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

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those that liue it are counted as signes and wonders in Israel Isa 58. 18. But what marvell sith Christ was not Isa 52. vlt. And 53. 7. knowne by it his image despised his person in carnall eyes deformed They then that cannot discerne the Sunne how should they perceiue a Starre a Candle Moreover Is our life from Christ Let vs then that are Vse 4. partakers of it returne him prayse for so great a blessing divide not this treasure ascribe nothing to thy owne selfe or others it s the root that beareth vs not we the root life is a Rom. 11. great blessing this life the blessing of blessings then let vs never be weary in magnifying the Lord for such a favour nay seeing it comes from Christ let vs returne it againe vnto him seeking his glory as he hath done our good If we beget children doe we not expect they should spend their liues for the profit of vs their Parents As the Sea therefore sends forth many rivers but they returne all againe into her bosome so seeing our life comes from Christ let it flow backe to the prayse of his Maiestie and th● rather wee may be induced hereto because this is the onely way to haue life and to escape death for all eternitie And here may all of vs learne instruction seeing our life Vse 5. is from Christ Iesus are we weake and feeble in our minds Runne we to to him and pray we Lord quicken me Be our children dead in sinne Bring them before Christ desire him to raise them to life imitate the poore that liued when he liued amongst them in the vse of the meanes still haue an eye to this Physitian otherwise our Patients will not be cured this is that Sunne that with his warme beames enliueth all the creatures if he be absent we are all but dead men rotten branches And to shut vp this poynt wee are to learne here to be Vse 6. carefull that we offend not this Lord of life and incurre his displeasure for if we doe we shall dye the second the eternall death Simple Polititians be they that consider not how all the keyes to convey life and death hang on his finger Will we not tremble to heare treason For its death And shall we then crucifie againe the Author of our salvation and rend his flesh in our teeth and tongues like the vaile of the Temple from the top to the bottome take heed of this for he that lighteth our Candle can easily put it out And this shall suffice to haue spoken of the Pen-man of this Epistle for the present now in the next Verse is the person mentioned to whom Paul in particular directed his Writings VERS 2. To Timotheus my beloved sonne grace mercie peace from God the Father and Christ Iesus our Lord. IN these words are two things contained a description The Logicall resolution and a salutation in the forme of a prayer the person to whom Paul sent this Epistle is described 1. By his name Timotheus 2. By a word of relation sonne 3. By an adiunct beloved In the salutation being laid downe prayer-wise obserue what he wisheth and from whom the matter what is 1. Grace 2. Mercie 3. Peace the persons from whom be 1. God 2. Iesus Christ and both are amplified by a word of relation God the Father Christ our Lord. To Timothie This word imports as much as the honor The Theologicall exposition of God or precious to God his Father was a Grecian and his Mother a Iewesse who beleeued in God Acts 16. 2. What he was in name he was in nature he honoured God was precious to God My beloved sonne Sonne is a word of relation and doth alwayes presuppose a father who gaue him his being and it is diversly taken 1. For persons Psal 79. 11. 2. for lambes branches bullets arrowes sparkes or almost any other thing the which proceedeth from a cause Genes 49. 22. Psal 79. 11. and 80. 16. and 89. 23. and 1●4 4. and 147. 8. Iob. 5. 7. Now the reasons why Paul cals him sonne may be these 1. Because he had either begot him or at the least confirmed him by the Gospell 2. Because he loued him as a sonne and he Paul like a Father 3. In that he was yong and Paul old 4. And in regard he was so like minded to the Apostle from the first reason I take it came the name of God-father because they had begotten them to God And he addeth Beloved to distinguish him from others for he was beloved of God of the good people and of Paul also in a speciall manner Grace mercie and peace To omit to speake of all the acceptations of grace let vs know that it is tooke chiefly two wayes 1. For Gods free favour 2. For the gifts flowing from the same the first though I exclude not the latter is here meant Mercie To omit how many wayes it is accepted by Mercie here is meant a loving inclination of God to his people being in misery or for an effect of his grace or the effects of that loving inclination mercie seemes to proceede from grace and all other blessings whatsoever for by the grace of God each one may truely say I am that I am Peace It also in Scripture hath a large extent but ordinarily is received for outward rest and quiet and inward tranquilitie of the mind this latter is to be received though the other not absolutely to be reiected And what if wee should vnderstand grace as it is in God Mercie as manifested to miserable man And peace as the effect which proceeds from both Yet how ever it be this is most safe to hold that Paul wished Timotheus all good spirituall corporall temporall eternall without him and within him From God the Father In these words the Apostle manifesteth to vs from whom and in what order grace mercie and peace is derived to vs. By God is meant the first person in the Trinitie and he is called the Father because as from the fountaine all things proceed from him for by an vnvtterable yet naturall generation he begate the Sonne from all eternitie He is also a Father by Creation Adoption Preservation Againe the word Father is attributed to the whole Deitie in generall and the distinct persons in particular Isa 9. 6. Ier. 23. 6. And Iesus Christ our Lord We haue once heard for all what Iesus and Christ signifies yet here is another title annexed to our Messias Lord in the Hebrew tongue is a supporter stay or base In Greeke it signifies one that hath authoritie over a thing or person being a word of relation It is a truth that I haue writ diverse times vnto Churches The Metaphrase in generall and publike and private persons in particular wished them all blessings that might make either for their comfort and peace here on earth or the perfection of glory in the kingdome of heaven But now I haue Penned this
we note that Power loue and a sound minde should moue vs to be resolute Doct. 1. in good actions and to stirre vp all other gifts we haue receiued Againe we obserue as they bee in opposition with the word feare that Doct. 2. The Spirit of power expelleth feare For the weaker is easily subdued by the stronger Men of strength will with ease ouercome feeble Infants Besides we collect that Loue driueth away feare Perfect loue casteth it out as another Doct. 3. Apostle writeth 1 Ioh. 4. 18. And this may be obserued also that A sound minde putteth away the Spirit of feare Doct. 4. He that knoweth all the dangers in his voyage and hath skill to guide the Barke will not feare shipwracke Ignorant Pilots so iniudicious Christians are timorous persons Reasons For 1. It will teach a man why he should feare 1. 2. 3. 4. Vse 2. What to feare and what not to feare 3. When he is to feare when not to feare And 4. How to feare for kind measure Wouldest thou then not feare as the wicked doe then striue for a sound mind a profound Iudgement And as they depend one on another we gather that Power loue and a sound minde are of absolute necessity for a Doct. 5. resolute Christian Preacher or private person For Power without Loue can worke but will not Reasons 1. 2. 3. Vse 1. Loue without power would worke but cannot And Power and Loue can and will but a sound minde is requisite to guide both Woe then to those that stand in the Sanctuary of God to feede his flocke and haue none of the three neither seeke for them It had beene good for such they had gone to plow or Cart. I say no more of them but the Lord haue mercy vpon them In the name then and feare of God let vs striue for these Vse 2. three this cord will not easily be broken Get wee power loue sound minds so shal we be resolute in good courses and fight valiantly the battels of the Lord. Sleepe not with the veyle of darknesse ouer thine eyes couer not thy heart with the mantle of hatred neither be thou like the cripple that is alwaies crawling or relying on his crutches But get thou the annoynting of grace from aboue that thine ●●es may be opened loue shed abroad in thy heart and strength and nimblenes to run through the whole man Omit not the season neglect not the meanes least thou seeke one day and shalt not be heard And finally we note another thing that Doct. 6. Power loue and a Sound mind are the gifts of God Man by his fall lost all Learne then whom to praise for them if thou best them whither to goe for them if thou want them VERS 8. Be not therefore ashamed of the Testimony of our Lord neither of mee his prisoner But be partaker of the afflictions of the Gospel according to the power of God TWo things in generall in this verse are to be obserued The Logicall resolution 1. A Dehortation 2. An Exhortation In the Dehortation are three things 1. What the Apostle dehorts from viz. Shame 2. Whereof Timotheus must not be ashamed viz. 1. Not of the Testimony of Christ 2. Neither of Paul his prisoner And 3. The ground why hee must not bee ashamed is contained in the word Therefore In the Exhortation three things also may be noted 1. To What the Apostle exhorts him and that is to suffer afflictions 2. What afflictions such as accompany the Gospell 3. How he must suffer according to the power of God And the word Therefore may also be a ground to the Exhortation as to the Dehortation The Theologicall Exposition Be not therefore This word therefore presupposeth two things 1. An inference drawne from some precedent reason 2. A thing to be omitted or performed subsequent Ashamed Shame is an effect that followeth the commission of some evill and alwayes is a companion of true repentance But by not being ashamed Paul intendeth more as Boldnes resolution constancy perseuerance Of the testimony of our Lord. That is the Gospel of Christ and it may be called his Testimony for 2. Reasons 1. For Christ did seale it with his bloud 2. Because in the Gospel testimony is giuen of Christ Testimonies are either divine or humane they be inarteficiall arguments hauing little force of arguing or prouing a thing and that they borrow from the artificiall for they haue it not in their owne nature Now the Gospel is a divine testimony and hath great power and authority because the author of it Christ was trueth it selfe and they that penned it were carried by the Spirit and could not erre Neither of me his prisoner There be two sorts of prisons and prisoners spirituall or corporall of spirits or of persons Peter speaketh of spirits in prison where note by the 1 Pet. 3. 19. way that soules departed are in place contrary to the iudgement of some But here is meant a corporall or personall prisoner for so was Paul at that present And he ioynes himselfe with Christ because his cause was coupled with Christs The Exhortation followeth But be partaker of the afflictions of the Gospel or Doe thou suffer together for the Gospel This word Partaker intimates 2. things 1. Companions or diuers persons 2. A thing devided or shared amongst them The persons Companions to Timotheus was Paul and others the thing they had part of was afflictions And afflictions are such as either wound the soule or body for man consisting of a double substance may suffer two kinds of torments But man onely can hurt the body not the soule of Paul was in their fingers Of the Gospell Gospel in Greeke is glad tydings and Gospel some deriue of God and speech saying it is an old Saxon word signifying Gods speech or good speech The sense is Endure such troubles as accompany the Preachers and embracers of the word of God and of Christ According to the power of God There is some difficulty in the vnderstanding of this phrase and my Authors say nothing to content me Some vnderstand them thus Being moued by or with the power of God others reade Being perswaded by the Gospel which is according to the power of God that is in which the power of God doth plainly shew and declare it selfe For my part I take this to be the truth that Paul wold haue Timotheus to suffer as he was able and had or should receiue ability from God And hee seemes to answere a secret obiection that might arise in his sonnes heart He might thus reason How am I able being yong and weake to endure such great troubles as accompany Paul and other strong Christians Paul takes away this thus Why Timothy doe thou suffer according to thy power beare what thou art able for that 's all I require of thee or that the Lord will afflict thee withall Being that the Lord hath
other ought not to be neglected And it doth teach vs a twofold lesson 1. To obserue Vse 2. learne who bee our principall and speciall friends 2. To pray to God in a particular and peculiar manner for them 1. Subiects here must remember their Soueraigne and the Lords annointed vnder whom they enioy peace and plenty Nebuchadnezzer must be prayed for for Sions sake for the members are much beholden to the head 2. Let children be mindfull of their parents who next to God haue giuen them a beeing and preseruation Wee haue too many Chams that discouer their fathers skirts but too few Shems who seek their honour Is not that eye worthy to be picked out by the Rauens and of the young Eagles to be deuoured that hand like to the wicked Kings to wither and that tongue to cleaue to the roofe of its mouth who be neuer opened lifted mooued to pitty desend and blesse their naturall begetters that haue suffered and done so much for them Let such take heede that Cain's curse doe not befall them 3. The people must not forget their Pastors For they be they that of the slaues of Satan children of wrath haue be got them to be sonnes of God heires of heauen But this is not the custome of our countrimen they of all others care least pray least for their Preacher and hence it often falleth out that God remoues their candlestick tyeth the the tongue of their spirituall Father that he speakes not to their comfort or sends some heauy iudgement vpon them for the omission of this dutie 4. And in conclusion Ionathan must be remembred of Dauid euery priuate friend must pray for another Pray I pray you for all men in generall but especially for Princes Preachers Parents and principall friends in particular for this is the Law and the Prophets Another point is this that Mercifull men shall obtaine mercy Doct. 9. No doubt but that Paul preuailed with God for his kind friend Onesiphorus And Christ confirmes the point affirming that Blessed be the mercifull for they shall obtaine mercy Math. 5. 7. Because the Lord hath so promised Reas 1. Againe hee loues his owne image and likenesse in his Reason 2. children and so crownes it with reward Art thou vnmercifull Then expect condemnation without Vse 1. mercy For to such shall be shame and confusion And as this may comfort the mercifull so it should moue Vse 2. all to shew mercy that they may bee comforted with the same comforts wherewith they haue comforted others and that of the Lord. But obserue these Rules 1. Let the glory of God be preferred aboue and before Rules in shewing of mercy to be obserued the reward 2. Let loue of our brethren and Gods command moue more than the reward 3. Confesse that it proceeds from Gods mercy if thou receiue a reward 4. Stay thou the Lords leasure in expecting the reward Finally we gather hence that They who would finde mercy in the day of euill are to shew mercy Doct. 10. in the day of euill One siphorus refreshed Paul in his day Christ shall reward him at his day he found out Paul in Rome amidst the prophane and he shall be found out in the aire not amongst the reprobate Compare Ier. 38. 9. with cap. 39. vlt. Iosh 6. 17. 25. Math. 25. 40. For God respecteth the circūstance of time such actions Reas 1. of all other are the best pleasing vnto him that be done in their season for all things are to be done in cōlines order God then doth declare the truth of his promise his fatherly Reas 2. compassion the more then at another season For fauours in their season are best apprehended most accepted And in so much as God will haue a time to reward euery good worke in why should he not picke the fittest oportunity the most acceptable season Let this assure thee that hast cōforted others in their greatest Vse 1. misery that God shall comfort thee in the time of thy greatest extremitie Thou maist build vpon 't And learne we hence to take knowledge when is the day of Vse 2. evill to others cōfort them at that instant that we may with boldnes expect the like at the Lords hands Refresh the poore afflicted needy in their need and God in mercy shall remēber thee in thine We would al haue cōfort in the houre of death day of iudgment why then here is the way take compassion on the members of Christ now and it shall be vnto thee as thou desirest But here a Question may arise why Paul praieth for mercy Quest at that day rather then at another time 1. Because it will be the greatest and most dreadfull day Answ that euer was to thousands 2. If he find mercy then for his friend he shall be blessed euer after 3. And if he should passe that day there could neuer be any hope of future fauour 4. Finally though the Lord should deferre mercy long in the requital of sauours yet then Paul knew was the day wh● no good work should be forgot or go vnrewarded therfore he named that day From whose example reasons Let vs all learne to pray that all those whom we truly affect and from whom we haue receiued many kindnesses may all find mercy with the Lord at that day Amen It will be obiected that if Onesiphorus had once the possession Obiect of heauen the which he had long before that day he needed not mercy for he had it already 1. If he was sure of mercy then who doubteth but that he Sol. was certaine to haue it here also For he that ascendeth to the highest step of necessity must take the lower in his passage Therfore in this we see the Apostles great wisdom in praying 2. Paul prayeth for the manifestation and declaration of Gods mercy to him at that day For a man may haue a pardō for his offences be sure of it in respect of himselfe in particular yet it cannot be knowne to all vntill the king cause it in publike to be proclaimed And by the way learne we this lesson that God will take a particular knowledge of euery distinct person at that day for Paul prayeth that Onesiphorus in particular may haue mercy manifested to him Yea he knoweth all his children by name as he sayd of Moses the which were it truly beleeued and well considered would be no weake ground of reioycing to the faithfull person And in how many things he hath ministred vnto me at Ephesus thou knowest very well Because the same things for the most part haue beene handled heretofore that are to be obserued out of this appellation or testimony we will but name the doctrines and so omit them Where Paul was prisoner at Rome now as we fee at want as heretofore in Ephesus we note that Sometimes in great Townes and famous Cities it hath gone hardly Doct.
most preferment and the face of man but not one of a thousand in the first place the mercy of God But beloved let vs be of another mind striue we to haue Vse 2. this liquor shed abroad in our hearts to haue a sensible feeling of his tender mercy and sacred affection so shall we eat our bread with gladnesse and drinke our drinke with a chearfull heart be mercifull as our heavenly Father is mercifull to vs vnto our kinred and acquaintance the want of this causeth deadnes of affection doubting in the promise and rebellious disobedience both to God and man for wicked men are alwayes mercilesse men because that none can exhibitie that to another the which he hath not first received himselfe for as mercie is deriued vnto vs we accordingly deriue it to our brethren and now we proceeede to speake of Peace Peace Hence we also obserue that As grace and mercie so peace is a principall thing to be sought Doct. 7. for Take peace in what sence you please it will be worth the having Peace every where is commended and commanded 1. For the peace of God it passeth all vnderstanding 2. Peace Reas 1. with man is no small favour this made the face of Esau to Iacob looke like an Angell 3. In the dayes of Peace we may goe out build houses plant vineyards thriue and prosper 4. How soundly may we sleepe awake with ioy and runne into the Sanctuary when this double garment of externall and internall peace doe cover our beds and round about beset and guard our persons None know the worth of it but such as sometime haue wanted it and beene at warre with God and the creatures Away then with the courses of some who would be counted Vse 1. Christians that thinke not of it care not for it but of far greater blame are they worthie that seeke to set enmitie betweene God and man neighbour and neighbour Doe these seeke after peace Doe they wish it Or rather doe they not shut it out of place and person and set open the gates of warre and strife at all times every where These desire to swimme and fish in troubled waters and of their father the devill are they for his worke they delight to doe But let all the sonnes of peace pray for it entertaine it and Vse 2. make it their onely companion It s of great worth every way profitable What creature covets not peace Ioyeth not in it And shall not the reasonable desire it striue for it To liue and not to haue peace with man is vncomfortable but to be at warre with thy Conscience is most miserable its better not to be than not to haue rest peace Why could not David build the Lords house Why He wanted outward peace Why was Cain so netled in soule Why He had not inward peace Why are so many millions miserable Why They are not at peace with God and doth not experience tell vs that times of trouble hinder Traffique Let vs all then cry with the Prophet for our Ierusalem Peace be within thy wals and prosperitie within thy Psal 122. 7. pallaces Seeke to the God of peace for all kindes of peace Salute we our friends as Paul did his Grace mercy and peace be with you Say we to the house wherein wee set a foote Peace be vnto thee and if it be not worthy thou shalt not lose thy labour for it shall returne to thy selfe And thus much of this Point From the order of these words somewhat may further be observed as that Men without grace haue no true or sound peace Doct. 8. They haue a sound of feare in their eares quake at the shaking of a leafe tremble at the least terrible tydings and like the raging Sea cast vp mire and mudde There is no peace saith my God to the wicked Levit. 27. 36. Isa 57. vlt. Let the cause be removed and the effect will cease where fire is wanting heat will not be had and though some seeme to be ever at peace yet they are never at peace For they are fallen from the Creator God and its vnion Reas 1. with the Creator which giues rest to the creature if the foundation be not firme the building will reele and totter 2. And haue they faith No How then should such purchase and procure peace For onely justification by faith since the fall of man bringes sound and setled peace 3. And as they want faith so they haue no hope whereon to leane that their soules may finde peace 4. Adde to all this a guiltie and naughtie Conscience and how should they partake and be possessed of true-inward peace Gen. 4. 14. Dreame not then that all is peace that seemes so for what Vse 1. peace can a prophane person haue within him that wanteth faith and grace Nay how ever he cary the matter he is at warre within himselfe The wounded Deere runs skips and leapes yet the Arrow or Bullet stinges paines torments at the very heart and before long will cause a fall a death So vnder a chearfull looke the soule may be sorrowfull and all that laugh in the face are not at peace within Who then is he that would haue true and sound peace Vse 2. Let him striue for mercie and grace for as the shadow the bodie heat the fire these follow the one the other Many imagine they haue it yet are fouly deluded deceived I deny not but the wicked may haue a peace but it s not worth the naming for it runnes not from a cleare fountaine it springs not from a sweet root and therefore one drop of this we haue in hand is worth a thousand of that as a litle rose-water a whole glasse-full of mudde 2. It is not constant neither but often interrupted every thunder clap will cause such to quake to tremble and at the last they shall certainly be consumed O that men were wise to gather grace so should they haue peace at their latter end in the meane while be like Mount Sion vnmoueable Graunt that such may haue outward troubles yet they shall haue inward peace that passeth all vnderstanding And now we proceed to another Point Where Paul in all his former Epistles nameth but grace and peace and writing to Timotheus whom he loved so dearely addeth mercie in his Salutation we note that The degree of affection cannot be covered Doct. 9. As the truth so the measure of loue will show it selfe and and not in words onely but likewise in action Doe we not see this in Iacob towards Rachel Ioseph to Beniamin Ionathan to David And the people to Ionathan Gen. 33. 2. and 43. vlt. 1 Sam. 20. 2. c. For the disposition of the heart over-ruleth the outward Reas 1. members and like a strong streame moueth all the wheeles according to its motion 2. As he that loues would declare 2. the truth of it so would he its degree
Word is truth both in the threatnings and promises and shall be accomplished accordingly as we keepe the conditions And by obedience I doe vnderstand a conscionable care to beleeue threat and promise aswell as to obey the precept for to beleeue is to obey and to liue by faith may be called the obedience of the Gospell 2 Thes 1. 8. Many haue some care in somethings to obey the Precept but never regard to liue by faith and if they can say they beleeue in Christ Iesus then they thinke all is sure and their dutie discharged as though a man must never vse his hand but in holding fruit in it and not in applying it to the mouth assuredly faith hath a worke in every action that we performe and that not onely in assuring vs the thing is lawfull we doe but in perswading the Lord will performe his promise to vs when wee haue kept the covenant with him And vnderstand this that if we could beleeue more wee should obey more for all life motion and spirituall action comes from faith as all naturall acts are said to proceede from the forme If then these things were looked into who dares de●ie that a Christians course is leborious painefull and requires great diligence on their parts that will serue the Lord For knowledge of God and of his will must be had and faith and obedience too in him and his word both in the threats and promises as well as in the Precepts else no good servants From mine elders It may here be demanded if Paul served God with a pure Conscience before his Conversion I thinke it may be vnderstood of both for so farre forth as the Letter of the Law directed he was obedient liuing after Acts. 26. 4. 5. the most strict sect of a Pharisee and what he did against the 2 Tim. 1. 13. Saints was through ignorance wherefore the Lord had the rather mercie on him but it is principally meant after his Conversion For the Pharisees of which number he himselfe was vnderstood the Law according to the Letter neither could he away with the Gospell till the Lord in a wonderfull manner had compassion Acts 9. on him The Doctrine that we gather hence vnderstanding by Elders the auncient Patriarches and beleeving Iewes is that The Church before Christ had the same faith which now it hath Doct. 6. after his comming Did they not all eate the same spirituall meate And all drinke of the same spirituall drinke For they dranke of that rocke which followed them and that rocke was Christ It differed nothing in truth but in degree as a childe and an aged person 1 Cor. 10. 3. 4. Else God should be changeable but there is no variablenes Reas ● nor shadow of turning with him Iam. 1. 17. And were it not thus man should be saved after a divers Reas 2. manner which may not be admitted And did not Christ and his Apostles confirme their Reas 3. doctrine by Moses and the Prophets This confuteth the Maniches who hold that an evill Vse 1. God writ the old Testament and a good the New but one God was the Author of them both and what was darkely included in the former is more clearely manifested in the latter And this may confirme the salvation of our forefathers Vse 2. who kept the faith and to doubt no more of them than of our selues The Papists bring in this place for their Parents wherevnto we reply 1. That they were not beleevers 2. They are degenerate and fallen from the ancient faith 3. There was a Prophecie of a generall Apostasie and so their Elders are by the streame of time corrupted 4. And the antiquitie of a few or 500. yeares is not sufficient From mine Elders That Abraham Isaac Iacob whence it ariseth that The name of the righteous shall be had in remembrance Doct. 7. What though the names of the wicked rot Shall not the memory of the iust be blessed Yes it shall grow vp and flourish from generation to generation Prov. 10. 7. Psal 112. 6. For God will honour them that honour him 1 Sam. 2. 30. Reas 1. Reas 2. Also one good man will perpetuate the name of another vnto their succeeding posteritie and tell it to his children Furthermore such leaue noble and worthy Monuments Reas 3. behind them either by doing or suffering which spread their fame into all quarters and future generations And the wicked may haue an hand in this action for Reas 4. some of them may thinke well of such and register their names others as Pilate by Gods over-ruling-hand may write the truth which shall stand for ever Doe they not then labour in vaine who seeke to blot out Vse 1. the memoriall of the iust with taunts scoffes and reproaches as men doe the engraving vpon Tombes with their foule shoes Let them doe their worst spet their venome weaue a deceitfull webbe yet shall they never effect their purpose for What is written shall be written maugre all their malice the names of the wicked are written in the earth each foot shall scatter them but for the righteous they are engraven in stone with a pen of yron and for ever shall flourish Here may a man take direction that will lead him to true Vse 2. honor eternall doe iustice loue mercie walke vprightly serue in truth of heart the Lord God of thy Fathers and thy same shall ever remaine build Bethel pull downe Babel and thy name shall be everlasting Who would haue his name to rot His memoriall perish Not any then serue God from thy elders with a pure Conscience Many like Nimrod seeke a name but they in not taking the right way lose both it and themselues What person so poore if religious but is had in everlasting remembrance And who so great if vngodly but are either forgot or their names continued to their everlasting shame For when men by indirect meanes seeke prayse they lose it and purchase perpetuall reproach With pure Conscience Here is laid downe the manner how Paul served God whence the collection is that The service of God is then commendable when it is accompanied Doct. 8. with a pure Conscience These two like Naomi and Ruth must run together What tast without salt in the white of an egge What praise in that service that wanteth sinceritie And who ever in merchandizing lost so much credit as Himeneus and Philetus that made shipwracke of faith and a good Conscience The Hebrewes still put heart for conscience having no particular word for it and so doth the Evangelist so that a pure heart and a pure conscience are equivalent termes Prov. 15. 15. 1 Ioh. 3. 20. Isa 38. 3. Iob. 27. 4. 5. Acts. 24. 16. Heb. 13. 18. For otherwise the life were led either in close hypocrisie Reas 1. or open profanenesse and can that deserue praise which hath no similitude with God Nay he condemnes that which hath not
suffer the least riveret of our thoughts to be dreined another way We must with proud scorne neglect the counsels of flesh and bloud and attend to the commissions of our maker not daring to be idle or to attempt any thing without his warrant for else as Himeneus and Philetus we shall make shipwracke of faith and a good Conscience Who hath more science than the Devils and yet none a worser Conscience Walke therefore after this Canon and thou shalt haue for thy companion a good Conscience And this obedience must haue a two fold concomitant 1. Generalitie 2. Constancie 1. Vniversall knowledge must be seconded with vniversall Companions of obedience Psal 119. 6. Heb. 13. 1● obedience had not David respect to all the Commandements Did not the Author to the Hebrewes with his fellow-brethren desire in all things to liue honestly Or else men should haue but halfe and imperfect Consciences Doth not every Artist striue to vnderstand all the Precepts in his Art Put them in practise that the frame may be perfect and complete Not one tittle in the rule but is of force each branch must haue a place in this building A good appetite covets to taste of every dish a sound sense to smell all kinde of flowers and to participate of what goodnesse is in the creatures We must eate all this Booke drinke every drop of this water else we shall haue but partiall Consciences We may not separate what God coupleth be our owne Carvers in this feast but f●ed fully liberally An Herod will doe many things but he that is anointed of the Lord will performe all for else he shall haue but a maimed Conscience Painters will not omit a finger in the picture M●sicians a chrochet nor Grammarians a syllable a letter a comma So must our obedience to the rule be generall vniversall All this Mercy seat must b● covered with Gold no part left vnwashed Thinke yee on this who boast so much of good meanings honest hearts and workes of supererogation and then you may confesse with shame that you come farre short of the patterne and haue but the remnants of a good Conscience 2. The second concomitant for the making vp of this edifice is continuance constancie We must endure alwayes in all things not be weary in well-doing for cursed is he that continueth not in all things that are written and the threat was Gal. 3. 10. at what time thou shalt ●ate in dying thou shalt die Some hold Gen. 2. 17. that Adam did no morall act before he fell because he must haue nothing towardes his debt all must be discharged by Christ the sureties skore And say they had he done one good theologicall act he had then pleased God infinitely and so could he never haue beene displeased for Gods complacentia is himselfe Sure I am he never persevered in generall obedience and therefore wanted a necessary companion of a complete good Conscience For as we are tyed to know all obey all the particular rules of this worthy art so are we to perpetuall obedience We must be faithfull to Rev. 2. 10. death or else possesse no crow●e of life We are sure that perseverance in all things will ●ake vp and preferue a good Conscience And when God would haue confirmed Adam had he obeyed the Law vniversally is not to me revealed By this Discourse you may see what a Legall good Conscience requireth to wit a distinct and vniversall knowledge of every branch of the Law Secondly generall and constant obedience to all the Precepts For he who is ignorant of the least tittle or transgresseth in one particular by omitting what the Law commandeth or committing what it prohibiteth is guiltie of all and so consequently hath not Iam. 2. 10. a complete Legall good Conscience because it is as you haue heard a feeing of all our actions according with the rules of the Law Whence follow these Conclusions 1. A double errour in the Romanists who hold that men may haue a complete Legall good Conscience and consequently be iustified by their owne workes But can any man since Adams fall vnderstand the whole Law Or if he could giue generall and constant obedience to every Precept Is there any that sinneth not in some thing May not the best cry with David Who can vnderstand his ●rrours Psal 19. 12. and if thou Lord should marke what is done am●sse were any Psal 143. 2. able to appeare in iudgement answere one for a thousand And if they cannot thus say and thus doe as in truth they cannot is not their Doctrine false and to be reiected Also doe they not with-hold the Bible from the common people Which when they do● so how can they procure a Legall good Conscience For whatsoever action is not guided by a rule is evill before God and haue you not heard that knowledge ●ust precede obedience and is absolutely necessary for the obtaining of a good Conscience 2. That not any since the fall of Man Christ excepted ever had a complete Legall good Conscience For the best know but in part and their obedience for the most comes 1 Cor. 13. 9. short of their knowledge Christ indeed vnderstood the whole will of his Father fulfilled all righteousnesse no corruption Mat. 3. 15. was in him nor any sin ever proceeded from him so that he and none but he except we should include the blessed Angels ever had a complete Legall good Conscience for his person and actions in every respect were proportionable and correspondent to the whole Law he failed not in the least tittle 3. Hence we may cleare the Lord from all iniustice in the condemnation of so many millions of men and women for doe they know his will Perfectly obey it Haue they never erred in iudgement or gone astray in their conversation If they haue done both may he not then in his iustice condemne them If any want this forenamed Conscience the Lord may in his iust iudgement inflict eternall torment vpon them For haue they not lost his Image Runne they not daily on his skore Let vs then rather admire his mercie than quarrell with his iustice that we all were not long agone consumed 4. Finally we conclude hence that the safest and securest way for vs is to denie our Legall good consciences striue to obtaine the Evangelicall that we may be iustified saved This is the true and onely way neither haue wee a better For though the law be of power to giue life yet we are ignorant weake and not able to fulfill it if we were then Christ dyed in vaine Now what an Evangelicall good conscience is we will paint forth what concurres to the making vp of it wherein it differs from the Legall what must be done to procure it and how an Evangelicall and Legall are not to be separated in a Christian 1. For the first An Evangelicall good Conscience is a seeing of an act according An
spirit extraordinary effectuall calling is immediately by the spirit without the word The calling here is effectuall and in respect of Pauls manner of being called seemes extraordinary though not so in regard of Timotheus Act. 9. Vs. That is me Paul and thee my sonne yet all the elect either haue beene or shall be called with an holy calling With an holy calling Here 's another distinction of callings Holines it is either personall or by imputation So God is called holy Yea he is holines it selfe Personall holines is either inherent or actuall and both these are to bee found in the subiects of this calling though not perfectly yet in some degree Besides imputatiue holines is double also 1. When Holines imputed 1. to persons 2. things Christs holines is made ours for hee is our sanctification 1 Cor. 1. 30. And as our sinnes were made his sinnes and hee became a sinner by imputation so his holines is made ours and we without sinne by imputation Finally holines is ascribed to the word to the Sabbath and many other things because they are causes of holines or times wherein we are specially commanded to serue God in the duties of the first table or in that the things be not applyed to a common vse and in some one of these senses or other as wee shall heare more anone this calling is said to be holy Not according to our workes That is not for the prevision and foreknowledge of mans faith or merits But according to his purpose and grace viz. Freely and of his meere mercy and from no other ground Which was giuen to vs in Christ Iesus before the world was 1. Here Paul giueth a strong reason why their workes were not the cause of their calling in the word Giuen for a gift must be free and 2. He draweth another from the time it was giuen viz. before the world was 1. From all eternity And amongst many other arguments this is not the The Metaphrase least for to moue and instigate thee to preach the Gospel to beare witnesse to the truth to partake of the afflections which I and others suffer in as much as the Lord of his meere grace and favour before any thing had a being and without any regard at al of thy faith workes or merit hath freed thee from all dangers placed thee in a good condition and in time called thee effectually by his blessed Spirit with such an honorable and holy calling as he hath done me and will also preserue thee to his heauenly Kingdome through the Redemption of Christ his sonne our onely Saviour and Mediatour If we hold this verse as a digression from the former matter The deductiō of doctrines then this poynt will follow that A Digression is warrantable either in words or writing Doct. 1. And the Scripture else where doth confirme this proceeding Gen. 4. 23. Isay 7. 16. For it is a meanes to stirre vp better attention and to Reas 1. draw the Auditors more strictly and respectiuely for to giue heed to what followeth The Hawke sometimes goeth afarre off that shee may get the wind and bee better able at the stoope to strike and catch her prey And this Crypsis in preaching may be vsed Againe the Spirit of God may draw the tongue sometime Reas 2. to speake what we haue not purposed for the good of some particular person who is in the assembly and some present occasion may minister iust occasion to doe the same as wee see and know by our daily experience Then let not the Auditor be too forward in censuring the Vse 1. preacher for digression from the matter in hand for God may haue a secret hand therein that we for the present are not ●ware of for the comforting or conuerting of some person present And this may warrant the Minister in this kind of proceeding Vse 2. Cautions for Digressions Yet Cautions must be observed 1. See it bee not for want of study through idlenesse or thy owne neglect and carelesnes to be well provided 2. Forg●● not to returne to thy former matter and purpose for otherwise a iudicious Auditor wil feare as Sauls father did him when he had long sought his Asses that the preacher hath lost himselfe Againe where Paul in the former verse and the last word thereof hauing named God doth in this make a description of his goodnes we note that It is vsuall with good men when they name the Lord to make Doct. 2. mention of his mercies or some benefit they haue receiued from him For they would haue him to receiue all glory We vse in Reas 1. the naming of our friends to make mention of the kindnes we haue receiued from them to shew our thankfulnes and that they might be praised Againe they would not haue the Lords name tooke vp in Reas 2. vaine or be profained and the more they can speake to his praise the more inward comfort they haue Wee ioy in the commendation of those wee most affect so doe the children of God in the due prayse of their father Would to God that this were the custome of our country Vse 1. but with too many it is not We vse his name but alas how often in vaine not once making mention of the least of his mercies nay it were wel if some did not first sweare by it and next declare what villany they themselues haue committed But if we would glorifie our heauenly father haue Vse 2. others to speake to his praise shew foorth our thankfulnes and haue much inward comfort let vs couple his name and his mercies together and hee that doth this shall haue a secret and hidden ioy stirred vp in his heart Is it not vsuall that if we speake much of a friend and his fauours to vs for others to say Sure you are beholden to or you are in loue with such a one wil not such sayings make vs right glad In the third place if we consider these words as they are a motiue cause and depend on the former then this is the doctrine that will follow that He who would not faint but suffer affliction is still to haue an Doct. 3. ●ye to his Salvation Moses had respect to the recompence of reward and thereby was moved to suffer affliction with the people of God for a season The Saints looked for a better resurrection therefore endured Racking sawing asunder and resisted v●to bloud The forerunner and finisher of our faith Christ our Lord he setting before him the glory provided for him endured the crosse and despised the shame Heb. 11. 24. 35. and 12. 2. Because varying of the obiect varieth the minds motion Reas 1. Psal 40. When Dauid considered his misery hee cried out I am poore and needy but when he thought on the affection of God towards him he altered his ioy and note saying Yet the Lord thinketh on me Besides saluation is a
Ieremiah Iosiah Timothy and others that of children were called that Parents might be encouraged to vse the meanes of conversion and not be without all hope of a blessing And so we doe of some old men as of Abraham called at 70 yeares of age and it seemeth probable by Nichodemus his answere to Christ that he himselfe was an old man Iohn 3. This no doubt is written that we might not Aged persons rarely called despaire of any for God can call whomsoeuer and whensoeuer he will Yet men and women of great age are not often called 1. For they are most vnfit for the Lords worke what man will take an aged person to make a watch or to become a Musition for are not his fingers set which should bee nimble for such a calling how vnhandsomely will they goe about so curious an instrument or action And shall the Lord then not make choise of the fittest persons to performe his actions 2. Old men haue gotten a stronger habit of sinne then others what saith Christ of such Can a Blackamore change his skin and a Leopard his spotts then may ye doe well that are accustomed to doe evill 3. Sathan hath more possession of such people and is the harder to be cast out 4. We read in the Gospell that God calles at the third houre sixt houre ninth and eleuenth houre why not at the twelfe making an equall distribution I cannot tell I doe but guesle but it may be because at the twelfth houre either none or few are called I would not be mistaken here as though this were vnpossible with God but that men might be moued not to procrastinate and deferre their conuersion I haue added this And when trees haue beene often watered pruned and dunged yet beare not doth not the Lord of the vineyard bid them to be cut downe Luk. 13. for why make they the ground barren wicked men hinder the good of others This for the time of calling The manner how followeth and that is either violently How the Lord calleth or more gently God is wise in all his proceedings and therefore calleth as he seeth needfull Some he peirceth to the very hart woundeth the spirit causeth them to quake and tremble exceedingly at the voice of his power others he calleth with a still and quiet voice as is most conuenient The discreet Mother hauing a child stubborne vntoward shaketh the rod when as one that is more meeke and tractatable is allured by a cherry or apple and euen so dealeth the Lord by his chosen children for he calleth them according to their dispositions and seuerall qualities yet alwaies so as they come and obey his voice 2. And this may serue to haue beene spoken of their cutting off both for time and manner Next their fitting followeth the which consisteth of 2. branches the one Compunction the other desperation When the Cyon is cut off from the tree then in order it followeth that it be fitted to be set into the stocke into which it is to be grasted And so when by the knife of the law we are either violently or more leisurely lopped from the old oliue it ensueth that wee be fitted to be set into the new Christ the Lord. Now this compunction of heart hath two degrees the one rendeth asunder the very ioynts and sinewes pierceth and entreth into the very bones and the marrow But the other doth not wound so deepe but as it were skarreth the skin and ●ateth into the flesh For as some be let bloud in the finger others in the arme or head so God being a most skilfull Chirurgion doth pricke and let vs bloud as he discerneth the nature of our disease The child came to himselfe by neezing seuentimes 2 King 4. 35. And after this compunction followeth an holy desperation which consisteth in the denying of a mans owne merits and relying on the Lord for mercy for his sinnes being great and many his good workes not any at all he is therby brought to despaire in regard of himselfe and also to call the mercy of God into question Yet not doubting whether the Lord can but whether he will or not grant him a pardon for his sinne Now doth the sinner hang the head smite his hand vpon his thigh cry earnestly to God for mercy and seeke to the Minister the Phisition of the spirit for grace and comfort And this compunction and holy desperation is greater in some then other for these Reasons 1. Some man may haue had many outward calls by the Sixe reasons why all men are not called a like word and inward motions by the Spirit the which hee hauing resisted and not obeyed then hee is brought to feare that he hath sinned the sinne vnto death And if he hath any knowledge in the Scriptures peradventure will bring that to fight against himselfe especially that place in Heb. 6. or 10. 2. Other some haue had good education and haue bin trained vp in the Scriptures of children so that they haue beene restrained from many grosser sinnes then others haue committed Whence it followeth that there is degrees of compunction Trees that haue beene long vnpruned haue the more cuts when they come to be lopped and dressed 3. Peraduenture the Lord hath a purpose to send some one of his children for to dwell like Lot in Sodom or Ioseph in Egypt and there he foreseeing that they shall haue weake provocations to good strong temptations to evill letteth them drinke the more deepely of the dregs of sinne that they in future time the rather may be moued to avoyd it For a wounded spirit and troubled conscience for sinne will proue for time to come an excellent Tutor Hee that hath burnt his feete with treading on the hot stone will looke the better to his steps in all his iourney afterward 4. All men haue not constitutions of body alike some be strong others weake so that that measure which will but cure the one humble him sufficiently would kill the other and bruise him to powder And if some were so cast downe as others be they being poore men and to liue by great toyle and dayly labour would neuer be able to execute the duties of their calling and to get their bread by the workes of their hands A man in the breaking of his beast will haue an eye to that and shall not the Lord much more in the reclaiming of his children 5. God appointeth some to be sonnes of thunder to speake with power and authoritie to Preach amongst a people whose faces be as brasse and neckes like sinewes of yron therefore he bringeth them home as we say with a witnes at their conuersion For as he that hath receiued much wrong by a bad neighbour will speake worse of him then he can who hath had lesser iniuries at his hand so will such as haue felt the enmity of sinne the most preach more fervently against it then he who hath not felt the sting
of it in that measure 6. Finally some men haue most excellent and acute vnderstandings now the more clearely the intellect receiueth a fearefull obiect the more will the heart be troubled If one through the dimnes of the eye take a Lyon for a tame beast he wil not be shaken with equall terrour as he wil that by the clearenes of his sight discerneth the beast in his owne kind and nature And this is a most true position that the best wits be the most wounded in heart at their effectuall calling because sin and the punishment be the more clearely apprehended and men ordinarily more then women from the acutenes of the vnderstanding But some may obiect It s from God not man that one is Obiect 1. thus humbled for God in this doth all True yet the Lord worketh according to the condition Sol. of the subiect about which he is excercised And women are often more cast downe then men be at Obiect 2. this season We grant it Yet that comes from the weaknes of the sexe Sol. And shall you not see one more terrified at the drawing of the sword then another is in beholding it sheathed into the very bowells Thus you haue heard how the Lord prepareth a sinner before effectuall vocation cutting off and fitting of him to be grafted a new at which time he is like a branch sl●pped from the body of the tree and ready to wither and dye in his owne apprehension And then the Lord speaketh vnto the poore perplexed soule by his Spirit in the promises of the Gospell and that peraduenture when he the least expecteth any such comfortable tydings secretly saying and whispering the sinner in the eare of his soule Be of good comfort for thy sinnes are forgiuen thee Now hee giueth Christ to him and him vnto Christ so that the penitent person is come home into his desired place and the liberty of Gods children Now from this that hath beene said we may deduce many Conclusions from the precedent discourse things for our further instruction and to confirme vs concerning the certainty of our effectuall vocation 1. Here we see that the law is necessary to be preached that like a schoolemaster it may whip vs to Christ for to find comfort in the time of neede 2. That the true sight of our sinnes and humiliation is a companion of effectuall vocation for the sicke haue need of the Phisition and Christ calleth none but such as are lost in their present apprehension 3. That euery sigh for sinne and compunction of spirit is not to be effectually called for Reprobates like Ahab and Iudas may for a time be much deiected yet neuer receiue Christ whereby to be truly iustified 4. We learne from hence that effectuall vocation is an action sensibly to be felt by the persons who be the proper subiects of it and a worke though on Gods part secretly effected yet on mans easily apprehended 5. And here men that haue not endured so much humiliation as others yet are not to despaire of their spirituall condition for the Lord doth not call all his a like To one hee reveileth some little sinne at the first least he should be swallowed vp of overmuch heauines yet by the punishment thereof he commeth to coniecture what is due vnto him for the rest And when the poore sinner hath got power against this then he will reveale vnto him some other of greater nature for hauing had experience of Gods former mercy he is made the more bold and able for to wrestle with greater transgressions and Sathans more fell and fierce temptations the which vsually come in the latter end of this spirituall combate For like a cunning Captaine that would raze downe the walls he first dischargeth his lesser pieces and if they will not effect it then he giueth fire to his greatest Ordinances and roaring Cannons 6. And for conclusion let him that is neuer so much deiected not be out of heart as though the Lord could not raise thee vp againe and comfort thy soule for as his mercy so his power is infinite The deeper the fo●●dation is layed the firmer will the building be and the more we be hu●●led and broken at our preparation the more shall we be ●●le to stand fast after our effectuall vocation Wherefore read pray meditate heare the word receiue the Sacraments and seeke to the Phisition of thy soule and at one time or other through one of these conducts he will seale to thy soule a certificate for the remission of all thy sinne and thou with comfort shalt say Now soule returne vnto thy rest Do● but vse the meanes tarry the Lords leisure and he shall come that will come and comfort thy heart say not that no man euer felt what thou doest for many haue and found pardon peace vnspeakeable But when thou are come home to thy long desire h●uen A Caution and the Lord hath heard the voy●● of thy weeping then see 1. thou faile not to performe the v●●es that thou madest ●● him in the daies of thy former affliction least a worse ●hing follow Neither think● it thine honour that thou h●st b●●●e 2. more te●●efied and deiected in thy preparation then thy brethren as the manner of ●o●e i● but be thou the mo●e ashamed that thy hea●t was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 th●● 〈◊〉 ●ust exhibite more power to ●●ll ●h●● ho●e then ●he rest o● his children And by how ●u●h the more 〈◊〉 Lord ●●th ●●mbled 3. thee aboue others be ●hou so 〈◊〉 the more 〈◊〉 in all good workes For the more p●ines and labour the Husbandman taketh in tilling his ground the more corne he expect●th from it at the time of harue●● and shall ●ot the Lord looke for the like from al● his manured and well ●●lled closes yes vndoub●●●ly And here I will adde some particulars that he who is of where in the that is called hath experience fectually called knoweth by experience whereof men in the estate of nature are ignorant 1. He knoweth now what a featefull thing it is to be a stranger from the life of God and to haue him for his enemie and would not for the 〈◊〉 of a world be one ●●ture in his former condition 2. How vnable he is of himselfe either ●● answre the Lords call or to beleeue in him though he would and find in himselfe a mind to both 3. What an enemy sin and Sathan is to the sonnes of men Now he perceiueth the sting of the one and the fiery darts of the other and how deepe they will strike pierce into the very ioynts and the marrow 4. He can tell you that a wounded spirit is the extreamest of all extreamities and that peace with God passeth all vnderstanding 5. That Christ was God aswell as man or els he had not beene able to haue borne the full burden of one mans sins much lesse of the whole world of the elect this is a
Reasons alleadged we omit what might be further collected from this verse and proceed to the next VERS 10. But is now made manifest by the appearing of our Saviour Iesus Christ who hath abolished death and hath brought life and immortality vnto light through the Gospell THis verse dependeth on the former For our The Logicall resolution Apostle hauing affirmed that we were called and saued in Gods purpose before the world was in these words declareth the manifestation of Gods mercy and the benefits we receiue through the same The particulars in this portion of Scripture be these 1. That the grace and purpose of God and mans saluation is manifested 2. The time in the word Now. 3. With whom or by whom it appeared and that is Christ who is described by two effects one that he destroyed death another that he brought life and the instrumentall cause whereby is said to be the Gospell Now. This word includes all times before and after the The Theologicall exposition comming of Christ Made manifest There be diuers degrees of the appearing of Grace but onely in our apprehension 1. Grace appeareth in Gods decree 2. In the darke promises at the beginning of the world 3. When the efficacy of the merit of Christ appeared in the world 4. By the application of the Spirit 5. When Christ came in the flesh 6. And lastly when hee shall returne againe in Glory Who hath abolished That is Remoued obliterated destroyed swallowed vp 1 Cor. 15. 54. c. Death By Death is meant the sting of death for all must once dye and the torments of hell hereafter called the second death Reuela 21. 8. As also the death of corruption which is in vs may also be vnderstood with all other kinds that be inflicted as curses And brought life First the life of grace here and of glory hereafter And immortalitie This argueth a further benefit that Christ hath procured for as Adam brought death and eternall death so Christ bringeth life and life that shall endure for euer Some read the word incorruption and the bodies of the Saints shall after the day of iudgement see no corruption Vnto light First openly manifestly and as cleare as the Sunne at midday vnto such as haue their eyes opened Through the Gospell First by the promises and doctrine of the new Testament written preached As the Lord from before the begining of the world of The Metaphrase his gracious and free purpose gaue through Christ Saluation to his chosen people so hath he now since the beginning of the Law and promises exhibited clearely and conspicuously vnto euery one of vnderstanding manifested the same by the bright appearing of Christ our Lord who hath blotted and rooted out death temporall in respect of the sting and torment and eternall paine in the kingdome of darkenes and hath also brought vnto light the assurance of the life of grace here and the perfection of endlesse glory hereafter and that by the writing and Preaching of the Doctrine and promises of the Gospell From the relation and dependance of this verse with the The deductiō of doctrines former we gather that Gods purpose in his appointed time shall come to passe Doct. 1. Grace was giuen in Gods resolution before the world and now manifested in former and present times Let man devise what he can Gods counsell shall stand The Lord of h●●sts Prou. 19. 24. Isai 14. 24. 46. 10. hath sworne saying Surely like as I haue purposed so shall it come to passe and as I haue consulted so shall it abide He declareth the last things from the beginning and from old the Psal 33. 11. things that were not done Yea the co●●sell of the Lord shall stand for euer and the thoughts of his heart from generation to generation And though Christ was long yet he came in the fulnesse of time Gal. 4. 4. For he is not subiect to forgetfulnes The Butler being Reas 1. but a man may forget Ioseph and Ioseph his fathers house yet howeuer that be the Lord alwaies is mindfull of his purpose David was in a passion when he cryed Hath God forgotten to be mercifull The Lord hath the Idea of all things in himselfe and euery thought is before his eyes so that he is not forgetfull of his purpose Psal 139. 16. He is true of his promise for it makes for his glory Shall Reas 2. the Lord purpose and not performe Sure this should argue instability and mutability in the Lord the which cannot be For the Lords purposes are founded vpon his counsell his counsell is most wise therefore hee neuer altereth or changeth his former purposes Neither doth God like man purpose any thing that he Reas 3. is not able to performe Nature may be interrupted and not produce her effects but the Maker of it cannot be hindered at all for his power is infinite and if he but will any thing it is done yea speake but a word Speech is one of the least motions yet when God said Let there be light Gen. 1. it was so This may serue for to terrifie the wicked and confute Vse 1. their Atheisme who cry out Where 's the promise of his comming haue not all things beene alike from the beginning Yet Act 17. 31. shall not the Lord appeare in his appointed tim He hath set a day wherein he will iudge the world The yong man Eccles. 11. 9. may reioyce in his youth and doe what seemeth him best in his owne eyes y●t let him know that the Lord will bring him to iudgement The Epicure goe in purple and fine linnen and fare delicately euery day but his sweet morsells shall be grauell in his mouth when his account is cast vp And be thou assured that as the Lord hath purposed mercy to his children so hath he iudgement without 2 Thes 1. mercy to all wicked and vngodly persons and in the time he hath purposed it shall be performed For he is Iob. 9. 4. wise in heart and mighty in power who euer waxed fierce against him and hath prospered God spared the old world long but the floud swallowed them vp at the length Iezabell had a long time of turning and Ierusalem of repenting but was not the wrath of God powred downe at the resolued time to the vttermost And so shall it be at the last with such as cry and thinke the Lord is like vs he will neither Psal 50. 21. Zeph. 1. 12. do● good or evill And in the second place this must teach the faithfull patience Vse 2. Ioh. 2. and to waite the Lords leysure We may not appoint the Lord a time when to finish his worke It was Maryes fault that would be directing her sonne that was God and man when to worke his miracles and be handling of him and we read that the best of Gods children haue failed in not patiently waiting for the accomplishment of
be marked that The best man may be forsaken These left Paul Doct. 8. Quest Ans Did these neuer returne to the truth afterward God knoweth not we and though we hope the best of some yet let vs feare the worst for the good of our selues VERS 16. The Lord giue mercy to the house of Onesiphorus for he often refreshed me and was not ashamed of my chaine WE may not thinke that this complaint and commendation The Coherence are here annexed without reason or relation to the percedent verse For thus I conceiue it is Paul hauing prest Timothy by many maine and forcible arguments not to be ashamed of the doctrine of the Gospell In the 13. ver giueth him a direction what to doe that he may not be ashamed which is to keepe the patterne of sound words for he that worketh by a true and streight rule shall haue no cause to be ashamed of his workmanship But in regard this might seeme hard to Timothy he tells him what he must obserue that he might be able to follow this forme of doctrine viz. Keepe the graces of God from decaying that are in him Oh but he might suggest this thing is as hard as the other Now Paul secretly grants him this and therefore tells him that he can no wayes doe that but by the assistance of the holy Ghost ver 14. And hauing giuen him this good rule least his sonne should be puffed vp with presumption and omit all subordinate helpes he tells him how many haue fallen away ver 15. for Timothy might thus conceiue Well if the Holy Ghost be and dwell in me I will feare the lesse or he might be temped to be carelesse from that ground for the preseruation of these worthy things And last of all least vpon the Mement of so many Revolters and that of Phygellus and Hermogenes he might be too much on the other side againe deiected for man on both hands is incident to fall into extremities he bringeth in a worthy example of loue boldnes stedfastnes and resolution in this Onesiphorus to hearten and imbolden him This may seeme to be the true scope of Paul and dependance of these foure last verses Or it may be thus Paul may put Timotheus in minde of these mens falling away and of this good mans resolution that he by the shame which befell the one and the prayse accompanying the other might be the more disswaded from declining and perswaded to stand fast For doubtles these instances of coutrary persons proceedings carry with them the seedes and force of an argument being by Paul thus produced But to omit that wee come to the words the which consist of a petition and a reason In the petition we may obserne 3. things 1. To whom it 's The Logicall resolution preferd the person is the Lord. 2. The thing petitioned for and that 's mercy 3. For whom this petition is put vp and that is for the house of Onesiphorus Thus much for the prayer or petition In the Reason are 3. things also or t' is threefold 1. Onesiphorus refreshed Paul 2. He did this often And 3. He was not ashamed of his chaine And though the Reason seeme but twofold why he prayed to God for this man yet we may without breach of the Reasons rule apprehend it to be threefold as we haue demonstrated out of the word Often The Lord giue That is God the Father impart conferre The Theologicall Exp●sition or grant Mercy I would here vnderstand mercy to be taken in a large extent as for outward and inward blessings with whatsoeuer is profitable or comfortable for soule and body or for all the like refreshings I was in my troubles refreshed with may be the Apostles meaning To the house of Onesiphorus House in the Hebrewe is of building in Greeke of dwelling in our English from custody or tuition And the word house may be borrowed from the Almaine huis which is of hu to defend Whereby the way we may take the description of an house the which is a building wherein man doth inhabite or dwell for safetie and tu●tion By house in this place is meant the people whereof Onesiphorus had charge whether wife children or seruants by a Metonymie For he often refreshed me That is did by his personall presence praiers conference and gifts many a time recreate and comfort me both in body and minde And was not ashamed of my chaine That is When I was vsed like a theefe or malefactor and went vp and downe with irons on my heeles or hauing a keeper was led being chained by the hand he tooke knowledge of me and did not passe by me as they of Asia did accounting it a disgrace to their reputation As I cannot but iustly complaine against and condemne The Metaphrase all Asia of which company were Phygellus and Hermogenes in that they were ashamed to visit or refresh me So I must needs highly commend Onesiphorus for many refreshings whereby he comforted me both in soule and body and tooke acqnaintance of me esteeming it no disgrace or shame although I was chained and vsed like a Malefactor For the which his kind dealings towards me I beseech the Father of all mercy to comfort and bless● all his whole familie wife children ●●d servants both in soule and body with all earthly and heauenly benefites euen as he hath comforted and refreshed me in all my miseries and great afflictions by his presence prayers conference and other fauours The Lord giue mercy c. Whereas many fell away and Doctrines deduced one mentioned that was resolute and Paul brings him in to be imitated of Timothy we may note this instruction that One good mans Example is to be preferred and followed before Doct. 1. a world of wicked persons We may not follow a multitude to doe euill Exod. 23. 2. No one Lot in Sodom one woman in the South one Michaiah is to be respected before al other vncleane Sodomites lazie Damosells and hundreds of false Prophets 2 Pet. 2. Luk. 11. 31. 1 King 22. 8. For he hath the truth on his side he followes the narrow Reas 1. way that leadeth to heauen Now the truth is to be preferred more then errour though Millions swerue to the one and a few embrace the other Againe God will excuse no man for so doing It will be Reas 2. a cold plea for a man to say I saw few of that stampe but multitudes of this I did as the most did when he shall come to the time of reckoning the great day of his account This iustly meetes with some in our dayes who hold Vse 1. neighbours fare good fare and to doe as the most the best way But haue these many the truth on their side doe they keepe the forme of sound words What a madnes would we esteeme it if a man when he is conuented before the iudge and accused for theft should say why all my
he sought him out found him And here it may seeme to appeare that these people were at Rome when they forsooke Paul and also probably that they met with him with his chaine and would not take knowledge of him but turned themselues from him and that by the opposing of these seuerall persons actions directly one against another Now in this Verse we haue a description of Onesiphorus The Logicall resolution 1. It s said that he was at Rome that was the subiect place where for a time he abode 2. He is described by an effect For he sought 3. By the manner how very diligently And 4. By the successe of his seeking he found whom he sought Againe here be two things layd downe in these words concerning Paul the one that he was at Rome the other that he was prisoner and in distresse there But when he was at Rome This word But is diuersly vsed The Theologicall exposition in Scripture Sometime exclusiuely I haue lost none that thou gauest me But the sonne of perdition 2. Inclusiuely Now is layd vp for me a crowne of righteouses and not for me only But for al them that loue his appearing 3. Discretiuely He gaue them all none excepted change of rayment But vnto Beniamin three hundred pieces of siluer 4. Oppositiuely Not Iesus But Barrabbas And in the last sense it seemes to be taken here They of Asia sought me not or He was not ashamed But c. opposing it to shame and then the arguments are diu●rs I haue thought it might be read For making it the third argument of a Syllogisme or Reason to proue that Onesiphorus was not ashamed of Pauls chaine He sought me out very diligently To seeke in Scripture is sometimes taken in the worst sense also for prayer c. Here it signifies searching and going from place to place very studiously and inquisitiuely And found me That is came where I was and did meete with me The Difference betwixt Inuenire and Reperire is this When we goe on a thing we doe inuenire when a thing comes on vs we doe reperire The one seemes to be an act per se the other per accidens Let no man once doubt that Onesiphorus was ashamed The Metaphrase of me being poore in bonds for he being at Rome where I was prisoner in chaines very diligently and studiously inquired for me and trudged from place to place vntill he had met me found me out And would hee ever haue done this if he had beene ashamed of me or scorned me No verily be thou assured of that my sonne For hee being at Rome c or when he was at Rome When Doctrines deduced he was there and heard or knew of Pauls troubles he then sought him and refreshed him whence note that When the faithfull are afflicted then they are to be refreshed Doct. 1. Say not vnto thy neighbour Goe and come againe to morrow will giue thee if thou now haue it Prou. 3. 28. I am 2. 15. c. For that 's the fittest time Now a morsell of bread or cup Reas 1. of cold water to a dry and hungry stomacke will be right welcome comfortable A word now spoken to the weary and wounded soule is in its sittest season and how gladly will it be receiued Againe we know not what a day or hower may bring Reason 2. forth our brother may be dead or swallowed vp of ouermuch heauines in the meane time And will not that be pitifull fearefull Now sleepe hence forward the houre is come c. could not but pierce the sluggish hearts of Peter and Iohn Besides we may haue our goods taken from vs or in Reason 3. future time want all oportunity to doe good when we be willing the which though the world neuer dreame of such a thing is an heauy curse Would it not greeue the husband to much haue good seed and yet want ground and time to sowe it In so doing we make God our debtor and the sooner Reas 4. the better is it not And here the best may be taxed for omitting of the Vse 1. present occasion or poore mans necessity We are prone to commit sin instantly and to put off good and charitable duties from time to time and to doe them lingringly But beloued this should not be so we gather fruit when it is the ripest cut downe corne when it is hardest let bloud when it groweth ranckest and shall we not refresh our brethren being poorest Let vs be otherwise minded Is thy brother hungry now Vse 2. feed him thirstly now giue him drinke burdened with sinne now comfort him sicke or in bonds now visit him And doe but obserue the Lords proceeding and thou shalt see that alwayes in the greatest straites then he hath declared his arme of mercy In the middest of the sorrowes sayth the Prophet of my heart the Lord comforted my soule In my daies marke the best haue their dayes of affliction he heard me Then goe thou and doe likewise Canst thou tell how it may fall out with thee in future time Death will come and it s a righteous thing with the Lord to depriue those of meanes of comfort then when as they would not comfort others in great sorrow at that houre Wee may runne from the poore and his homely bed and cottage but God and his swift curse will one day overtake vs. Wherefore I in the name and mercy of God beseech you to minde this thing Say not Pharisaically see to it thy selfe Little doest thou know how the very presence of thy friend in time to come may comfort thee And I wish that the experience of the want of it may sometime teach thee the worth of it I may truly say that if men knew the sting of death burden of sin or extremitie of hunger by experience they would runne to and fro to comfort and refresh the afflicted but men haue not felt the one therefore they neglect the other A morsell of bread or cup of small beere nay a word spoken in due season may not saue the body but a soule from death Then seriously assiduously minde this one thing Thou wilt reply we shall endanger our selues in so doing Obiect 1. Sol. 1. Onesiphorus might haue said so being at Rome but would that haue serued his turne 2. Thou therefore must do it and leaue the euent to God Epaphroditus was neare vnto death and regarded not his life in this case for the service of his brethren Phil. 2. 30. But they are visited with strange and noysome diseases Obiect 2. Sol. Why such haue most need of all others the greater miserie the more need of mercy I am a Minister and my people haue the plague may I Quest 1. visit such It s generally held no thou maist not being a publike Answ person for thy death may be the death in mans iudgement of many a soule And a generall
The yong man must Remember his Creator in the daies of youth least the houres come wherein hee shall haue no pleasure in them Iezabel had a time so had Ierusalem Agrippa and many others but when they foreslowed the oportunitie they found not in future time any mercy When God calleth and we will not come we shall cry but we shall not be heard Wofull experience hath taught this truth to many thousands for there is an appointed time for all things vnder the sunne 2. Seeke for what thou wouldst haue at the Lords hands let him be the principall Asa was sicke in his feete Ezekiah at the heart the one seeking to the Phisician first died the other going to God had his life many yeares prolonged Goe not with Saul to a witch at Endor with Iudas to the Pharisees with Ephraim and Iudah to Ashur and Hos 5. 13. king Iareb with the Papist to the Pope or Angell But goe to the Lord for these are miserable comforters and the best of them if the God of all the world the first mouer of all things and chiefe Phisician be absent cannot heale thee or cure thee of thy wound But seek vnto God and he will heare thee helpe thee 3. Goe to him but not like the proud Pharisee with I thanke God I am not so nor so neither with the boasting Papist in the robes of thing owne righteousnes but come vnto him in the name of Christ Iesus the sonne of his loue send him or set him before thee For whatsoeuer thou shalt seeke in his name that is in his worthines it shall be giuen thee For without Christ he is a consuming fire 4. Let the word and that neuer-erring spirit be thy guide If these two lead thee to the Father in the new and euerliuing way of Christ the Sauiour of all that are saued thou shalt find according to thy hearts desire Practise this Rule 5. Haue respect to the manner of thy seeking let it be vpon the feete of faith and affection with the wings of pure zeale and feruency and then thou shalt find assuredly 6. And finally let the end of thy seeking be for the glory of thy God the good and comfort of thy brethren and reformation of all thy wayes the curing and curbing of thy strong corruptions the encrease of all grace and for food friends favour and rayment so farre and no farther as the Lord seeth them to be needfull for thee Obserue these directions and then stay the Lords leysure and be sure of it that as Onesiphorus found Paul so shalt thou the thing thou hast sought after be it what it can in earth or heauen Now whereas Onesiphorus sought Paul at Rome and was permitted to refresh him we may note that Rome heathen was not sobad then as Rome Christian is now Doct. 5. Act. 28. 30. For Paul might be suffered to liue to haue his keeper Reas 1. to leade him in a chaine to dwell in a house all that would were permitted to come vnto him and without let he might preach the kingdome of God the Gospell of Christ But now if a Paul were there he would not be thought worthy to liue no not for an houre Againe wicked men grow worse and worse Reas 2. Vse Let this for euer be as a sure brand for that Beast who is drunkk with the bloud of the Saints that it is he and no other who exalteth himselfe aboue all that is called God and the very Antichrist whom the Lord will consume with the sword of his mouth They boast of piety and pitty when as Cain was no more cruell to Abel then they be to the faithfull Well Let them thinke that they doe God good seruice in putting vs to death yet they are deceiued it that In this we are not that for so doing they shall tast of the very dregs of Gods hottest vengeance spue and fall and dye the second death For Pope and Papists are men according to the Divells owne heart VERS 18. The Lord grant vnto him that he may find mercy with the Lord at that day and in how many things he hath ministred vnto me at Ephesus thou knowest very well WE are now come through the good prouidence The Logicall resolution of God to the last verse of this Chapter In the which two things are comprehended 1. A prayer 2. An Appellation In the Prayer we may obserue 4. things 1. To whom Paul prayed the Lord. 2. For whom he prayed him That is Onesiphorus 3. For what he prayed mercy 4. At what time he would haue his friend to receiue the thing he prayed for at that day In the Appellation we haue these particulars 1. That Onesiphorus relieued Paul 2. The place where it was at Ephesus 3. Wherewith that is many things And 4. The probation of this in the last words These or this thou knowest very well He drawes an argument from Timotheus knowledge to confirme his Testimony The Lord. In Hebrew Adonai is Lord being a word of The Theologicall exposition the plurall number yet often vsed in the forme singular it is deriued of Aeden a base or pillar which sustaineth a thing and our English word Lord hath much like signification being contracted of the old Saxon word Laford which commeth of Laef to support sustaine or cherish so that Lord is a Sustainer refresher supporter cherisher For if God withdraw his power all things come to nothing In the Greeke it properly signifieth one that hath authoritie or on whose authoritie something dependeth or consisteth and so indeed doe all things depend on God and hee is cheife gouernour and owner of all things created Mercy The word in the Hebrew put for mercy doth import a sacred affection of piety fauour benignitie and bountifull good pleasure or will of God towards a man without respect of desert or merit It is also applied to man and then it is meant a pious louing and benigne affection whereby he is moued and inclined to doe good to shew pittie compassion c. or that grace of God the which he hath receiued from the father through Christ which is inherent in him or conferred externally vpon him and then its glory Isai 40. 6. 1 Pet. 1. 24. And it is frequent for the Greeks to vse that word which our Apostle doth here for it the which Christ himselfe alloweth did practise See Hos 6. 6. Math. 9. 13. And the Hebrewes of Chesed which is Mercy call a godly man chasid that is gracious mercifull Psal 4. 4. some read a gracious Saint With the Lord. The like phrase we read Gen. 19. 24. The Lord rained fire and brimstone from the Lord. Paul vseth the like manner of speaking for as iudgement came from the Lord vpon Sodom so he prayes for mercy to befall Onesiphorus from the Lord Yet I haue thought that Lord in the first place is to be vnderstood of the Father and in the second is meant the Sonne
be The Iudge of all the world But in regard the most little consider this day or dreame of their latter end or if they doe vsually like Agrippa put it off vntill it be too late let these following Motiues somewhat preuaile with thee to practise it speedily 1. Remember that he may come suddenly in the dead of Motiues to prepare for the day of iudgment the night when thou little dreamest of such a matter Was it not a dreadfull summoning to the rich foole This night shall thy soule be fetched from thee Suddennes makes an evill a double curse We may die in our sleepe and what a fearefull thing would this be if we be tooke away in our sinnes for as death leaueth vs so shall iudgement find vs. 2. We cannot hide our selues or the least of our sinnes from his all-seeing eye For all things are naked and bare before him with whom we haue to deale 3. Consider his power he can send his Angells to fetch vs before him from the foure endes of the world be we neuer so strong in might or potent for number 4. Call to minde that he is strict and iust in all his proceedings not one can escape death if sinne be found vpon him 5. That there shall be no delay or bayle when he commeth iudgment shall be executed speedily 6. And last of all let it be well thought on what the iudgment is where the torments shall be with whom and how long The paine shall be in soule and body the place that darke and infernall pit the persons Sathan and all the damned from the presence of God and the spirits of iust and perfect men and the continuance for all eternity What heart so hardened conscience so seared or person so desperate reprobate weighing these things in the equall ballance of his owne minde and consideration that would goe on in a sinfull course and not amend Yet if this will moue nothing I say no more but the Lord haue mercy vpon thee for thy case is fearefull dreadfull The fourth Note we obserue is that The best man is not to rely vpon the merit of his workes but Doct. 4. the free mercy of God at the day of iudgement Math. 25. 37. 38. c. For he hath many falls into euill If we say we haue no sinne Reas 1. we deceiue our owne selues and the truth is not in vs And There is none that doth good and sinneth not no not one Even in many things we sinne all Besides our sinnes the best workes we performe be imperfect Reas 2. For as chaffe groweth vp with the corne so doth sinne cleaue to our perfectest actions Grace and corruption like fire and water mixed hinder the acts one of another from absolute perfection Away then with the Merit Mongers that plead through Vse 1. desert for saluation Had Onesiphorus neede of mercy that did so many good workes shal the Papist hold workes of supererogation We might say of Supererogation Canst thou stay the Sunne in his swiftest motion gather the wind in thy fist remoue the earth out of its center or stoppe the hot burning fornace with straw and stubble then plead afterward for merit yet these things be easier to mortall man then the other yet both impossible But they obiect Why then doth Daniel exhort the King Obiect 1. to Redeeme his sinnes by righteousnes Dan. 4. 27. 1. The Hebrew phrase is not truly turned Sol. 2. It s but an exhortation to repentance inducing him for to breake off his former cruelty he had committed the which is needfull for all persons 2 Tim. 2. 25. Christ bids the people to Make them friends of their riches Obiect 2. of iniquitie that when they want they may receiue them into everlasting habitations Luk. 16. 9. Sol. 1. They is not to be referred to the riches but to the persons as is plaine by the parable's application 2. No other thing is meant but that they would testifie of their goodnes and charitie towards them and pray for them Why then doth God command good workes Obiect 3. Sol. 1. To manifest that he approueth and alloweth them 2. That we might be prouoked to doe them 3. To comfort vs in the assurance of the truth of our faith 4. To strengthen the weaknes of our beleefe that often staggereth But God hath promised a reward to them Obiect 4. True but 1. It s of his free mercy not for our merits Sol. 2. He crownes his owne graces in vs. And we cannot Merit for 1. He workes both the will and deed of his good pleasure 2. There is no equall proportion betwixt our workes and salvation For they be finite imperfect temporall it is infinite perfect eternall 3. A worke of merit must be aboue that which is required at our hands aboue Gods due we haue none such For God hath created redeemed sanctified vs freely 4. We confesse that God might condemne the best for if he should Marke what is done amisse no meere man could abide it And he of his mercy can saue the worst Let the best therefore not presume neither the worst vtterly despaire 5. And we read of a threefold promise of reward 1. Vnder the Couenant of workes 2. Of faith 3. After we beleeue in Christ But this is all out of the Lords mercy and dignity not for our merits or desert 6. And if that be a truth that Christs merits doe not proceede from him or are procured by him without relation to the free promise of his Father the which some hold how then can man merit condignely Yet the Protestants maintaine good workes and no barren faith doe they allow as the lying Aduer●aries know well enough though they send vs all to hell with our fruitles faith Onely we say that by faith we are iustified without the workes of the law for were it otherwise Christ had died in vaine And this is our firme position that as fire cannot be without heate ayre without leuity water voyd of humidity or the earth be abstracted from all gravity No more can a true liuely faith be without some fruites worthy amendment of life Good workes are the way to heauen and a necessary condition if man haue time and meanes to be obserued yet they are not the sole cause of raigning When the Figtree saith our Lord puts foorth his leaues ye know that the spring draweth neere But is that a cause of the spring or the spring of that So when we bring foorth good workes we know we haue a true faith but faith is the cause thereof not the contrary and so consequently of mans salvation Bellarmine himselfe saith that in regard of the vncertainty of mans workes and our owne presumption the safest way is to depend on the mercy of God Thus by the ouerruling hand of God a second Caiphas hath once againe prophecied aright And let this doctrine reach vs to practise Christs lesson Vse 2.
for by the first he is re-beloved but by the second in a greater maner the manifestation of affection breedes affection as it is apprehended whether we respect truth or measure This argueth that the loue of many as Lot said of Zoar Vse 1. is but a little one so weake a spring can haue no deepe fountaine so small branches no great vertue in the roote and so feeble a flame no abundance of fewell for causes produce effects proportionable to their internall power doe they not Try then as the truth so the measure of thine owne and Vse 2. thy friends affection by the outward effects he that loues much will declare it by many prayers sundry actions this did Mary to Christ Christ to the people Beniamin must haue better attyre a double portion if Ioseph respect him aboue his brethren Shall Ionathan dye He shall not die if the hearts of Sauls subiects cleaue vnto him If Iesus loue Lazarus he will weepe groane in spirit and cry with a powerfull voyce Lazarus come forth for vndoubtedly such as the heat is within will be the burning without much loue much manifestation of it in words in action Or it may be Paul addeth mercie to grace and peace because that Timotheus was a Minister for the like he doth to Titus and omits it in all other his salutations to the Churches and people in generall to teach vs that Ministers of all men stand in need of mercie Doct. 10. And that not onely in respect of themselues but in regard of their place and calling To whom was this command chiefely exhibited Be mercifull as your heavenly Father is mercifull but to the men of God Or why did Elisha pray Let thy spirit be doubled vpon me but to confirme the truth of this Doctrine 2 King 2. 9. Luk. 6. 36. For they are in Gods roome resemble his Maiestie and Reas 1. therefore haue the more need of mercie in abundance Againe they are daily exercised about men in the greatest Reas 2. depth of misery and therefore store of mercie is necessary for such where much is to be vsed much is required This doctrines vse is scarce dreamed of or if it be but little Vse 1. practised Who that is a Preacher from the forenamed grounds seeketh to be rich in mercie Alas wee consider not how we resemble God What miserie the most are in and hence it followeth that Ministers many times are the most mercilessemen This must teach Preachers a lesson worth the learning Vse 2. namely to exceed all men in grace and mercy as Saul did the common people by the head and shoulders for doe they not resemble God Are they not the Wells where miserable sinners are to fill their emptie soules with the water of mercy Doth not each Ambassadour striue to resemble his Lord who sends him If the Preachers pit be dry how can we expect any in the common ditch Are not the Priests lips to preserue knowledge And shall their hearts be emptie of the spirit These haue rather need of a double portion I haue heard of a fire kindled in a towne that tooke hold of every house and passed by the Preachers I would not haue it so in regard of the spirit for how ever the former was accounted a mercie sure I am this latter is an heavie iudgement for all men should runne as the poore to the great mens houses to kindle their turffe at the Preachers Altar Where others striue for double honor double maintenance labour thou for double holines double mercie thus to doe is to doe wisely and but thy dutie neither From God the Father In this phrase two things concerning Doct. 11. God may be observed first that He is a Father God may be stiled a Father either essentially or personally Do ye so reward him O ye foolish people and vnwise is he not your Father This may be vnderstood essentially Deut. 32. 6. The God and Father of our Lord Iesus Christ 2 Cor. 11. 31. knoweth that I lie not here it is to be accepted personally Againe he is either a Father in generall or in speciall in generall as he is the Creator and conserver of all creatures hence he is called the Father of spirits Heb. 12. 9. Of Angels Iob. 1. 16. Of men haue we not all one Father Mala. 2. 10. And in speciall he is a Father and that of Christ or of the faithfull 1. Of Christ as he is the Word and begot from all eternitie the Lord possessed me in the beginning of his way before his workes of old I was set vp from everlasting or ever the earth was Pro. 8. 22. 23. 2. Of Christ by personall vnion Thou art my sonne I to day begot thee Psal 2. 7. Acts 13. 33. And of the faithfull he is likewise a Father in speciall 1. By regeneration Of h●s owne good-will be gate he vs by the Word of truth I am 1. 18. Or 2. By adoption Now are we the sonnes of God and haue received the spirit of adoption whereby we cry Father Father Rom. 8. 15. 1 Ioh. 3. 2. And haue the faithfull God for their Father in a peculiar Vse 1. manner Then in the first place we may take knowledge of their dignitie David could say Thinke ye that it is a small 1 Sam. 18. 22. thing to be sonne in-Law to a King Was that such a priviledge Then what is this O that the faithfull knew their owne worth Let the faithlesse fume chafe and swell till they burst yet one of these is worth a thousand of them the world is not worthy of such for is not the righteous better than his neighbour How readest thou Pro. 12. 26. Let the faithfull learne hence to know the God of their Vse 2. 1 Chron. 28. 9 Fathers and to serue him with a perfect heart and a willing minde will not a sonne honour his Father Must we respect the person of man And shall not wee regard the glory of God who is our Father How if we neglect him Can we be excused Doth not he expect it Deserue it And is it not our dutie to doe it Giue we him then his deserved titles make we mention of his many mercies secke we his glorie learne we his will and doe it for not every one that cryeth Lord Lord but he that doth the will of the Mat. 7. 2● Father which is in heaven shall be blessed As he is our Father in speciall so let vs honour him in a singular maner the rule of creation requires it much more of re-creation and adoption Againe Art thou a faithfull person Then looke vp to Vse 3. God thy Father expect a worthy portion at his handes Can they that are evill giue to their children good things Luk. 11. 13. and shall not your heavenly Father giue to you the things whereof ye haue need Be not then in doubt but beleeue cry not What shall I eat drinke
same command Ex. 20. 3. 4. Is not the promise made alike to them all Gala. 3. vlt. We must not then severely censure one another for who Vse 1. art thou that condemnest another mans servant he standeth or falleth to his owne Master Iames his exhortation is here to take place Be not many Masters that is many censuring and commanding Masters I●m 3. 1. Neither may we haue one another in too great estimation Vse 2. giuing that worship to the servant which is due to the Master what saith the Angell to Iohn See thou doe it not for am not I thy fellow-servant Rev. 22. 9. Care must be had that we make not vniust lawes to bind Vse 3. the Consciences of our brethren this were Pharisaicall and not to be obeyed if pressed servants must not Lord it but know that they haue a Master in heaven with whom there is no respect of persons Mat. 23. 4. Eph. 6. 9. In one word there must be no iarres and contentions amongst Vse 4. Luk. 2. 14. vs it s our Masters charge Liue in peace if an house be divided it cannot stand and if we devoure one another we shall be devoured Wherefore be of one tongue and of one heart liue in peace and the God of peace shall be with you 2 Cor. 13. 11. Out of the word Our might many points be deduced as that 1. Christ Iesus hath a pluralitie of servants Doct. 15. Doct. 16. Doct. 17. Doct. 18. 2. True faith applyeth the promise in particular 3. Christ is a Lord indifferently to all the faithfull 4. We are to acknowledge the priviledges of our fellow-servants In conclusion as this sentence depends on the former words we collect that No grace mercie or peace can be had from God the Father Doct. 19. but in and through Christ Iesus The Father is the fountaine Christ the spring and the reason is because God is iust and none but Christ can satisfie him He it is that must roll away the stone from the Wels mouth 〈◊〉 Adam dammed it vp He and none but he can open the sealed fountaine This discovereth the misery of Turke Iew and all who know not or deny the Lord Iesus we must learne hence ●o●seeke sue to God in his name and none other Acts 4. 12 And ●●therto of this second Verse Now followeth the third VERS 3. I thinke God whom I serue from mine elders with pure Conscience that without c●asing I haue remembrance of thee in my prayers night and day● THIS Verse and the two following depend The Logicall resolution one vpon another and though they be not a plaine exhortation yet they closely conteine in them the seeds of such a dutie as may easily be conceived In this we may consider a three fold Confession The first is that the Apostle gaue thankes which dutie is amplified by the Obiect of it God The second that he also served this God and that 1. For time from his elders 2. Againe for the manner with pure Conscience Thirdly he acknowledgeth that he prayed wherein 1. He remembred Timotheus 2. Without ceasing 3. And that night and day by this Paul declares to Timothie his affection and desire he hath of his welfare I thanke God Somereade I haue thankes for God but The Theologicall exposition that may not be admitted for Paul did it and deferred not this action In these words are three things 1. The action thankesgiving 2. The person I and 3. To whom thankes were 〈◊〉 The Lord. Whom I serue from m●re elders with pure Conscience The Apostle addeth these words because he was accounted by the Iewes to be an Apostata and a revolter from the truth and a dissembling person By elders is meant Abraham Isaac and Iacob Some reade progenitors ancestors fathers as though he spake of his naturall Parents With pure Conscience That is vnfeignedly sincerely and without hypocrisie That without ●●asing These words haue a double reading as if which Paul prayed he also pray sed God for Tim●thie or thus I than●● God that I doe pray for d●ee c. Without ceasing is constantly ordinarily I haue remembrance of thee in my Prayers Prayer is manifold mentall vocall conceived read in verse in prose publique private simple compound and the like It is likely these were private not publique prayers for Paul would avoyde all ostentation and iust cause of exception also at this time he was a prisoner Remembrance Remembrance hath in it foure things apprehension reposition retention and production a notion or thing is by the externall or internall sence presented to the eye of reason she perceiue● it that 's apprehension then it is committed vnto memorie as a place of conservation that 's reposition afterward kept ●here in safe●ie that 's retention and lastly when occasion●s given it s called ou● againe and that 's production A man takes a sha●t in his A Simile hand puts it in his ●●ver retaines it there for a t●●e and when he would recreate himselfe pu●s it forth againe this is a plaine Embl●me of Remembrance Night and day Lailah in Hebrew is for night and it signifieth rest quietnesse stilnesse because men were to take their ●ase and sleepe in that time which is from the Sunne-setting vnto the Sunne-rising Day In Hebrew jom of the stir tumu●● and busines that is in it the time from the Sun-rising to its-setting is called day or from Sunne-setting to its-setting in the same horizon whence a day is distributed into naturall or artificiall day is taken for hight and night for darkenesse and are applied to our spirituall estate 1 Cor. 3. 13. Ephes 5. 13. 1 Thes 5. 5. I would not haue thee my sonne Timothie once to imagin The Metaphrase but that what I write vnto thee is out of loue for I vnfeignedly giue thankes to God whom whatsoever others may report and beleeue of me I haue served in truth and integritie and not declined or done any thing of malice or set purpose since I had vnderstanding yea from my progenitors and elders Abraham Isaac and Iacob and the rest of the beleeving Iewes And be thou assured that as I pray night and day so in my requests to God I in a peculiar and speciall manner remember to make mention of thee and thine affayres alwayes in the Lord. I thanke God Note hence that Doct. 1. A good man exerciseth himselfe in thankesgiving He doth not onely craue future but returnes prayse for former favours hence it is that David Deborah Moses and many moe haue penned Psalmes of this subiect Exod. 15. Psal 106. Iudg. 5. Rev. 19. 1. 2. and Psal 96. per totum For they know themselues to be vnworthy of the least Reas 1. benefit and receiue all things without desert of their owne I am lesser than all thy mercies and all thy truth Gen. 32. 10. And it s a good thing to prayse the Lord no dutie more Reas 2. acceptable
by Christ and none other Fiftly That faith is not idle but beleeueth more or lesse And Lastly That it is not vnprofitable For the end of faith is that we might obtaine salvation In the second place according to promise wee will proceed to lay downe some proper notes of faith whereby we may the better know it and if that it dwell in vs as it did in Loïs Ennice and Timotheus 1. Let it be remembred that vnfeigned faith hath two 2. degrees of faith Luk. 17. 6. Rom. 4. 19. degrees the one is little compared to a graine of Mustard-seede the other great likened to a ship that is caried with a full gale Againe Note that there bee some things that are common to both of these degrees whether great or litle and others that are proper but to the one of them Those that be common to either be these 1. Faith whether strong or weake is seated in an humble Sixe properties of faith in generall strong or vveake hart It groweth not in any other ground it is not to be foūd in an hard and vntilled soile but in such as the Lord hath humbled and broken to pieces by the plow and harrow of the law Proud hearts and high minds possesse it not Mat. 8. 8. 10. Luk. 15. 21. 2. Againe where it is there will be prayer This tree will haue its fruit this fire will either be burning or smoking and tho a strong faith send out strong cries yet a weake in some modell will not be wanting Euery true beleever is a Prayer Act. 9. 14. 16. 16. Mark 9. 24. 3. Moreouer it will purge the heart where it inhabiteth Faith is like barme it will purifie and cleanse the person into whom it is infused by its proper nature from the filthines of the flesh and spirit or in that it assureth the soule that no vncleane thing shall inherit heauen Therefore it moueth man to be holy Acts. 15. 9. 2 Cor. 7. 1. 4. These two degrees agree in their obiect For they neuer rest vntill they come to God in Christ This is the way they both walke and the onely stay that they both rely and depend on Psal 20. 7. Io. 14. 1. 6. 5. Besides a true faith will apply the promises in particular it resteth not in an implicit or confused kind of beleeving but as the vnderstanding doth distinctly discerne them so doth faith seuerally yet distinctly apply them otherwise to doe were papisticall Iob. 19. 25. Io. 2. 28. 6. Lastly Faith neuer separates the end and the meanes Gen. 32. 28. that tend to it A strong faith will not faile in thus doing nor a weake faith either A false faith doth put iustification Col. 3. 2. 3. and Sanctification mercy and iustice Christ a Sauiour and Christ a Lord a sunder these all be common both to 1 Ioh. 3. 2. 3. the one and the other whether weake faith or strong And those that finde not these in themselues haue no true faith at all A greatfaith hath some excellent properties and effects which are not so proper to a weaker 1. One is to praise God in the greatest affliction Iob. 1. 21. Properties of a great faith 2. Another not to make hast out of troubles but with patience to stay the Lords leysure being assured that great and long afflictions shall do them more good than if they were lesser shorter Isa 28. 16. 3. To indure no deniall in praier vntill the request bee granted to aske feruently Gen. 32. 28. Mat. 15. 24. c. 4. To beleeue beyond all hope or reason in regard of naturall meanes that might produce the effect they looke for Rom. 4. 18. 5. Boldly to preach and professe the truth in the hottest 2 Cor. 4. 13. skirmish of persecution and if neede bee to resist vnto bloud 6. Finally to long and looke for the comming of Christ Phil. 1. 23. vnto iudgement and desiring to be loosed which is best of all These be some attendants that accompanie a great faith For a weake faith is often impatient in small trials forward to make hast both in respect of time and in vsing vnlawfull meanes now and then It liueth too much by sight and sence and doth not mount on high is easie and apt to take a deniall in prayer feareth death iudgment and hell therefore cryeth stay thine hand a while that I may gather Psal 39. vlt. strength before I goe hence and be no more seene They then that boast so much of the greatnes of their faith may here see if they be not deceiued Dost thou prayse the Lord in the greatest troubles with patience stay his leasure in all things admitt of no deniall of thy requests to God in prayer beleeve the promise aboue hope beyond hope and past all hope in the greatest opposition for the loue of the truth shew the most resolution and in a sound apprehension of the vanitie of this world and the excellencie of that to come wishest to be with Christ as the chiefe obiect of thy blessednesse why then it is with thee as it seemeth otherwise not The weake vnfeined faith hath these things to be found Properties of a weake faith with it 1. A true and cleere sight of the want of it Luk. 17. 5. 2. A prizing it aboue all earthly things Mat. 13. 46. 3. An earnest longing after it Acts. 16. 30. 4. A carefull and constant vse of the meanes to obtaine it Acts 10. 33. 5. A resolution to sinne no more Iohn 9. 36. 6. A great sorrow they found the want of faith no sooner Ier. 31. 19. yet mixed with some ioy that now at the last before it bee too late they haue espied it not without this resolution neither that let God doe what seemeth best to his Maiestie yet they will still sue vnto him for mercie He that findeth these things in himselfe findeth a good thing for assuredly vnfeigned faith is rooted in his heart and though for the present it be but as a seed yet before long in the daily vse of Gods ordinances it will spring spread and proue as a great and large Cedar This must comfort those that be weake in the faith that they bee not for the present vntill faith grow stronger in their owne apprehension swallowed vp of ouermuch heauines Now in the third place the lets that hinder men from obtaining Hinderances of faith in the Preacher of this vnfeigned faith are to bee discouered and they are partly to be found in the Preacher partly in the people In the preacher 1. When he doth not preach at all but lie and sleepe and delight in sleeping Of whom I may say as Christ did somtimes of the dumbe Diuell that this kind is not to be cast out but by prayer and fasting Mark 9. 29. 2. When men preach yet rarely as Papists come to Church according to the statute but more to saue their liuings than their owne soules and
conceiue that the Preacher speaketh out of spleene not of affection and therefore they regard not their words And they are wise for the world to come and louing to their children therefore they doe this For herein consisteth Reas 4. true affection and the principall dutie of good Parents to their children What then be those Parents that neuer practise this Vse 1. point Nay who neuer so much as once minde it may we not from the rule of contraries conclude that they are profane and impious they will prune their plants breake their horses and traine their hawkes to the lure yet neuer dresse the plants of the Sanctuary instruct their Sonnes or take the least toyle to make them faithful of the Lords family Doe they not rather by rotten speech lewde example and wicked courses make them two-fold worse than children of the Devill If they procure them a competent portion a profitable calling which be good we grant they thinke they haue done their dutie but what haue they done all the while for their soules and to make them the Lords sonnes the vnreasonable creatures will feed their yong till they can prey of their own wing so that thus farre they are equall to them Let them then that would bee accounted religions shew Vse 2. it in the imitation of these Godly parents Prouide food raiment for the body but especially a spirituall portion for their soules Worke faith in their hearts grace in their persons and in thus doing thou shalt saue thy selfe and thy children Let their eares heare not thy trickes of youth but what God hath done for thy soule in the daies of old Let thy practise be a Patterne worthy their imitation say to thy sonne doe thus aswell as this that it may be said of thee a Godly father a Godly childe And doe not deferre the time but take the season teach them while they are yong and let these reasons moue thee 1. For then they will remember it when they are old Pro. Children to be taught yong why 23. 13. dye cloth in the wooll not in the webbe and the colour will be the better the more durable 2. To deferre this dutie is dangerous For thou maist bee tooke from them Who then shall teach them after thy departure or what if they dye in that condition must not thou answere for their bloud 2. Kin. 2. 24. 3. Besides what if they come to faith will it not be with the more difficulty fallow ground must haue the stronger teame great trees will not easily bend and a bad habit is not easily left and a better come by If their memories bee stufft with vanity as a table-booke the old must bee washt out before new can be writ in 4. What shall I more say God workes strangely in children 1 Kin. 14. 13. and rare things haue beene found in them and what a comfort will it be for parents in their life to heare their children speake of good things and at the last day when they can say to Christ here am I and the children thou hast giuen Heb. 2. 13. me And here children must attend to their fathers instruction Vse 3. and not despise their mothers counsaile least the Rauen of the valley plucke out their eies and the yong Eagles eate it Pro. 30. 17. Some care not for the instruction of their Parents other can out-runne them but can they escape the hand of God and hee that obeyeth not his Parents speech shall certainely be destroyed 1 Sam. 2. 25. We reade here of good women but there is no mention made of their yoke-fellowes the mothers bee commended not the fathers whence let be noted that Faithfull wiues may haue faithlesse husbands Good women Doct. 6. may be vnequally yoked 1 Sam. 25. 3. 1 Cor. 7. 13. And this comes to passe through beauty for that being Reas 1. in a man may much preuaile with the weaker sex For why did the sonnes of God take the daughters of men to their wiues Was it not because they were faire So might it fall out with the daughters of God Gen. 6. 2. beauty preuailes much in this matter Gen. 12. 12. Couetousnes also may be a cause Honest maides be often Reas 2. poore haue but small portions wicked men sometimes rich and mighty and that may worke mightily Hester 2. 16. And if there be but such a motion how will carnal Parents presse their daughters to it Sometimes men affecting and knowing the person to be Reas 3. religious will like the Shechemites serue the true God to gaine fauour By this diuellish dealing many haue beene deceiued Iosh 9. 4. Gen. 34. 9. 14. It often falleth out that when persons marry they are Reas 4. both faithlesse and so the Lord calling the wife and passing by the husband that woman becomes vnequally yoked 1 Cor. 7. Whence we are taught not to iudge wiues by the cariage Vse 1. of their husbands neither husbands by their wiues For in so doing wee may commend or condemne without cause or reason Nabal the foole may haue a wise Abigail and Hester a good Queene an vnbeleeuer All wiues that haue good husbands must first praise God Vse 2. for such Secondly Make much of such Thirdly Pitty and pray for those that haue not such and fourthly In their liues endeuour to walke worthy of such else they may receiue the greater condemnation in being yoked to such And good wiues that haue bad husbands are 1. to seeke Vse 3. out the true cause if some carnall respect did not make them to marry such if it did they must acknowledge their sinne with great sorrow if not be patient For it is but a fatherly correction and God may worke great good out of it aiming at another end they are not aware of Hester 4. 14. for the present 2. They must be subiect to their husbands that though they obey not the word yet they may without the word by their good conuersation be wonne to the word 1. Pet. 3. 1. The wiues good actions must be their husbands instructions 3. Let this teach them to loue Christ their first husband the more perfectly For by the badnes of the one you may iudge the better of the goodnes of the other This is to draw good out of euill and worthy to be remembred 4. Such must admire the mercy of God to them that they had not themselues beene bad their husbands good and liue in hope that through the blessing of the Almighty they may proue instruments to saue their soules And if this fall out how would that man affect then his wife more than euer he disliked her From this doctrine the women maids or widowes that Vse 4. intend to marry may learne a lesson to beware in their election least they fall into the like condition And the better to direct thee let these rules be obserued in the choyce of an husband In the choyce
to it so that the secret will of God may be the revealed For before the Creation of the world Gods whole will was hidden in himselfe that afterward became manifest It was in Davids heart to build the Lord an house when he did declare it to the people it was then but one and the same will In the secret will of God two things are to be obserued And from all that hath beene said will many profitable lessons follow 1. We must take heede that we doe not conclude as if the Lord did worke all outward things of necessitie For his Will is free in respect of the outward obiect Gen. 45. 5. Act. 2. 23. Isai 10. 6. 7. 2. Because it is the first mover that therefore we conclude not He is the Author of sinne For God can doe the same which man doth yet free from iniquitie And 3. we must avoyde the error of those who imagine that because Gods Will worketh in all things that therefore God willeth sinne and punishment absolutely without any condition on mans part And 4. of them and their opinion wee must beware who thinke that Gods Will can make any thing lawfull be it neuer so vniust 5. Of those also who because Gods Will is vnchangeable therefore will vse no meanes at all for what they would pertake of 6. And finally Let vs all take heed that we maintaine not the heresie of the Monothelites who held because Christ was God therefore his Will was but one when as our Lord himselfe witnesseth the contrary Ioh. 6. 38. Math. 26. 39. And seeing that Gods Will is free and the first moving Vse 2. cause of all goodnesse Let vs. 1. prayse him for the good he hath bestowed on vs or at any time done by vs. 2. Depend vpon him for direction and abilitie in all our proceedings 3. Reverence the extraordinary acts of his Providence 4. Yeeld our selues and all our wayes with willingnes to be ruled and disposed as shall seeme best in his eyes 5. And as he willeth good and nilleth evill so let vs doe the same 6. In conclusion let vs alwayes pray Lord thy will be done and not ours If we doe these things we shall never fall but with our Apostle be confident in the assurance of the conservation of our soules which wee commit to him at the last day Let thy faith be fixed on Gods power and Will and then thou shalt haue the desires of thy heart and Will We might now come to speake of Pauls perswasion and assurance he had in God for his preservation Some of our Divines make fiue degrees of faith 1. A credence 2. an assurance 3. an affiance 4. a confidence and 5. a perswasion Perswasion seemes to be the greatest so that wee may collect that Of Faith there be distinct degrees Mat. 6. 30. 15. 28. Doct. 13. Mat. 8. 10. 13. 32. We reade of a faith no bigger then a graine of Mustard-seed and of a Plerophorie or full perswasion And in the Gospell mention is made of a little faith and of a great faith So that this point is manifest that there is two at the least distinct degrees of faith And not without Reason For some haue had greater meanes and liued longer vnder Reas 1. the powerfull Preaching of the Word then others who thereby are become strong in faith For as we see that trees which be planted in a good soyle neare the pleasant rivers and haue stood long doe flourish and spread more then they that haue growne in barren ground wanted watering and a shorter season so is it with the flower of faith Great meanes great faith little meanes the lesse faith except the Lord as sometimes he doth worke extraordinarily Some after their effectuall call haue beene more frequent Reas 2. and diligent in the vse of Gods ordinances then others more forward to doe good carefull to absteine from the least appearance of evill so that their faith is growne mightie Twinnes of equall age will outstrip one another by carefull attendance And this is to comfort the feeble minded and to support Vse 1. the weake in faith Be not deiected though thy faith carry thee not with a full gale to the kingdome of God for as all ships haue not alike sailes and winde all birds equally winged and all women infants of like proportion in every part so haue not all Christians the same degree of saving faith yet the weakest minde and lowest saile will carry the ship to shore as securely though not so speedily as if they were greater and the least true faith and hope will bring the sanctified soule to the haven of heaven as certainely though not so comfortably as the greatest But yet wee must not content our selues with this weake deg●●e we are to endevour for the strongest faith and the greatest measure goeth to the sea for water will not feare that he shall returne with his vessell emptie For what heate can dry vp the same And shall we doubt of grace when we goe to the fountaine it selfe whose depth is vnsearchable past sounding When we cast vp our heads the Sunne shineth in our faces and doth refresh and heate vs so by the act of Meditation we come vnder the beames of Gods mercy that shall confirme our feeble faith 2. Consider that Christ hath satisfied the Fathers iustice payd the full debt cancelled the bond and is making intercession for all repentant sinners Therefore in his Name Heb. 4. 16. goe boldly to the throne of grace What if it be called a Throne for greatnes Is it not a throne of Grace that resembles goodnes When Esau had killed Venison in his hand he went boldly for his blessing though he mist it But take thou Christ the Lambe of God and come with and in him vnto the Father and none can steale away thy blessing for God cannot be deceiued neither wanteth he mercy in store for such 3. Call to minde that the promises belong to such as are Mat. 11. 28. in doubt Come vnto me all that are weary and heavy laden and I will ease you Whom came Christ to saue Such as in their owne feeling not in Gods purpose were lost Whom will the Physician heale They that be sicke Vnto whom hath the Lord promised comfort to the mourners in Sion And who ever in godly sorrow sought the Lord but he returned Mat. 9. 2. with this encouragement My sonne be of good comfort for thy sinnes are forgiuen thee Salvation is entred into thy house 4. Finally Pray often in private for as the slender and still dew that falleth in the night doth more refresh the yong sprouting and tender buddes then more wet that falleth or a greater shower in the day So oftentimes the prayer made in secret prevaileth with God more then the publike for the encrease of faith Paul at his conversion prayed three dayes and three nights Yet vse all the ordinances of God for it sometimes
to him for therein we acknowledge euery good perfect gift to come from him and so glorifie his name Psal 91. 1. Iam. 1. 17. Also it s the best time spent that is spent in this dutie for Reas 3. therein we resemble the Saints and Angels in heaven who continually say Glory be to God and prayse to the Lambe that sitteth on the throne for evermore and hence it followeth that the more gratefull the more gracious is the person Rev. 19. Moreover is it not a meane to receiue more and greater Reas 4. favours What lost the Leper in returning backe to Christ Or the blind man in acknowledging his kindnesse And who will not be liberall to a gratefull person Ioh. 9. Luk. 17. Thankefulnesse is a voluntarie retribution of one good thing Thankfulnes defined for another First I say it is a retribution what shall I render or retribute to the Lord Psal 116. 12. for first it alwayes presupposeth a benefit receiued secondly or else it were a giving rather then a thanksgiving Secondly And it must bee voluntary not coacted it must be a free will-offering Ezra 2. 68. first for the giver and receiver in this are to be like minded freely ye haue Mat. 10. 8. received freely giue againe God respects the affection of the action more then the thing given for a wicked man may doe the one but not the other he loues a cheerefull giver 2 Cor. 9. 7. Thirdly The matter or thing rendred must bee good first we may not render evill for evill much lesse evill for good secondly againe iustice requires it and the very law of nature to doe as we would be done vnto Who is he that would bee content to receiue evill for good or what proportion is there betwixt them are they not the greatest opposites Fourthly The last thing in this definition is that wee must render good things for good things for though we may doe good for evill yet wee must not giue thankes for evill first for it is naught in it owne nature secondly and that were follie in vs and might moue the authour of it either to scoffe at vs or harden him in a course of evill doing But it may be obiected that Gods children haue given Obiect thankes for afflictions and they are evill True they haue done so yet not simply for afflictions Resol but first as they bee tokens of Gods loue for if wee were without corrections whereof all are partakers then were we bastards and not sonnes Heb. 12. 8. Secondly the Lord will cause them to worke for the good of his and in that they are to thanke him for them else not Rom. 8. 28. Psal 119. 21. Obserue further that good things are either exhibited or promised so that we are to prayse God for his promises as for performances first for they are good things secondly they shall all be accomplished in a convenient season and this duty haue the Saints also practised Luk 1. 46. Tim 4 8. Thankefulnesse is either conceived or manifested conceived Thankfulnes distributed in will and resolution manifested in word or deede The first kind is hid from man yet knowne to God and is the cause of the other that followes and in some sence the least degree of thankefulnesse for what is in the heart will vpon iust occasion breake forth into speech yea if there be abilitie into action also as in erecting of schooles hospitals building of churches colledges maintaining of ministers receiving of the poore and the like Againe thankefulnesse is either sincere or hypocriticall what one doth in truth another may in appearance as we reade of the Pharisee who stopped into the Temple with a Lord I thanke thee c. Luke 18. 11. This checkes the current of our times which is alwaies Vse 1. craving but never restoring many pray yet doe not pay For what are thankes but pence God sels his favour for we haue not onely nine but nintie times nine who never Luk. 17. 17. returne praise for their cleansing many and it s good intreat others to pray for them yet which were better never find time to desire men to giue thankes for them How many favours haue we received how many pretious promises are vnto vs exhibited whereof wee take no knowledge Is not this the signe of an vngratefull minde I had almost said of a gracelesse heart But to leaue such let vs studie and practise this dutie Vse 2. and say with that good man What shall we render to the Lord Psal 116. 12. Psal 148. 1. c. for all his benefits He would call vpon all creatures to praise him in their kinde No surer signe of sound grace than to be frequent in this action doubtlesse a gratefull heart hath set times to praise God as to pray vnto him they thinke no houres better spent than in thus doing O how will such reioyce when they finde their hearts enlarged and their lips opened to prayse God Such a day to them is of more worth than a thousand others but because to doe this is no easie matter remoue we the impediments that hinder vse the helpes that further this action and they be such as these following 1. When as we thinke that our owne handes haue procured Impediments of thankfulnesse vs our abundance Is not this Babell which I built by the might of my power When as except the Lord build the house man labours in vaine When men doe not know that all comes from God they will sacrifice to their owne nets Deut. 8. 17. Dan. 4. 30. Psal 127. 1. Hab. 1. 16. 2. A second is vnmindfulnesse of Gods mercies he that forgetteth a kindnesse done it is all one for the present as if he never received any whence springs these speeches truely I had thanked you but it was out of my minde I had quite forgot I pray you pardon me 3. A third is discontent when this rules in the heart no thankes is to be had a contented minde is alwayes a thankfull minde Whence it commeth to passe that proud men covetous men or ambitious men are vngratefull men The bird will not prune sing till she haue tooke a stand that giues her full content When wee can say with Iacob Gen. 33. 11. We haue all things then we will giue thankes for all things 4. And not to mention any more ignorance of our misery were we deprived of present favours is a great blocke in the way what were a man if he were stript of his clothes and turned without food but a day or two into the fields Should we but lodge one night in Egypt England would be a good Countrey were we in such a famine as was in Samaria that the Mother must famish or eat the fruit of her 2 King 6. 28. owne wombe then food would be worth thankesgiving But we haue lost our tast and that 's the reason we cry giue me my will as