Selected quad for the lemma: mercy_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
mercy_n jesus_n sin_n sinner_n 3,659 5 7.4408 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A14185 Lectures upon the vvhole Epistle of St. Paul to the Philippians, deliuered in St. Peters Church in Oxford: by the reuerend and faithfull seruant of Christ Henry Airay ... and now published for the vse of Gods Church by C.P. ... Airay, Henry, 1560?-1616. 1618 (1618) STC 245; ESTC S100494 890,650 1,118

There are 26 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

towards miserable sinners I might instance in the like mercy of the Lord towards Matthew first a Publican afterwards an Euangelist towards Zaccheus first a sinfull man afterwards a notable conuert towards the theefe on the Crosse ere while on the crosse after a while in paradise c. but I will not trouble you with multitude of examples wherein might appeare the riches of Gods great mercies towards great and grieuous sinners Neither let this be any encouragement vnto any man to let loose the reynes vnto sinne because where sinne aboundeth there mercy aboundeth much more for if any man vpon such examples of his mercies shall presume and make bold to sinne let him also know that as the Lord is mercifull so is he also iust and that towards him and such as he is iustice shall triumph ouer mercy Rather let this so louing mercy of the Lord teach vs neither to despaire in our selues nor of others though great sinners for what though we haue omitted such things a● we ought to haue done nor onely so but committed such things as we ought not to haue done What if we haue committed incest with Lot or murther and adulterie with Dauid Nay what if we haue beene blasphemers or persecutors with Paul vniust with Zaccheus or theeues with him on the crosse The Lord hath mercy enough for vs in store and others as great sinners as we and ouertaken with the like sinnes haue beene recei● vnto mercy Onely let vs acknowledge our sinnes with Dauid Luc. 7.38 weepe for our sinnes with the woman in the gospell obey when the Lord calleth vpon vs with Paul receiue him ioyfully when he commeth vnto vs with Zaccheus and pray feruently vnto him with the theefe vpon the crosse and then assure we our selues we shall be receiued vnto mercy And who knoweth of any but the Lord may giue grace vnto repentance and then surely followeth mercy The Lord his mercies are in his owne dispensing he may when he will and he doth when he seeth it good renue the heart and grant mercy Though therefore the prodigall childe runne a lewde course for a long time yet let vs hope that the Lord will at length giue grace vnto repentance and receiue him vnto mercy Paul and Timotheus The second thing which I note is that the Apostle ioyneth vnto himselfe Timothie aged Paul yong Timothie an excellent Apostle an inferior Minister the author of the Epistle him that onely approued it or at the most wrote it from his mouth and all this to grace and credit Timothie with the Philippians vnto whom he meant shortly to send him as it appeareth by the next chapter vers 19. Whence 1. I obserue a notable example of rare humilitie for a rare and seldom thing it is to be seene superiors to receiue their inferiors into the honor of their labors and to be willing that what honor or fauour may accrew vnto them by their labors may be communicated likewise to their inferiors who had little or no hand in them Nay commonly superiors in authority or learning or otherwise count it a great debasing vnto themselues to be thought to haue had their inferiors to haue ioyned with them in their labours to haue vsed their helpe or to equall them with themselues Yet such was Pauls humilitie that he gladly receiued Timothie a faithfull minister of the gospell but farre inferior vnto him into the honor of his labors and equalled him vnto himselfe as if his hand had been as farre in the writing of this Epistle as was his owne that as they should accept of him for it so they might accept of Timothie also He had learned that lesson well which our blessed Sauiour gaue both him and vs to learne from himselfe Mat. 11.29 saying Learne of me that I am meeke and lowly in heart And himselfe herein gaue the Philippians a good patterne of that wherevnto afterward he exhorteth them Phil. 2.3 that in meeknesse of minde euery man should esteeme others better than himselfe His estimation of Timothy and his lowlinesse of heart are sufficiently witnessed by this his associating of him vnto himselfe but such a selfe-liking hath now possessed men that such humilitie is hardly to be found Euery man likes his owne labors so well and stands so much vpon his reputation that he cannot endure the disgrace that any man should say or thinke that he hath had this or that helpe this or that aduise that he neuer did this or that of himselfe To haue the credit or commendation of any thing well done of our selues we like it well but if any be ioyned in with vs especially our inferiors we make little reckning and oftentimes had as lieue want it as haue it so So far are we from the Apostles humilitie Wherevnto if we will attaine we must not thinke of our selues aboue that is meete wee must thinke of others according to their worth we must not thinke much to receiue others into the honors of our labors and we must make our selues equall to them of lower sort then our selues And this if we doe we shall be good followers of the Apostles humilitie 2. In this ioyning of Timothy vnto himselfe I obserue a good patterne of that care which ought to be had of of the Ministers credit with his people For wherefore did the Apostle ioyne Timothy vnto himselfe He meant to send Timothy shortly vnto the Philippians to instruct them in the waies of God more perfectly as appeareth by the next chapter therfore for the better credit of him in his ministery with them when he shold come vnto them in writing vnto them he receiueth him into the honor of his labors ioyneth him vnto himself So should they doe that are called vnto greater place in the Church then others of their calling They should by all meanes seeke the grace and credit and countenance of the Minister with his people yea whatsoeuer might be for the furtherance of him in his ministery they should with all holy care regard it for the grace we see of the Minister is the grace of his ministery and the more he is countenanced by his superiors the more he preuaileth in his ministery with his people As therefore they would giue testimony of their care of the Church and of the building vp thereof by the ministery of the gospell so they should haue care of the Ministers credit with his people And I wish they would doe so But I passe ouer to that which followeth The third thing which here I note is the title of dignity common to them both whereby both Paul and Timothy are described In the latter to the Corinths and in the epistle to the Colossians the Apostle in the inscription of his Epistles ioynes Timothy to himselfe as here he doth but there in title he seuereth himselfe from Timothy saying Paul as Apostle of Iesus Christ and our brother Timotheus and likewise in the Epistle to Phil●mon saying Paul
Heb. 9.28 as saith the Apostle the second time vnto saluation Is the message then of Christ his second comming gladsome vnto you Is the remembrance of it ioyfull vnto you It is a sure token vnto you that ye belong vnto Christ Iesus and it is a notable fruite and effect of your faith and hope in Christ Iesus It may be that some of you looking more vpon your selues and your owne sinnes then vpon Christ and the bowels of his mercies and being more sharpe and seuere toward your selues then quick-sighted to looke toward Christ Iesus may feele some appalling in your selues or at least not that cheerefulnesse in expectation that should be But let not your harts be troubled nor feare Ye looke not only vpon your sinnes or so on Christ as only a seuere iudge and so despaire in your selues and vtterly abhorre his comming but yee looke for him though not without hope yet without that cheerefulnes which ye ought In this weaknesse the Lord will perfit his praise and vnto these beginnings hee will giue a good issue Only let my counsell be acceptable vnto you turne away your eies from your selues and cast them vpon Christ Iesus He shall be your iudge that is your Sauiour He hath bidde you looke vp and lift vp your heads for your redemption draweth neere Joh. 5.24 And he hath said it that hee that belieueth in him hath euerlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but hath passed from death vnto life Tit. 2.13 Waite therefore patiently and cheerefully for the Lord for the grace of God which bringeth saluation to all c. The third and last thing which heere I note is in the person of him whom the Apostle saith that they looke for from heauen which is the Lord Iesus Christ the Sauiour Wherein I obserue a reason both why wee should walke in this like as citizens of the heauenly Ierusalem hauing our conuersation in heauen and why wee should looke and long for the second comming vnto iudgement For why should it seeme strange vnto any man that liuing here in the body wee should haue our soule-conuersation in heauen Is not our Lord and King mightie in power to saue and defend vs and to reuenge vs of our enemies in heauen Is not our Iesus who not by the workes of righteousnesse which we had done but according to his mercie hath saued vs by the washing of the new birth and the renuing of the holy Ghost in heauen Is not our Christ the Mediator of the new Testament that hath reconciled vs vnto God maketh continuall intercession for vs and teacheth vs outwardly by his word and inwardly by his spirit in heauen Is not our Sauiour who in that day shall make vp the full complement of our saluation in heauen where then should our conuersation be but in heauen where should the body be but where the head is where should the spouse be but where the bridegroome is not one of vs all but we are stung with fierie Serpents cursed sinnes and noysome lusts which fight against the soule If wee will be healed and liue we must looke vp vnto the brasen Serpent lift vp for that purpose In heauen is our brasen Serpent euen the Lord Iesus Christ We must therefore while we are in the body lift vp our eies vnto him and haue our soule-conuersation in heauen if now we will be healed of our infirmities and if when we remoue out of the body we will dwell with the Lord. And as this should bee a sufficient reason to moue vs to haue our whole conuersation in heauen so should it also moue vs to looke and long for the second comming vnto iudgement For shall our Lord and King come which shall tread downe ●he Deuill and all enemies vnder his feete and leading captiuitie captiue shall make vs to triumph in the heauenly places Shall our Iesus come then to be our iudge that first came to saue his people from their sinnes Shall our Christ come that offered himselfe vpon the crosse for vs and opened his fathers will vnto vs Shall our Sauiour come to saue vs from death and corruption by glory which first saued vs from sinne and condemnation by grace What cause then haue wee to hearken vnto the counsell of Iames Iam. 5.7 exhorting to bee patient vnto the comming of the Lord yea what cause to crie with the soules vnder the Altar Apoc. 6.10.22.20 How long Lord holy and true dost thou not iudge and auenge our bloud on them that dwell on the earth Yea to crie with Iohn Come Lord Iesus come quickely Vnto this which hath beene taught the example of our brother lying here before vs may as I heare be a good prouocation My selfe knew him not and therefore I can say the lesse of him But by the report of them that knew him hee was very studious and for his time had profited well in the knowledge of such Arts as he applied himselfe vnto He was also as I heare religiously affected and godly minded hauing in good measure while hee was in the body his conuersation in heauen And in the time of his sicknesse willingly submitted himselfe vnto the will of his God as one that looked for the blessed hope and appearing of the Sauiour euen the Lord Iesus Christ in whom his soule reioyced and in the merits of whose death and passion his heart was comforted The Lord grant that wee may all liue in his feare and die in his fauour LECTVRE LXXIII PHILIP 3. Vers 2● Who shall change our vile body that it may be fashioned like vnto his glorious body according to the working c. IT remaineth now that wee proceede vnto the third and last branch where the Apostle in the behalfe of himselfe and such others as walked as he did maketh Christian profession of their certaine hope of the glorification of their vile bodies by the powerfull working of Christ Iesus set downe in these words who shall change c. They had their conuersation in heauen looking for the Sauiour from heauen euen the Lord Iesus Christ and from heauen they looked for the Lord Iesus Christ knowing that then hee should change their vile bodies and make them like vnto his glorious body c. The generall point then here spoken is the glorification of our vile bodies in the day of Christ by the power of Christ The particular circumstances which here the Apostle noteth are these 1. who shall glorifie vs namely the Lord Iesus Christ who shall change c. 2. What he shall glorifie in vs namely our bodies whose soule-conuersation hath beene in heauen 3. the condition of our bodies what now they are namely bodies of vilenesse basenesse and abiectnesse i. Vile base and abiect bodies subiect to corruption sinne and all kinde of vanitie 4. The time when he shall glorifie our vile bodies namely in that day when he shall come in the cloudes of heauen to iudge both the quick and
writer of this Epistle and Timotheus the approuer of it or Paul the inditer of it and Timotheus the writer of it The title of dignitie commune to them both whereby they are described is this the seruants of Iesus Christ seruants both and therefore to attend vpon their ministerie and seruice and both seruants of Iesus Christ and therefore to attend vpon the ministration of the gospell which he had committed vnto them but yet the seruants of Iesus the Sauiour of the world euen of Iesus Christ annointed a King to defend vs a Prophet to teach vs and a Priest to offer vp a sacrifice for our sinnes The persons saluted are generally the whole Church of Philippi and more particularly the Bishops and Deacons there The whole Church at Philippi generally is saluted vnder the name of all the Saints in Christ Iesus which are at Philippi for by all the saints in Christ Iesus he meaneth all them which in baptisme had giuen their names vnto Christ Iesus thenceforth to die vnto sinne and to liue vnto God in righteousnes and true holinesse which was all the Church at Philippi Now this Philppi was a chiefe Citie in the parts of Macedonia Act. 16.12 whose inhabitants came from Rome to dwell there the first Citty in the passage out of Thracia beyond the riuer Strymon At the first it is generally thought to haue beene called Crenida because of the many fountaines about the hill whereon it was built 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being as much as fons and afterward to haue beene called Philippi because of the fortification and enlargement thereof by Philip King of Macedon and now to be called Gricopolis as if yee would call it Chrysopolis a Citty of gold because of the great abundance of gold that is there so great that Philip is said to haue receiued thence yearely aboue 1000 talents of gold which is asmuch as 600 thousand french crownes This Citty is notably knowne as for the great ouerthrow of Brutus and Cassius there by Octauius and Antonie so especially for the preaching of the gospell there by Paul and Silas and Timotheus for the embracing of the truth there by their ministerie and for many other accidents there during the Apostle his abode there for Paul being warned by the spirit to goe into Macedonia hee went thither and first came to Philippi there preached and by his preaching converted Lydia so that shee and her houshold were baptized Afterwards he cast out of a maide a spirit of diuination Wherevpon hee was brought before the Magistrates sore beaten with rods cast into the inner prison and his feete thrust into the stocks Being there in prison the foundation of the prison was shaken by an earth-quake the dores were opened the prisoners bands were loosed the Iaylor was conuerted he and his house baptized and the Apostle deliuered For these things this Citie is well knowne and it was the Church generally in this Citie that the Apostle saluted The persons more particularly saluted are the Bishops and Deacons there Where by Bishops he meaneth the Pastors and Teachers which laboured in the word and doctrine For both the word so signifieth throughout the whole New Testament and here it must needs so signifie because he speaketh of many in one Church By Deacons also he meaneth those that by their office were to receiue and distribute the common liberalitie of the Church according to the necessities of all the poore members thereof such as we read to haue beene ordeined in the Church Act. 6 5. and such as are described by our Apostle 1 Tim. 3.8 c. Vnto whom together with the Bishops the Apostle is thought here to write as to magnifie their office so because theirs had beene the care chiefly in respect of their office to send the Churches liberalitie to him by their Minister Epaphroditus The salutation followeth wherein he wisheth them all good from him which is the author of all goodnesse Where 1. is set downe the thing which he wisheth vnto them which is grace and peace vnderstanding by grace the free fauour of God wherewith he loueth his children and whence as from the fountaine all other goodnesse doth flow and by peace euery blessing corporall and spirituall for this life and that that is to come flowing from that fountaine of grace 2. is set downe vnto whom he wisheth this grace and peace namely vnto all the Saints at Philippi together with the Bishops c. 3. is set downe the author from whom and by whom he wisheth this grace and peace vnto them which is from God our father as the fountaine and first originall from whom commeth euery good and perfect gift and from the Lord Iesus Christ as the meanes by whom euery grace of the spirit is conveyed and deriued vnto vs. Thus much for the purpose of the Apostle in these words and the meaning of them Now let vs see what notes we may gather hence for our farther vse and instruction Paul and Timotheus First then for the very name of Paul it should not passe vs reading or hearing of it but therein we should obserue the great mercy of our gracious God towards sinfull creatures For what was Paul that now wrote vnto the Churches here and there to stablish them in the faith Surely he was sometimes a bloudy Saul a cruel persecutor of Gods Church one that hauing receiued authoritie of the High Priests Act. 26.10 shut vp many of the Saints in prison and when they were put to death gaue his sentence 11. punished them throughout all the synagogues and compelled them to blaspheme and being more madde vpon them persecuted them euen vnto strange Cities one that was a blasphemer 1 Tim. 1.13 an oppressor that spared neither men nor women Act. 22.4 but beat them and bound them and deliuered them vnto death Gal. 1.13 one that persecuted the Church of God extreamely and wasted it All which things himselfe testifieth of himselfe Could there well haue beene a more forlorne man a more desperate and godles creature Yet this man was receiued vnto mercy yea vnto such mercy that the Lord called him to be an Apostle and chose him to beare his name before the Gentiles and Kings and the children of Israel And that this was a worke of the Lord his owne mercy our Apostle himselfe witnesseth where he thus saith I was a blasphemer and a persecutor and an oppressor 1 Tim 1.13 but I was receiued to mercy And why was he receiued to mercy himselfe tells vs saying for this cause was I receiued to mercy 16. that Iesus Christ should first shew on me all long-suffering to the ensample of them that shall in time to come beleeue in him vnto eternall life It was then the Lord his great mercy towards him that of a cruell persecutor he became an holy Apostle of Christ Iesus and this mercy was shewed on him that in him might be an example of Gods mercy
for all blessings by Iesus Christ So our blessed Sauiour hath taught vs where he teacheth vs thus to pray Our father which art in heauen Mat. 6.9 c. And so we confesse when we pray for grace and peace vnto our brethren from God our Father c. And as Peter said vnto Christ to whom shall we goe Ioh. 6.68 thou hast the words of eternall life so I say to whom should we pray for any blessing Euery good giuing and euery perfit gift is from aboue c. as euen now we heard out of Iames. Friuolous therefore and impious is the invocation of Saints whereby that honor is taken from God which is chiefly due and properly belongeth vnto him I meane prayer For how shall any man call on him in whom he doth not beleeue Rom 10.14 Or in whom shall any man beleeue but in God onely So then if onely we be to beleeue in God then are we only to pray vnto God and therefore not vnto Saints The third point is that the grace and free fauour of God in Christ Iesus is the very fountaine of all Gods blessings bestowed vpon vs. So the Holy Ghost witnesseth throughout the whole scripture Rom. 3.24 Ephes 2.8 1 Cor. 15.10 saying that we are iustified freely by grace that we are saued by grace and that by the grace of God we are that we are whatsoeuer we be and whatsoeuer blessing we haue And so we confesse in effect when we pray first for grace and then for peace that from grace as the fountaine may flow peace and all the riuers of Gods blessings Mans merits therefore must stand aside we may not hold any blessing of them but onely of grace For as the Apostle disputeth of election so may it be said of any blessing of God if it be of grace it is not of works else were grace no more grace Rom 11.6 and if it be of works then not of grace or else were worke no more worke One of these excludeth the other so that whatsoeuer is by the one is not by the other The fourth point is that we are to beleeue in God the Father and in Christ Iesus his Sonne So our blessed Sauiour teacheth vs where he saith Yee beleeue in God Joh. 14.1 beleeue also in me as if he should haue said yee beleeue in God and so yee are to doe beleeue also in me for so yee are to doe And so in effect we confesse when we pray vnto God the Father and Christ Iesus his Sonne for grace and peace vnto our brethren For as euen now we heard vnto whom we pray in him we are to beleeue as also againe in whom we beleeue vnto him we are to pray Accursed therfore be their infidelitie that either deny there is or doubt whether there be a God or no and make a mocke at the sonne of God In whom now they beleeue not at his presence they shall tremble and cry vnto the mountaines and rocks fall on vs Apoc. 6.16 and hide vs from the presence of him that sitteth on the throne and from the wrath of the Lambe The fift point is that we are sure that God hath reconciled vnto himselfe by Iesus Christ and adopted vs through him into his sonnes So the Apostle telleth vs where he saith 2 Cor. 5.18 that all things are of God which hath reconciled vs vnto himselfe by Iesus Christ and that he hath predestinate vs to be adopted through Iesus Christ vnto himselfe Ephes 1.5 according to the good pleasure of his will And so we confesse when we wish grace and peace from God our Father for if he our Father then we his sonnes and a reconciliation made betweene him and vs. And therefore hauing finished all things our blessed Sauiour saith Joh. 20 17. I ascend vnto my father and your father to my God and your God Where giue me leaue by the way to put you in minde of one point wherin of late it may be I somewhat erred When last I spake of this point in handling of those words vnto God euen our Father c. I told you that it was obserued that not any saith with Christ my Father as many say with Thomas my Lord my God And so in deed it is obserued by Zanchius on those words But since I perceiue by as faithfull and diligent an obseruer of the scriptures Dr. Rain Iob 34.36 that Elihu speaking vnto God saith my Father let Iob be tried c. not indeed in our English translations following the iudgement of some of the Rabbins but yet in the best approued Translations So that it may not be a rule that none may say with Christ my Father but as we say my God and our God so may we say my Father and our Father And herein is the sweet comfort of all Gods children that we may cry vnto God Abba which is Father that we may pray and say Our Father that we may wish grace and peace from God our Father for if he be our Father and we his sonnes then are we also heires of God and heires annexed with Christ And let all the comforts in the world stoupe vnto this one comfort the very soules ioy of all them that haue receiued the spirit of adoption The sixt point is that Christ Iesus our Lord is our onely Mediator by whom onely we haue accesse in our prayers vnto God and by whom we receiue whatsoeuer we haue of God So the Apostle witnesseth saying There is one God and one Mediator betweene God and man which is the man Christ Iesus 1 Tim. 2.5 by whom we goe boldly vnto God Heb. 4.16 that we may receiue mercy and finde grace to helpe in time of neede And so we confesse in effect when we pray for grace and peace from God our Father and from the Lord Iesus Christ as the meanes by whom we are partakers of grace and peace for so they are from the Lord Iesus Christ as he is the meanes by whom they are conueyed and deriued vnto vs from God euen our Father The Saints therefore are no Mediators of intercession for vs either to bring vs vnto God or to bring his blessings vnto vs. Our high Priest is able perfectly to saue them that come to God by him Heb. 7.25 seeing he euer liueth to make intercession for them and as to saue them so to giue them all graces good and needfull for them The most of the rest of the points I will conclude in one which is this that Iesus Christ is God which wee confesse when we pray for grace and peace from him that he is the Sauiour of the world which we confesse when we call him Iesus that he is that counseller and great prophet that King and Prince of peace that lambe of God slaine from the beginning of the world to take away the sinne of the world which we confesse when we call him Christ and that vnto him
is giuen all power in heauen and in earth which we confesse when we call him Lord. If he therefore be with vs we neede not to feare who be against vs. For he is our God our Sauiour our Lord our Master our King our euerlasting high Priest I cannot prosecute either these or the rest of the points By these you will coniecture the rest and easily see the epitome of Christianitie concluded in this short salutation LECTVRE III. PHILIP 1. vers 3.4.5 I thanke my God hauing you in perfect memory c. NOw giue me leaue before I come to that which followeth to note one thing farther from the words already handled and that is the Apostles often vsing of the name of Iesus Christ in so few words Out of the abundance of his heart his mouth spake and still his mouth was filled with Iesus Christ Iesus Christ insomuch that three seuerall times still he ingeminates Iesus Christ Paul and Timothie the seruants of Iesus Christ to all the saints in Iesus Christ grace be with you and peace from God our Father and from the Lord Iesus Christ Which argueth that his comfort was in him that his loue was set on him and that he was vnto him as the spouse speaketh in the Canticles the chiefest of ten thousand Cant. 5.10 Hence then I obserue a rule whereby commonly to discerne what a man is his speach commonly bewraieth what he is The worldling his tongue is still talking of the world the couetous man of his money the voluptuous man of his pleasure the proud man of his rich attire the delicate man of his dainty fare the pot-companion of his cups and the like commonly talke most of the things they like best and by their talke commonly they may bee discerned what they are And in this respect as it is with them that set their affections on things which are on earth so is it with them that set their affections on the things which are aboue They are still talking of the word of their saluation of the commandements of the Lord of the mercies of the Lord and of the things that belong vnto their peace as Dauid professeth of himselfe saying Ps 101.1.119.13.15.145 5.35.28 My song shall be of mercy and iudgement with my lips doe I speake of all the iudgements of thy mouth I talke of thy commandments and haue respect vnto thy waies I will talke of thy worship ô Lord thy glory thy praise and wondrous workes my tongue shall be talking of thy righteousnesse all the day long and I will tell of thy saluation from day to day But of all other things their delight is in their hearts to muse and with their tongues to talke of Iesus Christ Here their hearts dance for ioy and the talking hereof is more sweet then hony and the hony-combe vnto their mouthes Hereon they loue as it were to dwell and their tongues can neuer be satisfied with talking on him And why here is their comfort here is their hope here is their loue here is their crowne of reioycing Here is their protector in all dangers their reconciler vnto God their mediator betweene God and them their Sauiour from their sinnes and he that is made of God vnto them wisdome and righteousnesse and sanctification and redemption Here is he in whom are hid all the treasures of wisdome and knowledge of mercy and loue in whom alone the father is well pleased And therefore here as men rauisht with ioy they cry and cry againe holy Iesus sweet Iesus blessed Iesus euen as we see the spouse in the Canticles not to leaue her bridegroome Christ Iesus after once shee catch hold of him but still cries O fountaine of the gardens O well of liuing waters Cant. 4.15.5.10.11 and of the springs of Lebanon My wellbeloued is white and ruddy the chiefest of ten thousand His head is as fine gold his locks curled and blacke as a rauen c. ad vers 17. Thus the children of God loue to talke of him whom their soule loueth and thus commonly a man may discerne who are saints in Christ Iesus Commonly I say not euermore certainely For if good speech and holy talke and crying Lord Lord and often vsing of the name of Iesus Christ were a perpetuall and certaine rule of a good Christian the dissembling hypocrite would be as good a Christian as the best And a hard matter it is not to be deceiued sometimes by the hypocrite But commonly I say a mans speach bewraieth what he is holy or profane The ground of which note is that saying of our Sauiour Mat. 12.34 that of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh and otherwise we cannot iudge whereon the heart thinketh but by that whereon the tongue runneth Hence then learne you beloued to make tryall vnto your selues and to giue tryall vnto others what yee are Your tongue and talke may tell your selues and doe tell others what yee are What is it whereon your tongues loue most to talke and wherein yee take most pleasure when yee talke Is it on the things which are on earth It may be a token vnto your selues and others that yee are earthly minded Is it on the things which are aboue It may be a token vnto your selues and others that your conversation is in heauen If yee loue Christ Iesus if yee take comfort in Christ Iesus your tongues will be talking of Iesus Christ and your hearts will reioyce when your tongues are talking of him As therefore the Apostle exhorteth the Colossians so doe I you Let your speach be gracious alwaies Col. 4.6 and powdred with salt Let the mercies which yee haue in Christ Iesus be so sweet and comfortable vnto you that your hearts may delight alwaies to muse and your tongues alwaies to talke of Christ Iesus Let him be hid in your heart let him breake out in your tongue and let him reioyce both the heart and the tongue that so yee may haue testimonie within your selues and giue testimonie vnto others that yee are Saints in Christ Iesus Now proceede we to that which followeth I thanke my God After the inscription and salutation now followeth the body of the Epistle it selfe wherein the principall scope and drift of the Apostle is to confirme the Philippians in the truth wherein they stood that they might not onely not decrease but increase in all knowledge and in all iudgement In this exordium or beginning of his Epistle which is from verse 3. to 12. to testifie his loue toward the Philippians that so they might the rather hearken vnto him 1. he signifieth his reioycing on their behalfe for the grace of God already bestowed on them 2. he signifieth his assured hope of Gods farther mercy towards them in performing the good worke which he had begun in them 3. he prayeth for their perseuerance increase in all knowledge and in all godlines His reioycing on their behalfe he signifieth 1. in his giuing of
therefore by Dauid the Lord saith Psal 50.23 who so offereth me thanks and praise he honoreth me euen with most excellent honor Let vs therefore clense our selues from this sinne of vnthankfullnesse Phil. 4.6 and let as the Apostle exhorteth our requests be shewed vnto God in prayer and supplication with giuing of thanks The fouler that the sinne of vnthankfulnesse is let vs the more detest it and the more requisite that thanksgiuing vnto God is let vs the more abound therein Let vs follow the counsell of the Apostle and walke in Christ Iesus rooted and built in him and stablished in the faith Col. 2.6 7. as we haue been taught abounding therein with thanksgiuing The second thing which here I note is the cause of the Apostles thanksgiuing vnto God which is because of the fellowship which they had in the gospell from the first day vntill then 1. because they as other Churches had receiued the gospell whereby they had fellowship with the Father and the Sonne and because they had continued in the truth from the first day of their conuersion vnto Christ by the worke of his ministerie vnto now that he wrote vnto them Whence I obserue a principall matter of our thanksgiuing vnto God a principall cause why we should vpon the blessing bestowed vpon vs giue thanks vnto God for it In all things indeed is matter of our thanksgiuing vnto God for euery good giuing and euery perfit gift is from aboue Jam. 1.17 and commeth downe from the father of lights c. He created vs formed vs and made vs and that in his owne image in him we liue moue and haue our being he giueth health wealth peace liberty foode rayment he sendeth raine from heauen and fruitfull seasons deliuereth in all dangers comforteth in all troubles helpeth in all needs blesseth the worke of our hands and filleth vs with plenteousnesse of all good things And for all these we should and haue great cause from day to day to tell out his praises with gladnes and to offer vnto him the sacrifice of praise thanksgiuing But yet is a more principall matter behind which is the fellowship which wee haue with other reformed Churches in the gospell of Iesus Christ and the continuance thereof so long time amongst vs the preaching of the word of our saluation amongst vs and the blessed increase thereof vnder a most gracious gouernment Here is indeed principall cause of reioycing and thanksgiuing for by our fellowship which we haue with other Churches in the gospell we haue fellowship with the Father and with his sonne Iesus Christ as Iohn witnesseth saying that which we haue seene and heard to wit the gospell 1 Joh. 1.3 declare we vnto you that yee may also haue fellowship with vs and that our fellowship also may be with the Father and with his sonne Iesus Christ By our fellowship in the gospell we are called out of darknes into his marueilous light and we which in time past were not a people are now the people of God 1 Pet. 2.9 10. and we which in time past were not vnder mercy haue now obteined mercy as Peter witnesseth By our fellowship in the gospell we are borne againe not of mortall seede 1 Pet. 1.3.23 but of immortall and are begotten vnto a liuely hope in Christ Iesus as the same Peter witnesseth And by our fellowship in the gospell 2 Tim. 3.15 we are made wise vnto saluation through the faith which we haue in Christ Iesus as witnesseth our Apostle O blessed fellowship in the gospell whereby we are made wise vnto saluation whereby we are regenerate and begotten vnto a liuely hope in Christ Iesus whereby we are called out of darknes into light and of no people made the people of God and whereby wee haue fellowship with Christ Iesus which is the great end of the ministery of the gospell that we may haue fellowship with him and walke in the light as he is in the light Againe the continuance of our fellowship in the gospell from the first day of her Maiesties most gracious gouernment ouer vs vnto now our pereseuerance in the truth without being remoued away vnto another gospell which is not another gospell saue that there be some which trouble you and intrude to peruert the gospell of Christ what a principall blessing is this of our good God vnto vs Surely these are such blessings as may well make vs breake out into exclamation with Dauid and say Psal 116.12 13 17. What shall I render vnto the Lord for these his great mercies towards me I will receiue the cup of saluation and call vpon the name of the Lord. I will offer a sacrifice of thanks-giuing will call vpon the name of the Lord. This was Dauids resolution vpon deliuerance from dangers by Saul and much more vpon such blessings as these haue we iust cause of such resolution God being principally in this soft and still voice of the gospell Haue we then such principall cause of thanksgiuing vnto our God for the fellowship which wee haue with other Churches in the gospell and for the continuance of this fellowship from the first day vnto now euen these forty yeares This then 1. should teach vs willingly and gladly to embrace the gospell of Iesus Christ when it is brought vnto vs. For if there be such cause of thanksgiuing vnto God for it being had then surely is there great cause of gladly embracing it when it may be had And yet what dullnesse and slacknes and coldnes herein In this congregation how is it embraced I beare you record some of you that yee doe embrace it willingly and gladly and I assure my selfe that from your hearts you thanke your God for it But others there are that seldome or neuer come vnto the hearing of it others that when they should heare it turne their backs and depart away from the hearing of it others that heare it sleepingly or coldly so that either it enters not in or quickly after is choked by the cares of this world Do these thanke God for the fellowship which they haue with others in the gospell Nay they haue none and some of them will haue no fellowship with others therein and therefore vnlesse at length they take hold of the grace that is offered them they shall haue no fellowship with the Father or with Iesus Christ his sonne As for you beloued that gladly embrace the gospell of your saluation hold on your good course thirst after it as the Hart doth after the water brooks frequent the places where yee may heare it lay it vp in your hearts that yee may not sinne against the Lord and let your mouthes be euer filled with praises thanksgiuing to God for it Secondly this should teach vs to labour by all holy meanes to continue in the grace and in the truth wherein we stand vnto the end For if it should so principally cause in vs
to be separated from Christ for their sakes Hee saw and knew what was best for himselfe euen that he should abide in the vine whereinto he was ingrafted Yet as a man forgetting or not regarding that which was best for himself he lookt so much vnto the good of his brethren that hee brake out and said Rom. 9.3 I would wish my selfe separated from Christ for my brethren that are my kinsmen according to the flesh And so should it be euen with all of vs wee should not alwaies looke what is best for our selues but also what is most meete and needfull for Gods glory And though as we heard before it were farre better for vs to bee loosed and to be with Christ in respect of our selues then liue in the body yet are we also to looke what is more needfull for Gods glorie and if to liue in the body bee more requisite and needefull for Gods glorie then are wee to desire to be in the body Good for the Church and good for the common-wealth it would bee if men could thus frame their desires not alwaies to runne vpon that which is best for themselues but that which is most for Gods glory and for the good of our brethren For why is it that in Church and in Common-weale things are so farre amisse as they are Wee complaine much and ô things were neuer so badde neuer so much amisse in Church or in Common-weale And where is the cause Euen within our selues Few such parents as was Abraham few such magistrates as was Moses few such ministers as was Paul that so bridle their desires that they preferre Gods glory and the publike good before their owne good The minister now can see and say this were more needfull for the Church but this is better for me more ease for me more commodious for me more pleasant vnto me and blame me not if I most respect that which is best for my selfe indeed the worst for himselfe but the best in his corrupt account The magistrate likewise now can say this and this indeed were best of all for the common good neuerthelesse this is better for mee and neere is my coate but neerer is my shirt and I count him a very foole that is not chiefely wise for himselfe Parents likewise now can say to bestow some of my goods and substance thus and thus were most indeed for Gods glory and for the good of many of Gods children neuerthelesse is more needfull for my children and no man may blame mee if they be the dearest vnto mee if what I haue I keepe for them And thus our desires are carried cleane otherwise then were our Apostles He much desired his owne priuate good but more the glorie of God and the good of others We much desire the glory of God and the good of others shall I say so I wish it might be truely said of many mo that it is but be it so we much desire the glorie of God and the good of others but more our owne priuate good more that which we count best for vs. If then we will haue such things as are amisse in Church and Common-weale amended Minister and Magistrate and all of vs must reforme our desires Howsoeuer this or that were best for the Minister in respect of himselfe yet must hee looke vnto that which is more needful for Gods glorie and the good of his Church and set his desires vpon that Howsoeuer this or that were best for the Magistrate in respect of himselfe yet must hee looke vnto that which is more needfull for Gods glorie and the good of the Common-weale and set his desires vpon that Howsoeuer this or that might be best of all for vs in respect of our selues yet if another thing be more needefull for Gods glorie and the good of others we must looke vnto that and set our desires on that Phil. 2.4 Looke not euery man saith our Apostle on his owne things but euery man also on the things of other men Let vs beloued both Minister and Magistrate and all of vs thus doe and whatsoeuer is most for Gods glorie and for the good of his Church let vs most set our desires on that LECTVRE XX. PHILIP 1. Verse 24. Neuerthelesse to abide in the flesh is more needfull for you 25. And this I am sure of that I shall abide and with you all continue for the furtherance and ioy of your faith 26. That you may more abundantly reioyce in Iesus Christ for me by my comming to you againe ANother thing yet there is which here is to be noted and that is that the Apostle saith that it is more needefull for the Philippians that he liue longer then that hee bee loosed Whence I obserue that the long life of the faith full Pastor is very needefull for the Church and the blessing of God vpon it A plaine proofe whereof we haue in the example of Iehoida touching whom it is said 2 Cron. 24.2.17 That Ioash did vprightly in the fight of the Lord all the dayes of Iehoiada the Priest But after the death of Iehoiada came the Princes of Iudah and did reuerence to the King and the King hearkened vnto them and they left the house of the God of their Fathers and serued groues and idols What a blessing of the Lord was here vpon Ioash the King of Iudah and vpon all Iudah by the life of Iehoiada the Priest So long as hee liued Ioash did that which was good in the sight of the Lord and Iudah walked in the waies of the Lord but when hee was dead then Ioash the King and Iudah with him reuolted from the true seruice of the Lord and fell vnto idolatry And therefore the Lord purposing to visite the iniquities of Iudah Psay 3 2. and Hierusalem vpon them threateneth to take away from them the Iudge and the Prophet that is the Magistrate and the Minister as if he should haue said that he would roote out all ciuill gouernment and all ecclesiasticall discipline from amongst them and bring an vtter confusion and desolation vpon them Is it then a plague of GOD vpon a land to take away their Prophets and their Teachers And is it a visitation of the peoples sinnes vpon them By this then ye see that the continuance of the Pastors life among the people is the blessing of the Lord vpon the people I meane the continuance of the good and faithfull Pastors life For otherwise if the Pastor be an idle sheepe-heard one that despiseth his flocke one that cannot or will not feed the tender Lambes of Christ Iesus leade them forth vnto greene pastures and vnto the soft running waters then surely it is a great blessing of the Lord to deliuer the sheepe from such a sheep-heard to cut him off from feeding his people And therfore the Lord promising in mercie to visite his dispersed flocke speaketh thus vnto them by his Prophet Behold Ezec. 34.10 I come against
good and so may he ioy in the continuance of his life i● he looke vnto the end wherefore it is continued Whatsoeuer therefore we be let vs remember that we are to liue vnto him that hath called vs out of darknes into light and in whatsoeuer perill our life is preserued let vs remember that it is continued for the glory of God and the good of our ●rethren And as we are by our calling Ministers or others ● let vs labour that our abode in the flesh and continuance ● life may be to the furtherance and ioy and comfort of ●ur brethren in euery thing that is good And let this bee ●oken touching the end wherefore the life of Christians in ●enerall and of Ministers in particular is preserued and ●ontinued viz. for the glory of God and the good of his Church Which as it serueth for the instruction of all to ●each vs euer to looke vnto the end wherefore our life is ●ontinued vpon earth so for the reproofe of such as whose ●●fe doth no good and for the comfort of such whose life ●rues for the good of the Church Now followeth the other end wherefore the Apostle ●ith he should abide and with them all continue viz. that ●hey seeing the mightie power of Christ Iesus in deliuering ●im from the mouth of the Lion from the crueltie of Nero ●ight more abundantly reioyce in him in whom already ●hey d●d reioyce for sauing him from death and bringing ●im againe vnto them Whence first I doe obserue the great ●eioycing which ought to be in the people for their Pastors ●eliuerance out of perill and for the continuance of his life ●mongst them their ioy should euen abound in Christ Ie●us as in his great blessing and mercy vpon them So wee ●eade that when Peter was deliuered out of prison by an Angell there was great ioy among the Christians which were ●ssembled in the house of Mary Iohn Marke his mother Act. 12.12 ●nsomuch that it is said of the maid that came to the doore when Peter knocked at the entrie doore 14. that she opened not the entrie doore for gladnesse as one so surprised with ioy that ●he could not rest till she had told it and when the doore was opened and the rest saw it is said of them 16 that they were astonied partly through wondering at and partly ●hrough reioycing for his deliuerance And so should they that are taught in the word abundantly reioyce when their Teacher is freed from trouble or danger and his life or libertie is continued vnto them for whether it be life or libertie that is granted vnto him it is for their sakes o●● whom the Lord hath made him ouerseer and there●●●● they are to honour him and to reioyce for him as p●●●ued for them and the furtherance of their faith Such then as grieue at the life or libertie of their faithfull Pastors such as practise what possibly they can against the life and libertie of their godly Teachers such as wash and watch euery aduantage against them to get their mouths stopt or depriued of their ministerie such as reioyce in their trouble imprisonment or banishment let such I say and all such like looke vnto it whether they belong to the sheepe-fold of Christ Iesus Luk. 10.16 He that heareth you beareth a● saith our Sauiour Christ and he that despiseth you des●●● mee To refuse then to heare the Ministers of Iesus Christ is much because it is to refuse to heare Iesus Christ likewise to despise the Ministers of Iesus Christ is very much because it is to despise Iesus Christ but what then is it ●o practise mischiefe against the Ministers of Iesus Christ 〈◊〉 reioyce in the losse of their life or libertie and to band men selues against them Surely this is plainly to bewray themselues not to belong to Christ Iesus As for vs if wee will know that wee belong vnto Christ Iesus let vs reioyce in the life and libertie of our faithful● Teachers The life and libertie of Gods faithfull Minister cause ioy in the hearts of them that belong vnto the Lo●● Let vs therefore by this token discerne what we are good or bad Gospellers The second thing which hence I obserue is the effect which the examples of the power and goodnesse of Christ Iesus in the deliuerance of his Saints out of their troubles ought to worke in vs such examples should confirme vs daily more and more in that reioycing which wee haue 〈◊〉 Christ Iesus For when we plainly see as in a spectacle before our eyes by the deliuerance of his Saints out of their troubles that our King and our Sauiour beholdeth vs from his holy heauens lookes vpon our sufferings our wrongs takes our matters into his owne hands auengeth vs of o● enemies and deliuers vs out of the will of them that hate 〈◊〉 this should adde much vnto that reioycing which before ●ee had and cause vs farre more abundantly to reioyce in ●hrist Iesus because thus wee see that which before we be●●eued that our King liueth and raigneth and hath all ●●wer giuen vnto him both in heauen and in earth But how little such examples worke with vs doth ap●eare by our little reioycing in Christ Iesus All our reioy●ng is in the vanities and pleasures and fooleries of this ●●e neither doe wee euer vouchsafe to consider the power ●●d the mercy which the Lord sheweth in his Saints And ●●erefore wee reioyce not as wee should but as wee should ●ot O let vs consider the great things which our Iesus hath ●one and still doth for vs. Let vs not be so negligent as to ●asse ouer or to forget the things wherein hee sheweth his ●ower and his mercy towards his Saints but let vs religi●usly regard and remember them that so we may haue our ●eioycing in Christ Iesus LECTVRE XXI PHILIP 1. Verse 27. Onely let your conuersation bee as it becommeth the Gospell of Christ that whether I come and see you or else be absent I may heare of your matters that yee continue in one spirit and in one minde fighting together through the faith of the Gospell HI●herto wee haue heard the Apostle his Exordium and his Narration Now that which followeth both in this chapter and in the rest of this Epistle is for the most part matter of exhortation A little in the third chapter hee furnisheth them with matter of doctrine against certaine false Teachers which were crept in amongst them But because they were well grounde●● the truth by his ministerie and Apostleship the spe●● thing wherein the rest of this Epistle is spent is exhorta●●● vnto a Christian life In this remainder of this chapter 〈◊〉 the Apostle setteth downe that generall exhortation vn●● Christian life which is indeed the great and maine exhortation whereof all the rest are but branches and secondly 〈◊〉 insisteth particularly in some of those things wherein th● life whereunto he exhorteth consisteth His generall exhortation is generally
shall also raigne with Christ That persecution then causeth perdition to the aduersaries and saluation vnto vs it is of God who in iustice rendreth vnto them as they haue deserued and for his promise sake rendreth vnto vs as he hath promised For this yee must here note and vnderstand that persecutions afflictions sufferings and wrongs by aduersaries are in themselues and in their owne nature punishments of sinne as is also death and hereby God in iustice might punish our sinnes and our iniquities for if hee should bring vpon vs the bloudy persecutions of such Tyrants as were Nero Domitian and the rest of those cruell persecutors in the Primitiue Church he might thus plague vs for our offences and himselfe be iust in all his wayes and holy in all his workes But vnto vs his beloued ones and his redeemed these things are not that which in themselues and in their owne nature they are and which in Gods iustice they might be vnto vs euen punishments of our sinnes but onely fatherly corrections and louing chastisements whereby in mercy God exerciseth vs represseth sinne in vs and bowlteth the branne of corruption out of vs here in the body of this flesh And as vnto vs in mercy death is made of God not that which in it owne nature it is a punishment of sinne but an entrance and passage vnto life so in mercy hath hee promised that afflictions persecutions and the like shall be vnto vs not that which in their owne nature are the beginnings of greater miseries but fore-runners of our saluation in the day of Christ Iesus It is not then of the nature of suffering persecution yee see but it is of God that persecution betokeneth vnto vs saluation that saluation is recompenced vnto vs which are troubled He in mercy hath promised that so it shall be and therefore so it shall be and it is a righteous thing with him that it be so The vse which our Apostle here teacheth vs to make hereof is as of the former not to feare persecution by the aduersaries which oppose themselues against the truth and against vs for the truths sake for seeing God turneth their persecution and rage against vs to their perdition and to our saluation why should wee feare them Whatsoeuer therefore they practise against vs let vs rest and repose our selues in our God He shall stretch out his hand vpon the furiousnes of our enemies but his right hand shall saue vs he shall recompense the aduersaries their wickednes and destroy them in their owne malice but hee shall wipe all teares from our eyes and after wee haue drunke of the brooke in the way lift vp our head aboue all our aduersaries Againe is it of God that persecution causeth vnto vs saluation This then may farther teach vs that by suffering persecution we doe not merit saluation For if it be of merit that our sufferings bring saluation vnto vs then it is not of God but the cause is in our selues and if it be of God then is it not of merit nor is the cause of our saluation in our selues Not according to the workes which we doe or sufferings which we suffer but according to his mercy he saueth vs for neither haue we wherein to reioyce by works nor are any sufferings of this present time worthy of that glory which shall be shewed vnto vs nor is there any other name vnder heauen whereby we may be saued but onely by the name of Christ Iesus He that reioyceth therefore let him reioyce in the Lord of whom it is that our persecutions and sufferings worke vnto our saluation And let this bee spoken of this third motiue or reason whereby yee see that we are not to feare the aduersaries because God recompenseth their persecution vnto them with perditi●n and vnto vs with saluation It followeth For vnto you it is giuen c. These words are both a proofe of that which went immediatly before and a fourth motiue likewise to perswade the Apostles former intendment Immediatly before he had said that God in persecution gaue them a token of their saluation The proofe here is Vnto you it is giuen of God by grace to suffer for Christ his sake therefore in suffering God giueth you a token of your saluation or thus sufferings for Christ are testimonies of grace vnto you of God therefore they are arguments and tokens of saluation vnto you of God And as thus these words serue for proofe of that so are they a notable motiue to perswade the Philippians not to feare the aduersaries for thus out of the Apostles words I frame the motiue Who will be afraid of a singular gift of God but to suffer for Christ his sake is a singular gift of God to you therefore yee are not to feare persecution by the aduersaries And that to suffer for Christ his sake is a gift of God hee sheweth à pari from the like as to beleeue in Christ is the gift of God so to suffer for Christ both gifts of God and vnto whom the one is giuen the other may not seeme strange For vnto you it is giuen to wit by grace for so the word signifieth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for ●hrist that is in Christ his cause not only that yee should beleeue in him as others professe they doe but also to suffer for his sake which many others shrinke to doe Euen both these faith in Christ and persecution for Christ his sake are the gift and grace of God towards you Here then first I note that the Apostle saith it was giuen by grace vnto the Philippians to beleeue in Christ Whence I obserue that faith in Christ is the gift of God by grace Which also Christ himselfe teacheth vs where he saith No man can come vnto me except it be giuen him of my Father Joh. 6.65 Whereby hee meaneth that no man can come vnto him that is can beleeue in him and his Gospell except it be giuen him of his Father For so by comming vnto him diuers times in that chapter is meant beleeuing in him a● when it is said He that commeth vnto me shall not hunger and he that beleeueth in me which expoundeth the former 35. shall neuer thirst and againe Him that commeth vnto me I cast not away which is all one with that 37. He that beleeueth in me shall not perish So that it is cleare that when our Sauiour saith that no man can come vnto him except it be giuen him of the Father the meaning is that no man can beleeue in Christ except it be giuen him of God And to the Hebrues Christ Iesus is called the author and finisher of our faith Heb. 12.2 And wherefore was it that when Christ preached and when his Apostles and Disciples preached some beleeued and others beleeued not but because vnto some he gaue grace to beleeue and not vnto others For only they vnto whom it is giuen of God to beleeue doe
but in his sufferings he was patient and constant nei●her for bonds nor imprisonment nor feare of death shrunk ●●om the profession of his hope This was his fight and ●hus he ouercame Hence then 1. I obserue that it is no light matter to en●ure the crosse for Christ his sake but it is a fight with the ●duersarie euen a round trying of the masterie who shall ●uercome Now in this fight the fielde is wonne and the masterie got if we patiently constantly endure the crosse ●et vs therefore stand fast that at the last we may say with ●he Apostle I haue fought a good fight 2. Hence I obserue that the example of Gods Saints that ●aue suffered before vs should encourage vs gladly to suffer ●or Christ his sake And therfore our Sauiour encourageth his Disciples against persecution thus saying so persecuted ●hey the Prophets which were before you And againe If the world hate you ye know that it hated me before you And again Take the Prophets saith Iames for an example of suffering aduersitie and of long patience As therefore we haue the holy men of God for an example let vs gladly suffer for Christ his sake and in nothing feare the aduersaries 3. Hence I obserue that the Pastors ought to be vnto their flockes examples as of other good things so of patience and constancie in suffering for Christ his sake 4 That great and long crosses may lie vpon them when God loues most as here on Paul on the Israelites 400 yeeres in EGYPT on Abraham in his barennesse Laus omnis soli Deo THE SECOND CHAPTER LECTVRE XXIV PHILIP 2. Verse 1. If there be therefore any consolation in Christ if any comfort of loue if any fellowship of the spirit if any compassion and mercy 2. Fulfill my ioy that yee be like minded hauing the same loue being of one accord and of one iudgement THE Apostle hauing in the former chapter exhorted the Philippians generally vnto such a conuersation as becommeth the Gospell of Christ and hauing particularly instanced in some of those points wherein such a conuersation consisteth now in this chapter hee instanceth in some other points wherein such a conuersation consisteth as namely in concord loue and humilitie and most earnestly exhorteth the Philippians and in them vs vnto these most necessarie vertues and graces of a Christian life and conversation In the words I note 1. the manner 2. the matter of the Apostles exhortation The manner how the Apostle exhorteth the Philippians is by way of request as we say for all the loues vnder heauen in the first verse in these words If there be therefore c. Wherein the Apostle coucheth 4. very patheticall arguments to perswade the things whervnto he exhorteth them are inferred as ye see vpon the words before as if he should haue said your selues haue seene what I suffered at Philippi for Christ his sake what fighting I had there and now yee heare what I suffer at Rome for Christ his sake what fighting I haue here If therefore c. The first argument is If there be any consolation in Christ that is if by my ministerie and Apostleship ye haue any comfort in Christ Iesus then fulfill my ioy that yee be like minded c. as if he should haue said now shew whether yee haue receiued any consolation in Christ Iesus by the worke of my ministerie If yee haue receiued any let me haue some backe againe from you fulfill my ioy c. The second argument is if there be any comfort of loue that is if you so loue me that yee desire any comfort in these my bands for the defence of the Gospell then fulfill my ioy c. as if he should haue said I loue you from the very heart roote in Iesus Christ now shew whether yee so loue me that indeed yee desire my comfort in my bands and imprisonment And if yee doe so loue me then fulfill my ioy c. The third argument is If there be any fellowship of the spirit that is if yee be knit together in the bond of one spirit with me and amongst your selues then fulfill my ioy c. as if hee should haue said Men that are knit together in the bond of one spirit are to giue proofe thereof by concord loue and agreement amongst themselues now then shew whether yee be knit together in the bond of one spirit with me amongst your selues And if yee be so knit together then fulfill my ioy c. The fourth argument is if there be any compassion and mercy that is if ye haue any bowels of compassion to shew any mercie to me the Lord his prisoner for your sake then fulfill my ioy c. as if he should haue said Now shew what bowels of compassion there are in you what mercy you haue on me the prisoner of Iesus Christ for your sake And if there bee any bowels of compassion in you any mercy towards me then fulfill my ioy c. What more patheticall to moue more forcible to perswade then these arguments so closely followed and so passionately vrged All such and in such sort pressed that the manner of the Apostles exhortation could not be deuised more effectuall to perswade the things which now his hearts desire was to perswade Now the matter of the Apostles exhortation is partly touching graces which he wisheth them to follow after and partly touching faults which hee wisheth them to bee free from The graces which he wisheth them to follow after in this second verse are set downe first in generall and then in speciall In generall he exhorteth them that they be like minded or as it is translated elsewhere that they be like affectioned Rom. 12.16 hauing their affections likings and desires set on the same things Which his exhortation is not simply so that they be like minded but with another prefixed motiue as I take it therevnto fulfill my ioy that yee be like minded Which is as if he should haue said I ioy in the fellowship which yee haue in the Gospell from the first day vnto now I ioy in your constant abiding in the truth in such assaults by the aduersaries of the truth I ioy in your liberalitie sent vnto me whereby yee communicated to mine afflictions I ioy in very many mercies and graces of God bestowed vpon you in Christ Iesus But yet my ioy is not full so long as I heare of any contentions emulations and distractions among you my ioy is not full If therefore there be any consolation in Christ c fulfill my ioy make full my ioy and so shall yee make full my ioyt if yee be like minded like affectioned one towards another So that yee see the exhortation is not simply proposed but with this motiue prefixed therevnto my ioy is not full except yee be like minded fulfill my ioy that ye be like minded This is the generall vertue whereto he exhorteth them The speciall vertues comprised vnder
which is his body 2. When ●e saith that at the name c. Whereby is meant that God ●ath made all things subiect vnder his feete and that all crea●res shall confesse that Iesus Christ is the Lord vnto the glo●●e of God the Father It is then as if the Apostle had thus ●●d Christ when he was God humbled himselfe to be man ●nd being God and man he humbled himselfe and became o●edient vnto the death for vs therefore God hath highly ex●lted him that thus humbled himselfe and hath crowned him ●n the heauenly places with glory and honour farre aboue all ●rincipalitie and power and might and domination and e●ery name that is named so that all creatures now doe and ●hall cast downe their crownes and fall downe before him ●nd say praise and honour and glorie be vnto him that set●eth vpon the throne and vnto the lambe for euermore And ●et this be spoken touching the order and the meaning of ●hese words in generall Now let vs a little looke vnto the ●enerall scope of them and see what lessons we may learne ●rom them Wherefore God hath c. The generall scope and drift of ●he Apostle in these 3. verses is by the consequent and good ●nto which God giueth vnto humility further to perswade vs ●nto humilitie and lowlinesse of minde that so if the exam●le of Christ his humiliation cannot preuaile with vs to moue vs vnto humilitie yet the excellencie of that dignity where●nto he was exalted after and for his great humility may per●wade vs thereunto Whence I gather these three obseruati●ns for our instruction 1. Hence I note the gracious goodnesse of our mercifull God who seeketh euery way to win vs vnto that which he requireth of vs. Somtimes he threatneth that so for feare of 〈◊〉 iudgments we may walk in the law that he hath appointed for vs sometimes he punisheth for that in our affliction we see●● him diligently as the Prophet Hosea speaketh somtimes 〈◊〉 promiseth Hos 5.15 2 Pet. 1.4 that by his promises we may be partakers of the d●uine nature as Peter speaks 1. that so we may be drawn from the corruptions which are in the world through lust as the same Apostle there expoundeth himself In this place hauing press●● vs with the example of Christ his humiliation vnto humility he setteth downe the excellencie of that dignitie whereunto Christ was exalted after his humiliation that so seeing the reward or at least the consequence which followeth humilitie we may embrace this holy vertue which hee requireth of vs. A man would haue thought that this should haue beene enough to perswade vs to set before vs the example of Christ Iesus And we when we haue vsed any reason to such or such purpose we thinke we haue done well and bidde him whom we speake vnto looke to the afterclappes if he hearken not vnto vs. But such is the mercy of our good God that hee leaues not with a little but he heapeth reason vpon reason and addeth motiue vnto motiue and rather then he will not preuaile with vs he will doe with vs as we do with little children by most great and precious promises hee will perswade vs vnto that he requireth of vs. O let vs take heede how we hearke● not vnto the voice of so good and gracious a God! 2. Hence I note the dulnesse of our mindes vnto euery good motion of the spirit vnlesse the Lord doe as it were draw vs with the cords of loue and euen force vs by multiplying his mercies towards vs. There must be precept vnto precept line vnto line reason vnto reason and after all this promise or hope of reward or else bee the motion neuer so good yet we will not hearken vnto it Vnto pride and vaine-glory vnto contention and oppressing one of an other wee runne apace and neede no spurre to set vs forward nay not any reason here shall rule vs but runne we will after our owne vnbridled affections But to preuaile with vs to put on tender mercie kindnesse meeknesse humblenesse of minde to perswade vs to be curteous one vnto an other and to submit ●●r selues one vnto an other there must be exhortation vpon ●●hortation the example of Christ Iesus must be proposed ●●to vs and besides all this there must bee certaine hope of ●●ory after humility and well if all this can perswade vs vnto ●●mblenesse and lowlinesse of minde Such is our backward●●sse and so slow are wee to hearken vnto the things that be●ng vnto our peace We should loue our God euen for him●●●fe because he is good and goodnesse it selfe wee should ●●epe his commandements because they are his and good ●●d righteous altogether we should embrace humilitie be●●use we should be conformable to the image of Christ Iesus ●ut to stirre vp our slacknes and dulnesse vnto these and the ●●e duties he hath giuen vs most great and precious promises ●●d assured vs that the performance of these duties shall not 〈◊〉 in vaine in the Lord. Let vs not still harden our hearts as 〈◊〉 the day of slaughter let vs not still stoppe our eares at the ●●ice of the Charmer charme hee neuer so wisely but if no●●ing else will preuaile with vs yet let his promises perswade ● vnto our duties and let the sure hope of glory stirre vs vp ●nto humility 3. Hence I note that the high-way to be exalted into glo●y is to decke our selues inwardly with lowlinesse of minde Which is not only prooued by this example of our Sauiour ●●e consequent of whose humility was an eternall weight of ●lory as here we see but by many other places of Scripture ●oe Our Sauiour Christ saith Whosoeuer exalteth himselfe ●●all be brought lowe and whosoeuer humbleth himselfe shall be ex●lted Salomon saith the reward of humility and the feare of God Pro. 22.4 ●●riches and glorie and life And in an other place the feare of ●he Lord is the instruction of wisedome 15.33 and before honour goeth ●umilitie The reason is giuen by the same Salomon in an other ●rouerbe where hee thus saith 3.34 with the scornefull the Lord ●corneth but he giueth grace vnto the humble which the Apostles Paul Peter and Iames doth thus read God resisteth the proud ●nd giueth grace to the humble How humble and lowly min●●led Dauid and Salomon were the Scriptures do witnesse as al●o how high the Lord exalted the throne of their glorie The like might be said of many others mentioned in holy Scriptures which I willingly now passe ouer because I haue her●tofore pressed this point Only in a word with Saint Iames ● exhort you to cast your selues downe before the Lord and hee sha●● lift you vp Pro. 29.23 The pride of a man shall bring him lowe but the humble in spirit shall enioy glory Swell not therefore with pride one against an other whatsoeuer blessings you haue of wisedome wealth or honour one aboue an other Let nothing be don● among you
But we see he vsed no such speech but as it pleased the Lord to vse these meanes in restoring him to health so he with all thankfulnes vsed the meanes and was restored vnto health Let vs therefore know that it is the Lord onely that deliuereth from death and restoreth vnto life and health and that this he doth sometimes without meanes and most commonly by meanes Let vs therefore in the bed of our sicknesse call vpon the Lord and let vs not neglect the meanes which he hath ordeined for the recouerie of our health Let vs onely trust in the Lord and let vs know that if the meanes be helpfull vnto vs it is because of the Lord his blessing vpon them He blesseth the meanes and therefore we are healed by the meanes so that he healeth and therefore we are healed Now what is the cause wherefore the Lord hauing visited vs with sicknesse doth againe raise vs from the bed of our sicknesse and restore vs vnto health This is not for any thing in our selues but for his owne mercies sake as the Apostle plainely sheweth when he saith but God had mercy on him for it is as if he had said but God for his mercies sake restored him vnto health Whence I gather this note that restoring vnto health is a mercy of the Lord. Which is farther proued vnto vs by that song or psalme of thanksgiuing which Ezechias made after his restoring vnto health where he saith Esay 38.17 Behold for felicitie I had bitter griefe but it was thy pleasure to deliuer my soule from the pit of corruption It was thy pleasure or it was thy loue to deliuer my soule c where that is ascribed to Gods loue whence his mercy floweth which in our Apostle is ascribed vnto Gods mercy So that restoring vnto health is a louing mercy of the Lord. What shall we say then When wicked and vngodly men are restored vnto health is this a louing mercy of the Lord towards them Yes surely ●or albeit so their sinne and consequently their iudgement be increased yet this not comming from this mercy of lengthning their daies but from their owne corrupt nature we are to account that health and life and wealth and whatsoeuer else they haue are temporall mercies of the Lord vpon them Howbeit the mercies of the Lord in restoring his children vnto health and in restoring the wicked vnto health are much different His mercy wherein he restoreth the wicked vnto health is a generall mercy whereby he taketh pitie vpon all men proceeding from such a loue as whereby he maketh his sunne to arise on the euill and the good and sendeth raine on the iust and vniust But his mercy wherein he restoreth his children vnto health is a speciall mercy whereby he taketh pitie vpon his children proceeding from that loue wherewithall he loueth vs in Christ Iesus by that the wicked are only restored vnto bodily health by this the children of God are so restored vnto bodily health that farther in soule they are more quickned then before by that the iudgement of the wicked is increased for that they abuse their health whereunto in mercy they are restored vnto the dishonor of God by this Gods name is more glorified in his children for that they vse their health whereunto in mercy they are restored to the praise of the glory of Gods grace In a word by that the wicked are made more inexcusable by this the children of God are made more fruitfull in good works and more assured of Gods loue Albeit then it be a mercy of the Lord both to the godly and likewise to the vngodly that they are restored vnto health for that the Lord might in iustice haue suffered his rod to lie longer vpon them if he had dealt with them in weight and measure yet is it such a speciall mercy proceeding from such a speciall loue which hee vouchsafeth vnto his children in restoring them to health as that the wicked and vngodly haue no part or portion at all therein Is it then such a speciall mercy vnto Gods children that they are restored vnto health Were not death rather a speciall mercy of the Lord vnto them or had not death then beene a speciall mercy unto Epaphroditus Surely it cannot be denied but that it is a speciall mercy of the Lord vnto his children if when he hath exercised them with his rod and prepared them by sicknesse vnto himselfe he take them by death out of the miseries of this life and translate them into the kingdome of his Sonne Ap. 14.13 For so saith the Spirit Blessed are the dead that die in the Lord and why for they rest from their labours and their works follow them They rest from their labors What is that that is by death they are deliuered and freed from such griefes and sorowes and labours and troubles and reuilings and persecutions and hatreds and other manifold calamities wherevnto this life is subiect yea from that grieuious yoke and heauie bondage of sinne which made the Apostle to crie Rom. 7.24 O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer mee from the bodie of this death Againe their works followe them What is that That is their good deeds which they did in the the loue of God and in the loue of his truth after death acompanie them and they receiue that crowne of glory which the Lord in mercie hath promised to all them that loue and feare him walke in his waies So that whether we respect the end of wretched miseries or the perfect fruition of euerlasting happinesse which the children of God haue by death it cannot be denied but death is an especiall mercy of the Lord vnto them And in these respects death then had been a speciall mercy of the Lord vnto Epaphroditus and in these respects I doubt not it was that Paul desired in the former chapter to be dissolued and to be with Christ Phil. 1.23 euen that hee might bee freed from the miseries of this life and that hee might bee ioyned with his head Christ Iesus to raigne with him in his kingdome for euer in the time appointed of the Lord. But as death so likewise life and restoring vnto health is a speciall mercy of the Lord vnto his children because so they are made farther instruments of his glory who hath restored them vnto health For being restored vnto health both they consider the mercifull goodnes towards them and so breake out into his praises who hath done great things for them Esay 38.18 whereas the graue cannot confesse the Lord neither death can praise him but the liuing the liuing as saith Ezechias they confesse him and sing praises vnto his name againe being restored vnto health they consider that the Lord hath reserued them for his farther glory to be manifested in them or by them and therefore their studie and care is so to lead their liues as that Gods name may be glorified in
them and by them A good nature yee know reioyceth in euery opportunitie that is giuen him whereby he may shew himselfe thankfull and dutifull though it be to his trouble and cost Euen so the children of God though this life be full of trouble and griefe yet when their health is restored and their daies lengthned they reioyce in the opportunitie that God hath giuen them to doe good in the Church or in the common-weale and are carefull therein to shew themselues both thankfull and dutifull vnto their God For answer then vnto the point in man we are to consider briefly these two things the good of himselfe and the good of others vnto the glory of God In respect of the good of himselfe death is a speciall mercy of the Lord vnto euery childe of God because then they rest from their labours and their workes follow them And therefore the Apostle said it is best of all to be loosed and to be with Christ Phil. 1.23 But in respect of others and of the glory of God it is a speciall mercy of God vnto his children to be restored vnto health because so they are made farther instruments of his glory and of the good either of Church or of Common-wealth And therefore the Apostle addeth 24. neuerthelesse to abide in the flesh is more needfull for you Albeit then death had been a speciall mercy of the Lord vnto Epaphroditus in respect of the good of himselfe yet in respect of the Church at Philippi it was a speciall mercy of the Lord as our Apostle here saith that he was restored vnto health Neither yet would I so here be vnderstood as if I thought or taught that it is a speciall mercy of the Lord vnto his children to be restored vnto health onely in respect of the good of others and not at all in respect of the good of themselues for albeit death bee so a speciall mercy of God vnto them in respect of the good of themselues for that thereby they are freed from the troubles of this life and receiued into euerlasting ioy and blisse yet is health also and life a speciall mercy of the Lord vnto them euen in respect of the good of themselues because the oftener they passe through the fire the more they are purified and made the finer gold the more they are boulted and sifted the finer flower they will be Albeit therefore by life they haue moe troubles yet because by troubles they are made more glorious therefore is life and restoring vnto health a speciall mercy of God vnto his children not only in respect of others good but in respect also of the good of themselues Are then both death and recouerie of health speciall mercies of the Lord vnto his children If then we be the children of God let not our hearts be troubled nor feare in the bed of our sicknesse If it please the Lord by death then to cut off our dayes this let vs know that in mercy towards vs he doth it that so we may not see the euils that are to come that so we may haue rest from all our labours and from all the troubles of this life and that so wee may be euer with our head Christ Iesus and haue the full fruition of those ioyes which eye hath not seene neither eare hath heard nor hath entred into the heart of man to thinke of And againe if it please the Lord to restore vs vnto health let vs know that in mercy likewise he doth it that so we may confesse his name and sing praises vnto him in the land of the liuing that so wee may be further instruments of his glory in doing good vnto others either in in the Church or in the Common-wealth and that so being further tried wee may be further purified to returne as fine gold out of the fire Hath any of vs then cause to mourne for them that doe already sleepe in the Lord Let vs mourne but not as men without hope for the Lord hath had mercy on them and in his mercy towards them hath deliuered them out of prison into a most glorious libertie and hath brought them from a most troublesome sea of miseries vnto the most happy hauen of euerlasting blessednesse Againe hath any of vs beene restored from sicknesse vnto health Let vs remember that the Lord herein hath had mercy on vs as hee had on Epaphroditus For this mercy let vs shew our selues thankfull vnto the Lord and our thankfulnesse vnto the Lord let vs testifie vnto the world by walking worthy of this mercy He hath reserued vs vnto his further glory Let vs glorifie God both in our bodies and in our spirits for they are Gods Let vs be faithfully and painfully and carefully occupied in the workes of our calling whatsoeuer it be vnto the glory of our God And in particular as this time requireth as God hath had mercy on vs by restoring vs vnto health and bringing vs from the gates almost of death vnto life so let vs take pitie and compassion on our poore distressed brethren and by our morsels of bread and other releefe let vs saue their liues from death As our liues were precious in Gods sight so let their liues be precious in our sight who happily are as deare vnto God as wee are For know this that blessed are they that consider the poore and needie c. Psal 41.1.2.3 And not on him onely but on mee also Wee haue heard of Gods mercy on Epaphroditus in restoring him vnto health which was both a worke of the Lord and a worke wherein the Lord shewed his mercy on Epaphroditus Now see the riches and the bountifulnesse of Gods mercy herein for in restoring him vnto health Gods mercy was not shewed on him alone but on the Apostle Paul also The note which hence I gather is this that in the mercies of the Lord vpon his children there is oftentimes a blessing not for them alone in particular but for others of his children also So sometimes hee sheweth mercy on the childe and kee●●h him aliue for his parents sake to be their staffe of comfort in their old age and againe sometimes he sheweth mercy vpon parents and keepeth them aliue for their childrens sake to bring them vp in the feare of God and in the knowledge of his will So likewise sometimes he sheweth mercy on the Pastor and from sicknesse restoreth him to health for his peoples sake both that they may be kept safe from scattering by the Wolfe and that they may bee taught in the wayes of the Lord and againe sometimes he sheweth mercy on the people for their Pastors sake lest that punishment which should iustly light vpon them should bring too much sorrow vpon him So we reade that he shewed mercy vnto that good King Ezechias being sicke vnto death 2 Reg. 20.1 in restoring him vnto health neither vnto him alone 7. but euen therein likewise he shewed mercy vnto the
wee long not for his presence if he be absent generally wee sorow not for his sicknesse if he be sicke generally wee take no such pleasure either in his presence or in his life Nay rather if he be absent we will wish him farre enough and to tarie long enough and if he be sicke vnto death wee will reioyce and be glad at his death So farre short of these Philippians that were but newly planted in the Church and had but lately embraced the truth of Christ Iesus are wee who haue long enioyed the ministerie of the word and the bright light of the holy word of truth For so they accounted that the Apostle could not haue giuen a greater token of loue of them then to send their minister backe againe vnto them and it was the greatest pleasure and ioy of heart that might be vnto them to see their minister againe thorowly well and in good health And surely if we tooke that ioy and comfort in the word that we ought we would take more ioy and comfort in the Ministers of the word then we doe But how the Ministers of the word are to be accounted of we shall see in the handling of the next verse that followeth It now followeth And I might be the lesse sorowfull In these words the Apostle setteth downe a third cause or reason why hee sent their Minister vnto them with such diligence and speede And this cause respected himselfe For it was that hee might be the lesse sorowfull 1. That howsoeuer his sorowes after this should be some for some other things yet they might bee the ●esse when their ioyes were fulfilled by their Ministers presence and when their Minister should againe bee amongst them to labour amongst them In that then that the Apostle saith not and that I might be without sorow but onely and that I might be the lesse sorowfull Hence I gather this obseruation that the children of God are not much to hope nor greatly to seeke in this life to be quit and ridde of all sorow but it is enough for them if their sorowes be abated and if they haue lesse sorow then they deserue and then they are enabled to beare Ioh. 16.33 In the world saith our Sauiour ye shall haue affliction euen many-causes of sorow and griefe and vexation of spirit For so it is ordained that through many afflictions we should enter into the kingdome of God Act. 14.22 a● the Apostle saith And therefore our Sauiour Christ saith againe if any man will come after me let him denie himselfe Luc. 9.23 and take vp his crosse daily and follow mee Daily saith he For as one day followeth an other so one crosse followeth in the necke of an other Wee looke and hope for an holy citie Apoc. 21.4 the new Ierusalem where God shall wipe all teares from our eyes and where there shall be no more death neither sorow neither crying neither any more paine But that citie is not here on earth where we be but Pilgrimes it is in our Coun●rey in heauen where we shall haue an abiding citie where we shall be euer with the Lord. Nay if it were here on earth we would not long for that in heauen Let vs not therefore looke in this life to be without all trouble or sorow or griefe Let vs rather consider how in this life our whole life is stained with many sinnes and how for our sinnes wee haue deserued not only death euerlasting after this life but troubles also and sorowes vnsupportable in this life And then when we see that we are not onely freed from that death by the death of Iesus Christ and by saith in his name but that our sorowes in this life are much lesse then we deserue let vs reioyce in the Lord and comfort our selues in his mercies that our troubles and sorowes are nothing in comparison of that wee haue deserued And againe let vs consider that howsoeuer our troubles and sorowes and griefes be many yet so onely they presse vs as that we are able to say with the Apostle 2 Cor. 4 8.9 We are affected on euerie side yet are we not in distresse in pouertie but not ouercome of pouertie we are persecuted but not forsaken cast downe but wee perish not c. And then when we see that our troubles and sorowes and griefes are no more but such as the Lord hath enabled vs to beare let vs reioyce in the Lord and comfort ourselues in his mercies towards vs who doth not suffer vs to be tempted aboue that wee be able but giueth the issue together with the tentation that we may be able to beare it For surely these are great mercies of the Lord towards vs that our sorowes are so lessened and abated that they are neither such as we haue deserued neither such but that wee are able to beare them by the power of him who doth strengthen vs hereunto And therefore though in this life we be not quite free from all troubles and sorowes yet let vs account this a great mercie of the Lord vnto vs that wee are lesse sorowfull that our sorowes are lesse then the desert of our sins and lesse then he enableth vs to beare But how was it that the Apostle should be lesse sorowfull by sending their Minister Epaphroditus vnto them because by his presence they should haue occasion to reioyce For as by their heauinesse for their Minister his sorow was encreased so againe by their reioycing for their Minister his sorow would be abated Here then we may obserue another notable qualitie of Christian loue and friendshippe Rom. 12.15 which is to weepe with them that weepe and to reioyce with them that reioyce A rule which the Apostle giueth all Christians to obserue keep from which who so declineth may seem therin to crosse euen nature it selfe For naturally we see that the members of our body are so affected one towards an other as that if one member suffer all suffer with it and if one be had in honour 1 Cor. 12.26 all the members reioyce with it How much more should it be so in the mysticall body of Christ Iesus that they who are ioyned together in one faith and in one baptisme should so likewise be ioyned together in loue and affection one towards an other that the sorow of one should be the sorow of an other and the ioy of one should be the ioy of another But I haue had occasion heretofore to obserue this note vnto you and therewithall the great want of this Christian loue in vs one towards another for that we are so farre from this duty as that we weepe and are sorie one at the prosperitie of another and againe laugh and reioyce one at the calamity of another If either by that or this instruction ye be taught in this dutie then practise it and if either by that or this admonition ye see your want in the performance of
circumcision euen they which worship God spiritually c. so that hauing spoken of spirituall circumcision we haue spoken in a generality both of this and the rest that followes Yet it will not be amisse somewhat more particularly yet as briefly as we can to speake by occasion of these words of the spirituall worship of God There is no people so farre without God in this world Iewe or Gentile Turke or other but that both they know there is a God and likewise thinke they worship him with true worshippe But how a great many nations and languages should either know the true God or truely worshippe him it can scarce be imagined seeing they want the holy word of life where alone we both clearly know him and likewise how to worship him Nay how should not they most grossely erre touching the true worship of God seeing where the word is there are so many errors touching the true and spirituall worship of God Witnesse those manifold will-worshippes of God which men haue deuised vnto themselues and for which they haue no warrant at all in the word such as are forbidding of marriage and forbidding of meates to some men at all times and to all men at sometimes vnder pretence of holy religion and deuout seruice of God But for our instruction in this point let vs hence obserue that not only in the spirit of our minde purified by the spirit to serue him in holinesse and in righteousnesse but that if we will not erre in the performance of true and spirituall worshippe vnto our God we must proceede by this rule of reioicing in Christ Iesus inasmuch as by reioycing in Christ Iesus wee worshippe God spiritually For what is there required in our spirituall worship of God which by our reioycing in Christ Iesus is not performed vnto him Is it not our spirituall worship of God to loue him to put our trust in him to feare him to pray vnto him to obey him and to glorifie him both in our bodies and in our spirits And are not all these things performed vnto him by our reioycing in Christ Iesus We reioice in Christ Iesus knowing that in him we are beloued and therefore we loue God who we know doth loue vs in Christ Iesus Againe we reioice in Christ Iesus knowing that in him all the promises of God are yea and Amen and therefore we belieue in God put our trust in his name who we know for his sake maketh good all his promises vnto vs. Againe we reioice in Christ Iesus knowing that by him an atonement and reconciliation is made betweene God and vs and therfore we feare God whose wrath we know is now appeased towards vs by the mediation of Christ Iesus Againe wee reioice in Christ Iesus knowing that by him we may go boldly vnto the throne of grace and therefore wee poure out our praiers vnto God who wee know giueth vs whatsoeuer wee aske by faith in his name Againe wee reioyce in Christ Iesus knowing that through Christ wee are able to doe all things and therefore wee obey God who wee know strengtheneth vs in Christ to doe all things that hee requireth of vs. Againe wee reioyce in Christ Iesus knowing that hee is made of God vnto vs wisedome and righteousnesse and sanctification and redemption and therefore we glorifie GOD both in our bodies and in our spirits who we know hath giuen vs his sonne and together with him hath giuen vs all things also So that through the reioycing which we haue in Christ Iesus we worship God spiritually with all holy worship of loue of faith of feare of praier of obedience and of glorifying his name both in our bodies and in our spirits Yea and whosoeuer hath not this reioycing in Christ Iesus it is impossible that he should worship God with this spirituall and holy worshippe For how shall hee loue GOD that is not perswaded of the loue of God towards him in Christ Iesus how shall hee belieue in God and put his trust in his name that knoweth not that all his promises are yea and Amen most certaine and sure in Christ Iesus How shall hee feare God as a dutifull childe that assures not himselfe of his reconciliation with God by the death and intercession of Christ Iesus How shall hee pray vnto God in faith that knows not that his praiers shall bee accepted and heard in Christ Iesus that offereth our praiers vnto God and makes continuall intercession for vs How shall hee obey God in that which he commands that knowes nor that God in Christ Iesus doth enable him to doe that which hee commandeth How shall hee glorifie God in his body or in his spirit that knowes not what great mercies God hath vouchsafed vnto vs through Christ Iesus So that vnlesse wee can reioyce in Christ Iesus euen because wee know all these thinges wee cannot possiblie worshippe God with spirituall worshippe Will you then men and brethren haue a direction for your spirituall worshipping of God Surely it is needfull Ioh. 4.24 for God is a spirit and they that worship him must worship him in spirit and in truth Let this then be your direction Reioyce in Christ Iesus reioyce in him because yee are beloued in him and then surely yee will loue God who loues you in Christ Iesus Reioyce in Christ because in him all Gods promises are made good and performed vnto you and then surely yee will beleeue in God and put your trust in him who keepeth promise and suffereth not his truth to faile for euer Reioyce in Christ because by him yee haue receiued the attonement and then surely yee will feare God whose wrath was appeased by the reconciliation of Christ Iesus Reioyce in Christ because through him your praiers are accepted and heard with God and then surely ye will powre out your praiers vnto God who giues you whatsoeuer yee aske in faith in his name Reioice in Christ because in him ye are made able to doe all things and then surely yee will obey God who strengthneth you in Christ to doe all things Reioice in Christ because by him yee are redeemed and saued and by the power of his spirit sanctified and then surely yee will glorifie God both in your bodies and in your spirits who with Christ his Sonne giueth you all things both for this life present and likewise for that that is to come So that there cannot be a better direction for our spirituall worship of God then to reioice in Christ Iesus because by our reioicing which we haue in Christ Iesus wee are enflamed to loue God to beleeue in him to put our trust in him to feare him to pray vnto him to obey him and to glorifie him both in our bodies and in our spirits which is our spirituall worshipping of God Whence it is also easie to ghesse why it is that wee faile so much in the spirituall worshipping of God which is euen hence because wee faile in our reioycing
vnto that righteousnesse which is of God through faith to the end I say that he might bring the Iewes from those outward things of the flesh vnto the inward knowledge of Christ Iesus he raised vp to this purpose this holy Apostle that he being a manfully furnished with all prerogatiues in all such outward thing● as they reioyced in might both be of greater authoritie with them and likewise haue the greater possibilitie to draw them from workes vnto grace from the law vnto Christ For if it had beene so that he had perswaded them to renounce all confidence in the flesh and to reioyce onely in Christ Iesus hauing himselfe no cause of confidence in the flesh they might happily lightly haue esteemed him and thought that because himselfe had nothing touching the flesh whereof to reioyce therefore he enuied them and perswaded them to renounce all confidence in the flesh But when now they should see that he that thus perswaded them was one that had greater cause of confidence in the flesh then had the best of them they must needs likewise see that surely his perswasions proceeded from a certaine and sound iudgment and not from any conceited opinion or hatefull enuy So we see that to teach men that pleasures and sumptuous buildings and riches and possessions and the like were all but vanitie and vexation of the spirit he stirred vp Salomon who hauing had his fill of all kinde of pleasures which either his eye Eccles 2. or his heart could desire and hauing built goodly houses and great workes and hauing gathered great riches and treasures and gotten large possessions aboue all that were before him in Ierusalem was so fit to teach that lesson that he saying of all those things that they were but vanitie and vexation of the spirit the truth thereof might the rather be beleeued So likewise when the Church had sate now a long time in the darknesse of Romish Egypt and had beene bewitched as with many other grosse errors so with this of iustification by workes and merits of their owne making we see that to purge the Church of these pestilent diseases he raised vp not many yeares ago in Germanie that reuerend Luther who hauing beene a long time more pharisaicall and zealous in those monkish waies and doctrines then the common sort of his order and hauing liued as Erasmus witnesseth Epist lib. 5. Melan. l. 6. Wolsac so that none of all his enemies could euer charge him with any note of iust reprehension might so much the rather preuaile with the Church to draw them from those dreames and dregs of superstition and idolatrie wherein they were drowned And thus oftentimes it seemeth good to the wisdome of our God to the end that he may the rather draw his people either from errors in opinion or corruptions in life to raise vp of themselues some such as haue as deeply beene drencht in those errors which they maintaine and delighted asmuch in those follies which they follow as they themselues that when they shall disclaime such and such errors or renounce such and such follies the rest may the rather hearken vnto them and be induced by them to disclaime their errors and to renounce their follies Whence I make this double vse 1. This may teach them whom it hath pleased the Lord to reclaime from error in opinion or folly in life to consider why the Lord hath thus in mercy dealt with them and accordingly to performe such duties vnto the Lord as are required of them Art thou then called out of the darknesse of Romish Egypt vnto the glorious light of the Gospell of Iesus Christ Art thou freed from the bondage of that Romish Pharaoh into the glorious libertie of the sonnes of God by the day-starre arising in thine heart It is a great mercy of the Lord vnto thee thus to deliuer thy soule from death and thy feete from sliding But consider thou whether the Lord hath not also in wisdome done this that thou hauing beene nusled vp in their superstitious errors and as egerly maintained them as they shouldst now labour to draw them out of darknesse into light and from vaine confidence in the flesh to reioyce in Christ Iesus What doest thou know but that the Lord therefore suffered thee for a while to sit in darknes and in the shadow of death that when afterward the day-starre should ●rise in thine heart thou mightest both labour the more with them and likewise be in the better possibilitie to preuaile with hem Follow thou therefore the example of this holy Apostle and labour to weyne them as from other their errors so from confidence in their workes and in merits of their owne making that they may reioyce wholly in Christ Iesus and onely put their trust in his name Againe hast thou haunted with vaine persons and beene delighted in the companie of the wicked hast thou runne with a theefe when thou sawest him and beene partaker with the adulterers hast thou giuen thy money vnto vsury or taken reward against the innocent haue thine hands wrought or thy feete runne vnto or thy thought deuised or thy heart consented vnto this or that sinne or iniquitie and hath the Lord now reclaimed thee It is a great mercy of the Lord no doubt vnto thee But consider thou whether the Lord hath not also in wisdome done this that thou mightest draw them with whom sometimes thou sortedst thy selfe vnto a reformation of their waies What knowest thou but that he hath reclaimed thee from such and such inordinate waies that hauing walked with them thou mightest be the meanes of reforming them As it hath pleased the Lord therefore to reclaime euery man from any error in opinion or folly in life so let him labour to reforme such errors or follies in them whom hee knowes to be intangled with them euer remembring that of our Sauiour vnto Peter when thou art conuerted strengthen thy brethren Luk. 22.32 and likewise that that he which converteth a sinner from going astray out of his way Iam. 5.20 saueth a soule from death and hideth a multitude of sinnes 2. This may teach them that are as yet holden with any error in opinion or folly in life to hearken vnto those whom the Lord hath raised euen of themselues to admonish them of their errors or of their follies For thus they should consider with themselues He was so affected as now I am and had as great skill and will to maintaine those things which now he doth oppugne as I haue and if the Lord haue now reuealed vnto him that which as yet he hath kept hid from mine eyes who am I that I should not hearken vnto him Againe he was so delighted as now I am and did runne after such sinnes and iniquities as he now speaketh against as now I doe and if the Lord haue now so lightned his eyes that he both seeth the folly of his owne waies and calleth me from the like
the Pharisies where he telleth them that the Publicans and harlots shall goe before them into the kingdome of God Matt. 21 31. The meaning is not that the wicked and lewd life of the Publicans and harlots did more commend them vnto God then did the religious and strict life of the Pharisies but thereby our Sauiour giueth them to vnderstand that because of their conceit and confidence in their owne righteousnesse they were further from the kingdome of God then were the greatest sinners that were so that there was more hope of the greatest sinners that were that they would sooner come to repentance and sooner come vnto him then would they that had confidence in their owne workes and in their owne righteousnesse The more confidence then that we haue in our owne workes and in our owne righteousnesse the more strangers wee are from Christ and his righteousnesse If wee cleaue wholly to our workes as thinking to be iustified or saued by them wee are wholly separated from Christ Iesus and haue no part in that saluation which is by grace through faith in his name or if wee clea●● in part vnto our workes then doe wee diminish the glory of Christ Iesus Nay I say more if wee cleaue in part vnto our workes wee haue no part in Christ or in saluation by him Which I take it is plaine by that of our Apostle verse 3. of this chapter where hee saith Wee reioyce in Christ Iesus a●● haue no confidence in the flesh as if he should haue said If we● should haue confidence in the flesh then should wee not reioice in Christ Iesus The conclusion then must needs bee that all our workes by reposing confidence in them how good soeuer they seeme to be are indeed losse and hurtfull vnto vs. For what more hurtfull then to withhold vs from comming vnto Christ vnto these of the Apostle let mee adde a 3. respect wherein also euen all our workes generally are but losse and dung which is in respect of the quality of our works in themselues For if our best workes should be weighed in the ballance of the sanctuarie they would be found too light if they should be examined after the strict rule of Gods iustice they would make vs lift vp our voices with Dauid and say Psa 143.2 enter not into iudgement with thy seruant ô Lord for in thy sight shall no man liuing be iustified Iob. 14.4 For who can bring a cleane thing out of filthinesse there is not one that can do it How good therefore how righteous and holy soeuer we be yet must we know that all our righteousnesse is but as filthy clouts out of the Prophet Es 64.6 Whether therefore we compare our workes and our righteousnesse by workes with the knowledge of Christ and the righteousnesse which we haue by faith in his name or whether we respect the reposing of any part of our confidence in them or whether we respect our workes in themselues if they should be examined by the Law of God we see that they are no vantage but losse and as the Apostle tearmeth them dung Which doctrine how true and likewise how necessary it is the Apostle his insisting and beating vpon it doth euidently shew For ye see that the three seuerall repetitions hereof taketh vp this whole verse almost What then doe we condemne good workes doe we make this account of them that so we may banish them out of the country So some tell you but most vntruely For in all places wee exhort all men that they abound in euery good worke and we giue all encouragement thereunto Wee tell you that good workes are the way which God hath ordained that we should walke in vnto heauen and that without holinesse of life no man shall see the Lord wee tell you that God commandeth them that God rewardeth them that God is well pleased with them and that they are truely good workes though they be not perfectly good workes yea wee tell you that they are accounted vnto vs as perfectly good because whatsoeuer imperfection is in them is for Christ his sake couered and not imputed vnto vs. Thus wee haue learned and therefore thus we tell you Also we tell you that yee are not to repose any confidence of your saluation in them but all in Christ Iesus that they are to bee counted but losse and dung in comparison of the excellent knowledge of Christ Iesus and of his righteousnesse that our workes be they neuer so good doe not make vs righteous before God that wee are saued not of workes but by grace through faith in Christ Iesus and that none of all our workes can abide the seueritie of Gods iudgement much lesse merit any grace at Gods hands Thus also we haue learned and therfore thus also we tell you And doe we condemne good workes because wee teach you the truth touching good workes We desire and we pray that ye may abound in all knowledge and in euery good worke but we are iealous that ye should not grow to an ouerwening conceit of them Good workes must be done but we must not trust to be iustified or saued by them because that honour onely belongeth vnto God Let this teach vs to renounce all confidence in our owne workes and in our owne righteousnesse whatsoeuer and to beware of them that tell vs that our workes are meritorious and worthy of heauen For if wee flatter our selues with a proud and pharisaicall conceit of our owne righteousnesse by our workes Luc. 18.14 we shall depart home iustified as the Pharisie W● must therefore come vnto Christ as the Publican confessing our owne vnrighteousnesse and acknowledging our owne nakednesse in our selues if we will be cloathed with the long white robe of his righteousnesse For hee filleth the hung●e with good thing● but sendeth away the rich emptie Hee came not to cal or to clothe the righteous in their own conce●● but he iustifieth the wicked and clotheth the naked For hee respecteth the humble and lowly but for the proud he beholdeth them a farre off Let vs therfore humble our selues in our selues and only reioyce in Christ Iesus If we do any thing that is good it is not of our selues but onely from grace and if we receiue a reward for any good that we doe it is not for the merit of the worke but of the mercie of the Lord for we must still hold that rule of our Sauiour that when wee haue done all that we can yet must we say Luc. 17.10 we are vnprofitable seruants we haue done that which was our dutie to doe Now vnprofitable seruants what merit they Or they which onely doe their duty what merit they Surely other merit of any works we know none but of death If therefore we will bee made righteous before God let vs renounce all merit of grace by our owne workes all confidence in our owne righceousnes Let vs abound in euery good worke but
the resurrection of the iust LECTVRE LX. PHILIP 3. Verse 12. Not as though I had already attained vnto it but one thing I doe I forget that which is behinde and endeuour my selfe c. THus wee haue heard how the Apostle for the confutation of those false Teachers that were crept in among the Philippians hath instructed them by his owne example in the point touching mans righteousnesse before God namely that they were not to repose any confidence in their owne righteousnesse which is by workes but to repose all their confidence in the righteousnesse of Christ which is through faith for he iudged all his owne workes to be but losse and dung in respect of any righteousnesse before God and he reioyced only in Christ Iesus that he might winne Christ that hee might know Christ and the vertue of his resurrection c. and therefore the Philippians were to doe so too and wee so too Now the Apostle goeth forward and as before by his owne example he taught them what to thinke of mans righteousnes before God so now by his owne example hee teacheth them still to labour to increase in the way of godlinesse and in the knowledge of Christ Iesus and of the vertue of his resurrection c. And he taketh occasion so to doe vpon that which he had said before for he had said before that hee thought all things losse for the excellent knowledge sake of Christ Iesus and that hee iudged all things to be dung that he might winne Christ that he might know Christ c. Now hereupon happily it might be thought that hee was growne to an excellent knowledge of Christ Iesus hee was perfect in the knowledge of Christ Iesus Did he take such pleasure and comfort in the knowledge of Christ Iesus that for it hee thought all things losse and dung Here was perfection indeed hee was come to the races end he needed no more No no saith the Apostle for all this I am but in the way I haue not yet attained to the perfect knowledge of Christ I am not perfect in the knowledge of Christ I follow and labour after it with all maine and might that I haue I am entred the lists I am in the way and I neuer looke behinde mee but still I goe forward and albeit I be not at my races end yet still I am looking toward the marke that is set before mee and I make towards the marke as hard as euer I can Thus the Apostle by his owne example sets an edge on them to runne forward in the race that they had begunne in Christ Iesus and to labour still to increase in the knowledge of Christ Iesus Which hee did the rather because of those false Teachers that were amongst them that told them that they knew Christ well enough and that they were come to great perfection in the knowledge of Christ Iesus in that they know him to be the Messias to bee God and man to be the reconciliation for the sins of the whole world and now they were to looke to the obseruation and keeping of Moses Law and to ioyne it vnto Christ so to be made righteous before God Because of these I say the Apostle hauing taught them that not any thing is to be ioyned vnto Christ to be made righteous by it doth now stirre them vp by his owne example to labour continually to increase in the knowledge of Christ Iesus Thus much for the generall scope and meaning of these words Now let vs yet a little more particularly examine these words Not saith the Apostle as though I had already attained to it to it to what to the perfect knowledge of Christ for the Apostle had said before that hee thought all things losse for the excellent knowledge sake of Christ and that he iudged them to be dung that he might win Christ that he might know Christ c. and hereupon it might be thought that hee had already attained to the perfect knowledge of Christ and of the vertue of his resurrection c. whereby he might attaine to the resurrection of the dead But no saith the Apostle I iudge all things to be dung that I may know Christ not as though I had already attained to the perfect knowledge of Christ Againe it is to be obserued that he saith not as though I had already or not as though I had now attained to it whereby the Apostle signifieth that as now his state stands he hath not attained to the perfect knowledge of Christ He addeth either were now perfect to wit in the knowledge of Christ and so of the vertue of his resurrection c. Hee addeth but I follow 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 where the word doth not simply signifie to follow but to follow as the persecutor that will not rest till he haue him whom he persecuteth or to follow as the runner that will not rest till hee come to the goles end By this then hee signifieth how greedily and incessantly he pursueth after the perfect knowledge of Christ hauing it as it were in chase I follow saith he if I may comprehend that that is desiring to catch hold of the knowledge of Christ Iesus euen as I also am comprehended of Christ Iesus that is euen as Christ Iesus hath caught hold on mee that is desiring that as Christ hath perfectly caught hold of mee by his gracious mercy towards mee so I may ●atch hold of the knowledge of Christ Iesus perfectly by the like his gracious mercy towards mee And so I reade in this place not as it is in our Bibles for whose sake but euen as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the phrase which the Apostle vseth suffering it and the scope of the Apostle leading vnto it It is then as if the Apostle should haue said I thanke my God I know Christ and the vertue of his resurrection c. and I take great comfort and pleasure in the knowledge of Christ and I thinke all things but losse for this excellent knowledge sake not as though I had now attained vnto this knowledge perfectly or were now as I am now Paul aged and taught by God in the wayes of God perfect in the knowledge of Christ nay I now know him only in part but I follow this knowledge euen with eagre and incessant pursuit desiring that I may comprehend and catch hold of the knowledge of Christ Iesus euen as perfectly and in the like mercy that hee hath comprehended and caught hold of mee This I take to be the true meaning of these words and it is not my meaning now or at any time to trouble you with varieties and diuersities o● expositions In these words then I note these points first the Apostles acknowledgement of his owne imperfection in these words not as though c. secondly the Apostles eagre pursuit after perfection in these words but I follow c. Now let vs see what obseruations wee may gather hence for our vse and
him that he will haue vs to ●ake speede to come vnto him and he will inlarge our hearts ●hat we may runne the way of his commandements and so ●ome vnto him Such is the marke set at the end of our Chri●tian race not a dead marke which helpeth the runner no●hing in his race but drawing vs vnto himselfe that where he 〈◊〉 there we may be also This was the marke that the Apostle ●anne at and this is the marke that we should runne at to ●now him perfitly and the vertue of his resurrection c ●hereby we might attaine to the resurrection c. Here then we learne why it is that so few runne as they ought in the Christian race The most part of men haue an other marke that they runne at Some runne at riches some at honors some at pleasures some at ease some at skill and knowledge in the things that are done vnder the Sunne and on these things are their eyes set and their mindes wholly bent But the least summe make Christ Iesus the marke whereat they runne to know him is the thing whereon the fewest mindes are bent He is farthest out of light and farthest out of minde with the most men Not running then a● the right marke how can we but runne amisse Beloued yee see what the marke is whereat we should ayme in the whole course of our life Let the children of this world pricke at their seuerall markes as they list but let vs follow hard towards the marke Christ Iesus He is that marke whereat if we be Christians we should ayme in our whole race Let our eyes be still set and our mindes alwaies bent vpon him If wee walke towards him he will direct our goings in his paths 〈◊〉 for his owne names sake A better marke we cannot haue and another marke we ought not to haue There is no running if we runne as we ought but to him neither any running to him but by him Let vs therefore by him runne vnto him and in all things let vs still looke vnto him The race is well runne when at the races end we come to such a marke and well may we runne through cold and nakednes through stripes and imprisonments and all kinde of difficulties to come to such a marke whereunto we can no sooner come but straight we haue the prize for which we runne euen glory and immortalitie in the highest heauens Let vs therefore so runne that we may obtaine let vs runne till we come vnto the marke that we may obtaine the price of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus And let this suffice to be spoken touching the second qualitie of runners The third qualitie of runners whereby the Apostle makes proofe of his incessant running in his Christian race is this that runners keeping in minde the price for which they runne make haste vnto the marke for the price that they may obtaine In this also the Apostle professeth that hee matched euen the best runners in the last words when he saith that 〈◊〉 followed hard toward the marke for the price of c. In which words by the price is signified that inheritance immortall and vndefiled which is reserued in heauen for vs and it is called ●e price of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus because it 〈◊〉 the glory of Gods children whereunto God from on high ●●th called vs in Christ Iesus As therefore the Apostle before ●rofessed that he ranne and lookt not backe to that which was ●ehinde and that he ranne and gaue not ouer to follow that ●hereon his eyes were alwaies set so now he professeth that ●e ranne and hastned his running for to obtaine the price of ●●ory and immortalitie in the heauens whereunto hee was ●●lled by God in Christ Iesus All sufficient proofes that the ●postle came apace as he that desired to obtaine Hence then I obserue that life euerlasting and glory in the ●eauens is the price and reward of our holy and constant run●ing in our Christian race Which our Sauiour signifieth ●hen vnto them that endure hatred persecution and contu●elies for his sake he saith Reioyce and be glad Mat. 5.12 for great is your ●●ward in heauen Our Apostle likewise sheweth the same ●here he saith Rom. 2.6 7. that God will reward euery man according to his ●orkes to them which by continuance in well-doing seeke glory ●●d honor and immortalitie eternall life Col. 3.23.24 And to the Colossians ●●so where speaking vnto seruants he saith whatsoeuer yee doe ●e it heartily as to the Lord knowing that of the Lord yee shall re●●iue the reward of the inheritance All which places and many ●ther which might be produced to the like purpose doe ●lainely shew that eternall life is the reward of our holy ●alking with God in such good workes as he hath ordeined ●●at we should walke in them A notable price to runne for ●nd a notable incouragement vnto the runner For can we ●unne for a better price then for eternall life in the heauens Or can a better reward for our incouragement in our Chri●●ian race be giuen vs than eternall life in the heauens How ●hould not this make vs to prouoke one another vnto loue ●nd good workes How should not this make vs runne the ●ace of a holy life breaking through all impediments and ●ot intermitting our course vnto the end But here we must know that though we run for this prize ●et this prize is not giuen vs for the merit of our running and ●hough this prize be the reward of our running yet doe wee not merit this reward for our running Rom. 9.16 For it is not in him th● willeth nor in him that runneth but in God that sheweth mercie The Lord in mercy hath set downe this prize of our running and in the like mercie giues it vnto him that runnes out vnto the marke but not for the merit of his running This one place at this time may serue for a full proofe of this point The Apostle ranne for the prize but it was for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus He doth not say for the prize that was due vnto him albeit it was due vnto him though not for his merits sake yet for the promise sake made in mercie but he ranne for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus Which in that it was the prize of the high calling of God it is plaine that it is giuen in mercie by him that hath called vs in mercie and likewise in that it is the prize c. in Christ Iesus it is plaine that it is giuen in merc●● through Christ Iesus in whom onely we are called vnto glorie and life euerlasting It is ordained then that wee should runne for this prize for no man obtaineth it but he that runneth for it and therefore the Apostle ranne for it but it is the prize of our high calling to be the sonnes of God giuen vs
we are come like vnto good souldiers which turne not aside but march on along after the prescript rule of their Generall so let vs walke without turning aside to the right-had or to the left-hand after that one rule let vs beleeue and liue as we are directed by ●●●t one rule of his word vnder whose banner we doe fight 〈◊〉 vs so farre as we are come walke as Christ Iesus hath taught 〈◊〉 in his holy word The same phrase of speech is vsed to the ●●e purpose where it is said Gal. 6.16 as many as walke according to this ●●e i. As many as make this word of truth this Gospell of ●●rist Iesus now preached and taught vnto you the rule and ●●are of their faith life from which they will not swarue ●●turne aside to the right-hand or to the left peace shall bee ●●on them and mercy and vpon the Israell of God Let vs ●●●ceede by one rule and let vs minde one thing i. Let there bee 〈◊〉 dissentions amongst vs but let vs be knit together in one ●●nde and in one iudgement being of like affection one to●●rds another in Christ Iesus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For so the phrase of speech ●●re vsed signifieth to be of one minde of one iudgement of ●●e affection one towards another so that nothing bee done ●●rough contention amongst vs as it plainely appeareth both 〈◊〉 the 2. verse of the 2. Chapter of this Epistle and by diuers ●●her places where the same phrase is vsed The summe of all ●●s if the Apostle had thus said God will in his good time ●●eale his truth vnto them that bee as yet otherwise minded ●●an I am But in the meane time till God reueale it let vs 〈◊〉 such grounds of the truth as already we agree vpon pro●●ede both in faith and in life as we are directed by that one ●●le of his word vnder whose banner we fight not turning a●●●e from it to the right-hand or to the left-hand and let vs 〈◊〉 knit together in one minde and in one iudgement so that ●●thing be done through contention among vs. This I take 〈◊〉 be the simple and plaine meaning of these words Now let 〈◊〉 see what profitable notes we may gather hence for our own ●●e and instruction The 1. thing which hence I note is touching the cause of ●issensions in the Church of God whence it is that there are ●●ch dissensions and diuisions in the Church of God whereby ●●e vnity and peace of the Church is rent a sunder and bro●en Not to search farther into the causes thereof than this ●●e scripture giueth occasion out of this Scripture I note 3. ●auses of the dissensions in the Church of God The 1. is because we doe not with patience expect and waite till God 〈◊〉 his good time reueale vnto vs that truth which as yet is hid 〈◊〉 from our eyes For such oftentimes is our inconsiderate hea●●●dinesse that if we seeme vnto our selues to apprehend this 〈◊〉 that point of doctrine through the suggestions and persuasions of this or that man by and by we aduenture the defence and maintenance thereof though I●●l haue preached though the Church of God haue beleeued otherwise We looke 〈◊〉 what it is that the Church hath receiued but what it is that 〈◊〉 haue apprehended or if we doe rather we striue to bring the Church to that which we haue apprehended than wee 〈◊〉 yeeld vnto that which the Church indeed hath receiued 〈◊〉 howsoeuer that we teach may hazard the peace and quite of the Church yet will we not stay our selues and expect●● God may farther reueale his holy truth vnto vs. And 〈◊〉 hath beene heretofore and is at this day one great cause of diuision and dissension in the Church I might instance i● diuers heresies wherewith the Church hath beene troubled and which haue in part beene caused because the auth●● thereof would not waite till God should reueale the truth vn●● them If that auncient father Tertullian had waited till God had reuealed vnto him that truth which afterward he did ●●ueale vnto him he had not beene so tainted with the errors o● the Millenaries and the Montanists as he was neither ha● troubled the Church therewith so much as hee did And i● some at this day that trouble the peace of the Church with their strange doctrine would both pray vnto the Lord for the reuelation of his truth and patiently waite till the Lord should reueale his truth vnto them we should be more free from disensions than we are The 2. cause of the dissensions in the Church of God 〈◊〉 because we do not proceede by one rule in that whereun●● we are come For such oftentimes is our vntowardlinesse that in the generall grounds of Christian religion where●● we doe agree we will be slinging out of ranke and not proceed by that one rule of his word vnder whose banner we do● fight In the primitiue Church all the Churches of Chr●●● were come vnto that that they beleeued the resurrection of the dead and that they acknowledged iustification by the ●●ghteousnesse of Christ yet then they proceeded not by one ●●le in these things but some denied the resurrection of the ●ead of which sort were Hymeneus and Philetus 2 Tim. 2.17 and some ●ught that vnto Christ there must be ioyned the workes of ●●e Law to be made righteous before God Whereupon fol●●wed then great dissensions in the Church In the reformed Churches of Christ at this day generally we are come to this ●●at we professe that predestination vnto life is not by fore●●ght of faith or workes but by the alone good pleasure of al●ightie God that the children of God cannot finally fall ●om faith or grace that the children of God may and ought 〈◊〉 assure themselues of their saluation that it is not in man to ●ue himselfe if he will that Christ hath freed vs from the of hell by suffering the paines of hell for vs. And if ●e shall not proceede by one rule in these things but one ●●ape out from another what else can follow but great dissensions in our Churches And is it not a cause of many dissensi●ns betwixt the Romish Church and vs that we doe not both ●roceede by one rule in that whereunto we are come Wee ●re come to this that we agree in the Articles of the Christian ●aith that we both beleeue in the Trinitie that wee both be●eeue one Catholique and Apostolique Church that we both ●cknowledge one Baptisme for the remission of sinnes that ●e both looke for the resurrection of the dead and the life ●f the world to come And yet what dissensions betwixt vs ●nd them euen about these thing● And why because they do not proceed by one rule of the holy word of life with vs but ●hey flie out into Traditions Councels Fathers Decretals Constitutions and Legends and keepe no order with vs in marching along after the prescript rule of our Generall Christ ●esus
appeareth that their ioy is not Christian because it is not constant but ebbeth and floweth according to the ebbe and floud of aduersitie and prosperitie What shall we say then when the Lord afflicteth vs with pouertie sickenesse and the like crosses must we reioyce in the Lord Yea verily 1. Sam. 2.6.7 for it is the Lord that killeth and maketh aliue that woundeth and healeth that bringeth to the graue and raiseth vp that maketh poore and maketh rich that bringeth low and exalteth Amos 3.6 There is no euill in the Citie which the Lord hath not done No euill that is no crosse or affliction no plague or punishment which he sendeth not And whatsoeuer crosse or affliction it is vnto his children it is but either a probation that the triall of their faith being much more precious then gold that perisheth may be found to their praise and honour and glorie at the appearing of Iesus Christ such as was Iobs affliction or else it is a fatherly correction that being chastened of the Lord 2. Sam. 12.14 they may not be condemned with the world such as was the death of Dauids child for Dauids sin and such as was the weakenesse and sickenesse and death of many of the Corinthians 1 Cor. 11 30. for eating and drinking vnworthily at the Lords Table Are then our crosses of pouertie sickenesse or whatsoeuer they be from God Then are they good and we are to reioyce in them For all things fall out for the best for those that loue and feare him Are they for the triall of our faith My brethren saith Iames James 1.2 count it exceeding ioy when ye fall into diuerse tentations and trialls c. Are they to correct and chastice vs If we endure chastening Hebr. 12.7 God offereth himselfe vnto vs as vnto sonnes for whom he loueth he chasteneth O but sometimes he shutteth vs euen vp in despaire and infidelitie how shall we then reioyce in the Lord I demand then Dost thou know it and lothe it and long to be brought againe into the glorious libertie of the sonnes of God Thou hast good cause to reioyce in the Lord for he hath onely hid his face from thee for a while that he may haue mercie on thee for euer And what if thy faith or hope be but as a graine of Mustard seed what if being as it were couered vnder the ashes they seeme not to be Christ Iesus is most plentifull to helpe them that are most weake and he is all-sufficient to supply all wants If any seede of God be there in thy weakenesse he will perfite his praise Yea but in that our Sauiour pronounceth a blessing vpon them that mourne Matt. 5.4 it appeareth that we are not alwayes to reioyce Not so neyther for euen then when we sigh and mourne for the affliction we haue in the world we are to reioyce in the Lord and to be of good comfort in Christ Iesus because he hath ouercome the world euen then when we mourne through a sence of Gods iudgements we are to reioyce in his tender mercies that he deales not with vs after our deseruings euen then when we mourne in the body because of affliction we are to reioyce in our soules because of our strong consolation in Christ Iesus and because our light affliction in the body causeth vnto vs a far most excellent and an eternall weight of glorie And therefore our Sauiour in the same place where he saith Blessed are they that mourne exhorteth also to reioyce and be glad in persecution for that great is our reward in heauen Let this then teach vs to take heed how we murmure against the Lord for pouertie sickenesse or any crosse whatsoeuer They are from the Lord whatsoeuer they be and if we be his children they are onely eyther for the triall of our faith and patience that patience hauing her perfect worke we may be perfect and entire lacking nothing or else as a louing correction of a mercifull father that we may be reclaimed from the wickednesse of our wayes And if we do not now reioyce in the Lord when he seemeth thus to hide his face from vs certainly whatsoeuer shew we made before of reioycing in the Lord we plaied but the hypocrites Howsoeuer therefore looking vnto our selues vnto our sins vnto our infirmities vnto our afflictions vnto the world we may sigh and mourne yet let vs reioyce in the Lord. We are not bid to reioyce in our selues Nay in our selues we shal be sure to haue cause enough of mourning We must therefore go out of our selues vnto the Lord and we must reioyce in him We must looke vnto him and remember that he is good and therefore whatsoeuer he doth is good that he is Almightie aod therefore can raise vs out of the dust of death and set vs with the Princes of the earth that he is mercifull and therefore will not suffer the rod of the vngodly to rest on the lot of the righteous And againe we must remember that he was poore that we might be made rich in him that he was weake that we might be made strong in him that he was tempted that he might be able to succour them which are tempted What cause therefore soeuer of mourning there be in our selues let vs looke out of our selues and let vs reioyce in him alwayes If he blesse vs then we thinke and yeeld easily that we haue cause to reioyce in the Lord and if he crosse vs with any plague or trouble then we haue also cause to reioyce in him because it is for our good and his owne glorie Reioyce therefore in the Lord alwayes LECTVRE LXXIX PHILIP 4. Verse 4. Againe I say reioyce 5. Let your patient mind be knowne to all men The Lord is at hand THese words are as we heard the last day an exhortation vnto the Philippians to reioyce not as the world doth but to reioyce in the Lord not with a momentanie and flitting ioy but alwayes both in weale and in woe not vnaduisedly made or about a light and easie matter but seriously made and about a matter very needfull and yet hard to be perswaded and therefore doubled Againe I say reioyce in the Lord alwayes Now see how it pleaseth the Lord that as the Apostle comes againe and againe vnto this holy exhortation and leaues it not with once or twice but euen the third time also exhorteth them to reioyce in the Lord so I should come vnto you againe and againe euen three seuerall times with the same exhortation to reioyce in the Lord. Againe saith the Apostle I say reioyce euen in the Lord alwayes for that is to be added and resumed to the former place From which doubling and redoubling of this exhortation I obserue both how needfull and withall how hard a matter it is to perswade this constant reioycing in the Lord to reioyce in the Lord alwayes For to this end doth the holy Ghost often in
For when we haue done all that we can Christ hath taught vs to say that we are vnprofitable seruants Luc. 17.10 yea when we haue done all things that are commanded vs. And whatsoeuer afflictions we suffer in this present life Rom. 8.18 Paul hath taught vs that they are not worthy of the glory that shall be shewed vnto vs. The merit that we can talke of for our workes Dan. 9.9 Iob. 9.20 is to say with Daniel To vs belongeth open shame and with Iob If I would iustifie my selfe by standing vpon the merit of my workes my owne mouth shall condemne me Iam. 3.2 Esa 64.6 for in many things we sinne all and all our righteousnes euen the very best of it is as filthy clouts How is saluation then a reward due vnto our workes Euen for the promise sake made vnto vs in Christ Iesus For therefore do we claime saluation as due vnto our workes euen because God hath made that promise in Christ Iesus vnto our workes But what was the cause of his promise was it our workes seene or foreseene that they would be of such desert No but of his owne free grace and mercie towards vs according to the good purpose of his will he promised it vnto vs. And therefore the Apostle saith Eph. 2 8. Tit. 3.5 By grace are ye saued through faith not of works lest any man should boast himselfe And againe Not by the workes of righteousnesse which we haue done but according to his mercie he saued vs. Thus we teach and euery where we exhort all men vnto good works and holinesse of life without which no man shall see the Lord. First then here beloued learne you to skill what manner of men they be that charge vs that we preach onely faith but either mention not or else condemne good works Ye see we tell you out of our Apostle here that they shall further your reckoning in the day of Christ Iesus And therefore we beseech you to abound in euery good worke vntill the day of Christ Iesus and know them to be of their father the diuell that say that either we mention not or condemne good works vnto our people Secondly hence learne to acknowledge and to magnifie the great mercy of our God who accepteth that for a furtherance of our reckoning which if he should deale with vs in iustice could stand for no payment for how I pray you stands it We should bring gold for payment into the Lords treasurie But we bring lead and he accepteth it for gold Our best righteousnesse is full of vnrighteousnesse yet doth he accept it What for our righteousnesse sake No for his mercies sake and imputeth vnto vs the righteousnesse of Christ Iesus Let our mouthes therefore alwaies be filled with his praises for such his louing mercies towards vs. Thirdly let this be a sufficient motiue vnto you to stirre you vp vnto charitablenesse and vnto euery good worke for seeing such is their acceptance with God that in that great account they shall further your reckoning what should stay you but that ye should labour to be fulfilled with the fruits of righteousnesse Time cuts me off that I cannot speake of these things and I shall the next time be farther occasioned to speake of them by occasion of the text LECTVRE XCIII PHILIP 4. Verse 18. Now I haue receiued all and am well filled I was euen filled after that I had receiued of Epaphroditus c. NOw I haue receiued all Hitherto we haue heard the Apostles thankfulnesse vnto the Philippians for their care for him and his commendation of them for their liberalitie towards him Now he commendeth their liberality and withall addeth a promise of recompence of reward for their liberality and so concludeth the Epistle with praise and thanksgiuing vnto the Lord. In verse 18 first he signifieth the faithfulnesse of Epaphroditus when he saith Now I haue receiued all all what to wit all that you sent by Epaphroditus For herein he giueth him this testimony that he had receiued the whole summe of him which came from them which it is like they had specified Secondly he commendeth their liberality of the quantitie of it when he saith I haue plentie and am filled For hereby he signifieth that their liberality towards him was not scanted but was such as plentifully supplied his wants such as filled his desires not that the gift which they sent him was so great and magnificent for the Churches of Macedonia were but poore 2 Cor. 8.2 but though it were but small yet such was his contentment as that he was as well satisfied and as fully as the greatest man with his greatest riches Thirdly he commendeth their liberalitie of the acceptablenesse of it vnto God when he saith An odour that smelleth sweete c. For herein by a speech borrowed from sacrifices made by fire for a sweete sauour vnto the Lord he signifieth that their liberality was as acceptable and pleasant vnto God as the sacrifice that smelleth sweete in the nostrils of the Lord. These are the principall points contained in these words and this I take to be the meaning of them Now let vs see what notes we may gather hence for our further vse and instruction The first thing which here I note is the faithfulnesse of Epaphroditus who kept nothing backe of all that the Philippians sent vnto the Apostle but faithfully deliuered whatsoeuer they sent vnto him Whence I obserue a notable patterne of that faithfulnesse which ought to be in al Christians to discharge that trust whatsoeuer it is that is reposed in them euen such should be their faithfulnesse as that they whom it doth concerne may safely giue them this testimonie that they haue discharged the trust that was reposed in them Such was the faithfulnesse of Samuel who when he had asked of the people of Israel Whose Oxe haue I taken 1 Sam. 12.3.4 or whose Asse haue I taken or whom haue I done wrong to or whom haue I hurt or of whose hand haue I receiued any bribe to blinde mine eyes therewith and I will restore it you They said vnto him Thou hast done vs no wrong nor hast hurt vs neither hast taken ought of any mans hand So faithfully he had walked amongst them in all things that they gaue him testimonie of his faithfulnesse before the Lord and before his Annoynted Such faithfulnesse also our blessed Sauiour figureth out vnto vs in the Parable of the seruants vnto one of whom he gaue fiue talents and vnto another two to occupie withall vntill he should returne whence he went and in the end gaue them this testimonie It is well done good seruants and faithfull Mat. 25.15.20 1 Cor. 4.2 ye haue bene faithfull in little I will make you rulers ouer much enter into your Masters ioy And the Apostle telleth vs generally that it is required of the disposers that euery man be found faithfull Be it publique or priuate things for
we haue and to be free from all suspicion of vngodly desires and vnlawfull attempts to increase that we haue as not content with that we haue so let vs follow our Apostle and as he hauing that which supplied his wants said I haue plentie and I am filled so whatsoeuer be our store if we haue but foode and raiment let vs thinke and say that we haue plenty and that we are filled The third thing which I note is the acceptablenesse of the Philippians gift vnto God Which the Apostle signifieth by a speech borrowed from sacrifices the odour wherof smelleth sweete as persume in the nostrils of the Lord. Whence I obserue how acceptable and pleasant vnto God our workes of charity are generally towards the poore and particularly towards the Ministers of Christ his Gospel they are as sweete smelling sacrifices wherewith the Lord is well pleased It is said that Noah after the deluge Built an altar vnto the Lord Gen. 8.20.21 and tooke of euery cleane beast and of euery cleane fowle and offered burnt offerings vpon the altar and it is added that the Lord smelled a sauour of rest that is he accepted his sacrifice and was so well pleased that he ceassed from his wrath So in the mentioning of many sacrifices in Leuiticus it is often thus added It is a burnt offering an oblation made by fire for a sweete sauour vnto the Lord. So that our Apostle calling our workes of charitie sacrifice and sweete smelling odours euidently sheweth thereby how acceptable and pleasant they are vnto God Such a sacrifice Obadiah offered vp vnto the Lord 1. Reg. 18.4 when he hid the Lord his Prophets by fifties in a caue from the furie of Iezebel and fed them with bread and water Such a sacrifice Ebedmelech offered vp vnto the Lord Ier. 38.13 when he got Ieremiah the Lord his Prophet out of prison where he was cast into the dungeon and dead almost with hunger Such a sacrifice the house of Onesiphorus offered vnto the Lord 2. Tim. 1.16 when he sought out our Apostle diligently and found him and often refreshed him and was not ashamed of his chaine These all in their charitable works for the Prophets and Ministers of the Lord offered vp sweete smelling odours and sacrifices acceptable and pleasant vnto God Such a sacrifice likewise the Churches of Macedonia offered vnto the Lord when in their extreme pouerty they were richly liberall to the reliefe of the poore Saints at Ierusalem And with such sacrifices whensoeuer they are offered God is well pleased as witnesseth the Apostle where he exhorteth to such sacrifice To do good Heb. 13.16 saith he and to distribute forget not for with such sacrifice God is well pleased Yea he keepeth the good deeds of a man as the apple of his eye and the almes of a man is as a thing sealed vp before him Yea looke whatsoeuer good he doth vnto the poore Eccl. 17.20 the Lord shall recompence it him againe into his owne bosome Prou. 19.17 For the day shall come wherein it shall be said vnto such workers of charitie Mat. 25.34 Come ye blessed of my Father inherite ye the kingdome prepared for you from the foundations of the world for I was an hungred c. Here then first learne what the Christian sacrifice is wherewithal God is well pleased The sacrifices of the old Law they are now abolished and done away euen since our blessed Sauiour gaue himselfe for vs to be an offering and a sacrifice of a sweete smelling sauour vnto God Other incenses and sacrifices which now in many places are offered and sacrificed vnto idols and images they are an abhomination vnto the Lord. It is not perfumes in temples burning of incense vnto Saints sacrificing vnto stocks and stones or hoasts vpon the altars that are acceptable and pleasing vnto God Nay he that doth these things is as if he cut off a dogs necke as if he offered swines bloud as if he blessed an idoll nay he is an idolater and he is an abomination vnto the Lord. If we will be sacrificing the Christian sacrifice which we must offer vnto the Lord to be a sweete smelling sauour vnto him must be the offering of the calues of our lips euen the sacrifice of praise thanksgiuing for such his louing mercies as he hath vouchsafed vnto vs or else the offering of our selues a liuing sacrifice holy acceptable vnto God which is our reasonable seruing of God or else the offering of our goods in a charitable deuotion to the poore afflicted members of Christ Iesus These sacrifices are commended vnto vs by the Apostles of Christ Iesus Heb. 13.15 the first where it is said Let vs by Iesus offer the sacrifice of praise alwaies vnto God that is the fruite of our lippes which confesse his name Rom. 12.1 the second where it is said I beseech you brethren by the mercies of God that ye giue vp your bodies a liuing sacrifice holy acceptable to God which is your reasonable seruing of God Heb. 13.16 the third where it is said To do good and to distribute forget not for with such sacrifice God is well pleased And these are the alone sacrifice left vnto Christians to offer which are acceptable and pleasant vnto God Secondly let vs hence learne to striue euery man to go one before another in doing good vnto all the afflicted members of Christ Iesus It is a sacrifice acceptable and pleasant vnto God witnesse the Apostle here It is more accepted with God then all burnt offerings and sacrifice witnesse the Prophet Hos 6.7 It shall further their reckoning in the day of Christ Iesus witnesse the Apostle in the words before It shall bring with it great recompence of reward through the promise made of God vnto vs in Christ Iesus witnesse our blessed Sauiour Mat. 25. Gal. 6.10 Let vs therefore as the Apostle exhorteth While we haue time do good vnto all men but specially vnto them which are of the household of faith Let vs as Daniel counselled Nebuchadnezzar Dan. 4.24 Breake off our sinnes by righteousnesse and our iniquities by mercies towards the poore Let vs as Salomon willeth Prou. 3.3 Binde mercie and truth vpon our neckes and write them vpon the tables of our hearts Let all hard-heartednes be farre from vs and let the bowels of compassion be kindled within vs so often as we behold the distressed members of Christ Iesus The law commandeth mercifulnes and compassion euen vnto the poore beasts How much more should we that are members one of another we that are members of the mystical body of Christ Iesus deale mercifully one with another and be feruent in charity one towards another Beloued let vs consider our selues and prouoke one another vnto euery good worke He that hath bene slacke let him be no more slacke and he that hath bene forward this way let him be forward still The day approcheth
when we must all appeare before the iudgement seate of Christ that euery man may receiue the things which are done in his body according to that he hath done whether it be good or euill Let vs therefore make vs friends of the vnrighteous mammon let vs lay vp for our selues treasure in heauen whither neither rust nor moth corrupteth and where theeues do not breake through nor steale And this shall we do if as God hath blessed vs we giue vnto the poore and take pity compassion on the fatherlesse and afflicted LECTVRE XCIV PHILIP 4. Verse 19. And my God shall fulfill all your necessities through his riches with glorie in Christ Iesus ANd my God shall c. The Apostles commendation of the Philippians liberalitie we haue heard which was this First that in it selfe it was such as that after he had receiued it he had plentie and was filled Secondly that it was a sweete smelling odour a sacrifice acceptable and pleasant vnto God Now vnto this commendation the Apostle addeth a promise of recompence of reward for their liberalitie and so concludeth the Epistle with praise and thanksgiuing vnto the Lord. In verse 19. where the promise is first I note the Author of the recompence promised which is God whom the Apostle in great strength of faith calleth his God both for his owne comfort and for the Philippians encouragement Secondly I note what recompence is promised which is that his God shall fulfill all their necessities wherein he alludeth to that he had said in the former verse that as he was filled by them all his necessities supplied through their liberalitie so his God should fulfill all their necessities and supply all their wants Thirdly I note the possibilitie of making this recompence which appeareth to be easie because God is rich My God shall fulfill all your necessities through his riches Fourthly I note the fulnesse of the recompence promised vnto their liberalitie in that it is said that he shall fulfill all their necessities through his riches with glorie all with glorie that is so plentifully and abundantly and gloriously that it shall be to the glorie of his name Lastly I note the cause wherefore or the meanes wherby such recompence shall be made which is Christ Iesus in whom and for whom and through whom we haue and receiue both all the promises and all the blessings for this life and for that that is to come My God shall fulfill c. with glorie in Christ Iesus The summe then of these words is this as if he had thus said As I haue plentie and am filled by you so that all my wants are supplyed so my God that helpeth me and comforteth me in all my troubles my God that seeth and regardeth your mercies towards me shall for a full recompence of reward fulfill all your necessities and supply all your wants through his riches plentifully to the glorie of his name not for the merit of your worke but in and for Iesus Christ in whom and for whom you and your workes are accepted This I take to be the meaning of these words Now let vs see what notes we may gather hence for our farther instruction The first thing which here I note is that the Apostle saith My God c. which is not spoken by way of excluding them as if he were not their God also but partly out of the powerfull might of his sauing faith partly to comfort himselfe in the middest of all his troubles partly to note his vpholding stay in all his troubles and partly to imply vnto the Philippians that what they had giuen vnto him they had giuen vnto God For so it will appeare if the speech be well obserued that such neare application hath alwaies such signification So Dauid The Lord is my rocke and my fortresse Psal 18.2 and he that deliuereth me my God and my strength my shield the horne of my saluation and my refuge So Esay O Lord thou art my God Esay 25.1 Mat. 27.48 I will exalt thee and I will praise thy name So our blessed Sauiour My God my God why hast thou forsaken me In which and many other like places where the Prophets and Apostles and our blessed Sauiour do vse these particular speeches of My Lord my God and the like they do not vse them as thereby singling out vnto themselues a peculiar God but in some such like respect as before was mentioned to wit either through the great strength of their faith or for their comfort in their troubles or to note their vpholding stay in their afflictions or else to imply the communication vnto Gods Saints to be a communication vnto God Whence I obserue that such speeches are no note of singularitie no speeches to be either scorned or reproued in them that vse them with reuerence in feare Which I obserue because of them that vpon the hearing of such speeches are straight way readie to brand him that vseth them with some new name of Puritane or Precisian or the like and in scorne to aske him who is his God who is his Lord and whether he haue any peculiar God which is not our God and our Lord. Of whom I aske againe whether the Prophets and Apostles and our blessed Sauiour which vsed these speeches were Puritanes or Precisians or the like If they were why is it obiected vnto any man that he is if they notwithstanding these speeches were not why vpon the like speeches is any man iudged to be Shall any man aske of any of them who is his God or who is his Lord or whether he haue any peculiar God Why should then any such question vpon the like occasion be made It may very well be that they who now aske such questions if Paul were now liuing and now spake or wrote thus would aske him the like questions Wherein learne a notable policie of the Diuell He seeth the great stay and the great comfort that the child of God hath when he comes so farre as that with boldnesse and confidence he can say my God and my Lord. He seeth that whatsoeuer troubles do presse vs whatsoeuer scorners do blow vpon vs howsoeuer he seeke continually like a roaring Lion to deuoure vs yet nothing can cast vs downe if through the powerfull might of a sauing faith we can say my God and my Lord. He seeth that to come so neare vnto God as to call him my God and my Lord is to depart too farre from him And therefore he laboureth against this boldnesse and confidence and neare approch and to this purpose hath deuised to brand them with odious names that shall at any time so speake Neither yet doth my speech tend to perswade the ordinary vse of those speeches my God and my Lord. For our blessed Sauiour hath taught vs to pray Our Father which art in heauen and I know that our most vsuall speeches of our Lord and our God are most holy and most Christian
the beasts of the forrest are his and so are the cattell vpon a thousand hils the whole world is his and all that is therein The eies of all waite vpon him 145.15.16 and he giues them their meate in due season he openeth his hand and filleth all things liuing with plenteousnesse All riches of grace and glorie of this life and of that that is to come are with him and vnto whom he will he giueth them And therefore the Apostle telleth the Corinthians saying 2 Cor. 9.8 God is able to make all grace to abound toward you that ye alwaies hauing all sufficiencie in all things may abound in euerie good worke The Corinthians they did as we do they feared that if they should giue much to the reliefe of the poore Saints they should impouerish themselues thereby For they thought that whatsoeuer was giuen to others was taken from themselues And therefore they gaue when they gaue very sparingly and nothing chearefully Whereupon the Apostle tels them that God is able to wit through his riches to make all grace to abound towards them that is to repay them all that they haue giuen with aduantage that they might haue enough both for themselues and also to helpe others withall So rich is our God that he can and so good is our God that he will do thus vnto all them that sow liberally and giue chearefully And why should any man doubt of this When thou sowest thy come in the ground doest thou not hope to receiue thine owne againe with aduantage and doest thou not reape oftentimes a great deale more then thou diddest sow Why then shouldest thou doubt after thy dispersing to the poore to reape seuen fold more for it Why shouldest thou not hope to receiue thine owne againe with very great aduantage Considering these things beloued let it be farre from vs to doubt that pouertie will follow our liberalitie Let vs not thinke with our selues that the more we giue the lesse we haue but rather that the more we giue the more through his riches we shall haue Let the poore therefore be our field wherein we sow our corne and surely we shall reape plentifully let the poore be our altar whereon we make our offering and then surely our sacrifice shall be acceptable and pleasant vnto God let the poore be our chist wherein to hourd our treasure and this shall surely further our reckoning in the day of Christ Iesus If our liberality abound according to our abilitie to the poore our God shall fulfill all our necessities through his riches yea he shall fulfill them with glory euen with such plentifulnesse and abundance as that his name may be glorified thereby The third thing which I note is that the Apostle saith that their recompence of reward was in Christ Iesus Whereby he giueth them to vnderstand that God made this recompence of reward vnto them of their liberality towards him not for their works sake as vpon desert but for Christ Iesus sake onely by grace Whence I obserue how the promises of God touching the recompence of reward for our works are made good vnto vs the promises are made and payed only in Christ Iesus not any way for the merit of our works seene or foreseene In him God from the beginning loued vs and made all his louing promises of his sweete mercies vnto vs and in him partly now he doth partly hereafter shall make them good vnto vs through his riches with glory This our Apostle witnesseth where he saith 2 Cor. 1.2 that all the promises of God in Christ Iesus are yea and are in him Amen that is in him they are all made and performed ratified and established And the reason is plaine for why doth he make or performe such promises vnto vs but onely in his gracious loue and fauour towards vs euery promise of his vnto vs being a testimonie of his loue towards vs And how doth he loue vs but onely in Christ Iesus in whom alone he is well pleased Mat. 3.17 His promises then vnto vs being made and performed onely in loue vnto vs his loue vnto vs being onely in Christ Iesus it is plaine that all his promises are made and performed vnto vs in Christ Iesus alone By him we are reconciled vnto God and in him through him and for him we haue whatsoeuer we haue So that whensoeuer any promise is made vnto vs throughout the whole Scripture either of blessing for this life or for that that is to come of temporall or of eternall reward of safetie from enemies or of saluation in the heauens still we are to lift vp our eyes vnto heauen where Christ Iesus sitteth at the right hand of God to know that in him alone both the promise is made and shall be performed vnto vs through the loue of God wherewith he loueth vs in him Hence then first we learne not to credit any such as shall tell vs that any reward is promised or giuen vnto vs for the merit or worth of our works seene or foreseene For let but this ground be laid which is most certaine and true that all the promises of God vnto vs are made and performed in Christ Iesus then must it needs be concluded that in vs no merits or any thing were seene or foreseene wherefore such promises should be made or performed and that we are altogether vnworthie in our selues vnto whom any such promises should be made or performed For therefore are they made and performed in Christ Iesus because in vs there is nothing wherefore they should be performed or made Or if there be then as the Apostle reasoneth touching iustification saying If righteousnesse be by the Law that is by the works of the Law then Christ died without a cause so do I touching this point If in vs there be any thing wherefore the promises of God should be made or performed then in vaine are they made and performed in Christ Iesus I omit to speake of the great vnworthinesse of our best works because I haue spoken to that purpose often heretofore Onely for this time let this ground be considered and if any man at any time shall seeke to perswade you that this or that reward is promised and shall be giuen vnto you for the merit of your works tell him that it is promised and giuen vnto you in Christ Iesus and therefore not for any merit of your works Secondly hence learne the stablenesse of all Gods promises made vnto his children As this here is so they are all made in Christ Iesus and therefore must needs be stable and neuer faile Euen as we say that whom he loueth once he loueth vnto the end because whom he loueth in Christ Iesus him he alwaies loueth so his promises being all founded and grounded vpon his loue once made vnto his children shall not faile for euer because they are all made in Christ Iesus A notable comfort vnto all Gods children Hath he
promised life and saluation vnto all that beleeue in his name hath he promised deliuerance out of troubles vnto those that loue feare him hath he promised to fulfill all their necessities that shew mercie to the poore Here is the comfort that not one of these promises shall faile for euer because they are all made in Christ Iesus in whom he loueth vs for euer and therefore keepeth his promises made in him vnto vs for euer Let vs not therefore faile of what he requireth of vs and assuredly he will not faile of whatsoeuer he hath promised vs. Thirdly hence learne that the promises made of God belong onely vnto them that are in Christ Iesus The proofe whereof is this because the promises made of God are onely made in Christ Iesus so that vntill such time as we be graffed in Christ Iesus and made one with him we are meere strangers from the couenants of promise and quite aliants from the commonwealth of Israel Holy things are not for dogs nor pearles for swine nor the childrens bread for whelpes his faithfull oath is vnto Abraham and his seede and his holy promises vnto them that be at peace with him And who are at peace with him but they that are in Christ Iesus his Sonne by whom we are reconciled vnto him In vaine therefore do they looke after the promise that beare not fruite in the true vine Christ Iesus Worldly blessings they may haue and that in abundance Mat. 5.45 For he maketh his Sunne to arise on the euill and on the good and sendeth raine on the iust and vniust But the sure promises of grace and glory are vnto Iacob his people and to Israel his inheritance Will we therefore take comfort in his promises The Spirit must witnesse vnto our spirit that we are in Christ Iesus Will we lay hold on the promises as belonging vnto vs So we may if in the assurance of our soules we can crie Abba Father And therefore as we loue and long to be partakers of the promises so let vs in all things grow vp into him which is the head that is Christ Let vs be mercifull as our heauenly Father is mercifull and let vs do good vnto all but especially vnto them that are of the houshold of faith If we communicate vnto the necessities of the Saints the Lord our God shall fulfill all our necessities through his riches with glorie in Christ Iesus This promise is sure because made in Christ Iesus and belongeth vnto vs if we be in Christ Iesus and walke worthy of Christ Iesus abounding in this and euery good worke vntill the day of Christ Iesus Now one word of that wherewith the Apostle concludeth his Epistle saying Vnto God euen the Father c. Vnto God c. In these words the Apostle concludeth the Epistle with praise and thanksgiuing vnto the Lord. Where first I note that now he saith our God Before he said my God now our God So that howsoeuer more scruple be made about the one then the other yet ye see there is warrant for both to vse this or that speech as the occasions are Secondly I note that the Apostle saith our Father Not any but Christ alone saith my Father He when he speaketh of himselfe saith my Father when he speaketh of vs saith your Father as that place witnesseth where he saith Ioh. 20.17 I ascend vnto my Father and your Father and to my God and your God He can onely say my Father because he alone is his Sonne by eternall generation we onely can say our father because we are onely his sonnes by Adoption through Christ Iesus and regeneration by his Spirit Thirdly I note that here he is called our God in respect of our creation and our Father in respect of our regeneration our God in respect of temporall our Father in respect of eternall blessings Now vnto God euen our Father for both euen for all be praise for euermore that is throughout all ages from generation to generation that as his mercies endure for euer so his name may be blessed and praised for euer Whence I obserue that alwaies in all things God euen our Father is to be praised write we or speake we remember we or mention we temporall blessings or spirituall graces still he is to be praised And the reason is For of him and through him and for him are all things In all things therefore let vs glorifie God through Iesus Christ let vs alwaies haue that song in our mouthes Apoc. 7.12 Praise and glorie and thanks and honour and power and might be vnto our God for euermore Amen And as our Apostle concludeth this his Epistle with praise vnto the Lord so let vs remember to praise our God for that it hath pleased him so often to assemble vs together to heare a great part of this Epistle opened vnto vs and thence to be instructed in the things that belong vnto our peace The beginning of this worke was his doing and the continuance of this worke is his doing Vnto him therefore euen God our Father be praise for euermore Amen LECTVRE XCV PHILIP 4. Verse 20. Vnto God euen our Father be praise for euermore Salute all the Saints in Christ Iesus The brethren which are with me c. NOthing being needful to be spoken touching the coherence of these words with the former for the better vnderstanding of these I will also omit the repetition of what was spoken the last day and trust vnto your faithfull remembrance the rather for that my desire is at this time to conclud my obseruations vpon this conclusion of the Apostle In these words therefore now read we haue the conclusion of this whole Epistle Where first he concludeth the Epistle with praise and thanksgiuing vnto the Lord. Secondly he addeth as his manner is certaine salutations First for conclusion of the Epistle he saith Vnto God euen our Father c. or vnto our God and our Father referring our vnto both as vsually it is wont Where first I note vnto whom all praise is due euen vnto God our Father our God and our Father And here by the way first I note that the Apostle saith Vnto our God In the former verse he said my God now he saith our God So that howsoeuer more scruple be made about the one then about the other speech the one being vsed and approued by all the other being scorned and reproued by many yet ye see there is warrant for both and as the occasions are so we may vse this or that speech vnles we will take vpon vs either to censure the Apostle for vsing as well the one as the other or thinke that the Apostles example may not be our warrant to vse as well the one as the other It is as I told you the last day the policie of the Diuell to the end that he may stay men from this boldnesse and confidence and neare approch vnto God as to