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A17384 A commentary: or, sermons vpon the second chapter of the first epistle of Saint Peter vvherein method, sense, doctrine, and vse, is, with great variety of matter, profitably handled; and sundry heads of diuinity largely discussed. By Nicholas Byfield, late preacher of God's Word at Isle-worth in Middlesex. Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622.; Gouge, William, 1578-1653. 1623 (1623) STC 4211; ESTC S107078 497,216 958

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prouided for that God preserues them yea and himselfe finds them out means of singular refreshing all their dayes Eightthly He crownes them with blessings Psal. 103.4 Ninthly hee giues them assurance of an immortall inheritance 1. Pet. 1.3 4. The consideration of this maruellous mercy which the godly haue obtained may teach vs diuers things First with all thankefulnesse to acknowledge the mercy of God wee should alwaies mention the louing kindnesse of God in all the experiences we haue of the truth of his mercies toward vs Esay 63 7. We should frame our selues to an easy discourse of the glory of God's Kingdome and talke of his power Psalme 145.8 9 10. Wee should be so perswaded of this truth as freely to say that we know that the Lord is gracious and very mercifull Psalme 116.5 It is a great sinne Not to remember the multitudes of God's mercies Psal. 106.7 Oh! that men would therefore indeede prayse the Lord for his goodnesse c. Psalme 107. foure times repeated in that Psalme Christians should glory in it not in their riches strength wisedome c. but in this that they know God that exerciseth mercy Ier. 9.24 Secondly in all our waies heartily to disclaim merits of works or opinion of our worthinesse or deserts say still with the Prophet in the Psalme Not vnto vs not vnto vs Lord but to thy Name giue the glory for thy mercy and truths sake Psal. 115.1 The whole frame of our saluation depends vpon God's Grace not on works Ephes. 2. Tit. 3.5 Thirdly let vs with Dauid resolue to dwell in the house of the Lord for euer since our happinesse lieth in mercy and since we haue the tidings of mercy in God's house there the fountain of this grace is daily opened vnto vs and we may draw water still with ioy out of this well of saluation in the Gospell Psal. 5.7 23. vlt. Fourthly we should learne of God to be mercifull Let vs striue to comfort others with shewing them mercy as we haue receiued mercy from the Lord. Oh let vs bee mercifull as our heauenly Father is mercifull Luke 6. Fiftly we should hence be incouraged and resolued since we know our priuiledges to goe boldly vnto the throne of Grace vpon all occasions to seeke mercy to helpe in the time of neede We haue obtained mercy of the Lord and therefore may and ought to make vse of our priuiledge Heb. 4.16 Secondly this doctrine of God's mercy may serue for singular comfort to the godly and that both in the case of sinne and in the case of afflictions 1. Against the disquietnesse of the heart for sinne it should much refresh them to remember that they haue obtained mercy yea though innumerable euils haue compassed them about Psal. 40.11 12. and though our offences are exceeding grieuous Psal. 51.1 Exod. 34.6 7. 2. Secondly in the case of afflictions many things should hence comfort vs. 1. That howsoeuer it goe with our bodies yet God hath mercy on our soules 2. That it is mercy that our afflictions are not worse that wee are not consumed Lamentations 7.22 3. That in the worst afflictions God doth many waies shew mercy his mercies are new euery morning Lament 3.23 4. That though God cause griefe yet hee will haue compassion to regard vs according to our strength hee will deale with vs in measure Lament 3.32 Esay 27.7 5. That hee doth not afflict willingly Lament 3.33 6. That all shall worke together for the best Rom. 8.28 Deut. 8.16 7. God will giue a good end Iam. 5.11 Hee will lift vp from the gates of death Psal. 9.13 God will giue thee rest from thy sorrowes and feares and hard vsage Esay 14.1 3. Psal. 57.3 He will send from heauen to saue thee 8. Hee will afflict but for a moment Esay 54.7 But in both these cases wee must remember First to seeke mercy of God Ezech. 36.32 Secondly if wee bee not presently answered our eies must looke vp to God and wee must waite for his mercies Psal. 123.3 4. Thirdly wee must check our selues for the doubtfulnes of our hearts as Dauid doth Psal. 4.7 8. and 77.10 Fourthly because we liue too much by sence we must beseech God not onely to be mercifull but to let his mercy be shewed and come to vs Psal. 85.8 and 116.77 Fiftly wee should also beseech God not onely to let vs feele his mercies but to satisfie vs also earely with his mercies Psalme 90. verse 14. Sixtly wee must looke to it that wee walk in our integritie Psalme 26.11 and liue by rule Gal. 6.16 Lastly howsoeuer wee must trust in God and looke to it that wee rest vpon the Lord Psal. 32.10 and 33.18 22. For God takes pleasure in those which hope in his mercy Psal. 147.11 Quest. But how may a man that is not yet comforted with Gods mercy take a sound course to obtaine mercie Ans. That men may obtaine mercie First they must take vnto themselues words and confess their sins to God and hartily bewaile their offences Ioel 2.13 Hosh. 14.3 Secondly they must turne from and forsake their euill waies and their vnrighteousnes inward and outward Esay 55.7 Thirdly they must bee carefull to seeke the Lord while hee may bee found Esay 55.6 Fourthly they must bee mercifull and loue mercie For then they shall obtaine mercie Math. 5.6 Fiftly they must learne the way of Gods people and learne them diligently Ierem. 12.15 16. They must haue pure hands and a cleane heart and not lift vp their soules to vanity Psal. 4.5 Sixtly they must hate the euill and loue the good Amos 5.5 Seuenthly they must cry vnto God daily Psal. 86.3 Eightthly there must nought of the cursed thing cleane vnto their hands Deuteronomie 13. verse 17. Ninthly when the Lord saith Seeke yee my face their hearts must say Thy face O Lord will wee seek Psal. 27.7 8. Verses 11.12 Dearly beloued I beseech you as strangers and pilgrims abstain from fleshly lusts which fight against the soule And haue your conuersation honest among the Gentiles that they which speak euill of you as of euill doers may by your good works which they shall see glorifie God in the day of their visitation THese words contain the epilogue or conclusion of the whole exhortation as it concerns Christians in generall from verse 13 of the former chapter hitherto and it hath in it matter both of dehortation and of exhortation as answering in the substance to all that hee hath hitherto intreated of by way of vse The dehortation is in verse 11 the exhortation in verse 12 in the one shewing what they should auoid in the other what they should doo They should auoid fleshly lusts and that they should doo is to liue honestly In generall we may note that it is the proper effect of all sorts of doctrine in scripture to make an impression of care in our hearts about the reformation of our liues that it is in vaine heard which doth not
godly by giuing vs a roome in their hearts causing them to loue vs and honour vs euen for Christ onely whom they discouer in vs by our loue to Christ and faith in his name and imitation of his vertues Secondly and hee graceth vs also amongst the wicked by protecting and acknowledging vs in times of greatest distresse and by washing out the blemishes which our own indiscretiōs at any time brought vpon vs by cleering our innocencies from their vniust aspersions The vse may be first for confutation of their folly and madnes that account it a course of abasement to follow Christ and leaue the vanities of the world Godly courses are honourable courses No man euer lost honor by cleauing to Christ and liuing so as might become the faith and loue of Christ. Secondly and withall wee may hence be informed that all the honour that is without Christ is but obscure basenesse no man can bee truely honourable without the faith of Iesus Christ in his heart Thirdly we should hence be resolued to make more account of the Godly because Christ is to them al honour they are the only excellent ones in the world Fourthly wee should labour also to bee an honour vnto Christ and to the faith and profession of his name and seruice wee must remember that he is our surety to God for vs and hath vndertaken for our good behauiour and therefore for that reason wee should be carefull of our duties and besides wee see that the disorders of great mens seruants leaue an imputation on their master and so it is with vs and Christ. If wee liue righteously and soberly and religiously wee honour Christ our Master but otherwise if wee bee scandalous wee dishonour Christ and therefore had need to looke to our waies And lastly we shold account Christ sufficient honour to vs and not regard the scornes and reproaches of the world but rather with Moses esteeme the reproaches of Christ greater riches then the treasures of Aegypt Thus of the consolation to the godly The terror to the vnbeleeuers is exprest first partly by charging vpon them their offence secondly and partly by describing their punishment Their offence is disobedience To them that are disobedient All vnbeleeuers stand indited of disobedience and that in three respects For first they are guilty of Adams disobedience For by the disobedience of one man many are made sinners Rom. 5.19 Secondly they are guilty of disobedience against the morall Law which they haue broken by innumerable offences and in respect thereof are liable to all the curses of God Deut. 28. Thirdly they are guilty of disobedience against the Gospell For there is an obedience of faith Rom. 1.5 and the Lord complaines that they obeyed not the Gospell Rom. 10.16 and for this disobedience God will render vengeance in flaming fire at the Day of iudgement 2. Thes. 1.8 Now men disobey the Gospel not onely when they are bewitched to receiue false opinions in religion Gal. 3.1 But also and chiefly when they beleeue not in Iesus Christ but liue in their sins without repentance Vses The vse should bee for humiliation vnto impenitent sinners they should take notice of their inditement make haste to humble themselues before the Lord lest Sentence come out against them and there be no remedy and the rather because God will aggrauate against them their disobedience Now there are many waies by which a sinner may take notice of the aggrauations of his disobedience as First by the number of his offences if he consider that he hath made his sinnes like the haires of his head To bee guilty of treason but in one particular should occasion feare but he that is guilty of many treasons hath great reason to bee extremely confounded in himself and this is thy case Secondly thy disobedience is the more grieuous because thou hast receiued abundance of blessings from God who hath by them wooed thee to repentance and this will heap much vpon thee Rom. 2.4 Esay 1.3 Thirdly thou must consider all the meanes thou hast had of amendment God hath planted thee in his garden the Church he hath commanded his vine-dressers to bestow the paines and apply the meanes of growth to thee If now thou be not fruitfull this will be pleaded against thee which art still a barren figtree Luke 13.6 Fourthly it increaseth thy disobedience that thou hast beene guilty of diuers hainous and fowle euils as if thou haue beene a drunkard a filthy person a blasphemer of the name of God a man of blood or the like Fiftly the continuance in sinne thou hast long abused the patience of God and this heapes coals of further indignation against thee Rom. 2. 4 5. and the rather because thy heart hath beene to sinne euer for there is in the heart of vnregenerate men a desire to sin for euer and it is a griefe to them to thinke that at any time they should not be able to liue in sinne still Sixtly thou hast offended against thine owne vowes and couenants and the promises thou hast made to God both in baptisme and the communion and in other passages of thy life Seuenthly it increaseth thy offence that thou hast dealt wickedly in the land of vprightnesse Esay 26.11 There thou hast offended where thou hast had the example of the godly to shew thee a better course It is ill to sinne any where though in Babel but it is worse to transgresse in Sion or Ierusalem euen in the glorious Churches of Iesus Christ. Eightly thy incorrigiblenes addes to the heap of sinne though the Lord hath afflicted thee yet thou hast not learned obedience by the things thou hast suffered but thou hast made thy heart like an adamant so as thou wouldst not returne Ierem. 5.2 3. Ninthly it is yet more that thou hast beene so farre from reforming thine owne life that thou hast scorned and reproched the good conuersation of the godly thou hast spoken euill of the good way of God Thus and many other wayes may the sinner charge his owne heart and thereby prepare himselfe to returne to the Lord while there is yet hope For if thou wouldest returne with all thy heart and take vnto thee words and confesse thy sinnes and pray for forgiuenesse and mourne before the Lord and turne away from thy owne wickednesse the Lord would shew mercy and the obedience of Christ would heale thy disobedience and God would loue thee freely and the bloud of Christ would cleanse thee from all thy sinnes Hosh. 14. Isaiah 55.7 1. Ioh. 1.7 and while it is yet to day the Lord sendeth to thee and beseecheth thee to be reconciled 2. Cor. 5.19 21. Consider that God hath been with thee all this while hauing sent many others to hell for their sinnes and there is hope of forgiueness the Lord hath receiued great offenders to mercie as the Israelites that often fell away from him Iudges 10. and Mary Magdalene and Peter and Dauid and
declared himself that hee will not shew mercy or pity towards diuers sorts of offenders Thirdly that the things men vsually obiect will not be auailable to deliuer them from Gods wrath Fourthly what sorts of men in particular God will not be mercifull vnto For the first that men are apt to plead God's mercy when it belongs not to them is apparant through the whole course of Scriptures to haue euer been in the disposition of most wicked men they blesse themselues in their hearts when their iniquity is found worthy to be hated Psal. 36.2 They liue at ease and put far away the euill day from them Amos 6.1 3. They cry Peace peace when sudden destruction is made to come vpon them 1. Thes. 5.3 For the second that God will not bee mercifull to many a man that liues in the visible Church is manifested by many Scriptures as Deut. 29.19 Ier. 16.5 Ezech. 5.11 and 7.4 9. and 8.18 Hosh. 1.6 and 2.4 and in many other places For the third their excuses and pretenses are all vain for 1. If they stand vpon their greatnes in the world it is certain that riches will not auaile in the day of wrath Iob 36.18 19 c. 2. Nor will it help them to be born of godly Ancestors for rather than God will bee tied to the wicked seed of Abraham hee will raise vp children of the stones to Abraham Mat. 3. 3. Nor can multitude priuiledge them For though hand ioin in hand yet sin shall not go vnpunished and God turns nations of men into hell Psalm 9.17 4. Nor will their outward seruing of God serue their turn It is bootlesse to cry The Temple of the Lord the Temple of the Lord if men redresse not their waies Ier. 7.4 8 9 10. 5. Nor wil it help them that some Ministers speak comfortably to them and by their preaching they may expect mercy for GOD will iudge those Prophets that strengthen the hands of the wicked The stubborn people were neuer a whit the safer when the Prophet told them they should haue peace and no euil should come vnto them but the Lord protesteth that the whirl-wind of his fury should fall grieuously vpon the head of the wicked for all that Ier. 23.15 19 20. that at length they should consider it perfectly and the Lord threatneth that he will rent the wall of security which the Prophets haue built with vntempered morter that he will rent it euen with the fierce winde of his furie and there shall be an ouerflowing showre in his anger to consume it Ezech. 13.10 to 15. 6. Neither may the patience of God proue that he meanes to shew expected mercy for though a sinner prolong his daies an hundred times yet it shall not be well with the wicked nor ought he to settle his heart the more freely on his sinne because sometimes it is not speedily executed for God will finde a time to set his sinnes in order before him and then he may teare him in peeces and none can deliuer him Eccles. 8.11 12 13. Psal. 50.19 7. Neither will it ease them that there are so many promises of mercy in Scripture For they are limited and besides in diuers places where mercy is promised the Lord explains himselfe by shewing that he will not cheere the wicked Ex. 34.7 as was alleaged before so Nahum 1.3 and v. 7. compared with the 6. 8. Neither will their Baptisme helpe them for neither Circumcision nor vn-circumcision auaileth any thing but a new Creature Gal. 6. Ob. If any say But though they be not now vnder mercy yet hereafter they may bee vpon Repentance Ans. I answere that in this they say truely but yet not safely For many men that haue promised themselues the late Repentance and mercy haue died in their sins before they could euer repent And thy times are in Gods hands thou knowest not when nor how thou shalt die and therefore the surest way is Now to turne to God with all thy heart as they were counselled more at large Ioel 2.12 13. Now for the fourth it may awake some sort of offenders the more effectually that besides the generall threatnings against wicked men they in particular are assured that they are not vnder mercy As first such as shew no mercy to men Iam. 2.13 and such as transgresse of malicious wickednesse Psal. 59.6 and such as are people of no vnderstanding Esay 7.11 and such as walk after the imaginations of their owne wicked hearts and will not harken vnto God Ierem. 16.5 10 12. and such as blesse themselues in their heart when they heare the curses of the Lawes Deut. 29.19 and such as steale murther commit adultery and sweare falsely Ier. 7.9 and many other particulars Catalogues might be instanced in all the seuerall Scriptures the Prophet Malachy puts in such as deale corruptly in tything and offring Malach. 1.8 9. To conclude the counsell of the Prophet Ieremy is excellent in this case who most effectually speakes thus Heare yee giue eare bee not proud for the Lord hath spoken Giue glory to the Lord your God before hee cause darknes and before your feet stumble vpon the dark mountaines and while yee look for light hee turne it into the shadow of death and make it grosse darknes But if you will not heare my soule shal weep in secret for your pride and mine eye runne downe with teares Ierem. 13.15 16. Vse 2. Secondly the consideration of this doctrine may iustify the practice of godly Ministers that denounce the iudgements of God vpon their hearers that liue in sinne without repentance It is their duty to shewe them that they are not vnder mercy they are required to cry aloud and to shew Gods people their sinnes Esay 58.1 And the Prophets that cried peace peace are extremely threatened of God so as for not warning the people the blood of their soules is required of the Prophets Ezech. 33. verse 2. to 10. Vse 3. The third vse may bee therefore for the singular humiliation of wicked men that liue in the assemblies of Christians Though they haue obtained a place in Gods Church yet they haue not obtained mercy but liue vnder the fearefull displeasure of God and this is the more terrible if they consider three things First that this is the case of multitudes of men in the Church but a remnant are vnder mercy which will appeare more distinctly if you draw out of our assemblies such as in Scripture are expresly said not to bee vnder mercy as 1. Take all such as yet liue in their naturall Atheisme that mind not God nor Religion that onely care for earthly things and shew it by a constant either neglect or contempt of the publike assemblies of Christians amongst vs These cannot obtaine mercie because they refuse to heare Gods voyce and to seeke to the ordinary meanes of mercie Isaiah 50.1 2. Heb. 3.7 2. Draw out then secret offenders such as sinne in the dark and say Who seeth vs
pouerty haue a shew of wisdome and piety in not sparing the flesh but the holy Ghost tels vs that all this is but hypocrisie 2. Tim. 4.1.2.3.4 Col. 2. vlt 2. How miserable the estate of multitudes of our owne people is by these signes wee may perceiue that the plague is wondefully spread in Israel There are whole congregations of hypocrites that is of men that say and doo not that come neer to God with their lips and their heart is far from him that seldome or neuer pray but when they be sick that regard not the inward foulnesse of their hearts so their liues bee either ciuill or euill but in secret Iob. 15.34 Isay. 9.17 Secondly for instruction and so it should teach vs all to beware of this leauen of Hypocrisie Luke 12.11 and if we would be thought to haue the true Wisedome from aboue then let vs shew it by our fruits that they may be without Hypocrisie Iam. 3.17 And for the better enforcing of this vse I will put you in minde of two things First the sorts of Hypocrisie you are most in danger of Secondly the remedies or preseruatiues against Hypocrisie The sorts are chiefly these 1. The distraction in Gods worship which is a most wofull fault and most common This was it was shewed before that so angred God Isaiah 28.13 2. Secondly the omission of priuate worship I meane to make a shew of Religion and the loue of God and yet neglect reading of the Scriptures prayers conference and secret communion with God This as was shewed will prouoke God to stop his eare at our crie because we do not pray at all times Iob. 27.8 9. 3. Neglect of mortification of inward sins and secret faults taking liberty so it be but sin in the heart or in secret This will vndoe thee for euer if thou looke not to it in time 4. Affectation of praise and credit with men to do our workes to be seene of men Now there are diuers rules to be obserued if we would not bee poysoned with the raigne of Hypocrisie 1. Keepe thy selfe in Gods presence forget not God Remember alwaies that his eyes are vpon thee Thus Dauid set the Lord alwaies before him Psalm 16.8 And this God commandeth Abraham to doe if he will bee vpright Gen. 17. ● 2. Thou must pray much and often to God to create a right Spirit in thee For by nature we haue all double and Hypocriticall harts Psal. 51.10 3. Keepe thy heart with all diligence watching daily resisting distractions wauering thoughts and forgetfulnesse And to this end mortifie the first beginnings of this sinne in thy heart mourne for it as soone as thou discernest it and iudge thy selfe seriously before God Iam. 4.8 Math. 23.26 4. In all matters of well doing bee as secret as may bee Matthew 6. both in Mercie Prayer Fasting Reading and the like 5. Be watchfull ouer thy owne waies and see to this point That thou be as carefull of all duties of Godlinesse in prosperitie as in aduersitie in health as in sicknesse Iob 27.9 10. 6. Conuerse with such as in whom thou discernest true Spirits without Guile and shun the company of open and known Hypocrites 7. Be not rash and easy to condemne other men for Hypocrites onely because they crosse thy opinions or humors or will or practice It is often obserued that rash censurers that vsually lash others as Hypocrites fall at length into some vile kinde of Hypocrisie themselues But may we not call an Hypocrite an Hypocrite Hypocrites are not all of one sort Some are close Hypocrites some are open The open Hypocrite thou maist shew thy dislike of his courses and auoide him But the close Hypocrite thou canst not discerne or not certainely and if thou follow thine owne coniectures thou maist somtimes condemne a dear childe of God and approue a detestable Hypocrite But how may the open Hypocrite be discerned By diuers signes First by an ordinary and vsuall affectation of the prayse of men in doing good duties When a man constantly sets himselfe out to the shew it is an apparant marke of a false heart Marke that I say an vsuall affectation Secondly if a man make a shew of the meanes of godlinesse or liking the meanes of godlinesse or of the persons that are godly and yet it bee manifest that he hates to be reformed liues in known grosse faults and being rebuked by the word or seruants of God will not reforme but carrieth a grudge at the parties that laboured his reformation This is an euident marke of an Hypocrite Now to judge these is no offence Thirdly It is a signe of an Hypocrite when a man will be godly and ●estrayned and zealous in some companies and in other company take liberty for grosse p●ophanenesse Lastly he that will be rid of Hypocrisie must looke to himselfe to keepe himself free from the causes of it and take heede that he be not bewitched in those things that haue bred hypocrisie in other men What is it can make a man an Hypocrite First somtimes feare will doe it as in time of trouble or persecution men to auoide dangers will play the Hypocrites Luke 12.1 2 3 4 5. Secondly sometimes desire to get credit and to bee well thought on especially when it is mixt with enuie at the respects of others driues some men headlong into Hypocriticall courses Math. 6. Thirdly sometimes men are emboldned vnto Hypocrisie by a secret perswasion that Christ will deferre his comming and they shall not of a long time be brought to account Matthew 24.48 50. Fourthly men fall into Hypocrisie for gaine to hide their wicked and deceitfull courses So the Pharises Math. 23.14 so 1. Tim. 4.2 7. Fiftly forgetfulnesse of God is a great cause of Hypocrisie and the raigne of it in many harts Iob 8 13. Sixtly Lust and some vile wickednesse driues many men and women into Hypocrisie 2. Tim. 3. These things we must take heede of and preserue our selues from them if euer we would not be wretched hypocrites before God Thirdly heer is also consolation to all the godly whom God hath kept vpright and free from this damned vice I mean from the raign of it for there is no man but hath some dregs of hypocrisie in him But how may a man knowe that hee is not an hypocrite By many signes First when a man had rather bee good than seem so Secondly when a man makes God his secret place striues desires secrecie to worship God Matthew 6. Thirdly when a man loues no sin but would fain be rid of euery sin and so hath respect to all Gods commandements Fourthly when a man confesseth his hypocrisie and mourns for it and striues against it Fiftly when a man accuseth himself for it to others whose respects he most desires Sixtly when a man keeps his heart close to the substance of godlinesse and labours
will make all grace abound to them that striue to liue to be his seruants 2. Cor. 9.7.8 Seuenthly You must pray that your masters or if you will ministers may haue their harts enlarged and made fat and that they may come vnto you and conuert you with abundance of the blessings of the Gospel For if there be famine or scarcity and barrenness in Gods House you will not thriue well at home Rom 15.29 Eightthly We must take heed of al such things as hinder our growth as namely 1. Hypocrisie When men aduance a profession of Religion onely for carnall ends and seeke more the praise of men then of God These mens hearts will be fearfully blasted 2. Errors in opinion of strange doctrines 2. Pet. 3.17 18. Hebrews 13 c. 3. Spirituall pride 2. Cor. 12.6 7. For God giues grace to the humble Iam. 4.7 4. Headstrong affections as the passions of anger or the like these pull men back and hinder the growth maruelously 1 Cor. 3.2 3. Eph. 4.30.31 5. Liuing in places where we haue not powerfull meanes for our soules Eph. 4.13 For where vision failes they perish must needs faint and be starued in the famine of the word 6. Discord with such as feare God For if wee grow wee must grow vp in loue holding communion with the body of Christ Eph. 4.15.16 7. Domesticall vnquietnes and disorder For that will hinder not onely prayer 1 Pet. 3.7 but all other parts of piety 8. Worldliness This was the sinne did vndoe Demas 9. Sinister iudgement of our own practices in godliness when we are either iust ouermuch that is think too highly of what we do or wicked ouer-much that is thinke too vilely of the grace of God in vs or the good wee doe both these hinder Christians extreamely 10. The loue of any particular sinne For if once we dally with any corruption grace is dulled and the spirit of grace greeued and vexed in vs. Now for the fourth point we may know whether we grow or no by diuerse signes First if we be planted neere the riuers of water if the Lord make vs happy in liuing in such places where the means of grace aboundes and the ordinances of God florish in their life and power Psal 1.3 Eph. 4.13 Else if a good tree be planted in a dry heath far from water or raine no maruell if it grow not And when the Lord doth make the meanes plentifull hee doth vsually make his grace plentifull in so many as are ordaind to life Secondly and especially if we be conscionable in the vse of the means if wee measure to God in sincerity in hearing praying reading and receiuing the Sacraments c. there may be no doubt but God wil measure to vs in the plenty of his blessings if wee suck the milk of the word with desire we shall growe Wee need no more doubt whether our soules growe in grace if we can bring constant affections to the means than wee would whether the bodies of our children would growe if they haue good nurses and doo suck the breasts well Thirdly grace growes in vs as humility doth grow God wil giue more grace to the humble Iam 4.8 And look how we thriue and continue in true humility so we thriue in grace and contrariwise as pride and conceitednes growes in vs so doth true grace wither And the like may be said of meeknes which is a grace that orders the affections as humility doth the minde Fourthly we may try our growth by our loue to the godly the members of the mysticall body for the body of Christ increaseth in the edification of it self through loue As the loue of Gods children groweth or decaies in vs so doth grace growe or decay Eph. 4.15.16 This loue is the bond of perfectnes Col. 3.13 Fiftly we must try our confidence in God and the assurance of our faith For as grace growes so doo we growe more established and settled in God and the hope of his kingdome This is to abide in Christ and thus to trust in the LORD hath a promise of such a blessing as that man shal not wither Ier. 17.7 8. Sixtly we may discern our growth by the decay of taste in sinne and the world As the violence of temptation and the admiration of the pleasures and profits of this life go out of vs by the same degrees doth the holy Ghost get the victory and the Spirit settles the possession of grace in vs c. Seuenthly wee may discern it by our teachablenesse and honouring of prophecying when our Teachers according to their lines may bee inlarged and liue without suspicion or censure when we can beleeue them and rest in their testimony aboue the whole world 2. Cor. 10.15 2. Thes. 1.10 Eightthly wee may easily discern it by our constancy and frequency in good works either of piety or mercy or righteousnes either at home or abroad For to such as haue for vse it is certain more is giuen Mat. 13.11 Ninthly wee may knowe it by the frequency of our communion with God If the Lord daily dwell in vs or with vs and reueal himself to vs by the signes of his presence there is no doubt to be made of our growing The heart of a christian is Gods Temple and you may bee sure all prospers well in the Temple when the cloud sits there or often appears there Eph. 2.20 21. Vse The vse of this whole doctrine concerning growth may serue first for humiliation and so in many things First our hearts should smite vs for our ignorance There are many things of excellent fruit and praise which we haue not at all laboured in diuers of the twelue things before Secondly for our deadnes of heart and vnprofitablenesse of life which is aggrauated against vs 1. When God giues vs much means 2. When wee are insensible or at least incorrigible knowe all is not well and feel our selues to be lashed and yet mend not 3. When wee are slothfull and weary wil not stirre vp our selues nor receiue direction for the making vp of what is lacking to our faith or to any other gifts especially when wee are weyward and will go about rather than bee at the triall of direction or asking the way Ier. 31.21 3. Much more to such as are so farre from growing that they fall away and decline lose their first loue and what they haue wrought begin in the Spirit and end in the flesh This much vexeth God and is extremely dangerous to the parties Esay 1.4 Ier. 7.24 and 15.6 2. Pet. 2.20 But that this may not either pearce too farre or fall too deadly or flat vpon any that are guilty we must knowe there is a double declining or apostasie The one inward the other outward First the inward is when a mans heart is falne off from the care of godlinesse and the means of it and regards iniquity constantly being possessed of the raign of habituall hypocrisie and this
of two things Psalme 34. First thou must pray vnto him and make him thy refuge in all distresse Secondly and thou must put thy trust in him and then certainely thy face shall be lightned and thou shalt not be ashamed and I may adde two things more First Thou must loue his Word waiting vpon him in his Sanctuary Secondly and yeld thy selfe ouer to be his seruant and thou canst not faile to finde this goodness of the Lord. Fourthly It should inflame affection in the godly They should fall in loue with God Oh loue the Lord all yee his Saints Psalm 31.19 21 33. What can more draw affection then sweetnes of nature Fiftly It should perswade all Gods seruants to liue by faith and not through vnbeliefe in the time of affliction or temptation to dishonor god Why saist thou thy way is past ouer of God Or why sayst thou The Lord hath forgotten or will not forgiue Esay 40.27 49.15 16. Exod. 34.6.7 Sixtly It should kindle in vs a vehement desire to imitate so sacred a nature and continually to striue to be like the patterne in God for curtesie Eph. 4.32 kindness 2. Cor. 6.6 and all louing behauiour Colos. 2.12 1. Cor. 13.4 and easie to bee intreated Iam. 3.17 and loue to our enemies Luke 6.35 We should be followers of God Eph. 5.1 we should beare his image especially herein Col. 3.10 Seuenthly How should our hearts bee satisfied as with Manna when we feele this sweetnes of God to vs in particular either in the Word or prayer or in his works We should euen be sick of loue our sleep should be pleasant to vs and our hearts filled with gladnes What greater felicity can there be then that such a God should loue vs Psal. 63.6 Ierem. 31.26 Cantic 2.5 or 6. Eightthly We shold be carefull when we haue felt this sweetnes of the Lord to preserue our selues in this communion with God and abide in his goodnes as the Apostle vseth the Phrase Rom. 11.22 Lastly it should much affect with sorrow and shame all impenitent sinners and that in two respects First because they haue lost their time and liued without the sence of this sweetnes in God the Apostle Tit. 3.5 vseth this Phrase The bountifulnes of God appeared The word shined as the sunne doth in the rising which imports that the world was nothing but darknes till men found by experience the goodnes of God Secondly because they haue so long offended a nature of such infinite goodnes this will proue a grieuous aggr●uation of their sinne and misery For such a goodnes so prouoked will turn into extreme fury such mercy abused will be turned into vnspeakeable fiercenes of indignation as appeares Deut. 29.19 20. and Rom. 2.4 5. The second Doctrine is that God doth graciously sweeten his Word to his people or God doth shew his graciousnes especially in his word Hence it is that Gods seruants haue acknowledge the word to be sweeter then hony and the hony-comb Psal. 19.10 119.103 and the holy Ghost compareth it to feasts yea royall feasts Esay 25.6 Prou. 9.4 Luke 14.17 and the Apostle acknowledgeth a sauour of life vnto life in the Word 2. Cor. 2.14 The consideration whereof should teach vs diuers duties First To labour to finde the word so vnto vs to seeke this sweetnes in the word and to that end we must mingle it with faith else there will be no more tast in it then in the white of an egge and besides we must come to it in the tediousnes of our own vilenes For we are neuer fitter to tast of Gods grace then when we are deiected in the true feeling of our owne vnworthines God will giue grace to the humble and further we must get an appetite and affection to the word For the full stomach loatheth an hony-combe but to the hungry soule euery little thing is sweet Prouerbs 27.7 and lastly we must take heede that wee marre not our tastes before we come as they doe that haue sweetned their mouthes with wickednes and spoyled their rellish with the pleasures of beloued sinnes Iob 20.12 Such as liue in the delight of secret corruptions euen they that account stolne waters sweet may bee the guests of Hell but Gods guests they are not onely they that ouercome eate of the hidden Manna Reuel 2. Secondly When we haue found hony let vs eate it Prou. 20.13 That is if the Lord be gracious vnto vs in his word let vs with all care receiue it into our harts and with all affection make vse of it Lose not thy precious oportunity Thirdly It should teach vs in all our griefes and bitternes to make our recourse to the Word to comfort and sweeten our harts against our feares and sorrowes For at this feast God wipes away all teares from our eyes Esaiah 25.6 8. Fourthly The sweetnes of the Word when we feele it should satisfie vs yea satisfie vs aboundantly We should giue so much glory to Gods goodnes as to make it the abundant satisfaction of our hearts Psal. 36.6 Fiftly Yea further we should labour to shew this sweet sauour of the word in our conuersations by mercy to the distressed by gracious communication by our contentation and by all wel-doing that the perfume of Gods grace in vs may allure affect others that the very places where we come may sauour of our goodnes euen after we are gone Sixtly We should be alwaies praising of God for the good things of his Sanctuary acknowledging all to come frō his free grace without our deserts Psal. 84.4 entertaining his presence with all possible admiration saying with the Psalmist O Lord how excellent is thy goodness Psal. 36.9 Seuenthly We should pray God to continue his goodness to them that know him and to vouchsafe vs the fauour to dwell for euer in his house Psalm 36.11 Eightthly And constantly the experience hereof should set vs alonging our soules should long for the courts of Gods house and our hearts cry for the daily bread in Sion and we should constantly walk from strength to strength til we appear before God in Sion Psalm 84 and the rather because besides the sweetnes there is a plentifull reward in keeping Gods Word Psalm 19.20 Secondly from hence we may bee informed in two especiall things 1. Concerning the happinesse of the godly in this life notwithstanding all their afflictions and sorrows Thou seest their distresses but thou seest not their comforts The stranger doth not meddle with their joyes Oh how great is the goodnes of God in giuing his people to drink out of the riuers of the pleasures in his house when hee makes their eies to see the light in his light Psalm 36.8 9. Psalm 65.4 2. Concerning the office of Gods Ministers They are the perfumers of the world the Church is the perfuming-pan and preaching is the fire that heats it and the Scriptures are the sweet waters Or the Church is the mortar preaching the pestle and
wildernes of this world Philip. 2.15 Secondly it was their office to blow in the siluer trumpets and that vpon foure occasions as you may see Num. 10. First The one was to assemble the congregation or the Princes to the tabernacle Secondly The other was to giue an alarum when there was any remoue of the campe Thirdly The third was in the time of Warre when they mustred to battaile Fourthly The fourth was for ioyes sake at the time of solemne feasts and for thanksgiuing to God and in all these we should be like the Priests We should be as trumpets to call one vpon another to goe vp to the house of the Lord Esay 2.2 Secondly We should euery where proclaime mortality and signify that the whole hoast must remoue we must cry All flesh is grass 1. Pet. 1.23 Thirdly We should also blow the trumpet of defence and arme our selues in the spirituall warfare and call vpon God to saue vs from our enemies and stir vp one another prouoking to loue and good workes 1. Pet. 4.1 2. 2 Tim. 2.3 4. 2 Cor. 10.4 5. We should cry alowd like a trumpet in reproouing the transgressions of men and opposing the sinnes of the time Esay 58.1 Ephes. 5. Lastly we should trumpet out the praises of God for all the goodnes he hath shewed vnto vs we should blow as in the new moon Psal. 81.3 But then in all this we must remember that we blow with a siluer trumpet that is with all discretion and sincerity c. Thirdly a speciall work of the Priests was to blesse the people and to put the name of God vpon them The former whereof is prescribed Nam 6.22 23 24. and so should we all learne the language of Canaan or the language of blessing we must blesse and not curse for we are thereunto called 1 Pet. 3.9 Lastly their principall work was to offer sacrifices of which in the next words The Vses follow First For reproofe For there are many faults in Christians whereby they transgresse against their spirituall Priest-hood as 1. When men are yoaked with vnnecessarie society with the wicked for heereby they forget their separation to God c. 2. When men neglect the finishing of their repentance and assurance they looke not to their anointing 3. When men are scandalous of their indiscretions and faults they forget that such as haue any blemish must not offer the bread of their God and forget their washing from their old sinnes 2 Pet. 1.7 4. When men are barren of good workes or are vncheerefull and dull they leaue off the Priests garments of innocency and gladnes 5. When the liues and behauiours of men sauour of vanity and worldliness they remember not the blood of sprinkling 6. When men are ignorant and idle seeke not knowledge or doe not teach and instruct and admonish How doe the Priests lips preserue knowledge or how doe they beare about the Arke of the Lord 7. When Christians are fearfull and irresolute and colde and not frequent in the praises of God how doo they blowe in the siluer trumpet 8. When Christians are bitter-hearted and accustomed to euill-speaking how doo they forget their duty of blessing To omit the neglect of sanctifying till I come to handle it in the next place Vse 2. Secondly for consolation to all godly and mortified and inoffensiue Christians they should be wonderful thankfull to God that hath made them partners of this holy Calling howsoeuer the world conceiues of it God promiseth it as a great mercy to his children that they shall be called the Priests of the Lord Esay 61.6 and the Church is wonderful thankful for it to God Reu. 2.6 and 5.10 And the rather should we reioyce in it because God hath promised to take vs to himself as his portion and peculiar treasure Exod. 19.6 And it is his promise also to satiate the soules of his Priests with fatnes Ierem. 31.14 And what a priuiledge is it to haue accesse vnto the Lord and to stand before God daily which the Priests not onely might but were tied to it by their office But then for conclusion of this point let vs all bee sure wee haue our part in the first resurrection Reu. 20.6 and be carefull to be like the Priests for obedience and sanctity Exod. 19.5 6. and to get knowledge plentifully into our hearts Col. 3.16 and in the cause of God to blow the trumpets of zeal and resolution carrying our selues with all humility and readinesse to doo good and so becomming instruments of blessing to the people And which I had almost forgotten we must remember to be like the Priests for teaching and confuting and reprouing and informing our Familiars and friends as wee haue fitnes and occasion Thus of the Priest-hood of Christians in generall In particular hence is further to be considered first their work secondly their honour Their work is To offer vp spirituall sacrifices their honour is Acceptation and high account with God through Iesus Christ. First then of the work of Christian Priests which is To offer secondly what they must offer viz. sacrifices thirdly the difference of those sacrifices from those in the Law of Moses they are spirituall which word notes both the substance of Christian sacrifices viz. that they are such sacrifices as were not according to the Letter but according to the mysticall significations of the sacrifices of Moses Law and withall the manner how they must be offred vp viz. spiritually or after a spirituall manner The main thing heer intended then is To auouch that Christiās haue their sacrifices which they must offer and that in a spirituall manner Now for the cleerer opening of this doctrine two things must bee distinctly considered of First what sacrifices can remain to Christians since the Law of Moses is abrogated and secondly what things are requisite to the offring vp of these sacrifices For the first There are diuers sorts of sacrifices among Christians Some are proper to som Christians onely some are generall to all The sacrifices that are proper to some Christians are such as three sorts of men must offer First Ministers secondly Martyrs thirdly rich men First Ministers haue their sacrifice which they must with all care offer to God and their sacrifice is the soules of the hearers Thus Paul was to offer vp the Gentiles to God Rom. 15.16 And thus it was prophecied that in the time of the Christian Church the Elect should be brought in as an offring to God out of all Nations Esay 66.20 Ministers sacrifice their people either in this life or at the day of Iudgement In this life in generall when they perswade them to their attendance vpon the House of God and breed in them a care to come before the Lord in Ierusalem Esay 66.20 In particular when they work repentance and true conuersion in their hearts and when they make them go home and mortifie their sinnes and tender their vowed seruice to God And
came downe from heauen to signify that true zeale is kindled in heauen and comes down from aboue It is no ordinarie humor nor a rash fury It is no wilde fire And it was required about this fire that they should preserue it and neuer let it goe out but put fuell still to it and so it was kept for many yeeres so must wee doe with our zeale wee must labour by all meanes to preserue the feruencie of our hearts that wee neuer want fire to burne our sacrifices Our zeale should bee as the loue mentioned Can. 7.10 that much water could not quench it Euery sacrifice must haue fire Marke 9. Sixtly The sacrifices must be salted with salt so must our Christian sacrifices as our Sauiour Christ shewes Marke 9.49 50. And thus we must haue the salt of mortification and the salt of discretion and we must looke to it that our salt lose not his saltnes but that it haue a draining power in it to extract corruption out of our sacrifices our words to God and men must bee powdred with salt Col. 4.6 and so must all our actions Seuenthly the sacrifices must be without leauen Leuit. 2.11 Leauen is wickednes or malice or sowrenes or deadnes of heart or worldly griefe euen whatsoeuer leaueneth that is infecteth or maketh the meate offring to be heauie or sowre 1 Cor. 5.8 Eightthly in the same place of Leuiticus 2.11 Honie likewise is forbidden to be mingled with their sacrifices and by hony may be meant our beloued sinnes or particular corruptions wee should especially watch against them in the time of performance of holy duties that they mingle not themselues with our sacrifices by infecting our cogitations Ninthly the offring must bee waued and shaken to and fro before the Lord Leui. 7.3 And this signified the wauing of our lips in praier to God for his acceptation our sacrifices should bee soundly tossed to and fro in praier before the Lord Iob prayed before he sacrificed Iob 42. Tenthly on the Sabbath the sacrifices were to bee doubled to signifie that in a speciall manner wee should consecrate our selues to piety and mercy on the Sabbath day Eleuenthly our sacrifices must bee offered vp with all gladnes of heart and spirituall delight Thus Gods people were said to be a free-harted and willing people Psa. 47.9 and 110.3 And this was shadowed out partly by the oile that was powred into the meat offerings which is expounded to be the oile of gladnes and partly by the feast they made at the end of their solemne sacrifices vnto which they inuited their friends to ioyne with them in reioicing before the Lord and it is likely Dauid alludes to this feast when he saith hee would take the cup of saluation and praise the name of the Lord For as yet the Lords Supper was not instituted nor doe we read of any vse of a cup in the sacrifices or sacraments themselues Exod. 18.12 1. Chr. 16.1 2 3 4. Psal. 116.13 Twelfthly If wee be called to it wee must not deny vnto God the fat of the kidneies and the inwards By the fat was meant the things which are dearest to vs most beloued and that most delight vs and if the seruice of God and the Church and the poore require it wee must deny our selues and sacrifice what is most deare to vs. Thirteenthly the Apostle to the Hebrewes Chap. 13.13 addes that we must not leaue off wel-doing for reproach sake but be contented to bee like Christ who suffered without the gate as scorned of men and like the sacrifice was burnt without the campe Though all men hate vs and speake euill of vs and cast vs out of their companies yet wee must persist in our intention to sacrifice still to God Fourteenthly In the Sacrifices God had a great respect of mercy that cruelty were not shewed as Leuit. 22.27 When he enioyned that the creature must be seuen dayes vnder the damme and that no damme with the young one was to be slaine the same day Certainly God abhorreth that cruelty should bee exercised vnder pretence of piety Cursed be those long praiers that will deuoure widowes houses Matth. 23. In one thing we differ from the sacrifices For the sacrifices were dead or consisted of things without life but wee must be liuing sacrifices wee must do what we will do while we are aliue and must do it liuely with the affections that belong to the duties to be done Vse The vse may be briefly twofold for partly it should humble vs for our neglect of praiers and thanksgiuing and almes and contrition Wee omit the maine duties of our generall calling when we omit these It was the abomination of desolation when the temple was without sacrifices and how can it but be exceeding vncomely with Gods spiritual house that hath not sacrifices in it We are Christians but in name when pietie and mercy is neglected But especially we should be instructed from hence to mind our worke and to striue to answere our high calling by a continuall care day and night to exercise our selues herein the smoke of our incense should daily ascend vnto God The Apostle Paul beseecheth the Romans by the mercies of God to look to their sanctifying Rom. 12.1 Which shewes it is of wonderfull necessity and would make vs in some measure walke worthy of the Lord. And to the Hebrewes he bids them take heede of forgetting these sacrifices importing that vsually our deficiency in these seruices are from forgetfulnes we forget to pray and forget to shew mercy euen after we haue purposed both And thus much of the worke of a Christian. Now his honour followes Acceptable to God by Iesus Christ. Wherein three things may be noted First that howsoeuer piety and mercy and weldoing find little acceptation in the world yet it shall neuer want honour and great esteeme with God Pious and mercifull Christians shall neuer faile of the loue and fauour of God Their workes are accepted It is true that God may change his minde concerning the Ceremoniall Sacrifices but the acceptation of Christian Sacrifices is a thing established with God Heb. 10.9 These offerings shall be pleasant vnto the Lord Malach. 3.4 They are well-pleasing in his sight Heb. 13.16 They are a sweet sauour vnto the Lord Phil. 4.18 God hath a booke of remembrance Mal. 3.17 and our fruit shall certainly remaine Ioh. 15.16 And thus Cornelius his prayers and almes came vp before the Lord Acts 10. Secondly that it is not enough to doo good duties but wee must striue so to doo them that God may accept them Heb. 12.28 Esay 1.11 12 13 14. Thirdly that now our best works are made acceptable to God onely by Iesus Christ Reu. 8.3 4. It is from the presenting of Christ that wee are found holy and without blame in Gods sight Col. 1.22 Therefore we must doo all in the name of the Lord Iesus Col. 3.17 Vse The vse of all should be to teach vs with all care to
deuote our selues vnto godlinesse that thereby we may proue what this good and acceptable will of God is Let vs try Gods acceptation and wee shall certainly finde it shall go well with the iust Rom. 12.1 2. Yea wee should from hence gather much encouragement to imploy our selues in piety and mercy It is enough if God accept of vs. Quest. But what should we doo that we may be sure our sacrifices be accepted of God How shall we knowe when God doth accept our seruice in any holy duty Ans. That a mans conscience may be soundly established in this point of God's acceptation we must look to three things First that the person be sanctified None but Priests must approach to offer sacrifice to God They that are in the flesh cannot please GOD Rom. 8.8 The sonnes of Leui must bee purified and refined as the siluer is refined before their offring will bee pleasing Mal. 3.3 4. When the Lord reiected with so much disdain the sacrifices of the Iewes hee shewes what they should haue done to please him they should haue washed themselues by true repentance and put away the euill of their works Esay 1.11 16. Onely the works of the penitent cannot bee accepted if the person be not in fauour the works are hated For they are sanctified by the holy Ghost Rom. 15.16 Secondly that the manner of performing our seruice bee right there are diuers things in the manner are hatefull and diuers things pleasing The things specially hatefull are first beloued sinnes secondly hypocrisie thirdly malice and fourthly luke-warmnesse The sacrifice is lothsome if it be blinde or lame or blemished that is if men bring to Gods seruice the loue of any foule sinne the seruice is lothsome Malach. 1. So if mens hearts be carried away with continuall distractions that seruice is lost this is To come neer to God with our lips when our harts are farre from him Hypocrisie is leauen as beloued sin is hony both forbidden Again when a man comes to God's work and hath not forgiuen his brother hee keeps the Feast with some leauen his Passeouer is defiled nor can his own sinnes be forgiuen because he forgiues not Mat. 6. 1. Cor. 5.8 Finally luke-warmnesse is like a vomit to God when wee are neither hot nor cold They are lothed like the Laodiceans Reuel 3. There are other things wonderfull pleasing to God as First when a man doth whatsoeuer he doth in the Name of Christ this is the Altar that sanctifieth the gift and the sacrifices are heer acceptable through Iesus Christ Heb. 13.15 Col. 3.17 Secondly when our works are soundly powdered with salt that is when we soundly confess our owne vnworthinesse and giue all glory to God in Iesus Christ. Thirdly when wee loue mercy and piety accounting it our delight to doo God's will and thinking our selues greatly honoured to bee admitted to doo this seruice Mic. 6.8 2. Cor. 8.5 Fourthly when we can bring faith that is a heart well perswaded of God so as wee can beleeue all good of him and his mercy Without faith no man can please God Heb. 11.6 and God takes no delight in him that withdraweth himself through vnbelief Heb. 10.36 37. Fiftly when it is our euery-daies work Sacrifice will please God if it be continuall Hebrewes 13.15 Thus of the second thing Thirdly wee may knowe that our sacrifice is accepted if the Lord burn it to ashes with fire from heauen Thus God did put a difference between the sacrifice of Cain and Abel by some visible signe and though wee may not limit God and expect he should answer vs by visible signes yet God hath not left vs without testimony of his fauour For by his word of promise and by his Spirit bearing witnes to our spirits hath hee manifested euen from heauen his acceptation and in particular when the beleeuer stands before the Lord with his sacrifice duely offered when the Lord doth ●uddenly fill his heart with the cloud of his presence or warm his soule with the ioyes of the holy Ghost what is this but the signe of his acceptation Question What if we be accepted in our seruice of God what great thing is that to vs Answ. When God accepts thine offrings thou maist be assured of three things First that all thy sins bee forgiuen thee God hath purged away thine iniquity he hath receiued an atonement in Iesus Christ Psal 65.2 3. Secondly God is exceedingly delighted in them Thy sacrifice is a sweet smell vnto God he reioyceth ouer thee with ioy Phil. 4.18 Thirdly it is a pledge vnto thee that God wil supply all thy necessities out of the riches of his glory in Iesus Christ our Sauiour Phil. 4.19 Verse 6. Wherfore also it is contained in the Scripture Behold I put in Sion a chief corner-stone elect and precious and hee that beleeueth therein shall not be ashamed HItherto of the proposition of the exhortation The confirmation follows where the Apostle giues reasons why wee should make our recourse to Christ to seek holinesse of life from him and the reasons are two The first is taken from the testimony of God verses 6 7 8. The other is taken from the consideration of the excellent priuiledges of Christians vnto which they are brought by Christ verses 9 10. The testimony of God is both cited verse 6. and expounded verses 7 8. In the testimony of God obserue first where it is to be found viz. In Scripture secondly how it is there It is contained there thirdly what is testified Now the matter testified concerns either the giuing of Christ for the good of the Church or the safety of the Christian that by faith receiueth Christ. The giuing of Christ is exprest in these words Behold I lay in Sion a chief corner stone elect precious the safety and happinesse of the Christian that receiueth Christ in these words And hee that beleeues in him shall not be confounded First of the place where this testimony is found viz. in the Scripture By the Scripture is vsually meant all the Books of the old and new Testament written after an extraordinary manner by inspiration of the holy Ghost But heer he means it of the Books of the old Testament but yet so as the word doth agree to all the Books of both Testaments Now this very word giues vs occasion to consider of the nature of these Books and of their vse and of their excellency and of their harmony These Books are called Scripture because they contain in writing the whole will of God necessary to be knowne of vs they are the Treasures of all truth The doctrine which was before deliuered by tradition for 2000 yeers was afterwards written down and explained in these Books so as nothing needfull was left out or omitted Secondly this word imports the excellency of the Bible aboue all other bookes because it is called Scripture as if no other writings were worthy to be mentioned in comparison of these The Scripture exceedes
that the testimonies of Scriptures concerning Christ ought to bee familiarly knowne of vs and this as an especiall one But I rather think it is vsed to note the wonder of the work heere mentioned and so the word may import diuers things vnto vs. First it was a maruelous work that God should giue vs his owne Sonne to be our Sauiour and the fountaine of life to vs. Hence it is that wee may obserue throughout the Scripture that God doth set this note of attention and respect both vpon the generall and vpon many particulars that concerne Christ as it were by the Word to pull vs by the eares to make vs attend or to giue vs a signe when we should specially listen Thus God brings out Christ to the Church and tells how he loues him and hath resolued vpon it by him to saue both Iewes and Gentiles and wils them to behold him and wonder at him Isaiah 42.1 So when hee promiseth the comming of Christ And of the ends of his comming hee makes a proclamation all the world ouer that he hath appointed a Sauiour vnto Sion Thus hee would haue vs wonder at the seruice of the Angels about the time of his birth Math. 1.20 Luke 2.9 10. and at the miracle of his conception that he should bee borne of a Virgin Mat. 1.21 and at the Wisemen led by a starre out of the East Mat. 2.1 9. and at the opening of the heauens when the voice came downe to testifie that Christ was the beloued Son of God in whom he was well pleased Math. 3.16 17. and at the seruice which the Angels did him and at his wonderfull abasement for our sakes Math. 21.5 and especially that hee should sacrifice his owne bodie for our sinnes 1. Iohn 1.29 Heb. 10.7 and that he is aliue from the dead and liueth for euer Reuel 1.18 and that he hath opened the secret book of Gods counsel and made it known to the world Re. 5.5 and that after such hard times vnder the raign of Antichrist hee should recollect such troops of Gospellers as stood with him on Mount Sion Reu. 14.1 It were too long to number vp more particulars Onely thus much wee should learn that the doctrine of Christ is to be receiued with great affection attention and admiration Secondly this word strikes vs like a dart to the heart for it imports that naturally wee are extremely carelesse and stupid in this great doctrine concerning Christ faith in vs. For when God cals for attention it implies that we are maruellous slowe of heart to vnderstand or with affection to receiue the doctrine Let the vse of all be then to striue with our owne hearts and to awake from this heauinesse and sleepinesse and with all our soules to praise God with endlesse admiration of his goodnes to vs in giuing vs his Sonne Thus of the wonder of it 2. The Author of it follows I lay or put God would haue vs to take speciall notice of it that it is he that was the Author of this glorious worke He is the work-master the chief master builder It is Gods worke and the knowledge of this may serue for diuers vses For first it should direct our thankfulnes wee should giue glory to God and praise his rich grace Hee will not lose his thanks for Christ. He holds himselfe much honoured when wee praise him for so great a gift as Christ. Secondly it should much strengthen our faith and make vs beleeue the loue of God and his willingnes to bee reconciled He is the party offended and if he were hard to be pleased he would neuer haue sought out such a proiect for reconciliation Besides what can God deny vs if he can giue vs his owne Son and who is pleased also in his Word to signify so much and commanded it by his seruants to bee told to the parties offending that he hath found out such a way of perfect peace Thirdly we should hence be comforted in all the straits of godlines when the Lord goeth about to lay the foundation of grace in our hearts and to forme Christ in vs we should remember it is the Lords work and it shall prosper if the Lord will haue it go on who can hinder it The gates of Hell shall not preuaile against it when God builds it vpon this Rock Fourthly it should teach vs in al other distresses to trust vpon God and neuer be afraid of the oppositions of men or the impediments of our deliuerance For what shall restraine Gods mercy from vs If the Lord can bring about such a worke as this to found Sion by laying Christ as the chiefe corner stone in her then we may trust him in lesse matters The Lord will accomplish all the Counsell of his will and he that hath promised that all shall worke together for the best will performe it To this end hee pleades this worke of founding Christ in the womb of a Virgin of purpose to giue them thereby a signe of deliuerance then in a temporal affliction it is easy for him to saue vs and deliuer vs from all our troubles that can giue vs a Sauiour for all our sinnes Lastly Ministers that are but vnder-Masons Carpēters must learn to take al their directions at god both to see to it that they lay no other foundation then what God hath laid which is Iesus Christ and in all things to be faithfull in good workes as such as must make their accounts to God And thus of the Author Thirdly The time followes I lay or put Hee speakes in the present time yet meaneth it of a thing to bee accomplished in the time to come For God laid Christ downe as the corner stone partly in his Incarnation when he sent him into the world in the flesh to take our nature and partly he is said to lay down this corner stone when spiritually by meanes hee formes Christ in the hearts of men in the visible Church Now the Lord speaketh in the present time I doo lay for diuers reasons First To signify that the care of that busines was then in his head he was plotting about it did continually minde it Secondly to signify that howsoeuer the maine worke of the open restoring of the world by Christ in the calling of the Gentiles was long after to be done yet God did spiritually forme Christ in the hearts of the remnant so as at all times hee did more or lesse further his building Thirdly to note the certainty of the accomplishment of it he saith he did then do it to assure them it should as certainely be done as if it were then done which should teach vs to beleeue God and neuer limit him When we haue his promise let vs reckon vpon it if God promise vs any thing it is as sure as if we had it Thus of the time Fourthly The manner followes noted in the word Laid I lay There are many things imported vnder this
a righteous nation may enter in Esay 26.1 2. Men may deceiue themselues but God will not be deceiued For he hath his fire in Sion and furnace in Ierusalem Hee will try euery man and make his count onely by righteousnes Esay 31.9 Rom. 9. and therefore the sinners in Sion haue reason to be afraid Esay 35.14 And if yet wee would haue signes more particular wee may trie our selues by these that follow First Sion is a Virgin and all the Godly are the Daughters of Sion and so the chiefe Daughter of a chiefe mother Now this is a true vertue of a true member of the Church that his loue is vndefiled towards Christ Hee is not enamored with other things Hee will haue no other God but one Hee accounts all things but drosse and dung in comparison of Christ Hee harbours no beloued sinne but denieth the inticements of it with detestation and griefe that hee should euer be so assaulted Secondly God knoweth his owne in Sion by this signe that they are they that mourn in Sion that are farre from making a mock of sinne The Lord himselfe is their witnes that their hearts are heauie by reason of their sinnes and they knowe no griefe like to the grief for their sinnes Esay 61.2 Thirdly thou maist knowe thy estate by thy subiection to Christ and his ordinances For God hath set his King in Sion Now if thy Soueraigne bee in Heauen and thou canst bee willing to be ruled by his ordinances this will bee a comfortable testimonie to thee as contrariwise if thou dislike his gouernment and wouldst faine cast his yoake from thee so as this man may not rule ouer thee thou art of the number of the people but not of Gods people Psal. 2.6 Thus of the second vse Thirdly wee should bee carefull to celebrate the praises of God yea and therefore carefull for all the goodnes he shewes vnto vs in Sion Praise should waite for him The Lord is great and greatly to bee praised in Sion the Cittie of our God Psal. 48.1 Psal. 147.12 Esay 51.16 All that serue the Lord in Sion and are refreshed with the comforts of his presence should get large hearts both for admiration and celebration of his goodnes Psal. 134. the whole Psalme Come say the godly Ierem. 31.10 let vs declare the worke of the Lord in Sion c. Fourthly since Sion is the place where the Lord keepes house and giues entertainment to all his followers wee should call one vpon another to goe vp to the Lord in Sion wee should run thither to the bountifulnes of the Lord and in all our wants shew our selues instructed in this point by making our recourse vnto Sion as the place where God is pleased most readily to declare his shining mercies Ierem. 31.6 12. Fiftly we should be stirred vp to much praier for the accomplishment of the building of God in Sion Our hearts should long to see this work prosper Oh that the saluation of Israel were come out of Sion Psal. 14.1 For Sions sake wee should not hould our peace Esay 62.1 but still beseech the Lord to doe good to Sion and build vp the walls of Ierusalem Psal. 51.20 Sixtly we should especially be greeued if we see that Sion prospers not Of all iudgements we should most lament the desolation of Sion The whole booke of Lamentations is spent vpon this subiect Wee should hang our harpes vpon the willowes if we remember that Sion lieth waste and there be none to build her vp Psal. 137. Seuenthly the especiall vse should be for consolation If the Lord doe vs good in Sion wee should account it a maruelous felicitie if the lord admit vs to be members of the true Church in places where Gods work prospers The Lord giues this promise in Esay to comfort them against all the miseries were outwardly to fall vpon them This work should make amends for all other troubles If God build vs vp in spirituall things hee giues vs double for all outward crosses we should striue with our owne hearts to be exceedingly affected with the happines of our owne condition on earth when we know our interest in Sion wee should liue without feare yea euerlasting ioy should bee vpon our heads and sorrow mourning should flee away Esay 31.10 and the rather if wee consider the prerogatiues of Sion aboue all the world besides for First the Lord dwells there It is the Palace of his residence on earth as hath beene shewed before Secondly the fauor of God shines there Hee delightes in his people and ioyes in all the members of Sion He reioiceth ouer them with ioy Zeph. 3.15 16 17. Psal. 86.2 Thirdly in Sion we are loosed from our fetters and bonds It is a place where the Captiues goe free The Lord turnes back the captiuitie of his people Psal. 14.7 Fourthly in her Palaces God is knowne for a refuge in all distresses Psal. 48.3 There is wonderfull safetie there The Lord doth mightily preserue and defend his people wee are safe if wee be members of the true Church and haue true grace the greatest aduersaries labour in vaine and seeking see and maruell and haste away Psal. 48.11 12. They shall certainly be confounded and turned back that hate Sion Psal. 129.5 Vpon euery place of mount Sion shall be defence Sion is a quiet habitation God hath his yeere of recompence for the controuersies of Sion and his day of Vengance Esay 34.8 Fiftly the Lawe comes out of Sion and the word of the Lord from Ierusalem There we haue directions for our life and for eternall life Esay 2.3 It is Gods foddering place there hee giues vs shepheards to feed vs Ierem. 3.14 Sixtly the inhabitants of Sion haue all remission of sinnes and the healing of their infirmities as the Prophet shews in these words excellently The inhabitant thereof shall not say I am sick the people that dwell therein shall bee forgiuen their iniquitie Esay 33.24 Seuenthly all the good newes is there to bee had we are naturally Athenians we loue to tell and heare newes if we were spiritually so Oh! how would we reioice in Sion whose spirituall glory is to bring good tidings Esay 40.9 and 41 27. and 52.7 c. Eightthly If the Lord bee displeased with Sion yet it is but for a moment hee will returne in euerlasting compassion It is a sure thing The Lord will yet haue mercy vpon Sion Psal. 102.14 Hee will againe comfort Sion and make his wildernes like Eden and his Desart like the garden of the Lord Esay 51.3 Lastly and specially we should reioice in Sion because the Redeemer comes to Sion and to them that turne from their transgressions in Iacob Esay 59.20 Yea saluation only comes out of Sion Psal. 14.7 In Sion onely hath God placed saluation for Israel his glory Esay 46. vlt. And therefore we should labour to walk worthie of so great mercies of God and liue with all contentment whatsoeuer our
must needs be the worst kinde of restraint Thirdly because these crosses are more hardly cured it is much easier to heal a sicknes in the body than a disease in the soule Fourthly because these iudgements for the most part are inflicted vpon the worst offenders I say for the most part for sometimes the Godly themselues may be scourged for a time and for iust reasons with some kindes of spirituall iudgements Vse The vse may be first for reproof of the madnesse of multitudes of people in the world that can bee extremely vexed and grieued for worldly crosses yet haue no sense or care of spirituall iudgements they howle vpon their beds if GOD take from them corn or wine or the fruits of the field but neuer grieue if God take the Gospell from them they are much troubled if they lose the fauour of their greatest friends but neuer mourn because GOD hath forsaken them they are very impatient if their bodies be sick and yet very quiet if their soules bee sick they would think themselues vndon if they were carried to prison who yet are not much moued at it that God should deliuer them vp to Satan And yet I would not be mistaken I do not mean to say that wicked men should not mourn for worldly or outward crosses It is true godly men should not or not with great sorrows but for wicked men they ought to be extremely grieued for euery outward affliction because it comes in wrath from God and is but the beginning of euils But then two things must bee noted First that their sorrow should be godly viz. for their sinnes that brought those iudgements not for the crosse it self secondly that they ought to bee more troubled for spiritual iudgements than for temporall Secondly this should much comfort godly men and women in all their afflictions and it should make them patient because though God afflicts them in their bodies or states yet hee spareth their soules and doth not execute those outward crosses but with much compassion Thirdly it should teach vs how to pray in the case of afflictions if they bee spirituall iudgements wee may pray directly for the remoueall of them but for temporall iudgements we must pray with condition And thus of the generall obseruations Before I enter vpon the particular breaking open of the doctrine of this verse it will not be amisse to shew that this and such doctrine as this is not vnprofitable Quest. For some one might say To what end serues this doctrine of God's dealing with vnbeleeuers Ans. I answer it is profitable both for godly men and wicked men For wicked men may hence hear and fear and doo no more wickedly seeing hence they may discern what they may come to if they preuent it not by repentance And for godly men they may hence be the more inflamed with the admiration of Gods goodnes when they shall heare of their owne priuiledges by grace Such Scriptures as this containe the arraignment and triall of the vngodly Now it is very profitable for vs to stand by and hear the triall Wee know multitudes of innocent men flock to the Assises to heare the araignement of malefactors which breeds in them first contentment in the obseruation of the solemnity and manner of administration of Iustice Secondly a feare to offend the terror of their sentence frightes the heart for many daies after Thirdly a loue of innocency it makes men loue innocency much the better for a long while after Fourthly compassion to malefactors it softens the heart and makes men fit to shew mercy to these poore condemned men The like to all this is bred by the consideration of such Doctrines as this In the words of this verse then two things are to bee noted first the kindes of punishments inflicted vpon the body of vnbeleeuers secondly the causes of it The kindes are two first God will deliuer them vp to scandall and then to despaire to scandall as Christ is a stone of stumbling to despaire as Christ is a rocke of offence These words are taken out of the Prophet Esay Chapter 8. where the Lord intends by them to denounce the reprobation of the Iewes as some think or rather foretels the spirituall Iudgements which shall bee inflicted vpon them The Apostle in this place applies the words to the vnbeleeuers of his time among whome the obstinate Iewes were chiefe to shew that as the other Scripture was comfortable to the Godly so were there places that did threaten the wicked that as the former place did proue Christ a stone of foundation for the godly so this did shew that Christ was a stone in another sense to the wicked Christ is a stone of triall to all men in the Church because the Doctrine of Christ tryes men whether they be elected or reiected good or bad so Esay 28.16 Againe Christ is a precious stone to the beleeuer and thirdly heer a stone of stumbling to the vnbeleeuers Now that we may know what offence or scandal is we may be helped by the Etimology of the originall words For Scandall in the originall is either deriued of a word that signifies to halt or els it noteth any thing that lieth in a mans way a stone or a piece of wood against which he that runneth stumbleth and so hurteth or hindreth himselfe It most properly signifieth rest or a certaine crooked piece with a baite vpon it in instruments by which mice or wolues or foxes are taken and thence the Church translated the name of scandall to note the snares by which men are catched as beastes are in grins and baites so the word it seemes is vsed So then a scandall is any thing which causeth or occasioneth offences by which a man is made to halt or is brought into a snare or made to stand still or fall in matter of Religion or saluation And so the sorcerers were a stumbling block to Pharaoh and the false prophets to Ahab and the lying signes of Antichrist to such as loue not the truth Now all scandall may be thus diuided Scandall is either actiue or Passiue that is giuen or taken Scandall giuen is when the authour of the action is likewise the cause of the hurt that comes by it Thus Elies sonnes were scandalous thus Dauid by his greeuous sinnes gaue offence 1. Sam. 2.17.2 Sam. 18.22 c. and thus Scandall is giuen either by euill doctrine first whether hereticall secondly or superstitious or else by wickednes of life or by wilfull abuse of Christian liberty Offence taken is either from our selues or from others A man may bee an offence a stumbling blocke to himselfe by dallying with some speciall beloued corruption of which our Sauiour Christ saith If thine eye offend thee pull it out or thy hand or thy foot c. Math. 5.29 Scandall taken from others is either that they call humane or that they call diabolical Scandall taken which they call humane may either bee found in Godly
estimation from them or at least put them to silence c. For the first if wicked men bee offended for doing good wee are not to regard their offence As when the Pharises were offended at Christ he cared not but said Let them alone they are blind and leaders of the blinde c. Math. 15.14 And so the Apostles answered It is better to obey God then men Acts 5.29 It is better that scandal arise then that the truth should bee forsaken Thus Michaiah cares not for the offence of Ahab nor Eliah and in this case Leui is not to respect father or mother bretheren or children Deut. 33.9 And so though wicked men bee offended wee must preach the Gospel with all plainenesse and not affect wisdome of words 1. Cor. 1.23 and wee must labour for the meate that perisheth not and must pray vnto God and vse religious exercises in our houses as Daniel did wee must renew Iustification by our owne workes and we must suffer in a good cause and wee must with strictnes auoid the excesses of the time Now for the second we may be guilty of giuing offence to the wicked First by scandalous and vicious life thus Dauid gaue offence Secondly by indiscretion in the manner of doing good duties as if men pray or fast or giue almes to bee heard or seene of men Thirdly by rash zeale as when men proclaime to the world a great deale of strictnes in things that are not grounded vpon the Word and yet are tainted openly with known infirmities and sinnes or when men are violent and rash censurers especially in things they commit themselues or when men neglect their calling and liue inordinately and are busie-bodies vnder pretence of Religion or when men that haue a faire dore opened to doe good by preaching the Gospell will not yeeld in some indifferent things that they may winne them as woe had beene to Paul if he had not beene a Iew with the Iewes that hee might gaine the Iewes thereby or necessity lay vpon him the preaching of the Gospell or to preach the Gospell though it were clogd at that time with condition of yielding to the Iewish ceremonies 1. Cor. 9. Now for the third there are diuers excellent rules that may much adorne the liues of Christians in their courage toward the wicked and so either preuent scandall or leaue them without excuse themselues being Iudges as they will confesse in the day of visitation These things then will much aduance our cause before wicked men to shew in our conuersation 1. Integrity and harmelesnes and sound care of the practising of godlines Philippians 1.15 16. 2. Submission and obedience vnto the King and his humane ordinances 1. Peter 2.13.14.15 3. Reuerence and feare when we intreate of any thing that concernes God and Religion 4. Meeknes of wisdome expressing a minde free from conceitednes frowardnes or affectation Iam. 3.13 5. Mercy to the poore and a minde free from the greedy desire of earthly things a serious declaration of the contempt of the world Iam. 1.26 Math. 5.16 c. 6. Quietnes and peace to be shewed first in studying to be quiet to meddle with our owne busines secondly in making peace amongst others Math. 5.8 7. Loue to our enemies being ready to pray for them or doe them any good Lastly hence may be gathered some matter of consolation for the godly For first if the Lord haue kept them from taking offence hee hath freed them from a great sore spirituall iudgement Secondly if the wicked should be so peruerse as to take offence when he giues none yet this may stay him that Christ himselfe was an offence vnto them Thirdly as it is a great iudgement to bee offended at Christ so it is a great mercy and supernaturall grace when the Lord makes our hearts able to loue the Lord Iesus in all sincerity Hitherto of the first kinde of punishment the second is that Christ shall be to them A rock of offence that is they shall fall vpon Christ as the ship doth vpon the rock and be broken all to pieces There shall bee a desperate anguish vpon their consciences perceiuing themselues to haue no right in Christ by the feare of which as men that haue suffred shipwrack they shall be out of all hope of mercy Thus hee that falleth on this stone shal be broken and vpon whom it shall fall he shall be ground to powder Luke 20 17. The consciences of wicked men are diuersly affected some are without feeling of any grieuance in the matters of their soules some haue feeling The consciēce is without feeling either through a continuall security and sleepines which is in all men or through a searednes by which some men are growne past feeling Now those wicked men that haue any feeling in this text are cast into two sorts for either they are offended or they despaire Christ is to those latter an occasion of their ruine they suffer shipwracke vpon Christ which is ioyned with singular offence or paine or grieuance of their consciences This rocke is like that in the Iudges chap. 6.21 out of which fire went and consumed them The despaire that wicked men feel is of two sorts For either it is a despaire which riseth from their perswasion of their want of helpe in spirituall things or from their want of help in outward things somtimes they fall into desperate tormēts and griefs and fears about outward things either vpon fear of danger or vpon an apprehension that they are vtterly vndone or shall be in matters of the world this was the despair mentioned and this despair was in Saul Achitophel and Belshazzer Dan. 5. and in the Iews when they said there was no hope Ier. 2.25 and this was in the Aegyptians Babylonians Tyrians and their case in the desolation of their estate by warre mentioned in many chapters of the Prophet Esay But this despair is not meant heer for this is a despair of all help or saluation of the soule by Christ conceiuing that they are vtterly cast off of God and shall perish for euer Thus Cain and Iudas despaired of all mercy in God And this despaire of saluation and all happinesse is felt either in hell or at the day of Iudgement or in this life First it is certain that the Wicked feel an eternall despair in hell which increaseth their torments because they haue no hope of ease or help and thus also the diuels despair This despair in hell is a meer gnawing the conscience and tormenting it which neuer dieth Secondly they also feel despair with singular horrour when they come to appear before Iesus Christ at the last Day when they behold the face of the Iudge and feel within them a witnes that tels them they shall bee damned This torment will then come vpon them like the pains of a woman in trauell and their anguish will bee so great that they will cry to the mountains
to couer them from the face of the Iudge 1. Thes. 5.3 Thirdly now the first degree of this despaire is felt by diuers wicked men in this life as it was by Cain and Iudas and of this hee speaketh heer And thus wicked men despair when they think their sins cannot be forgiuen and that they haue no benefit by Christ and shall certainly perish for euer And this is noted heer as a grieuous curse of God inflicted vpon vnbeleeuers Despair is one of God's most fearfull iudgements in this world which when God inflicteth hee may bee said to rain vpon them fire and brimstone and an horrible tempest Psal. 11.6 Most fearfull is their case when the wrathfull Arme of God takes hold of them and hee poures out his indignation vpon them this will make their loins to shake Psalm 69.23 24. They are then like the raging sea hauing no peace within them Esay 57. vlt. They are brought to the King of terrors and their confidence is rooted out Iob 18.11 14. There they were in great fear Psalm 14.5 They are said to blaspheme God and gnaw their tongues Reuel 16.9 10. While God's Saints sing for ioy of heart they howle for vexation of spirit Esay 65.14 They could bee glad to run into the holes of the rocks and into the caues of the earth for fear of the Lord and the glory of his Maiesty when hee comes thus terribly to shake the earth Esay 2.19 Surely such is the case of the Wicked and this is the portion of their cup that knowe not God And how terrible this torment is in the heart of a wicked man may appear if wee consider but what torment the very Godly suffer in their despair which is far easier than that of the wicked Dauid saith The paines of hell compassed him Psalm 18.5 6. and 116.3 and that God's terrours did cut him off and that he was ready to dy and that while he suffred God's terrors hee was distracted Psal. 88.15 16 14. As also it may appear by those torments which the very despaire for outward things hath put wicked men to which is farre lesse grieuous than this despair of God's mercy and eternall saluation and yet in that case their paines are compared to the paine of a woman in trauell Psalm 48.6 See more at large of the horrible plight wicked men haue been in in this respect in the description of the iudgements should fall vpon the forrain nations rendred by the Prophet Esay in many chapters Vses The vse may bee first for great amazement to wicked men that now perhappes laugh and sing in the iollity of their hearts O let them remember what God may doo to them What case will they bee in if God bring them once to despair And this is the por●ion of their Cup. Oh! if the terrour of a King be as the roaring of a Lion what then is their case if God shall reueal his wrath from heauen vpon them for their waighty sinnes And the more should they bee affrighted because despair is but as it were the beginning of euils They feel it for a short time on earth but shall feel it for euer in hell And therefore if it bee possible they should bee perswaded in time to repent that they may be deliuered from this great wrath to come Oh how easie in comparison might mens repentance be if they would be warned in time Secondly this doctrine may breed in vs a wonderfull awfulnesse and fear of God when we read of such iudgements in Scripture or behold any poor wretches tormented with this iudgement it should breed in vs not onely an infallible assurance that there is a God or that there shall be a hell of wofull torments or the like but it should especially make vs think of God with all reuerence and be afraid to displease him for dominion and fear are euer with him Iob 25.2 This doctrine should make vs resolute to go our waies and sinne no more the counsell of the Wicked should bee farre from vs seeing hee can thus put out their candle and make them drink of the wrath of the Almighty Iob 21.17 20. Thirdly it should work in all of vs a care to vse all means that we may be kept from despair Quest. What then should we doo that we fall not into despair Ans. Some things are to bee auoided some things are to be done If we would not fall into despair First wee must take heed of wilfull vnbelief such as was in the Iewes when men not onely neglect the assurance of saluation brought by Christ but contemn it and striue to put all such cares out of their heads Secondly we must take heed of stumbling If men feel their hearts to be insnared in respect of Christ and that they are tossed with vile obiections c. let them look to themselues and amend in time for if Christ be a stone of stumbling he may be a rock of offense Thirdly wee must take heed of security and contempt of the knowledge of God's waies Despair will work terribly when it lights vpon a minde that hath contemned knowledge and liued in all ease and security Iob 21.1 to 20. Fourthly we must take heed of apostasie from the profession of the loue of the truth for despair is many times a wofull scourge to such kind of creatures as the stories record and experience shewes Fiftly wee must in generall take heed of all grosse and presumptuous sinnes especially the sinnes against the third sixt and seuenth commandements for vsually these sins go before in the desparation such as are swearing and cursing and periury and murder and incest and whoredome c. The Wicked flee when none pursues them but the righteous are bold as a Lion Pro. 28.1 and 14.14 Now secondly there are other things which we must doo that we may auoid despair First we must not smother our doubts in matters of Religion especially in the cases of our conscience but take the pains to ask and seek resolution else that which is but doubting at the first may proue to bee despair in the end Those lesser sores in mens hearts may fester and rankle within vs till they prooue to this great disease Secondly wee must store our heads with the promises of the Gospell and those comfortable places of Scripture as may breed in vs a full perswasion of God's singular compassion and mercy towards all penitent sinners and withall do shew vs that plentifull redemption in Iesus Christ and the maruellous efficacy of his blood to clense vs from all our sins Thirdly wee should aboue all things put on the shield of faith I mean we should vse all diligence to get the assurance of GOD's fauour in Christ for assurance will preserue vs safe from despair For as vnbelief brings it so faith preserues vs from it Fourthly we should be carefull vpon all occasions to keep our assises and if we bee endangered by any sinne we should make haste to
and yet become grieuous to men by their vile offenses Thirdly vnfruitfull Christians which lie in a continuall barrenness whose ground is alwaies fallow haue but little consolation from hence for though they are better than the former in that they are not openly wicked yet they fall short of their duty heer because they do not more effectually shew forth the graces of Christ. And that there may bee a healing of this error they must mend first their ignorance and pray to GOD to teach them to profit secondly their slothfulnesse rowzing vp themselues to more zeale of good works and care to answer the opportunities of well-doing Vse 2. Secondly for instruction All that loue the Lord Iesus should hence be perswaded to increase in all care of well-dooing and study how to shew forth the light of their workes before men and the rather because 1. They haue receiued such singular mercy from the Lord. 2. They shall heerby glorifie their heauenly Father and make Religion to be well-spoken of Phil. 2.15 16. 2. Thes. 3.21 and put to silence the ignorance of the foolish we should be as tender of the honour of our profession as of our owne honour 3. They shall heerby wonderfully establish their owne harts in the assurance of their calling and election 1. Iohn 1.5 6. 2. Pet. 1.5 to 10. and much increase their owne contentment and joy in the Lord 1. Cor. 15.58 4. They shall haue a full and plentifull reward in the day of the Lord Rom. 2.7 8 9 10 11. 5. The hearts of their Teachers shall bee heerby filled with ioy when they see they haue not laboured in vain Phil. 2.16 2. Cor. 3.1 2 3. Of him that c. In the third place it may bee heer considered of why those vertues shewed forth by Christians are yet called the vertues of Christ. For answer whereunto we may be informed that they are the vertues of Christ in diuers respects First because they are such vertues as are had onely by such as bee in Christ by effectuall calling for all the Wicked are strangers from the life of God Secondly because they are receiued from the Spirit of Christ of his fulness we haue all receiued these graces Iohn 1.14 Eph. 1.21 Thirdly because they are shewed forth for his glory All our gifts and seruices are deuoted to the glory of Christ as they are in him so they are for him Lastly I think they may be called the vertues of Christ because they resemble his vertues as the picture of a man is called by the name of the man himself And the consideration heerof should the more incite vs to the care of these vertues seeing wee are heer to follow no worse a patterne than the example of the Lord Iesus himself and withall we should be the more humble when wee haue had and done all we can seeing we haue nothing but what we haue receiued And since all should be for his glory we haue reason to say at the best Wee are vnprofitable seruants And withall it should comfort vs against the sense of our infirmities to consider how weak soeuer wee haue been yet our gifts are acknowledged for the vertues of Christ himself and by the benefit of Christ's intercession are accepted of God as if they had bin found in the person of Christ himself Thus of the third point He that hath called you The fourth thing to be noted is this Periphrasis heer giuen of Christ. In stead of saying the vertues of Christ hee saith the vertues of him that called you which he doth of purpose to exalt the praise of the gifts of God in our calling and partly to shew that we enter vpon the possession of the former prerogatiues the most of them when we are called by the grace of Iesus Christ and partly thereby guiding vs to the knowledge of that work of God which may assure vs of our interest in the former prerogatiues All which shewes that we haue great reason seriously to study the doctrine of our calling by Iesus Christ. Calling is either personall or naturall or spirituall or supernaturall The personall calling is to some office the naturall to the exercise of some morall vertue the spirituall or supernaturall is to Christ calling vs to seek happinesse and blessednes in him This is heer meant And so the calling of a Christian is to bee reckoned among the gifts or endowments God bestowes vpon his people which that wee may distinctly vnderstand according to the order of them there are seuen gifts of God First vocation by which he calls men out of the world into the Church Secondly iustification by which he forgiues the Called their sins and clothes them with the rich Robe of Christ's righteousnes Thirdly sanctification by which he qualifies their nature with all heauenly gifts necessary for their saluation Fourthly adoption by which hee acknowledgeth and receiueth them for his sonnes and heirs Fiftly Christian liberty by which hee frees them from all things that might hold them in bondage or in a seruile condition as from the rigour and curse of the Law from the dominion of sinne from the burden of Moses ceremonies and humane traditions and from those seruile fears in God's seruice bred by the spirit of bondage Sixtly consolation by which he keeps them in this happy condition which hee performeth three waies 1. By defending them against all aduersaries 2. By deliuering them out of their many troubles in their militant estate 3. By bestowing vpon them the gifts of perseuerance to the end and for euer Seuenthly temporall blessings by which hee furnisheth them for this present life The six first of these are gifts principall the last is but accessary The three first are the chief gifts and the three next are such as arise out of the first Now this work of calling men into the church is either externall or internall By the externall men are called into the visible Church by the internall men are cald into the inuisible Church And that we may conceiue of this distinctly in respect of calling all men may be cast into foure companies First some are not called at all any way by the Gospell as many of the Pagans c. Secondly some are called onely externally as those in Mat. 20. Many called but fewe chosen Thirdly some are called internally onely as the thief on the Crosse. Fourthly some are called both internally and externally so the Elect of God for the most part and ordinarily It is the last sort of men that are vnderstood heere Now that this work of God calling vs may in the order of working bee more cleerely vnderstood we may conceiue it thus The first cause is Gods loue of men his kindnes and loue to men as the Apostle calles it Tit. 3.4 First that God conceiues in himself a compassionate loue of man lying in his extreme naturall distresse Secondly Christ then as Mediator laies the ground of this calling and
degree of the misery of wicked men I take it it is especially the darknes of ignorance is heer meant though the other cannot be excluded That which is euident to bee obserued from hence is that all men that are not effectually called liue in darknes and walk-on in darknes Eph. 4.17 1. Iohn 2.9 Psal. 82.5 It is a continual night with them they are like the Aegyptians that could haue no Sunne to light them but were couered with palpable darknes Neither are they helped that they enioy the light of the Sunne for of all darknesses that which comes from the absence of the Sunne is the least or hath least distresse in it If a man liued where hee should neuer see day or were born blinde yet his distress were nothing in comparison of the darknes especially spirituall that lieth vpon the poor soule of an vnregenerate man which lieth shut vp in miserable darknes which these men may feele in themselues by their liuing without GOD in the world and by the absence of the ioies of God and by their singular vncapablenesse in the things of the Kingdome of GOD and by their strange and absurd errours in conceiuing of matters of Religion by their monstrous thoughts and obiections they feel at some times and disability to conceiue of the worth of eternal things though the least of them bee better than the whole world and lastly by their want of discouering what to do almost in all the occasions of life Vse The vse may bee for singular terrour to wicked men if they had hearts to consider of it to knowe that they liue in such a condition as no prisoner can suffer in the worst dungeon of the world and the rather if they consider the aggrauation of their distresse in respect of the darknes they liue in or are likely to liue in as First that they haue the Diuels as the Rulers of the darknes they liue in who like cruell Iaylers will see to it that they bee kept still in their dungeon with all increase of heauinesse and misery Eph. 6.12 Secondly that their darknes is also the shadow of death a most deadly poisonfull darknes that daily increaseth in the infection and annoyance of it Esay 9.2 Thirdly that they suffer so many kindes of darknes in the vexations and discomforts of each of them Fourthly that it is such grosse darknes so thick and palpable without any mixture of true light or comfort if they had but star-light or moon-light it were some ease Fiftly that they are neither safe walking nor lying still If they walk they go in singular danger for they knowe not whither they go 1. Iohn 2.11 Iob 18.5 6 7. If they lie still and sleep it out they are in danger to be swallowed vp eternally Sixtly that this darknes will not hide from God All they doo is manifest before him Esay 29.15 Seuenthly that it is a continuall darknes it will neuer be day with them so long as they liue in that estate without repentance Iob 15.30 All his daies he eats in darknes Eccles. 5.17 Eightthly that they are in danger euery hour to bee cast into vtter darknes where will bee no ease nor end He knoweth not that the day of this darknes is ready at hand into which if hee fall he shall neuer depart out Ninthly that this is the case of euery vnregenerate man the whole world of them lieth in darknes and not one escapeth it their whole earth is without form and void and their heauens haue no light in them Ier. 4.24 Ob. But wee see wicked men haue ioy and comfort many times Sol. They haue certaine sparkes of light like the light smitten out of the flint first they cannot warme themselues by it nor see how to direct their waies secondly it will quickly goe out thirdly howsoeuer it bee for a time heere yet at length they must lie downe in sorrow Esay 50.10 And the consideration heereof should in the second place much reproue the peruersenes of wicked men and that in diuers respects and considerations First that they can bee silent in darknes as the phrase is 1. Sam. 2.9 that they can liue so securely neuer make mone or humble themselues in their distresse Secondly that they dare which is worse many times call darknes light and light darknes and defend it that they are in as great liberty and safety as the best of them all Oh woe vnto them because they call darknes light Esay● 20 Thirdly that they will not come into the light when the dore is opened and while there is spirituall means of light What a thing is this that light is come into the world and the darknes comprehendeth it not Ioh. 1.5 Fourthly this is their condemnation that they loue darknes more then light and preferre their vile condition before the condition of the children of the light Ioh. 3.21 Thirdly let these poore wretches bee instructed if it bee possible 1. To embrace the meanes of light 2. To pray to God to be intreated of them to lighten their darknes doth not hee iustly perish that may enioy the light for asking for it yet and will not Ob. If any ask how may they knowe that they are in darknes Ans. I answer First By the vncapablenes and insensiblenes of the soule in the things of the Kingdome of God Eph. 4.17 1. Cor. 2.14 Secondly By the workes of darknes by the continuall practice of sinne without sound repentance Rom. 13. 1. Iohn 1.6 7. Thirdly in particular by the habituall hatred of the godly because they follow goodnes 1. Ioh. 2.9 11. Fourthly by the absence of God in the vse of his ordinances who is as the Sunne to the Godly Psal. 84.12 And thus of the vse that concerns the wicked Vse 2. Godly men should from hence gather encrease of consolation in their harts from the consideration of Gods mercy in translating them from the Kingdome of darknes into the Kingdome of his deare Loue Col. 1.12 13. they are the men vpon whome God hath accomplished the prophecy and promise of his grace They are the deafe men that are made to heare the words of the book and the blind men that see out of obscurity and darknes Esay 29.18 19. The Lord hath made darknes light before them and brought them being but blind men by a way they knew not Esay 42.16 The people that sate in darknes haue seene great light Esay 9.1 These men are the prisoners that once were in darknes and God sent his owne Sonne to the prison dore to bid them come foorth and shew themselues Esay 49.9 And their deliuerance from darknes should be the more comfortable if they consider First what a world of people are yet couered with darknes Esay 61.1 Secondly that darknes shall neuer returne They enioy a day that neuer shall haue night following Ob. But is there not darknes still in godly men as well as in other men Sol. I answer In some
hath done as great a work vpon our hearts as he did when he commanded the light to shine out of darknes in the beginning of the world Thirdly if we consider what glorious things are reuealed vnto vs for by the gospell hee hath caused to shine in our hearts the knowledge of the glory of God c. Finally it is the more comfortable in that the Apostle cals this light maruellous light which is now in the next place to be opened Maruellous light The spirituall light which shines in the harts of the godly by the Gospel is a maruellous light either because it is such as the Godly do maruell at or because it is such as they ought to maruell and wonder at When men first enter into the truth that is when they are first conuerted Christians beeing for the most part full of affections as they that haue scaped lately singular danger and as they that neuer before saw the Kings Court they are frequently stirred vp with admiration at the glory of the Gospell they wonder at and are vehemently affected with the new discouery of the riches of Christ shewed them in the preaching of the Gospell and thus it is a maruellous light in this sense Esay 30.26 But I rather consider of it in the other sense It is a maruellous light though wee should not haue the heart to bee so affected toward it it is maruellous I say First because it is a light that needed the Mediator to procure it none but Christ can giue vs this light Other light is free wee pay nothing for it but this is carried in the hand of the Mediator to vs and for vs Esay 42. and 49. Secondly because it commeth after so long a night of ignorance and sin they must needs account the light precious that haue not seen it a long time as blind men when they receiue sight Thirdly and more because it is a light commanded to shine out of darknes 2. Cor. 4.6 That God should call light out of such darknes as was in our hearts is maruellous Fourthly in comparison with the times of the Law and the shadows of the old Testament Fiftly because it is a light comes not from any creature but from God the Creator God is our light Esay 6.19 And in this respect this light is like the light that shone about Paul Acts 22.6 Sixtly because it is a light that shines at the time of the euening of this world That the Sun should shine in the day time is no wonder but that it should shine in the night or at euening were a dreadfull wonder euen so it is in this last age of the world Zach. 14.7 Seuenthly because it is a knowledge aboue the reach of reason it is the light of faith Eightthly because it shines onely to the godly It is light in Goshen when there is no light in Aegypt that was maruellous and so is it when we see the light shining all abroad and many men sit in darknes euen in the same place in the same congregation city or family When the Godly see cleerly the Wicked discerne nothing light is with-held from the Wicked Ninthly because it hath more force than any other light for it is the light of life it quickens the soule and enlyues it Iohn 8.12 Lastly because it is an euerlasting light it is such a day as no night followeth it The consideration of all this should work diuers things in vs. For if in all these senses it bee a maruelous light then First we should be maruelously affected with it and striue to be exceeding thankful for it How haue we deserued to be cast againe into darknes for our extreme vnthankfulnes How haue wee giuen God cause to take away the Candlestick from vs Let vs therefore striue after thankfulnes and admiration and if the Lord doe work it in vs let vs take heed we lose not our first loue Secondly wee should arme our selues for the defence of the light we should preserue it as a singular treasure both in our hearts and in our Churches we should with the more resolution resist the works of darknes standing alwaies vpon our guard Rom. 13.12 Thirdly we should striue after all the degrees of the assurance of faith Fourthly we should striue to make our light shine the more excellently both for the measure of good works Malac. 5.16 and for the strict precise respect of the exact doing of good duties Now we haue the light so cleerely shining wee may doe euery thing the more exactly then if it were dark Ephes. 5.15 Our gifts must not bee hid The light must not be put vnder a bushell Math. 5.15 Phil. 2.15 We should now auoid not onely greater faul●s and falles but lesser stumblings 1 Ioh. 2.10.11 We should doe all things to the life and power of them and shew discretion aswell as knowledge This doctrine also doth imply the grieuous misery of wicked men for if it bee maruelous light into which the godly are called there is a maruelous darknes in which wicked men liue The whole creation of God had been but a confused heape if God had not set in it the light of the Sun such a confused Chaos is the world of men if the Gospell shine not into their hearts Finally this should much comfort the godly they are called into maruelous light in all the sences before named which should much inflame their hearts and they should rebuke their owne hearts for not valuing so rich treasure Wee may from hence take occasion to note how little wee should trust to the iudgement of flesh and bloud in valuing spirituall things when the very godly themselues doe not so much esteeme of them as they should Whatsoeuer we think yet in Gods account the light of the Gospel the light of faith and knowledge the light of Gods countenance c. is maruelous light But if the light of the godly bee maruelous in this world what shall it be in the world to com when God the Lamb shall be their immediate light Heere God lights vs by the meanes there God himself will be our euerlasting light Heere our light may be darkned with clouds of affliction and temptation there shall bee an eternall light without all darknes Heere we haue no light but what is infused into vs there we shall our selues shine as the Sunne i● the firmament Hitherto of the description in Tropicall tearms Now it followeth in plaine words Verse 10. Which in times past were not a people yet are now the people of God which in times past were not vnder mercy but now haue obtained mercy THe Apostle takes the words of this verse out of the Prophet Hosea chapter 1.11 where the Lord promiseth that the number of the children of Israel shall be as the sand of the sea and in the place where it was said vnto them Ye are not my people it shall bee said vnto them Ye are my people Now the Apostle
nor looketh after them as it were and though they haue Lawes and a kinde of gouernment yet their Lawes and Customs are vain Esay 10.3 altogether insufficient to make them liue happily Vse The vse may be First for information and so it may inform vs in two things First the vanity and insufficiency of worldly things riches power honour conquests carnall parentage and the like auaile men nothing vnto a blessed life the Gentils had all these in their greatest glory and yet not worthy to be called a people Secondly wee may hence gather the reason of these strange deuouring iudgements which fall vpon the world by warres famine pestilence c. For inasmuch as worlds of men liue without the compasse of the obedience to God's gouernment and stand out as so many Rebels the Lord therefore seeing they will not bee his people fights against them from heauen and makes wonderful hauock among them as a great King that reuengeth himself by the strength of Armies vpon Rebels Secondly for instruction and so wee that were sinners of the Gentiles should hence learn to acknowledge praise the free grace of God who without our deserts hath reckned vs in the Court of his people wee that were by nature viz. none of God's people Thirdly and especially it should set out the misery of all men liuing in their sins without repentance and the rather should we bee mooued with this terror 1. Because no place can priuiledge impenitent sinners for not onely professed Gentiles but euen wicked Israelites are in Scripture reckoned as no people The wicked are accounted as no people though they liue in the Church and dwell among God's people For what is the chaffe to the wheat though both lie together Yea though men bear the name of God's people yet God hates them neuer a whit the lesse for that and therefore to distinguish them and shew how little he regards them hee calls them the euill people Ier. 13.10 the disobedient and gain-saying people Rom. 10.21 the people of Gomorrah Esay 1.10 the people of my curse Esay 34.5 2. Because God will shew by his fierce wrath that hee doth not reckon of them at all but will cast them off as a girdle that is good for nothing Ier. 13.10 Many places of Scripture shew this All the sinners of the people shall die Amos 9.10 God will take away his power from them euen his louing kindnes and mercies and would not haue them much pitied Ier. 16.5 Behould saith the same Prophet in another place the whirl-winde of the Lord goeth forth with fury a continual whirl-wind it shall fall with pain on the head of the wicked Ier. 30.23 so Ezech. 11.21 Esay 34.5 Ob. But when men liue in the Church and are baptized c. how may it bee knowne that they are not Gods people what signes are there of men that are not Gods people Sol. They are described in diuers Scriptures where we may finde out what people it is God excepts against First such as can liue without God in the world are not Gods people Ephes. 2.12 Such as can goe whole daies weekes moneths yeeres without any harty care of God or his glory or fauour These are euidently not a people Secondly such as are of a stifneck such as will not let Gods yoke come vpon them such as wil not obey his voice but walk in the imaginations and counsels of their owne euill hearts Ierem. 7.23 24 c. 13.10 especially such as refuse to heare his voice and are withall gainsaiers and such as are talkers whose lips carry about them the infamy of Gods true people and the blasphemy of Gods name Rom. 10.21 Ierem. 10.13 Ezech. 36.3 c. Thirdly it may be discerned by their manner of seruing of God for such as God reiects from being of his people may draw neere to him with their lips but their hearts are from him and they doe him no seruice but as mens lawes feare them to it A constant habituall alienation of the heart from the care of Gods presence in Gods ordinances is a sure signe of persons God regards not Ob. But there are faults in the best men in the world and therefore why should such as liue in the Church and professe the true Religion be cast off only for liuing in sin seeing all are sinners Sol. I answer with the words of the holy Ghost Deut. 32.5 6. Their spot is not the spot of Gods people that spot that is in the wicked is a spot of leprosie and therefore they ought to bee put without the Campe till they be cleansed The sins of the Godly are sins of infirmity and the sinnes of the wicked are sinnes of presumption The wicked neuer obey from the heart which all the godly doe sinne doth not raigne in them as it doth in the wicked Thus of their estate by Nature as they were not a people their estate by Grace is described in those words Are now the people of God Are now the people of God The difference of reading here from that of the prophet is to be noted for wheras in the prophet it is thus In the place where it was said ye are not my people it shall be said vnto them Ye are the sonnes of the liuing God which words are somewhat doubtfull for some might gather that therefore all which were not a people should in time be the people of God The Apostle therefore applies it so as that it may appeare that the comfort only belongs to godly Christians and in stead of the words Ye shall be called the Sonnes of the liuing God he saith Ye are now the people of God which in sence differs not and the Apostle leapeth to the direct Antithesis and takes it for granted that all God's People are God's Sonnes also vnlesse we conceiue that hee borrowed these words out of Hosh. 2. vlt. which I rather incline vnto though Interpreters most take to the words and the first Chap. Ye are now the people of God For the sence of the words we must vnderstand that men are in Scripture said to be God's people three wayes First in respect of eternall Praedestination see Rom. 11.2 He will not cast off the people hee knew before Secondly in respect of the couenant in the Law and so the sonnes of Abraham were God's people and none other as many Scriptures shew Thirdly in respect of the couenant in the Gospell and so it is to be taken here and all vnregenerate men were not a people and all that beleeue are God's people by the benefit of the couenant of Grace in the Gospell Now for the coherence I might note That they that are not the people of God may be the people of God and so acknowledged of God himselfe which should teach vs with meekenesse and patience to waite when God will turne those that lie in their sinnes and despaire of no man and restraine fierce and peruerse censures concerning the finall estate of
any nation may be admitted to this estate and the Lord without respect of persons will blesse them with the blessing of his people as the Prophet excellently shewes Esay 2.19 and 19.24 25. The Gentiles haue come to reioice amongst his people Rom. 15.9 10 11. They were hard times when the Lord's dominion was in a manner confin'd in the Kingdome of Iudah and Israel 2. Because it is so great and glorious a work on God's part to make vs his people for hee doth as it were plant the heauens and lay the foundation of the earth that hee may say vnto Sion Thou art my people Esay 51. verse 16. 3. Because in the hardest times that can befall the godly the Lord will haue them plead this priuiledge and they may go to God and he will acknowledge them in all their distresses and sanctifie their afflictions and deliuer them at the voice of their cry Esay 64 9. Zach. 13.19 4. Because they shall yet enioy a farre more excellent estate in another world than now they haue Reu. 21. They are now but as the children of Israel in Goshen or in the wildernesse Vse 2. Secondly diuers things may bee hence obserued for instruction as 1. Such as liue in the Church and yet haue not the marks of God's people on them should awake and look about them and labour to get into the number of God's people These fooles among the people as the Prophet Dauid calleth them should vnderstand and these euill neighbours vnto Israel should bee perswaded to learn the waies of God's people and so they may bee built vp in the midst of Israel Ier. 12.16 And it should bee their daily praier vnto God to grant them this one request namely to blesse them with the fauour of his people Psal. 106.3 4. 2. The penitent sinner that feels his heart called by the voice of Christ should hence bee moued to enter into the couenant of God and speedily to take the oath of subiection alleageance binding himself with all his heart to God and his diuine seruice deu 29.10 11 12 13. Ier. 50.5 3. Such as haue taken the oath and are acknowledged for true Subiects should for the rest of their time study how to carry themselues as becomes the people of God and so In generall they should remember two things 1. To giue eare to God's Law and hearken what the Lord will say vnto them from time to time Psal. 78.1 Esay 51.4 2. To lead a holy life and conuersation for therefore hath God seuered them from all nations that they might bee holy to him Leuit. 20.26 All God's people are righteous Esay 59.21 and 62.12 And Christ hath redeemed them from all iniquity and purified them that they might be a peculiar people vnto him zealous of good works Tit. 2.14 They must therefore bee no more polluted with their transgressions nor bee fashioned to the lusts of their former ignorance Ezech. 14.11 and 36.25 c. In particular they should 1. Giue God thanks for euer for blessing them with the blessing of his people Psal. 79. vlt. 2. They should humble themselues to walk with their God Mic. 6.8 being humbled at his feet to receiue his Law Deut. 33.3 bowing down with all reuerence to worship him Psa. 95.7 For God is a great God aboue all gods and a great King aboue all kings 3. They must auoid needlesse society with the wicked 2. Cor. 6.16 and take heed that they learn not the manners of other nations Leuit 20.24 4. The Law of GOD must bee in their hearts For they should be a wise and vnderstanding people aboue all men and this is the signe of God's people Esay 51.7 Deut. 4.6 And it is God's couenant to write his Laws in their harts Ier. 31.33 5. They must auoid Idols and keep Gods Sabbath this God requires perpetually Leuit. 26.1 2 3 11 12. and graciously accepts when hee findes this care Esay 56. with protestation against those that will not keep his Sabbaths Ier. 17 c. 6. They must walk confidently in the trust vpon God's goodnes and couenant with them as the godly resolued Mic. 4.5 All people walk in the name of their god and therefore we will walk in the Name of the Lord our God for euer and euer resoluing to cleaue to God in a perpetuall couenant Ier. 50.4 5. 7. They should approoue themselues to bee God's people by their language their language should bee a pure language not speaking lies a deceitfull tongue should not bee found in their mouthes and their words should be gracious such as might minister grace to the hearers Zeph. 3.9 13. Eph. 4. Col. 4. 8. They should be patient in all aduersities as being of Moses minde that it is better to suffer affliction with God's people than to enioy the treasures of Egypt Heb. 11 25. 9. They should obey according to all that God commands them shewing a respect to all God's Commandements seeing they serue God and not men and that all dissimulation will bee open before his eies Ieremie 11. verse 4. And thus of the second way of comparison In the last words of the verse their estate is considered in relation from God to them And so in the state of nature they were not vnder mercy but in the state of grace they are now vnder mercy Not vnder mercy Doct. All the time that men liue without repentance for their sins and faith in Iesus Christ they liue without the mercy of God they are not vnder mercy God loues them not nor regards them they are children of wrath Eph. 2.3 and the wrath of God abideth on them Ioh. 3.36 Yea though the Lord be exceeding mercifull in himself and to the faithfull yet by no meanes will he cleer the guilty Exod. 34.6 Num. 14.18 Now this not beeing vnder mercy imports diuerse things First that their sinnes are not forgiuen or pardoned Secondly that their soules are not healed of their originall diseases but they liue still in their blood Thirdly that they are liable vnto all sorts of iudgements and those which are vpon them came from the wrath of GOD which hateth them c. Fourthly that they are in danger of eternall condemnation in generall that they liue and lie vnder the forfeiture of the couenant of works and haue no part in Christ or the couenant of grace Vse The vse should be therefore to teach wicked men to take heed how they presume of Gods mercy they may deceiue themselues but God will not be mocked Gal. 6.7 For such things as they are guilty of the wrath of God comes vpon the children of disobedience Eph. 5.5 They that liue after the flesh shall die Rom. 8.13 For the more distinct vnderstanding of this point foure things would be considered of First that wicked men are exceeding apt to plead Gods mercy thogh it belong not to them and doo not beleeue that God will deale so with them as they are threatned Secondly that God directly
There are many amongst vs that for ough●●ee know liue honestly who yet in secret are polluted with desperate abominations as fearefull deceit in their callings prodigious filthines of body or the like 3. Remooue from vs likewise open and notorious offenders such as are drunkards outragious swearers knowne adulterers or fornicators murtherers railers and extortioners For to such belongeth not Gods mercy or Kingdome 1. Cor. 6.9 4. Then separate from vs such as are onely ciuilly honest not religious There are many that are farre from grosse offences either open or secret who are not yet vnder mercy which is discouered diuers waies as by their ignorance For God will not haue mercy vpon people that haue no vnderstanding Esay 27.11 And by their impenitency they neuer soundly and in secret confessed their sinnes to God They neuer mourned for their many corruptions There is a world of inward wickednes which they were neuer humbled for And also by their vnbeliefe they know no way how to bee saued by Christ by effectuall beleeuing on his mercy but think to bee saued by their owne good deeds or else they liue in a generall security not looking after saluation but thinking it enough that they are wel accounted of amongst men 5. Lastly cast out Hypocrites that onely make a shew of godlinesse and haue not the power of it that draw neer to God with their mouthes but haue their hearts farre from him These in vaine worship God These are Iewes outward but haue not the circumcision of the heart and therefore their praise is not of God You may easily conceiue how small a number will remaine if all these bee deducted out of the societies of Christians Secondly if they withall consider that if mercie bee not obtained all else is in vaine It doth not profit him to obtaine credit riches friends in this world long life or ought else if hee obtaine not mercy what shall it aduantage thee to obtaine the whole world if for want of mercy thou lose thine owne soule Thirdly it increaseth their misery that they may dye in the case they are in For either God may take away the meanes of mercy from them or may leaue them to so much insensiblenesse as they may remoue themselues from the meanes of mercy or God being prouoked by their long obstinacy may deliuer them vp to a reprobate sence or God may suddenly take them away by death and then woe vnto them it had beene better for them they had neuer beene borne Quest. But some one may aske What should bee the cause that so many obtaine not mercy of God seeing God is in his owne nature so gracious and they are in so great need of mercy Ans. I answer that the cause why some obtaine not mercie is First because they seek it not they bee at a great deale of care and paines many times to seek other things but they altogether neglect their owne mercy and seeke not for it Now God stands vpon that That hee will bee sought vnto The house of Israel must know that though God bee many waies gracious as is shewed at large Ezec. 36.25 c. yet for all this hee will bee sought vnto or else euen Israel may want mercy verse 32. Secondly others are so farre from seeking mercy that they refuse mercy when God in the Gospel daily calles vpon them and beseecheth them to be reconciled yet they are so busily imployed in following foolish vanities that they forsake their owne mercy Ionas 2.8 They will not answer when God calls but reiect his Word and grieue his good Spirit and abuse his patience and bountifulnes and so heape vp wrath against the day of wrath Thirdly others seek mercy but they seeke it not aright they faile in the manner as either they seeke it coldly and carelesly praying but for fashion sake or with their lips without power of affections They speak for mercy but they doe not care for mercy They neither obserue nor regard whether their petitions bee granted or denied and this is the condition of the ordinary sort of men or else they seek mercy corruptly without sincerity of the heart As when men pray God to forgiue them the sinnes which yet they mind not to leaue Now this is a shamefull kind of seeking mercy For God stands vpon it that wee must forsake our wickednes or else hee will not forgiue Esay 55.6 2. Tim. 2.19 Or else lastly men seeke it too late as Esau sought the blessing when it was gone Heb. 12.15 They may call when God will not answer Pro. 1. Zachar. 7. And this is the case of some that put off their repentance vntill the latter end But haue now obtained mercy Doct. The godly are exceeding happie in the obtaining of Gods mercy All that are called in Christ Iesus euen all that haue truely repented themselues of their sinnes are certainly vnder mercy and in that respect in a maruelous safe and happy condition Three things are distinctly imported in the obseruation First the one is that God is mercifull Mercy may bee obtained Ionah 4.2 Psal. 116.5 and 86. Secondly that penitent sinners doe obtaine mercy Ioel 2.13 Esay 55.7 Thirdly that such as haue obtained Gods mercy are in a maruelous happy case in comparison of what they were before in It is inough if we obtaine mercy whatsoeuer wee obtaine not Hence the Phrase Thou hast couered him with thy mercie And our happines in respect of the interest wee haue in Gods mercie is the greater if wee consider either the properties or the effects of God's mercy There are foure admirable properties in the mercy of God which he shewes to his people First his mercy is tender mercy Psalm 51.1 which he shewes in diuers things as 1. That he is full of compassion in pitying the distresses of his people no father can so pity his childe Psalme 103.13 Hence his bowels are said to be troubled for them or to sound in him Where is the sounding of thy bowels saith the Prophet Esay 63.15 Ier. 31.20 The word Misericordiam imports as much for it sounds misery laid to the heart God then is mercifull in that he laies our miseries to his heart 2. That he waits to shew mercy Esay 30.18 watching for all oportunities as it were to preuent vs with his blessings 3. That he is slowe to anger not easily stirred to displeasure when he hath shewd his fauor Psal. 103.1 He is a God of iudgement that considers the weaknesses and infirmities of his seruants as knowing whereof they are made Esay 30.18 Psalm 103. 4. That if he do see some more preuailing euils in his people yet hee will spare as a father spares his onely sonne Mal. 3.17 And if hee doo chide yet hee rebukes his people still with great affection Ier. 31.19 and he wil quickly giue-ouer and not chide alwaies Psalm 103. He is ready to forgiue as soon as they call vnto him Esay 65.23 and 55.7 Psalm 103.
honesty of life is with speciall care to be intended now this must be explicated The word translated Honest signifies properly Fayre and the Translatours respecting the matter of our conuersation render it well Honest so as withall for the manner wee adde that it bee a faire conuersation so that two things must bee obserued in our conuersation the Matter and the Manner For the Matter We must bee sure that we bee honest It is a vaine thing to thinke of being religious if wee fayle in honesty wee must not onely studie the duties of the first Table but wee must be carefull to proue the power of our Religion in the sound practice of the duties of the second Table we must liue righteously as well as religiously Tit. 2.12 wee must adde vertue to our faith 2. Pet. 1.5 and withall we should labor to excell in honesty to carry our selues so in all our dealings that our carriage might allure through the fairenesse of our behauiour we must in the things of honesty striue for an alluring carriage There be diuers things in our outward conuersation which set a great glosse vpon many actions and certaine particular duties which shew exceeding comely in a Christian mans behauiour those the Apostle would haue vs to studie and bee carefull of euen all things that are honest and might win credit to the profession of Religion Phil. 4.8 This then is the question What are those things which would so adorne the outward conuersation of Christians and make it faire and amiable For answer heereunto there are things distinctly which are of singular praise and much adorne a Christians conuersation and make it faire The first is harmelesnes to bee free from all courses of iniury and cruelty and oppression and the like A hurtfull and iniurious conuersation is a foule and vnseemely conuersation The second is discretion when men carry themselues with all due respect of their words and the consideration of the time place and persons with whom they conuerse a discreete conuersation is a wonderfull faire conuersation when as a foolish vaine rash conceited talkatiue behauiour is extremely irkesome and lothsome Col. 4.5 Iam. 3.13 The third is quietnes and gentlenes which excels as it shewes it selfe First by humblenes of mind thinking meanely of himselfe esteeming others better then himselfe Esay 4.2 in giuing honour going before others Rom. 12.13 Secondly by peaceablenes when men study to be quiet Eph. 4.11 12. and meddle with their own busines and auoid contention by all meanes rather suffering wrong then proue quarelsome Heb. 12.14 Thirdly easines to be entreated in case of offence taken and willingnes to be guided in things profitable and good Iam. 3.17 The fourth is sobriety When a man liues so as hee is not blemished either with filthines or drunkennes or couetousnes a man that is vnspotted of the world for any foule crimes and withall can shew a mind not transported with the greedy desires after earthly things is much honoured and iustly amongst men the worst man cannot but acknowledge the praise of such So as men shew this in their dealings euidently Rom. 13.13 Iam. 1.26 The fift is fidelity and plainnes when men are iust and true in all their dealings and will keepe their words and promises and abhor the sinnes of deceit and auoid subtilty and worldly wisedome and shew themselues to bee plaine men as it was said of Iacob that hee was a plaine man not like subtill Esau. This ought much to bee sought after by Christians that men may see their hearts by their words 2. Cor. 1.12 The sixt is profitablenes rendred in the end of this verse good works They lead a faire conuersation that doe good and are helpfull to others and ready to shew any kindnes or mercy to any that liue neere them or haue occasion to vse them This is an admirable prayse The vse should be therefore to teach vs to study how to adorne our conuersation with such integrity and vertuous behauiour as may winne prayse and reputation to our profession especially we should at least shunne all those hatefull euils which by experience we finde to bee grieuous and lothsome and are to be accounted as blemishes in our conuersings being things as are in a speciall manner lothsome and prouoke ill opinion in others as being against honesty and that faire conuersation should bee found in vs as First the sins of vncleannesse and whoredome and fornication and lasciuiousnes and filthy speaking Rom. 13.13 Eph. 5.3 4. Secondly the sins of drunkennes and riotousnes Rom. 13.13 1. Pet. 4.3 Thirdly the sinnes of passion malice wrath bitternes crying and euill speaking Eph. 4.31 Fourthly sinnes of deceit lying dissimulation and hypocrisie Fiftly Pride statelines desire of vaine glory Gal. 5.26 Sixtly backbiting complaining censuringe iudging Mat. 7.1 Iam. 4. Gal. 5.13 Seuenthly idlenesse and slothfulnesse 1. Thes. 4.11 12. Eightthly to bee a busie-body in other mens matters prying and inquiring and meddling with things that belong not to them 1. Thes. 4.11 12. 1. Pet. 4. To which adde prattling and talkatiuenesse 1. Tim. 5.13 Ninthly such courses as haue appearance of euill in them such are the vse of vain apparell and wilfull resorting to persons and places that are of euill report Thus of the matter to which he exhorts The reasons follow why they should bee carefull of an honest and faire behauiour and first because they liue among the Gentiles Among the Gentiles Those Gentiles were such as liued in their naturall idolatry the nations that had not receiued the Christian faith Those that think this Epistle was written onely to the prouinciall Iews alleage the words of this verse to proue it for they say it was written to such as liued among the Gentiles and were no Gentiles and they onely were the Iewes But this reason is of no force for those Gentiles that were conuerted to the Christian faith became Christians and so were no more Gentiles or Pagans and so these words may bee vnderstood of all sorts of Christians that liued among the vnconuerted Gentiles whether they were in their naturall estate either Iewes or Pagans In that the Christians liued among the Gentiles and must by their faire conuersation bee rightly ordered towards those Gentiles diuers things may be obserued First we may hence note how hard a thing it is to recouer men from a false religion though their religion bee grossely absurd In this place whither the Gospell came we see multitudes of men remained Gentiles still and would not receiue the Christian faith And this is the more to be noted if we either consider the reasons the Gentiles had to remain in their religion or the manifest causes they had to mooue them to imbrace the Christian Religion for for their owne religion they might easily obserue these things amongst many other First their palpable and sottish idolatry in worshipping so many gods and those so accounted to bee gods being many of them apparantly but
image or similitude as First in the diuine nature of Christ. For Christ as the Sonne of God is said to bee the splendor and brightnes of his Fathers glorie Heb. 1.2 Secondly in the humane nature of Christ. For in his humane nature did the God-head dwell and shine as the candle in the Lanthorne and so the glorie of God appeares amongst men for when Christ was incarnate and came to dwell amongst men they saw his glorie as the glorie of the onely begotten Sonne of God Ioh. 1.14 Thirdly in his works for the inuisible things of God as his power and wisedome in the excellency of them are made visible vnto our obseruation in the creation and gouernment of the world in the great booke of the creatures is the glorie of God written in great letters Rom. 1. Thus the heauens declare the glorie of God Psalme 19.1 And in this great book the glory of the Lord is said to endure for euer and the Lord will alwaies reioice in this impression of his glorie in his workes Psal. 104.31 and as all the workes of God are his glorie in that they do some way set out his excellency so especially miracles are in a high degree resemblances of God's glorie and therefore are these workes of wonder called the glorie of God Thus the power of God in raising Christ is called his Glory Romanes 6.4 And so the maruailous workes mentioned Psalme 97.4 5.6 so Christ in working the miracle in Canaan of Galile is said to shewe his glorie Iohn 2.11 And as workes of miracle are called the glorie of GOD because GOD hath in them stamped some liuely resemblance of his Excellencie so also workes of speciall Iustice done vpon Gods enemies are called his glorie also as these places shewe Exod. 14.14 Num. 14.21 Esay 13.3 So also Gods mightie working in deliuering his seruants is called his glorie also Psal. 105.5 6. and 57.6 and 85.9 Fourthly in man God hath imprinted his glory and so in all sorts of mankind they are called the glorie of God in respect of their resemblance of Gods soueraignty man is as it were a visible God in this visible world and in respect of his superioritie ouer the creatures resembles God And as God hath imprinted his glory vpon all men in generall so in a speciall manner vpon some men as 1. Vpon such men as shine in the outward dignity and preeminence of their places in this world aboue other men their glorie is said to bee Gods glorie 1. Chron. 29.11 12. 2. Vpon such men as are indued with the grace of God and the vertues of Iesus Christ these beare Gods Image and are therefore called his glorie Esay 46.13 2. Cor. 3.18 Psal. 90.17 3. In a more principall manner vpon such as be receiued vp to glorie in heauen Thus God will be glorified in his Saints at the day of Iudgement 2. Thes. 1.10 This is that glorie of God which the godly doe hope for with so much ioy Rom. 5.2 Fiftly in certaine visible signes testimonies of his presence Thus the consuming fire on mount Sinah is called the glorie of God Exod. 24.6 16 17. So also the cloud that filled the Temple Exod. 40.34 And the cloud that rose vpon the Tabernacle in the wildernes And so the signes of Gods presence in heauen are in a speciall respect called his glorie Thus Stephen saw the glorie of God and Iesus standing at his right hand Acts 7.55 Thus we are said to appeare before the presence of his glorie Iude 24. Sixtly In his Word and so the Word of God is the glorie of God either in generall as it describes the excellency of Gods nature in all in his properties or attributes Psal. 26.8 Or in speciall the Gospell is called the Glorie as it sets out the goodnes of God after a matchlesse manner relieuing forlorne mankind Esay 6.1 And thus that part of the Word of God that doth describe Gods mercy is called his glorie Exod. 33.18 19 22. Eph. 3.16 Thus also that way of shewing mercy by bringing in the infinite righteousnes of his owne Sonne is called the glorie of the Lord Esay 40.5 Thus God glorifieth himselfe Secondly God is said to bee glorified by vs Man may make God glorious but that he cannot doe by adding any glory to God's Nature and therefore we must search out to finde by the Scripture what waies man may glorifie God and so we may be said to glorifie God or to make God glorious three waies First by knowledge when we conceiue of God after a glorious manner thus we make him glorious in our owne hearts and this is a chiefe way of making God glorious And this is one way by which the Gentiles glorifie God and this God stands vpon so as he accounts not himselfe to bee knowne aright till we conceiue of him at least as more excellent then all things Seeing we can adde no glory to God's nature we should striue to make him glorious in our owne mindes and hearts And we may by the way see what cause we haue to bee smitten with shame and horror to thinke of it how we haue dishonoured God by meane thoughts of him And hereby we may also see how farre man can be said to haue the true knowledge of God in him yea there is some comfort in it too to a Christian that humbleth himselfe to walke with his God for though at the best he come farre short of conceiuing of God as he is yet God accounts himselfe to be made glorious by vs when we get so farre as to conceiue of him aboue all creatures and that is when he comes into our hearts as a king of glory farre aboue all that glory can be found in earthly Princes Psalme 14.7 9. And thus we make him glorious not when we barely iudge him to be more excellent then all things but when our hearts are carried after the apprehension of him so as we loue him aboue all and feare him aboue all c. And thus we make God glorious in our hearts by knowing him Secondly by acknowledgment When in words or workes we doe ascribe excellency vnto God and to glorifie him is to acknowledge his glory or as the phrase in Scripture is To giue him glory and so there be diuers speciall waies by which we are said in Scripture to glorifie God as First when in words wee magnifie God and speak of his prayses and confesse that he is worthy to receiue honour and glory and might and maiesty so Reuel 4.11 Psal. 29. 86.9 Secondly when men confesse that all the glory they haue aboue other men in gifts or dignitie was giuen them by God So Dauid glorifies God 1. Chron. 29.11 12. And thus we make God the Father of glory as he is called Ephes. 1.17 Thirdly when men that are guilty of sinnes that cannot be proued against them yet feeling themselues to be pursued by God doe confesse to Gods glory and their owne shame
their secret offences Thus Achan gaue glory to God Iosh. 7.19 And thus the penitent sinner glorifies God when hee cares not to abase himself in the acknowledgement of his owne vilenesse that God may be magnified in any of his attributes or ordinances by it Ier. 13. 16. Mal. 2.2 Fourthly When the prayse of God or the aduancement of his Kingdome is made the end of all our actions This is to doe all to his glorie 1. Cor. 10.31 Fiftly when wee beleeue God's promises and wait for the performance of them though we see no meanes likely for their accomplishment Thus Abraham gaue glory to God Rom. 4. Sixtly when wee publikely acknowledge true Religion or any speciall truth of God when it is generally opposed by the most men Thus the Centurion gaue glory to God Luke 23.47 Seuenthly when men suffer in the quarrell of Gods truth and true Religion So 1. Pet. 4.16 Eightthly when on the Sabbath men deuote themselues only to Gods worke doing it with more ioy and care then they should doe their own worke on the weeke dayes refusing to prophane the Sabbath of the Lord by speaking their owne words or doing their own willes Thus Esay 58.13 Ninthly when men do in particular giue thanks to God for benefits or deliuerances acknowledging God's speciall hand therein Thus the Leper gaue glory to God Luke 17.18 so Psal. 113.4 Tenthly by louing praysing admiring and esteeming of Iesus Christ aboue all men For when we glorifie the Sonne we glorifie the Father Iohn 1.14 11.4 Eleuenthly when wee account of and honour godly men aboue all other sorts of men in the World and so these Gentiles doe glorifie God in that they prayse the Christians aboue all men whom before they reuiled This is one way by which the Gentiles glorified God Thus of the second way of glorifying God which is by acknowledging his glory The third way of glorifying God is by effect when men make others to glorifie God conceiuing more gloriously of him or in praysing God and his wayes Thus the professed subiection of Christians to the Gospel makes other men glorifie God 2. Cor. 9.13 So the fruits of Righteousnesse are to the glory of God Phil. 1.10 So here the good works of Christians do make new Conuerts glorifie God so euery Christian that is God's planting is a tree of righteousnesse that God may be glorified Esay 61.3 so are all Christians to the prayses of the glory of God's grace as they are eyther qualified or priuiledged by Iesus Christ Ephes. 1.7 Vse The vses of all should be especially for instruction and humiliation it should humble vs if we mark the former doctrine in that it discouereth many deficiencies in vs for besides that it sheweth that the whole world of vnregenerate men lieth in wickednes and that as they haue all sinned so they are all depriued of the glory of God and altogether delinquent in each part of making God glorious I say that besides the discouery of the generall and extreme corruption of wicked men it doth touch to the quick vpon diuerse persons euen the godly themselues to giue instance In the first way of making God glorious How meanly and dully doo wee for the most part conceiue of God! How farre short are our hearts of those descriptions of GOD made in his Word Wha● strange thoughts come into our mindes at some times Oh! how haue we dishonoured the most High in our vnworthy conceptions of his Iustice Power Eternity Wisdome and Mercy For the second way of glorifying God What heart could stand before his holy presence if hee should examine vs in iustice 1. For our language What man is hee that hath not cause to mourn for his want of language daily in expressing of the praises of God! When did we make his praise glorious haue our mouths been filled with his praise all the day long 2. For our extreme vnthankfulnesse when we meet with GOD himself we haue been healed with the nine Lepers but which of vs haue returned to giue glory to God in the sound acknowledgement of his goodnes to vs It is required we should in all things giue thanks and yet wee haue scarce vsed one word of praise for a 1000 benefits 3. Our slight acknowledgements of sinne our backwardnes to search our waies our carelesnesse when wee knowe diuerse grieuous faults by our selues either auoiding God's presence and making confession for fashions sake neither out of true grief for our sinnes and in a speciall manner doo we fail in those cases of trespasse or sinne that come to the knowledge of others Do we knowledge our sinnes one to another Oh how hard it is to bring vs to bee easie to giue glory to GOD heerin 4. What man is hee that liueth and hath not failed of the glory of GOD about the Sabbath Doo we delight in God's work Haue wee consecrated that Day as glorious to the Lord Haue not our mindes runne vpon our owne waies After what an vnspeakable maner haue we slighted God in his Ordinances Lastly what shall we answer to the Lord for our neglects of Iesus Christ Haue wee glorified the Son or rather haue wee not shamefull wants still in our faith Which of vs can say that he liues by the faith of the Sonne of God and are not our affections to the Lord Iesus extremely dull and auerse Where is the longing desire after him and the ●eruent loue of his appearing And for the last way of glorifying God by effect How vnprofitably and vnfruitfully doo the most of vs liue Who hath praised God in our behalf Whom haue we wonne to the loue of God and the truth Where are our witnesses that might testifie that our good works haue caused them to glorifie God But especially wo be to scandalous Christians that haue either caused wicked men to blaspheme or God's little ones to take offense and conceiue ill of the good way of God if they repent not it had been better for them they had neuer been born And as for wicked men that are openly so to giue a touch of them and their estate they haue reason to repent in sackcloth and ashes if their eies were but open to see what terrour is implied in this doctrine and how God will auenge himselfe vpon them both for their not glorifying of him and for changing his glory and for the opposing of his glory 1. In not glorifying God They haue spent their daies without GOD they haue either not conceiued of him at all or in a most mean and vile manner they haue not honoured him in his ordinances or in his Sabbaths they neuer loued the Lord Iesus in their hearts c. 2. In changing the glory of God they haue done shamefully Some of them haue turned Gods glory into the similitude of an Oxe or a Calf that eateth hay Some of them haue giuen his praise to Images and the works of their hands Some of them haue fixed the glory of their
of God either the great Book of the creatures or little booke of the Scriptures and so praying God to direct them take those things that easily offer them selues from thence The other way of meditating without booke as I knowe not whether it bee absolutely required so can it not bee so fruitfully performed nor so comfortably But to returne the viewing of GODs workman-ship in his creatures and of his wisedome rule in his Word will help vs in the first point which is to bring God into our minds For the second that wee may not mistake but conceiue of God aright wee must looke to diuers things carefully First wee must resist and subdue and no way harbour or fauour any atheisticall conceits against the doctrine of Gods nature or prouidence If wee find our minds intangled with any such wee must labour to get them cured for till our hearts bee whole of such diseases wee are disabled from any true conception of God Secondly wee must in thinking of God then cast out all likenesses wee must not conceiue of him in the likenes of any man or other creature but get aboue all similitudes and there rest in the adoration of him that is not like any of those things wee must haue no Images of God neither in our Churches nor in our heads Command 2. Esay 40. Thirdly we must learn distinctly the attributes of God's praises in the Scripture and conceiue of him as he is there commended to vs I mean wee should as wee are able when wee think of God thinke of him as he is omnipotent most wise most iust most mercifull c. It is an excellent prayse of the diligence of a Christian to accustome himselfe to conceiue of God according to descriptions made of him in his attributes in his Word Fourthly it may much helpe vs if we conceiue of God as dwelling in the humane nature of Christ for thereby it may somewhat arise in our mindes if we be prone to conceiue of likenesses Marke it carefully wee may not set before our mindes Christ-man and so worship without any more adoe but if we conceiue of the man-Christ and then worship that God-head that dwells in him we do right and besides attaine vnto a point farther which is to conceiue of God in Christ. Thus of the right conceiuing of God's nature The third thing which we must labour for is to magnifie God in our hearts to make him great to conceiue largely with full thoughts of God and to this I adde also to conceiue gloriously of him to clothe our thoughts of God with a shining excellency aboue any thing else wee thinke of Now that God may bee magnified and thought on after a glorious manner these things must bee done Wee must with all attendance and reuerence waite vpon the presence of God in his house for that is the place where his glory dwelleth Psalme 27.8 And God hath magnified his Word aboue all his name Psalme 138.2 And the vse of the Gospell is said to be the Gospel of the glory of the blessed God because it doth with the liuelyest impressions make a mans heart to discerne Gods excellency Mic. 5.4 1. Tim. 1.11 Secondly the meditation of the wonderfull works of God recorded in Scripture or obserued by experience is good to breed great and glorious thoughts of God for as the sight of the miracles of Christ wrought this in the hearts of the people Math. 15.31 Luke 7.16 so the contemplation of such great works may work the same effect in vs and the same effect also may the thought of the workes of God's speciall Iustice or Mercy haue Ezek. 38.23 Esay 13.13 especially the consideration of those works of fauour or deliuerance by which God hath declared his speciall goodnesse vnto vs Gen. 19.19 1. Chron. 17.24 Dauid also clotheth the thoughts of God with glory and greatnesse in his heart by thinking of the monuments of God's wonderfull Power and Wisedome in the heauens and earth seas c. Psalme 104.1 c. yea by thinking of his owne forming and making in the wombe Psalme 139.15 Thirdly we must pray earnestly to God with Moses and begge this of God that he would shew vs his glory Thus also of the third thing The next thing is to learne how to establish the thoughts of God's glory in vs and that is done especially two wayes First by striuing to set God alwayes before vs as Dauid did Psalme 16.8 Secondly by remembring God in all our wayes doing all our workes vnto the glorie of GOD 1. Cor. 10.31 Lastly to make vs in loue with God thus conceiued of according to his glory the thorow meditation of his mercies to vs are of singular vse to thinke eyther of the variety of them or of the speciall respect God hath had of vs aboue many others and the frequencie of his mercies that hee sheweth vs mercie daily but aboue all to consider that his mercies are free to think how vile we are vpon whom God looks with such grace and goodnes Thus the blessed Virgin taught her selfe to magnifie God and to loue his name Luke 1.46 48. Thus of making God glorious in our hearts by knowledge Now for the second which is to make him glorious by acknowledgement the particular wayes how that may be done haue been reckoned before in the explication of the doctrine onely wee must labor by praier to fashion our selues to that work that God in any of those particulars doth require of vs and that is the most speciall help which I knowe thereunto But by the way let mee warn thee to look to two things First that in any course of glorifying GOD which is to be done by thy words thou bee carefull to auoid hypocrisie and be sure that thy heart be lifted vp and affected according to the glory of God for the Lord abhorres to be glorified with thy lip if thy heart bee farre from him Esay 29.13 And the next is that thou presume not in any case to make the pretense of God's glory a couering for any wickednes as the Pharises that would hide their deuouring of widows houses vnder the praise of long prayer or those in the Prophet Esay's time that would persecute godly men and molest them with Church-censures and say Let the Lord bee glorified Esay 66.5 Thus of making God glorious in our selues Lastly that wee may make God glorious in the hearts of other men and cause them to speak of his praises we must carefully look to foure things 1. That when wee speak of God or his truth we doo it with all possible reuerence and fear that wee bee carefull in all our discourses of Religion instructions admonitions reproofs confutations or the like to treat of these things with all meeknes and reuerence God hath giuen vs a Commandement of purpose to restrain the taking-vp of his Name in vain 2. That wee striue by all means to liue vnspotted and in offensiue in
the duty of Superiours for in that new and tender world great care was to bee had that vnder pretense of Religion ciuill obedience either in the family or Common-wealth were not neglected And it is a truth to be known at all times that God would not haue inferiours too skilfull in the duty of Superiours that they might first learne to shew duty before they called for duty from their Superiours That may bee one reason why the duty of Masters is not heer handled and in other places of the Epistles but briefly for many times the description of the duty of Superiours is vsed but as a glasse by the Inferiours to pry into the faults of those that rule them and so growe carelesse and wilfully stubborne vnder pretence of the faults of their superiours But some one might say that by this meanes if the Magistrates did turne Christians they were left without rules of direction and so they should not know what to doe Answ. That inconuenience was long before preuented because the duety of Magistrates is fully taught in the old Testament which vnto a godly minde is of as great authority as the new Thus of the coherence and generall consideration of all the words The duty of Subiects followes to bee particularly considered of Submit Concerning Subiects here are fiue things to be considered of First the proposition of Doctrine in these words Submit your selues to euery ordinance of man for the Lords sake Secondly the exposition of it in one case and that is the Persons to whom they were to bee subiect to all sorts of Gouernors to Kings or any other Gouernours Thirdly the confirmation by reason Ver. 14 15. Fourthly the answer of an Obiection Vers. 16. Fiftly the conclusion Vers. 17. In the Proposition consider 1. The dutie to bee done Submit 2. The persons must doe it your selues 3. The things to which they must be subiect Ordinances where is a double extent viz to euery ordinance and though they be ordinances of men 4. The manner or motiue For the Lords sake Submit The duty is to submit vnto Magistrates Rom. 13.1 2. For Explication two things are to bee considered Why wee must submit and How we must submit For the first wee must submit 1. Because God is the Author of magistracy Gen. 9.6 Deut. 16.18 Prou. 8.15 Dan. 2.21 Ioh. 19.11 Rom. 13.1 4 6. Obiect The Diuell is said to bee the Prince of this world and hee claimeth all the kingdomes of the earth Ioh. 12.31 Mat. 4.8 9. Sol. Hee is the Prince of this world by malicious vsurpation not by any right 2. Hee is so in relation to wicked men hee is their king but not of others 3. Hee speakes like himselfe that is like the father of lyes when hee claimes all the kingdomes of the earth for no part of the world is his because The earth is the Lords and all that therein is Obiect But God was angry with the Israelites for their asking of a King and therefore it seemes it was not his ordinance that there should bee Kings Sol. Hee was not angry with them for desiring Gouernours for they had Gouernours before sent of God and the very king they had afterward God gaue them him Hos. 13.8 but hee was angry for the cause of their request Their faith and hope was in a manner spent and they conceiued more hope in a King then in God that had beene such a King to them so many yeares 2. Men must be subiect because God hath taken mens consciences bound to subiection Rom. 13. 3. Because kings are heads of the people and therfore as members it is agreeable that they should submit and bee ruled and guided 4. In respect of the benefit men receiue by Magistrates both in outward things and in matters of religion For outward things men enioy publike peace and quietnesse and protection by the helpe of the power of the Magistrate And for matters of Religion earthly Common-wealths are as it were Innes to lodge the Church in and Princes power affords protection so as Christians may more safely follow their calling and if they bee godly Kings they are the very nurses of Religion And thus of the reasons For the second this Submission hath in it sixe things the first is obedience to their lawes and commandements Tit. 3.1 The second is honour Rom. 13.7 for they are principalities and powers as the Angels shine in heauen so doe Princes on earth yea they are called Gods and so in two respects first as they are Gods Deputies and Viceroies God executes a part of his Kingdome by Kings Secondly as they beare the image of God and his authority and soueraignety Now we must performe this honour by reuerence and by feare of them and by iudging the best of them and their actions without conceiuing suspicious of them nor receiuing euill reports against them nor daring to speake euill of those dignities and Rulers of the people and by all thankefulnesse for the good wee receiue by them acknowledging to the full all their praises The third is Loyaltie by which we resolue and endeauour to the vttermost of our powers to maintaine and preserue the persons rights prerogatiues crowns and dignities of Princes If wee must lay downe our liues one for another then much more for our King and Countrey The fourth is Piety wee must pray for them with all manner of prayer wee must make supplications for Gods blessing vpon them and deprecations for the remouing euils from them and if they should sinne and God bee wroth with them wee should stand vp in the gap and make intercession for them and wee should giue thankes for all the mercies the Lord shewes vnto them 2. Tim. 2.1 The fift is Maintenance tribute must bee paide Rom. 13.7 Christ himselfe submitted herein The last is Subiection to their punishments Rom. 13.4 yea to their iniuries as Dauid Christ and the Apostles did submit themselues to the iniurious dealing of Saul Pilate and the Tyrants when perhaps they could haue made resistance Vse 1. The vse may be first for terrour to the seditious great hath beene the vengeance of God vpon Traytors the earth swallowed vp Corah Dathan and Abiram for their rebellion Absolon was hanged vp by the haire betweene heauen and earth as vnworthy both of heauen and earth The words of our Sauiour Christ are in an high degree true in this case He that taketh vp the sword shall perish by the sword And S. Paul saith They shall bee damned that resist the power Secondly it should much humble the better sort of men for diuers faults that are too common such as are the receiuing of euill reports and speaking euill with two frequent intemperancy grudging at the paiment of tribute and taxations euill surmises of the actions of Princes and the aptness to fauour thēselues in the liberty of doubting concerning obedience to them in things indifferent Thirdly all good Christians should bee perswaded to make conscience of this
sinne and misery and the setting of it in the possession of that blessed immortality in heauen The liberty of the body is the freeing of it from the bonds of death and bowels of the earth by enduing it with a glorious resurrection part of which freedome they enioy euen in the graue For though they be buried yet they are not damned to hell there but rest in hope of their finall deliuerance and with this liberty of glory both soule and body are made heires of heauen Rom. 8.21 It is the liberty of grace is heere meant and that this part of the Christian happines may the better appeare I will consider First what hee is freed from and secondly what hee is freed to For the first there are diuers things hee is freed from as First from the rigour of the morall Law hee is deliuered from the most rigid seuere execution of absolute perfect obedience so as being now vnder grace he is not bound to fulfill the law perfectly but may be accepted of God if he obey it in the vprightnes and sincerity of his heart though he haue many frailties and infirmities God hath now tempred that rigour of exaction which hee iustly stood vpon in his first agreement with man in Paradise and did with terror againe proclaime in giuing his Law in Sinai so as now in Christ our yoke is easie and our burden light Math. 11.29 Rom. 6.14 Christ our surety hath fulfilled that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or exact righteousnes of the Law for vs Rom. 8.3 Galatians 4.24.26 Heb. 12.18 Rom. 7.6 c. Secondly from the execution and condemnation into which the Law for our sinnes had cast vs our expiation being made in the blood of Christ who was made 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a curse for vs that wee might be iustified from these things from which by the Law of Moses we could neuer bee absolued Rom. 8.1 Galatians 3.13 Thirdly from the tyranny and damnation of sin that dwels in vs the force of it being mortified by the Spirit of Christ and so weakned that though it may rebell yet it cannot rage and rule as it did before Rom. 6.14 Iohn 8.34 2 Cor. 3.17 Romanes 6.6 18. Fourthly from bondage vnder diuels those spirituall wickednesses that had their strong holds in the hearts of euery man by nature and ruled effectually in all the children of disobedience who had possession in our hearts and kept vs in their power as most cruell Iaylers Ephesians 2.2 4. by Christ they are thrown out of possession they may tempt still but the gates of hell shall neuer preuaile againe ouer the godly Colos. 2.15 Fiftly from the Lawes of Moses The ceremoniall and iudiciall Lawes which lawes were a yoke that neither the Iewes nor their fathers were euer able to beare Acts. 15.10 The ceremoniall lawes were a very seale of our condemnation a hand-writing against vs wherein men many waies acknowledge their guiltines besides they were extremely burthensome in respect of the rules of them and the strict obseruation required from them Our deliuerance from these lawes these places proue Acts 15.1 Cor. 9.1 19. 2. Cor. 3.17 Heb. 9.10 Colos. 2.17 There were foure respects which the ceremoniall Law had or foure vses First these ceremonies as I said before did signifie our sin-guiltines and were as an obligation and hand-writing against vs Colos. 2.14 Secondly they were a badge to distinguish the Iewes from all other nations Genes 17.13 14. Thirdly they were shadowes and typicall adumbrations of Christ and his benefits Heb. 9 9 10. 10.1.4 Fourthly they were as a tutor or Schoole-master to instruct and keepe them vnder in the minority of the Church Galat. 4.1 2. Now all these vses are abolished by Christ For our condemnation is taken away by Christ and so the hand-writing is cancelled Colos. 2.14 and the Gentiles and Iewes are made all one people Ephes 2.14 15. and Christ the substance and body is come and therefore the shadowes must vanish Col. 2.17 and the heir is as it were now at age therefore needs not Tutors and Gouernors Gal. 4.1 2 3. As for the freedome of Christians from the Iudiciall Lawes that must be vnderstood with a distinction for so many of the Iudicial Lawes as did agree with the common politicall law of Nature are in force only so much of the Iudicial law as did only concern the singular particular policy of the Iewes is abolished Where the reason of the Law is Vniuersal the Law binds all where the respect and reason of the Law is fitted onely to the condition of that people there the law is abolisht Sixtly from seruile feare vnto which wee are and were in bondage by Nature and so wee are freed from the seruile feares of the graue of men of death there was a spirit of bondage in vs by nature wee durst not come into Gods presence and legall terrors did lie at the doore of our hearts to driue vs to despayre of mercy or acceptation But when Faith came then the spirit of bondage went away and the hearts of Christians are emboldned with spirituall liberty and firme confidence taking delight in the Law of God in the inner man Rō 8.15 Luke 1.74 And there was likewise in vs by Nature a feare of the reproch and rage of men and the oppositions and scornes of the World from which God's children are so deliuered that many times they haue contemned the vttermost furie of Tyrants as Daniel and his companions and the Martyrs and the Patriarchs and Moses c. and from the feare of death We were all in bondage to it all our life but now Christ hath deliuered vs by destroying him that had the power of death Heb. 2.14 15. This of the first point what we are forced from Now for the second what we are free to and therein are diuers comfortable considerations First we are free to the fauor and fellowship of God the Father and of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost 1. Iohn 1.3 7. 1. Cor. 1.9 Iohn 17.21 2. Pet. 1.4 1. Ioh. 5.24 Secondly wee are free to the Communion of Saints we are fellow Citizens with the Saints we are written in the writing of the house of Israel acknowledged as members of the Congregation of the first borne This is an Article of our Faith Ephesians 2.20 3.6 4.4 5. Hebrewes 12.18 c. Thirdly wee are free to all the promises of Grace those rich and precious promises wee may safely imply they are ours 2. Pet. 1.4 Eph. 3.6 Fourthly we are free of God's chamber of Presence we may go in when we will and aske what we will and it shall bee done vnto vs we are free to put vp as many petitions and suits as we will we are free to the Throne of Grace Heb. 4.16 Eph. 3.12 and so in generall wee are free in the whole House of God euen to the vse of all his ordinances Iohn 6.36 Fiftly
we are free in respect of things indifferent and all things are indifferent that are neyther commanded nor forbidden in the Word of God all the restraints that in the time of the old Testament lay vpon any creature are now taken off so as all the creatures of God are good and lawfull All things are pure to the pure Titus 1.15 1. Tim. 4.4 Rom. 14. so are dayes meates garments c. So as now Christians may vse them or omit them freely note what I say vse as well as omit For some are so singular or simple as to thinke Christian liberty doth onely make reference to omit but not to vse meates garments dayes or indifferent ceremonies whereas they restraine Christian liberty that forbid the vse of those indifferent things as well as they that dislike the omitting onely in vsing men must take heede as hath beene shewed before of the opinion of merit worship or necessity to holinesse or saluation which is that which is condemned by the Apostles Vses The vse may bee first for humiliation to wicked men for hereby is implyed that they are in great bondage and not free for howsoeuer it is true that euery wicked man in Christian Churches is freed from that yoake of Moses lawes yet in all the rest they are in danger still and bondage They stand bound by the couenāt of works to the absolute keeping of the Law because none haue the benefit of the new couenant till they be in the same and so all their faylings of the perfect fulfilling of the Law are imputed to them and they are vnder the execration and all the curses of the Law They are in bondage to the tyranny of their owne sinnes and haue the diuels intrenched in strong holdes in their soules They would bee troubled to know that the diuell did possesse their bodies and yet do not consider that the diuell doth certainely possesse their soules euery wicked man is possessed Besides they are in bondage by these seruile feares they dare not set their hearts in Gods sight It is a death to them nor dare they for Religions sake displease men and the feare of death is like a continuall death to them and for all this they are neuer helped till their hearts be turned to God Secondly we may hence gather the difference betweene the liberty of the new Testament and that in the old In the old Testament godly men were free from the rigour and curse of the Law and from the dominion of sinne and power of the diuels and from seruile feares onely in the new Testament there are these three things added 1. That the doctrine of liberty in the former things is more cleere and more generally reuealed 2. That wee are freed from the Mosaicall Lawes 3. That wee haue liberty in things indifferent A third vse may be for instruction to teach men to try their interest to this freedome For such men onely are made free that beleeue in Christ Iohn 1.12 and resolue to continue in the Word Iohn 8.31 and are weary and heauy loaden Mat. 11.29 and are throughly turned to God 2. Cor. 3.16 17. Lastly our Christian liberty may bee a great comfort to our hearts if we consider seriously the great miseries wee are freed from and the great priuiledges we are freed to and the rather because our freedome proceedes from the tender mercy of God Luke 1.78 and was purchased at a deare rate by Christ 1. Pet. 1.18 and the Patent of it is sealed by the holy Ghost Eph. 1.13 and also because it is graunted to none but the sonnes of God As free These words restraine the grant of our liberty and shew that though we bee made truly free by God yet in diuers respects wee are but as free rather like freemen then so indeed and so we are but as free First in respect of others for by the iudgement of others no freeman can bee knowne infallibly but onely in the coniecture of charity Secondly in respect of our selues and so we are but as free 1. In respect of the rigour of the Law For most Christians through ignorance and vnbeliefe liue vnder the bondage of Legall perfection and so discerne not that vprightnes in the Gospel is accepted in steade of perfection 2. In respect of the malediction of the Law so many Christians are but as free First because they doubt of Gods fauour Secondly because though the curse be remoued yet the things that are cursed are not remoued for the matter of affliction is still the same in respect of which our life may bee said to bee hid with God Colo. 3.3 3. In respect of the power of sin For though the dominion of sinne be taken off yet sinne rebells in the most godly and many times preuailes in a great degree through their security or infirmities Rom. 7. Fourthly in respect of things indifferent whether we respect God or our selues God hath freed vs in respect of right but restrained vs in respect of vse by a threefold commandement viz. of faith of charitie and of obedience to Magistrates The commandement of faith bindes vs not to vse our liberty vnlesse we be fully perswaded of our right that is in things we may either doe or omit at our owne pleasures Rom. 14.6 The commandement of charity in things we may either doe or omit at our pleasure bindes vs not to vse our liberty when the weake brother will bee offended The commandement of obedience bindes vs to submit the vse of things indifferent to the commandement of the Magistrate so as if the Magistrate make ordinances about the vse or restraint of things indifferent God hath bid vs to obey those ordinances and so though we be free still in respect of our right yet we are not now free in respect of the vses of them Againe many Christians binde themselues where God bindeth not sometimes by thinking things indifferent to be vnlawfull and sometimes by thinking themselues free to leaue them but not to vse them Lastly seruile feares doe much darken the glory of Christian liberty in the hearts of many Christians whilst through ignorance or wilfull vnbelief they trouble themselues with conceits that God doth not accept their seruice or when they admit too much respect fear of the displeasure of men or when they vse not the meanes to beare the feare of death in themselues Vse And therefore the vse should bee to teach Christians so to study the doctrine of Christian liberty and so to attend the informing reforming of their own hearts that they may no longer restraine their own liberty in any part of it and withal since in some things we are not fully freed in this life they should the more earnestly stire vp themselues to hope for and long for that glorious perfect liberty in heauen purchased by Iesus Christ. Not vsing your liberty as a cloak of maliciousnes In these words the Apostle remoues the abuse of their liberty The word
mercy Thirdly hee causeth the Gospell to be preached to all sorts of men without exception And so grace is offred to them and there is no other let but their refusall of grace offred Fourthly the example of all sorts of sinners that haue returned As great sinners as they haue been receiued to mercy and they are set out as examples to encourage other men to seek mercy as Manasses Mary Magdalene Dauid Peter Paul and others Many among the Corinthians haue been notorious offenders but were iustified and sanctified The explication of the doctrine of returning followes where these things are to be considered of c. First the motiues to perswade men to return Secondly the persons that need returning Thirdly the time when men must return Fourthly the false waies men must auoid in returning Fiftly what a number of lost sheep doo vsually return Sixtly the aggrauations against certain persons for not returning Seuenthly the means of returning Eightthly the manner how we must return or the rules to be obserued in returning Ninthly the signes of a lost sheep returned Lastly the lets of returning For the first I mean not to insist vpon all sorts of motiues but to follow the word Return as it is vsed in Scripture and take a few of the fittest motiues as it is vsed in this place And so diuers things should make a man to return as First the consideration of God's maruellous goodnes and amiablenesse of nature to all such as turn vnto him he is wonderfull gracious to them and mercifull and will repent him of the euill Ioel 2.12 13. Ier. 31.19 20. The parable of the lost sheep shewes this fully Secondly the great danger that men are in if they return not GOD is angry with the wicked euery day Psalm 7.12 And his fury may break forth suddenly vpon them like fire Ier. 4.4 For the words of his seruants will certainely take hold vpon them Zach. 1.4 6. and iniquity will be their ruine Ezech. 18. verse 30. Except they repent they must perish Luke 13.5 And therefore if wee warne men of their sinnes and they will not returne wee are deliuered and their blood will bee vpon themselues Ezech. 3.19 Thirdly if a man consider but the happines of such as doe returne GOD will forgiue them all their sinnes he will aboundantly prouide for them Esay 55.7 If they returne they shall liue and not die Ezech. 18.23 and 33.11 and euerlasting ioy shall bee vpon their heads and sorrow and mourning shall flee away Esay 51.11 and in this verse the Apostle shewes their happines For they shall alwaies liue vnder Iesus Christ as the Shepheard and Bishop of their soules For these and many other reasons it is the onely wise course to returne Luke 1.16 And there is not one wise man amongst all them that returne not Iob 17. And thus of the motiues The second point is the persons that need returning It is certain that those that liue out of the visible Church or in false churches neede returning As Pagans Turks Iewes Papists Schismaticks and all Hereticks Yea Iuda and Hierusalem neede repentance Ierem. 4.4 and 26.2 3. Men that liue in the visible Church and are baptized need to returne or else they wil perish Luke 13.5 Iohn 3.3 The third point is the time of returning and in short the best time to returne is the present time while it is yet called to day while wee haue the meanes of returning when God cals vpon vs by the ministry of his seruants especially when hee knocks at the dore of our hearts and laies the axe to the roote of the tree it is wonderfull dangerous to defer repentance for euen the longer thou liuest in sinne the more hard will thy heart bee Heb. 3.13 and the meanes of grace euen the Kingdome of God may be taken away or God may cut thee downe euen by sudden death or may cast thee into a reprobate sence and giue thee vp to a heart that cannot repent Rom. 2.4 5. The fourth point is the false waies to bee auoidid in returning and these are First to returne with despaire or to goe back without the guide faith in Gods mercy or to goe the way that despair leads In this way Cain and Iudas perished Secondly to returne fainedly and not with a mans whole heart to make a shew of returning when men doe not returne indeed Ierem. 3.10 Thirdly to returne but part of the way and to repent by halues as Ahab and Herod did Fourthly to returne when it is too late euen when the dore is shut to repent when it is too late Iob 27.9 The fift point is the aggrauations that lye against diuers persons about their not returning For if it be euill in it selfe for any not to returne then how fearefull is their case First that are proud of their skill in going out of the way that are wise to doe euill Ierem. 4.22 Secondly that are deepely reuolted that is that are such as liue in horrible and fearefull sinnes Esay 31.6 Thirdly that will not returne though their transgressions bee vpon them and they pine away in them Ezech. 33.10 They will not giue ouer though they haue no peace and are daily buffeted for their euill doing and their consciences beare the shame and trouble of their offending Fourthly that will not returne though the seruants of God openly testify against them Neh. 9.29 2. King 17.13 14. Fiftly that will not returne though the hand of God bee vpon them euen to consume them Ierem. 5.3 Sixtly that are turned back by a perpetuall backsliding Ierem. 8.4 that hold fast their sinnes and refuse to returne Ierem. 8.5 The sixt point may bee this viz. what number of lost sheepe doe vsually returne not all that goe astray Our Sauiour tels vs of a parable of one lost sheepe returning and the Prophet Ieremie tels vs of one of a Tribe and two of a Tribe Ierem. 3.14 Multitudes of men perish and neuer returne The seuenth point is the meanes or cause of our returning and these are either Principall or Instrumentall The principall causes are GOD and Christ that good Shepheard It is God that turneth back the captiuity of his people Psal. 14. vlt. and three times in one Psalme the people pray God to turne them againe Psalme 80.3 7 19. This is Ephraims sute Turne thou mee O Lord and I shall bee turned Ierem 31.18 So the Church saith Lamen 5.21 And Christ is that good Shepheard that seekes that which is lost yea laieth downe his life for his sheep Iohn 10. The instrumentall causes of returning are either externall or internall The externall meanes of returning is the Word preached and so both the reproofes of Gods seruants testifying against the wicked to make them turne from their sinnes Nehem. 9.26 29. as also the promises of the Gospel by which the sinner in the name of Christ is as it were wooed and intreated to returne with assurance of
and Gods elect in the holines of conuersation Vse The sixt prerogatiue is their number Vse The acceptation of the words Doct. The sence as the word is taken for praises The diuision The first part Fiue things we are not to imitate in Christ. 9. Vertues in Christ which we must shew forth in our liues 1 Wisdome How we should shew it viz. fiue waies What it must not haue in it 2 Meeknes shewed in foure things 3 Humility which is shewed 3 waies 4 Contempt of the world shewed in foure things 5 Mercie sh●wed foure waies Patience to be shewed foure waies 3 Motiues Compas●ion to enemies Inoffensiuenes Loue to the godly How many wayes we shew foorth the vertues of Christ. Phil. 4.5 7 Wayes wherein wee may offend by outward shewes Vse Motiues to the shew of vertue Why the vertues in vs are called the vertues of Christ. Sorts of callings 7 Gifts of God Distinction of calling 4 things in the order of working our calling Vse Eight signes of an effectuall calling Ezech. 11.18 2. Cor. 2.4 5. Ephes. 2.5 5 Rules that shew vs how to walk worthy of our calling The miserie of such as refuse their calling shewed in eight things Math. 10. Of the estate of such as haue temporary grace The remembrance of our miserie past is pofitable in ●●x respects The acceptations of the word darknes Degrees of darknes Nine aggrauations of the darknes is in wicked men 4 Signes of spirituall darknesse 6 Differences betweene the darknesse is in godly men and that which is in wicked men Ioh. 12.46 Esay 50.10 Mich. 7 8. Psal. 1●2 ● Acceptations of the word Light In how many respects the light of the godly is maruellous Esay 9.2 Mat 4.16 Of the calling of the Gentiles in generall Vse Many sorts of people in Scripture Why wicked men are said not to bee a people Who are not Gods people Men are Gods people three waies Ier. 31.3 How Gods people excell all other people Exod. 33.6 Rules for Gods people how to carry themselues to God Excuses of wicked men refuted What wicked men in particular are not vnder mercy Why many obtaine not mercy 4 Properties of Gods mercy 1 It is tender many waies 2 It is immense It is free mercy and that diuers waies Gods mercy is eternall 6 Effects of Gods mercy Vse 1. Vse 2. Helpes to obtain mercy How many waies Gods people are the onely beloued ones Vse How Christians may preserue this loue Iusts to be especially auoyded 3 Differences of lusts in Godly men and wicked men Helps to auoyd lusts Vse Lusts are fleshly in diuers respects 8 Euill properties effects of the flesh How these lusts hurt the soules of wicked men as also the souls of godly men Soule taken in diuers senses A discription of the Soule 7 things very considerable in mans Soule Psal. 49.18 The soule is a substance The soule is not a bodily substance The soule is immortall Eus. Eccl. Hist. l 2. c. 26. Aug. tom 6. de haeres c. 8.3 The originall of the Soule Anima non est ex traduce God creates the soule Vnion of the Soul● with the body how The faculties of the soule 1 Vegetation Sense 1 Outward 2 Inward sense Of the faculty of reason in the soule and wherin it excels The end why the soule was made 4 Kinds of war against the soul. The flesh wars against the soule fiue waies Why God doth suffer this war How many waies wee get victory ouer our lusts Signes to knowe whether we be ouercomne of our lusts Six things to be looked to to expresse a fayre conuersation Vse In what cases it is lawfull to conuerse with wicked men Causes why godly men are euill spoken of In what cases it is not hurtfull to speake euill of godly men Reasons against euill speaking In what cases in particular it is odious to speak euill Helps against reproaches to bear them Wherein works are good Rules to bee obserued in doing good works Ier. 31.19 20. Heb. 9.14 and 12.14 Kinds of good works Esay 1● 8 How a godly man may comfort himself in his works What works are good for How a man may lose his workes What works may be shewed What works ought not to shewed How God is glorified by himselfe 1. Cor. 11.17 How God is glorified of vs in generall How God is glorified of vs in particular Motiues to the care of glorifying God Helps to glorifie God By what meanes God may bee brought into our mindes Helpes to conceiue aright of God Deut. 4. How God is to be magnified in our hearts and by what means The thoghts of Gods glory is 2 waies established Note A double caueat in glorifying God 4 Things must be done by vs to make others glorifie God Men are said to visit diuersly 2 God doth also visit many waies 1 The creatures But especially men and so either as he visits all men in generall or some men in speciall God visits men two waies especially 1 In iustice What kind of men in particular are in danger of this kind of visitation 2 God visits in mercie so either in temporall things a● in the case of blessings or in case of afflictions God visits in spirituall things diuersly Doct. 1. Vse Vse Signes of such as are truly visited in mercy with true grace 1 Hee hath a new Lord. 2 New acquaintance 3 A new language 4 A newe heart Speciall signes of a newe heart 1 It hath no guile 2 It is void of malice 3 It is void of couetousnes 4 A newe mind New affections A new behauiour discouered diuers waies Many sorts of daies noted in Scripture Note How the day and season of grace may be knowne Note Against such as presume on late repentance First obiection answerd Note Second obiection answerd Third obiection confuted Note Note What glorious things the day of visitation brings forth Vse Note Vse 1. Vse 2. Note Note What submission hath in it viz. sixe things Si quis tentat excipere conatur decipere Agnoscit dominum suum cleri Aben-Ezra 1 Subiectiue 2 Obiectiue 3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 4 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In what things the Magistrate is not to be obeyed In what things they are to be obeyed In what matters ecclesiasticall the Magistrate hath no power In what things he hath power ecclesiastical Actions about Gods worship of two sorts Quoad 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Quoad 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Whether any inuentions of men ought to be obeyed Gal. 5. Mat. 15. Command 2. Circumcision was a burthen Acts 5.10 and these burthens called necessary things v. 28. and they were said to doe well if they obserue them v. 29. Pretended inconueniences by humane Lawes suruaied Acts 15.1 Rules about taking and giuing scandall at humane ceremonies 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hypocrisie Originall of Kings Homo natura est animal politicum Diuers kindes of societies Pagus à 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
outward estate be Euery poore Christian should think themselues aboundantly happie What shall one answer the messengers of the nations saith the Prophet Why thus That the Lord hath founded Sion and the poore of his people shall trust in it Esay 14.32 Especially if wee consider that of the Psalme that the Lord hath there commanded the blessing euen life for euermore Psal. 133.3 Thus it should serue for consolation Eightthly It imports and imputes also great reproof and so to two sorts of men First to the godly themselues that liue not comfortably and are dailie distressed with vnbelief shal any distresses now make Sion droop The Lord takes it wonderfully vnkindly that Sion said God hath forsaken mee and my God hath forgotten mee and pleades earnestly to proue that it was false What saies the Prophet Micah is there no King in thee why doest thou crie out Mic. 4.8 9 10 11 12 13. And the Prophet Ieremie notes it with indignation Behold saith he the voice of the crie of the daughter of my people because of them that dwell n farre countries Is not the Lord in Sion Is not her King in her Ierem. 8.19 Secondly to carelesse and carnall Christians Is the Lord about so great a work as founding of Sion and forming Christ in the harts of men Then wo to them that are at ease in Sion and can sit still and securely neglect so great saluation brought vnto them Amos 6.1 A corner stone Christ is described by these words A corner stone elect and precious He is likened to the foundation stone in the corner of the building by which similitude diuers Doctrines are imported as First that Christ is the foundation of all the building of grace and godlines in the Church and the onely corner stone Hebr. 1.3 Ioh 5.39 Other foundation can no man lay then that which is laid which is Iesus Christ 1. Cor. 3. which should both teach vs and informe vs it should teach vs where to begin when wee goe about the work of godlines and eternall life Wee must begin at Christ All the building of true grace must begin at Christ and our redemption in him till wee haue learned Christ wee haue learned nothing and it should teach vs also to stay our hearts in all estates vpon Christ wee should rest in him as the building doth vpon the foundation And further it should teach vs to ascribe all the praise of the grace or hope wee haue receiued vnto Christ and the support wee haue from him And it may informe vs concerning the dotage of the Papists who make Peter the rock and foundation of the Church and yet heere wee haue the testimonie and Doctrine of Peter himselfe to the contrarie teaching vs to acknowledge no other rock of foundation but Christ himselfe Secondly we heere are instructed concerning the Vnion of Iewes and Gentiles in one Christ The two sides of the building meet all in the corner and are both fastened vpon this one foundation of Christ crucified Thirdly it is heere imported that Gods building euen in these times of the Gospell is not finished nor will bee in this life till all the elect be called He is for the most part imploied in laying the foundation and fastning the Elect as they arise in their seuerall ages as liuely stones vpon this liuing stone But the work will not be finished till we be settled in that Building made without hands in heauen Fourthly hence we may gather a testimony of the two natures of Christ or in Christ. Hee is God because he must be beleeued on and he is man because he is part of the Building and was laid down of God as the corner-stone Elect and precious There are two Epithets by which the corner stone is commended as meet to bee the onely head of the corner The first is that it is an Elect one a choise one that one of a thousand there was not such another to be found in all the heape of the creatures to make a corner stone of This is hee that is separate from sinners and acknowledged to be better and fitter for this worke then the Angels in heauen There can bee no other name vpon which we may be founded but onely the happy name of Iesus And therefore for the vse of it let euery knee bow at the name of Iesus and let euery tongue confesse to the glory of God the Father that he hath been wonderfull in his choise Let vs adore him whom God hath chosen and giuen vnto vs as the foundation of all our happines especially let vs learn of God to make our choise of him Oh Infidelity Infidelity how iust is thy wofull destruction for thy vnbeliefe Oh man that mightest haue been for euer happy in this choise Oh let vs bee warned and saue our selues from the common ruine of the world Let all this be vile in respect of Christ. Let vs chuse him aboue all the world Hee is worthy vpon whom all our soules and all our minde and all our ioy should be set God forbid wee should reioyce in any thing but in Christ and him crucified Let vs bee crucified to the world so we be loued of Christ. Shall wee wilfully make our selues like the miserable Iews Shall we chuse rather Barabbas then Iesus and Belial rather then Christ If the daughter of a begger should bee offred in marriage whether she would chuse of a matchlesse Prince or a base and seruile pesant would we not detest such folly if she should neglect the Prince and choose the pesant And yet this is our case God requires no more of vs but to choose his Sonne before the world or Satan or the flesh and we are assured of eternall aduancement and yet behold we chuse not wee deferre the time wee court the pesant that will for euer vndoe vs and neglect the continual sollicitations of the Heir of all things Lord put to our faith and make vs for euer resolute to cleaue to the Lord Iesus and him alone Secondly he is sayd to be precious Of this before but yet somewhat note for the vse Is he precious O then first how should we admire the glorie of that building when the foundation is layed with precious stones Secondly this should begette in vs an high estimation of Christ. Quest. What should we do to attaine to this heartily to account of Christ as so excellent aboue all other things Ans. First we must think much of our misery and our need of Christ. The true reason why wee are not more ioyed in Christ is because we are not soundly Catechized in the particulars of our miserie in our selues we should seriously lay that doctrine one time after another vpon our hearts and it will make vs run to Christ with singular affection Secondly we should get Catalogues of the great things purchased by Christ and of the wonderfull precious promises made vnto godlines both for this life and that which is to
the thiefe vpon the Crosse Consider that God hath offered thee thy pardon in the Sacrament Feare the Lord therefore and his goodnes and returne with all thine heart and iniquity shall not be thy ruine Hitherto of their sinne their punishment followes and so first vpon their rulers and leaders in these words The Stone which the builders refused is become the Head of the corner Which words are taken out of Psal. 118.22 where they are vsed by the Prophet Dauid and here quoted by the Apostle Peter The words haue a double sense for they did concern both Dauid and Christ. As they concern'd Dauid this was the meaning that Though the Nobles and Courtiers did despise and reiect and oppose Dauid yet such was God's prouidence that the man whom they reiected GOD made King of Israel and the chief stay support of that State Now for this sense of the words diuers things may be noted First that God ●ath raised vp great men in the Common-wealth for this end that they might seek the publick good and imploy their labours for the building vp and prosperity of the State Which should both teach great men to think of their duties and the accounts they must make to God as also it should teach the people to pray the more heartily for them and to obey them in all lawfull things Secondly we may hence gather the imperfection of all humane things For in that earthly Kingdomes need building vp still it shewes that they attain to no perfection but at the best are stil in progresse Thirdly that many times great men wilfully oppose the right and set themselues against the righteous and resist the will of GOD. Which should teach vs not to place our confidence in the great men of this world nor to be alwaies led by their example in opinions Fourthly that God will finde out the wickednes of great men and bring them to confusion God accepts not persons hee hateth sin in great men as well as in mean men and will crosse and confound their godlesse and vngodly coun●els Fiftly that God takes to himself the power to dispose of earthly Kingdomes and to giue Kings and Rulers at his owne pleasure It was the Lord's dooing and it was maruellous that Dauid should become the Head of the corner Psal. 118.23 The Lord pleads it as a part of his soueraignty and prerogatiue To set vp Kings By me Kings raign Pro. 8. Which should teach Princes and Iudges and Nobles to doo homage to God and acknowledge him for their Soueraign and therefore serue him with fear Psalm 2. And it should teach the people to giue honour and tribute and custome and obedience for conscience sake to their Rulers seeing the power that is is of God Rom. 13. Now as these words were vnderstood in the case of Dauid so was Dauid heerin a type of Christ and so the words are to be vnderstood in the case of Christ also as our Sauiour himselfe applies them Mat. 22. and as it is euident to bee the meaning of the Apostle heer And it is the drift of the Apostle to strengthen weak Christians against the scandall that might arise from the opposition of the Kingdome of Christ. For it might trouble them and amaze them to consider how Christ was opposed by the Scribes and Pharises who were the great learned men of the time and such as were eminent in the Church and in the account of the most men were the chief persons that took care for Religion and the state of the Church and did excell all other sorts c. Now that this scandall might be remoued he shewes in these words First that nothing did therein fall out but what was the lot of Dauid in his time Secondly that all this was foretold in the old Testament and therfore might not seem strange Thirdly that all those oppositions should bee in vain for GOD would reiect and confound those opposites and would prosper and aduance the right of Iesus Christ without the help of those men In the particular consideration of these words three things must bee noted First the persons threatned viz. the Builders that is the Scribes and Pharises and those that vnder pretence of religion did oppose Christ. Secondly the cause of their punishment viz. the refusing of Christ the foundation stone Thirdly the iudgement inflicted vpon them which is twofold the one implied the other expressed There is a iudgement implied viz. that Though they were by calling and in the account of the multitude Builders yet God would reiect them and go on with his work in conuerting both Iewes and Gentiles without them The iudgement expressed is that Christ whom they so much hated and opposed should be in spight of their hearts and to their extreme vexation made King of the Church and exalted to supreme power ouer all things and the only stay of the whole Church both of Iews and Gentiles And heerin it is to be noted both the manner how this shall be done in the word is become or is made and also the time in that hee sayth It is made Builders Quest. A question may be moued heere for the sense viz. how the Scribes and Pharises and such like men can be sayd to be builders Ans. For answere whereunto we must vnderstand that the Scribes and Pharises and so wicked men that possesse eminent places in the Church may be said to be builders First in the account of the multitude whatsoeuer they were indeed yet they were commonly so accounted as builders and prime men in managing the affaires of the Church Secondly the Scribes and Pharises may be acknowledged in some respects as builders indeed they did God some worke For howsoeuer they did not soundly teach Christ yet they drew the people by their doctrine to auoid on the right hand the Stoicall strictnesse of the Essenes and on the left hand the prophane irreligiousnesse of the Sadduces Thirdly they were builders by calling they haue the name not so much from what they were as from what men in their places had been or ought to haue been And these are the persons that oppose CHRIST and are thus seuerely iudged of God Diuers things may be hence noted First that men may be great in their owne opinion and in the account of the world who yet are nothing set by of God such were these Pharises Luke 16.14 15. And therefore wee should labour for a spirit without guile and not be wise in our selues or rest in outward shewes but seek the praise of God we are safe if God allow of vs though all the world disallow vs. Secondly that God will acknowledge freely any good hee findes in his very enemies as heer the Pharises are not denied the title of Builders for that generall work they did in encountring the Sadduces and Essenes And as they are called Builders so are the diuels called Principalities and Powers to import what is any way of praise in them notwithstanding