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A04220 An exposition of the second epistle of the apostle Paul to Timothy, the first chapter Wherein 1 The text is logically into it's parts resolved ... 4 The seuerall doctrines thence arising deduced. ... All which is accompanied with familiar and delightfull similitudes ... Lastly as the matter requireth: there is vsed, definitions, distributions, subdiuisions, trialls, motiues, and directions, all which be of great vse in their proper order. By Iohn Barlovv ... Barlow, John, b. 1580 or 81. 1625 (1625) STC 1434; ESTC S100861 328,113 454

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and man but a faire winde them depart What shall I more say We haue raging malice and blind turbulent zeale hanging like a Meteor betwixt heauen and earth that as an ill-couch't fire w●rke le ts fly at all But hitherto we haue spoken in the abstract we will now a little touch the concrete We haue had with a crosse winde set sometimes on our shores the vulgar Atheist who saith in his heart there is no God and if in speech he professe him yet in practice hee denies him The proud trecherous purblind Papist iust of that brotherhood it s to be fear'd who erring from the true way stumbled on treason and brake their neckes at Tiburne Yet these spread their good deedes as the Heauens ouer the North-pole and hang their saluation like the earth vpon nothing The Hominisied Godified Familist who holds himselfe if once full come to be as perfect as Adam his father was in Paradise And we say so too but then hee must be considered as hee was after his fall not before it The mutable newfangled Anabaptist who will weare no weapons haue all things common yet wrangles with his brethren whether hee is to be baptized on the head or heeles for a worthie reason Christ it s said washed his Disciples with water on the feete The strict precise Separatist censuring his equals speaking ill of them in authoritie whose vniust rent from our congregations like the diuisions of Ruben haue Iudg. 5. 15. made great thoughts of heart And to conclude for I am too prolixe we haue had the c●mmon Protestants who lead their liues in Folio especially at that neuer-to-be-forgotten golden voyage wherein S● W. R. so many went they knew not whither who carryed themselues as if their tongues had beene pieces their breath Gunpowder the opening of the mouthes the giuing of fire with the match and their oathes piercing Bullets to haue wounded their aduersaries sometimes filching and fighting whose swords like Ioabs would droppe out on the least occasion 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 stepping from shoare to ship would drinke soule-slaying healths euery carowse being seconded with the report of a Cannon as if powder and shott had beene onely appointed to haue beat the aire scare Crowes make old folke to start and Cattell to runne a gadding Wee haue seene and shall againe the Dutch drinking and our English for company take their shares with them vntill they began to sle-ecke en-de sny that is stabbe and slash that their blood and bowels runne about their heeles If this then was thus as it was indeed shall not the men of God draw forth the arrowes of Gods vengeance set them in the noch and with an angry countenance let them rattle amidst the congregation whet the two edged sword of the word make it sharpe and keene to the hewing of the body of sinne and the shredding of such siewes of corruption asunder As the Prophet said Is this 2 Kin. 5. 26. a time to take bribes so may I Is this a people amongst whom to cry peace peace No verilie Wherefore good Reader out of thy ingenuous disposition beare with my rude rough and vnc●uth style And thus I commend thee to God these labours to thine and the worlds light with my selfe to thy fauorable censure and faithfull prayers yet not without a setled resolution if the Lord will to proceede further in the publishing the remainder of this Epistle Thine in the Lord Iesus I. B. The principall heades handled in this Chapter verse 1. Doctrines page PReachers are to maintaine the dignitie of their persons 8 How a good name may be gotten 9 2. Great sinners may become Saints 9 Cautions to be vsed that grace be not abused 11 3. Any relation to Christ is of great importance 12 4. The lawfulnesse of our calling is to be iustified 13 Trials if we be lawfullie called to preach the Gospell 15 5. Promotion commeth from the Lord. 15 6. Spirituall life is procured by the Gospell 16 7. Saluation obtained through Christ Iesus 17 Verse 2. Doctrines page 1. Persons of good hopes are chieflie to be instructed 23 2. There is a spirituall kinred in the world 24 3. Preachers are chiefly to affect whom they haue begot or confirmed in the faith 25 4. Salutations are not for complement but pietie 26 The kinds of salutations 26 Who are to be saluted 27 A twofold limitation to be obserued 27 Whether we my salute him we know not 27 5. The grace of God greatlie to be wished for 27 How grace may be got 28 6. Mercie much to be desired 29 7. Peace a principall thing to be sought for 30 8. Men without grace haue no true and sound peace 31 9. The degrees of affection cannot be couered 32 10. None more need of mercy than ministers 33 10. God is a father and how manie waies 34 12. All Spirituall blessings come from God the father 36 13. Christ Iesus is a Lord. 37 14. All Christians are fellow seruants 38 15. Doctrines deduced not handled 39 Vers 3. Doctrines page 1. Good men are thankfull 42 Thankfulnes defined 43 Thankfulnes distributed 44 Impediments of thankfulnes 45 Helpes to true thankfulnes 46 2. Carnall friends will become foes if a man embrace the Gospel 47 3. Against all opposition we are to maintaine the truth of our profession 48 4. It s an honour for man to serue God 49 5. A Christians course is laborious 50 What is required in the seruice of God 52 How God may be knowne of vs. 53 What the law and Gospell require 54 Wherein spirituall power is exercised 54 6. The Church had the same faith before the comming of Christ which now it hath after him 56 7. The name of the righteous shall be had in remembrance 57 8. The seruice of God is then commendable when it is accompanied with a pure conscience 58 Conscience in generall defined 59 Corrolaries from the definition deduced 59 Conscience distributed 61 What a good conscience is 62 What an euill conscience is 62 A good conscience is legall or euangelicall 63 What a legall good conscience is 63 How it is distributed into compleat or incompleat 63 A compleat legall good conscience defined 63 How many things concurre to a compleat legall good conscience 64 What followeth from thence 64 An Euangelicall good conscience what it is 68 What needfull to the making vp of it 68 How it differs from a legall 69 What necessarie to procure it 70 It is neuer separated from the legall in a Christian 72 The effects of conscience 74 Its application 74 Consciences charge 80 9. Faithfull men are frequent in prayer 85 Prayer described 87 Calling vpon God distributed 87 In calling vpon God we must vse the tongue and why 87 Also the heart and why 88 How to procure the spirit 94 What is to be done before prayer 97 What in prayer 98 Helpes to auoyde wandring thoughts in prayer 99 Helpes to pray with feruencie 100 What is to be done after
if in any of their flocke much more in those that are of the houshold of faith This must direct Preachers to haue an ●ye how the Vse 2. word workes who are called or edified that they may know how to put a difference betwixt them of their flock whom to encourage respect and imbrace in a peculiar manner for one of these is worth a thousand of the other if a minister make these sory who shall make him glad and if he disaffect them who are to be beloved of him Grace mercie and peace Heere is to be noted the salutation in forme of a prayer and the order in it from the words in generall we collect this Doctrine that Salutations are not for complement but pietie Doct. 4. They are to be vsed in a religious manner and not cursorilie and they be of two kinds first with a kisse Rom. 16. 16. secondly or by word and that either spoken The Lord be with you Ruth 2. 4. or written the salutation of me Paul 2 Thes 3. 7. with mine owne hand For be they not testimonies of our loue and affection Reas 1. doe wee not thereby declare the disposition of our mind yea the very Heathen to this ende haue vsed them And againe are they not in forme of a prayer doe we Reas 2. not wish well to our friends in the vse of them and may not the Lord adde a blessing to our friends in the right performance of them who dares denie it Two sorts of persons by this point are reproved First Vse 1. such as never vse them Secondly those that onely take them vp for complement or villanie as the great that I say not gracelesse gallants of our times or like Iudas that in pretence of friendship make it a cover to doe mischiefe Mat. 26. 48. But let vs put this in practise according to the example Vse 2 and patterne of our Apostle and say with the Angell to Gedeon the Lord is with thee thou valiant man Iudg. 6. 12. But may we salute all men Quest Ans There is a two-fold limitation the one in regard of time the other of person for time we may omit them in matters that require expedition 2 King 4. 29. When we be in hast Luk. 10. 4. For person if there come any to vs that brings not the doctrine of Christ We may not bid him God speed 2 Ioh. 10. Rom. 16. 17. What if we doe not know them may we then salute Quest them Yes and if they be not worthy the blessing shall returne Ans to our selues Mat. 10. 13. Make we then more conscience of this dutie for assuredly if it be vsed in an holy and reverend manner if we haue an eye to the Lord and speake affectionately from our hearts and wish a blessing to those we salute the Lord will grant our desires for the good of vs that salute and of them that be saluted as experience doth manifestly declare and thus come we to the matter of the salutation Grace mercie peace Grace being placed first in order we gather thence that The grace of God aboue all things is to be wished for Doct. 5. Hence it is that the Apostles vsually beginne and conclude their Epistles with wishing of them grace and mercie and all good Ministers their Sermons in the same manner For he that is assured of Gods favour may then thinke Reas 1. vpon all his attributes as his omnipresence omniscience omnipotence yea of his justice with comfort Then may we conclude that all things shall worke together Reas 2. for our good Rom. 8. 28. For if grace be within vs who or what can be against vs This condemnes the custome of many who seldome Vse 1. if ever wish and desire the grace of God for themselues and others yet of all things it is the most excellent necessary For what are goods without grace but fewell to burne vp thy soule What would a stately building a faire possession Heards of Cattell or heapes of gold and silver profit thee or thine and in the meane time want the free favour of God He that hath much for many yeares but is not rich in God shall dye a foole Luk. 1● 12. Aboue all things then let vs seeke the grace and favour Vse 2. Psal 4. of God Pray we with the Prophet Lord lift vp thy countenance vpon me for the gaine thereof is better than gold and all that thou canst desire is not to be compared vnto it grace giveth life pacifies the heart conquers the world quencheth the darts of the deuill of weake it makes strong driues away despayre cheareth the minde provokes to all good it bringeth comfortable tydings and is never proud or weary of well-doing What shall I more say It iustifies saveth raiseth the dead and carieth the soule and bodie into the presence of God and the spirits of iust and perfect men Wherein differs man from beasts or man from man yea Angell from Angell but in the qualitie of grace For grace is the very essentiall forme of a creature And that thou maist partake of it doe as followeth How grace may be got First Heare the Word search the Scriptures reade good 1. Bookes receiue the Sacraments pray conferre for these be as so many Conduits wherby the Creator conveyeth grace into the soule of the creature Secondly avoyde pride for God giueth grace to the humble 2. sends the rich in their owne conceit emptie away full vessels cannot receiue this precious liquor Iam. 4. 6. Thirdly the spirit must not be quenched despighted grieued 3. nor resisted good motions are to be entertained cherished so like a little sparke they will increase to a great flame Heb. 10. 28. Isaiah 30. 21. Finally get into the covenant of grace for as the Mercy-seat 4. was no larger than the Arke so the grace of God extends no further than the covenant Exod. 25. 10. 17. To neglect these helpes is to sinne that grace may abound or at the least to turne the good meanes of grace into wantonnesse Iud. 4. Mercie Hence collect wee that As grace so mercie is a speciall thing to be desired Doct. 6. Vnderstand by mercie a sensible apprehension of Gods sacred affection or a loving inclination flowing from his free grace and favour than which what more desirable For by mercie we are allured to performe euery good dutie Reas 1. towards God and towards man For he who hath tasted of mercy will loue God beleeue in him and mourne that he hath offended him and be mercifull to others as God hath beene mercifull to him And is it not mercie that frees from all misery Never was 2. man miserable who had it blessed without it Hence may we checke the great carelesnesse and worldly Vse 1. mindednesse of many who wish and seeke for any thing soever than the mercy of God Some desire pleasure others profit the
thing of great worth and of the Reas 2. faithfull principally desired and therefore casting the eye of their mindes vpon that they will endure any sorrow Why did not Paul and others faint Why they accounted that the 2 Cor. 4 vlt. afflictions of this life were not worthy of the weight of glory that way layd vp for them in the heauens Here we see what enemies those be to themselues Who Vse 1. are alwaies casting their eye on their present miseries but neuer looke vp to the heauens If the husband man would neuer haue thought on the day of reaping hee would haue small comfort in plowing sowing c. And this is to direct vs what to doe in the sad times of affliction Vse 2. namely to thinke on our salvation David had vtterly fainted but that hee expected to see the goodnes of God Psal 27. in the land of the living and so shall wee in troublesome times haue we no eye towards the land of Canaan the new Ierusalem He that wades through a strong and swiftriuer must looke to the shoare not downe vnder his feete For then his head would grow giddy his eyes dazell and he be in perill of drowning so when the strong streames of affliction compasse vs on cuery side if we would not faint and fall cast we our eyes on the banke and coast of heauen And this thing is worth our daily observation for we shall haue some rubs lesser or greater continually This poynt then is physicke for each time euery malady Thus we proceed to handle the words without any relatition to the verses foregoing Who. The note is that God is the Author of mans Saluation whither temporall or●ternall Doct. 4. totall or partiall All the Prophers beare witnesse to this David cryeth Salvation Psal 3 vlt and 27. 1. Isa● 12. 2. is from the Lord The Lord is my Salvation Isaiah God is my Saluation and the Saviour of all men 1. Tim. 4. 10. For he found out that new and everliuing way when man Reas 1. Gen. 3. 15. had lost himselfe into which Sat●an could not pry and the Angels desired to peepe into And as he found out the way so he prepared the meanes Reas 2. ●oh 3. 16. for he sent his sonne made of a woman that they that beleeued in him might be saued Thirdly he was contented to take a satisfaction of the Reas 3. surety whereas he might haue required it at the debtors hands and then no flesh had beene saued for none could haue made an infinit satisfaction What shall I more say he hath sent his word law and Reas 4. Gospell he hath fitted and thrust foorth Ministers to diuide it aright and to discouer the hidden mysteries in the same finally hee hath giuen vs of his Spirit and by the finger of the Holy-ghost in some measure made vs for the present capable of his kingdome it s he and none but hee that saveth Israel For the father he saveth vs by grace Christ by Note purchase the Holy-ghost by application This serveth to confute the Papists who ascribe too much Vse 1. vnto man for the worke of his salvation but wee passe by that And is God the principall agent in mans salvation Then Vse 2. not vnto vs not vnto vs but vnto his name giue wee the praise For what power had we to giue our selues a being to preserue our selues since we were borne to worke out our saluation why were not we reiected with many borne in a land of darkenesse or strangled sucking of our Mothers brests who tooke the veile of ignorance from our eyes caused the light of the glorious Gospell to shine into our soules and made vs who sometime were fooles wise vnto salvation why then with a gratefull heart say with the Prophet It is the Lords mercy I was not long agoe consumed and hee is my God and my Salvation And would we all be saued why then seeke vnto God Vse 3. rely vpon him yet vse thou all other helpes that hee hath prescribed Doe the best thou canst but still depend vpon him not on the meanes the which without his finger as Moses rod will worke nothing And is God the author of mans saluation why then let Vse 4. the righteous be of good comfort for they shall be saued What can hinder who can prevent his resolution Let Sathan and all the Spirits of the infernall pit gather their wit power and forces together cast riuers of water out of their mouthes breath fire at their nosthrills spet venome as fast as words yet God shall plucke off their Chariot wheeles smite them in the hinder parts they shall in heapes lye dead and stinking on the shore when the waters shall giue way that all the Israel of God may safely passe and possesse heauen And though sometimes we may seeme to be in great dangers as Paul and the people were in the ship yet Act. 27. as they did to land at the length so shall we come safe to the land of the liuing For not one whom the father hath chosen and his sonne redeemed but in the time appointed they shall be saued Not one of these souldiers shall become captiues none of these children shall bee disinherited Feare not them little flocke seeing nothing can depriue you of saluation Hath Out of this word it may be gathered that The Salvation of the faithfull is certaine and not doubtfull Doct. 1. Paul speakes of it as of a thing perfected finished And it is vsuall in the Scripture to call things that are not as Num. 23. 10. though they were Bal●●● made no question of thi● God saith he will put his feare into them and they shall never m●●ke Ier. 32. 29. 40. that depart from him He hath promised to marry himselfe to them in faithfulnes that is in a couenant that shall not bee Hos 2. 19. 20. broken and to such there is no condemnation And for the Rom. 8. 1. certainty of this poynt wee may produce many worthy reasons And first from God the father thus we argue 1. Hath hee Reas 1. not chosen them 2 Tim. 2. 19. and shall he at any time reiect his people Why then doth he not make a new election why for his counsell shall stand 2. He loueth them and whom he once loueth doth he not loue them with an everlasting loue Ier. 31. 3. 3. He cannot repent of what he hath promised or faile of his word Rom. 11. 29. and 4. Is not his iustice satisfied hath not Christ paid the full debt and shall God require it againe of the debtor Rom. 5. 8. And if God hath chosen them loved them his iustice bee satisfied for them and he hath promised to saue them shall then any of them perish on Gods part I trow this is plaine to euery mans capacity that they shall not nor cannot A second maine Reason or rather many may
of it in that measure 6. Finally some men haue most excellent and acute vnderstandings now the more clearely the intellect receiueth a fearefull obiect the more will the heart be troubled If one through the dimnes of the eye take a Lyon for a tame beast he wil not be shaken with equall terrour as he wil that by the clearenes of his sight discerneth the beast in his owne kind and nature And this is a most true position that the best wits be the most wounded in heart at their effectuall calling because sin and the punishment be the more clearely apprehended and men ordinarily more then women from the acutenes of the vnderstanding But some may obiect It s from God not man that one is Obiect 1. thus humbled for God in this doth all True yet the Lord worketh according to the condition Sol. of the subiect about which he is excercised And women are often more cast downe then men be at Obiect 2. this season We grant it Yet that comes from the weaknes of the sexe Sol. And shall you not see one more terrified at the drawing of the sword then another is in beholding it sheathed into the very bowells Thus you haue heard how the Lord prepareth a sinner before effectuall vocation cutting off and fitting of him to be grafted a new at which time he is like a branch sl●pped from the body of the tree and ready to wither and dye in his owne apprehension And then the Lord speaketh vnto the poore perplexed soule by his Spirit in the promises of the Gospell and that peraduenture when he the least expecteth any such comfortable tydings secretly saying and whispering the sinner in the eare of his soule Be of good comfort for thy sinnes are forgiuen thee Now hee giueth Christ to him and him vnto Christ so that the penitent person is come home into his desired place and the liberty of Gods children Now from this that hath beene said we may deduce many Conclusions from the precedent discourse things for our further instruction and to confirme vs concerning the certainty of our effectuall vocation 1. Here we see that the law is necessary to be preached that like a schoolemaster it may whip vs to Christ for to find comfort in the time of neede 2. That the true sight of our sinnes and humiliation is a companion of effectuall vocation for the sicke haue need of the Phisition and Christ calleth none but such as are lost in their present apprehension 3. That euery sigh for sinne and compunction of spirit is not to be effectually called for Reprobates like Ahab and Iudas may for a time be much deiected yet neuer receiue Christ whereby to be truly iustified 4. We learne from hence that effectuall vocation is an action sensibly to be felt by the persons who be the proper subiects of it and a worke though on Gods part secretly effected yet on mans easily apprehended 5. And here men that haue not endured so much humiliation as others yet are not to despaire of their spirituall condition for the Lord doth not call all his a like To one hee reveileth some little sinne at the first least he should be swallowed vp of overmuch heauines yet by the punishment thereof he commeth to coniecture what is due vnto him for the rest And when the poore sinner hath got power against this then he will reveale vnto him some other of greater nature for hauing had experience of Gods former mercy he is made the more bold and able for to wrestle with greater transgressions and Sathans more fell and fierce temptations the which vsually come in the latter end of this spirituall combate For like a cunning Captaine that would raze downe the walls he first dischargeth his lesser pieces and if they will not effect it then he giueth fire to his greatest Ordinances and roaring Cannons 6. And for conclusion let him that is neuer so much deiected not be out of heart as though the Lord could not raise thee vp againe and comfort thy soule for as his mercy so his power is infinite The deeper the fo●●dation is layed the firmer will the building be and the more we be hu●●led and broken at our preparation the more shall we be ●●le to stand fast after our effectuall vocation Wherefore read pray meditate heare the word receiue the Sacraments and seeke to the Phisition of thy soule and at one time or other through one of these conducts he will seale to thy soule a certificate for the remission of all thy sinne and thou with comfort shalt say Now soule returne vnto thy rest Do● but vse the meanes tarry the Lords leisure and he shall come that will come and comfort thy heart say not that no man euer felt what thou doest for many haue and found pardon peace vnspeakeable But when thou are come home to thy long desire h●uen A Caution and the Lord hath heard the voy●● of thy weeping then see 1. thou faile not to performe the v●●es that thou madest ●● him in the daies of thy former affliction least a worse ●hing follow Neither think● it thine honour that thou h●st b●●●e 2. more te●●efied and deiected in thy preparation then thy brethren as the manner of ●o●e i● but be thou the mo●e ashamed that thy hea●t was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 th●● 〈◊〉 ●ust exhibite more power to ●●ll ●h●● ho●e then ●he rest o● his children And by how ●u●h the more 〈◊〉 Lord ●●th ●●mbled 3. thee aboue others be ●hou so 〈◊〉 the more 〈◊〉 in all good workes For the more p●ines and labour the Husbandman taketh in tilling his ground the more corne he expect●th from it at the time of harue●● and shall ●ot the Lord looke for the like from al● his manured and well ●●lled closes yes vndoub●●●ly And here I will adde some particulars that he who is of where in the that is called hath experience fectually called knoweth by experience whereof men in the estate of nature are ignorant 1. He knoweth now what a featefull thing it is to be a stranger from the life of God and to haue him for his enemie and would not for the 〈◊〉 of a world be one ●●ture in his former condition 2. How vnable he is of himselfe either ●● answre the Lords call or to beleeue in him though he would and find in himselfe a mind to both 3. What an enemy sin and Sathan is to the sonnes of men Now he perceiueth the sting of the one and the fiery darts of the other and how deepe they will strike pierce into the very ioynts and the marrow 4. He can tell you that a wounded spirit is the extreamest of all extreamities and that peace with God passeth all vnderstanding 5. That Christ was God aswell as man or els he had not beene able to haue borne the full burden of one mans sins much lesse of the whole world of the elect this is a
that patterne consisting of sound words being so in themselues as likewise able to worke and preserue soundnesse in thee To the knowledge whereof thou camest by the writings especiallie that thou hast receiued at my hands And know thou that this patterne cannot any wayes else bee obserued but by the aide and helpe of that faith and loue the which God the father hath shed abroad in thy heart not for any desert of thine but through his meere mercie hath confer'd them on thee by Christ Iesus Where as Paul hath disswaded and perswaded and now Doctrines dedi●●d giues Timothie a rule by which he may be directed in his proceedings we first note from his example that Perswasion and disswasion are to be accompanied with direction Doct. 1. 1 Cor. 12. vlt. Heb. 6. 1. 1 Tim. 6. 2 It s not sufficient for a man to say doe this and not that but he must lay downe rules and helpes whereby he with whom he is to deale may be inabled for the dutie For otherwise a man will either stand still and doe nothing Reas 1. or if he doe not so yet he shall worke out of all good order Againe else the minister should not deliuer the counsell of Acts 20. 27. God guilty should he be of the peoples blood and so consequentlie without sound comfort This correcteth the hot and fierie spirits of some who like Vse 1. an vnskilfull rider be alwayes spurring but neuer guiding They cry why will ye doe that and wherefore doe you this but doe not giue them direction how to auoyd the one or performe the other And so it fals out that the one hath no profit the other as little comfort Let vs then learne as to perswade and disswade so to direct Vse 2. others God willed that Moses should build him a tabernacle yet he gaue him a patterne how to be directed in the perfecting of the same So let ministers haue an eye to this that their people may doe all things in comelinesse and in order Keepe thou the patterne c. As these words be a direction we gather that The best way to maintaine the puritie of Religion is to haue a Doct. 2. patterne Exod. 20. Ier. 6. 16. Gal. 6. 16. Psal 119. 9. For God at the first writ the patterne in mans heart by the Reas 1. Adam had the the law writ in his heart at the creation Rom. 2. 15. which he might haue beene kept from all sinne and impuritie as may be thus proued For 1. The Gentiles many yeares after had some remainders of the law by which they were guided in their hearts the which could not haue beene had it not beene engrauen in Adams at the creation 2. Those to whom the Lord will shew mercy he hath promised that he will put his law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts Ier. 31. 33. Heb. ● 10. 3. We are commanded to write it vpon the tables of our hearts Pro. 3. 3. and the Prophet saith He hid the word in his heart Psal 119. 11. 4. Euery creature had the rule created with him and in him whereby he was to be guided in all his actions But man sinning broke the patterne and obliterated these excellent rules that were perfect in him at his creation And if the rule was not within him where was it or why should God guide all his other creatures by an internall precept and not man And euerie good man may find this in himselfe and see it in others that the more holy they grow the more shall they find the word of God imprinted in their hearts And doubtlesse when that a man is perfectlie sanctified which will not be here he shall haue the law absolutelie 1 Cor. 13. 9. 10. renewed and engrauen in him so that in this sence the word may be said to abide for euer And here we might adde the iudgement of the Hebrew Pirke R Eliezer in Gen. 2. doctors and the most that euer writ for the further confirmation of this that Adam at his creation had the law writ in his heart and was to haue beene guided by it The reason I stand to proue this is in that those who hold that Christs actiue and passiue obedience doe not concurre both of them to mans iustification seeke to maintaine that Adam had no law in him or out of him to guide him except the trees of life and death good and euill But certainly this is a farre fetcht shift and as farre from the truth 1. For the trees were as Sacraments to seale life or death vpon the breach or obseruation of the law as ours be Adam broke the morall law 2. When Adam ate the forbidden fruite did he not breake all the Decalogue 3. Sathan was subtile and tempted Adam to breake the kings seale for that spoiled all the rest And the blotting out of a word or sentence is not so great an offence in any deed or writing as to destroy spoile and abuse the seale 4. Why did God giue the tables in stone afterwards if man was not to be guided by them in his creation Was he then bound to God and his brother and not before or did God make a new law or set Adams sonnes a taske their father neuer had But we let this passe and proceed to giue further reasons of the point in hand Againe the naturall powers of man are much weakened Reas 2. much more the spirituall since Adams fall And the Lord seeing that gaue his people a law writ in two tables of stone for a patterne and why then 1. Because the children of Israell were multiplied as the Why the law was writ in Moses time sand by the sea shore according to his promise made vnto Abraham 2. In that the gouernours of families were growne negligent and would not teach their house and children the lawes of God 3. And especiallie in regard at that day there was scarce any print or footesteps of the law left remaining in the hearts of the sonnes of men For processe of time had worne them out 4. And finallie for that the people began to murmur at the doctrine of Moses and Aaron crying they tooke too much vpon them as if they had bound heauier burdens than the Lord himselfe prescribed to them Besides in the course of our Pilgrimage we shall meete Reas 3. with many false teachers infinite and innumerable errours and heresies and how can these things be discerned otherwise than by a true and infallible rule Furthermore doe we not see how that grounds are good Reason 4. in all beginnings as to dispute speake c And last of all patternes helpe our darke iudgements ●eas 5. better our affections confirme our memcries and yeeld vs comfort and incouragement in all our proceedings This serueth to confute our aduersaries who denie the Vse 1. people the patterne of all puritie the word of truth They may be likened
The yong man must Remember his Creator in the daies of youth least the houres come wherein hee shall haue no pleasure in them Iezabel had a time so had Ierusalem Agrippa and many others but when they foreslowed the oportunitie they found not in future time any mercy When God calleth and we will not come we shall cry but we shall not be heard Wofull experience hath taught this truth to many thousands for there is an appointed time for all things vnder the sunne 2. Seeke for what thou wouldst haue at the Lords hands let him be the principall Asa was sicke in his feete Ezekiah at the heart the one seeking to the Phisician first died the other going to God had his life many yeares prolonged Goe not with Saul to a witch at Endor with Iudas to the Pharisees with Ephraim and Iudah to Ashur and Hos 5. 13. king Iareb with the Papist to the Pope or Angell But goe to the Lord for these are miserable comforters and the best of them if the God of all the world the first mouer of all things and chiefe Phisician be absent cannot heale thee or cure thee of thy wound But seek vnto God and he will heare thee helpe thee 3. Goe to him but not like the proud Pharisee with I thanke God I am not so nor so neither with the boasting Papist in the robes of thing owne righteousnes but come vnto him in the name of Christ Iesus the sonne of his loue send him or set him before thee For whatsoeuer thou shalt seeke in his name that is in his worthines it shall be giuen thee For without Christ he is a consuming fire 4. Let the word and that neuer-erring spirit be thy guide If these two lead thee to the Father in the new and euerliuing way of Christ the Sauiour of all that are saued thou shalt find according to thy hearts desire Practise this Rule 5. Haue respect to the manner of thy seeking let it be vpon the feete of faith and affection with the wings of pure zeale and feruency and then thou shalt find assuredly 6. And finally let the end of thy seeking be for the glory of thy God the good and comfort of thy brethren and reformation of all thy wayes the curing and curbing of thy strong corruptions the encrease of all grace and for food friends favour and rayment so farre and no farther as the Lord seeth them to be needfull for thee Obserue these directions and then stay the Lords leysure and be sure of it that as Onesiphorus found Paul so shalt thou the thing thou hast sought after be it what it can in earth or heauen Now whereas Onesiphorus sought Paul at Rome and was permitted to refresh him we may note that Rome heathen was not sobad then as Rome Christian is now Doct. 5. Act. 28. 30. For Paul might be suffered to liue to haue his keeper Reas 1. to leade him in a chaine to dwell in a house all that would were permitted to come vnto him and without let he might preach the kingdome of God the Gospell of Christ But now if a Paul were there he would not be thought worthy to liue no not for an houre Againe wicked men grow worse and worse Reas 2. Vse Let this for euer be as a sure brand for that Beast who is drunkk with the bloud of the Saints that it is he and no other who exalteth himselfe aboue all that is called God and the very Antichrist whom the Lord will consume with the sword of his mouth They boast of piety and pitty when as Cain was no more cruell to Abel then they be to the faithfull Well Let them thinke that they doe God good seruice in putting vs to death yet they are deceiued it that In this we are not that for so doing they shall tast of the very dregs of Gods hottest vengeance spue and fall and dye the second death For Pope and Papists are men according to the Divells owne heart VERS 18. The Lord grant vnto him that he may find mercy with the Lord at that day and in how many things he hath ministred vnto me at Ephesus thou knowest very well WE are now come through the good prouidence The Logicall resolution of God to the last verse of this Chapter In the which two things are comprehended 1. A prayer 2. An Appellation In the Prayer we may obserue 4. things 1. To whom Paul prayed the Lord. 2. For whom he prayed him That is Onesiphorus 3. For what he prayed mercy 4. At what time he would haue his friend to receiue the thing he prayed for at that day In the Appellation we haue these particulars 1. That Onesiphorus relieued Paul 2. The place where it was at Ephesus 3. Wherewith that is many things And 4. The probation of this in the last words These or this thou knowest very well He drawes an argument from Timotheus knowledge to confirme his Testimony The Lord. In Hebrew Adonai is Lord being a word of The Theologicall exposition the plurall number yet often vsed in the forme singular it is deriued of Aeden a base or pillar which sustaineth a thing and our English word Lord hath much like signification being contracted of the old Saxon word Laford which commeth of Laef to support sustaine or cherish so that Lord is a Sustainer refresher supporter cherisher For if God withdraw his power all things come to nothing In the Greeke it properly signifieth one that hath authoritie or on whose authoritie something dependeth or consisteth and so indeed doe all things depend on God and hee is cheife gouernour and owner of all things created Mercy The word in the Hebrew put for mercy doth import a sacred affection of piety fauour benignitie and bountifull good pleasure or will of God towards a man without respect of desert or merit It is also applied to man and then it is meant a pious louing and benigne affection whereby he is moued and inclined to doe good to shew pittie compassion c. or that grace of God the which he hath receiued from the father through Christ which is inherent in him or conferred externally vpon him and then its glory Isai 40. 6. 1 Pet. 1. 24. And it is frequent for the Greeks to vse that word which our Apostle doth here for it the which Christ himselfe alloweth did practise See Hos 6. 6. Math. 9. 13. And the Hebrewes of Chesed which is Mercy call a godly man chasid that is gracious mercifull Psal 4. 4. some read a gracious Saint With the Lord. The like phrase we read Gen. 19. 24. The Lord rained fire and brimstone from the Lord. Paul vseth the like manner of speaking for as iudgement came from the Lord vpon Sodom so he prayes for mercy to befall Onesiphorus from the Lord Yet I haue thought that Lord in the first place is to be vnderstood of the Father and in the second is meant the Sonne
for he is the iudge of the world As if our Apostle had thus prayed Now God the Father grant that Onesiphorus may find mercy of his sonne at his appearing vnto whom he hath committed all iudgement For Paul knew this that Christ must iudge the world might therefore distinguish thus in his vnderstanding when he prayed But howeuer the sense is good and sound At that day Some thinke at what time he should also be afflicted for at one time or other Paul thought he might also suffer for the Gospell though for the present he escaped Others haue conceiued at the day of death I rather would take it to be meant at the day of iudgement for then is the righteous rewarded for his workes and that is a day wherein if it goe well with vs it will be well with vs for euer And its vsuall for good men to haue their minds in trouble set vpon that obiect of the generall freedome from all misery and fruition of all felicity And in how many things or how much By things may be vnderstood money meate apparell and the like or parchment papers bookes conference encouragement c. The sense is very aboundantly liberally He hath ministred vnto me at Ephesus That is freely louingly imparted and conferred vpon me when I was personally there present Thou knowest very well Here Paul appeales to Timotheus for the truth of his testimony and confession To speake my priuate opinion This Appellation I thinke hath reference to that in the 15. verse And thus the sense seemeth to me Thou knowest how many fell from me of Asia at Rome But thou art better or very well acquainted in how many things or how much I was relieued by Onesiphorus at Ephesus For peraduenture Timothy saw not them when they reiected Paul and cast off their profession but heard it or if he did it might be but once yet he being Preacher at Ephesus and abiding there long might often see Paul releeued by Onesiphorus And this I take to be the reason why Paul saying here as in the 15. verse thou knowest doth in this adde better or very well which he omitted there For it seemes to be a comparison The one thou knowest well the other better or very well or Timothy might heare of the first yet saw the second Though it be not in my power to make requitall to my The Metaphrase good friend Onesiphorus for many his kindnesses yet my hearts desire and my prayer to God is that hee would shew him favour and mercy by the hand of his sonne in that great day when and wherein he shall come to iudge all the world And good reason haue I thus to petition the Lord for him for thou art very well acquainted how abundantly he administred vnto my necessities being at Ephesus as thou art not altogether ignorant how all Asia fell from me and forsooke me at Rome The Lord grant vnto him that he may find mercy with the Doctrines deduced Lord at that day For our better and more methodicall proceeding we will first beginne with the time when Paul would haue his friend to finde mercy whence this is the point to be collected that There is a distinct time wherein the world shall be iudged Or Doct. 1. There is a day of Iudgement Eccles 11. 9. Dan. 7. 13. Math. 24. 37. 2 Pet. 3. 10. And that for these following Reasons That the creatures might be freed from bondage and all Reas 1. maner of groning for till then they be subiect vnto much sorrow going against the proper end of their first creation whereby the Lord is much through the abuse of them by the Reprobates dishonoured They be the great Booke of God alwayes vnfolded wherein the wicked might reade his power Deitie and wonders if they would they are oftentimes punished for mans offences the earth is barren groning like a woman with childe yet cannot bring forth her fruite the Sea rageth and the springs are dryed vp the beasts of the field mourne the fish of the waters die and smell the fowles of the ayre perish and the very heauens become as brasse The good Angels are till then ministring spirits take many a iourney from heauen to earth place to place and from person to person to comfort and kill preserue and slay And some but without grounds haue conceiued that they mooue vntill that day the Orbes and celestiall spheares when as it's probable no such things be For thus I would reason 1. If there bee materiall Orbes wherein the starres as If Angels moue the Orbes nayles in a wheele be fixed then they must be either more crasse and solid or more subtill and rare then the Element of fire If they affirme that they be more solid then how can a more graue body ascend aboue that which is lighter And if they hold they be more subtill then the fire aboue which they say they are placed then how can the stars be fixed in them for wee cannot fallen them in the ayre much lesse then in a fine● subiect 2. We see fishes in the sea beasts placed on the earth fowles in the ayre and Angels in heauen Why then should the element of fire bee created to bee voyd since euery element is replenished with its proper and peculiar creatures Earthly bodies be on earth watery bodies in water aiery in the ayre heauenly in heauen so that by proportion method the Sunne Moone and Starres should be in the element of fire and running their circular and swift motion they cast downe the fire which otherwise of its nature would not descend participating more of fire and being without sense for otherwise the fire would consume them then any other element For if we marke we shall see the Lord doth maruailously fit euery creature for its subiect And this may seeme to bee the reason why the Moone is spotted and no planet besides in that she runnes her motion in the very ebbe as I may say and dregs of the element of fire for the purest as we see in water is highest And why the starres neerest the Poles doe twinckle and looke bright may also be in that the fire being moued there by the reflexe doth enlighten them more fully And whereas some seeme to wander it is not because they are not mooued with a circular Motion but they come short going a lesser compasse and therefore we thinke that they goe forward and backward We may see the truth of this in those people that in diuerse pathes one distant from another doe runne with a circular motion about a post or pole 3. It is the position of those that doe maintaine Orbes and Epicicles that No violent motion is perpetuall how then if the Angels or Intelligences did moue the Orbes wherein they hold the starres be fixed should this motion bee so constant permanent 4. Finally God made euery creature very good able by an internall faculty or principle to accomplish its end
be The Iudge of all the world But in regard the most little consider this day or dreame of their latter end or if they doe vsually like Agrippa put it off vntill it be too late let these following Motiues somewhat preuaile with thee to practise it speedily 1. Remember that he may come suddenly in the dead of Motiues to prepare for the day of iudgment the night when thou little dreamest of such a matter Was it not a dreadfull summoning to the rich foole This night shall thy soule be fetched from thee Suddennes makes an evill a double curse We may die in our sleepe and what a fearefull thing would this be if we be tooke away in our sinnes for as death leaueth vs so shall iudgement find vs. 2. We cannot hide our selues or the least of our sinnes from his all-seeing eye For all things are naked and bare before him with whom we haue to deale 3. Consider his power he can send his Angells to fetch vs before him from the foure endes of the world be we neuer so strong in might or potent for number 4. Call to minde that he is strict and iust in all his proceedings not one can escape death if sinne be found vpon him 5. That there shall be no delay or bayle when he commeth iudgment shall be executed speedily 6. And last of all let it be well thought on what the iudgment is where the torments shall be with whom and how long The paine shall be in soule and body the place that darke and infernall pit the persons Sathan and all the damned from the presence of God and the spirits of iust and perfect men and the continuance for all eternity What heart so hardened conscience so seared or person so desperate reprobate weighing these things in the equall ballance of his owne minde and consideration that would goe on in a sinfull course and not amend Yet if this will moue nothing I say no more but the Lord haue mercy vpon thee for thy case is fearefull dreadfull The fourth Note we obserue is that The best man is not to rely vpon the merit of his workes but Doct. 4. the free mercy of God at the day of iudgement Math. 25. 37. 38. c. For he hath many falls into euill If we say we haue no sinne Reas 1. we deceiue our owne selues and the truth is not in vs And There is none that doth good and sinneth not no not one Even in many things we sinne all Besides our sinnes the best workes we performe be imperfect Reas 2. For as chaffe groweth vp with the corne so doth sinne cleaue to our perfectest actions Grace and corruption like fire and water mixed hinder the acts one of another from absolute perfection Away then with the Merit Mongers that plead through Vse 1. desert for saluation Had Onesiphorus neede of mercy that did so many good workes shal the Papist hold workes of supererogation We might say of Supererogation Canst thou stay the Sunne in his swiftest motion gather the wind in thy fist remoue the earth out of its center or stoppe the hot burning fornace with straw and stubble then plead afterward for merit yet these things be easier to mortall man then the other yet both impossible But they obiect Why then doth Daniel exhort the King Obiect 1. to Redeeme his sinnes by righteousnes Dan. 4. 27. 1. The Hebrew phrase is not truly turned Sol. 2. It s but an exhortation to repentance inducing him for to breake off his former cruelty he had committed the which is needfull for all persons 2 Tim. 2. 25. Christ bids the people to Make them friends of their riches Obiect 2. of iniquitie that when they want they may receiue them into everlasting habitations Luk. 16. 9. Sol. 1. They is not to be referred to the riches but to the persons as is plaine by the parable's application 2. No other thing is meant but that they would testifie of their goodnes and charitie towards them and pray for them Why then doth God command good workes Obiect 3. Sol. 1. To manifest that he approueth and alloweth them 2. That we might be prouoked to doe them 3. To comfort vs in the assurance of the truth of our faith 4. To strengthen the weaknes of our beleefe that often staggereth But God hath promised a reward to them Obiect 4. True but 1. It s of his free mercy not for our merits Sol. 2. He crownes his owne graces in vs. And we cannot Merit for 1. He workes both the will and deed of his good pleasure 2. There is no equall proportion betwixt our workes and salvation For they be finite imperfect temporall it is infinite perfect eternall 3. A worke of merit must be aboue that which is required at our hands aboue Gods due we haue none such For God hath created redeemed sanctified vs freely 4. We confesse that God might condemne the best for if he should Marke what is done amisse no meere man could abide it And he of his mercy can saue the worst Let the best therefore not presume neither the worst vtterly despaire 5. And we read of a threefold promise of reward 1. Vnder the Couenant of workes 2. Of faith 3. After we beleeue in Christ But this is all out of the Lords mercy and dignity not for our merits or desert 6. And if that be a truth that Christs merits doe not proceede from him or are procured by him without relation to the free promise of his Father the which some hold how then can man merit condignely Yet the Protestants maintaine good workes and no barren faith doe they allow as the lying Aduer●aries know well enough though they send vs all to hell with our fruitles faith Onely we say that by faith we are iustified without the workes of the law for were it otherwise Christ had died in vaine And this is our firme position that as fire cannot be without heate ayre without leuity water voyd of humidity or the earth be abstracted from all gravity No more can a true liuely faith be without some fruites worthy amendment of life Good workes are the way to heauen and a necessary condition if man haue time and meanes to be obserued yet they are not the sole cause of raigning When the Figtree saith our Lord puts foorth his leaues ye know that the spring draweth neere But is that a cause of the spring or the spring of that So when we bring foorth good workes we know we haue a true faith but faith is the cause thereof not the contrary and so consequently of mans salvation Bellarmine himselfe saith that in regard of the vncertainty of mans workes and our owne presumption the safest way is to depend on the mercy of God Thus by the ouerruling hand of God a second Caiphas hath once againe prophecied aright And let this doctrine reach vs to practise Christs lesson Vse 2.
AN EXPOSITION OF THE SECOND Epistle of the Apostle Paul to Timothy the first Chapter WHEREIN 1 The text is Logically into it's parts resolved 2 The words plainely explicated 3 A familiar Metaphrase annexed 4 The seueral Doctrines thence arising deduced and largely cofirmed 1. by Precept 2. by Example 3. by Reasons All which is accompanied with familiar and delightfull similitudes for the better alluting the drouping affections to imbrace the truth and the froward will to obey it Lastly as the matter requireth there is vsed definitions distributions subdiuisions trialls motiues and directions all which be of great vse in their proper order By IOHN BARLOVV sometime Minister of the word at Plimmouth but now resident at Halifax in Yorkshire LONDON Printed by ● D. for Iohn Bellamie and are to be sould at his shop at the 3. Golden Lyons in Cornehill neere the Royall Exchange 1624. TO THE RIGHT WORSHIPFVLL Mr LEONARD PVMROY MAIOR OF Plymmouth with the worshipfull Magistrates his brethren and to all who beare Office in that Corporation I. B. wisheth Grace Mercy Peace WOrthie Sirs and much respected friends the truth is that if I would follow the fashion of the world you should then receiue a large commendation For sure I am many a man hauing narrower footing hath leaped farre a smaller bottome spun a long thread and of lesse matter erected a stately building But I to shun the appearance of flatt●ry silence the carping aduersarie and that another day my hand might not cry my heart mercy will turne my prayses of you into prayers for you and exhortations to you that as you haue begunne well so you may neuer waxe wearie or proud in so doing You are stiled Gods able by your example to bring good or euill into fashion the gouernment of the inferiour lies vpon your shoulder Wherefore doe iustice and take heede of quitting the guiltie and condemning the innocent But let iudgement runne downe as the waters and righteousnes as a mightie streame In this Amos. 5. 24. sea there must be no ebbing nor flowing the bankes at euery season are to be full swelling ouer Neither is this streame to be staied for a moment or turned another way If it should iniquity in the meane time would take her place and whosoeuer drawes and drinkes of that puddle shall dye the death Moreouer you may not mixe it the mudde of iniustice with the pure fountaine of righteousnesse for that will hinder the current from sliding through the channels of Iudicature so cleerely and speedily as the Iudge of all the world expecteth commaundeth And that this wels mouth may not be stopped this streame stayed or by any vncleane carkase cast into it putrified but runne strongly purely and spring for euer in your elections remember lethroes counsell to Moses Choose you Exod. 18. 20. 21. 22. 1 Cor 5. 6. out able men fearing God leuers of the truth and hating couetousnes though to be an inferiour officer Will not a little leauen leauen the whole lumpe And tel me whē is the riuer troubled at any time but when the mud is raised vpward the cleere water falleth downeward Let the righteous rule there wil be rest but if the wicked beare sway troubles shall come Who wil put a sword into a mad mans hād will he not beare it for nought ingender strife cōceiue mischiefe Depresse the profane 23. puddle exalt the cleare water then shal God be with you and all the people also goe home to their place in peace I speake Io 13. 10. the truth I dare not flatter you are cleane may I not adde but not all It s a rare societie that consists of none but Saints a singular body without all blemish and may we can wee finde a corporation that hath no vnsound member in it Will you credit me haue you but one such I could wish there were none at all I accuse no mans person Euery one must fall or stand vnto his owne master the wrath of man doth not accomplish the iustice of Iames. 1. 20. Reu. 22. 11. God Wherefore he who is righteous let him be righteous still and if any be filthy let him wash 2 Kin. 5. 13. and be cleane And not to weary you with words here you haue at the last what some of you long since desired at my hands viz. the first lectures at my comming to you I preach't among you Now may the wise see what the world hath carped at and the Preacher full often bin blamed for as if the earth had not beene able to haue borne his words nor he for the bitternesse of his spirit worthy to set a foot in Gods sanctuary I confesse my corne may be mixed with chaffe my coyne haue some slips and my zeale not altogether according to knowledge yet my desire in Preaching printing these Sermons was and is that sinne might be mortified holines vivified God our master after the best manner serued and both speaker and hearer at the last day saued Here you haue onely the beginning but if the Lord will you may see and receiue the ende of my labours with you Truly I shall greatly reioyce if my weake indeauours proue in the least measure to you or any other profitable and that they may assure your selues my prayer according to my power to him shall not be wanting who is only able to giue a blessing And thus commending you to God I take my leaue and will during life alwayes rest From Halifax in Yorkshire August 19 1624. Yours in what he can to doe you service I B. The Epistle to the Reader FRiendly Reader it were but labour in vaine to tell thee why I made choice of this Epistle rather than another to to treat of For are not all Preachers sowers So that if they breake vp any little close within the large pale that boundeth Gods great demaine the holy letters they cannot misse it but keepe their compasse Neither is it to any purpose to declare vnto thee why these lines are now put to publike light For is not all the graine in Gods garner good fit for the market and to be set to sale For to omit many reasons this is the very truth that as Prognosticators vsually write Almanackes to and for that Climate wherein they be resident so haue I made election of this portion and now especially penned it for that place where and amongst whom the Lord for a few yeares by the hand of his prouidence cast me Wherefore I will the rather informe thee of my method in this succeeding treatise the which is this and thus In the first place may it please thee to view it thou shalt finde the text Logically into its parts resoluod next the words plainly explicated then a familiar Metaphrase as we apprehend the sense annexed And last of all the seuerall doctrines arising thence deduced And because ordinarily a deduct is to be drawne not from one simple but two Arguments
Verse he dehorteth his sonne from being ashamed and that first of the Gospell of Christ and secondly of him his prisoner Also he exhorteth him to suffer afflictions for kinde such as accompanie the Gospell for measure according to the power he had from God Both of which also he presseth from the forenamed grounds in ver 7. And likewise from the certaintie of his saluation and the holinesse of his vocation vers 9. Of which favours he remoueth a false cause his owne workes and setteth downe the true the fountaine Gods mercie the conduit of conveighing it Christ Iesus affirming further that it was purposed and given in Christ before the world beganne but now manifested by his bright appearing And by the way he describeth our Saviour Christ from two notable effects viz. the abolition of death the reduction of life adding the meane whereby they are applied to vs and that is through the Gospell vers 10. Concerning which Gospell Paul testifieth two things the one that he was appointed to preach it the other and that vnto the Gentiles vers 11. Then he proceedeth to declare first his intertainment for so doing he suffered afflictions 2. His cariage that he was not ashamed Where he annexeth a double ground of his resolution the former flowing from an experience of God the latter from a confidence he would keepe that he had committed to him vers 12. In the succeeding Verses Paul exhorteth Timothie to a twofold dutie first to hold fast the forme of sound words he had receiued of him which would direct and preserue him as from errour in doctrine so from sinne in his conversation the second to keepe safe the good things committed to him prescribing him the way which is by the assistance of the holy Ghost in him vers 13. 14. The Apostle having finished the former exhortations complaineth he was forsaken and that generally of all Asia particularly he nominateth two eminent persons Phygellus and Hermogenes For the truth whereof he appealeth to his sonne Timothie vers 15. In the conclusion of this Chapter vers 16. 17. 18. He mentioneth a good man one Onesiphorus whom he prayeth for with his whole houshold That which he petitioneth for them is mercie the time when is the day of iudgement The motiues whereby he was induced thus to doe are taken from the kindnesses Onesiphorus had shewed him At Rome he refreshed him not ashamed of his chaine And at Ephesus he also had ministred vnto him many things as Timothy knew very well Thus you fee the distinct Heads in this Chapter vnfolded discovered VERS 1. Paul an Apostle of Iesus Christ by the will of God according to the promise of life which is in Christ Iesus IN these words the Pen-man of this Epistle The Logicall resolution is described and that 1. by his name Paul 2. by his office an Apostle amplified by the person who sent him Iesus Christ 3. By the ground or lawfulnesse of comming to it the will of God 4. By the end of his commission which is to Preach the promise of life The which life is explicated from whom it proceedeth and that is Christ Iesus Paul We must here note that the Pen-mans name was also The Theologicall exposition Saul as well as Paul that many men are of many and different opinions why he had both and yet in all his Epistles maketh but mention of the one Briefely to omit all others he was a Citizen of two Provinces of the Iewes by birth and of the Romanes by prerogatiue therefore was named Saul being an Hebrew of the Hebrewes Paul being a Romane of the Romanes and he now called to be a Preacher especially to the Gentiles reserues that name which was most familiar to them best accepted of them An Apostle The word in the Greeke tongue is vsed either as an Adiectiue or a Substantiue and that generally for any one sent but more particularly for a legate of Christ having 2 Cor. 5. ●0 a peculiar charge to Preach the Gospell And many be the properties and priuiledges of Christs beyond any other Apostles For 1. they saw the sonne of God manifested in the flesh 2. They were immediately called to their office by him 3. Extraordinarily fitted with gifts to execute their function 4. They spake all languages 5. Had power to worke Miracles 6. Write as they were caried of the spirit last of all their commission was to Preach through the world Of Iesus Christ Iesus comes of an Hebrew word which signifieth to make safe and imports as much as a Saviour Now Saviours are either principall or instrumentall Iesus as he is God is the Saviour of all men as God-man and Mediator 1. Tim 4. 10. specially of them who beleeue This notation was given him by the hand of an Angell Thou shalt call his name Iesus for he shall saue his people from their sinnes Mat. 1. 22. Christ This word springs of a Greeke roote that signifieth to annoint so that Iesus Christ in our English dialect is as if we should say An annointed Saviour Of Christs there be two kindes true or false Of the former sort they be either Mat. 24. 24 typicall or reall Now this Christ is true reall not false not typicall And it may be he assumed both an Hebrew and a Greeke name closely to teach he was Saviour both of Iewes and Gentiles For vnder these words are his offices comprehended He was anointed in respect of his Man-hood not the God-head For that is holines it selfe and cannot admit of any ambiene or created vnction By the will of God Here the Apostle layeth downe the true ground of his calling partly to stop the mouthes of his carping adversaries partly to remoue false causes as Symonie and the like and partly that his doctrine might be accompanied with the greater maiestie making way for acceptation Here obserue that Will is ascribed to God the Father as Mat. 6. 20. Prov 8. 22. 1. Cor. 1. 24. Luk. 1. 35. Wisedome elsewhere to God the Sonne and Power to God the holy Ghost Will is the beginner of the act Wisedome the disposer and Power the effecter The first person willeth the second disposeth the third effecteth Thus distinct actions are appropriated to the distinct persons in the Deitie And the reason is in that the Father worketh from himselfe having none in order to precede him the Sonne from the Father being in order after him and the holy Ghost from both both being in order before him And hence it is that Election is given so often in Scriptures to the Father Ephes 1. 3. 4. 1 Cor. 1. 30. 1 Cor. 6. 11. 2 Thes 2. 13. Redemption to the Sonne and Sanctification to the holy Ghost though all externall acts which passe vpon the creatures by the three persons may be said to be indivisible as the worke Gen. 2. 26. of creation Where by the way we gather a strong argument against the Arminians who
those that liue it are counted as signes and wonders in Israel Isa 58. 18. But what marvell sith Christ was not Isa 52. vlt. And 53. 7. knowne by it his image despised his person in carnall eyes deformed They then that cannot discerne the Sunne how should they perceiue a Starre a Candle Moreover Is our life from Christ Let vs then that are Vse 4. partakers of it returne him prayse for so great a blessing divide not this treasure ascribe nothing to thy owne selfe or others it s the root that beareth vs not we the root life is a Rom. 11. great blessing this life the blessing of blessings then let vs never be weary in magnifying the Lord for such a favour nay seeing it comes from Christ let vs returne it againe vnto him seeking his glory as he hath done our good If we beget children doe we not expect they should spend their liues for the profit of vs their Parents As the Sea therefore sends forth many rivers but they returne all againe into her bosome so seeing our life comes from Christ let it flow backe to the prayse of his Maiestie and th● rather wee may be induced hereto because this is the onely way to haue life and to escape death for all eternitie And here may all of vs learne instruction seeing our life Vse 5. is from Christ Iesus are we weake and feeble in our minds Runne we to to him and pray we Lord quicken me Be our children dead in sinne Bring them before Christ desire him to raise them to life imitate the poore that liued when he liued amongst them in the vse of the meanes still haue an eye to this Physitian otherwise our Patients will not be cured this is that Sunne that with his warme beames enliueth all the creatures if he be absent we are all but dead men rotten branches And to shut vp this poynt wee are to learne here to be Vse 6. carefull that we offend not this Lord of life and incurre his displeasure for if we doe we shall dye the second the eternall death Simple Polititians be they that consider not how all the keyes to convey life and death hang on his finger Will we not tremble to heare treason For its death And shall we then crucifie againe the Author of our salvation and rend his flesh in our teeth and tongues like the vaile of the Temple from the top to the bottome take heed of this for he that lighteth our Candle can easily put it out And this shall suffice to haue spoken of the Pen-man of this Epistle for the present now in the next Verse is the person mentioned to whom Paul in particular directed his Writings VERS 2. To Timotheus my beloved sonne grace mercie peace from God the Father and Christ Iesus our Lord. IN these words are two things contained a description The Logicall resolution and a salutation in the forme of a prayer the person to whom Paul sent this Epistle is described 1. By his name Timotheus 2. By a word of relation sonne 3. By an adiunct beloved In the salutation being laid downe prayer-wise obserue what he wisheth and from whom the matter what is 1. Grace 2. Mercie 3. Peace the persons from whom be 1. God 2. Iesus Christ and both are amplified by a word of relation God the Father Christ our Lord. To Timothie This word imports as much as the honor The Theologicall exposition of God or precious to God his Father was a Grecian and his Mother a Iewesse who beleeued in God Acts 16. 2. What he was in name he was in nature he honoured God was precious to God My beloved sonne Sonne is a word of relation and doth alwayes presuppose a father who gaue him his being and it is diversly taken 1. For persons Psal 79. 11. 2. for lambes branches bullets arrowes sparkes or almost any other thing the which proceedeth from a cause Genes 49. 22. Psal 79. 11. and 80. 16. and 89. 23. and 1●4 4. and 147. 8. Iob. 5. 7. Now the reasons why Paul cals him sonne may be these 1. Because he had either begot him or at the least confirmed him by the Gospell 2. Because he loued him as a sonne and he Paul like a Father 3. In that he was yong and Paul old 4. And in regard he was so like minded to the Apostle from the first reason I take it came the name of God-father because they had begotten them to God And he addeth Beloved to distinguish him from others for he was beloved of God of the good people and of Paul also in a speciall manner Grace mercie and peace To omit to speake of all the acceptations of grace let vs know that it is tooke chiefly two wayes 1. For Gods free favour 2. For the gifts flowing from the same the first though I exclude not the latter is here meant Mercie To omit how many wayes it is accepted by Mercie here is meant a loving inclination of God to his people being in misery or for an effect of his grace or the effects of that loving inclination mercie seemes to proceede from grace and all other blessings whatsoever for by the grace of God each one may truely say I am that I am Peace It also in Scripture hath a large extent but ordinarily is received for outward rest and quiet and inward tranquilitie of the mind this latter is to be received though the other not absolutely to be reiected And what if wee should vnderstand grace as it is in God Mercie as manifested to miserable man And peace as the effect which proceeds from both Yet how ever it be this is most safe to hold that Paul wished Timotheus all good spirituall corporall temporall eternall without him and within him From God the Father In these words the Apostle manifesteth to vs from whom and in what order grace mercie and peace is derived to vs. By God is meant the first person in the Trinitie and he is called the Father because as from the fountaine all things proceed from him for by an vnvtterable yet naturall generation he begate the Sonne from all eternitie He is also a Father by Creation Adoption Preservation Againe the word Father is attributed to the whole Deitie in generall and the distinct persons in particular Isa 9. 6. Ier. 23. 6. And Iesus Christ our Lord We haue once heard for all what Iesus and Christ signifies yet here is another title annexed to our Messias Lord in the Hebrew tongue is a supporter stay or base In Greeke it signifies one that hath authoritie over a thing or person being a word of relation It is a truth that I haue writ diverse times vnto Churches The Metaphrase in generall and publike and private persons in particular wished them all blessings that might make either for their comfort and peace here on earth or the perfection of glory in the kingdome of heaven But now I haue Penned this
most preferment and the face of man but not one of a thousand in the first place the mercy of God But beloved let vs be of another mind striue we to haue Vse 2. this liquor shed abroad in our hearts to haue a sensible feeling of his tender mercy and sacred affection so shall we eat our bread with gladnesse and drinke our drinke with a chearfull heart be mercifull as our heavenly Father is mercifull to vs vnto our kinred and acquaintance the want of this causeth deadnes of affection doubting in the promise and rebellious disobedience both to God and man for wicked men are alwayes mercilesse men because that none can exhibitie that to another the which he hath not first received himselfe for as mercie is deriued vnto vs we accordingly deriue it to our brethren and now we proceeede to speake of Peace Peace Hence we also obserue that As grace and mercie so peace is a principall thing to be sought Doct. 7. for Take peace in what sence you please it will be worth the having Peace every where is commended and commanded 1. For the peace of God it passeth all vnderstanding 2. Peace Reas 1. with man is no small favour this made the face of Esau to Iacob looke like an Angell 3. In the dayes of Peace we may goe out build houses plant vineyards thriue and prosper 4. How soundly may we sleepe awake with ioy and runne into the Sanctuary when this double garment of externall and internall peace doe cover our beds and round about beset and guard our persons None know the worth of it but such as sometime haue wanted it and beene at warre with God and the creatures Away then with the courses of some who would be counted Vse 1. Christians that thinke not of it care not for it but of far greater blame are they worthie that seeke to set enmitie betweene God and man neighbour and neighbour Doe these seeke after peace Doe they wish it Or rather doe they not shut it out of place and person and set open the gates of warre and strife at all times every where These desire to swimme and fish in troubled waters and of their father the devill are they for his worke they delight to doe But let all the sonnes of peace pray for it entertaine it and Vse 2. make it their onely companion It s of great worth every way profitable What creature covets not peace Ioyeth not in it And shall not the reasonable desire it striue for it To liue and not to haue peace with man is vncomfortable but to be at warre with thy Conscience is most miserable its better not to be than not to haue rest peace Why could not David build the Lords house Why He wanted outward peace Why was Cain so netled in soule Why He had not inward peace Why are so many millions miserable Why They are not at peace with God and doth not experience tell vs that times of trouble hinder Traffique Let vs all then cry with the Prophet for our Ierusalem Peace be within thy wals and prosperitie within thy Psal 122. 7. pallaces Seeke to the God of peace for all kindes of peace Salute we our friends as Paul did his Grace mercy and peace be with you Say we to the house wherein wee set a foote Peace be vnto thee and if it be not worthy thou shalt not lose thy labour for it shall returne to thy selfe And thus much of this Point From the order of these words somewhat may further be observed as that Men without grace haue no true or sound peace Doct. 8. They haue a sound of feare in their eares quake at the shaking of a leafe tremble at the least terrible tydings and like the raging Sea cast vp mire and mudde There is no peace saith my God to the wicked Levit. 27. 36. Isa 57. vlt. Let the cause be removed and the effect will cease where fire is wanting heat will not be had and though some seeme to be ever at peace yet they are never at peace For they are fallen from the Creator God and its vnion Reas 1. with the Creator which giues rest to the creature if the foundation be not firme the building will reele and totter 2. And haue they faith No How then should such purchase and procure peace For onely justification by faith since the fall of man bringes sound and setled peace 3. And as they want faith so they haue no hope whereon to leane that their soules may finde peace 4. Adde to all this a guiltie and naughtie Conscience and how should they partake and be possessed of true-inward peace Gen. 4. 14. Dreame not then that all is peace that seemes so for what Vse 1. peace can a prophane person haue within him that wanteth faith and grace Nay how ever he cary the matter he is at warre within himselfe The wounded Deere runs skips and leapes yet the Arrow or Bullet stinges paines torments at the very heart and before long will cause a fall a death So vnder a chearfull looke the soule may be sorrowfull and all that laugh in the face are not at peace within Who then is he that would haue true and sound peace Vse 2. Let him striue for mercie and grace for as the shadow the bodie heat the fire these follow the one the other Many imagine they haue it yet are fouly deluded deceived I deny not but the wicked may haue a peace but it s not worth the naming for it runnes not from a cleare fountaine it springs not from a sweet root and therefore one drop of this we haue in hand is worth a thousand of that as a litle rose-water a whole glasse-full of mudde 2. It is not constant neither but often interrupted every thunder clap will cause such to quake to tremble and at the last they shall certainly be consumed O that men were wise to gather grace so should they haue peace at their latter end in the meane while be like Mount Sion vnmoueable Graunt that such may haue outward troubles yet they shall haue inward peace that passeth all vnderstanding And now we proceed to another Point Where Paul in all his former Epistles nameth but grace and peace and writing to Timotheus whom he loved so dearely addeth mercie in his Salutation we note that The degree of affection cannot be covered Doct. 9. As the truth so the measure of loue will show it selfe and and not in words onely but likewise in action Doe we not see this in Iacob towards Rachel Ioseph to Beniamin Ionathan to David And the people to Ionathan Gen. 33. 2. and 43. vlt. 1 Sam. 20. 2. c. For the disposition of the heart over-ruleth the outward Reas 1. members and like a strong streame moueth all the wheeles according to its motion 2. As he that loues would declare 2. the truth of it so would he its degree
suffer the least riveret of our thoughts to be dreined another way We must with proud scorne neglect the counsels of flesh and bloud and attend to the commissions of our maker not daring to be idle or to attempt any thing without his warrant for else as Himeneus and Philetus we shall make shipwracke of faith and a good Conscience Who hath more science than the Devils and yet none a worser Conscience Walke therefore after this Canon and thou shalt haue for thy companion a good Conscience And this obedience must haue a two fold concomitant 1. Generalitie 2. Constancie 1. Vniversall knowledge must be seconded with vniversall Companions of obedience Psal 119. 6. Heb. 13. 1● obedience had not David respect to all the Commandements Did not the Author to the Hebrewes with his fellow-brethren desire in all things to liue honestly Or else men should haue but halfe and imperfect Consciences Doth not every Artist striue to vnderstand all the Precepts in his Art Put them in practise that the frame may be perfect and complete Not one tittle in the rule but is of force each branch must haue a place in this building A good appetite covets to taste of every dish a sound sense to smell all kinde of flowers and to participate of what goodnesse is in the creatures We must eate all this Booke drinke every drop of this water else we shall haue but partiall Consciences We may not separate what God coupleth be our owne Carvers in this feast but f●ed fully liberally An Herod will doe many things but he that is anointed of the Lord will performe all for else he shall haue but a maimed Conscience Painters will not omit a finger in the picture M●sicians a chrochet nor Grammarians a syllable a letter a comma So must our obedience to the rule be generall vniversall All this Mercy seat must b● covered with Gold no part left vnwashed Thinke yee on this who boast so much of good meanings honest hearts and workes of supererogation and then you may confesse with shame that you come farre short of the patterne and haue but the remnants of a good Conscience 2. The second concomitant for the making vp of this edifice is continuance constancie We must endure alwayes in all things not be weary in well-doing for cursed is he that continueth not in all things that are written and the threat was Gal. 3. 10. at what time thou shalt ●ate in dying thou shalt die Some hold Gen. 2. 17. that Adam did no morall act before he fell because he must haue nothing towardes his debt all must be discharged by Christ the sureties skore And say they had he done one good theologicall act he had then pleased God infinitely and so could he never haue beene displeased for Gods complacentia is himselfe Sure I am he never persevered in generall obedience and therefore wanted a necessary companion of a complete good Conscience For as we are tyed to know all obey all the particular rules of this worthy art so are we to perpetuall obedience We must be faithfull to Rev. 2. 10. death or else possesse no crow●e of life We are sure that perseverance in all things will ●ake vp and preferue a good Conscience And when God would haue confirmed Adam had he obeyed the Law vniversally is not to me revealed By this Discourse you may see what a Legall good Conscience requireth to wit a distinct and vniversall knowledge of every branch of the Law Secondly generall and constant obedience to all the Precepts For he who is ignorant of the least tittle or transgresseth in one particular by omitting what the Law commandeth or committing what it prohibiteth is guiltie of all and so consequently hath not Iam. 2. 10. a complete Legall good Conscience because it is as you haue heard a feeing of all our actions according with the rules of the Law Whence follow these Conclusions 1. A double errour in the Romanists who hold that men may haue a complete Legall good Conscience and consequently be iustified by their owne workes But can any man since Adams fall vnderstand the whole Law Or if he could giue generall and constant obedience to every Precept Is there any that sinneth not in some thing May not the best cry with David Who can vnderstand his ●rrours Psal 19. 12. and if thou Lord should marke what is done am●sse were any Psal 143. 2. able to appeare in iudgement answere one for a thousand And if they cannot thus say and thus doe as in truth they cannot is not their Doctrine false and to be reiected Also doe they not with-hold the Bible from the common people Which when they do● so how can they procure a Legall good Conscience For whatsoever action is not guided by a rule is evill before God and haue you not heard that knowledge ●ust precede obedience and is absolutely necessary for the obtaining of a good Conscience 2. That not any since the fall of Man Christ excepted ever had a complete Legall good Conscience For the best know but in part and their obedience for the most comes 1 Cor. 13. 9. short of their knowledge Christ indeed vnderstood the whole will of his Father fulfilled all righteousnesse no corruption Mat. 3. 15. was in him nor any sin ever proceeded from him so that he and none but he except we should include the blessed Angels ever had a complete Legall good Conscience for his person and actions in every respect were proportionable and correspondent to the whole Law he failed not in the least tittle 3. Hence we may cleare the Lord from all iniustice in the condemnation of so many millions of men and women for doe they know his will Perfectly obey it Haue they never erred in iudgement or gone astray in their conversation If they haue done both may he not then in his iustice condemne them If any want this forenamed Conscience the Lord may in his iust iudgement inflict eternall torment vpon them For haue they not lost his Image Runne they not daily on his skore Let vs then rather admire his mercie than quarrell with his iustice that we all were not long agone consumed 4. Finally we conclude hence that the safest and securest way for vs is to denie our Legall good consciences striue to obtaine the Evangelicall that we may be iustified saved This is the true and onely way neither haue wee a better For though the law be of power to giue life yet we are ignorant weake and not able to fulfill it if we were then Christ dyed in vaine Now what an Evangelicall good conscience is we will paint forth what concurres to the making vp of it wherein it differs from the Legall what must be done to procure it and how an Evangelicall and Legall are not to be separated in a Christian 1. For the first An Evangelicall good Conscience is a seeing of an act according An
worth the hauing Holines is a thing much to be respected and cannot be had without the spirit And doe thou obserue these directions 1. When thou feelest and findest any secret motion stirred How the spirit may be procured vp in thy heart to holines entertaine it prayse God for it and giue willing obedience therevnto For there is almost no man but at one time or other he shall heare a still voice within him saying This is the way walke in it This must Isa 30. 21 be cherished greatly regarded For if we put this from vs peraduenture when we would with all our hearts feele such whisperings they will be wanting and not easily come by 2. Attend vpon the men of God in the Ministery of his word For it s sayd While Peter spake and the people heard the holy Ghost fell vpon them They that deny the meanes cannot expect this mercy Act. 10. 44. 3. Pray to God the Father that he would send downe his Spirit into thy heart Can they that are evill saith our Sauiour giue to their Children good things how much more shall your heauenly Father giue the holy Ghost to them that aske him Luk. 11. 13. 4. And in Conclusion Speake not evill of thy brother say not he hath a Devill This was the Pharisees fault and Mark 3. 30. in so doing it seemes they sinned vnto death For they told him that he cast out Devills by the Prince of Devills when they thought otherwise so that malice against the truth being accompained with a sound vnderstanding of the truth appeareth to be that irremissible sinne Now the last thing to be collected is this that The Graces of the Spirit are preserved by the Spirit Doct. 7. Paul hauing commanded Timotheus an hard taske giues here a notable direction how he may be able to doe the same and that is through the assistance of the holy Ghost This is also seene Phil. 4. 13. 2 Cor. 13. 13. For Sathan is strong man but weake 2. He is subtill we Reas 1. 2. be simple so that the Spirit of all wisedome and power is he that can enable vs to preserue this worthy thing within vs. And who more fit to doe this then hee that hath wrought this good worke by his owne finger in vs Here we might controule the doctrine of our Aduersaries Vse 1. who ascribe so much power to man after grace receiued or especially that they attribute so much to man in his pure naturalls Hath Timothie neede of the speciall worke and aide of the Spirit to keepe the gifts of grace in him Let them then that will stand vpon their owne strength we dare not Vse 2. And in the next place here we learne instruction to be humble in our owne eyes to deny our owne power and to runne at all times and in all distresses to this refuge of the Spirit for assistance He that doth this doth wisely and but his duty neither the which he is commanded And he that doth not this layeth himselfe open to the fiery shot of Sathan and dangerous methods he vseth buildeth on the sand and the house of his hope the foundation of his faith is certaine to fall But let not vs so learne or teach the Doctrine of Christ Yea rather pray we with the Prophet Lord stablish me with thy free Spirit Plal. 51. 13. VERS 15. This thou knowest that all they which are in Asia be turned from me of whom are Phygellus and Hermogenes IN this Verse is contained a complaint Where foure things are to be observed The Logicall resolution I. The persons against whom it is made and they be laid downe 1. Generally and implicitely in the word all c. 2. Particulary and explicitely one is named Phygellus another Hermogenes II. These people are explicated by their place of habitation or birth which was In Asia III. Their fault was that they turned backe IV. From whom that is expressed in the word Mee And the proofe of the trueth of all this is annexed For this thou knowest This thou knowest That is thou Timotheus doest The Theologicall exposition very well know by experience that what I say is truth Thet all they which are in Asia Or which were in Asia for the time is not expressed in the Greeke neither is it much materiall whether he complained of them that followed him to Rome or that remained still in Asia or that dwelt in Rome being borne in Asia But this is most true that they were Asians I will say nothing where this place was or how farre distant from Rome or the scituation and largenes of it but leaue it those that haue skill in Geography and Topography Be turned from me That is haue not visited me refreshed me Me. Paul the Ambassadour of Christ but haue forsaken me and denied their former profession Some read are become aduersaries to me and rise vp against me I thinke that they omitted all these duties of loue and resolution in Religion the which were in Onesiphorus so that I would expound their fault by the future commendation which immediately followeth Of whom are Phygellus and Hermogenes Or of which sort country number and its likely these two were of the chiefe of them probably Ministers I doe not thinke it vnprofitable in vaine or all together The Metaphrase without warrant to put thee my sonne in remembrance of the many Backsliders who were in Asia forsaking of me and revolting from their former profession of the Gospell of which number Phygellus and Hermogenes were men not of the meanest rancke and note amongst them although it be very well knowne vnto thee by experience already For this thou knowest Hence it may be collected that It is warrantable and profitable to put the people in minde of others Doct. 1. backesliding and falling away For if it were not then Paul would not haue done it we may be assured This may also be seene in Act. 20. 29. c. 1 Tim. 4. 1. 1 Cor. 10. 13. c. 2 Tim. 4. 10. For by this meanes they may learne to beware of such Reas 1. And is it not good to be acquainted with our enemies for he that is forewarned is forearmed It will cause the people to make the more of them that Reas 2. Ioh. 6. 67. be faithfull Will ye also goe away and is not this an helpe to discerne betwixt the good and evill It will make the best to looke better to their footing least Reas 3. they themselues also fall away For good Christians are iealous of their owne estate and will draw spirituall instruction out of euery thing When one falls before vs we shall looke the more circumspectly to our footing Finally they will be the lesse discouraged or disheartened Reas 4. when they heare that some haue fallen For were there not some such examples it would goe worse with the best for hereby they see it 's no new thing to
pricks or keene kniues they they pierce and strike it through the heart if God shew not greater mercy with deadly wounds temporall eternall Why then weepe for your selues and doe good for your selues and for your children Yet for all our preaching and pressing of parents to piety some houses are like little hells and diuers gouernours worse then Achitophel who though he hanged himselfe had a care first to set his house in order Furthermore this doctrine should instruct vs to pray for good gouernours godly parents For woe to that society Vse 4. where the Ruler of it is ignorant profane or a child in vnderstanding Such good men are little regarded respected men esteeme of them at too small a valuation Corke is light yet it keepeth the net from sinking to the bottome of the sea so good gouernours are too little esteemed of Notwithstanding were they remoued fire and brimstone should fall downe from heauen and heapes be tumbled into the nethermost hell When good Iosiah was taken away the people as men sensible of their owne misery mourned so that it became a proverb like Hadadrimmon in the valley of Megiddo for his death did presage future and fearefull evilles to follow When Lot was gone to Zoar what befell the inhabitants and if Paul had not beene in the ship who had come safe to shore Wherefore make much of such pray often and earnestly for such mourne and spare not for the departure of such and let all the men of God in their preaching ayme especially at the conuersion of such For one good King godly gouernour holy father is worth ten thousand of the inferiour people for all the world will be tapt to imitate the Rulers and great men being good will doe the more good by their speech example and authoritie Why did King Dauid a little before his death giue his sonne Salomon a charge to serue the Lord God of Israel in such a particular and speciall manner Why for hee was to succeed him in the kingdome to build the Temple therefore he was so vrgent to presse him to piety Let vs in the like case do the same In a word if they that gouerne houses Colledges or Kingdomes be godly pray for them praise God for them but if not mourne and entreat the Lord to amend them And the higher place thy sonne is to haue in the Church or commonwealth striue thou the more to teach him the knowledge and seruice of God And may a good governour bring a blessing to he Vse 5. whole house then depart not out of such a family from vnder such a mans protection for if thou doest thou maist draw iudgements vpon thine owne pate Some cannot endure such Masters as well curbe them of vnlawfull pleasures presse them to the performance of holy duties but will like the prodigall vp and be gone These out-runne the shower of Gods grace and thinke they doe well when alas as much as they can they drowne themselues in perdition and endlesse destruction They had rather eate and drinke and deuoure beefe and garlike in Aegypt then the water of life and Manna from heauen vnder the conduct of Moses Are thou one of this minde then alter thy manners for feare a worse thing follow Finally this must teach those that liue in bad houses to Vse 6. be vp and gone Is the gouernour a Papist or Athiest a swearer or filthy person carry not with him except a forced necessity compell thee For as the Lepers said in another case if thou abide in such a● place some mischi of evill light vpon thee 2 King 7. 9. Thou wilt say vnto me how shall I know a godly Quest family Well enough and that by these markes Answ 1. Is there in it more good bookes and Bibles then payres of cards and tables 2. Is there more praying then playing searching of Scriptures then shufling of cards turning ouer of the holy papers then tossing of tables singing of Psalmes then obscene songs and sonnets desire and endeauour to grow in grace more then to gather goods 3. Is there constant prayer morning and euening sanctifying of the creatures before they be receiued casting out of the bad receiuing in the good And last of all Is the Sabbath strictly obserued of all strangers that rest there as of the daily inhabitants then conclude that the feare of God is in that place and if thou maist lodge and cate thy bread there That house that hath neither Bible or good booke reading praying or singing of Psalmes instruction catechising nor care to keepe holy the Lords day is that place where Sathans throne is and the Deuill dwelleth And not to belye them such filthy and infectious habitations be the families of Papists yea all that I haue beene acquainted with of which sort the Norherne parts are but too fully replenished Rome hath two much roome there amongst them Abraham did teach his family Ieremiah imprecates the Lord to poure downe his fury vpon the families that cal not on his name David did the like See Ier. 10. vlt. But passing this poynt we come to handle another which is that True affection is of a spreading nature Act. 26. 29. Rom. 2. 3. Paul loued Oresiphorus well and from the head we see it enlarged it selfe to the whole house all the members Hence it is that in the Scriptures it 's compared to water for loue is said to be shed in the heart or to oile that being Rom. 5. 5. Psal 133. 1. c. powred on the head runneth downe all the garments Certainely he that in truth loueth the parents cannot but affect the children For at the first it was so created As the vnderstanding Reas 1. was to see all truth in all things so was the affection framed to effect all things the which reason approued Those two were to be proportionable like the patterne and the thing made by it Now at our Regeneration Loue in some degree is restored to that perfection it had at the Creation therefore spreadeth Because that Loue is nimble subtile actiue therefore likened Reas 2. to fire that would conuert all contrary elements and subiects into its selfe It s hotter then the coales of Iuniper it compasseth the creatures as a garment it will dilate it selfe farre and neere For of all simple elements fire is the most actiue and spreadeth as we may see by a candle the furthest and so will true and feruent affection Againe Loue shouldreth out enuy the which a pinching Reason 3. and cold frost freezeth and holdeth things together from spreading Enuy would draw all good from others to it selfe but loue doth breake those bonds and sets the heart at liberty And is not Loue true loue one of the most sacred attributes Reason 4. in God yea God is called Loue. And did not the Lord before sin brake the condition extend his affection to all creatures Why then a sparke of that true fire in the
creature cannot but haue a large extent a spreading operation This may informe vs what to judge of many in these Vse 1. dayes surely they haue little or none of this oyle or fire abroad and kindled in their hearts for if they had we should fee it's spreading We may truly say with Christ that Loue is waxen cold Many boast much of it but where shall we finde a faithfull louing man for all seeke their owne and not the good of their brethren We haue a prouerbe Loue me and loue my dog I wish some did not more loue their dogs then the Lords children And by this doctrine in the impartiall examination of Vse 2. our selues we may try the trueth of our Loue. Canst thou that art a Magistrate say with Moses Oh! that there were such an heart in my people to serue God being a preacher canst thou breake out with Paul I would to God that all that heare me this day were such as I am the children of the Lord Hath the Lord made thee a father and canst thou pray with Abraham and Noah Oh that Ismael might liue and Iapheth dwell in the tents of Shem that is that my disobedient seed might know the Lord God of their father serue him and be saued you that are Gouernours of families is it in your hearts and hands for you and your people to follow God doe you labour like Cornelius that all your family might feare the Lord And you that are single persons doe you helpe one another to get grace and to grow vp in godlines then this fire of true affection is from Gods owne altar descended on you this loue is shed abroad in your hearts the oyle of amity hath annointed your garments and you are of that number which with ioy vnspeakeable shall one day behold the face of God But if this desired spreading be absent your hearts are stuffed with hatred cold envy hath benummed your subtile and actiue affections and therefore take heed of this that you be not found haters of God and louers of pleasure aboue him or his If you be heare your doome Depart from me into euerlasting fire for I know you not you did neuer visit me in my members cloath me feede me or build vp my decaied body by prayer instruction example nor in affection therefore you haue no loue in you neither shall ye receiue any fauour at my hands for the head and members make but one obiect Thou wilt say vnto me How farre will loue spread it Quest Answ selfe Why from God the Father to all his children Christ the head to all his members from the beginning of Gods booke to the last letter in breife from one end of the world from one part of the large heauens vnto the other true loue would haue al sexes persons countries and kingdomes so farre forth as it may stand with the will of God the Father to be sanctified and for euer blessed for there is no bounds in loue Affection vnlesse God chaine it the which he may and doth for mans vnworthines is without limits spreading it selfe from the externall conuexe of the highest throne round about and thence descendeth to the earth's lowest center yea Loue embraceth the Lord who is infinite incomprehensible so farre forth as sound reason doth rightly guide it direct it It is a garment that doth cloth all creatures and to the vttermost of its power wrap within its louely armes the eternall Creatour He that findeth this in himselfe findeth a good thing and but that very character which is imprinted in the heart of euery true beleeuer and faithfull person I might deduct another doctrine out of the matter of this petition which is that The mercy of God is principally to be desired for our friends Doct. 5. For what Paul prayed for for his friends we should request also for ours Rom. 1. 7. 1 Cor. 1. 3. Gal. 1. 3. For if we receiue mercy from God we shall want no Reas 1. manner of thing For to whom the Lord shewes mercy to that man he will giue all gifts spirituall and corporall whateuer so farre as they be good for him Againe had we all other fauours the world can affoard Reas 2. yet without the mercy of God they would but proue curses to vs in the end for without mercy we are no members of Christ so no sonnes and consequently no heires of heauen This checkes the preposterous course of many in these Vse 1. times The Papist he entreates God that his friend may haue his Purgatory here or in another world but omits the mercy of God in the beginning The common Christian or earth-worme wisheth his kinred and companions strong bodies large possessions heapes of siluer and long life but no mention of Gods mercy all this while that is least thought on seldome prayed for He that obserueth but the custome of many in their best wishes shall heare them ordinarily crosse this Canon and method of our Apostle Let this then be a derection to thee what chiefly and Vse 2. first of all to beg of God for thy friends Aske not that thy sonnes may sit at the right hand of Christ in his earthly kingdome for it is not of this world Cry not for Quailes in the wildernesse for they may choake thee and thine nor for riches for the theefe may breake through thy wall carry them away seeke not long life or like Saul the honour of the people But cry to the Lord for grace and mercy this this is that one thing necessary for thy selfe for all thy friends And though few doe thinke so yet it is so for if the Lord doe not deny thee this then hee will deny thee nothing and hee that hath this shall haue all things This will wash away thy sinnes cloath thee with the righteousnesse of Christ enrich thee with the sauing graces of the Spirit procure thee food and rayment sanctifie all things to thee affliction and sinne it selfe giue thee comfort in trouble hope in death and carry thee to the throne of God where in his presence thou and thy friends shall haue fulnesse of ioy for euermore Then when thou prayest say The Lord giue mercy to me and my friends to them and their families For hee oft refreshed me In these words wee will briefly point out the Doctrines and handle some of them From the person refreshed Paul we gather that Want may befall Gods dearest children Doct. 6. Iacob sometime went ouer Iordan with his staffe Ioseph was once no rich man the widow of Sarepta was in a great Gen 32. 10. 1 King 17. 6. Luk. 16. 20. strait Lazarus was poore and it is said the women did minister to Christ Luke 8. 3. of their substance The Lord doth it for many Reasons First to correct his for the abuse of his creatures for Reas 1. when wee haue like the Prodigall mis-spent abused or surfetted on them the Lord in
other ought not to be neglected And it doth teach vs a twofold lesson 1. To obserue Vse 2. learne who bee our principall and speciall friends 2. To pray to God in a particular and peculiar manner for them 1. Subiects here must remember their Soueraigne and the Lords annointed vnder whom they enioy peace and plenty Nebuchadnezzer must be prayed for for Sions sake for the members are much beholden to the head 2. Let children be mindfull of their parents who next to God haue giuen them a beeing and preseruation Wee haue too many Chams that discouer their fathers skirts but too few Shems who seek their honour Is not that eye worthy to be picked out by the Rauens and of the young Eagles to be deuoured that hand like to the wicked Kings to wither and that tongue to cleaue to the roofe of its mouth who be neuer opened lifted mooued to pitty desend and blesse their naturall begetters that haue suffered and done so much for them Let such take heede that Cain's curse doe not befall them 3. The people must not forget their Pastors For they be they that of the slaues of Satan children of wrath haue be got them to be sonnes of God heires of heauen But this is not the custome of our countrimen they of all others care least pray least for their Preacher and hence it often falleth out that God remoues their candlestick tyeth the the tongue of their spirituall Father that he speakes not to their comfort or sends some heauy iudgement vpon them for the omission of this dutie 4. And in conclusion Ionathan must be remembred of Dauid euery priuate friend must pray for another Pray I pray you for all men in generall but especially for Princes Preachers Parents and principall friends in particular for this is the Law and the Prophets Another point is this that Mercifull men shall obtaine mercy Doct. 9. No doubt but that Paul preuailed with God for his kind friend Onesiphorus And Christ confirmes the point affirming that Blessed be the mercifull for they shall obtaine mercy Math. 5. 7. Because the Lord hath so promised Reas 1. Againe hee loues his owne image and likenesse in his Reason 2. children and so crownes it with reward Art thou vnmercifull Then expect condemnation without Vse 1. mercy For to such shall be shame and confusion And as this may comfort the mercifull so it should moue Vse 2. all to shew mercy that they may bee comforted with the same comforts wherewith they haue comforted others and that of the Lord. But obserue these Rules 1. Let the glory of God be preferred aboue and before Rules in shewing of mercy to be obserued the reward 2. Let loue of our brethren and Gods command moue more than the reward 3. Confesse that it proceeds from Gods mercy if thou receiue a reward 4. Stay thou the Lords leasure in expecting the reward Finally we gather hence that They who would finde mercy in the day of euill are to shew mercy Doct. 10. in the day of euill One siphorus refreshed Paul in his day Christ shall reward him at his day he found out Paul in Rome amidst the prophane and he shall be found out in the aire not amongst the reprobate Compare Ier. 38. 9. with cap. 39. vlt. Iosh 6. 17. 25. Math. 25. 40. For God respecteth the circūstance of time such actions Reas 1. of all other are the best pleasing vnto him that be done in their season for all things are to be done in cōlines order God then doth declare the truth of his promise his fatherly Reas 2. compassion the more then at another season For fauours in their season are best apprehended most accepted And in so much as God will haue a time to reward euery good worke in why should he not picke the fittest oportunity the most acceptable season Let this assure thee that hast cōforted others in their greatest Vse 1. misery that God shall comfort thee in the time of thy greatest extremitie Thou maist build vpon 't And learne we hence to take knowledge when is the day of Vse 2. evill to others cōfort them at that instant that we may with boldnes expect the like at the Lords hands Refresh the poore afflicted needy in their need and God in mercy shall remēber thee in thine We would al haue cōfort in the houre of death day of iudgment why then here is the way take compassion on the members of Christ now and it shall be vnto thee as thou desirest But here a Question may arise why Paul praieth for mercy Quest at that day rather then at another time 1. Because it will be the greatest and most dreadfull day Answ that euer was to thousands 2. If he find mercy then for his friend he shall be blessed euer after 3. And if he should passe that day there could neuer be any hope of future fauour 4. Finally though the Lord should deferre mercy long in the requital of sauours yet then Paul knew was the day wh● no good work should be forgot or go vnrewarded therfore he named that day From whose example reasons Let vs all learne to pray that all those whom we truly affect and from whom we haue receiued many kindnesses may all find mercy with the Lord at that day Amen It will be obiected that if Onesiphorus had once the possession Obiect of heauen the which he had long before that day he needed not mercy for he had it already 1. If he was sure of mercy then who doubteth but that he Sol. was certaine to haue it here also For he that ascendeth to the highest step of necessity must take the lower in his passage Therfore in this we see the Apostles great wisdom in praying 2. Paul prayeth for the manifestation and declaration of Gods mercy to him at that day For a man may haue a pardō for his offences be sure of it in respect of himselfe in particular yet it cannot be knowne to all vntill the king cause it in publike to be proclaimed And by the way learne we this lesson that God will take a particular knowledge of euery distinct person at that day for Paul prayeth that Onesiphorus in particular may haue mercy manifested to him Yea he knoweth all his children by name as he sayd of Moses the which were it truly beleeued and well considered would be no weake ground of reioycing to the faithfull person And in how many things he hath ministred vnto me at Ephesus thou knowest very well Because the same things for the most part haue beene handled heretofore that are to be obserued out of this appellation or testimony we will but name the doctrines and so omit them Where Paul was prisoner at Rome now as we fee at want as heretofore in Ephesus we note that Sometimes in great Townes and famous Cities it hath gone hardly Doct.