true Religion and much is the profit of our conuersion Without this a man is no better then a Beast nay worse then any Beast He liueth like a Swine hee dyeth like a Dogge he becommeth afterward a Deuill The holy man Iob describing the life and death of vngodly men saith of them q Iob. 21 14 15. They spend their daies in wealth and suddenly they go downe to the Graue They say also vnto God Depart from vs for we desire not the knowledge of thy waies Who is the Almighty that we should serue him And what profit should we haue if we should pray vnto him This is the voyce of Atheists that regard not God yea that thinke there is no God But true Religion bringeth with it the greatest profit and no gaine is comparable vnto it It maketh vs profitable to our selues and others the benefit that it bringeth to others is both to their Bodies and Soules Hence it is that the Wise man saith r Pro. 3 14 19 The Marchandize thereof is better then the Marchandize of Siluer and the gaine thereof is better then Gold it is more precious then Pearles and all things that thou canst desire are not to be compared to her Length of daies is in her right hand and in her left hand riches and glory her waies are waies of pleasure and all her pathes prosperity she is a Tree of Life to all that lay hold vpon her and blessed is he that retaineth her Howsoeuer therefore the World and the Children of this World doe repute and esteeme of godlinesse it is most certaine it is the greatest Iewell and offereth all other blessings with it Heereunto accordeth the saying of the Apostle Å¿ 1 Tim. 6 6. Godlinesse is great gaine if a man be content with that he hath And in another place t 1 Tim. 4 8. Bodily exercise profiteth little but godlinesse is profitable vnto all thinges which hath the promise of the life present and of that which is to come What can be more profitable then that which maketh a man happy and blessed who is by the fall of man and the corruption of his nature curssed and miserable And who is it that doth not desire blessednesse But godlinesse ioyned with true conuersion of a Sinner to God maketh his State and standing blessed The Psalmist witnesseth That he is u Psal 112 1. 119 1 2. 1 1 2. blessed that feareth the Lord and delighteth greatly in his Commaundements blessed are they that are vpright in their way and walke in the way of the Lord blessed are they that keepe his Testimonies and seeke him with their whole hearts blessed is the man that walketh not in the counsels of the wicked but delighteth in the law of the Lorde and exerciseth himselfe therein day and night What can be more profitable then to haue interest in Christ the treasure of al treasures and the Iewell of all Iewels to haue him our Mediator our Redeemer our Sauiour But when once we are truly conuerted wee haue gotten Christ he is become ours we haue him dwelling in vs him I say x Col. 1 18 19 and 2 9. Ephes 3 17. Iohn 17 3. in whom dwelleth the fulnesse of the Godhead bodily who is the head of the church whom to know is eternall life By him our bondage is turned into freedome our beggery into riches out thraldome into liberty our death into life Who is it then can be so simple or ignorant to affirme that profession to be without gaine and profit that bringeth Christ Iesus with it in whom all treasures are hid and had Or who can be so sottish or sencelesse to deny that when wee haue done all that we can our meanes are too slender our cost too smal our time too short and our labour too little in seeking to finde him and in digging and deluing after him For if we finde him we are sure to find al things and to want nothing that is good What thing can be more profitable then that which giueth a man iust Title to Gods blessings and a sanctified vse of his creatures The vngodly man that is not conuerted to God but peruerted in all his wayes hath no part or interest in the promises and mercies of God to warme himselfe with his wooll to feede himselfe with his meate y Psal 50 10. For all the Beasts of the Forrests are his and the beasts on a thousand Mountaines Such as are wicked persons are wrongfull Vsurpers and vniust intruders vppon the Lords goods and the portion that he hath prepared for his owne people nay they are shamefull Theeues and shamelesse Robbers that steal from the godly that which was created for them bestowed vpon them and sanctified vnto them Hence it is that the Apostle saith z Titus 1 15. Vnto the pure are all thinges pure but vnto them that are defiled and vnbeleeuing is nothing pure but euen their minds and consciences are defiled In Adam we haue lost the pure and free vse of the creatures of God in Christ Iesus the second Adam and a Heb. 1 2. heyre of al things we recouer our Title vnto them againe Now that which putteth vs in possession and bringeth the full fruition with freedome of conscience and comfort of heart of all these things must needs be holden most helpefull and profitable vnto vs in this life Last of all if wee consider the enduring and continuing of the gaine of godlinesse we shall finde the price of it to be aboue all other commodities the sweetnesse whereof may delight vs and the contentment thereof may satisfie vs and the certainty thereof may allure vs to the seeking and preferring of it before all other and to trauell and trafficke for it farre and neere What commodity canst thou name or remember that the richest Marchants bring from strange Countries which is not subiect to be lost by land and to perish by the Sea by stormes by robbers by rouers by tempestes and shipwracke so that when thou hast fetched it with the greatest
maliciousnesse be ye curteous one to another and tender-hearted freely forgiuing one another All these Testimonies and examples as a Cloud of Witnesses serue to teach vs that repentant offenders must be forgiuen and their offences blotted out of our remembrance Reason 1. The reasons to confirme this truth farther to our consciences are not far to seeke but neere at hand For first hereby we imitate our heauenly Father and are made like to him As we are commaunded to be holy as he is holy so we are charged to Be mercifull Å¿ Luke 6 36. Ezek. 18 23. because our Father also is mercifull who hath not desire that the wicked should dye but that he should liue if he returne from his waies God is prouoked of vs euery moment and we are indebted vnto him ten thousand Talents yet he is intreated of vs and he is reconciled vnto vs so that he maketh his Sunne to arise vpon the good and euill and the raine to fall vpon the iust and vniust ought not we therefore to loue one another and to forgiue one another after his example This is the reason vsed by the Apostle t Col. 3 12 13 Now therefore as the elect of God holy and beloued put on the bowels of mercy kindnesse humblenesse of minde meekenesse long-suffering forbearing one another and forgiuing one another if any man haue a quarrell to another euen as Christ forgaue euen so doe ye It were wofull to vs if God were not ready to forgiue for we finde our selues ready to offend and one sinne vnpardoned is sufficient to make vs be condemned Reason 2. Secondly our forgiuing of our Bretheren giueth comfort and confidence that we our selues shall be forgiuen We are taught to gather assurance of pardon to our owne hearts from our readinesse to forgiue others that God wil in Christ hath forgiuen vs our trespasses This we see in the fift petition of the Lords Prayer when we are taught to say and to pray u Luke 11 4. Forgiue vs our sinnes for euen we forgiue euerie man that is indebed to vs. Euery one would be glad to haue a sure testimony and infallible witnesse of the forgiuenesse of his sinnes for from hence commeth our greatest comfort Now there cannot be stronger Argument to worke in vs this perswasion seeing that we by examining our affections toward our Brethren may conclude the certainety of Gods mercy toward vs. For our forgiuenesse is not made x Cyprian sermo 6 de orat dominica the cause but the signe and Seale of Gods forgiuenesse for as much as his pardoning of vs doth worke in vs the pardon of others Reason 3. Thirdly it is a certaine thing that such as will not forgiue shall themselues neuer be forgiuen Our forgiuenesse is vpon condition if we remit the offences of others if we retaine them our owne sinnes are also retained If then the example of God and our owne assurance cannot draw vs to this duty let the greatnesse of the danger moue vs to forgiue which hangeth ouer their heads that harden their hearts in hatred and mallice against their Brethren This our Sauiour setteth downe immediatly after the Lords Prayer y Math. 6 14 15. Mat. 11 25 26 For if ye doe forgiae men their trespasses your heauenly Father will also forgiue you but if ye doe not forgiue Men their trespasses no more will your Father forgiue you your trespasses And in another place he saith When ye shall stand and pray forgiue if ye haue any thing against any Man that your Father also which is in heauen may forgiue you your trespasses for if you will not forgiue your Father which is in Heauen will not pardon you your trespasses This the Apostle Iames assureth z Iames 2 13. That there shall be condemnation mercilesse to him that sheweth not mercy and mercy reioyceth against condemnation This we see in the example of that euill Seruant that fell from his Maisters fauour and was denyed forgiuenesse For when as being vnable to pay a Mat. 18 26 27 28 29 30. He cryed for mercy desired forbearance and promised payment his Maister had compassion vpon him loosed him and forgaue him the debt But when that Seruant dealt hardly with his Fellow-Seruant that ought him an hundred pence so that he laid handes vpon him tooke him by the throat and cast him into Prison his Lorde called backe his grant and required the debt of him and deliuered him to the Tormentours This may seeme very strange at the first that his Lorde should forgiue the Debter yet and afterward exact the debt of him to pardon the offence and to punnish the offender This may seeme all one as if a Magistrate should remit the theft and execute the Theefe But we shall not greatly maruaile at this dealing if we consider that God giueth pardon vpon condition and that we receiue pardon vpon condition True it is this condition is not alwaies or heere in this place expressed but it is here and alwaies to bee vnderstood Notwithstanding sometimes the condition is added as when Christ saith Condemne not and ye shall not be condemned forgiue and ye shall be forgiuen Luke 6. So that he forgiueth vs our offences condicionally that we forgiue the offences of our Brethren Thus he forgaue the Seruant that was not able to pay to teach him compassion and mercy toward those that were indebted vnto him If we will not forgiue but require of our debters the vtmost farthing we shall finde the Lord as hard and our selues to make a Law against our selues Wherefore to the end that Gods example may be followed in well doing that our owne consciences may be assured of forgiuenesse and that great danger is incurred through want of forgiuenesse we learne that God requireth it as a speciall duty of vs to shew our selues ready and forward to forgiue our Bretheren that haue wronged and offended vs. Obiections made against this doctrine And howsoeuer this Doctrine be proued by Scriptures cleered by examples and confirmed by reasons yet as it standeth not with the liking of flesh and bloud which is ready to reuenge and breath out threatnings so carnall reason ministreth many obiections which are not to be passed ouer but to be diligently discussed and dissolued It shall not therefore be amisse before we proceede to the vses to answer such questions as stand in the way whereat the vnleatned stumble as at a stone that lyeth in the way which being determined we will handle the Vses Obiection 1. First seeing we are bound to forgiue euery one that is indebted vnto vs the question may be asked whether this extend to all debts and that we are charged to forgiue all our Debters Answere I answere debts are of two sorts either Ciuill which commeth by Couenants of buying and bargaining one with another without which the life of man cannot consist Of these mutuall Couenants and Contracts betweene
man and man we must not vnderstand our Sauiour Christ when he speaketh of Debts and Debters but of priuate hurts and damages that are done vnto vs in our bodies in our goods or in our good Names These iniuries done to our bodies which oftentimes are misvsed to our goods which are diminished to our good Names which are impaired are to be remitted As for other debts due to vs we may require them so we doe it with shewing mercy to such as are in necessity toward whom we ought to haue patience in forbearing Obiection 2. The second is whether a man may lawfully sue him at the Law that hath offended him Or how doth suing and forgiuing stand together in a Christian Answere I answer the Law is free for all men and the end of it is to redresse all disorders And as a Souldier in a lawfull warre may kill his Enemy and yet loue him so may a man forgiue an iniury and yet vse the remedy of the Law and thereby seeke in a Christian manner to redresse the wronges that are done vnto him Now in suing at the Law we must obserue these sixe rules First it must not be for toyes and trifles but in matters of waite and importance which do neerely concerne vs and whereby we are some way damnified But trifles cannot damnifie vs. This reproueth those that are so farre carried vpon the spleene b 1 Cor. 6 7. as that they are ready to prosecute euery action and slight occasion that is offered vnto them if it be but the wagging of a Straw which bewrayeth an euill heart in them Secondly we must take heede of priuate reuenge and inward hatred which if we conceiue we doe not forgiue We must not suffer our suites to coole our loue to our Bretheren nor to weaken our Faith in performing our seruice worship vnto God For albeit the cause be neuer so iust and lawfull c Rom. 12 9 10. yet if we handle it vnlawfully vncharitably and vnchristianly we offend God and transgresse against our Brother Thirdly we must beware of giuing offence to the Church of God Some offences are taken but not giuen as when men are offended for doing our duty to God We must not omit that which God requireth because man will be offended Our care must be to be ready to giue satisfaction to the godly that our doing be not iustly scandalous obseruing the rule of the Apostle d 1 Cor. 10 32 1 Thes 5 22. Giue no offence neither to the Iew nor to the Gentile nor to the church of God and abstaine from all appearance of euill Fourthly the end of all Controuersies and Suites in Law must bee to liue in concord and to maintaine godly peace If we haue not this end we ayme at a wrong end The end of all lawfull Warre is not murther and tumults but peace and quietnesse So the end of all strife must be to liue without strife For if all iniuries were put vp and were not repressed many would grow worse and worse and ouerturne the Ciuill State and gouernment Fiftly another end we may at must be that the truth may come to light that is hidden that the party offending may be chastised e 1 Cor. 6 11. and by chasticement be brought to repentance for his wronges For such is the mallice of many that the passing by of one wrong would but open a wide gap or gate to bring other iniuries vpon our owne heades and the more we suffer the more hard measure they would offer Lastly the Law must bee vsed not vpon pleasure but vpon necessity and we must take it vp as the last refuge and remedy We must vse it as a Father vseth correction or as a Physition vseth desperate Medicines or as the Surgion vseth searing and cutting f 1 Cor. 6 6. when other will not serue the turne If a friendly agreement and priuate arbiterment may be had let it be preferred and the Magistrate not troubled with our contentions Thou oughtest not to produce into publike Courts of Iustice and iudgement that which may well bee decided and determined by graue sober godly and discreet men at home as the small causes which the Rulers might iudge were not to be brought before Moses Exod. 18 22. If it cannot be had so that though we seeke peace and ensue it yet it flyeth from vs it is lawfull for vs to go farther euen to sue our neghbour at the law and vse the benefit of the Magistrate Obiection 3. The third obiection is how can the Magistrate practise this Doctrine to forgiue offences and offenders seeing as the Apostle teacherh Rom. 13. He beareth not the Sword in vaine If his duty be to punish how can he pardon If he be to execute iudgement how can he forgiue them that trespasse Answere I answere a Magistrate is to be considered two waies according to two seuerall persons which he doth sustaine to wit either as he is a Man or as hee is a Magistrate as he hath a common condition or a speciall As he is a man or a Christian man which estate he hath common with his Brethren he is to beare and forbeare and behaue himselfe as others but as he is a Magistrate which estate he hath as properlie belonging vnto him he is the Deputy and Vice-gerent of God he sustaineth his person he executeth his iudgement and therefore he ought not to haue any respect of persons or winke at the committing of any wickednesse Obiection 4 The fourth Obiection is how we can be saide to forgiue our Bretheren their trespasses seeing no man can forgiue sinnes but onely God Hence it is that Dauid saith in the Psalme Against thee against thee onely haue I sinned and done euill in thy sight Psal 51. Likewise the Scribes and Pharisies when they heard Christ speake to the man sicke of the Palsie Thy sinnes are forgiuen thee began to reason among themselues Who is this that speaketh Blasphemies Who can forgiue sinnes but God onely Luke 5 20 21. Answere I answer in euery sinne there are two things to be marked and considered the euill of the action and the damage that ariseth to man by the euill action the one God forgiueth the other man forgiueth God pardoneth the euill Man pardonerh the damage or detriment that befalleth his person goods or name So then God forgiueth and Man forgiueth God forgiueth the sinne man forgiueth the hurt For we must obserue that in euery trespasse are two offences one to God the other to man To God when he forgiueth the breach of his law and imputeth it not to the offender which belongeth properlie to him and no man is able to doe To man when he remitteth the iniury or harme that hath risen to him in the things that appertaine to him It is not in mans power to forgiue the sinne whereby God is offended and he oftentimes pardoneth the wrong done to him when God forgiueth not
because Loue seeketh not her owne but the good of others Secondly as wee see selfe-loue checked and controuled so they are condemned that place brotherly loue in faire wordes and gentle speeches and yet many faile in these and cannot affoord them as if euery worde of their mouth were worth Gold whereas in such is no sound Religion but a vizard onely of holinesse True loue must be shewed in the fruits in sustaining helping pittying releeuing those that craue our releefe and are in necessity The Apostle teacheth them that are destitute of true faith that shroud themselues vnder the profession of the Gospell and yet are not able to make demonstration thereof by their workes A good Tree bringeth foorth good fruit If the Tree bring forth either no fruite or euill fruite it is an euill tree If we haue onely good words and either no workes at all or euil workes it is a plaine argument we are not yet in the number of true beleeuers z Gal. 5 6. neyther are endued with that faith which worketh by loue Hence it is that the Apostle Iames saith a Iam. 2 15 16 If a Brother or a Sister be naked and destitute of daily food and one of you say to them Depart in peace warme your selues and fill your bellies notwithstanding ye giue them not those things which are needfull to the body what helpeth it Euen so the Faith if it haue no workes is dead in it selfe If then we content our selues to giue the Almes of faire wordes which are but empty shewes it sheweth that we are barren trees full of leaues but voyd of fruite and it shall minister as little comfort to our hearts as it dooth releefe to their bodies We are taught to visit Christ in his members and apply our selues to do them good that in the last iudgement we may finde that mercie and compassion at the hands of Christ which wee haue shewed to the members of his body To giue kinde words is not that feruent loue which heere is commended vnto vs. Lastly it reproueth such as giue themselues to fraud and deceite to cruelty and oppression to subtilty and circumventing their brethren to lying vsing false Waights and Measures For if this should be the rule of our loue that it ought to be feruent we should examine our owne hearts whether wee would haue another man to deceiue and oppresse vs by forgery falshoode The Apostle reprooueth all such wrongfull and iniurious dealing and as a Prophet of God denounceth seuerely certain iudgement vpon such wickednesse b 1 Thess 4 6. Let no man oppresse or defraud his Brother in any matter for the Lord is an auenger of all such things as we also haue told you before time and testified It is common and wicked Obiection May I not do with mine owne as I list who shall hinder me to vse mine owne as I thinke good This is the common argument of Harlots Drunkards and other beasts which ought not to be in the mouths of Christians Let them vse it that are out of Christ let vs bee ashamed of such prophanenesse and ignorance For indeed thou hast nothing that is thine owne thou art but a Steward and the time shall come when thou must giue an account of thy Stewardship because thou mayst be no longer Steward Vse 3. Lastly seeing all are to be loued but especially such as haue bin conuerted by vs it teacheth vs to further their saluation that haue beene brought into the way by vs and neuer to forsake them vntill we haue brought them to their iournies end For what a vaine thing were it to finde a man wandering out of his way and going astray from the right path and when he hath brought him backe to leaue him without farther direction Or what an vnnaturall part were it for a Mother to bring forth her Childe into the worlde and then to take no more care of it neither to wash it in water nor to wrap it in swathling Clowts nor to haue any compassion vpon it but to cast it out into the open field The loue of Moses his Mother was greater toward him c Hebr. 11 23. Exod. 2 3 4. who being borne was hidden three moneths from the cruelty of the Egiptians and being put among the Bul-rushes in the water was watched by his Sister to see how God would prouide for his deliuerance euen so it standeth vs vpon hauing beene made blessed meanes and Instruments of the good of others to be assistants vnto them and to further their saluation as God shall enable vs. It is the part of a good Worke-man not to leaue his worke vnperfect A good Physitian will not leaue his patient when he hath doone but halfe his cure An Husbandman will not giue ouer when he hath halfe sowne but will labour vnto the end Hee that dooth but halfe builde an house is but halfe a Carpenter He that entreth into Christianity and beginneth wel is but halfe a Christian the greatest part of the worke remaineth behind Let vs all follow the example of God when he began the great worke of the Creation of the world he left not his workemanship vnfashioned and vnfinished but in six dayes fully accomplished it to the glory of his name And as he did in the generation of his creatures so he doth in their regeneration c Iohn 13 1. Those whom he loueth he loueth vnto the end This is it which the Apostle teacheth d Phil. 5 5. I am perswaded of this same thing that he that hath begunne this good worke in you will performe it vnto the day of Iesus Christ As then God neuer leaueth him whom once he loueth so shold we haue a care of those that we haue moued to imbrace the truth and watch ouer them for their good The Minister must preach sound Doctrine in loue to the soules of men that he hath vndertaken the charge of for whom he is to giue an account in the great day Wee see the Apostles hauing taught the Gentiles planted a Church among them did not cast off all care of them nor thinke themselues to haue discharged a sufficient duty toward them but knowing the malice of Satan the deceit of false Teachers and the frailty of mans nature e Acts 14 22. They returned back to confirm them in the faith and to settle them in that truth which they had receiued of them When Peter professed great loue to Christ f Iohn 21 15. he willed him to manifest it by feeding of his Sheepe and Lambes the greater his diligence was in feeding the flocke of Christ ouer which hee was made a principall Watchman the greater duty he performed to Christ himselfe When Agrippa the King had heard the defence that Paule made for himselfe and the confirmation of his calling by the heauenly vision that apeared vnto him he said g Acts. 26 28 29. Almost thou perswadest me to become a Christian But
1 Cor. 12 20 21 22. There are manie Members yet but one bodie and the eye cannot say vnto the hand I haue no neede of thee nor the heade againe to the feete I haue no neede of you yea much rather those Members of the bodie which seeme to bee more feeble are necessarie The Rich cannot want the poore and therefore may not contemne them and the poore cannot want the rich and therefore may not backbite them and enuy at them For as God hath tempered the body together that one member should stand in need of the helpe of another so is it in the things of this life one liueth by another and therefore one must haue a care of another and seeke the good one of another Thirdly heere are reprooued all mercilesse men that shut vppe their pittie and compassion from the poore and therefore haue not the Loue of GOD dwelling in them nor the Loue of Children remaining in them For whosoeuer loueth GOD will for his sake Loue his Brother also The Apostle Iohn d 1 Iohn 4 7 8 20 21. handleth this Argument at large in his first Epistle and the fourth Chapter where he saith Beloued let vs loue one another for loue commeth of God and euerie one that loueth is borne of God and knoweth God he that loueth not knoweth not God for God is loue If any man say I loue God and hate his Brother he is a lyar for how can he that loueth not his Brother whom he hath seene loue God whom he hath not seene And this commaundement haue wee of him that he which loueth God should loue his Brother also To this purpose the Apostle Iames saith e Iames 2 13. There shall be condemnation mercilesse to him that sheweth not mercy and mercy reioyceth against iudgement If then we look for mercy let vs shew mercy There is no poore Begger that craueth an Almes at thy doore there is no man standeth in so great neede of thy helpe that liueth with thee as thou wantest the mercy and fauour of God to comfort thee to cloath thee to feede thee to succour thee to heare thee to help thee when thou criest vnto him We are all as naked and needy Beggers that knocke at his gate and we are wholly nourished by his hand We are al as poore suters suing for his grace and fauour and we cannot liue if we be denied and take the repulse of him Wee receiue mercy vnder condition to shew mercie againe If we be vnmerciful we make our selues vnworthy to receiue any mercy from God Vse 2 Secondly seeing we are seruants to all to helpe them by all the means we can by comfort or counsell by word or deed by our wealth or authoritie or whatsoeuer God shall inable vs from hence ariseth a great comfort vnto a mans conscience and an assurance of his peace and acceptation with God to pray vnto him with comfort for his graces not doubting to obtain them if we haue bin seruiceable and comfortable vnto others especially to the seruants of God that are as deare to him as the Apple of his eye It is a meanes of excellent ioy and peace to a man to consider that hee hath employed all the good things he hath to the vse of Gods house and his houshold seruants for when any common daunger shall fall or hee finde anguish and affliction of Conscience for sinne he may be assured of comfort seeing GOD hath wrought this sincerity and set it as a seale of his mercie in his heart Obadiah hauing beene in the practise of this dutie a diligent seruant and perfourmed most notable seruice when Iezabell sought the destruction of the Prophets he hid an hundered of them by fiftie and fiftie in a Caue and gaue them Bread to eate shewing himselfe liberall handed and tender-hearted with the hazard of his owne credite fauour and life When hee met Eliah that willed him f 1 Kings 18 12 13. to go to his Lord and tolde him he would shew himselfe vnto him although Obadiah at the first feared and distrusted and thought the spirit of God would carrie him away to some other place and then Ahab would kill him he beganne at the length to comfort himselfe with the meditation of his seruice that hee had done to the Saintes Doest thou not know that I feare God and hast thou not heard of the fruits of it that I tooke in the heate of this persecution and in the bitternesse of this long iudgement and in the extreamity of this famine an hundred of the Lords Prophets how I hid them and fed them secretly in two Caues of the earth If thou account of this my seruice and hast iudged me faithfull to the Lord let this moue thee not to giue mee ouer into the hands of thine and mine enemy The like we see in g Nehe. 5 19. Nehemiah an excellent Prince he did so employ himselfe and his seruice to the good of the Church that hee regarded not his owne profite but spent of his owne Goodes and substaunce because the necessitie of the people was exceeding great so that hee entertained them at his owne cost and charges From whence hee gathereth vnto himselfe this comfort as Obadiah had done before who prooueth that hee feared the Lorde and assured his Conscience thereof because hee had preserued and nourished the true Prophets of God Nehemiah I say gathereth this comfort by succouring the poore seruants of God in distresse that God not for the desert of the woorke but the grace of his owne mercie who crowneth not h August epist 105. our merits but his owne gifts would not forget them so that he saith Remember me ô my God according to all that I haue done for this people Now as the remembrance of our seruice ministred to the Saintes shall Minister comfort to vs so the contrary practise must of necessity gall a mans conscience and the horror thereof accuse him for not doing any good seruice to the Church of God when he shall remember how long he hath liued in the world and yet beene barren of all good works and neuer done any good to the people of God Nay it were well with many if they had onely done no good if they had onely beene barren and brought forth no good fruit and if they had onely done no hurt to the Church For their daily practises cry out against them and the teares of the faithfull which they haue shed what said I their teares Nay their blood which they haue poured out as Water doth witnesse euidently against them that they haue brought forth plentiful fruits of hatted of enmity of mallice of outragiousnesse against the Church Their owne consciences accuse them and Gods people haue felt them and in the end fearefull iudgements shall ouertake them No enemy of the Church that set himselfe against Sion hath euer prospered O that that they had hearts to consider these things but now are they hidden
helpfull and seruiceable to Gods people shall finde them as their remembrancers to God who will not forget the labour of their loue and the duty of their seruice This ought to bee a notable encouragement vnto vs not to deale niggardly toward the Saints nor to withhold from them the fruits of our loue seeing nothing shall be lost that is bestowed vpon them but we shall receiue an hundred folde into our bosome grace for grace loue for loue blessing for blessing mercy for mercie For this comfort and consolation will arise to them that doe good to Gods people they shall haue fauour with God they shall gaine a good report with the world and they shall purchase the sweet sauour of a good name as of a precious oyntment among the Saints and shall stirre them vp to intreate Gods manifold mercies for them Iehoiada that good High-Priest was so honoured of the people for suppressing the tyranny of Athalia for setting vp the kingdome of Ioash and for restoring the true religion of God that he was accounted a common Father of the Countrey and they gaue him the burial of a King r 2 Chron. 24 15 16. for they buried him in the Citty of Dauid with the Kings because he had done good in Israell and toward God and his house So the apostle Paul declaring that Onesiphorus had done him great seruice prayeth vnto God for him ſ 2 Tim. 1 16 17 18. The Lord giue mercie vnto the house of Onesiphorus for he oft refreshed me and was not ashamed of my chaine but when he was at Rome he sought me out diligently and found me The Lord grant vnto him that he may finde mercy with the Lord at that day Whereby we may gather that the benefites bestowed vpon the Saints shall not perish although they themselues cannot requite thē for though they want ability to pay them yet they want not harts to pray for them yea the Lorde will not onely haue pitty of them that take pitty of his people but he will shew mercy to their housholds because when Paule praiseth the bountifulnesse and zeale of Onesiphorus he wisheth well for his sake to his whole family The blessing of God shall not rest onely vpon the head of the iust but it shall descend into his whole house such is the loue of God toward those that be his If the consideration of this great promise and rich recompence of reward doe not pricke vs forward to exercise the workes of loue and fruits of compassion we are more then blockish and brutish On the other side such as haue beene not helpfull but hurtful not industrious but iniurious not seruiceable but vnprofitable to Gods people when God shall visit them either with publicke calamities or priuate iudgements their owne Consciences shall gall them and gnaw vpon them when they remember their owne works which shall prouoke men to speak euill of them cause them to pray against them and constraine them to call vppon God to worke their confusion This we see in Paul the Apostle in the latter end of the same Epistle t 2 Tim. 4 14 Alexander the Copper-smith hath done me much euill the Lord reward him according to his workes Thus doeth the Prophet Dauid deale oftentimes in the Psalmes u Psal 74 2 3. Thinke vpon thy congregation which thou hast possessed of old on the rod of thine inheritance which thou hast redeemed and on this mount Syon wherein thou hast dwelt lift vp thy stroakes that thou mayst for euer destroy euerie enemy that doth euil to the Sanctuary Thus wee see the people of God haue from time to time prayed against the malicious enemies of the Church that sought the ruine and destruction thereof Their prayers are of great force enter into the eares of the Lord of hostes whether it bee to obtaine mercies vpon the friends of the Church or to draw downe vengeance vppon the aduersaries thereof that oppresse it with cruelty and blaspheme the name of God which is holy throughout all ages and generations There is no greater honour that we should desire or delight in then to be called the friends of God and the seruants of the Church If we be the seruants of God wee must also account our selues the seruants of the Church The Prophet Dauid did esteeme the faithfull that were in Ierusalem as his Brethren So on the contrary side there cannot a greater dishonor and reproach befall vs then to be reputed the enemies of God and his people For if wee set our selues against his people that are his portion and inheritance hee will no otherwise deale with vs then with his enemies If God come against vs as his enemy we shall not be able to preuaile we cannot stand before him but shall be as stubble in the fire and as chaffe before the winde Vse 4. Lastly seeing God requireth seruice to his Church at our hands to do all good to them by all good meanes it is our dutie to enquire and learne the estate of the distressed Church that we may knowe and bee informed where and when and how it is afflicted How many are there that neuer thinke vpon the people of God to do them good but forget their affliction and oppression The Butler of Pharaoh did not remember Ioseph but forgate him and the kindnesse he shewed toward him when they were prisoners togither who had said vnto him x Gen. 40 14 23. Haue me in remembrance with thee when thou art in good case and shew mercy I pray thee vnto me and make mention of me to Pharaoh that thou mayst bring me out of this house So when Zachariah the sonne of Iehoiada whom we mentioned before was for preaching the truth and denouncing the iudgements of God from his mouth oppressed with enuie and ouerborne by the might of the Rulers the King woulde not deliuer him out of their hands y 2 Chron. 24 21 22. but commanded him to bee stoned with stones and remembred not the kindnesse that his father had done to him but slew his son This is the common course and current of the world wee will not see the afflictions of the poore Saints but turne away our eyes from them or if wee cannot choose but see them we quickly forget them as if wee had neuer eyther beheld them or knowne of them This is one misery of the faithful that men do not regard them when they are in misery The Lord hath determined that there shall be alwayes some obiects offered vnto vs and set before vs to exercise the fruits of our Faith and Loue. He hath saide that the poore wee shall alwayes haue with vs and such as stand in need of our helpe and comfort It is in easie thing to boast of Faith and Loue but if we will be assured that we haue true Faith indeed we must shew it by our workes which are the fruites whereby it is knowne We must not turne away our
thine holy Sonne Iesus whom thou hast annointed both Herod and Pontius Pilate with the Gentiles and the people of Israell gathered themselues together to doe whatsoeuer thine hand and thy counsell had determined before to be done So then albeit they wickedly intended nothing but to shew their hatred and testifie their enuie in the death of Christ yet God brought another matter out of their mallice and made his endlesse mercy to man appeare in his worke of Redemption God would haue him dye Caiphas would haue him dye Pilate would haue him die Iudas and the Iewes would haue him die but God for our Redemption they for other ends as Iudas for couetousnesse and the Priestes for enuy The History of Iob is a plaine and direct proofe of this point that now we haue in hand he was robbed of his goods depriued of his Seruants and Children through the rage and couetousnesse of his Enemies and by the crueltie of Sathan the p Iob 1. and 2. enemies intended heerein to satisfie their owne couetousnesse the Deuill purposed to bring the Seruant of God to dispaire neither of thē aimed at any good to Iob but God that ouer-ruleth and ouer swaieth all had another end to try his patience to make knowne his Faith to try his obedience and to giue the deuill the foile ouerthrow Thus then we see that all things whatsoeuer they be are ordered and disposed by the prouidence of God to the good of those that belong vnto him euen then when they doe not intend it Reason 1. The reasons of this Doctrine are apparant to settle our hearts and consciences therein The first is the infinite wisedome and vnsearchable power of ●od who as the Apostle teacheth q 2 Cor. 4 6. bringeth light out of darkenesse worketh by contrary means such as men count foolishnesse r 1 Cor. 1 21. as to saue men by the foolish preaching of the Gospell that is which is esteemed among the wise men of the World no better then foolishnesse When Christ would make a blind man see and restore his sight vnto him ſ Iohn 9 6 7. He spat on the ground and made Clay of the spittle and annointed the eyes of the Blinde with the Clay A naturall man would thinke this had beene a way and meanes iudging by humaine reason rather to make a man that seeth to be blind then a man that is blinde to see Christ was able to haue healed him with a word or to haue giuen vnto him new eyes but he chose rather to vse these weak means that in themselues had no power or strength in them Thus was Naaman the Syrian cleansed of his foule Leprosie whereas he imagined the Prophet would come t 2 Kings 5. forth vnto him lay his handes vpon him and call vpon God for him it pleased God to worke by other meanes and to cleanse him by washing seauen times in Iordan We see this in nothing plainer then in the glorious worke of our Redemption The Lord Iesus u Hebr. 2 13. By death ouercame death by humbling of himselfe beneath all x Phil. 3. he was exalted aboue all By making himselfe poore he made many rich By suffering himselfe to be condemned he hath brought vs to be iustified and saued Thus he also dealeth with his owne Children hee bringeth men to Heauen by Hell he leadeth to immortalitie by corruption he guideth them through fire and water to set them in a wealthy place He worketh not by ordinary waies by extraordinarie so often as it pleaseth him When hee would comfort he terrifieth when he would raise vp he casteth downe when he would reuiue he mortifieth when he would exalt he bringeth low when he would make a man rich he maketh him poore This it is which Hannah setteth downe in her Song of Thanks-giuing y 1 Sam. 1 6 7 8. The Lord maketh poore and maketh rich bringeth low and exalteth the Lord killeth and maketh aliue bringeth downe to the Graue and raiseth vp This also the Prophet z Esay 28 21. Esay signifieth The Lord shall stand as in Mount Perazim he shall be wrath as in the Valley of Gibeon that hee may doe his worke his strange worke and bring to passe his Act his strange Act. This is one of the workes of the strange workes one of the actes of the strange actes of God when he turneth euill into good and ordereth the wicked actions of men to the glory of his Name and the good of his Children Reason 2. Secondly it is the pleasure of God to confound the wisdome of Man that cannot attaine to great matters but by great meanes For x 1 Cor. 1 27 God hath chosen the foolish thinges of the World to confound the wise and GOD hath chosen the weake things of the World to confound the mighty things And vile thinges of the World and things which are despised hath God chosen and things which are not to bring to naught things that are that no flesh should reioyce in his presence God disposeth of all things as pleaseth him and oftentimes crosseth the deuises of men They intend one thing but God bringeth to passe another they purpose one end but he will haue another come forth to teach mans wisedome to be but foolishnesse Reason 3. Thirdly he expresseth his wonderfull loue making all things that fall out in the world to serue his Church True it is the Church of God is beset with many enemies that as wilde Boares seeke to roote it out of the Earth as the Deuill which is the Captain of this Army vnder whose Banners are gathered together the wicked world the flesh hell death sin all which multitude as a great hoast muster together to work the vtter ouerthrow thereof yet God that sitteth in heauen maketh all their endeuours and enterprises further the saluation of his Church This the Apostle teacheth y Rom. 8 28. We know that all things worke together for the best vnto them that loue God euen to them that are called of his purpose He blesseth their troubles and afflictions and worketh in them patience vnder the crosse humility in suffering and experience of his mercies and maketh them confesse that it was good for them that they haue been afflicted We see this euidently in the example of Iobs troubles and torments that he endured there were many work-men set on worke to wast his goods to destroy his Children to kill his Seruants to afflict his Body to torment his Soule all ayming at this to bring him to despaire and all these Wheeles were set to moue by the Deuill but the Lord out of their sinnes wrought his great good z Iames 1 3 4 Rom. 5 3 4. Making tryall of his Faith to bring forth patience and patience experience and experience hope and hope maketh not ashamed So then seeing God is able to work and doth work both aboue and contrary to means that men imagine seeing he
went in and lay with his Fathers Wiues Heere are sundry deuillish and wicked practises Incest Murther Rebellion treason all abhominable enormities and yet God saith k 2 Sam. 12 12 He did all these things These sinnes were most foule and filthy to looke vpon as they were the inuentions of the Deuill the perswasions and practises of euill men but as they are punishments sent of God vpon Dauid for his offences they were beautifull in their time they were the righteous sentence of a iust Iudge who cannot deale vniustly in iudgement Thus much of answering these few Obiections Now let vs proceede to conclude some Vses out of this truth Vse 1 The Vses that will arise from hence are many but wee will onely touch the principall This Doctrine serueth for reproofe for comfort and for obedience For it serueth to reprooue and conuince sundry persons that eyther know not or knowing doe abuse this prouidence of God whereby he taketh care of all thinges that are in the World and directeth them to a right end And first of all we set against it and oppose vnto it the dreames and dotages of Atheists Epicures Libertines and such like Wretches who either deny wholy there is a God or make him sit as idle in heauen as themselues are vpon the earth so that albeit he know and see all thinges yet hee worketh or ordereth not the speciall actions of men that fall out These are they that pull God out of his Kingdome and set vp Chance and Fortune as an Idoll and make it their God We must all learne and confesse that the Lord that is the Creator of Heauen and Earth is also the Ruler and Gouernor of all euen the least Creatures The whole world from the highest heauen to the center of the Earth is subiect to his prouidence He worketh all things according to the counsell of his owne will he giueth life and l Acts. 17 28 breath he preserueth them so that nothing commeth to passe without his appointment Whether they be things with life or without life with reason or without reason generall or particular euill or good Angels or Men necessary or not necessary all are ruled by his decree So then Chance Fortune are words of the Gentiles and are blindly vsed by such as are called Christians whereas nothing can be done without his will and working who is omnipotent What seemeth more casuall then the Lot Yet The lot is cast into the lap but the whole disposition is of the Lord. Prou. 16. 33. This is it which our Sauior teacheth m Math. 10 29 30. and 6 26. Are not two Sparrowes sold for a farthing and one of thē shall not fall on the ground without your Father Yea and all the haires of your head are numbred So that we see Chance and Prouidence cannot stand together but the one ouerturneth the other Secondly it reproueth such as frō hence take encouragement to commit sin to breake out into sundry outrages or to liue securely because God can turne it to our good and maketh it serue to set forth his mercy This is that presumption and sin of rebellion touched by the Apostle Why do we not euill that good may n Rom. 3 8. come thereof whose damnation is iust So in another place o Rom. 6 1 2. What shall we say then Shall we continue still in sin that Grace may abound How shall we that are dead in sinne liue yet therein We confesse indeed that God is the Soueraigne cause of all euents that are brought to passe and whatsoeuer the enemies of the Church intend and enterprise whether the Sonnes of Men or the Deuill and his Angels he staieth and hindreth or represseth and disappointeth and alwaies disposeth it to the good and saluation of his children Neuerthelesse this doth not excuse or free the Instruments that he vseth from fault They do the will of God blindly and ignorantly but they do crosse his will openly and purposely so that his prouidence doth not exempt the wicked from their euill doing Dauid knew well enough and confesseth as much that Shemei was sent of God most iustly to cursse him and to raile vpon him when he fled from the face of his son Absolon yet in his last speach to the King his Sonne he doth not defend him or excuse him o 1 King 2 8 9 But giueth charge and commaundement to be reuenged of him and not to account him innocent If then euill instruments cease not to be guilty before men much more faulty shall they be before the iudgement Seate of the Almighty and much lesse shall they escape punishment for transgressing the Law of God For howsoeuer wicked men be well moued by God to execute his worke by them who may vse any of his creatures according to his owne power pleasure yet in asmuch as they being moued of God do peruersely and crookedly and wickedly moue themselues to will and work euill so that themselues are the workers and causers of their own euill works whereby it commeth to passe both that they grieuously offend God and afterward seuerely punished of him Wherefore such as resist God rebell against his law and striue against his will cannot say they haue done his will inasmuch as they had no purpose to keep his ordinances therefore make themselues subiect to all his iudgements Lastly this reproueth the Church of Rome that among many slanders cast out against vs are not ashamed to lay to our charge that we mainetaine that God is the author of sin We hold we teach priuatly publikely by word by writing in Schooles in Churches that God is not the author of sin but the deuil mans own corrupt wil whosoeuer teacheth and preacheth otherwise if it were an Angell from heauen we hold him accurssed Hence it is that the Prophet saith p Psal 5 4. Thou art not a God that loueth wickednesse neither shall euill dwell with thee So the Prophet Habakuke q Hab. 1 13. Thou art of pure eyes and canst not see euill thou canst not behold wickednesse Likewise Zephany saith r Zeph. 3 7. The iust Lord is in the midst thereof he will do none iniquity In like manner the Prophet Zachary saith ſ Zach. 8 17. Let none of you imagine euill in your harts against his neighbour and loue no false Oth for all these are the things that I hate saith the Lord. Thus we heare that he loueth righteousnesse and hateth wickednesse so that he is the authour of all good of no euill If we would heare this farther opened the Apostle Iames is a witnesse of it t Iam. 1 13 14 Let no Man say when he is tempted I am tempted of God for God cannot be tempted with euill neither tempteth he any man but euery man is tempted when he drawn away by his owne concupiscence and is entised This is the conscionable Doctrine of pietie and the contrary wee renounce and
friends The delight that men take in these is vaine and of no value nay it bringeth in the end Gall and Wormewood and biteth as a Serpent If thou delight in thy Wife Children Seruants Friends and Familiars in the flesh in a worldly and wicked manner and neuer considerest from whence thou hast them nor receiuest them as the guiftes and blessings of God that thereby thou mayest haue sound ioy and true happinesse heaped vpon thee it is extream folly and madnesse What was the end of Ahabs ioy in his wife in his sonnes in his posterity They were at the last thogh multiplyed exceedingly cut off from man to beast and none of them left to water a wall How many are there that being free and at liberty to make choise of Friends of Wife of Seruants of Companions do neuer set the Lord before their eyes who hauing little grace in their owne hearts make an election of such as are most vngracious and gracelesse They desire not to be Companions of such as loue the Lord and his Law but respect riches or beautie or honour or such outward Ornaments as perish with the vse and cannot cleanse the soule Wherefore let all superiors know and vnderstand that it is a duty and instruction belonging vnto them to delight themselues and set their hearts vpon such as are religious and vertuous and to shew their anger and displeasure against those that are faithlesse and feare not to offend the Lord with their wicked liues and vngodly behauiour For this shall bee our praise and commendation in the choise of our frends and in the gouernment of our houses to follow the example of God our Creator who is the most prudent and perfect Gouernour His fauour doeth embrace and his goodnesse compasse on euery side such as faithfully serue him and sincerely worship him but his wrath and angry countenance is fierce against those that walke rebelliously in the contempt of his Lawes and liue licentiously in the profession of his seruice Thus ought it to be in his people that gouerne in his feare such as they see feare God they must honor they must commend they must encourage they must countenance but such as are stubborne against themselues and stiffe-necked against God they must reprooue and reiect they must discommend and discountenance by all meanes they can For all such as suffer disorders and misbehauiour in their charges without checke and controulement shall finde the faultes of their Inferiours turne to their owne reproach and reproofe The Wiseman teacheth m Prou. 14 34 that sinne is a shame to a whole people and to a great company much more then shall it turne to be infamous and ignominious to a house and to the Maister of the house as we see in Eli and his sonnes Secondly it reprooueth such as hate and abhorre those that shewe the seeds of Faith and the sparkes of grace and the fruits of the spirit to bee in them It is an euill as we heard before not to preferre and make choyse of such as are good but it is a great deale worse to loath and dislike such as are godly when they haue made choise of them and brought them home into their owne doores They that haue obtained this mercy to finde grace with God do bring the blessinges of God with them into the house they come not empty and alone but full fraught and furnished with great Treasures if that we had spirituall eyes or hearts to discerne it A Religious and a vertuous Wife is n Prou. 31 10 11. a great Iewell her price is farre aboue the Pearles for she will do her Husband good and not euill all the dayes of her life and yet many repine and murmure that their wiues haue so much knowledge and that they are too zealous in the truth They neuer thinke they bring them to much riches and substance but if they labour to be rich in God which is the true Treasure they thinke a little to be too too much They neuer complaine that they are in fauour with great men from whom they may reape a commodity but if they seek to be in fauour with God from whom euery good giuing euery perfect guift proceedeth they make a scoffe and a mock at it They ought to encourage them and stirre them vp to good things and not hinder them in their course They ought themselues to teach and instruct them not discourage them from learning of others Thus it is also many times with many Fathers that pretend a loue to their children but it is in the flesh not in the spirit in the world not in the Lord in earthly things not in heauenly If their Children haue embraced the Gospell in sincerity and seeke after the meanes of their saluation with diligence they thinke they are too forward and feare they wil proue too praecise and so make more account of others that are more loose in life and prophane in conuersation This fault was in good Isaac who preferred his son Esau hated of God before Iacob that was loued of him So do the Fathers of our times delight themselues most in their Children that are most lewd and shew least fauour to such as most deserue it And thus it fareth with many Pastors Teachers of the people who ought to go before them in soundnesse of Doctrine and vprightnesse of life and by all meanes to bring forward such as are comming on to spurre and stirre vp such as are sluggish to comfort such as are carefull and zealous and to discountenance such as are open or secret enemies But how many are there that would be called and accounted faithfull shepherds and true Teachers sent of God who are affraid their hearers should bee too forward like enuious Maisters that are loath to haue good Schollers repine at it to haue any profit too much vnder them Thus they nuzzle them in ignorance that are blinde they strengthen the hand of iniquity they encourage euill doers and discourage those that would faine walke in the wayes of godlinesse It was the earnest desire of Moses o Num. 11 29 That all the Lordes people were Prophets and that the Lord would put his spirit vpon them If wee haue this spirit let vs neuer reproach those with learning too fast that are vnder our charge who ought to be our comfort in this life and shall be our crown in the life to come Vse 3. Lastly seeing it belongeth as a speciall duty vnto vs to shew our greatest affection to such as haue in their harts most religion it serueth as a comfort and encouragement to al callings euen the lowest that are among men to labour after good things and to seeke to serue and feare the Lord seeing such as are the meanest and of basest reckning with many are respected and recompenced of him This is a notable encouragement to consider that God taketh care of vs and requireth of men to do vs good The
Bretheren we must haue in common with them and it is our duty to account them our owne We are to mourne for the one and reioyce for the other as if it were our owne estate When any good is befallen vnto them we are to be glad and to be merry at the heart as it had befallen vs and so much the rather seeing we haue our portion in it If we see them weakned in their estate and go backward and not forward in matters of the World it ought to be our greefe and sorrow especially if we see them decline in the best things and turne aside out of the way from him that called them in the grace of Christ wauering and wandering wide from the truth of the Gospell which once they embraced we ought so to take it to hart to be swallowed vp with heauines as if we our selues had gone backward This affection is worthy great praise where it is to be found It assureth vs that we are liuing and feeling members in the body of Christ and haue a neere coniunction with the other parts It greatly pleaseth God and hath an assured promise of a rich reward according to the saying of our Sauiour x Math. 5 7. Blessed are the mercifull for they shall obtaine mercy This serueth to reprehend the common practise of common Christians that liue as those that know not or regard not this Communion and enterchange of the same blessings that they haue receiued at the handes of God These are they that say God for vs all and euery man for himselfe These are they that make what benefit they can of others but wil depart from nothing themselues who prize men as sheep and Oxen and bethinke with themselues how much they may make of them as if they brought them openly into the Market and set them to sale for what will you giue me These are they that neuer esteeme nor make any account of their brethren but when they haue occasion to vse thē and stand in great need and necessity of them These are they that seeke themselues onely and their owne good as for others they regard them so long and so farre as they may get and gaine anything by them according to the common practise of the world deciphered and described by the Apostle y Phil. 2 21. All seeke their owne and not that which is Iesus Christes Is it thus in the partes and members of the naturall body Doth the eye see onely for it selfe Doth it not giue direction to hand and foot and serue to the good of the whole body Doth the hand labour onely for it selfe and to sustaine it selfe or doth it not rather worke both for it selfe for euery member of the body besides The foot doth it not likewise walke vp and down and take paines for the generall good and common benefite euen of the least part that belongeth to the body If it be thus in the seuerall members of our body ought it not much rather to be so in the misticall body of Christ Iesus Shall we then make a Mart or Monopoly of our bretheren and fell them for our owne filthy gaine and priuate aduantage But whereas we ought to reioyce at their good how many are there that repine at it and pine away at the sight of it And whereas we ought to be greatly greeued to see them goe backe in goodes or in goodnesse in the world or in the word they are glad to behold their wantes and are ready to push them downe that beginne to fall These men are not onely without piety but without humanity not onely void of conscience but of common Ciuillity and are no better then rotten members Euery one would be taken and holden for a true member of Christ Iesus but few regard to do the duties of members The partes of our bodies delight and reioyce one in another but many of vs that dwell neere together regard not to see one another in the face or to conuerse and communicate either with other and yet they would be accounted Christians The partes of our body are ready to helpe and defend one another z Iob. 2 4. the hand is at hand to be lifted vp to saue the head to endanger one member to shield another otherwise it were no hand we will not hazard the least trifle for the greatest good of others and yet wee would be accounted Christians The partes of our body a 1. Cor. 12 26 when one is in paine will not leaue it destitute and distressed but seeke by all meanes to free it out of trouble but we are hand-fast in helping the poore and needy members of the same body with vs nay such paymentes as are imposed by Lawe vpon vs are hardlie wrung from vs otherwise we could be content to suffer the poore Seruantes of God to perish and yet wee would be accounted Christians If God loue b 2. Cor. 9 7. the cheerefull giuer how should he then accept of such Guiftes If we haue this worldes good c 1. Iohn 3 17 and 4 20. and see our brother haue neede and shut our compassion from him how dwelleth the loue of God in vs If we say wee loue God and hate our brother are we not liars against the truth For how can he that loueth not his brother whom he hath seene loue God whom he hath not seene Assuredly wee may conclude that there is no loue of God at all in them that haue no eyes of compassion to see their miseries no eares of pitty to heare their necessities no harts of mercy to mercie to melt and relent at their sorrows no hands of liberality to supply their wants For iudgment d Iam. 2 13. 1 Iohn 1 6 7. without mercie shall fall vpon them that will shew no mercy and we shall neuer haue fellowship with the Father if we haue not fellowship and communion with his Children Wherefore as the Apostle saith e Heb. 10 24 25. Let vs consider one another to prouoke vnto loue and to good workes not forsaking the fellowship that wee haue among our selues as the manner of some is but let vs exhort one another and that so much the more because ye see that the day draweth neere Let vs bee ready to practise these fruites of loue toward others that we may tast of the Fruites of Gods loue toward our selues Would wee then breefely know what communitie ought to bee among vs Would we vnderstand how and in what manner we ought to haue all thinges common Would we liue as true Friendes and practise true friendship one toward another The holie Man Iob giueth vs a good and full direction in these duties and such a direction as was sealed vp by his owne example f Iob 31 16 17 19 20 21 24 25. and 29 15 16. He restrained not the Poore of their desire nor caused ehe eyes of the Widdowes to faile he did not eate his Morsels alone but
them and cursse them and cannot behold them with a friendly looke and a louing countenance as if the fault were in the Clearkes Bayliffes and other publique Officers not in themselues and their owne vnfaithfulnesse which is all one as if a Male-factor should charge the Executioner who is the Minister of Iustice to be the cause of his death forgetting that his owne misdeedes and misdemeanors brought him vp vnto that place and punishment Vse 2. Secondly seeing it is needefull that to confirme our lawfull contractes there be Euidences to shew it is a good point of wisedome required of vs to vse the aduise of such as are learned in the law and are both men of knowledge and of conscience For heere if in any thing else we shall finde the common Prouerbe true That the best is best cheap Many there are that regard the Fee more then the Cause and speake for themselues rather then for the partie that hath chosen them Againe many suites arise through ignorance and vnskilfulnesse of the Law wherefore it is meete we should resort to a learned Counsell so that partly through the want of honesty and piety in some partly the want of skill and practise in others many poore Clients go to wracke We must all deale in the matter of our goods as wise Patients doe for the curing of their bodies and the recouery of their health They will not goe to euery Slubberer or Sorcerer to euery Leach or Mountebanke to take charge of their bodies to whom a man would be loath to commit his Beasts If any doubts arise auoyd all forgery and periury suborning of false Witnesses counterfeiting of Euidences and such like deceitfull practises as the God of this world hath taught the Children of darknesse and confusion Take that course which God alloweth and Iustice warranteth repaire to men of that profession giue him good instruction and follow thou his direction For this purpose I will craue leaue to set downe e Three rules belonging to Lawyers three rules that are required and are to be performed of men of Law the obseruation whereof shall giue peace and comfort of conscience with God and gaine them Crownes and credit among men First of all if they disdaine not to be aduised and taught by vs let the end of all their pleas and proceedings be the finding out of the ttuth Let this be the marke that they shoot at and the starre whereby they direct all their course which seasoneth all their pleadings as it were with Salt If they regard not the tryall of the truth nor which way the cause go so they may receiue their Fee they abuse the ballances of Iustice and turne equity into Iniquity God is truth and euery one that belongeth vnto him should labour to bring the truth to light It is a generall rule taught by the Apostle f 2 Cor. 13 8. We cannot doe any thing against the truth but for the truth Woe therefore vnto them that dig deepe to hide the truth and inuent shifts to bury it out of sight that it may not take place and do all things against the truth and nothing for it The second rule is that they doe not delay the causes of their Clients and protract the time in hope of farther gaine from Tearme to Tearme and from yeare to yeare As there may be too great hast so there may be too great delay and there are Rockes on eyther hand the safest course is to saile in the midst betweene them both for feare of shipwracke It is a dutie of the Surgeon not to linger the curing of his Patient and to torment him a whole yeare where he might restore him in a quarter Suites of Law are tedious and chargeable they are as the fits of a Feauer that vexe the body and trouble the minde It is an euill course to keepe sores alwaies raw and woundes greene in hope to get Mony So it is an vncharitable proceeding to retaine causes and to keepe them alwaies on foot except they may haue for expedition Lastly as the end of their pleading must bee truth and veritie and the course of it without delay so it is required of them when they know the cause to be euill and see the manifest signes of an ouerthrow that they doe not conceale it but discouer and open it vnto their Clients They are to forewarne them of the end that they doe not intangle themselues in vnnecessarie and vnlawfull suites It is deliuered as a dutie of the Physition and of the Minister when they come to a sicke man that lyeth on his death-bed and see manifest signes of death that they doe not hide it from him nor flatter him in his sicknesse saying I hope you shall doe well and recouer and be as merry among your Neighbours as euer you were but rather with wisdome warne him and with discretion certifie him of it to the end he may renounce all confidence in earthly thinges and put his whole affiance in God according to that sentence of the Apostle g 2 Cor. 1 9. We receiued the sentence of death in our selues because we should not trust in our selues but in God which raiseth the dead Thus ought it to be with the carefull and conscionable Lawyer when he seeth the cause of his Clyent desperate and languishing without hope of life he ought not to draw him on and moue him to proceede but perswade him to giue ouer and tell him the danger that will come vpon him It is too late to bid the Souldier beware when the victory is lost The wisest way is to preuent a mischiefe betimes before it be too late So then to trusse vp these thinges closely together and to couch them in a narrow roome if he shall vse his diligence that the truth may be discouered and right take place and make this the end of his pleading if he bend his wits to giue quicke dispatch to the causes he vndertaketh and not to prolong the time for his owne aduantage And last of all if he lay open the weaknesse of his Clyents cause vnto him and forewarne him of the issue thereof he shall doe the part of an honest man of a faithfull Christian of a learned Lawyer and of a discreet Counseller Vse 3 Thirdly from these assurances in writing to confirme our promises one to another we learn the cause why it pleased the Lord to vse so many waies and meanes with vs to giue vs his Word his Oath his promises his Miracles his Couenants and his Seales We learne wherefore all these do serue euen to strengthen our Faith in the good meaning of God toward vs. And as he thereby assureth his owne graces so he prouideth for our weakenesse If there were in vs that measure of Faith that ought to be the bare word of God might be all-sufficient to teach vs to acknowledge him to be the God of our saluation and to depend vpon him for our Redemption But seeing
we haue much infidelitie in vs and are cumbred with doubting in the promises of God it pleased him in great mercy to prouide a remedy for our infirmity so that we may truely say where Sin abounded Grace hath abounded much more Thus we see the Lord Iesus dealt with Thomas one of the twelue when he beleeued not the Resurrection nor those that were chosen Witnesses thereof but said h Iohn 20 25 27. Except I see in his handes the print of the Nailes and put my Finger into the print of the Nailes and put mine hand into his side I will not beleeue it Heere we may behold as in a Glasse the example of exceeding great infidelity and vnbeleefe hee neither beleeueth nor will beleeue he will liue by sight and not by Faith This was no small obstinacy and incredulity in one of the Apostles who deserued to perrish in his sinne But Christ Iesus raiseth him out of this sleepe and offereth mercy with much compassion as it were pulling him out of this danger Put thy Finger heere and see mine handes and put forth thine hand and put it into my side and be not faithlesse but faithfull This is it which the Euangelist Mathew setteth downe Chapt. 12. i Math. 12. 20. A bruised Reed shall he not breake and smoaking Flaxe shall he not quench till he bring forth iudgement vnto victory Now such as Thomas was such we are all by Nature we cannot be perswaded to beleeue except wee see and feele We will not beleeue the bare word of God but are alwaies ready to wauer through vnbeleefe Hence it is that God in great mercy did from the beginning of the world adde to his word his Sacraments to assure his people that as he is the GOD of truth so he meaneth truely and performeth effectually whatsoeuer hee hath promised The Sacraments therefore are as signes and seales of his promises and dependances vppon the word that is gone out of his owne mouth The Apostle speaking of circumcision giuen to Abraham saith k Rom. 4 11. He receiued the signe of Circumcision as the Seale of the righteousnesse of the Faith which he had when he was vncircumcised that he should be the Father of al them that beleeue not being circumcised that righteousnesse might be imputed vnto them also Whereby we may see what the Nature of the Sacraments is to wit l what a Sacrament is and to what end it was instituted that they are visible signes instituted of God to seale vp his promises in the hearts of the faithfull The Author or efficient cause is God who onely hath power and authority to appoint and ordaine them because he it is that can giue force and efficacy vnto them The matter is the visible signe the forme is the maner of institution according to the Rites taught and prescribed in the word The end is that the faithfull may bee confirmed and strengthned in the truth of GOD. The word was giuen to instruct the Church by hearing the Sacraments were giuen to instruct the Church both by it and by the rest of the senses Indeede if wee were Angels and not men and were Spirits without bodies and heauenly Creatures not earthly we should not stand in neede of visible and bodily Sacraments but because our faith is feeble and wrastleth with Sathan the World the Flesh and such Enemies it wanteth proppes and pillers to vphold it that it doe not fall For albeit our Faith be mingled with doubting assaulted strongly with the waues of infidelity yet it ceaseth not to bee a true Faith An vnperfect Faith is a sound Faith though it be weake so that it standeth vs vpon with the Apostles m Luke 17 5. To pray for the encrease thereof Faith goeth before the Sacraments the which without Faith are idle and empty signes without profit without comfort without vse True it is the Infidels as the Aegiptians Aethiopians and other prophane people who neither worshipped the true God nor embraced the true Religion had the outward vse of circumcision as n Herod in Euterpe Histories testifie as also the Turkes and Iewes haue at this day but their cutting off the flesh is not the Sacrament of God but a meere ciuill thing yea an euill thing Thus then we see that the Sacraments were ordained of God to help our infirmity The promise of God is certaine and his Couenant doth not wauer neither can these outward Seales make it stronger But it is we that stumble and stagger and haue neede to be supported And woe vnto vs if we vse not this help and remedy left vnto vs nor profit thereby in confidence and assurance of our saluation For God hath after a sort bound himselfe vnto vs as by an Obligation Indeede man notwithstanding his wordes his oaths his promises his bands his seales and his assurances is oftentimes changeable and vnconstant but it is not so with God whose word is yea and Amen Were it not that we are weake of Faith and slow to beleeue he needed not to sweare by himselfe and by his holinesse hee needed not to haue set Authenticke Seales to his Word sauing that he minded to leaue no place for doubting in vs. Hence it is that the Apostle writing to the Hebrewes Chapt. 6. saith o He. 6 17 18. God willing more aboundantly to shew vnto the heires of promise the stablenesse of his counsell bound himselfe by an Oath that by two immutable thinges wherein it was vnpossible that God should lie we might haue strong consolation which haue our refuge to lay hold vpon that hope that is set before vs c. The greater meanes God hath left vnto vs the greater faith he requireth of vs and the more conscionable vse of those meanes that we may not alwaies bee Children Woe then vnto vs if in the store of so great mercies and variety of so many meanes we remaine distrustfull and doe not labour to gather strength of faith and assuraunce of comfort Let vs therefore grow from Faith to Faith as it were from strength to strength and not stand at one stay let vs proceede from one degree and measure to another vntill Christ Iesus bee throughly formed in vs. Vse 4 Lastly seeing Couenants in writing be requisite by the Lawes of God and Man wee must know that it is our dutie to deale iustly and vprightly one with another and in our bargainings to keepe a good conscience toward God and Man For this is the end wherefore Instruments in writing were brought in that all cozenage might be cut off all occasion of strife might be preuented Whereby we may gather that in all ages of men and times of the World there haue beene many deceits and much vnrighteous dealing to the disturbance of publique peace and the dissoluing of concord among men otherwise it had beene in vaine to require or to receiue such security in our buying and selling in our borrowing and lending one with
so little Charitie in my selfe and so small respect to you and so hard an hart toward him that no perswasion can mollify me no reason ouercome me no friends turne me The answere to this followeth I haue written vnto thee not because I doubt of thy fauour but because I trust in thy obedience not because I feare thou wilt deny mee but because I know thou wilt pleasure me This perswasion he amplifieth by a comparison drawn from the greater to the lesse as if he should say Nay I am well assured that for my sake thou wilt graunt a greater matter then I craue at thy hands The Reason may be thus contriued If thou be readie to yeelde more then this then I know assuredly thou wilt do this But thou art ready to yeeld more then this Therefore I know assuredly thou wilt do this The meaning of the words Thus much is to be marked of vs touching the method wherein we haue the conclusion of the chiefe matter howbeit adorned with much efficacy of words and strengthned with great force of reasons Now let vs consider the meaning of such thinges as require interptetation Yea Brother This first word is a note of exclamation or an Aduerbe of asking or wishing or beseeching or hoping well as if hee should say Oh my Brother I hope that this my intercession for him shall not be in vaine but carry sufficient waight and authority to worke in thee moderation in relenting and compassion in pardoning of him This word of affirmation is put to garnish the sentence to make the exhortation more powerfull and patheticall When hee saith Let me obtaine this fauour or fruite benefit or pleasure he vseth the Optatiue mood alludeth to the name of Onesimus in the word Onaimen which fitly serueth his purpose Touching these wordes Comfort my Bowels The meaning is receiue him and remit his offences and in so doing thou shalt cheere and reuiue my hart for the receiuing of him is the releeuing and refreshing of my outward parts and of my inward affections so that nothing shall be more pleasing vnto me He addeth in the Lord thereby signifying that the duty required of him is such that it pleaseth God and setteth forth his glorie and may Religiously be performed nay such as coulde not with a safe Conscience be omitted or denied So then hee vnderstandeth heereby that hee should doe him a great pleasure and withall please God and obey him That then which he doth request is commended by two fruites it shall benefite man and it shall be acceptable to God In the 21. Verse he saith Trusting in thine Obedience which is word for word in thy hearkning vnto me expressing wherein Obedience consisteth Namely in hearkning to that which is commanded euen to hearken with a purpose to doe it To this purpose Samuell ioyneth Harkning Obeying together a 1 Sam. 15 22 Hath the Lord as great pleasure in Burnt-offerings and Sacrifices as when the voyce of the Lord is obeyed Behold to Obey is better then Sacrifice and to Harken is better then the fat of Rammes So then the vse of this worde of Obedience is not without great force for thereby he insinuateth that Philemon coulde neuer escape the note of disobedience if he did not yeild to the Apostle of Christ making so honest so equall so iust a request Lastly when he saith Thou wilt do no more then I say the wordes are in the Originall Aboue that I speake that is thou wilt grant more then I aske or demaund at thy hands testifying heereby the free hearts of true Christians that being prouoked to necessarie holy duties they will oftentimes exceed that whereunto they are desired This being the right order and true interpretation of these wordes in these two verses they are thus much in effect Oh my Brother if thou regardest any good to mee or desirest to pleasure me in that which I desire or delight in let me obtain this benefit good turn at thy hands which wil also be accepted of God being a work of mercy allowed commended in his word refresh I beseech thee my bowels and comfort me in my son Onesimus for what thou dost to him heerin shal be as done to me If thou ask me why I vse so many words and whither I do distrust of thy dealing I answeare that I write nothing at all doubting but altogether trusting thou wilt graunt my request yea assuring my selfe thou wilt shew thy selfe willing to grant more then I haue requested euen to set him free if I should require it Generall Obseruations out of these two Verses These wordes are short but the Obseruations that arise from hence might bee many some I will onely point out and afterward handle others perticularly First of all marke the forcible farewell that the Apostle taketh The Conclusions and Perorations that Orators vse are woont to haue the sharpest edge but they are woont for the most part to bee long and tedious and full of wordes but the Apostle in this place vseth the greatest breuitie with the greatest vehemency Wherein hee repeateth againe the same manner of speech Of refreshing his bowels which we had before in the twelfe Verse Thou therefore receiue him that is mine owne Bowelles Likewise as hee saith Let mee obtaine this pleasure in the Lorde so hee doubleth it Comfort my bowelles in the Lorde This teacheth that repetitions of the same Doctrine are good and profitable to the Church according to the practise of Paul b Phil. 3 1. It greeueth me not to write the same things to you and for you it is a sure thing Let it not therefore greeue vs or offend vs to heare the same Exhortations Reprehensions and Threatnings but rather learne to lay better hold of them at the last then we haue done at the first Secondly by these phrases of obtaining a pleasure and refreshing his bowels we may learne what ioy and comfort the godly do feele receiue in themselues by the raising and restoring of a sinner It is as if wee wanted an hand an eye a foote or an arme and had it giuen vnto vs woulde not this reioyce vs and reuiue vs greatly So is it with the faithfull when they beholde a fellow member with them in Christs bodie restored and coupled with the head from whence it receiueth a gracious influence of all spirituall blessings it ministreth occasion of the greatest ioy that can be vnto thē Thus it ought to be with vs when we see any conuerted to the faith we ought to haue a fellow-feeling of the goodnesse of God bestowed vpon them c Luke 15 10. inasmuch as the Angels themselues reioyce when one sinner is conuerted Thirdly marke what words of beseeching entreating he vseth of praying and desiring him to grant his request albeit by his Apostolicall authority he might command him Whereby we learn that the godly and faithfull are more moued with mildnesse gentlenesse and with
be to doubt of his fauour and to call his louing kindnesse into question We must build vpon his promises as vpon a stable and steadfast foundation that shall neuer be remooued Heauen and earth shall passe away x Math. 5 18. But his word shall not passe away We haue the word and Oath of God y Hebr. 6 18. as two vnchangeable Witnesses so that it is vnpossible that he should lie or we be deceiued We haue the Sacraments of God as two Authenticke Seales to ratifie his promises and to make them most sure vnto vs. We haue the earnest penny as a certaine pawne left vnto vs z Rom. 8 16. And the spirit of adoption testifying with our Spirits that we are the Sonnes of God Wee haue the grace of Sanctification written in our hearts whereby we are dead to sinne and crucified vnto the world Wherefore seeing we haue so many waies to warrant his gracious goodnesse vnto vs why doe we yet stand in doubt and wherefore are our minds wauering in his mercies a Iames 1 6. As a Waue of the Sea tossed by the violence of the Windes Let vs enter into our owne hearts and consider our owne dealinges toward our Brethren If we finde our selues ready to forgiue and inclined to remit the iniuries done vnto vs and willing to release or at least to forbear the debts that we may worthily challenge of many our poore and needy brethren we may from this compassion toward them gather an vndoubted perswasion as a necessarie conclusion to our selues that his mercie shold be extended in great measure toward vs that he will neuer forget his wonderful compassion knowing that whomsoeuer he loueth vndoubtedly he loueth vnto the end He is neuer wearie of well-doing his gifts are without repentance He is not as man that he should lye nor as the Sonne of Man that he should change b Iames 1 17. With whom is no variablenesse nor shaddow of turning We are variable and vnconstant but hee is alwaies the same and will make good the words that are gone out of his owne mouth Let mee obtaine this pleasure in the Lorde c. The Apostle in these wordes doth testifie that these things which he requested of Philemon were in the Lord that is agreeable to the will of God He doth not craue them to please himselfe or to pleasure Onesimus onely but he asketh them because he knoweth that the obtaining of the same will be acceptable to God Here then he sheweth what ought to be the end that we propound to our selues in making suites and requests to others we must consider not so much what may content vs as what God commaundeth and alloweth Doctrine 2. Whatsoeuer we desire prouoke and perswade others to do must be in the Lord. From hence we learne that whatsoeuer we doe mooue desire prouoke and perswade others to doe must be in the Lord that is warrantable and conscionable standing with the will of God and a good conscience This is it which the Apostle handleth Phil. 4. Whatsoeuer thinges are true b Phil. 4 8 18. whatsoeuer thinges are honest whatsoeuer thinges are iust whatsoeuer thinges are pure whatsoeuer things are worthy loue whatsoeuer thinges are of good report if there be any vertue or if there be any praise thinke on these thinges And afterward in the same Chapter commending them for a worke of mercy he sheweth That it was an odour that smelleth sweete a Sacrifice acceptable and pleasing to God Likewise Ester 4. 14. When Mordecai would perswade Ester c Ester 4 14. to aduenture her credit and life in the behalfe of the Church which was sold to the mercy of the Sword and to the tyranny of the Enemies hee sheweth the equity and lawfulnesse of it though it were dangerous for her and threatned death vnto her Who knoweth whether thou art come to the Kingdome for such a time As if he should say Thou owest this duty to God and seruice to his Church being aduanced to the Kingdome for this end and purpose and therefore it is well-pleasing in his sight Thus doth Nehemiah exhort the Rich and the Rulers among the peoole to restore the Landes the Vine-yards the Oliues the Houses together with the hundred part of the Siluer and of the Corn and of the Wine and of the Oyle that they exacted of them shewing that in so doing d Nehe. 5 9 11 12. They should walk in the feare of God and redeeme themselues from the reproach of the Heathen Thus the Apostle perswadeth the Thessalonians to sanctification e 1 Thes 4 3 7 Because it is the will and pleasure of God who hath not called vs to vncleannesse but vnto holinesse By all these consents as by most strong Euidences and firme Witnesses it appeareth that we ought to haue the warrant of Gods word and approoued will to allow whatsoeuer we require or prouoke others to doe Reason 1. This will be made very plaine and manifest by sundry reasons First of all true loue will require onely such thinges as are honest Such as proceed further and make their owne will the rule and line to square out other mens actions with all doe want true loue and are not indeede true Frrendes The Apostle describing the Fruites and effects of loue saith f 1 Cor. 13 6. It reioyceth not in Iniquity but reioyceth in the truth It is a good sound note of a right friend to request such thinges onely as are iust and seemely The very Heathen by the light of nature could g Cicer. de amicitia see thus farre and teach how farre we are bound to pleasure and profit our friends Reason 2. Secondly such requests as are lawfull and lawdable doe giue warrant in crauing boldnesse in asking and comfort in obtaining Such requests shall neuer make vs ashamed to mooue them nor cause vs to take the repulse or denyall when we haue mooued them We see this in the example of Mordecai when he craued of Ester to make intercession for her people shee looked more into her owne danger then into the Churches deliuerance and respected more her owne person then their safetie notwithstanding hee h Ester 4 13. knowing his request to be honest and lawfull would not giue ouer but continued his suit though hee were delayed yet he was not daunted though he were denyed yet he was not discouraged but went forward boldlie vntill he receiued a gracious aunswere The like wee see in the Woman of Canaan who came to Christ for her Daughter that i Math. 15 22. Was miserably vexed with a Deuill albeit she receiued a three-fold repulse or a three-fold delay yet such was her Faith that she would take no denyall but did stride ouer all things that might seeme to hinder her and neuer would cease vntill shee had obtained her request Whereby we see that her honest request was granted and she went not away empty Reason
as seeke to be iustified by the Law are fallen from Grace Therefore the Apostle Paule saith Rom. 11. There is a remnant according to the election of Grace e Rom. 11 5 6 and if it be of Grace it is no more of workes or else were Grace no more Grace but if it be of workes it is no more Grace or else were worke no more worke This serueth to confute the Romish Doctrin giueth vs iust cause to come out from among them and to make a separation from them as being no true Church of God For in asmuch as they take away the foundation and cheefe pillers whereupon the house of God standeth they pull it downe and bring it to ruine We see how they exclude Grace and bring in Merrit They establish a two-fold kind of Merit and both of them as they vnderstand them plants of their owne setting but meere Strangers in the Garden of the Scriptures and therefore shall fall according to the Doctrine of Christ who saith f Math. 15 13 Euery Plant which mine heauenly Father hath not planted shall be rooted vp One sort is the g A two-folde merrit taught in the Church of Rome merrit of the person the other is the merrit of the worke The merrit of the person they make to be a dignity in the person wheredy hee is esteemed worthy of eternall life and this they say is found in Infants dying after Baptisme who though they want the merit of good workes yet they want not the merrit of their persons by which they receiue the Kingdome of heauen The merrit of the worke is a Dignity or excellency in the worke in it selfe whereby it is fitted and inabled to deserue life euerlasting Hence it is that they teach that the worke and the deed are meritorious two waies first by Couenant because God hath made a promise of reward vnto them Secondly by their owne Dignity because Christ hath merited that our workes should merrit A strange opinion and a strange language and manner of speaking neuer heard of in the Booke of God As for vs wee renounce all personall merrits that is all merrits within the person of any meere man also all merrits of workes done by any meere man whatsoeuer The true merrit whereby we looke for the fauour of God and life euerlasting is to be found in the person and workes of Christ alone who is the treasurie and store-house of all our merrits Obiection But heere some man might obiect and say The promise of reward is made to them that beleeue and worke therefore our workes doe merrit for merrit and reward be Relatiues Answere I answere there is a double reward one of Merrit the other of Mercy Euery good worke be it neuer so little done in Faith done to the glory of God done in that manner that he commaundeth shall bee rewarded but the reward is not giuen for the worthinesse of the worke but through the liberality of him that hath promised Hence it is that eternall life is called an Inheritance The obedient Childe hath promise from his Father to be his Heire and to inherit his Lands Goods and Possessions after his decease yet not for his obedience sake but because his Father loueth him and in kindnesse and compassion preferreth him before others Let it suffice vs to haue the Kingdome of Heauen as a free inheritance and not dreame as Hirelings that we shall haue it as an hire and Wages of our worke for then we shall be deceiued of our hope and expectation It is a vaine confidence to set vp such an high price of our workes as thereby to make them able to buy Heauen These men do know neither the weakenesse of their owne strength nor the vnworthinesse of their owne workes nor the wretchednesse of their owne persons nor the excellency of Gods Graces nor the praise of his glory whereof he is iealous which hee will not giue to any other They are like to Simon Magus h Actes 8 18. who offered to buy the guifts of God for his Money as a purchase or like to the i Math. 6 7. Heathen that looke to be heard for their much babling sake or like to Seruants that doe all for their hire So these Merit-mongers will haue no Heauen except they may haue it as their hire and as a penny-worth for their penny they will not be indebted vnto God nor beholding vnto him for it As for vs we value not our good workes at so high a rate we know their imperfections we craue eternall life as a Sons portion and an inheritance freely promised vnto vs and freely bestowed vpon vs. Indeede it is the will and pleasure of God that wee should labour and bring forth good workes to expresse our thankfulnesse to him that hath adopted vs for his Children and after our labour receiue the inheritance yet we cannot deserue it by our obedience and we haue a better claime vnto it by being Sonnes then working as Seruants We confesse that the reward shall be giuen of bounty not of necessity by guift not by debt by promise not by desert by Gods acceptation not through our perfection As for the Papists that glory in their owne workes let them take heede they do not deceiue themselues and whilst they rob God of his honour let them beware they doe not robbe themselues and depriue themselues of the honour promised to the Saintes and whilst they challenge and lay claime to euerlasting life as to the Wages of Seruants let them in time looke to themselues least they be denyed the Inheritance that belongeth vnto Sonnes Vse 3. Lastly seeing all Gods guifts come from him to vs of Grace and Mercy It is our dutie aboue all things to desire Mercy and to craue the free guiftes of God The Children of God whensoeuer they presented themselues into his presence they haue stripped themselues of all thinges they haue renounced all priuiledges of the flesh they haue acknowledged their owne vnworthinesse and haue craued nothing but his fauour and to bee satisfied with his Image This we see in the Prophet Dauid Psal 6. k Psal 6 3. 6. 63 3 4 5. My Soule is sore troubled but Lord how long wilt thou delay Returne ô Lorde deliuer my Soule saue me for thy mercies sake He desireth nothing but of Mercy hee pleadeth nothing but fauour hee standeth not vppon his owne righteousnesse he willeth not God to respect him according to his owne worthynesse Againe Psal 63. Thy louing kindnesse is better then life therefore my lippes shall praise thee thus will I magnifie thee all my life and lift vp mine hands in thine Name my Soule shall be satisfied as with Marrow and fatnesse and my mouth shall praise thee with ioyfull lippes Where hee preferreth the goodnesse of God before all things in Heauen and Earth whiles he aduanceth it aboue life signifying thereby that his life could not bee pleasant vnto him and that he would
other men extortioners vniust adulterers or euen as this Publican If a man haue one of his eyes or legs weaker then the other will hee reiect or neglect it and not rather looke to it and seeke to strengthen it and cure it Whē the fire is going out we are wont not to cast water vpon it but to thro on more Coales or to bring more Wood to kindle it When the bodie is feeble and sickly we doe not vse to starue it or stifle it but to cherrish it to dyet it and keepe it warme So ought it to be in the members of Christes body when we see any stand at a stay and as it were begin to pine and languish we should bring them home into the Sheepefold of Christ when we see any wounded we should binde vp their wounds and poure in Oyle and Balme to refresh them wee must seeke them that are lost and gather them that are dispiersed As for those that discourage and discountenance such as are of humble and broken harts and by their vnseasonable seuerity bring them to despaire let them know that they are no better then the very Instruments of the Deuill who are hired as Iourney-men to doe his worke and doe vsurpe the very office of the Deuill He is the accuser hater and persecuter of the faithfull but especially he seeketh to vndermine the weake and to swallow them vp in the quicke sandes of desperation without helpe or hope In this consideration the Apostle moueth the Corinthians to forgiue the incestuous person saying a 2 Cor. 2 10 11. To whom ye forgiue any thing I forgiue also for verily if I forgaue any thing to whom I forgaue it for your sakes forgaue I it in the sight of Christ least Sathan should circumuent vs for we are not ignorant of his enterprises Wherefore as God hath appointed comfort to his afflicted and contrite seruants so they are iustly to be taxed that shew rigour when they should shew mercy and draw out the sword when they shoulde put it vp Of these mercilesse men doth the holy man Iob oftentimes complaine who when he lacked and looked for comfort but could finde none he was b Iob 12 4. 16 2. as one mocked of his Neighbor and crieth out in the extreamity of his sorrow of his friends Miserable comforters are ye all Thus it fareth with many of Gods deare Children and our poore Brethren when as thorough great anguish of soule and vexation they call as Iob once did for comfort c Iob 19 21. 1 Haue pittie vpon me haue pitty vpon me O yee my Friends for the hand of God hath touched me yet their acquaintance are strangers vnto them their neighbors haue forsaken them their brethren are remoued farre from them and their familiars haue forgotten them True it is there is a time of seuerity and sharpenesse and such as are obstinate and vntractable as an vntamed Heifer are to bee terrified with sharpe handling that they may bee made feare But there is a difference to bee made betweene sinner and sinner and the seruants of God must discerne aright betweene Offender and Offender not iudging of all alike nor dealing with all alike according to the Doctrine and direction of the Apostle Iude Haue d Iude 22 23. compassion of some in putting difference and other saue with fear pulling them out of the fire c. This Wisedome we ought all to craue that we may do things in due season that we may not purge humors when wee should restore Nature neither yet go about to heale when we should cut and lance The Wise-man to this purpose hath a woorthy saying Prouerbes 25 11. A word spoken in his place is like Apples of Gold with pictures of Siluer Let vs not be in the number of such e Ezek. 13 22. and 34 4 5 6. As with our lies make sad the heart of the righteous whom the Lord hath not made sad nor strengthen the handes of the wicked that hee should not returne from his wicked way by promising him life Let vs take heede that it bee not iustly and truely spoken of vs which the Prophet chargeth vppon the Shepheardes of Israell The weake haue yee not strengthened the sicke haue yee not healed neither haue yee bound vppe the broken nor brought againe that which was driuen away neither haue yee sought that which was lost but with cruelty and with rigour haue ye ruled them c. God will require an account of vs touching his Sheepe and such as we despise he accounteth and respecteth as most deare and precious in his sight Secondly must we haue a respect to the weake Then we must acknowledge it to be our duty to cherrish such good things as we see in any of our Brethren remembring the saying of our Sauiour Math. 18 33. Oughtest not thou also to haue had pitty on thy fellow-seruant euen as I had pitty on thee God doth shew mercy and pittie vpon vs and therefore if we will bee his Children we must not be vnlike our heauenly Father Such is the state and condition of men that whethersoeuer we turne vs wee cannot but see some of our Brethren feeble and fainting and ready to sinke vnder the burthen so that they are ready to perish vnlesse we put vnder our hand to vphold them In this respect so many as are members of the Church ought to be so many Physitians one to another that we may bee meanes of curing and comforting one another We are charged to be keepers of them to look vnto them and by all good meanes to tender their good It is an excellent precept giuen by the Apostle Gal. 6 1 2. Brethren if a man be suddenly taken in any offence ye which are spiritual restore such one with the spirit of meekenesse considering thy selfe least thou also be tempted beare yee one anothers burthen and so fulfill the Law of Christ Where we see the Apostle vrgeth vs to this duty by putting vs in minde of our owne infirmity We so stand to day as that wee are readie to fall to morrow nay we continue this houre that we are readie to giue ouer the next Yea such is the mercy of God oftentimes toward such as are weake ones that when he hath made them once to see their own frailties he maketh them at the last stronger and more stedfast in the Faith then such as seemed to bee more forward and many degrees before them How weake was Nicodemus He i Iohn 3 2. came to Iesus by night at the first hee had a good desire to be instructed but he was ignorant in the principles of Religion he durst not shew himselfe openly to bee his Disciple for feare of the Iewes The like wee might say of Ioseph of Arimathea another Disciple of Christ k Iohn 19 38. but secretly to auoid danger notwithstanding God did so blesse them both with encrease of strength and the spirit of courage and boldnes that
the little light of Grace and spark of Faith that was in them did so shine and breake out into such a flame that they were not ashamed to professe themselues to be his Disciples when the rest forsooke him they begged his body of Pilate they wrapped it in linnen cloaths with Myrrhe and Alloes and sweet Odours and bestowed the honour of buriall vpon him Thus it falleth out oftentimes that they which are first are last and the last are first We know not what stormes and Tempestes hang ouer our owne heades and what perillous times may come vppon vs we know not what weaknesse wee shall shew in them howe great the Rebellion of the Flesh will be and what comfort wee shall want our selues The Prophet pronounceth him l Psal 41 1. Blessed that iudgeth Wisely of the poore and promiseth that the Lord shall deliuer him in the time of trouble If wee haue any feeling of this happinesse or haue anie Faith in our hearts touching this promise let vs make it manifest by seeking the good of our weake Bretheren It is an hiddeous and horrible cruelty and out-rage by our want of mercy and of feeling their infirmities to hinder the saluation of any one for whom Christ died Hence it is that the Apostle saith Rom. 15 2 3. Let euerie man please his Neighbour in that which is good to edification for Christ also would not please himselfe but as it is Written The rebukes of them that rebuked thee fell on me It cost a great price to Redeeme a soule and to bring it from Death to Life from Hell to Heauen and therefore we must vse all meanes wherewith the Lorde shall enable vs to comfort such as are Comfortlesse by the Comfort where-with wee our selues are comforted of God There is no Man but desireth to finde Peace and Comfort in him-selfe What is this life of ours without it If a man should liue many thousand yeares vpon the face of the earth and haue experience of nothing but sorrow anguish misery and vexation of Spirit so that hee could feele no quietnesse no rest no consolation no tranquility in these daies of his Pilgrimage would he not desire to be out of such a life and preferre death before it Do we then wish for peace And would we finde comfort The greatest comfort in the World that can come vnto vs and refresh and cheere vppe our Soules is to winne and saue Soules Blessed are we if we haue beene Instruments to gaine but one Soule vnto God It is the greatest gaine it is the best Traffique it is the sweetest Marchandize It shall be said vnto vs in the last day Thou good and faithfull Seruant well done thou hast beene faithfull ouer little I will make thee Ruler ouer much enter into thy Maisters ioy Let vs set this before our eyes and consider before hand the price of the reward when the time of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord. Vse 3. Lastly seeing God hath such a care of them that are weake that he would not haue them cut off but cared for of all men this ought to serue as a notable encouragement vnto them to labor to grow in Grace and to encrease more and more that they may proceede from strength to strength and so come to a perfect man in Christ Iesus True it is there are degrees of Faith all haue not one measure of Grace and yet the least measure if it be but as a graine of Mustard-seede is of power to saue our Soules If there be wrought in vs by the sanctifying Spirit of God the beginnings and seeds of Faith to wit an humbling of our selues vnder the burthen of our sinnes an acknowledgement and feeling that we stand in neede of Christ an hungring and longing desire to be made partaker of Christ and all his merrits and a flying to the Throne of Grace from the sentence of the Law troubling the conscience trembling vnder the same if these preparations as it it were ploughings vp of the furrowes of our hearts be found in vs God will not cast vs away but make this weake measure of Grace to be effectuall to saluation This is a sweete comfort to all saint hearts that are euery foot like to sinke downe and as it were to giue vp the Ghost This ought to be a forcible meanes to work thankfulnesse in them when in the examination of their hearts they shall finde the least measure of Grace setled in them and know their mercifull Father willing to acknowledge it to accept it and to reward it Not that we should flatter our selues in our wantes or content our selues in our weakenesse to stand alwaies at one stay but heereby to be brought forward in well-doing and to runne the race with all cheerefulnesse that is set before vs. This a notable signe of a true and sincere hart when we feele our strength to come euery day vnto vs and an accesse to be added to our former course For if we desire to be better and better and deale as men that runne in a race who stand not still in the mid-way but presse with might and maine to the marke this is an infallible note of a sincere heart This is it which the Apostle testifieth Phil. 3 14 15. Bretheren I count not my selfe that I haue attained to it but one thing I doe I forget that which is behinde and endeuour my selfe vnto that which is before And follow hard toward the marke for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus It is the goodnesse of God to accept the small measure of Faith that we bring vnto him This graunteth not liberty vnto vs to doe nothing to stirre neither hand nor foote or to content our selues that we go not backward For we must all know and vnderstand that the beginnings of grace are deceitfull and counterfeit vnlesse there be a growth and encrease The kingdome of Heauen is like to q Math. 13 31 33. a graine of Mustard seed which at the first is so small and little that it is scarse discerned but after that it is cast into the ground of a prepared and purified heart it rooteth deeply it groweth speedily it spreadeth exceedingly It is like vnto Leauen which a woman taketh and hideth in three peckes of Meale till all be Leauened The Maister deliuering his Talents vnto his seruants that he had called saith vnto them Occupy vntill I come he doth not bid them hide them in the earth Luke 19 13. Hereunto commeth the exhortation that Paule giueth vnto Timothy who had greatly profited in godlinesse and was brought vp in the vnderstanding of the holy Scriptures from a childe Chapter 1. r 2 Tim. 2 6. I put thee in remembrance that thou stirre vp the gift of God which is thee by the putting on of mine handes The word is a borrowed speach from the fire which must bee euermore kindled and kept with a new supply from going out
Profaners of the Sabbaoth 124 Prouision for the poore 160 Prouidence of God orders all thinges 295. It exempts men from sinne 300. It comforteth 302. It giueth contentation 303 Puritan how it arose 93 Q. Questions answered whether the holy Ghost be excluded in Salutations 4● Why Paule cals God his God 66. Whether Faith respecteth the Saints Ibid. Why Faith is restrained to the Saints 67 how Infants can be saued that want faith 8● Whether all that cannot say God is their God are Reprobates 81. Whether the Spirit may bee lost 133. Whether a Christian may not be angry 174. Whether it be sufficiently to haue Faith inwardly in the heart and so to conceale our Religion 88. Whether vnlawfull to respect persons 189 Whether we may heare none but our owne Pastors 202. Whether God be not able to saue vs without the ministers 215 Whether al men would beleeue if they heard God speake 218 How the promise of long life is kept 39 What they must doe that are not able to restore 413 We must not aske the question why all beleeue not 240 Question whether it be lawfull to sue at the Law 246 Whether the faithfull can fall away 491. R Rash Iudgement 6 Reading is not Preaching 208 Who hold reading to be preaching 209 Reioyce when we ought 68 Repinining See Enuy. Religion must be professed 86 Reproofe of such as loue onely the vngodly 115 Reproaches See Taunts Repentance blots out the reproach of sinne 88 317 Residents required of Pastors 19● 196 Reason against Non residency 196 197. Regeneration wrought by the word See Preaching Reuenge not iniuries 304. Reasons to proue we ought not 305 Repentance not to be delayed 318 Repetitions 406 Restitution 413 Reward a meanes to moue to godlinesse 226 Religion brings profit with it 230. The seuerall sorts of profit 231. It makes all the Family dutifull 234. It is no inheritance 237 Reformed Families haue often in them vnreformed persons 237 Repentant offenders must be forgiuen 244 Reioyce at our Brothers good 421 Regeneration 424 Reproofe 430 Reward prooues not merit 463 Rich men want reproouers 27 Rigour 480. in punnishing to be auoyded 176 177 Riches abused 275. Riots and Rowts condemned 369 S. Sabaoth to be duly sanctified 23 Saints are not to be prayed vnto 66. not to be beleeued in 103. why so called 117. There are Saints vpon earth 118 Two sorts of Saints 118. No reproach to be a Saint 119 Saints of the Popes making 121 Saints how they may be honoured 145 Wherein it consisteth Ibid. Salutations 465. they beseeme the Seruants of God 471 Sanctification a signe of election 122. necessary in all Ibid. Seruants we are to all 134 Sermons read 212 Seruants are of two sons 365. how they must do their duty 284. Whatsoeuer they do heartily is accepted 285. how they are made obedient 235 Seruants ●…lly entreated 329 Sacraments 391. What they are ibid. the causes of them 392 Sathan hinders prayers 462. how he poisoneth it 461. he perswades it will merrit ibid. how he is to be resisted Ibid. Sins of the penitent not to be increased 311 Selfe-Loue 258 Sinfull men contemne the Ministry 296 Sharpenesse See Rigour Slanderers of the godly reproued 96. they are petty-Deuils 144. we may be such by holding our peace 429. Slander to religion to make it enemie to Princes 263 Slander that we make God the author of sinne 301 Solitary life 23 Soule-Labour is greatest 36 Soule-Loue the truest 44 Societies of the vngodly must bee shunned See Company Soule more excellent then the body 505 Spiritual blessing chiefly to be craued 49 Sport not at sinne 72 Spirit compared to fire 133 Spiritual graces to bee preferred before earthly 500 Speech how to be ordered 477 Standers at a stay reprooued 131 Stirre vp the guifts of God See Gifts Strangers not to be wronged 443. Infidels respected them Ibid. Superiours to be reuerenced 177. they beate Gods Image 178. they must vse mildnesse toward Inferiors 333 334. they must instruct them 344. Profitable Meditations for Superiors 335 Suretyship lawful 373. how it may be vsed lawfully 377 Christ became our Surety 375 Sureties for euil persons 379 Rash Suretiship the vndoing of many 381 Sureties must do three things 383 Submission to the Gospel 401 Subscription 494 Suing at Law 246. what to be obserued in it Ibid. Suspitions 427 T Taunts must not discourage vs. 120 Tale-bearers 427 Testaments of the dead allowed 387. rules to be obserued in them ibid. Thankesgiuing required 68. 425. 456. it is to be giuen to God alone ibid. not only for our selues ibid. not to be seuered from prayers ibid Theft in borrowing 4 3 Time-seruers 486 Times and seasons of our conuersion in Gods hands 607 Titles giuen to the Ministers 34 Triall of our conuersion how to be made 232 Translations of Scripture ●09 True Religion alters a man ●27 Troubles of our Brethren must touch vs 422. we must seek to remedy them 423 Tongue 475. 476. How to order it in speaking 477. How it is abused Ibid. English Traytors made Romish Saints 19 Turkes Common-wealth 376 V No valour to reuenge 250 Vaine to set our selues against the Gospell 3 Vaine-glory 146 147 Vanity of this World 505 Vexing of the Saints 1●0 A vexation to dwell among the vngodly 150 Vnequall marriages 32 Vncertainty of humane things 154 155 Vnblameable infirmities See Infirmities Vnrepentant Sinners must bee charged with their sinne 320 Vngodly hate the godly 325 326 Vnthankfulnesse of the poore 412 Vniuersall vocation and election there is not 240 Vncourteous speaches 475 Vnknowne tongue in prayer 498 Voyce of God cannot be indured 218 Vpbraiders of penitent persons 314 Vse maketh men prompt 133 Vse not guifts to the hindrance of others 138 Vse of our goods belongs to the Saintes 372 Vserers 410 W Want of outward blessings See blessings Weake ones not to be despiced 83. they must be strengthened 478 Weake Faith auaileable 285 Wiues must be helpers of their husband 29 A Christian Wife is a great blessing 30 Wiues must wait the fittest times 31 Wife that is godly 326 328 Way to breed obedience in all sorts 234 Wicked men haue nothing theirs 60. Al things are set against them Ibid. they are Bond-men 115 Wicked prouoke Gods wrath against Princes 268. They are the greatest breakers of Princes Lawes ●63 Wicked are Vsurpers 23● 497. They are miserable in earthly things 49● Willingnesse in all duties 2●2 The minister must shew it in Preaching 286. The people in hearing 287 Worship must be performed with the whole body 94 Works of mercy must be specially shewed to the godly poore 111. They are accepted as done to Christ Ibid. Workes which are meritorious See Meritorious Wofull the estate of Apostataes 485 Wils of the dead See Testaments Word is seed and meate 130 World a bait 488 Worldly men reprooued ●01 Wretched estate of such as are without the preaching of the Word 213 Writings allowed for assurance 386. They stay suits 388 Y Yeare what best welcome to the couetous 409 Young persons owe duties to olde Men 180 They must suffer them to speak Ibid. they must giue them place Ibid. Z Zeale commended 10. Scoffers at it punished 10 11. It must be tempered with knowledge 11 True Zeale what it is 11. It is commended in good things 433 Zeale blinde 11 Faults escaped PAge 9. line 34. read knot of loue l. 36. r. prisoner of Christ page 5. l. 55. dele of p. 20. l. 41 42. r. our p. 36. l. 12. r. prison pag. l. 46. read if meat page 54. l. 54 read to reside page 77. li. 18. read but what pa. 123. l. 2. r. so old page 150. l. 34. r. mire p. 152. l. 18. r. leaues pag. 165 l. 18. read cooperation p. 167. l. 1. r. waies p. 174. l. 54. r. persons p. 178. l. 19. r. swarme p. 183. l. 43. dele bee p. 197. l. 7. read vigilant p. 219. l. 38. r. distractions p. 220. l. 18. r. and that p. 227. l. 15. r. the name p. 248. l. 18. r. not to hate l. 19. not to desire p. 250. l. 1. r. Amnon p. 254. l. 13. r. all such p. 265. li. 19. r. the inheritance p. 287. l. 18. r. and no. p. 288. l. 14. r vnto our p. 301. l. 1. r. could not p. 302. l. 7. r. spurre p. 303. l. 30. r. strayeth p. 319. l. 3. r. charge p. 341. l. 5. r. burned p. 350. l. 41. r. mutuall p. 352 l. 34. r. consent p. 360. l. 49. connecting p. 369. l. 44. r. being p. 370. l. 3. r. Churles p. 372. l. 13. read them not p. 381. l. 31. or the. p. 401. l. 11 r. guided p. 415. l. 30. dele no. p. 11. l. 15. r. albeit they want and ability to releeue them p. 260. l. 22. r. make him p. 433. l. 1. r. them striue p. 441. l. 31. r. to be the. p. 443. l. 11. r. no pitty p. 450. l. 50. r. to ouercome p. 457. l. 31. without profit p. 462. l. 24. r. of merriting p. 475. l. 52. vnregenerate heart p. 426. l. 12. r. not the. p. 427. l. 51. dele with p. 449. l. 42. read when he p. 447. l. 2. if we p. 267. l. 23. we had 227. in Margin r. Sophoc in Aiace p. 489. l. 21. read they will and l. 30. r. pace p. 495. l. 38. r. not want
of mercy to bee shewed vnto them So Lot his Nephew who had beene brought vp in his house and had learned of him to expresse the duties of Charity m Gene 19 1. sate at the Gate of Sodome into the which strangers did enter to call them to his House to refresh them with meate and to defend them from iniuries to which otherwise they lay open aboue all other This reprooueth those that grudge and are greeued when any occasion falleth out that they are tryed what affection and compassion they beare vnto them We see this euidentlie in Naball toward n 1 Sam. 25 14 Dauid and his men for when hee was intreated by the Messengers that were sent vnto him to giue whatsoeuer came to his hand he railed at them and sent them away empty he was lauish of his tongue but sparing of his pursse they had words but they had nothing but wordes It was otherwise with Abraham when he saw men come toward him hee ranne to meete them he bowed himselfe vnto them he intreated them to receiue the meanes of refreshing themselues at his handes he pressed vppon them very earnestly that they should not deny him To this purpose we heard out of the Apostle Peter That we should be harborous without grudging We must therefore not onely doe good to Strangers but doe good cheerefullie and with a ready minde without murmuring and repining at the occasion offered vnto vs. We now dwell in our owne Countrey and among our Kindred we rest quietly in our Houses and in our Beddes wee liue in peace and quietnesse but we know not what daies may shine vppon vs and what times may come ouer our heads We that now hate and abhorre strangers in our owne Land it may happen that our selues may be Strangers in a Land that is not our owne Moses exhorting the people of Israell to be mercifull toward such as aboue all others stand in neede of mercy to wit Strangers Widdowes and fatherlosse Children maketh this as a reason vnto them Loue the Stranger for ye were Strangers in the Land of Aegipt And albeit this reason doe not hold in many of vs neyther can be perswaded to deale kindly with Strangers because we haue beene already Strangers yet this Argument may be alleadged vnto vs to be carefull to loue Straungers because we our selues may be strangers in another Land For we know not where we shall end our daies or in what manner any more then when wee shall dye which all of vs know to be vncertaine If then we be hard-harted vnto others we must not looke to finde others pittifull to our selues It is Gods will that we should be Strangers in this World as appeareth by the example and confession of the faithfull Heb. 11. 9. 10 13. By Faith Abraham abode in the Land of Promise as in a strange Countrey as one that dwelt in Tents with Isaac and Iacob Heires with him of the same Promise for he looked for a Cittie hauing a Foundation whose bulder and maker is GOD. Thus did all the godly cast vp their accounts and confessed that they were Strangers and Pilgrims on the Earth yea we are his Children vpon other condition The Lord is in Heauen and we liue vpon the earth yet he commeth downe vnto vs and gouerneth vs he sheweth that he hath not forgotten vs but giueth vs an example what pitty we ought to haue of them that fly vnto vs as poore sheepe that are scattered by rauenous Wolues we should deale with them as we would haue the Lord deale with vs and shew that mercy that we expect of him True it is the Apostle noteth it among the properties required of the Pastour and Minister o 1 Tim. 3 2. Tit. 1 8. That hee should be giuen to Hospitality but he meant it also in generall to all the faithfull howbeit the Ministers must shewe them the way and hold out the Candle to giue them light For his purpose is not to binde the Ministers onely to beware of intemperancy to fly Couetousnesse to auoyde Pride and on the other side to moue them onely to be iust sober curteous chast and harborous in the meane season leauing all others to doe what they would and liue as they lift p Reasons why generall duties are appropriated to the Minister But the Apostle singleth them out by themselues and chargeth these duties vpon them first because the word of God should not be euill spoken off by the enemies beholding such scandals and faults to be in them Secondly to the end they should approoue their Doctrine by their good life and ratifie it to the consciences of all that heare it and so make it better welcome to them and them more willing to embrace it Thirdly that the people should follow them and frame their liues according to those vertues and graces which they see in their Shepheards And by the way let vs note that if chiefely among others the Minister must be harborous and it be a vertue that commendeth him to the Church to be giuen to Hospitality then the meanes should bee cheerefully and plentifully affoorded vnto him that he may be fitted and inabled to performe it This duty indeed is looked for from him and he lyeth open to obloquy and reproach when he doth not discharge it and yet in the meane season his present abilitie or rather disabilitie and insufficiency is not considered yea the means eyther are denied vnto him or with great grudging much lessening yeelded vnto him contrarie to the precept of the Apostle q Gal. 6 6. Let him that is taught in the word make him that hath taught him partaker of all his goods To conclude this point let vs learne to reioyce when we can do good to the distressed Saints that offer themselues as obiects of our compassion and bee glad that God hath inabled vs to helpe them Remembring that it is r Acts 20 35. a more blessed thing to giue then to receiue We saw before how God plagued the Sodomites and the men of Gibeah for their sauagenesse and cruelty toward the strangers that came to lodge among them God oftentimes blesseth those places and persons where and by whom they are entertained as on the other side many iudgements and punnishments fall from Heauen vpon their heads that are currish and vnkind vnto them Vse 4. Lastly it is a great comfort and peace to a mans conscience that God will in his Son Christ regard him when with a single heart he hath beene carefull to testifie his loue toward distressed Strangers for the truths sake Let vs reioyce in this consolation that we shall be assured that God wil pitty vs when we haue thus pittied others This perswasion we see in Nehemiah who resteth himselfe vpon it and raiseth comfort of obtaining from it Nehe. 5. 19. Remember me ô Lord in goodnesse according to all that I haue done for this people The like appeareth in Obadiah 1. King