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A57537 A godly & fruitful exposition upon all the First epistle of Peter by that pious and eminent preacher of the word of God, John Rogers. Rogers, John, 1572?-1636.; Simpson, Sidrach, 1600?-1655. 1650 (1650) Wing R1808; ESTC R32411 886,665 744

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evil slubber over this or that duty up starts the fear of God and saith Nay that must not be yielded to O the marvellous priviledges and sweet promises annexed hereunto Such as fear God need fear neither Hell Death Devil nor Judgement they need not fear Poverty Sickness or Persecution for either they shall not befal them or be sanctified to them O how should we labor to encrease herein by considering Gods greatness and our base poverty together with his justice against sin throughout all ages yea considering his wonderful goodness in himself to the Land to our selves both for soul and body who is not to fear such a glorious such a merciful God but notwithstanding both of his mercies and judgements plentifully manifested who doth truly fear him There 's indeed little fear of God in the world in England in most of our Towns O the fearful condition of such they have cause to fear all things they see as if all did conspire their ruine which also sometimes falls out as the Lord threatned by Moses Were not people hardened bold nay desperate they would not thus shake off Gods fear O let such haste out of this case O labor to get assurance of the pardon of your sins and so turn to God and walk in his fear Go not away hence to live loosly any more as heretofore you have done but fear the great Lord of Heaven and earth who is able to plague you both in Body Mindes Goods Children here and hereafter rear him that hath made thee fed thee and kept thee out of Hell and hath been so good to thee every way yea and will yet do more to thee if thou turn to him Honor the King For the coherence of these words with the former Note we 1. That the duties to God and our Neighbor the duties of the first and second Table are to accompany one another they must not be sundred God hath knit them and they must go together He that loveth God must love his brother also The second is like the first promises are annexed to the performance of both punishments threatned for the breach of either He that commandeth the one enjoyned also the other 1. This rebuketh such as make shew of great zeal in the duties to God and of his worship but in the mean time make no conscience of Deceiving Oppression Falshood Backbiting Idleness and the like break their word and promises wrong men in their bodies goods chastity good-names whatsoever such make their Religion is vain The Prophets cryed down such hypocrites in their times there 's now no less cause so to do Let men joyn both duties together and justifie the truth of the one by the other else as we commonly say He that will swear will lye he that will lye will swear he that makes no conscience of his duty towards his Neighbor makes no conscience of his towards God This rebuketh also such as are very civil and just in their dealings sure of their word and kinde neighbors and yet make no conscience of the duties of the first Table regard not the Word Sacraments Prayer publike or private the observation of the Lords-day and the like O they delight not in these they savor not of such things Howsoever the world count such right honest men yet is God little beholding to them What though they give men their due if they defraud God of his what though they steal not from men if they rob God of his Sabbaths and times of worship which he challengeth as his converting the same to their private uses Let the world think as well and as highly of these as they will wherein they do well they are to be well thought of they are not such as can abide the tryal of the Word neither shall be able to stand before God on the great day but as they have sundered that which God hath coupled so will he if they repent not sunder them for ever from his Kingdom 2. That the knowledge and fear of God is the fountain of all our duties to men in their several places none can be a good servant indeed a through good servant one to be trusted with business of weight with hope of blessing and success as Eleazer Abrahams servant but such a one as feareth God So according to the Text no man can truly honor the King and be an absolute good subject except he fear God no man will honor him from his heart as he ought nor obey him for conscience sake nor pay duties chearfully venture his life for him faithfully and pray for him heartily but such as fear God This is the onely sure bridle all others of credit fear c. will break to keep people in duty where this hath been wanting there have been mutinies and risings yea what else can be expected where this bears not sway 1. Let all that fear God shew it in their several places by the performance of their duties to men especially of subjection to their Governors that so they may bring the same in esteem and procure credit thereto 2. Would any be good Subjects let them begin at the right end perform their duties in the right maner even for conscience sake as being required of God Thus shall the Prince be much the better for them and they themselves have comfort in the performance of the same Thus shall not they dare fail herein for fear of the highest whereas worldly men perform theirs meerly for fear of men 3. Magistrates are to trust those most which do most fear God and accordingly to use them kindely and countenance them as being indeed their most loyal Subjects yea to further the Gospel what in them lies whereby people may be brought to fear God that so they may prove true and loyal to themselves and so adde strength to the Kingdom Thus of the coherence For the words themselves Honor the King I have already spoken at large of the duty contained herein Know we onely that by the King here is meant Caesar who was an Heathen Emperor one that intruded himself ruled tyrannously and was an Idolater and by Honor not Divine and Religious honor for that is due to God alone but Civil worship and honor The difference between those is not in the outward gesture of the body or bowing the knee but in the intention of the minde Divine is when we bow both knee and heart and soul to God and that for his own sake as the Lord of Heaven and Earth and the Author of all good to us to whom we pray when we want it and whom we praise as the Author of any mercy for soul or body Civil is when bowing the knee yea and the affection of the minde to men we do it yet for the Lords sake and as the Lords instruments and whom he hath set over us for good as excelling us in gifts and graces to whom we
to Redeem it with the blood of his Son and to give his Spirit thereto to graft and unite it to Christ and to sanctifie and make it like himself How dear are our children to us God hath made us sons nay heirs the Lands we purchase be dear to us we are Gods purchase our members be dear to us God hath made us members of his Son 1. Oh if we be so peculiar and choyce to the Lord how choycely should we walk how should we set as great store by the Lord and his Commandments as he hath done by us He hath chosen us for his inheritance we should chuse him for our portion and make him so and his Word our Heritage as David did O how warily should we walk Every Christians ought to be one of a thousand the least as David and the greatest of the Angel as God we should shine so among others as Moses his face shone when he came down from the Lord that we may straight be discerned by our conversation who and what we are O how doth this tax the coldness and carelesness of many Christians in whom who can view any singular thing but we ought to be singular persons They omit duties in their Families or slubber them over as many Hypocrites who can upon any occasion be as froward impatient worldly as any other Is it not requisite that such as the Lord hath been at such cost with as to Elect them Redeem them call them by his Word and Spirit Sanctifie them c. should be extraordinary persons we should be much in those duties that the World and Hypocrites do not meddle with as private Prayer Examination Watchfulness yea against secret corruption and in those we do we must perform them after another fashion then heretofore 2. This is a comfort that God makes such special reckoning of his therefore though we have many and mighty Enemies yet we need not fear God is on our side he is about us as the Mountains about Jerusalem they must dig down God ere they can come at his overcome God ere they can conquer his 3. Terror to the wicked How dare they meddle to hurt or persecute any of these little ones lest their Angel be let loose to destroy them If Meroz were cursed for not helping them what shall they be that harm them They that rail on them mock and misuse them would do further if opportunity served 4. The wicked are of no reckoning with God for they be like the Devil and do nothing but sin against God and are his Enemies The wicked are as chaff and darnel the godly as wheat the good as the fish in the net the wicked as weeds and frogs the good as the vine the bad as the nettles and brambles the good as the tree planted by the rivers of waters c. the wicked as barren nay hurtful trees the godly be like good ground the wicked like that which bears thorns and bryars This should make them see their base condition and set less by themselves seeing God sets nothing by them and joyn themselves to the Lords people and labor to be such That ye should shew forth the praises of him c. The end of all these priviledges and this cost is that we might shew forth by word and deed all the vertues of God his Mercy Patience Wisdom Goodness c. shewed in our Election Redemption Vocation Sanctification c. Where note 1. That God hath not bestowed this cost on us in vain but that we might both sound out his praises with our mouthes and throughout out whole life shew forth the same O how infinitely stand we indebted to him But where is our zeal any thing answerable to the least of these unspeakable mercies vouchsafed unto us 2. That he did not Elect us because he foresaw we would shew forth his vertues but that we might so do If he had foreseen any works in us we might then have shewed forth our own Merits as his Vertues but that 's contrary to this Text and the whole course of Scripture Therefore we may say herein Not unto us but unto thy name give the glory 3. That he Elected us not to be idle but to shew forth his Vertues and this confuteth the Opinion of those that hold the Doctrine of Election and the unchangeableness thereof to be a Doctrine of Liberty and a gap to all licentiousness But he chose us that we should be holy and that not in shew to please men but before him even so as he requireth and accepteth 4. That the furthest end of our Election is Gods glory not our Salvation True he propounded that too but not as the furthest end So he ordained some to Damnation not that simply he takes pleasure in their destruction but to set forth his glory even the glory of his power and justice in their just condemnation so would he be glorified in his mercy in the Salvation of the Elect. Hence learn we To make the glory of God the end of all our actions and nothing else not profit not pleasure not preferment no not the Salvation of our own souls we must not Hear Meditate Pray keep the Sabbath flie from Sin do good to save our Souls for then we seek our selves but that God may be glorified the other must be minded in the second place Who hath called you He describeth God by a special benefit bestowed upon them namely their effectual calling from sin to grace and this he doth to confirm them in their Election whereof he had spoken before by which they might prove the same Note then that effectual calling is a certain argument of our Election I say effectual calling because there is 1. An outward calling common to the Reprobate as many are called but few are chosen and 2. An inward and effectual calling when the Spirit goes with the outward means and boars through the ear of the heart and opens the eyes and breaks through all lets and enlightens and changes a man admirably who before was not at all moved when he heard the very same things when God deals with the Reprobate he calls them outwardly but when with his Elect he goeth to work with his Spirit which passeth the power of Man or Angels the work is the Lords The outward instrument of effectual calling is principally the Ministery of the Word other things may prepare as the fire heats the iron but the hammer fashioneth it as affections the good conversation of others and the like Thus the Jailor was by an Earthquake some are gastered and first smitten yet rarely by some fear in the night or at some other time fearful thoughts lay hold on them But this is not conversion it s no other then may be in a Reprobate after they are brought by counsel to the Word
same 5. If we must labor to have peace with men then much more with God who is at enmity with us because of our sins and that through Christ alone who is our Advocate with him This will afford more true joy then the world either knoweth or can Till we procure this we can have no true peace with our neighbors no true peace of conscience Verse 12. For the eyes of the Lord are over the Righteous and his ears are open unto their prayers but the face of the Lord is against them that do evil THat those which perform the forementioned duties shall have long life and good days here and hereafter and that the contrary shall befal those that do not thus do our Apostle here proveth Such as thus do God will have a care of them and watch over them for good and for the others God will set himself against them where an Objection is prevented Oh might some say that such as live most harmlesly and do most good and be best disposed and love peace and quietness should of all others be most hated and lie open to manifest dangers and they that will scamble and shift for themselves by right or wrong not caring whom they wrong do yet wax great and prove rich in the world True saith the Apostle If peaceable and good men were here left to themselves they would be soon thrust to the walls and be as sheep among wolves ready to be spoiled but God doth not so leave them but hath a continual care over them to defend them from dangers as much as shall be fit for them and if they fall into any he is ready to hear their prayers and to help them and for the others they may prosper a while which yet some of them do not but it shall not always so continue God will set his face against them and his fury root them out By Eyes we are to understand the diligent and watchful care that the Lord hath over his people as the mother whose eye is over the yong childe that it take no hurt And by Ears is meant his great readiness to hear their Prayers and grant their requests By Face is meant sometimes his favor and love as in the Psalms sometimes his wrath and displeasure as here for a mans favor or displeasure is seen by his contenance Thus are other parts of man ascribed to the Lord as his Hand Right hand Arm c. Q. But why are these attributed to the Lord not being in him A. Because if the Lord should speak unto us weak men of himself and as he is in himself we were utterly unable to bear it but being willing that we should understand him he speaketh according to our capacity as the nurse to the childe Because we know not how one should see without eyes or watch over any for good therefore God ascribeth eyes to himself and because our power lieth in our right hand therefore doth he ascribe a right hand to himself the like may be said about his ears c. 1. This should greatly provoke us to the reading and exercising our selves in the Scriptures for that we may so do in them the Lord vouchsafed to stoop very low for our understanding If we do it not it must needs be great neglect and unthankfulness wherein notwithstanding too too many fail 2. Ministers whose office it is to teach the Lords people must be careful to frame themselves to their understanding and edifying and not to soar aloft thereby stirring up admiration in their people without profit If God stoop so low must any so far seek themselves as not to follow such a patern O it s a greater mercy to edifie and convert one soul then that a thousand should go away meerly commending them for learning and eloquence By Righteous we are not to understand such as be so in their own conceit but such as are in Gods account truly Righteous perfectly by imputation of Christs Righteousness and imperfectly by inherent here begun and increased but which shall hereafter be perfected Righteous I say 1. By imputation of Christs Righteousness to us by Faith For Christ which knew no sin became sin for us that we might be the Righteousness of God in him 2. By inherent Sanctification of the Spirit conveyed from Christ which though it be imperfect yet is of the better part of their Righteousness and the rather because they are desirous to do well and do it willingly but sin against their will as an heap of corn is so called though it be not without chaff 3. Because of their endeavor to be more and more Righteous as a yong Apprentice is called by the name of his Trade because of his endeavor and purpose though he can do but a little in it so that they which be such may be of good comfort notwithstanding their imperfections remaining God accounts them Righteous and holy persons howsoever the world esteems of them By them that do evil is not meant such as fall into sin through weakness and infirmity but such as give themselves thereto and make a trade thereof living and lying therein without repentance against such doth the Lord set himself The eyes of the Lord are over the Righteous That is God hath an especial care of his righteous servants he loveth them dearly and watcheth over them for their good They are his portion and inheritance they are his Spouse they are his children whose care exceeds both the fathers and the mothers when both these forsook David the Lord did not leave him Psal. 27. 10. He causeth all creatures to do them good and serve their turns He appointeth the Angels to preserve them as Elisha destroy their enemies as it befel Senacheribs host bring them good tidings as to the Shepherds defend them c. The very Stars in their courses must fight for Israel the Hail-stones slay his enemies Frogs Lice Caterpillars c. plague the Egyptians for Pharaohs disobedience yea he will cause all things to go contrary to the course of nature rather then they shall miscarry the waters must divide themselves the Sun stand still and go backwards the stony rock yield water the fire must not hurt the three children nor the Lyons Daniel He that cared for man and provided all things necessary for him before he was is now no less careful for his reconciled ones his care is effectual continual he both preserves them from evil and provides for them good things the very hairs of their head are numbred and he that toucheth them toucheth the Apple of his eye How did he preserve Noah Lot Jacob Joseph Moses David Elijah Peter c. which of us also hath not escaped thousands of dangers through his eye over us But do not the righteous fall into many troubles as the examples of Abel Micaiah Jeremiah the Apostles and
As verily as we be unfeignedly humbled with desire of forgiveness and not to sin so verily may we believe our selves pardoned for which accordingly we are enjoyned daily to pray yea if we have been overtaken more foully for want of watchfulness yet let us not despair as Cain or run from God as Judas which is worst of all but address our selves to come with a heavy and bleeding heart to God with whom there is mercy David having confessed his sin Nathan said unto him The Lord also hath put away thy sin thou shalt not dye Unto every penitent soul his Son will be a propitiation for their sins As the prodigal was embraced of his father so will our heavenly father receive us if we return unto him 3. May be a most effectual means to humble such as have run on in their sins without humiliation that at the length they may take this course Return ye backsliding Children saith the Lord and I will heal your backslidings See to this purpose Hos. 14. 1 2. Oh but I have been thus and thus bad will some say No matter what thou hast been so now thou with thy whole heart turnest to God and neither art now nor hereafter intendest to be as heretofore Time past shall not be remembred Oh but I have committed many great sins It 's not that shall stand between God and thee if thou be truly humbled Gods mercy and the merit of Christ is as well able to take away and heal great as small offences Though our Iniquities be encreased over our heads and our Trespass grown up unto the Heavens yet if with Ezra we be truly humbled there 's assured hope of pardon To the Strangers c. Though haply there might be some Gentiles amongst these yet it is more probable that they were most Jews which were principally his charge as the Gentiles the Apostle Pauls They are called Strangers not as all Christians be while they be here on Earth absent from their heavenly Countrey and Inheritance for so are we Strangers in our own Countrey Towns and Houses but Strangers as being in a strange Countery forced by persecution to leave their own and fly into another which might be either through the Wars and Troubles which were raised in their own Countrey or by the persecution raised in Jerusalem about the death of Steven Here see 1. That sundry of the Jews received our Saviour Christ and believed in him and were soundly converted though the body of them did not for he came unto his own and his own received him not those made a good progress in the course of Christianity who were contented even with the loss of their liberties to undergo such dangers as might befall them in a strange Land onely that they might keep faith and a good conscience 2. The estate of the Church of God here on Earth namely to be under persecution In the world saith our Saviour ye shall have tribulation Always there hath been enmity between the seed of the woman and the seed of the Serpent Thus was it when the Church was but in one Family in one Countrey one Nation The world having Power Authority Wealth is full of malice against the poor Church so that were it not that God Almighty defends it it could not endure It 's as a Sheep amongst wolves or a Ship among the waves Though God will exercise it to keep it from errors and corruptions which it is subject unto through much prosperity and peace though it have need of some peace to gather it self yet if 't be long in peace it gathers mud as standing waters rust as the ploughshare in the hedge yea settles it self on the lees therefore God pours it out from Vessel to Vessel Ever mark after long prosperity grew pride and thereupon errors and corruptions which like a canker brought destruction Contrarily the Church never shines so gloriously as either in or presently after persecution Then life zeal sincerity heavenly-mindedness and such like graces appear in their true lustre It followeth 1. That as we are not to conclude for a company because they have so much peace that therefore they are beloved of God so must not we against any because they be few in number and outwardly despised and slighted Four hundred false Prophets were maintained by Jezabel whereas Micaiah the onely true Prophet of the Lord was put in Prison Jeremiah and Baruch were the true servants of the Lord whom whole multitudes of proud men and false Prophets resisted 2. That we are to prepare our selves for persecution especially having had so long a time of peace To this end we must resolve to part with all for Christs sake and for his Cause and Religion Thus did these Jews thus the holy Martyrs and great reason For what would it advantage us if we should gain the whole world in the mean time losing our souls by denying Christ. On the contrary If we forsake any thing for Christ here we shall have a Crown of everlasting glory Great is our reward in Heaven But how far are most of us from any such matter many are destitute of knowledge and how can they suffer Many have no love to the truth but are carnal and prophane persons which never could yet be wrought upon by the word to embrace it or be ruled by it that will not leave their vile lusts for it and how shall these leave their goods and liberties Nay that which is most to be lamented how few professors be like to stand to it many are more likely a great deal to flinch Alas what poor faith is in most especially how are most given over to the world being too eager and earnest for these things neglecting good duties and slubbering them over for the worlds sake How wil these forsake it altogether and leave Houses and Lands when they will not lay aside their businesses for an hour or two to hear the word or a quarter of an hour for prayer in their Families O let 's therefore labor as for good store of Faith so to come to a contempt of this world In the mean time use we it moderately and in his place denying our selves by little and little else we shall never come to it all at once but for our livings sake shall be subject to fall from God and renounce our Religion a fearful state 3. The lawfulness of flying in time of persecution The Jews here did it to save themselves from danger It 's lawful for a Minister or any other tyed by calling either when persecution is onely or chiefly intended against him or having consent for a time to go aside seeing it to be best for the rest It 's lawful for any either when God makes a way for them that seems to call them thereto whereunto if they should not yield we are to think they
Angels were unable to help us herein This hath Christ done for us and that fully the dignity of his person being such that he is both God and M●n in one person Of this the blood of the lamb sprinkled on the Israelites houses was a sign all Sacrifices tended hereunto our Sacraments point thereat all Scripture layeth our Salvation in the Cross Blood and Sufferings of Christ. Here see 1. An admirable mixture of Justice and Mercy so that God is not all mercy as the world imagines Therefore for prophane impenitent ones they shall bear the just wrath of God themselves and not by every late forced Lord have mercy have God at command as they imagine For if Christ was feign to suffer and the Father would not be intreated notwithstanding his strong cries but when he stood as our Surety laid on load and spared him not at all shall his prophane enemies think to escape as they list 2. Gods infinite mercy to mankinde to appoint a way to save some of them whereas no Angel that fell shall be saved 3. It sets out the depth of our misery therefore they that are still in it have no small piece of work to bring to pass 4. It teacheth us how to esteem of sin as being of that weight that nothing but the blood of Christ will satisfie for it 5. Its sets out the infinite and unspeakable love of God to give us his Son and of Christ to give himself seeing no less means would serve Who can sufficiently either admire or express the same 6. Here 's matter of endless consolation to all troubled sinners when Satan and the terrors of Conscience shall pursue them to flie to Christ Jesus and his sufferings This is their Castle their quietus est send Satan to thy Surety all is fully discharged in his death But this is only for humble bleeding sinners that turn to God with all their hearts but as for proud persons that live still in their lusts what have these to do to talk of Christs death yet have these it in readiness Christ hath died for us What for such prophane ones as make his death a packhorse and lay on more load which is to crucifie Christ again No let these know they shall bear the burthen of their own sins but let the true penitent be of good comfort and know that all his sins how great soever be done away Neither let such think that their afflictions are any part of the punishment of sin for it is all done away once in Christ and therefore shall not again be demanded of them but they are loving chastisements to humble them for their sins past and prevent others for the time to come both furthering their Salvation 7. For all that know they have their part in Christs death how should this work with them 1. For sin past it should vex and grieve our hearts for we were the Crucifiers of Christ Judas the Soldiers and Jews but our Servants whom our sins set on work It 's our great fault that we can think of our sins without being humbled shall Christ shed tears of blood for our sins and we not be troubled for our own 2. This should make us hate sin for ever being as it were the knife and spear that killed Christ what father could ever love that knife that should kill his childe 3. How should this inflame our hearts with love to him again and carry us on in a zealous care of obedience all our days our woful coldness in Christs cause and service deserves to be rebuked Alas how little will we do for his sake we ought to be ready to leave Goods Liberty and Life for him we should herein but do as he hath done for us yea who began thus to do for us when we were even his enemies How much more any other thing And may not this stop the mouths of all prophane persons which will be talking they hope to be saved by Christ when they shew no love nor thankfulness to him but live yet in their sins to anger him 8. An exclusion of all feigned and false satisfactions of mens own devising whereof the Church of Rome is full which would strike in for a part with the merit of Christs death which makes a great stir about the Cross when in the mean time they make void its efficacy Sprinkling c. By this word he alludeth to the sacrifices of the Law which all pointed at the sacrifice of Christ and to shew that as it had been nothing that a sacrifice had been killed unless the blood thereof had been sprinkled upon the people for so was the maner so it avails us nothing that Christ died unless his blood be sprinkled on us by the hand of a true faith applying Christ Jesus to our Consciences It s not Christ that saves but Christs death apprehended by a true and lively faith for a particular perswasion hereof are we to labor Here also in this verse is an excellent proof of the holy Trinity three persons and one God which is so to be worshipped all that do otherwise worship an Idol and not the true God Again observe That Election is attributed to the Father Redemption to the Son Sanctification to the Holy Ghost It 's not but that they be the common works of the whole Trinity as all the works of God towards the Creatures are in which respect Sanctification is also attributed to the Father but because of their immediate working The Father elected in the Son and by the Holy Ghost Father Son and Holy Ghost elected The Son is the immediate worker of our Redemption he shed his blood as the Holy Ghost the immediate worker of Sanctification Grace unto you and Peace be multiplied The usual salutation of the Jews asking the favor of God as the root and peace that is all happiness as that which flows from thence for so by peace the Jews meant Peace be with you Peace be to this house c. Hence note 1. That we should seek the favor of God as that which draweth on other things yea all things for in love is no lack Men may have other things without this but they will have an ill farewel as they that have possession but no right title to that which they possess 2. What a Minister should chiefly desire for his people even that they may be brought into Gods favor by Christ have their sins forgiven Christ made theirs and they assured thereof with so much prosperity as may stand with happiness So Husbands and Wives each for other So also Parents for their Children The favor and grace of God is the principal and root of all good Men may have abundance of outward things but if they flow not from Gods love they will have a hard farewel This brings sufficiency In his favor is life yea this were sufficient if it came alone but in
Gods love is no want of any thing needful worldlings indeed do greatly seek after wealth for their children and rejoyce to see them wealthy and healthy though in the mean time they see in them no true tokens of Gods favor but alas what are these It should more glad us to see an humble godly heart turned from sin and embracing righteousness though sickly and poor then to flow in all the wealth of the world and be ungracious and to come home in a Gold chain or to hear that our childe were like Joseph the second man in the Kingdom without grace But men do for their children as for themselves labor more for goods then grace But what shall we say to those Ministers that check their people for forwardness and seek to discourage them what also to those Parents that are so far from desiring grace for their children as they check and discourage them for their forwardness thereunto such would like them rather if they saw them jolly as the world Oh a hard part of Parents Be multiplied He desires not that they be once taken into Gods favor and his other graces begun in them but that they be continued and daily encreased more and more He was covetous to have his spritual children thrive apace and grow very rich in grace Such covetousness even a desire to joyn grace to grace is both for our selves and others commendable So should a Minister desire that his people may not be a little better then the worst but to exceed others by far that they may answer the time and means and to this end as to pray so to call upon them continually and they not to think amiss of this but to rejoyce in it as a special fruit of his Love so must Parents to their Children God gives us leave to be covetous in these things and to joyn grace unto grace as men do house unto house so shall we honor him much for a little grace will go but a little way Thus shall we benefit our Neighbors much when our branches spread far and our lips feed many Thus shall we have a large Testimony to our selves of our Salvation while we live and make a wide entrance for our selves into the glorious Kingdom of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. Verse 3. Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ which according to his abundant mercy hath begotten us again unto a lively hope by the Resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead NOw followeth the substance of the Epistle consisting of Doctrine and Exhortation Doctrine to the thirteenth Verse Exhortations in the Verses following The Exhortations are to continue constant in the profession of the Gospel of Christ and to stick close to that Salvation purchased by Christ and revealed therein and that they would lead an holy and and godly life answerable to this profession and Gospel both in their general and particular callings yea now in their present troubles and notwithstanding any other they might meer with hereafter Now this being a very weighty building therefore he had need lay a foundation fitting for the same and so he doth which is this namely The singular benefits that we receive by Jesus Christ his Death and Resurrection viz. Assurance of Salvation Hope Joy Peace c. and at last everlasting life in the Kingdom of Heaven all which are revealed and wrought in us by the Gospel which is no new Doctrine but that which of old was revealed to all the Prophets though now more clearly and fully manifested Therefore seeing God hath done so great things for us by Christ Jesus and these things are revealed in the Gospel which is very ancient good reason they should cleave to Christ and be carried after no other way of Salvation accordingly walking worthy of the benefits they have both already reaped hereby and may further hereafter The Doctrine setteth forth the great benefit that we reap by Jesus Christ namely That we are begot to a lively hope of Salvation and of being partakers of such an inheritance as is without comparison which is every way set forth according to its excellency where we have 1. The benefit That we are begotten to a lively hope 2. The moving cause The abundant mercy of God 3. The means whereby namely The Resurrection of Jesus Christ 5. The end That we may partake of Salvation which he calls an Inheritance and describes it by several properties Blessed be God For the maner of speech we read of three kindes of blessing in Scripture 1. God blesseth man when he bestoweth upon him his favors and good things earthly and heavenly 2. Man blesseth man and that either ordinarily when he prayeth to God to bless him Thus Moses is appointed to bid Aaron bless the people and the form of prayer is set down Thus Parents bless their children and we are to bless them that curse us or extraordinarily when by the Spirit of Prophecie the Prophets of God have not onely prayed to God for a blessing on their posterity but have pronounced a blessing upon them foretelling what their state should be in time to come As Isaac blessed Iacob and Esau Iacob also his Sons and Moses the twelve Tribes at his death 3. Man blesseth God when he ascribeth that honor praise and thanksgiving which is due to him for his Mercy Wisdom Justice Truth not when we give him any thing he hath not that cannot be but when we ascribe and give that to him which is most justly due to him already Thus understand we the phrase here as elswhere often For the matter Being to repeat the great benefits that come to us by Jesus Christ he doth it not barely but begins with praise and thanksgiving for the same Blessed be God c. saith he as if he should have said For these unspeakable and great benefits bestowed on us unworthy ones Oh my soul Spirit and all that is in me come forth to render thanks to God Teaching us That When we speak or have any occasion to think as we ought often to speak and think of Gods mercies especially his special mercies that concern our Salvation we should do it with admiration and setting forth his praise Thus both David and Paul Even his outward benefits ought to stir us up unto thankfulness how much more ought we to be stirred up for spiritual favors and deliverances from the bondage and thraldom of Sin Satan and Hell how can we do any less All creatures Sun Moon Fouls praise God in their kinde and yet they have onely been created what we then that have been redeemed when we were lost They that have felt their bondage and finde themselves delivered cannot but break out into his praise Indeed the common sort that have those things but in their brain onely and never had the feeling of the one or of the other they can speak
of these things but faintly and from the teeth outward and not from the heart as others but for any to boast of great matters done for them and yet shew no whit that they be ravished with love to God neither breaking out into his praises in words nor shewing it in their lives they do certainly lye and deceive their own souls for they that have had experience of the sowre and of the sweet cannot but speak I believed therefore have I spoken saith David Impossible it is for any man to think of his Election Redemption Calling c. And not be ravished therewith It 's our duty then to stir up our selves often and from time to time by the deep meditation of Gods special Mercies which as it will shake off dulness so will it much revive us to duty And Father of our Lord Jesus Christ Mark that he cannot speak of God but with some token of reverence and title of his Thus as he is elswhere stiled The God of Hope the God of Peace the God of Patience and Consolation the King everlasting so is he here the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. His practise must be our patren we must never think or speak of the holy and blessed name of God but with all high reverence his greatness compared with our baseness might induce us hereunto This condemneth as well the Blasphemy of Swearers as the unreverent takers of Gods Name in vain after what maner soever He is termed the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ not only nor so much in respect of his Manhood viz. that he took the lump whereof his humanity was framed which was of the substance of the Virgin and first Sanctified and freed the same from all stain or blemish of Original corruption and actually United it from the first conception thereof to the Godhead and second person and so framed the humanity of Christ of this substance and infused into him a reasonable soul but especially in respect of his Godhead by an unspeakable communicating of the whole essence of the Father to him before all worlds which mystery though we cannot fully understand we must believe and adore Here he is stiled the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ as formerly he was wont to be called and known by the name of the God of Abraham Isaac and Jacob to distinguish him from all false gods whereby he sheweth himself more cleerly to us and the way how we should get into his favor namely by his son there being no other way whereby our persons or service can please God If therefore we would obtain any thing at Gods hands we must not come barely to the Father as for forgiveness of sins mercy or any thing else but with respect of his son Jesus Christ by whom only he is and will be merciful unto us Speak we something of his three titles 1. Jesus a Savior so called by an Angel from Heaven ere he was born for that he was to save his people from their sins who is an absolute and sufficient Savior yea the only Savior neither is there was there or shall there be any other 2. Christ anointed to be our King Priest and Prophet through whom we are made Kings Priests and Prophets If so 1. Where be our sacrifices of our selves of Prayer and Praise Morning and Evening in our Families a Priest must not be without sacrifice 2. As Prophets do we teach our Families do we instruct and examine them 3. As Kings do we master our affections If we be led Captive of our frowardness worldliness and the like what Kings are we Look to it 3. Our Lord. He is our Lord every way by purchase and by conquest He bought us with his precious blood He also conquered all the Enemies that held us captive Sin Satan Death and so delivered us If any great man would by money ransom or by his sword rescue out of his Enemies hands any captive he were his Lord so is Christ our Lord either way Whence ariseth 1. Comfort to all that know themselves redeemed by him that he will never lose that which he hath so dearly bought and taken such pains with every way to come into the world to die for us then so to work as we may come to the knowledge of it by his Word and Spirit Whereby Faith and Sanctification are wrought in us 2. Instruction it s our duty to submit our selves to him as our Liege-lord to be his loyal people we must kiss the son take up his yoke He hath paid full dearly for our service and love his we are being now no more our own There are too too many that yet do not so cleave to this Lord and his Word but that they suffer other things other Lords to carry them away Many could be content to have Christ their Savior but they will not have him their Lord and King to rule in them and over them Let us break their bands asunder say they and cast away their cords from us And again Who is Lord over us Let such to their terror consider that fearful sentence passed against them But those mine Enemies that would not that I should reign over them bring hither and slay them before me They are counted Gods Enemies and adjudged to be slain before his face Yea he will break them with a red of iron and dash them in pieces like a potters vessel Others will let him be their Lord as far as they please and in what they list as if they would appoint their work themselves as some coy servants which the Lord will not indure Well let us bring our hearts to yield unto him as our Lord else we shall never have Salvation by him There 's no refreshing by him unless we take up his yoke both must go together they that will not willingly stoop to him he will be their Lord and King in despight of them and that to their confusion Now for the afflicted conscience that travels for mercy and pardon and desires after Christ more then all the world dost thou as earnestly desire him to be thy Lord and King and art thou willing to take up his yoke and that he shall rule and reign in thee and none else and that in all things be of good comfort thou art one of those whom Christ will save Which according to his abundant mercy c. Now we are to observe 1. The benefit bestowed for which he blessed God namely For begetting us again unto a lively hope 2. The moving cause His mercy nay abundant mercy 3. The means whereby The Resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead of which as they lie in order Hath begotten us again unto a lively hope This is the benefit God hath begot them again to the hope of Salvation for so he means for by hope is not
be dismaid and dead as it were on the nest Through this they can even in Prison with Paul and Silas sing Psalms as through this the Martyrs endured the fire Daniel and the Three Children went cheerfully to suffer This also makes a Christian lively to serve God and in every duty to praise him as David Open thou my lips saith he namely with assurance of thy love and my mouth shall shew forth thy praise So to do good to others as being fitted to teach them as well the way of Gods justice against sin as the way of his mercy to them that repent yea hereby we shall be fit to every good duty I will run the way of thy commandments when thou shalt enlarge mine heart namely by the perswasion of thy love and by thy Spirit and the hope of Salvation It s a fault in Christians that they be no more cheerful in this hope but lumpish and soon daunted in afflictions a fault I say that we are no more active and lightsom in Gods business Let every one then labor for it till this we are not alive our soul never prospers nor sees good day This even this is the beginning of life and the first step to eternal life Would any man live and be cheerful and see good days and have that which might keep him from being daunted in adversity persecution death at the day of Judgement let him by all means get this Without this mens hopes are vain their stout courage will fail them in those times when God shall frown It s Faith onely which will carry a man through all things Hereby he shall have a heart to serve God yea both do and suffer the greatest things for him and his sake According to his abundant mercy The moving cause of this benefit of our calling to Faith and hope is Gods mercy nay hit abundant mercy The cause of all the good that ever came to us or ever shall come is no other but onely free favor Why did he elect us before the world but onely of his undeserved love According to the good pleasure of his own will not for works we had done it was before the world not for any we were like to do as who do none till he work them in us So also Why redeemed he us when we were all fallen into condemnation even for his meer mercy was there any thing in us could deserve it when we were utterly unable to do any good nay when his utter enemies why also hath he called us Did we or could we do any thing before our calling to deserve it We were not onely unable to think a good thought but serving the Devil with all our power walking in our lusts after the Prince that ruleth in the children of disobedience See our case in Ezek. 16. both in respect of our Parents sinners and our selves or any thing we can do Nay to cut the throat of all conceit of any merit less or more before or alter he saith His abundant mercy So that a little mercy such as is in man or some reasonable store as in Angels would not serve the turn nor was sufficient to save us or move the Lord to call us to this hope but an abundant deal of the mercy of God which is infinite Was it a small matter that moved God to chuse thee to Salvation rather then thousands of others or was it a small mercy to give us his onely Son to save and deliver us by suffering all the wrath due to us What Not his Servant nor his Friend but his Son his only begotten Son the wisdom of the Father the Image of the invisible God the engraven form of his Person to stoop so low as to become man nay in that base estate to be despised of men to be hated spitted upon mockt shamefully Crucified and he that knew no sin to stand in the stead of most vile sinners and so to be dealt with and that for us no friends but enemies no good persons but vile and wretched ones Was a little love enough to bring this to pass Oh no but a love without measure without example never such another even that any Father gave his only begotten Son to save traitors and enemies It was wonder that the Father did not rather suffer all mankinde to perish then to give his only most blessed Son to suffer the least of these indignites And it was no small love of Iesus Christ that moved him to leave the glory of the Father and stoop to the estate of a man and all his infirmities save sin and to endure all these tortures of men and his Fathers wrath especially It was no small love that made him give us his heart-blood when he shed a few tears for Lazarus the Jews said Behold how he loved him but having shed his blood for us what may we say So also is it a small measure of mercy to call us to the hope of Salvation from our wretched estate when we went on in sin and minded no good nay all evil It must needs be a great deal of mercy to move God to think well to us when we went on madly in our sins and did fight against him so also to forgive so many and horrible offences as we had committed no marvel though David craved the multitude of Gods mercies If they were not infinite our sins could not be forgiven for our sins come as neer infinite as number can make them then to cloath such wretches with the righteousness of his Son then to forget and forgive all that is past and take us into favor and make us here heirs of all his promises and priviledges and of life eternal hereafter who will not admire it Is not this abundant mercy to work this hope in us whom he might have justly condemned and when he might also have been glorified in our condemnation as he was in Pharoahs Plagues So also to adopt us for his children men adopt that have none of their own God had a natural beloved Son men adopt their kinsmen God us nothing of his kin yea his enemies men adopt for some good quality we had no such thing to move God was it not a great deal of mercy that moved God to call Paul that ran a persecuting of him in his members to forgive Mary Magdalen Manasses c. So every one of us What were we when God called us Must not we say that it was abundant mercy that ever we were called forgiven and saved They that have had their part in this abundant mercy must be stirred up to abundant thanksgiving saying with the Psalmist What shall I render to the Lord for all his benefits towards me We must testifie our love in ●ealous obedience all the days of our life shewing forth the vertues of him that hath called us out of darkness into his marvellous
light and be a peculiar people to him zealous of good works walking worthy of the Lord which is by pleasing him in all things we must be ravished with zeal towards him as he hath been for our good The zeal of the Lord of Hostes hath done it Oh how this rebuketh the scant duty that God hath from us again We receive abundant mercy but return poor sparing obedience what slender zeal in Prayer or works of mercy How quickly are we weary of well-doing What small things will we stick at to God that stuck at nothing to us If he should call us to part with our Goods Country Liberty it were no more then Christ did for us yea if to dye did not he even dye for us It teacheth us also to shew mercy one to another in giving forgiving and the like herein the Lord himself going before us as a patern of imitation It sheweth also the miserableness of our estate that without abundant mercy we can never be saved therefore must we seek for it earnestly and betimes as becometh those that need such an infinite thing which condemns the notable carelesness and desperate boldness and presumption of the World that put off seeking for mercy till the latter end as if they had it at command But do they think abundant mercy is so easily gotten Many have not found it so nay they shall with Esau howl for the blessing and go without it because they despised it when it was so often offered The foolish Virgins sought to enter in when it was too late By the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead The means whereby we are begotten to this hope namely the Spirits assuring that Christ Jesus is risen for us and giving us power through his resurrection to rise to newness of life The benefits that come to us by Christs resurrection are many 1. We are hereby assured that he hath fully paid our debt and discharged all for if one sin had remained unsatisfied for the justice of God could not have suffered him to have risen again 2. Hereby we receive power to rise to newness of life 3. Hereby we are assured of the resurrection of our bodies at the last day The same power that did the one shall be able to do the other The head being risen will draw all the members after it We should therefore often meditate on our Saviour Christs resurrection and the benefits thereof especially on the Lords-day the day whereon he rose again by which very day we are put in minde thereof and among other things we must labor by Faith to draw vertue from his resurrection whereby we may be more and more enabled to walk in newness of life for as our Regeneration hath two parts a dying unto sin and rising to newness of life so have these two springs Christs death and his resurrection Verse 4. To an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled and that fa●eth not away reserved in Heaven for you HEre he explains what we are called to namely the lively hope of the Kingdom of Heaven which as it is here termed an Inheritance so is it in the next verse Salvation This is called an inheritance to shew us the nature of it being also described by sundry properties under divers-phrases as if no words could sufficiently express the same Those shew the perpetuity and purity thereof as also how we shall come by it it s reserved for us but where in Heaven where it s out of danger but how shall we come to it being here on earth among many dangers We are kept for it and that by a mighty hand even the power of God by the mean of Faith kept I say unto this Salvation prepared long ago and which shall be shewed us in the fulness of it even at Christs second coming An inheritance Therefore no purchase no wages of a servant but an inheritance given by a Father to his son not such as many heirs have entailed or as any natural son which hath it by a kinde of right after his father but an inheritance of Adopted children taken in as the childe of a Traytor nay a Traytor himself and so made heirs then which what can be freer This is said to be given and what 's freer then gift This serves to confute not onely the gross Opinion of Papists that we God setting us forward and helping us can do such things as whereby we can merit Heaven and Salvation but that which is more nice is of those which say that we have no good of our selves but that it s wrought in us by God alone yet now look for Salvation by their Holiness and Sanctification No God forbid for our Sanctification being imperfect God might justly condemn us for it and count our works a polluting of his grace therefore David saith No flesh before nor after grace can be justified in thy sight not onely by nothing of our own but by nothing that God worketh in us What differ these men from the proud Pharisee he attributed his holiness not to himself but to God and thankt him for it but he thought this would merit that he was not so and so as others and challenge something at the hand of God and therefore was rejected True it is God not onely disproveth not but liketh and accepteth of our works though unperfect yea crowns and rewards his own grace in us yet not for the worthiness of the work but for the persons sake that is in his favor by Jesus Christ whose perfect righteousness is imputed to make a supply of our imperfections and wants Seeing therefore it is an inheritance every way free bestowed upon us onely by right of Adoption in Jesus Christ which by his grace he hath called us unto let us so acknowledge it to the glory of God and like Adopted children love our Father fear him be zealous for his glory and take his part Incorruptible c. Now he describes it rather setting down what it is not then what it is which no tongue can express it is without end perpetual called therefore everlasting life Life for the excellency Everlasting for the continuance God endures for ever and ever so the happiness of his servants no death there to deprive us of it or take us from it no sin there to provoke God to take it from us it abides firm for ever it cannot be moved All earthly inheritances are subject to decay liable to a thousand perils alterations and troubles they may be taken from us and we from them by death How were the Canaanites put out and the Israelites succeeded in their places How did the Chaldeans displace them as themselves were by the Medes and Persians These things below are the meat that perisheth uncertain riches a treasure which moth and canker corrupt and whereto theeves may break in and steal whereof
we had been yet in our sins yet under the curse as if he had suffered and had not conquered and entred into glory we had been never the better It was needful that Christ should suffer for us for we by Adams fall were plunged into sin and so in danger of the curse of God and lyable unto all wrath here and hereafter This Gods justice could not suffer him to remit but the death threatned must be paid To this end our Savior became man and suffering all that was due to us thereby discharged us He was arraigned before an earthly Judge that we might never be brought to our answer before the heavenly accused that we might be cleared condemned that we might be acquitted before God counted among vile sinners that we might be reckoned among the Angels spitted on that we which had deserved that God should for ever have spitted on our face shame and confusion might be received into favor did undergo the curse that we might be blessed dyed that we might live c. then this there was no other way whereby we could have been discharged See Isa. 53. 1 Pet. 1. 19. 2. 24. 1 Iohn 1. 7. Rev. 1. 5. Hence perceive 1. The depth of our misery 2. The unspeakable love of God and Christ Jesus 3. Comfort to all that have their part in Christ all their sins and punishments are discharged crosses and death are now become blessings no punishments of sin whoso do not by Faith take hold on him must suffer for their own sins and that for ever 4. That as we are to hate sin with a deadly hatred so must we testifie our love to him that hath redeemed us at so high a price Numbers will talk of Christ that he dyed for their sins which yet are so far from being humbled to repentance hereby and to turn from sin to God as that they seem rather emboldened and heartened to run on in sin and sin more freely such vile wretches crucifie Christ again neither shall have any benefit by his death And the glory that should follow It was necessary that he should have overcome else had his death been in vain Hereof there were three degrees 1. His resurrection 2. His ascension 3. That he shall one day come into judgement bring all his servants into his glory whereunto may be annexed the consequents of each But how shall we come to glory even by the same way that our Head our Lord and Master hath gone before us namely by sufferings for through many afflictions we must enter into the Kingdom of God and God will have the Members made conformable to the Head It followeth hereupon 1. That afflictions or persecutions are no ill sign but rather of the way to Heaven and glory it should encourage us to suffer seeing glory follows and a great reward ensues thereupon 2. That those which will suffer no affliction nor persecution for Christ and the Gospel but shifting themselves therefrom aym at the glory of the World are not in the way to glory but shame hereafter will be their portion Verse 12. Unto whom it was revealed that not unto themselves but unto us they did minister the things which are now reported unto you by them that have preached the Gospel unto you with the holy Ghost sent down from Heaven which things the Angels desire to look into YE have heard what the Prophets searched into and by what guide now see what was revealed unto them how far forth they were satisfied namely that the things which they sought into even the time of Christs coming should not be in their days but in ours They took the pains we have the gains They laid the cloath and we come to partake and feed on the dainties The fruit of their ministery was to our benefit So that we have the advantage of all our Forefathers of the Old Testament Unto whom it was revealed that not unto themselves c. Lo say the Anabaptists the Jews foretold many things of Christ but had no part in him themselves those concerning us They had Canaan and temporal benefits and looked no further But how absurd this is we have already shewed having sufficiently proved the contrary And these words are not to be understood of Christ or of the substance of salvation but of the time of his coming and of the maner and measure of revealing him to them more darkly to us more clearly to them more sparingly to us more fully They believed in Christ that was to come we hear of Christ already come and that he hath finished all things and how and thus are we to understand Heb. 11. 13 33 39. where there seems an opposition They received the promises that is the fruit of them and salvation by Christ and they received not the promises that is saw not the exhibiting of Christ who was promised to the World For more plainness there was never but one Covenant between God and his people from the beginning till now nor shall be which is the Covenant of Grace except we mean the Covenant of Works which was between God and all mankinde in Adam the foundation and matter whereof was our own strength and righteousness but this was soon at an end Adam had soon broken this and overthrown himself and with him all us The Covenant of Grace then the Lord entred in his great mercy with Adam in Paradise which was founded in Christ Jesus requiring of us to believe in him and repent of our sins and he would forgive us our sins and give us salvation and life eternal This for the substance thereof was never altered one jot onely the Lord hath revealed his Son more fully to us more sparingly to them more plainly to us more darkly to them Herein may be considered both the Author Matter Form and End The Author the same God to them and us The Matter Christ Jesus the same to them and us The Form was generally also the same for as God required Faith and Repentance of them as well as of us so he gave them the same means for the working thereof the Word and Sacraments The End the same viz. the Salvation of his Elect and Eternal life The difference is in the measure of his giving them as also in the persons to whom then was it to the Jews onely who were the peculiar people of God now the partition wall is broken down and the Covenant is to the Gentiles as well as to the Jews So also for the measure he spake to them by visions and dreams to us by his word and when to them by his word it was both more sparingly and more darkly Also our Sacraments compared with theirs are as fewer so more easie and more significant and for the Spirit they had him more sparingly except some extraordinary persons whereas it was promised that
it or look therein to read it What a contempt were this The Scripture yet is the Lords Letter sent to us to inform us of his will O what shall the condemnation of this Land be that having the light love darkness better and God having given us his Word which he gives not to all we make so light account thereof we will not bestow the searching of it Nay every toy proves sufficient to keep us from it O woful unthankfulness How did our Forefathers make account of the Word Job David they in Queen Maries time whereof some read it by stealth in Hay-gofes c. O how precious was it to them Cra threw away his Money but kept his New Testament when he suffered Ship-wrack Many poor Christians and dear servants of God in Spain and elsewhere do now read the Word of God and other good Books with peril of their lives O how shall they rise up against us which may with peace and much liberty and sundry encouragements read and be conversant in the Scriptures yet regard it not God sends his Letter to us we will not vouchsafe to open it What will we regard if we regard not the Scriptures I tell you God hath no greater blessing to bestow on Mortal man This little Book is the glory of the world without which all the world is but a dung-hill and if this were taken away it were better for us not to be then to be for we should do nothing but grope in darkness and be devoured of our lusts till Hell snatch us away le ts learn therefore at last to be wiser and that whilest we may Casting away our toys and vanities learn we to be better acquainted with the Word then at any time heretofore all that be strangers to it be strangers to true comfort Yea resolve we that no day shall pass us without reading some part of Scripture for our instruction else how shall we do our duties each to other how use prosperity and adversity how to learn either to live or dye Here as good housholders we may provide store both for our selves and others For the words themselves Be ye holy for I am holy They are taken as ye heard out of Leviticus Them the Lord used to his people whom he had chosen from all others on whom he bestowed many outward mercies and betrusted them with his Word who thought they should see round about them the Gentiles abounding with idolatry and all maner of sin yet they must not follow them therein But as I have set you out from all other for my self saith the Lord so set your selves apart to my use and service and be ye holy to me as ye observe me to be Hence learn That Where God bestows on a Land or Corner or Town more mercies then on others he looks they should not be as other places that have not had the same favors but have been left to themselves but abounding in holiness holy as he himself is holy Here I might speak of this Land what God hath done for it and what he expects at our hands even that we should be better then any other Nation and then how we are so far from being more holy then others that if any Nation have any sin we get it from them and appropriate it to our selves What should I speak of the common sins of the times The last Assizes and every one shews what state we are in what horrible incests the daughter being with childe by her own father and the Wife burning the childe another ravishing his own daughter being thereof accused by his own childe and wife What cruel murthers besides the common mother sins ignorance extream worldliness and that overspreading canker and leprosie of this Land the contempt of good persons If any be more forward careful zealous then the common sort he is hated mocked discouraged all that may be Not the simplest fellow in a Town though he cannot understand one petition of the Lords Prayer but will mock at those that be any thing toward in Religion or forward to hear the Word refrain from disorder and keep the Lords Day c. this sin abounds most fearfully in this Land In other Religions which are indeed false and irreligious look who is most zealous and forward he is most reverenced and regarded onely in the true Religion if any be but careful to bring into use and practise that which he hears knows and dare not do as others but rather reprove them he makes himself as a wondering stock and is hooted as an howl one that shal sure be hoysed up in charges hu●cht at complained of and vexed This sin not repented of nor left wil be the moth confusion of this Land as we may justly fear God is every year upon us with one new punishment or other but they prevail nothing we are as bad stil or worse what therefore may we not look for How sped the Israelites at last we may fear lest God make us as famous for judgement as we have been for mercies we may fear that it shall be said of all that pass by How is this famous nation become thus desolate and answered Because they despised the Lord his Gospel and servants after many mercies bestowed upon them to have brought them in love therewith Be ye holy c. Some urge this exhortation and the like to establish Free-will but without cause They shew not what we can but what we should do and what God will require of the wicked or else condemn them and what he will enable his servants unto as give their endeavor thereto to the wicked they are commandments of conviction which God may justly require of them because he made them able to do the same to his servants they are not so but with the exhortation he conveys such grace as whereby they are enabled to do the same Lastly this place is abused by sundry to cry down the married estate to magnifie single life but there is no holiness in the one more then in the other for neither if we marry not have we the more as the Apostle speaketh about eating or marry have we the less the Kingdom of God not consisting in these things The benefit of the one more then the other consists onely in this That a single life hath freedom from many troubles and cares and so more liberty to every good duty but this gift is given but to few therefore rather then they should live discontentedly he perswades them to marry Let them therefore that live single take heed they put no holiness therein or think that thereby they please God the more but rather let them use it well and profit thereby in being so much the more zealous and forward in every good work publike and private else that their single life will one day be a witness against them but especially take heed of a filthy
opposites 1. Prophaneness when men dare live as they list and their lust is their Law 2. Security when men live carnally and wretchedly contenting themselves that they be none of the worst they be not such and such kinde of persons yet go on without regard either to God or his Word The evil they abstain from as it is not from the fear of God so if good come in their way they do it after their fashion and evil also as comes to hand they dare commit sin in hope of mercy and think they shall do well enough 3. Hypocrisie which hath more shew of Religion but resteth in the outward ceremonious performance of duties and looks not to do them in the right maner and so are not guided by the fear of God in their lives 4. Slavishness when men fear indeed but never but under or in expectation of the rod they then will flie to a book have good words golden promises c. at other times they care not what they do or at least be as before Contrarily the true fear of God is known by these notes 1. To hate evil and not leave it off onely for some sinister respects 2. Not onely gross and open evils of the hand but inward corruptions of the heart as Pride Arrogancy Hypocrisie Hardness Frowardness Wordliness of the heart c. spying them out mourning for them and striving against them as being seen to God as well as gross sins to men 3. All evil the evil way every evil way 4. Such evils as a man may go closely away withal as Joseph might with uncleanness with his Mistress but would not as fearing God 5. Such as a man may carry out by strong hand by might and authority and no body to control him yet dares not do it because there 's an higher who hath forbidden it 6. It will make a man watchful to avoid evil as the Hare hath an eye to passengers as she sits 7. It will make men avoid the occasions of evil 8. It is ever joyned with the fear of his Word and as is the one in us so is the other If it be thus then I may too truly and plainly conclude That there is but a little fear of God in this Land for how few hate evil secret corruptions all evil such as they can go cleanly away with such as they can carry away by might and colour of Law How many live prophanely as if there were no God no Law no Judgement day no reckoning to be made but do what their lust leads them too and that which some would not nor durst do for a world they make no bones of Another sort live securely and carelesly not so bad as the former but such as look not to God nor set him before their eyes in their deeds Others perform more duties to God but so as they regard not why nor in what maner but rest in the work wrought not casting with themselves how they may do them aright and thereby taking notice as well of their own weakness as Satans malice Others slavishly fear in their misery but in their prosperity regard nothing but their own will These being called out a few there be remaining that truly fear God for which he may justly have an heavy controversie with this Land that after so many happy means so few should be found that truly fear him though many think they do How few keep Gods commandments all alway with delight let every man examine himself carefully by these notes If any be loth and would have a wider sieve truly I can give no wider God hath given me no wider to let Hypocrites Prophane Persons c. scape through I try you but by the Word and by it you must be judged at the last day But for those that do indeed fear God there 's abundant comfort for them they have that which is better then all the world yea Gods mouth pronounceth them blessed Both the quoted Psalms are a storehouses of promises made to such there are others also in Psal. 25 12 14. 34. 9 10. 84. 11. Mal. 3. 16 17. which are duly to be weighed Such as fear God need fear neither Man Death Devils Hell Day of Judgement c. which are indeed the terror of the world only let them be provok'd to fear him more and more for even of Gods children not a few have but a small measure hereof whereby it comes to pass that they hate not sin so heartily in themselves and others as they should neither are such enemies to privy corruptions but that they break out often and so pull many a sorrow and gripe of Conscience upon themselves which more fear of God would have prevented Our often falls argue too little fear as may appear by our small zeal to duties and our little trembling at the Word of God therefore labor we for more that it may be said of us as of Obadiah That we fear God greatly that so we may be preserved from evil Oh this is the keeper of all vertues holding all in good order a watchman indeed to look to our heart if it be there and temptation comes up starts it and says Nay This will keep the heart clean hold out ill set us on to good Means to attain hereunto may be these Let us often set before our eyes our own baseness Gods greatness power and justice with the effects thereof on Adam the old world and others especially do we consider what God hath done for us that so our care and resolution may grow how to please God If this religious awe be in us O how it will keep our lives from innumerable evils and replenish them with all goodness that having finished them well we may come to the Lord in peace at our latter end O if we did consider the unspeakable mercies of God towards us we should see cause enough though there were no hell yet to fear more then death it self to offend God but because our nature is so exceeding lewd and prone to sin its good to think often that that God under whose power we live hates all sin and will not let any go unpunished What cause have we then to grow in the fear of God that have seen his greatness and just displeasure against sin so much every year one punishment or other What cause have we also to fear God that have such experiences of his goodness in 88. when he delivered us from the Spanish Armado and after from the Gun-powder Treason and now of late hath begun to relent towards us and gives us some showers of rain But alas if we will prove our selves by the notes before mentioned it will be evident that most have not the fear of God which is a fearful thing As no better testimony can be given of a man then this that he feareth God as Job and Obadiah so none more
so did he that quickly which we could never have done Therefore let every man trust to this if this be not a sufficient way thou mayest say I am content to perish thou mayest well enough and I with thee for company 1. This confoundeth all other false and devised satisfactions by any other and sheweth the most fearful state of all that know not nor embrace Christ as 1. The Jews that look for another Christ 2. The Turks that trust in Mahomet and do not acknowledge Christ so the Pagans that are utterly ignorant of him The Papists also that make him but half a Saviour and adde a number of other Merits and Satisfactions with their blasphemous Idol of the Mass their Pilgrimages Penances c. yea not onely say they are the sufferings of the Saints meritorious for themselves but even to put something into the common treasury to help others These also among our selves that hope to be saved by their good meaning good prayers and civil life and either do not at all look to Christ or but to halves being as good as not at all So those that make God an Idol all of mercy and no justice when as they are both essentially in him and he could not be God without both and the one is infinite in him as the other yet by crying God mercy they think to escape never considering how his justice should be answered but he should not be just nor God if he should let thy sins go unpunished 2. This sheweth the fearfulness of sin such was our case that as if one had committed a fault and there were no way to scape unless he could obtain the Kings son to dye for him we could not but perish unless the Son of God had dyed for us 3. This should much grieve and humble us to think what our sins have done even that they occasioned all the torment our Savior was put to It was not Judas nor the Jews Pilate nor the Soldiers that crucified Christ but our sins they being but our servants and executioners How should this go to our hearts that our lying swearing whoredom pride profaneness c. was the cause that put our Savior to all those indignities Shall he be pierced yea to the very heart for our sins and shall not we be pierced with grief for our own sins Shall he shed Tears of Blood and shall we have dry eyes Shall he say his soul is heavy to the death and shall not our hearts be heavy could we having a friend that loved us so dearly as he would take our room to endure much for us could we I say stand by and see him tortured for our cause and look on it with dry eyes 4. This should make us take heed of sin for the time to come and avoid it above all things in the world look upon every sin in blood no sin but hath a bloody face when we have committed it all the world cannot satisfie for it it must be blood the blood of the Son of God one drop of which was of more worth then Ten thousand worlds if it were but the blood of a man must be shed for every sin were 't not fearful but it s Christ Blood therefore how careful should we be But O Lord How small account is made of sin How doth the world make a May-game thereof How do men think they can appease Gods Wrath with a broken sigh or a Lord have mercy upon us for we are all Sinners or by making some counterfeit shew in their sickness or on their death-bed And do not the Papists think that it may be done away by auricular Confession Penance Pilgrimages Holy-water Popes Pardons the saying over of so many Ave-maries Paternosters c. But those that set so light by sin are such as never knew the weight of it nor have part in the remedy and therefore in vain do such say they hope to be saved by Jesus Christ and he dyed and shed his Blood for their sins and yet they still live in sin What is this but to make a light account of Christs blood a treading of it under foot an accounting of it an unholy thing a despiting of the Spirit of grace Yea if even Gods Children did so weigh this unspeakable price as they should they would be more afraid to offend then they are This also should awaken those that know no part in their Redemption that they have the greatest matter in the world to seek Such should never be quiet till they finde themselves discharged for without this there 's nothing but eternal destruction they shall bear their own burthen 5. This setteth out the unspeakable love of God and Jesus Christ that when we had plunged our selves into this miserable estate and could not onely not help our selves out but not so much as devise a way out that he did both finde out the way and was content to bestow his Son on us to suffer the curse and death that we had deserved that so we might be freed What man would beat his Son to spare his Servant What man would kill his Son to save his Enemy What Prince would give his onely Son and Heir for a base Subject nay to redeem a Traytor and that not to bondage but to death yet all this hath the Lord done God so loved the world O wonderful that the Father did not rather suffer all the world to perish then that his most blessed Son should suffer the least of those indignities that he indured And was not the love of Christ infinite that for us gave himself and did willingly lay down his life for us which could do nothing to deserve or requite it nay which were his very enemies so to endure such base and cruel dealing from men who himself was Lord of the world and could have commanded the earth to swallow them so to be spitted on mocked scourged nailed to the cross c. but above all that he would undergo his Fathers displeasures for us Rake-hells that had so provoked him 6. And what doth this call for at our hands again but admiring at the infiniteness of the price we study all our life how to walk thankfully before him giving our Bodies Souls Lives and Labors to him again most zealously faithfully serving him in all obedience yea if he should call us to lay down our lives for his Names sake to do it chearfully as he did for us we are not our own but the Lords who hath bought us and paid dearly for us and so must have neither Wit nor Will Body nor Soul Hand nor Foot but for him and which we are to employ in his service If one should redeem us with a great sum of Money we would ever be thankful and count our selves his if one should give all his Substance more if one should give himself to serve and be bond for us yet more but to lay down his
to set on to Religion O these Puritans are the vilest persons in the world even as the name of Hugenot in France was enough to help one to his death But let such take heed believe not all its malice speaks So take heed we believe not all we hear of particular Ministers and Christians some slandred one way some another Is this a new trick or rather is it not the old course of Satan to raise up such things to hinder men if he could from profiting by their Ministers or set men off from the profession of Religion It s more to be wondred that he raiseth not up ten to one therefore never condemn them in your hearts till you have tryed them Do them that equity ere you believe it ere you report it ask and expect if they have so carried themselves as they have deserved to be wel thought of before Is it not therefore a grievous thing that even such as profess the same truth and that have also good things in them hearing an ill report of their Neighbor Christian shall be too ready to believe it and report it to others but I hope saith he it is not true and so he tells it to another and so it encreaseth like a Snow-ball who should rather have stopt it when he heard it first and have used means to have come to the truth Verse 20. Who verily was fore-ordained before the foundation of tbe world but was manifest in these last times for you Verse 21. Who by him do believe in God that raised him up from the dead and gave him glory that your faith and hope might be in God HE proceeds to speak of Christ as of one of whom he cannot make an end of speaking and describes him 1. By his Antiquity 2. By the time of his taking flesh and the reason of it He was fore-ordained before the foundation of the world there 's his Antiquity He was manifest in these last times for you there 's both the time and reason of his Manifestation Those for whom he was manifested he describes also 1. By their Faith in God 2. By the means whereby they did attain thereto namely Jesus Christ where 's shewed both why they did for the time present and might still also believe and hope in God namely because he raised him from the dead and gave him glory both which were for our good Who verily was fore-ordained before the foundation of the world Here the Apostle prevents an Objection He had said they were redeemed from their vain conversation which they had received from their Fathers by Christs Blood why then belike might they have said our Fathers lived and dyed in their sins and in their vain conversation or else they had some other way of being Redeemed and Sanctified and so God had no Church in former times yet saith the Apostle God had his Church among the Forefathers and such as were Redeemed Justified and Sanctified as well as we and that also by no other way then we for Christ though he came not in the Flesh till these last times yet he hath been the Savior of the world from the beginning in Gods counsel and the effic●cy of his death and merit So that first he answereth what they might have doubted of their Fathers and then shews Christs Antiquity that they might see he was not a new way devised of late and that after Four thousand years it came into Gods minde thus to redeem mankinde Oh No saith he it was ordained before the world and hath been in force in all times And this he speaks the rather because we are ready to suspect Novelty neither can we freely fasten our Faith upon any new devised way He tells then they may freely rest upon him as being the ancient way of Salvation But was manifest in these last times for you He adds these words to stir up their hearts to more thankfulness and duty who being so unworthy should yet have the vantage of all the Fathers Christ was but promised to them he was performed to themselves Now its worth much thanks to have a benefit promised of God who is so sure of his Word and to us so unworthy but then it deserves much more thanks when the benefit is performed Who was fore-ordained 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ordained before The word signifieth foreknown as it s elsewhere rendred to shew that Gods foreknowledge is not idle nor separate from his Decree and Will as some think Now that Christ was ordained before the World he was he that was foretold by the Prophets signified by their Sacrifices promised to Abraham The seed in whom all the nations of the world should be blessed so to Adam The seed of the woman shall bruise the head of the Serpent yea he is termed The Lamb slain from the foundation of the world neither is this all He was ordained before the world Whatsoever God brings to pass in time as nothing nor the smallest or most casual thing but comes to pass by his Providence that he decreed beforetime for nothing comes to pass without Gods knowledge for then were not he infinite in Wisdom nor without his Will for then were not he infinite in Power How could this be seeing there was no need of Christ till after the world was made and man was the last creature that was made and that in innocency Was the remedy ordained before the malady The remedy was ordained before the misery was but not before the misery was foreknown to be Thus was the Lords order He before all time set down this to glorifie himself How In the Salvation of some of mankinde and condemnation of others Well how could he bring this to pass he decreed to make man male and female and to make them holy he decreed also to leave them to themselves that falling he might make a way for the glorifying of his mercy and justice which if man had continued righteous had been stopt up then he decreed to give his Son to redeem the vessels of mercy Now for his decreeing of Adams fall let it not seem strange he did not onely foresee but decree it yet so as he is altogether free from any fault thereof God Man and the Devil had all a hand in that action yet man and the Devil most guilty and the Lord most free as may appear partly by their diverse ends that they aymed at and partly by their maner of bringing it to pass Their ends God aymed to glorifie his mercy in saving some and his justice in condemning others a good end The Devils aym was to strip the Lord of any creature on earth to serve him and to overthrow all mankinde Adam and Eve they listened to the Devil counting God as it were a lyar that had threatned them when there was nothing so and envious of their good estate therefore thought without him to thrust themselves up into his seat and make
men contend for trifles Oppress use false weights and sleights as also hinders from inviting and meeting together 4. Envy at the thriving and wealth of others about them or equal to them as Labans sons did at Jacob Cain that Abels Sacrifice was better regarded then his Esau that Jacob was blessed and Ismael that Isaac was the son of the Promise 5. Frowardness and shortness of spirit breaks love very often for angry words stir up strife 6. These very days of peace make men grow hollow and strange and to set little one by another As when Sheep see a Dog they run all together so trouble makes men to make much one of another whereas its otherwise in peace These be woful causes 4. The effects of this want of love are lamentable every where both in Church and Commonwealth O what woful breaches and contentions what wrongs and enmities So in Families so among particular persons how break they out to the dishonor of God yea sometimes Professors one with another to the shame of their Profession the interrupting of their Prayers or either the hindring of themselves from the Sacrament as many a time it is or slubbering it over and coming with festred hearts and so depriving themselves of the benefit thereof nay provoking the Lord by their unworthy receiving Seeing these things be so O let every one of us finding our selves faulty humble our selves crave mercy and labor to be reformed herein To this end learn we to pluck out of our hearts those noysom weeds that this precious plant of love may grow We must strive against infidelity and labor for more faith In humbleness of minde we must labor to esteem every one better then our selves we must labor for a moderate affection to outward things setting more by peace then them we must also avoid envy We have more then we could have look'd for Is our eye evil because our Masters is good we must also cease from frowardness and be gentle and meek and labor we that this love to our brethren may shew forth it self in all good fruits as in judging the best departing from our right not provoking or being easily provoked but forbearing and forgiving Alas we have need that others should forgive us for who lives and is not subject to offend God forgives us many and great debts and shall we catch our neighbor by the throat God bids us ask forgiveness on no other condition but to forgive our offenders and there 's no better sign that a man is forgiven of God then to shew mercy to men none can be assured of that but they will forgive Let us therefore from the sea of compassion that God sheddeth out upon us let fall some drop thereof on our neighbors and not seek revenge which every bad man yea beast can do but pass by offences which is the glory of a man Besides revenge is the Lords Office and to revenge is indeed to resist the Lord without whose Providence nothing is done this kept David from revenging himself on Shimei Not to revenge is always the best way for us and the worst for him that wrongs us There 's no dealing with a man that commits his cause to God more safe to anger a Witch then an Innocent meek spirited man that hath his recourse to God thou hadst better deal with one that will take revenge on thee to the uttermost To this end keep we out anger if we can if not yet let it not rest in us as it were sowring in our hearts Let not the Sun go down upon it This indeed the world accounts a base thing but its honorable it makes us like God Neither must we labor for this a little or some few times but for a long skirted love that will cover even a multitude of offences And let our love shew it self in giving Spiritual and Temporal things for God gives to good and bad and makes us but Stewards of that he gives us that we may dispense the same yea the more we give the more we have as which encreaseth by giving and for Temporal things the high-way to thrive therein is to be merciful as to beggary to be pinching 5. The general reasons inciting to this duty of love 1. God requireth it of us who is love and if we perform it we do not so much serve our Neighbor as please God who takes it as done to himself If we neglect it we neglect not our Neigbor onely but God who takes himself wronged in this point 2. We are all one flesh and all have some part of the Image of God upon us But for the people of God 1. We be members of the same body The members of the Natural body not onely hurt not but help each other else quickly would the body be brought to confusion 2. Brethren not Natural ones but a better Brotherhood a nearer Bond Now between Brethren there must be no contention and it were a shame for such to contend 3. Both the Word requires it and the Sacrament of the Lords Supper calls for and puts us in minde of it 4. No better Argument that we are in the light love God are Christs Disciples and translated from death to life then this 5. The beauty of a Christian is love he 's the best Christian who loves most whose lips feed most whose branches spread widest 6. As it brings us much peace to our conscience and will comfort us not a little on our death-bed that we have not lived to our selves but to be useful to many especially to Souls so it procureth us love in the places we live in and in the Church of God where we have a good name No man is well beloved though he have good things in him if he be not loving Oh say they he is a good honest man but a harsh Censurer Contentious and so hasty that no man can tell how to speak to him he is a strait man no man is the better for him by counsel encouragement admonition so for other things But if a man be full of love Oh it shall procure him love again he shall be commended while he lives and mourned for when he dyes as they wept for Dorcas but a proud churlish close man he shall live without being desired and dye without being mourned for Many would have Love and Good-will and Credit but will not seek this way to procure it they live closely to themselves neither being useful or any way liberal to their Neighbors let them never look for it Many care not so they may scrape all to themselves for their good name let it go whether it will but these are bafounded and its a curse so to live Thus in general In particular Touching the love to the Children of God which is here chearfully called for consider we both the duty and the maner how it s to be performed For the duty it self it
same grace effectually call and convert which should binde our hearts more effectually to praise and serve him all the days of our life 4. That the excellency of this grace is such as all things without it are nothing If we had the wisdom of Solomon the strength of Sampson the policy of Achitophel the wealth of Ahasuerus c. if we could measure the Heaven Earth and Sea and knew the nature of all Creatures therein from the Cedar to the Hysope nay if we could understand the Bible could Preach never so Learnedly and had all gifts of knowledge and utterance yet were we not born again all were nothing Besides it s the more excellent both because so rare only the Elect of God are born again and because Eternal In the natural birth we dye because born of mortal seed and nourished by corruptible food but they that be born again never dye more never come more into their former state as being born of the immortal seed of the Word and Spirit and being thereby nourished are joyned to the fountain of life Christ Again by our first birth we are made miserable by this happy by that sinners by this righteous persons by that children of wrath by this children of God by that slaves of Satan by this servants of righteousnes by that limbs of the Devil by this members of Christ by that heirs of Hell by this heirs of Heaven O happy day O happy birth before Regeneration Sin and Satan wholly ruled in us but after Grace and the Spirit of God 1. This should teach us if we can prove it in our selves to rejoyce and remember our birth-day Many delight to talk of their age as others when where and what year they were born But canst thou tell where and when thou wert born again thou canst else have little joy of thy first birth The older thou art the more shame and greater condemnation if thou art not born again He that is not regenerate is a Bastard for though he have after a sort the Church to his Mother yet he hath not God to his Father and though in the Natural birth the Mothers side is the surest yet in the Spiritual birth it s otherwise Therefore if thou hast Wit Beauty Strength Wealth and the like rejoyce not in them but that thou art born again yea though thou art Poor Weak Sickly yet being born again thou art happy If God hath denied thee Wealth and Health or taken them away yet if he hath given thee grace thou art to rejoyce exceedingly 2. It may teach us to rejoyce if we know our children new born We rejoyce at their Natural Birth but alas wert not for hope because they be of Christian Parents we might rather weep for when a childe is born there 's come a sinner a guilty person into the World one that is in danger of all evil subject to a great deal of sin and sorrow and one that hath deserved to be cast into Hell O therefore if we know them born again there 's cause of rejoycing yea we must rejoyce at the new birth of a servant or any other as the Angels do The World likes such the worse a sign they are the old men 3. If we know it not we are to use the means bring them to Baptism after teach them what is fit that they may make conscience of their Covenant and bring them to the Word if they be any whit forward further them if backward or unwilling use thy Authority over them 4. Rebuke them that desire to see them Strong Fair Rich Healthy and the like in the mean time not respecting whether they be born again or not 5. He that is not born again hath nothing excellent in him but abides in death and is the servant of sin 5. That it s so necessary as without which there 's no entring into the Kingdom of Heaven for thereinto can no unclean thing enter and they onely which are pure in heart shall see God We are born impure sinful defiled from head to foot while we are in this state there 's no possibility of serving God as either by thinking speaking or doing good we must therefore be washed and made clean The world imagine no such necessity herein it s a riddle to them few know what any such work or change meaneth They think to be saved by their good meaning civil life and living orderly O this is sound if these do not well God help us all Again though openly bad if they can cry God have mercy on their deathbed they shall do well enough Here 's no dreaming of a new birth of any change in the understanding will affections yea throughout both body and soul but none of the others will serve the turn therefore try whether ye be new born If we live still in sin as in lying it s a certain argument we are as we were naturally He that is in Christ is a new creature and such a one walketh not after the flesh but after the Spirit if thou art thus thou hast put off thy old conversation and put on a new 6. The effects of Regeneration 1. An hatred of all sin a love of all good 2. A strife and labor to do the one and avoid the other 3. A diligent use of the means for this purpose and a Spiritual combat against the lets wherein being conquerors we have peace and joy if otherwise grief 4. Delight in the Word Prayer and Heavenly things whereas we were wont to delight in vain and worldly things so to cry Abba-Father to love the Father to desire the sincere milk of the Word and to live innocently If upon tryal of thy self by these notes thou findest thy self not born again thy case is fearful it had been better then thou shouldest thus dye that thou hadst never been born or born a Toad whereof when its dead there 's an end but the man that is not born again while he lives when he dyeth the second death will lay hold on him eternally yet alas a number of old folks ready to drop into the grave are not yet born again What shall become of these few men are born again when they become old which I speak not to discourage you quite but to awaken you the more earnestly to look about you some were called about the eleventh hour but let them that have day before them not defer or put it to the venture 6. That the life of a Regenerate man cannot be that it was or as is the life of carnal men for the case is altered he is now united to Jesus Christ as an imp to the stock a member to the head by Faith on our parts but principally by the Spirit of God by which Faith we draw and by which Spirit is conveyed to us vertue from Christs death to kill sin our old man and the corruptions
work without the hand of the workman Joh. 1. 13. is a notable Exposition of this place where by Blood and the will of Man and of Flesh the same is meant that here he calleth mortal seed and that which is here immortal or incorruptible seed is there but of God All Men and Angels cannot do this whomsoever God useth as the instrument he himself is the worker therefore is the Spirit compared to water as washing and making fruitful and to fire as through whom our corruptions are purified 1. This should stir up those that are born again to labor with all their might to shew themselves thankful to God that hath done that for them that their own Father their Preacher nay all the men of the world could not have done for them and to labor to glorifie his name in all holy obedience all their days for therefore hath he done it that they should be as the first fruits of his creatures even set apart for his service as the first fruits were 2. For those that are yet natural let them not trust to Ministers nor means but desire Almighty God to open their heart and to work in them that work that may be to their Salvation 3. Here 's an exceeding comfort to all new born persons namely That though they have a corrupt Nature the Devil subtile the World naught and themselves subject to many temptations and dangers yet they shall never fall finally from God it s not possible they should perish for then the immortal seed the Spirit given them and which is in them should perish which is more impossible then that that should perish whereby they are sealed unto the day of Redemption By the Word of God It s the mean to make of the servants of sin the servants of God of unclean clean of vile persons like Lyons Tygers and Bears to make meek humble Lambs to raise up the dead in sin and to bring to the Kingdom of Heaven which is therefore called The Gospel of the Kingdom See to this purpose Psal. 19. 7. Isa. 53. 1. Rom. 1. 16. 1 Cor. 1. 21. Jam. 1. 18. Acts 26. 18. and for examples hereof Acts 2. 37. 11. 21. 16. 30. The Law preparatively makes a way for Conversion and Faith by humbling and affrighting the heart with the sight of misery the Gospel effectively This works Faith and Repentance tells us of the remedy the sufficiency of it and how freely it is offered then works an earnest desire after it and an heart to leave any thing that might let us from it not that God is tyed to this but thus it hath pleased him to appoint ordinarily to work In times of persecution he can bless and doth reading of the Word to convert yea the report of private men So also for Infants he hath another way no less easie to him then hidden and admirable to us how to work in them as he sanctified John Baptist in his mothers womb He hath not ordained Angels to come and tell us news from heaven nor any to come from the dead with tidings but Moses and the Prophets Ministers to open and apply the Scriptures and this he makes effectual It s true God prepares men sometimes by crosses as the fire doth the iron but most are moved presently at the Word some by sickness or terror outward or inward sent of God have something brought to their conscience that they have heard and so are converted as others thereby prepared to the Word and thereupon converted by it as by experience hath been often found This is the reason that the Devil hath ever been a spiteful enemy hereto an enemy to true sound plain and diligent preaching raising so many Enemies against it laying so many logs in the way to hinder the course of it raising up such in the Ministery as either preach not at all or seldom or in the fleshly words of mans wisdom crying down preaching under this or that colour c. for he knows well that its the mighty Engine to batter his Kingdom it s that which pulls down the walls of Jericho how base soever in the worlds eyes It s the strong voyce of God that casts Satan out of his hold and possession his mighty arm that plucks us out of his power and Kingdom and translates us into the Kingdom of his dear Son 1. This teacheth us highly to esteem of it above all other means not preferring or equalling thereto either Reading or Prayer publique or private For what were this but to thwart the Lord hath he blest these alike to win souls If thou sittest at home and readest when thou shouldest be hearing God will curse thy pride that thinkest to be wiser then he or teachest any so to do 2. It teacheth us to praise God for his unspeakable mercy towards us that whereas most of the world sitteth in darkness he hath given us the means of the new birth If thou art hereby Regenerate thou art happy if not thy case is hard then will it profit us when it hath wrought this in us therefore pray unto God to continue his Word and give it power to change thee and that he would whet this two-edged sword to pierce through thee and make it an hammer to break thy stony heart 3. They that have it not should mourn for it and pray for it as being subject to perish For where prophesie faileth the people perish we must pity them who do not pity themselves 4. Labor to profit daily by it for it s also for our further building up and whereby we go on to perfection praying that it may be so long continued till we shall have no more need of it or our poor children whom we leave behinde us 5. Pray to God to give it free passage every day to the winning of many souls to the accomplishment of the number of Gods Elect and let every man further it what he can to the utmost of his power herein shewing himself Christs true friend And let all men take heed of hindring the same hinderers are enemies to mens souls and to the Kingdom of Christ and friends to the Devils Kingdom Here I may speak how God hath appointed Ministers to be the bringers of this glad tidings that converts the soul and that the Lord useth them as instruments to win the soul who are therefore called in Scripture by many Honorable names as Men of God Angels Ambassadors from God Spiritual Fathers c. so Builders Laborers Watchmen Shepherds c. in respect of their pains They are appointed over the Lords flock they have the trust of Souls the greatest trust that can be other callings are about mens bodies or goods but this their Souls 1. Therefore for Preachers we must be faithful in token of our thankfulness to God that hath so highly honored us and deeply entrusted us
have some one lust or sin that they will not part with Thus some stand cheapning many years together They would fain do well and be saved but have something that they cannot finde in their hearts to do away and so at last come to nothing perish as unbelievers for whosoever shall have part in Christ must be like the wise Merchant who will part with all that he hath to get the Pearl He will part with any with all his sins whatsoever that he may have pardon in Christ He will take up his yoke not in what he list shaking off some part at his pleasure but in every part thereof O poor fools that will lose Heaven for some one lust Are not such worthy to perish 1. This is an exceeding comfort to those that are holpen against all lets that hinder most and do not stumble at Christ but acknowledge themselves utterly lost without Christ that earnestly long after him prize him above the world and are content to part with any thing for him O you are blessed Why should so many stumble at Christ and not you O its Gods unspeakable mercy Flesh and Blood hath not so taught you well may you rejoyce for him the joy and rejoycing of your souls He will be a sure Foundation of happiness to you that will never fail you in this Life in Death or at the day of Judgement 2. Terror to all that stumble at Christ upon what occasion soever that will not see their need of him nor part with any thing for him To these he will turn to their destruction For they hurt not him thereby but themselves as one stumbling at a great stone hurts not it but himself or one running a Ship against a great Rock hurts not it but splits the Ship in pieces so wil it be to all that embrace not Christ for missing him Who shall save them There is no other to be saved by but they must bear their own burthen and shall undoubtedy perish They shall not escape destruction and no marvel For if they that despised Moses Law escaped not unpunished What shall become of them that despise Jesus Christ himself O how happy might we be that have the Lord Jesus the blessed Savior of the world Preached to us so graciously when as few have that favor but most sit in darkness and blindeness 3. Whatsoever hath made any of us stumble at Christ endeavor we to remove the same that so we may embrace him with both arms as our Savior and stoop to him as our Lord and King who will be to us a sure Foundation of Salvation that will not fail us If any will yet go on obstinately and carelesly he shall surely bring destruction upon himself eternally And is it not a grievous thing that Christ should be a cause of mens Damnation and yet he is to all that receive him not as they that come unworthily to the Sacrament eat and drink Damnation to themselves We say its pity fair weather should ever do hurt but is it not wonderful pity that ever Christ should do hurt Even to such as stumble at the Word Some will say they stumble not at Christ If they stumble at the Word that brings news of Christ and will not embrace it or be obedient thereto it s all one And For the Word Most men take occasion to be offended at it that either they will not profess it at all or at least no more then they must needs but to love it delight in it attend on it with diligence and be obedient to it in all things O this few do Why doth the Word give any just occasion to men to stumble O no! It s the the Word of Life and Gospel of the Kingdom able to make us wise unto Salvation to save our Souls It s our Light to guide Food to nourish Armor to defend us Pearl to enrich us all in all Yet will men through their own default and forwardness take one occasion or other not to embrace it being herein stark fools for if they take any occasion to quarrel with this or to shake it off or be strange to it they must needs perish yet there are too too many such The occasions that men take are either from the Word it self or from the Preaching of it or the Preachers and Professors thereof or from themselves Against the Word it self Be these 1. Some say if they knew indeed it were Gods Word they would as good reason they should believe and be ruled by it but that they cannot tell But he that hath not a prophane heart and willing to doubt but is any thing humble and teachable may see enough even by the Scripture it self to satisfie him fully and such arguments as hell it self is not able to gainsay 2. Some finde fault with the Translation of the Scriptures for whose satisfaction Dr. Fulk and others have written largely 3. Some curious Heads and nimble Wits no less prophane then proud stumble at the plainness of the Scriptures the homely and low stile of the same But this is one great argument to prove it to be of God because there is such fulness of Majesty in simplicity of words which is not to be found in any other writing It savors of a man and of weakness whatsoever else is written or if any thing work admiration it is that which is strained out into some lofty and eloquent Stile Unto the Prophet Gods Testimonies were wonderful a giving light and understanding even to the simple yet in some parts of Scripture is not only admirable Eloquence able to set down the proudest and ripest Wit so also we could have spoke it all but some be dark and obscure as may take up the deepest and greatest Learned which the Lord hath done that there might be taken away offence from the wise as the rest is plain to take away offence from the simple 4 Some stumble at some points of Doctrine which they cannot conceive of as of the Trinity the worlds making of nothing the Resurrection that Christ being Man should save us that being dead he should rise again c. This comes of Pride when men will reject that which they cannot conceive But we must be fools in our selves that is captivate wit reason and all to God adoring that we cannot understand and knowing that Gods mysteries are no more fit to be comprehended in our shallow reason then a man can span the whole Earth with his hand for Christ as he was Man and mortal so also is God immortal He that was God dyed but not in his Godhead that had been impossible but in his Humanity and by his Godhead raised up himself being dead and in both natures saved us 5. Again some points be too harsh for some as that of Predestination that God should appoint most men to damnation and that then it s in vain to strive or do any thing for that we cannot alter But
poverty should be a spur hereunto Is there not the same way of Salvation to them that is unto others They had need hear the Word to get knowledge and faith that they may go through their Temptations comfortably And first for the Sabbath let them and all others take heed they meddle not with it to their worldly uses God hath sanctified it to himself and the matters of Salvation This ought every one to spend conscionably which if we would do we might get a competency of saving knowledge wo be to them that dare prophane this God hath said we shall do all our works on the six days that which we cannot God will supply without breach of his Sabbath and for the poor that live in the same Town or near a Sermon on the week-day I make no doubt it s their duty without some great let to attend on it and God will recompence it if they do it conscionably let them thus do and thereupon return to their work and follow their calling with diligence and see what they shall miss by the weeks end Neglect of Religion indeed hath brought want but I never knew any that heard conscionably and thirstily that were put to the more want by their hearing or any such so miserably poor as careless persons If any shall under colour of hearing neglect their business whole days and so bring poverty on themselves they are exceedingly faulty 4. Others plead no want for they are troubled with nothing but too much and they have so much business and so many servants to look after and so many occasions as for their part they cannot spare the time A. Have they so much to do for themselves as God can have nothing done of them and so much for the body and this world as that they have no leisure for the soul or the world to come Remember the end of them who being invited to the great Supper came not but preferred their Oxen and Farms thereto they were shut out and had no part in that blessed Feast Others might also pretend it as well if they knew not that one thing to be needful What are all they idle persons and have nothing to do that attend on the word diligently No but such as both have business and in like maner a Christian care thereof yea and those that dispatch it well enough and finde Gods blessing thereon no less nay much more then they that have care of nothing else If they wanted something of that they get yet it shall be better with them in the winding up when they shal have that which will stand by them whereas all that the others have got shall be taken away else as they had no leisure and could finde no time to serve God so God will finde no time to save them 5. Others be not Book-learned therefore they hope they shall be held excused though they have no great knowledge A. You had need take the more pains in hearing as also learn and labor to be book-learned It s possible if you will give your minde and endeavor thereto If not yet many that never knew letter in the Book have attained to good knowledge and been most excellent Christians and laid down their lives for the Truth and others to competent saving knowledge and lived well as the servants of God But this may be a warning for Parents to bring up their Children in Reading as in many other respects so that they may not have this block to hinder them from goodness and rich men should do well to bestow Learning upon poor mens children it s a mercy indeed to their Souls 6. Others say They be so dull and its such an hard thing to learn Religion as they shall never attain it A. The slothful man saith There 's a Lyon in the way but it s as easie to learn as many other things are You can learn to play at Cards you can conceive your own business and are wise enough to save your selves from being beguiled if you would willingly in humility come to learn knowledge is easie to him that will understand And though you get no great measure yet if you get knowledge of the main points and Faith and desire more and be willing to be ruled by that which you know God will accept of the will 7. Others say If they should follow Sermons c. they should be so hated mockt and nick-named as they should not be able to endure it their Land-lords would fall out with them and turn them out of doors c. A. 1. Blessed are ye when ye shall thus suffer you may exceedingly rejoyce thereat 2. When a mans ways please God even his foes shall become his friends 8. The yonger sort say It s too soon and wealthy ones That they think they have more liberty then others A. 1. For the yonger sort they must remember their Creator in the days of their youth 2. For the rich and wealthy they are no more exempted from serving God then the meanest nay are more bound and tyed thereto by reason of the means afforded them to do good 9. Others think they do well and please God though they be not so precise as some be for they thrive they thank God and have as few crosses as the best of them all and if God did not love them he would not so bless and prosper them as he doth A. This is an ill argument seeing God afflicts those whom he loves and suffers his sun to shine and his rain to fall even on the unjust This is but the wicked mans portion Ishmael had the fat of the Earth Esau the dew of Heaven Our Savior suffered Judas to carry the bag but Peter and the rest carried away the grace Jacob had many crosses Esau many blessings yet was Jacob loved of God Esau hated There can be no worse sign then to live in a careless prophane course and yet to meet with no crosses but to have all prosperity the forgiveness of sins and a little Faith and Sanctification is more worth then all the world But the wicked is reserved to the day of destruction c. 10. Some say They have a Minister of their own though he cannot Preach yet he is an honest man and quiet and means well and doth his good will and what can one desire more of a man A. These be notable persons If Salvation were put in their mouthes they could be content to take it but to seek after it they see no such cause It will serve no mans turn to excuse himself by another mans fault If the Minister do not his duty to Preach people must seek after the light being its come into the world compassing even sea and land to obtain it Neither would they be so simple in other things as to put their Suit for Goods and Lands into ones hands that hath no skill at all in Law and being so told make answer
ordained most men to destruction then is his justice greater then his mercy We must not measure his justice and mercy by the number of the one or of the other for if there had been but one onely saved it had been as great mercy as his justice in condemning the rest for if but one had been saved it must have cost the death of the Lord Jesus such was our misery Now what a mercy it was that the eternal Son of God equal with the Father and in whom he was well pleased should not onely abase himself to our nature but to our infirmities yea to sorrows and great indignities nay to death yea a cursed death O who can express this love It was a wonder he did not rather suffer us all to perish then his Son to endure the least of these Then he hath ordained the means of their condemnation namely sin and so is the Author of sin True he ordained and decreed that there should be sin in the world as he did of the fall of Adam but not as is sin and evil but as whereby and out of which God draws glory to himself and it was necessary that there should he evil in the world as well as good that a way might be made for setting out Gods mercy in pardoning some and his justice in punishing it in others but so as the Lord is no way faulty He ordained willingly to permit it as it hath respect of good in it but as no actor of it He put no evil in Adam nor any man but onely willingly permitted his fall c. 2. This should and may stay our mindes when we see any great Professors and men of excellent parts fall away It s no other then that an Hypocrite and one that never was sound nor elect of God is now discovered and let none that can prove their election be overmuch troubled onely walk reverently but never be dismaid with deadly fear They fell because they were not elect and you being elect shall be therefore sure to stand and thus our Savior comforts his Disciples That none was lost but Judas who was the son of perdition so did Paul the Christians notwithstanding the revolting of Hymeneus Philetus Alexander c. If it were not for this what a deadly fear might this breed in weak Christians to see those so far their superiors in knowledge and gifts to fall away Thus of the first The second is this That This was of his own will and for no cause out of himself for the Lord infinite in wisdom and holiness needs not as man to fetch the reason of his purposes forth of himself He will have mercy on whom he will have mercy and whom he will he hardneth He doth all things according to the counsel of his own will Is it not said O Israel thy destruction is of thy self and He that beliveth not is condemned and Except ye repent ye shall all likewise perish Cursed be the mouth that saith not so even that every mans destruction is of himself and his own just desert but we must put a difference between the decree of God and the execution of it God condemneth no man upon his bare will but his own just desert Sin comes in between the decree of God and the execution of his Decree as the cause of Damnation If then it be asked Why is any man condemned For his sin But why did God decree to condemn any Because he would As no man is saved but by Faith in Christ and Sanctification of life which yet is not the cause why God appointed him to Salvation but because he would so there 's none condemned but for his sin yet God ordained him not thereto because of sin but because of his own will If any ask further and why would he That a note too high for man or angel to sing but there in humility we must rest and not put the Lord to render a reason of all his decrees or doings which even princes will not do to their subjects he raised up Pharaoh c. even because he would get glory out of him and by his means This condemneth the Opinion of foreseen works good or bad as of this because he foresaw some would be bad and refuse grace he therefore Reprobated them c. but God loved Jacob and hated Esau not onely before the had done good or evil but before there was any thinking of good or ill If foreseen sin be the cause of Reprobation then on the contrary foreseen grace of Election but the Epistle to the Ephesians sheweth the contrary hereof Faith and Sanctification followeth upon Election as fruits thereof therefore go not before as any causes so do Infidelity and impenitency follow after Reprobation If foreseen sin had been the cause of Reprobation then we should all have been refused for he could not see us but all sinners But as the blinde man was not so born for his own or Parents sin but that the work of God in curing him by a Word might be seen so was it in this business Thus of the second The third is this That The Lord hath done this most justly His will is a rule of Righteousness and he can do nothing but most holily and justly Is there unrighteousness with God God forbid Though we cannot see into the justness of it yet we ought to acknowledge it The Sun may shine and that brightly too though a blinde man see it not Man was made holy and having free-will by his willing sin lost his state and still sins willingly It seems cruelty in the Lord to appoint most part of mankinde to Destruction He did it not as ayming at their Damnation but at his own glory which is more to be regarded then all the World And shall the Clay say against the Potter Why hast thou made me thus and thus may not he do as he list So may not the Lord get glory by his own creatures which way he will And do men for their pleasure hunt the Hare and Partridge or kill not onely Flyes and baser creatures but also Fowls with their grins in like maner appointing Sheep Oxen c. for the slaughter and shall not the Lord have as much Soveraignty over men the work of his hands we cannot make a Fly or Flea yea it s more reason that the Lord should be glorified if he would with the Damnation of all mankinde then that the killing of a Hare nay a Fly should serve to the honor or pleasure of the greatest Potentate of the world What if he had ordained none to Salvation who had had cause to complain Besides with what patience bears he with them and their blaspheming of him every day What marvellous benefits and comfortable good things bestows he upon them houses lands wealth health peace who might destroy and send them to
where it may be they receive conversion and even that terror of conscience though it were occasioned by some outward thing yet it is the Word that indeed works it as which tells them both of their sin and danger The parts of it are 1. An enlightening of the understanding with a distinct knowledge of the principal points of Salvation 2. The opening of the heart to believe 3. The changing of the whole man from that ill nature that was in him to a quite contrary The Law prepares and make them see their deadly danger and by the Spirit makes to feel it grievously and then the Gospel works by little and little hope to comfort and so a change The cause that moves the Lord to do this to any is his meer mercy and no desert as is Election and Redemption so is our effectual calling free And this inward effectual calling is an infallible argument of Election past and glory to come They are links of the golden chain of mans Salvation that cannot by all the Devils be sundred but have one and have all Hereupon me thinks every mans heart should burn within him to prove his calling that hereby he might have a mark of his Election They that can prove it may have exceeding comfort and they must also beware lest being calling out of the world to God they look any more back or be more and more defiled with the fashions and maners thereof and every day in hearing the Word obey every part thereof and walk worthy of your holy Calling Much are they to be blamed that do no more honor their Calling but drop into things like men of this world yea are overcome of the world and covetousness But haply thou doubtest of thy Calling because thou findest not these fruits or not so plentifully as thou would'st be not discouraged though thou beest dull and full of infirmities and strong corruptions yet unfainedly hating and resisting them and being grieved at them and using the means against them thou art not to call thy foundation into question yet must thou humble thy self and as occasion requires set on more earnestly use the means more carefully and daily renew thy repentance But for those that shew no fruits of their Calling but though they have had the Word and been Hearers yet remain prophane and impenitent altogether or seeming to go some steps yet are not changed throughout through Faith they are not yet called for never imagine that every one that hears Sermons yea usually and with joy and mends many things and lives in some good fashion is straight truly called not onely the high-way ground but even the stony yea thorny which went far and beyond most in Congregations yet were not effectually called and numbers among our selves that think well of themselves are not truly called are not Believers nor turned to God Well let every man examine himself throughly being not called I dare not speak a word of comfort to you in this case you have not onely no mark of Election but the contrary when God hath by all means called as by promises threatnings c. and none have prevailed O now use the means with all diligence and though hitherto you have disobeyed the words of Gods calling yet let them now open the doors of your hearts If you do God will be merciful and blot out all if you will not when you shall hereafter call you shall not be heard and you which would not obey this gracious voyce of the Gospel to believe and repent that you might be saved shall one day hear another kinde of voyce from him which you shall obey nill you will you to your own confusion Out of darkness into his marvellous light Here are the parts of calling both from whence and whereto By darkness is meant ignorance of Christ Jesus and sin which are the works of darkness and tend to utter darkness In this case they were How could these Jews be said to be in darkness which had the Law and were skilful therein and stood not a little upon it They had knowledge of the Law but Christ Jesus the accomplishment of the Law they knew not to know whom aright is life everlasting All knowledge without this is nothing but darkness still so that he means not that they were without the means of knowledge as the Gentiles were for one may have the means and yet be in darkness nor that they were called out of ignorance to some knowledge by the means for one may have much knowledge and yet be in darkness but that they were called out of darkness that is out of ignorance of Christ and Salvation by him out of the state of corruption and sin and working the works of darkness and going to utter darkness To his light that is to know Christ by a saving particular and effectual knowledge to Sanctification and Holiness of life which are the works of the light and so to the hope of the eternal light of happiness Hereunto they were called out of the state of unbelief and sin which tend to death for so sin is called darkness and holiness light Sin is termed darkness because it comes from the Devil the Prince of darkness loves darkness and goes to darkness Holiness comes from light even God the Father of lights loves and can abide the light and goes to light and God the Fountain of Holiness is called light Here note What every mans estate is till he be called even that we are not onely darkened but darkness it self We were all made light in Adam full of knowledge and holiness since the fall we are all darkness and when God means to save any he pulls them out of darkness Darkness hath a power indeed which were it not for the Almighty power of God delivering us therefrom would hold us under for ever and as long as we be in this darkness we have no right to the Kingdom of God nay we have nothing to do with God we are neither his sons people nor servants The man that is not effectually called and sanctified what gifts soever he hath is yet in darkness and never wrought other then the works of darkness He may do good things and the works of light but they be not so in him being darkly performed by corrupt nature without Faith or the Spirit neither tending to the right end This may be said of every unregenerate person though never so old civil or of good parts 1. This confutes the Papists that teach that there are some such pure Naturals left in man some Free-will to goodness which if God stir up a little and help can work and that they can merit of Congruity which crosseth both this and other Scriptures as That the thoughts of mans heart are onely evil continually That the wisdom of the flesh is enmity with God and That
great cause of thankfulness whereas if we think we have ever been as now or that we had some goodness in us before as the Papists teach we cannot be truly and heartily thankful to God as we should Therefore the Doctrine of Rome That man is not so miserable but that he hath some good in himself c. will never humble a man as he ought to be nor make him so thankful as he should be David was put in minde that he was taken from following the Ewes with yong that thereby he might be the more thankful 3. To strengthen our faith to believe in God for afterwards and for all blessings needful to Salvation He that hath already done thus much for me will not now fail me 1. Therefore we should do well oftentimes especially when we feel our hearts lifted up with pride to enter into a deep consideration of our former estate and what we were before God shewed mercy to our souls in enlightening converting and effectually calling us for we are ready to be puffed up as though we had not received it and lift up our selves and contemn others now alas we should consider such were we and once as far from Salvation as they and so pity them 2. When we finde our selves dead or dull to duties do but consider what he hath done for us and from what a base condition he hath pulled us and into what dignity he hath advanced us and this will make us shake off all laziness 3. When our faith is weak and we begin to fear the time to come consider He that freely before the world chose us passing by most others gave his Son to dye for us his Word to tell us thereof his Spirit to assure us thereof and so Sanctifie us he will not now leave his work imperfect O but our sins be so many and we be so unworthy If thy sins could have turned away Gods favor he would have kept his mercy away at the first but seeing they could not keep God from shewing thee mercy at the first they shall never take away the favor of God from thee now that he hath vouchsafed the same they shall never take it away wholly and for ever Here the Apostle alludes as ye heard to Hosea 1. 10. God there threatned to cut them off from being his people which after fell out Whence learn that No priviledges can exempt men from Gods wrath but if they contemn his Word he will take it from them and cast them off Thus he did with the posterity of Abraham a very lamentable spectacle to see the ten Tribes carried into Assyria Captives thence by the Medes chased into many Nations and dispersed that had sometimes been the people of God and now nothing less but became no people were as the Heathens thus hath it fallen out to many Nations since our Savior Christ as to the Churches that the Apostles Paul and John wrote to and divers others This may terrifie us and hereby we may learn to stand in awe If God did not spare them will he spare us we stand upon our good behavior the sins of our Land be many not onely Bribery Oppression Whoredom Drunkenness Pride Covetousness but horrible prophanations of Sabbaths and Sacraments fearful contempt of the Word and abuse of Gods Servants and with most Religion grown to a mock and a reproach to those that be any thing forwarder therein then others If any shall say We have enjoyed the mercy of God and the Gospel a long time Not so long as the Israelites did But what then should God do for a people As when God cast off the Jews he took us Gentiles in which they thought could never have been even so can he finde him out a people among the ignorant and wilde people which are no worse then this Nation sometimes was though he should utterly cast us off In making them a people again see both the mercy power and truth of God 1. His mercy in receiving them in again Where learn That Though God should forsake some of the seed of a godly man yet he will extend mercies on others for their fathers sakes and remember the next or third Generation for the good old father or Grandfather Let Parents be godly that all their children may be so or if the Lord should frown on any of them that yet he may remember his Covenant to their Posterity Again though God be angry with men for their sins yet if they unfeignedly turn to him and humble themselves he is gracious and merciful As this should provoke Gods Servants when they have offended not to fly from him and dispair but come humbly to him remembring that though they have shaken off the nature and part of Children yet he retains still the nature of a father so this may provoke lewd Wretches to come unto God hearing he is so merciful But contrarily they abuse the same and go on in their sins 2. His power Though they were thus scattered and so unlikely ever to be gathered again yet did the Lord effect it If men say a thing or have a minde to a thing they may hap to do it but if God minde a thing he will do it neither shall any or any thing let him This may comfort us in all Gods promises of protection of his Church against the proud adversaries of the same And let such take heed how they oppose God in his Church or stand in his way lest they receive that which they shall never claw off again Though the Jews at this time be so scattered as that they be in all Nations yet God will finde a means to gather them under the knowledge and scepter of Jesus Christ. 3. His truth That was verified and came upon them which God had threatned in the time and by the ministery of Hosea and whereas there it was foretold that yet afterward they should be called home again and be made the people of God See the truth of his promises as of his threatnings for his promise to Abraham he took them in again Were not a people He saith not they were not the people of God but they were not a people What then heads of Swine not worthy the name of a people or of men but of Beasts for such are they which live without the knowledge of God and Christ nay evil Beasts as Horse and Mule without understanding Oxen and Asses may teach them wit The Sork Crane and Swallow know their times which they do not nay worse then Beasts Hence the Scripture compares them to Dogs Lyons Foxes Tygres Cockatrices c. as wicked rich men to fed beasts If a Horse have drunk his fill let him come through the clearest water that is and he stays not but numbers having already drunk too much must needs
good we must endeavor to live under the Ministery of the Word where we may know the will of God and be thereby directed unto Salvation This condemneth the most unmerciful hard-heartedness of the world that have no pity on themselves for their Spiritual miseries nay will not take knowledge of them but hate those that would help them out of them or knowing them yet are content either to abide in the same without any regard or bless themselves in their condition as if either it were not so bad as it is or they might come out of it when they would Would we not pity our selves if we were blinde lame naked diseased in our bodies Such are we in soul but where 's our pity Who would live in a place where there were no bread or in a Town besieged by Enemies wherein there were no Watchmen to give warning but not a few live where there are neither Preaching nor Preachers As Peter bade Christ favor himself so may we bid these pity themselves O consider of the worth of your souls and of the misery wherein they now are and if not now prevented hereafter shall be How do we take on if our finger be but a little burnt with a Candle Should we not therefore stand in fear of the everlasting burning in Hell Who will pity you if you pity not your own souls or who will commit unto you their souls to be cared for that have no pity of your own If God cast you into eternal torments without pity yet you must needs blame your selves as those who had no pity of your selves O pity your selves though it be with some pains to your bodies If your bodies do your souls a good turn as by bringing them to the Word being profited thereby they will requite them a thousand fold Pity towards others is either in respect of their souls or their bodies In respect of their souls It must be our care and labor to help them out of such miseries and bondage as they lie under Thus must Princes be careful of their subjects souls be unto them as nursing fathers and nursing mothers feed them guide them and with Asa Hezekiah Josiah Jehoshaphat c. provide that they may be instructed in their duties Thus must Magistrates of the people among whom they live encouraging the good and punishing the bad Thus Ministers as Watchmen tell people of any danger as Shepherds feed them and as guides lead them They must preach to the capacity of the meanest going in and out before them by an holy example Thus Patrons must have a care in bestowing their livings in pity of the peoples souls Thus Parents of their Children bringing them up in the narture and fear of the Lord Thus Husbands of their wives souls Masters of their Servants all of us each of others Help them that live in ignorance out of it in what you can bring home the impenitent comfort them that are afflicted yea we are even to pity those that are further off or dwell in other Countries who are yet without the knowledge of God and Christ as also to pity their souls who do not yet pity themselves What may not enduce us hereunto God is full of compassion and mercy Such an account made he of our souls as to save them he gave the blood of his own Son Christ Jesus so pitied us as he was content to abase himself to the state of man taking upon him the form of a Servant yea to undergo the ignominous death of the Cross O how he wept over Jerusalem How moved he was with pity when he saw the people scattered as Sheep wanting a shepherd and as he himself Preached most diligently so as the Doctor and Prophet of his Church he furnisht the same with able men as the twelve Apostles and seventy Disciples Adde hereunto that the soul is of more worth then the whole world and that if the soul be lost it must lie in unspeakable and endless torments and thither also will it draw the body This condemneth the unmercifulness of the world towards souls as of those which establish false Religion and binde their people thereto as Jeroboam who made the people sin such poyson and murther the soul So of ungodly Magistrates who hinder the preaching of the Word in what they can So of ignorant Heretical corrupt Teachers ravening Wolves such starve or poyson souls They cloath themselves with the fleece but care not for the flock So of wicked and unconscionable Patrons that for kindred favor or money put in such as God never called being no way fit for that weighty calling utterly unapt to teach having neither ability nor willingness thereto being such as seek their ease and pleasures So of wicked Fathers that buy livings for their Sons though never so unsufficient So of careless and ungodly Parents that have no care of the education of their Children providing for them food gay cloaths and great Portions but no good instruction If they were taken Captives of the Turk they will mourn but are no whit moved with pity though they be indeed Slaves unto Satan If but their finger ake they are grieved what should they then be seeing so many ugly sores of deadly sins running upon them So of Neighbors that little regard those they live by though ignorant impenitent c. they are not troubled at it shew little mercy this way So if any be afflicted in conscience few take the same to heart few do either regard or pity them Assuredly such as shew no mercy to the souls of others especially them that be under their charge shall have of God no mercy shewed on their souls but as it was said Eye for eye tooth for tooth so will he make them pay soul for soul their blood shall be required of them There shall be judgement without mercy to them that shew no mercy yea God will especially unconscionable and unmerciful Ministers not only in themselves and their goods so gotten but also in their children Contrarily to those that have pitied souls God will shew mercy Godly Kings and Magistrates with Jehoshaphat Hezekiah and Nehemiah God will bless and remember them in goodness Also godly painful and merciful Ministers shall both save themselves and them that hear them They shall shine as the Stars and receive an incorruptible Crown of glory Being careful in their places they are what effect soever their labors have a sweet savor to God The like may be said of Parents who are careful in their childrens education and of godly Neighbors which seek the good of their souls with whom they live God will requite it into their bosoms as having done a great work O let us be provoked to have more regard and pity of the miseries of souls then ever If we be careful of our own we will also be
careful of the souls of others when we have once felt the misery of our own souls and found mercy of God to be delivered therefrom then will we know the worth of souls and be pitiful over others No marvel though so few be careful of the souls of others being there are so few careful of their own whensoever you see any negligent in their places its because the work of grace hath not been as yet wrought on their souls In respect of their Bodies To those that be sick in pain poverty debt prison or any outward distress we ought to be inwardly compassionate and outwardly relieve them as we may we must have bowels of mercy right bowels towards them we must have such tenderness of affection as if we were in the same case we are not born onely for our selves we are but Stewards God sends poverty on them as for the tryal of their faith and patience so of our love we have cause to thank God who hath thus honored us to be givers what have we deserved more then others God as a mighty Prince and House-keeper hath called us all to his Table setting some at the upper end others at the middle as others at the lower end thereof It were no maners in them that sit above to keep all for themselves they must distribute to them that sit lowest of that that 's set before them God is merciful and so should we be yea this is the note of a good man and such were Job and Cornelius such Dorcas yea how pitiful was our Savior this way when he fed the hungry gave sight to the blinde healed the lame c. God hath also made gracious promises hereunto all which may induce us to the performance hereof And thus are we affected indeed when we are ready to hear the cryes of the poor and to relieve them chearfully wherein notwithstanding we must not look for too much beholdingness we must shew mercy to those that have most need and of those to the houshold of Faith we must give out of goods well gotten laying aside somewhat thereof for such uses we must abound more and more being full of mercy and not weary of well doing So when we lend freely not looking so much to save our selves as to pleasure them to whom we lend and in buying and selling do unto others as we would be dealt withal Whereunto may be added our dealing mercifully with those which fall into our danger by forfeiting their Bond not fulfilling their Covenants and the like 1. This condemneth all unmerciful men whether such as will part from nothing but even by constraint hard-hearted having no bowels giving no more then needs must not lending at all or for their own advantage to the undoing of the borrowers or such as do hurt oppress gripe by Usury by cruel letting of Leases selling after unreasonable Rate to the poor buying of them half for nought grinding their faces and flaying their skins by Forfeitures c. so feeding themselves on them and working on their necessities Let all such know That they have no grace in them at all no soundness in Religion no true love of God God also will shut up his mercy from these neither shall they partake of blessedness Though they cry unto him he will not hear them he will be revenged on them in their goods names children souls here and hereafter See Job 20. 10 15. Prov. 22. 22 23. Jer. 17. Mat. 25. 2. This may be a comfort to all merciful minded and liberal handed men They are herein like to God who is merciful and requires of us so to be because he is so as good and faithful Stewards they shall be made Rulers over much They shall be blessed every way for they cause many thanks to be given to God and they have also many Prayers they are blessed in their goods as which not onely encrease more and more but descend from them to their posterity they are blessed in their names they live in credit and reputation and being dead they are much lamented for they are blessed in their children they are blessed every way outwardly inwardly in body in soul here and hereafter The merciful shall obtain mercy The good and faithful servant shall enter his Masters joy 3. For those that be not cruel yet withal not so merciful as they should be let them labor for this grace of pity and to this end both remove the lets and impediments thereof namely Prodigality whereby they waste all become unthrifts unfit at all to do any good and Covetousness whereby they think all lost that goes besides themselves which is indeed the cut-throat of pity and use the means conducing hereunto namely 1. Labor for a feeling of Gods mercy to themselves 2. Visit the poors houses look into their Cup boards observe their cold fare their thin and hard lodging this cannot but affect them as the Samaritan upon his view of the man faln among Thieves had compassion on him 3. If they themselves cannot see them let them take informations thereof from others 4. When they are in any affliction as in pains or sick let them consider the means they have for their recovery as a warm house a good bed wholesom Dyet the Physitians advice and direction c. all which the poor want Whoso doth thankfully acknowledge those cannot but be pitiful There 's yet one further branch of pity We must be pitiful to our Beasts we must use them mercifully and keep them sufficiently yea be pitiful not onely of our own but our Neighbors nay our Enemies God is pitiful this way He feeds the yong Ravens that cry unto him and The Lyons seek their meat from him He openeth his hand and filleth all things living with plenteousness He will not have the mouth of the Ox to be musled and will have the beasts also rest on the Sabbath day This rebukes those which though they pamper them not as some do their Hounds giving them that which many of the poor want and others their Horses are cruel persons to their Beasts as rank Riders which are all on the spur yet in Princes Affairs or cases of necessity men may take liberty this way covetous Misers that keep their Cattel bare and poor Servants that deal unconscionably through their idleness and laziness suffering poor dumb creatures to perish all which hurry up and down by unnecessary journeys or by their journeys on the Lords day whether for profit or pleasure Be courteous Courtesie is an affable milde and lowly carriage of our selves towards our equals and inferiors for its reverence and duty we owe and do perform to our superiors and betters this is in countenance gesture words and deeds our countenance must be amiable not too cloudy and austere we must kindely and lovingly greet one
which is That thus to put up wrongs were the way indeed still to have more and more wrongs put upon us as if they should precisely follow the Rule of the Word in their dealings poverty and beggery could not but quickly come upon them both which are and have been found contrary 2. Whoso desires to live and that peaceably let him take this course hating and avoiding trouble and vexation so much as in him lieth Let us learn to be wise and thus provide for a quiet life that we may be the fitter to serve God and do good to our selves and others if we do not believe and practice the same we shall do him less honor then we do a Physician whose prescripts we use for procuring health and when trouble comes upon us we may justly blame our selves for the same O be guided by the Word how else shall you live a comfortable and quiet life David and Peter who here urge the same knew this by experience What is herein required of us hath been throughout all ages long taught though not much learn'd Thus in general For he that will love life Life and long life are blessings of God to be desired and delighted in of Gods children See to this purpose Gen. 25. 8. Exod. 20. 12. Job 5. 26. 1 Chron. 29. 28. Psal. 128. 6. Prov. 3. 16. yea the Apostle counts it a mercy of God that Epaphroditus was restored to health To be taken away untimely is as an apple pulled from the Tree before it be ripe by living long we shall get to our souls an assurance of Gods love with more and more evidences thereof to the encrease of our joys hereby also we have time and means to grow in grace and sanctification and to have the image of God restored in us more clearly and fully hereby also we shall do God much service in Church and Commonwealth and that better at the last then at the first as being bettered through experience and hence it is that Gods servants have sometimes prayed against death and desired still to live as David and Hezekiah Quest. How is this to be counted a blessing seeing many of Gods dear servants go without it and are taken away betimes R. It s but a Temporal blessing and so Gods people may be debarred thereof as of health wealth and such like and that sometimes for correction of sin howsoever God saveth their souls as on the Corinthians for their unworthy receiving of the Sacrament so good Josiah going to war without Gods command was killed in the battel so many a Minister is taken from his people for their making no better use of him as many a husband from his wife for not regarding him or trusting too much on him the like might be instanced in other sometimes in mercy that they may not see the evils to come and thus also amends is made them they are paid weight in gold for weight in silver in stead of long life in this world they have longer time in Heaven Q. How is long life a blessing seeing even many of the wicked enjoy it R. Though it be in it self a blessing as whereby they enjoy many good comforts in this life and are not so soon in Hell as they deserve and besides have space and time to repent yet as they handle the matter it s no blessing but contrarily proves a means of the encrease of their sin and so of their condemnation Quest. How is life and the continuance thereof to be desired as a blessing seeing it hath been the desire of Gods people to be dissolved and to be with Christ R. We must not desire to live because we would live but because we would live to Gods glory our own and the good of others neither must we desire to dye for it self for that is against nature nor because of our crosses and troubles but that we may cease to sin and be with God in his heavenly Kingdom perfectly both holy and happy We must desire to be with God but yet we must not be so importunate as though we would prevent the Lord and make away our selves wittingly or negligently shorten our lives Again we must not so love our life as that we should be unwilling to yield it up if God will or to redeem the continuance thereof with an ill Conscience and denying God for he that so loves his life shall lose it and his soul too Both then may be desired but because we know not what is best we must not be our own carvers but commend our selves to God to be disposed of It s a base thing to desire life to be great enjoy pleasures be revenged of our enemies and the like Q. Whence is it that most men are strongly carried after long life R. 1. Through the corruption of nature To love life is natural but to love it so exceedingly is of corruption 2. Through ignorance and unbelief of the things of a better life 3. Through the love of worldly profits pleasures and prefermentss That such fail herein may thus appear we should not love the world nor the things thereof The whole world cannot satisfie the soul our life is but a breath a blast our days are determined beyond which we cannot pass we are here but strangers and pilgrims So long as we live we are lyable as well to sin as crosses by reason thereof Of the things here wherein we place happiness what certainty is there friends may forsake us fail us remove from us dye wealth also and honor are uncertain There 's no small labor both in getting and keeping them as there cannot but be grief in parting with them yea for the most part they prove hurtful and drown men in perdition In a word the commodities of a better life are infinitely beyond all those in this life 1. Seeing long life is a blessing we ought to be heartily thankful to God that we have lived thus long and do yet live 2. When we crave of God the continuance thereof we must so use it as that it may be a blessing to us wherein we may get the assurance of our Salvation grow in grace and do good They that do thus may account their life a blessing for those that do otherwise it had been good they had dyed long ago 3. We must take heed that we do not shorten our lives and so deprive out selves of this blessing through Whoring Drinking Gaming too too many thus do as if they should not be ni Hell time enough 4. We ought to use all good means for the continuance of their lives that be dear to us be careful especially not to provoke God to deprive us of them so should Subjects of their Prince and godly Magistrates People of their faithful Pastors Husbands and Wives each of other c. And see good days That is enjoy here in this world
counsel of Daniel to Nebuchadnezzar even that they would break off their sins by repentance O turn ye why will ye dye acknowledge I beseech you all your rebellions and treacheries against God and that you have deserved hereby to be cut off entreating yet for pardon and mercy through Jesus Christ Turn to God with your whole hearts and learn to know that sin is odious bringing dishonor to God and destruction upon your selves O shun all evil little and great shun it at all times in all places how gainful or pleasing so ever and whosoever commands it or whomsoever you see practice it together with all the appurtenances and occasions of the same Means to evil may be these 1. Labor to understand the ten Commandments and so what is good and what is evil 2. Labor for faith which purifieth the heart from evil even the assurance of Gods love to us which may work in us love to his Majesty and so an hatred of all evil 3. A sanctified heart the inseperable companion of true faith 4. Attend on Gods ordinances publikely the Word and Sacraments and in private use meditation conference prayer c. 5. Watch and pray that we enter not neither be led into temptation 6. Make we a Covenant against evil as Job and David 7. Call to minde the fearful wrath of God and the wages of sin and the examples thereof on many both in Scripture and our own experience as also the hour of death when it will trouble us and lie heavy on our conscience and the day of Judgement when and where we would be loath to meet with it 2. This also rebukes them that eschew some evil but not all nor at all times or in all places Being commanded what will they not do What not for profit pleasure preferment The sins of their complexion and trade they will in no wise leave they run upon things because lawful though they cannot use them lawfully If they can sin secretly they make no conscience thereof 3. This may serve for instruction with rebuke to most Christians and to us that be most ancient professors that though we have a general purpose against evil yet we neither hate it so deeply nor shun it so carefully as we ought nor are so much humbled when we have been overtaken and have fallen thereinto as we ought we complain of our crosses but grieve not so much that we have fallen into sin If one should threaten to run at us with a naked sword or shoot at us whensoever he could finde an opportunity we would be wary and watchful upon our going abroad having an eye in every corner c. O do we thus against sin which watcheth but an opportunity to do us mischief If we would thus do we should not be so often overtaken as we are we should see better days scape numbers of crosses have more peace to our consciences more joy in our death and a freer passage to Heaven But alas we judge even that which is a great evil to be but a little one it pleaseth us if we have any colour for the same as that we have but once committed it that others do so and so c. Thus do we prophane the Lords-day despise his Ministers and run upon all sorts of evils 4. This affords consolation to all such as do indeed eschew evil and that out of an unfained hatred thereof rejoycing in nothing more then when they prevail against it grieving at nothing more then when they are overcome thereby such do indeed love God such fear him in truth and so are beloved of God and shall be everlastingly blessed these shall live happily here in joy and bliss hereafter O go on in this Christian course though the world hate you because ye do not as they do though they call you precise fools because ye dare not swallow such goblets as they do yea though hereupon ye pull danger upon your selves yet must ye eschew evil and so let us It s no matter though we have the worlds frown as long as we have Gods favor and what if we shall miss many a sweet morsel of profit pleasure and promotion if we be free from the gripes and vexations of conscience and the wrath of Almighty God they that now have their sweet meat would one day vomit up their morsels if they could as Judas did who though he rid himself of the money yet could not be rid of his wound of Conscience nor of the Judgement of God upon him were they ever the worse or had they any cause to grieve that they had not a share with him in the thirty pieces And do good This necessarily followeth on the other No man can have his heart truly nor aright set to do good whose heart is not first purged of the love of all evil for they cannot stand in one heart and at once and that man that lives and bears himself in the practice one sin never did good aright in his life neither ever pleased he God Who can serve God in one thing that serves the Devil in another This may serve to rouse up some that fain would do well and many good things they do but some one old accustomed sin which they know is a sin they cannot leave Well there 's no hating sin it will not do well the end will not be good it s but to be almost Christians Some will say Such a Preacher hath prevailed much with me and done me much good but as long as one known sin is lived in all is nothing worth to Salvation It s true a childe of God through strong temptations may be overcome of the same evil which he hates but he both covenants against it is careful that he may not fall into it having fallen he is much grieved He that is not grieved but doth again upon the next occasion fall to it is indeed in a grievous condition Thus from the order To do good is sometimes taken in a strict sence for the performance of the works of mercy whether for body or soul or both Here more largely for that good we are to do to our neighbor enemies that do us hurt or yet more largely for whatsoever God hath commanded in his Word Whose will is a perfect rule of Righteousness and makes that good which he requireth Whosoever would see good days here and hereafter must set himself in body and soul to the obedience of Gods will in doing good No other shall be saved good is the way leading to this end To come to this end we must walk in this way Reasons 1. It s good and amiable of it self as the Lord is 2. God commands it who is our Soveraign Lord and King Thou shalt do thus and thus saith he often throughout the Scriptures for I am the Lord thy God 3. All promises in Scripture of good things here or
and lightly gone sometimes also because the time is not yet fit A Childe would have the milk though but newly come scalding off the fire The unruly Patient would have the Plaister taken off as soon as it begins to smart such are we but God will hear and help in the due in the best time Sometimes the Lord grants not at all what his righteous servants crave Why because he cannot or is not willing nay because it s not good for us as if a childe should ask a knife of his Father he would deny it If for matters of soul as deliverance from temptations the Lord answereth not our petitions he yet gives strength to resist them as to the Apostle Paul which is far better for it s no mastery to have no temptations but to overcome temptations and to have no hurt thereby If for outward things craving freedom from crosses sicknesses loss c. the Lord doth not free them but gives them some Spiritual grace profitable for their souls this is far better then that they asked If one should ask silver and have the weight in gold given him what wrong were done him So if one in stead of health and long life here should soon dye yet to be translated into Heaven and there to live for ever sometimes we ask a greater measure of outward things then the Lord grants but yet gives us a contented minde and assurance of eternal riches in Heaven either then he grants the thing we desire or gives us a better in its stead and so not break promise with us 1. This sets out Gods wonderful goodness and mercy that will vouchsafe to stoop to look so low as to look to such poor unworthy Creatures as we are what are we dust and ashes sinful men and women and what is he The infinite immortal God the Lord of the whole World most holy and most pure This comes by the means of our Lord Jesus Christ in whom we are accepted 2. This is a singular comfort to the righteous that God hath not left us in this world of trouble without any means to help our selves No he hath left a mean in our hands to help us in whatsoever distress he sets us on work to pray and hath promised to hear and help Hereunto hath God annexed his promises neither is there any case wherein prayer cannot help us O this is a wonderful encouragement to us in all times in all necessities If by prayer we fly unto God there 's remedy If we need any grace as we do continually God upon our asking hath promised to give it The like may be said of patience meekness humility a tender heart and the like O that we should be so often wanting unto our selves how much grace and how much good have we lost for want of asking God hath infinite store neither is he loath to part therewith he hath it to bestow and it s his glory to bestow it He hath made the way offers to teach us to pray and promiseth to hear us and yet what dulness is in us how seldom pray we Many of us can go out in the morning without prayer neither have recourse unto God all the day long He is more forward to give then we to ask and yet who hath the benefit not he but our selves we shut out our selves when God hath opened the door we know not what we have lost when we have lost a prayer when we have neglected it upon every trifling occasion We feel not our wants we prize not grace we consider not the worth and excellency of prayer We trade to the Indies and other dangerous places for gain and that with great hazard there 's no hazard to Heaven send but out a well prepared prayer it never returns empty If we be in sickness we rest too much on the means and too little in prayer so for our callings as also for deliverances out of dangers we make friends but pray not at all 3. Be we hereupon stirred up to be more frequent in this duty and to make more account of it for Grace for Wisdom for help in danger for a Blessing in any thing we go about what other means soever we use let prayer be one let not that be left out This can do as much much more then any other onely keep our prayers in good tune as horses be kept in breath If we thus do we shall assuredly obtain onely we must wait Gods good leisure if we obtain not that we pray for we shall have better in the stead of it If we finde them granted we must with Daniel and his fellows return praises yea besides our own prayers we should have a stock going in sundry godly friends hands to get their prayers for us always but especially when we are in extremity If any thing in the world help it s this But need we go seeking to Saints departed If the King should call us to him and encourage us by promises were it not folly in us to seek up and down for a Nobleman to help us to speech with him 4. This setteth forth the difference between the righteous and the wicked Those are dear to God his Favorites near great in the Court of Heaven These he cannot away with their persons are odious and so is their service they either pray not at all which is usual with prophane wretches or pray without understanding as Papists and ignorant persons who do not minde what they pray and how should God minde their prayers if they do not minde them themselves or come in hypocrisie their hearts being in the mean time far from God or come in their sins and so God abhors them for he hears no sinners or never come but in their misery and that neither out of love to God or hatred of sin but fear of punishment or delay the time so long that it s too late ere they come as Esau and the five foolish Virgins These be Rebels they live at staves end with God stand out and will not come in to the pardon How should God hear them nay their prayers if they make any are abomination Whatsoever befals the wicked as evil enough may befal them every day yet they have no help What shall they do in their misery They may murmure and rage against God bear out for a while by head and shoulders as it were or lie like blocks and languish or run to Endor to the Devil for help but God they have none to go to nor prayer that will be accepted whatsoever become of them Contrarily the righteous cannot be miserable as long as he can pray put him down into a Dungeon and chain him by the neck to the ground yet as long as he can pray he is happy and shall have comfort and that deliverance which shall be best for him He hath Gods promise for the same and that will not
what he calls the power of God our Apostle calls the Spirit both which are in effect one 2. Hereby cannot be meant the Fathers and godly for he speaks onely of the disobedient and Reprobate ones 3. He speaks onely of those that lived in Noah's time and no other age of the world 4. This Prison was an unhappy and miserable place and not Abrahams bosom nor the place of the Fathers 5. Even after our Saviors Resurrection when our Apostle wrote this they were then still in Prison therefore Christ had not delivered them nor fetcht them out but they that had been there were there still And where they say he went to Preach to the Reprobates this will not stand neither for he speaks here onely of the Reprobates of Noah's time and why should Christ in his soul go unto them rather then unto any other Besides to Preach to them and do them no good nor intend any is against the nature end of preaching But that there are any such places as Limbus patrum Limbus puerorum or Purgatory the Scripture gives not any inkling 1. That the Fathers went to no such place is certain but that their souls loosed by death went to Heaven Jesus Christ yesterday to day and the same for ever They had the same benefit by Christ as we after their death 2. They also believed in Christ as well as we Abraham saw my day and rejoyced They ate the same Spiritual meat and drank the same Spiritual drink and so were partakers of the same benefits of Christ. 3. Their Spirits went to God that gave them they enter into peace and so not into the Prison 4. Abrahams bosom into which Lazarus was carried by the Angels was above not beneath an happy not a miserable place Christ therefore went not to fetch them out thence there being no such place For Purgatory they say there 's such a place in the brim of Hell where the pains be almost as bad as Hell pains and the fire as hot into which are sent the souls of the godly that dye in faith and repentance but yet have not suffered the punishment of their sins in this world therefore must make up their sufferings in Purgatory for they teach that for our sins and punishments both committed before Baptism Christ suffered but for those after Baptism though Christ takes away the sins yet the punishment must be suffered by our selves and that partly in this life by penances c. and the rest by suffering in Purgatory that for every sin is due seven years of payment in Purgatory and therefore the Pope gives Pardons sometimes for fifty sometimes for an hundred years c. and therefore they say Masses for the souls of them that have been dead many 100 years and when they have suffered for all their sins paid the utmost farthing then come the souls out after they have been a while refreshed in a fair green field ful of pleasant flowers which is hard by Purgatory then they go up to Heaven notwithstanding oftentimes through the mercy of the Popes those pains are mitigated We say 1. That as they themselves do not agree about the place c. So neither is it otherwise grounded but on unwritten verities The Scriptures mention but two places whereinto the souls go immediately after death Heaven which is for the godly and Hell which is for the ungodly for the godly that they do immediately go into an happy place all the Scriptures sound with Simeon they depart in peace go not to Purgatory scorching pains Christ is to them as in life so in death advantage Having finished their course henceforth there 's laid up for them a crown of righteousness They have after the dissolution of their earthly Tabernacle a building of God an house not made with hand eternal in the Heavens Christ hath prayed for them that they may be where he is even in Heaven The thief on the right hand had as much need to have gone to Purgatory as any other yet on that day wherein he dyed he was with Christ in Paradice Blessed are they which dye in the Lord saith the Spirit for they rest from their labors After death presently comes the judgement that every man shall stick to Among all those things which God spake to Moses there 's not a word of this among all the Sacrifices that God ordained there were none appointed for souls in Purgatory and amongst all the cleansings and purifyings of all kinde of impurities of Leprosie and Issues c. there 's not a word of this What was God so unmindeful of his Church and people then Neither is there in all the new Testament any word for it 2. What a wretched thing is it to hold that our sufferings should satisfie the wrath of God and punishment of our sins when the least sin deserves eternal destruction both of soul and body And for their distinction that Christs death gives power to the pains of Purgatory to satisfie is an idle and ridiculous conceit 3. To say that Christ should satisfie for our sins and take them away but not our punishment is it not a wicked abuse of Gods justice where he forgives the sin doth he not also forgive the punishment True he chastens his servants but they are no part of satisfaction of his justice onely a means to prevent sin to come and humble for that which is past as if I had a quarrel against a man I might forgive him and yet if I see him in an Appoplexy or Swoon I may hit him a blow to fetch him again The truth is Purgatory was devised partly of a blinde and curious devotion of some Monks that thought that they that had some beginnings as they thought of goodness and so dyed it were no reason they should be damned c. who were therefore to be purged in Purgatory and so come to Heaven and that seeing most men have much sin in them even when they dye it were unreasonable they should go straight to Heaven for no unclean person shall come there and therefore they must suffer and be cleansed in Purgatory Who doth not see the absurdity of these conceits when the Scripture saith Whosoever believeth in him shal not be condemned that whosoever dyeth in the Faith all their sins and corruptions are done away and they received into Heaven But principally the Pope and his Clergy out of covetousness were chief founders hereof for hereby they did infinitely enrich themselves and every where enjoyed the very fat in the Land It was devised for the pampering of the living not the punishing or purging of the dead Through their covetousness meeting with the peoples ignorance Purgatory was hatched But what a cruelty is this of the Pope who hath power as he saith to deliver as many as he lists out of Purgatory yet will suffer so many so long to
this Ark perished The making of this in likelihood was a matter of great cost of great toil and without doubt he had many a mock for his labor when he went first about it and whilest he continued working at it yet went he on As that was for the body so are Faith and Repentance for the soul whosoever have these shall never perish but have everlasting life For these we must labor whatsoever pains they cost us yea and if it were to hinder our outward estate hereupon and expose our selves to mockings and revilings Whosoever misseth of these whatsoever else they have shall questionless perish the word tells it and we are to believe it 1. This rebukes the monstrous folly and madness of the world Gods Ministers his Noahs preach the flood and perswade every man to make ready his Ark but alas how few look after any such matter nay as in the old world they rather mock at those that do or that take pains to hear the Word which is the way to get Faith or that take pains to lead a godly life O these precise fellows they be so holy and these Scripture fellows they be so holy as they will be in heaven ere their bones be cold c. whereby it appears that as Lots sons in Law about the destruction of Sodom they believe no flood at all no judgement at all to come or else haply they think it an easie matter to make an Ark at any time either thinking that some easier and nearer may be found then by Faith and Repentance as those that hope to be saved by their good meaning good prayers civil life c. which will assuredly deceive them or that they are easie to be obtained Was Noah One hundred and twenty years in making an Ark to save him from drowning in the waters and can they at pleasure and on the sudden make an Ark to save them from Hell and to get into Heaven as most hope by Lord have mercy upon me to be saved But as no doubt many used sundry shifts to save themselves when the flood came and none prevailed but the Ark so shall it be with all such O what if the flood should now come as it may ere the morrow is your Ark ready or not If it be not defer the time no longer No man knows that he shall live One hundred and twenty days or a quarter so long yet though Noah knew he should live so many years he did not defer the time delay the making of the Ark It will not be done on the sudden and after this life there 's no making of any as there was no hewing of timber or stone in the Temple but all in Mount Lebanus Look to it therefore betimes regard neither the costs nor pains you may be put to It s no matter so you be saved 2. This may comfort them that have their Ark prepared though thousands and ten thousands perish yet they shall not do amiss but be preserved and saved as Noah then shall not we weigh what pains we have taken to make it to hear the Word to humble our selves to repent c. And have not others taken as much pains for transitory things that will vanish and never do them good and though you have been mockt yet will the time come when those mockers will change their note Again in that they saw and heard of this Ark a building which ought to have been a real Sermon to them yet were not moved their sin becoming hereby the greater 2. Note That when God addes to his Word Examples and to the Ministery real Sermons also these ought much to prevail which when they do not as well the sin as the judgements of the Delinquents become the more fearful for the more means men have if they profit not thereby the greater will be their judgement as our Savior said of Corazin and Bethsaida When God threatens to plague wicked men it should make them stand in awe but when they see the same it cannot but pierce more To this end though God hath left some part of Scripture in Precepts and Doctrines yet hath he left most in Story and Example accordingly the Prophets used both Therefore when God in his Word exhorts to diligence in laboring after Salvation and to lead an holy life this ought much to move but when men see Examples of such people before their eyes this ought to move the more This condemns the notorious obstinacy of our times that notwithstanding the Word God addes so many examples of his judgements on wicked men more by far then we could have lookt for in the days of the Gospel as untimely ends upon Drunkards and notorious prophane persons c. that would take no warning yea haply of a dozen of them which have been in a Town cut off by one judgement or other yet who fears nay do not others continue in the same state as some old Drunkards without amendment as other new ones grow up every day The like may be said of other sins Belshazzar profited not by the judgements of God on his Father as most do not by any judgement on others What answer have they to make and what judgement waiteth them that have had many examples and yet never the better so of notorious covetous gripers oppressors rakers how blockishly and fearfully they have dyed with the miserable end of their goods either wofully wasted by drunkards or dispersed to those that never sweat for them yea oftentimes to their very enemies who seeth not yet who are moved hereat let these look for greater judgements so when God raiseth up many godly Christians that earnestly labor after their salvation taking great pains to hear the Word and to live godly most receive no profit by these real examples and Sermons but some mock at them and think them more precise then needs as others are blockish and are no whit moved thereby They might think with themselves when they see some such take such pains that there is somewhat in it some ill to be avoided some good to be obtained some great matter that should move these people to take such pains surely might they say it s not for nothing they have business as well as we which they could tend if a greater thing were not in the way it s not for nothing that they thus weary themselves But most do not understand or consider thus much with themselves and yet God hath raised up such as lights to draw on others and they that be not won by the Word nor moved by the examples of the godly their answer will be fearful Little do these people think that those that have travelled by their doors wet and dry and come through their grounds to hear the Word shall one day be their Judges It had been happy for them if they had dwelt further off 3. In that this ark did betoken the judgement of
on Christs passion O it s a fruitful mother of many children To know that sin is enmity against God fights against the soul brings death with it is not so available to kill sin as to know and meditate on this That Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh From the necessity of Christs sufferings whereof I have already spoken in the foregoing Chapter Note 1. Our woful and miserable condition as we are of our selves 2. The ugliness and hainousness of sin in Gods account 3. The admirable mixture of Justice and Mercy with the unspeakable love of God and Christ Jesus The Jews said He loved Lazarus well because he wept for him much more may we say That he loved us because he hath dyed for us David loved Absolom well who wished that he might have dyed for him how much then hath Christ loved us having indeed dyed for us O what love do we owe for this so great love 4. The happiness of such as do truly believe and repent their debt is fully discharged and having right unto Christ there 's nothing that the Lord will deny them 5. That we are to renounce all false ways of Salvation the Jews the Turks and the Papists way all other ways besides this 6. That we are to labor to know we have part in this yea Christ having suffered we must also bear afflictions patiently Arm your selves likewise c. The duty whereunto we are exhorted is to suffer in the flesh to mortifie our flesh that is our corrupt and sinful nature and the lusts and sins thereof both inward and outward But 1. Most are so far from mortifying their lusts that they follow them with greediness and cannot endure any to speak against them These be fools indeed to destroy their own souls by living in enmity and opposition against God 2. Some it may be refrain some lusts but others they live in and yield to and yet these will claim part in the death of Christ hope to be saved by Christ but so long as it s thus with them its impossible that they should have any part in Christ. Do we therefore labor for mortification applying the edge of the Word of God to the throat of our lusts That we may not give way hereto le ts often call to minde the threatnings of the Word the Sacraments of Baptism and the Lords Supper what God offers us there and what we convenanted with him for the crosses which our lusts have drawn on us Gods manifold mercies unto us but especially meditate on Christs death and passion which is indeed a strong corrasive to eat out sin for our corruptions remain too rank and through want of care and too much yielding thereto be not subdued as they ought Let us know that he is the best Christian not that hears most or knows most or can utter most but he that hath most power over his affections and heart Note further from hence That as our lusts fight against us so we must furnish our selves like Soldiers that we may prevail against them It s no easie thing to get out of sin or to get the Mastery thereof it s to mortifie our members to pluck out our right eyes and cut off our right hands It s easier to take any pains in offering sacrifice nay fast extraordinarily and to part with our goods with thousands of Rams and ten thousand rivers of oyl yea with our first born then to part with one beloved sin They that would overcome their lust must not stand still or be without weapons we have that within us which rebelleth against the Law of God and would lead us captive to the Law of sin which is in our members Hereunto the Devil addes his power the world also joyns herewith by ill examples bad counsels mockings revilings c. and therefore we must be resolute and play the Soldiers if we would get out of our bad course Through want hereof some even under a powerful ministery be never converted some get a little way but hang behinde in sin some are a great while ere they can get out whom the Word having called and awakened the world the Devil and their own lusts do again freshly assault nay some being truly converted yet fall back again into foul security and have yet strong corruptions and many odde qualities c. 1. This rebukes most of the world who do indeed joyn with these enemies few fight against them but fewer resolutely and therefore are led captive of them to their destruction 2. This may provoke us to put on the whole armor of God to arm our selves on all occasions and in all temptations with good thoughts and meditations of the ugliness of sin danger of it its hatefulness to God with the passion of our Savior Christ O how few arm themselves or when they do it s but to halves O this must be put on and kept on continually night and day we shall sleep never the worse there can be no truce between us and our enemies This must be kept even in the times of greatest prosperity Ships usually are cast away in storms but Christians may miscarry when its calm Thus was it with David he abode constant in all Sauls storms but in the time of peace was carried away with Bathsheba's beauty It must be kept on even in our old age and till death for then will the Devil set himself most against us and both Noah Moses and others did then catch worse foils then ever before Suffered in the flesh To mortifie our corrupt nature is called suffering in the flesh and the truth is its hard to say whether is harder to suffer bodily torments and pains or to mortifie a mans lust O it s a death to part with them yea when in a man after long strife between the grace of God and his corrupt nature in the work of his conversion grace prevails it s even as the pangs of death as when the Devil went out of the childe he threw him down and he lay foaming as if he had been dead O it s not so easie a matter as the blinde and prophane world imagine Hath ceased from sin That is living in any sin For he that is born of God sinneth not and He that committeth sin is of the Devil That he no longer c. The whole time of our life that remains after we are called to repentance ought to be spent in the service of God and practice of Repentance and a new life We owe all our life to him all the days of our life the whole time we owe all to him who hath made and preserved us nothing to any other What time therefore we have spent in sin we have robb'd God of it and so ought willingly to give him the remainder redeeming that is past with all diligence The time past we know but
most earnest and labor by all possible means to win men to God when we have done all that we can do we may finde by woful experience that all is too little When we see the holy Ghost going from a matter and to it again and dwelling upon it and pressing it with manifold reasons know we That diligence and carefulness is required in us about the same For the time past of our life may suffice us c. He doth not here approve of their former living as though that might be born with or speaks as we do in a lawful thing as meat drink recreation c. It s enough now leave off O this would have been a plausible Doctrine that men might have taken a time till they had had their fill prettily well in sin so they then returned Our Apostle hath no such meaning but rather schools them that the badness of the time past should humble them and make them careful to spend the rest better and to hasten thereto Whence thus much may be noted That The time past of every mans life mispent ought to be a great spur to repentance Reas. 1. The time spent in sin we know how much it is but what is behinde we know not The Devil is sure of his part but what God shall have whether half or a quarter so much is uncertain If we knew we should live twenty years more to serve God as we have done twenty years in sin God should have but the half but we know not whether we shall live twenty days Should we then defer Should we not make haste 2. Time is very precious above gold and silver and hereof we have squandered away a great part 3. There is no time to be spent in sin but we are to serve God in holiness and righteousness all the days of our life We must remember our creator even in the days of our youth Therefore having rob'd him of some of his due is it not well he will take this that remains and put up that wrong at our hands that is past though we adde no more 4. Whatsoever time is spent till we return to God is all going out of the way and if a man hath gone out of his way but till eight or nine a clock assuredly that 's more then enough 5. Whatsoever time is spent that way is but doing that that must be undone again and repented of and we must with grief and shame wish we had not done it Is not a little of this too much who will willingly so do his work that it must be ript or ravelled out again we use to chide our Children if they do their work so nay who perceiving that he hath thus wrought will not grieve who will not hereupon say It was a good turn I spyed it so soon c So should we grieve at all our former mis-spent time withal blessing God that we did so soon perceive it 6. All that is done this way is for the Devil our sworn Enemy for whom even the least is too much It s for the flesh to which we owe nothing and for the world which is our deadly though subtile Enemy 7. It s all done against God to whom we owe all and is it not then sufficient we have wronged him so far and is it not a great mercy if he will pardon all that is past though he adde no more to the heap 8. And all is against our own souls and is it not sufficient we have wronged yea wounded our own souls hitherto the welfare and salvation whereof we should now at least seek 9. It s all done in such filthy work as God never set them about nor gave them soul and body for the doing thereof 1. This rebuketh those youths that being called on to repentance yet think its too soon and that that 's not sufficient which they have done already What Have they not yet spent time enough that way do they know there is so much more behinde you would repent ere you dyed would you not you would Must you not then do it to day for you know not but that you may dye to morrow Have you squandered away already so much precious time as that some would even give the whole world for one day thereof and will ye yet go on in that course O do it not lest God snatch you away suddenly lest God give you up unto your hearts lusts and so ye fulfil the measure of your iniquity 2. This rebuketh also those unreasonable people as middle aged folks of forty or fifty years which are now as deep in the world and their profits as before they were in their pleasures and yet it s not sufficient for them they can finde no time of thinking truly and throughly to turn to God 3. It rebuketh also those that do still defer till towards their end and then they will turn to God Is not God much beholding to them O let these sluggards know that poverty will come upon them suddenly and strongly If they will needs stay till almost Sun-set ere they set out shall they not with the Levite and his Concubine be benighted and shut out of doors Their condition shall be the same with the five foolish Virgins If a man had a long journey and had gone out of the way all day till three of the clock in the afternoon would he being informed thereof go on still and say When it s almost Sun set I le turn into the right way yet thus doth the world Men defer till they think they shall dye then have they to come back all the way of their life and then must they lead the contrary good life and ere they can do this the night of death overtakes them and they be shut out with Dogs and Inchanters c. O let such be wise in time ere it be too late and let them think it more then high time to turn head and to ride hard too to redeem the time It s past Noon with many of us nay past three of the clock in the afternoon it draws towards night with some O then is it not time for us to draw near to God! Note further from hence That Where God bestoweth means of Salvation he expects fruit answerable while a place lies wilde and common like a Heath there can be nothing expected but Bryars and Thorns but if it be paled in and digged and planted then may fruit be expected therefrom when a people want the means especially the Gospel what can be lookt for at their hands having it their life and conversation must be answerable See Rom. 13. 12. Eph. 4. 17. 1 Thess. 4. 5. and 5. 4. 1. This discovereth the woful state of this Land which so aboundeth in iniquity notwithstanding the clear light of the Gospel amongst us Our sins are more then in times of Popery then among Turks and Pagans Our Saviors woes
mercies of others they are cruel It s a sign that those never tasted of Gods mercy which are altogether without the bowels of mercy Obj. O but if I could happen upon Angels in entertaining strangers then would I like well of it Answ. We do after a sort entertain Angels for they attend about those whom we harbor and the House is the stronger that night as Lots was yea we entertain more then Angels For he that receiveth one of these little ones receiveth me saith Christ Who would not be ready to lodge Jesus Christ if he were here If I could obtain a Son having none or being dead to have him raised from death to life as the Shunamite by the means of strangers or have my friends and servants restored to health I could like well to entertain them Gods Servants may obtain for us as great things as these nay greater even such things as may be for the good both of our own souls and theirs And if even those which in likelyhood have done thus onely in civil courtesie have not been unrewarded how much less shall they which do it for Conscience sake 2. For our own poor It s best to maintain them at their own houses with that which their own labor will not attain and not suffer them to go from door to door except when they bring home their work or come out upon occasion of some sickness to make known their necessities But many are forced out as being neglected at home Besides their maintenance at home its meet also for them of ability now and then to bid them home to their houses to warm them at their fires and that not onely at the Festival time of the Nativity of our Lord Christ but upon other occasions as the day of our deliverance from the Powder-Treason c. So its meet that every Lords day we should take home with us a poor body or two who are best minded most diligent in their Callings bring up their Children well c. to encourage them in goodness and that they may bear their burthen the more chearfully This is even in special enjoyned to us and required of us and thus doubtless did both Abraham and Job But how are the poor by most in most places neglected Hereof there are two chief causes 1. Wicked Covetousness which hath so prevailed with some that they are mad for the world and insatiable thinking all lost that goes besides themselves Some rich keep no house some have many Farms and for any good they do it were better they had none some live basely and miserably c. 2. Pride in building apparel sumptuous dyet whereby they are drawn so dry that nothing is to be had of them For the former they covet an ill covetousness to their own house it being the way to pull it down and for the latter their bravery will be turned into rags God blesseth not the Children of either the one or other The Fathers being ill Tenants and not paying their Rent God will turn out the Children O how many by sparing more then is right come to poverty Being merciless they shall have judgement without mercy stopping their ears at the cry of the poor they themselves shall cry and not be heard They send away the poor as Nabal did Davids messengers and bid them Go c. and it shall be said to them at the last day Go ye cursed c. If thou wouldst be merciful to the poor thou mightest be blessed in all thou puttest thine hands unto if thou wouldst sow liberally thou mightst reap liberally thy Children might be blest thou mightst have a good name and be mourned for as Dorcas thou shouldst not partake in the evil to come thou shouldst hear a joyful Sentence on the last day 3. For inviting one another It s a means for watering love much good comes by it and the contrary strangeness doth hurt In many places its neglected and that out of pride for they cannot or will not meet but with so great cost and variety that men be the worse for it a quarter after if Christians would meet like Christians for society and not for meat and be content with one dish or two it were much better and then it might be oftner This duty is required of Ministers and that elsewhere particularly as well as others for they be fittest to counsel and comfort strangers are easily found out and must go before their people in the practice of that they teach and shall thus both provoke others the better and make a way for their Ministery in the hearts of the poor If it be thus then it was doubtless Gods minde That a Minister should have wherewithal even a competent maintenance for himself and his and to do good to others It s the conceit of some That a Minister should live but meanly and as it were from hand to mouth and accordingly they do so pole from him that he can do no good this way But though they should not be pompous nor sumptuous nor rake after farms and wealth yet they must and ought to live in good sort as well as themselves Such as have skill in the Scriptures or have profited by the word or reverence the Calling of the Ministery will not otherwise judge For us if we cannot do as we would we must do as we can nor having ability must we bid set on the great pot in the mean while starving our peoples souls Without grudging The maner This is all in Gods account He will have the work done after his fashion else it s to no purpose though haply it be as costly and painful as he requireth to come to the Word Sacraments Prayer be good duties none better but the heart wherewith they be performed and maner of doing is all in all As the Gallants of our times though the matter of the Garment be never so good or costly regard it not if it be not of the fashion so in duties the Lord looks to the maner how they are performed This of mercy must be done without grudging that is willingly chearfully without murmuring or repining God loves a chearful giver He respects the widows mite thus given The people offered freely to the building of the Tabernacle and Temple and accordingly should we do in these works of mercy It s a great fault not of the world onely but even of Christians that are brought very hardly and heavily to perform these duties we ought to be so far from being grieved at them as we ought to be glad when any occasion is offered this way That we do the same chearfully let us do it in faith even be assured 1. That its pleasing and acceptable to God 2. That he will reward it abundantly were this encreased in us we would be glad of any opportunity to manifest the fruits thereof Verse 10. As every
paterns and means to confirm us in our sufferings for Christ The Apostle Paul used this as an argument to move Philemon to grant his request for that he was aged and a prisoner for Christ. Hereof this our Apostle informs them even that notwithstanding all their troubles whereof haply some might have conceived him careless they were dear unto him This rebuketh those that make account of men while they be in prosperity and the world smiles on them but when the times frown and they be discountenanced and in disgrace and trouble then cast them off or shrink from them shewing them no countenance nor kindeness a sign either of mung●els or at last of dastardly Christians Think it not strange concerning the fiery tryal Here 's the matter exhorted to By fiery tryal is meant All kinde of persecution in what degree soever compared to the fire for that as the fire tryes the gold so persecution tryes men Think it not strange wonder not at it as at some strange think come out of a far Countrey whereof the like was never either seen or heard of it behoved you to have prepared for it before and now make a reckoning of it that so you flinch not from it when it comes Here note that The want of fore-thinking of trouble makes it the harder to be born and the stranger when it comes When a man hath time to put on his armor or draw his Sword ere the Thief come he is more safe then if a Thief should rush upon him on the sudden As those which are not used to sickness bear it worst so such are most cast down in the time of trouble which in the time of prosperity do not so much as think thereof 1. This teacheth us even in the time of prosperity to think of troubles in the midst of health we must think of sickness and how we shall bear it and accordingly provide for it so in the time of wealth of poverty so having Children if God should take them from us of our Friends if they should hate us how would we behave our selves How could we do as such and such a Christian c So in life we must think of death and when any one dyes think that we may be the next and thereupon finde out how we are prepared for it These thoughts are profitable they will make us use our prosperity the more soberly and thankfully while we have it and walk more humbly and be better prepared for troubles if God shall lay them upon us Neither will they come the sooner for thinking of them howsoever we shall be the better enabled to bear them when ever they come What 's written of the Basilisk that if it see us before we see it we dye for it but if we see it first we live is true of troubles If we see them ere they come we be much better but if they come on us unlooked for they prove the more dangerous Now every man sits under his own vine and under his own figtree Now we go to the house of God in peace Now we profess Religion with good liking But what if the case alter ere I dye shouldst thou say What if I be haled to prison lose my goods be convented condemned tortured banished c. what shall I then do 2. This rebuketh most that seldom or never have any such thoughts May not we have changes why do we not then think of them Oh such sad thoughts do not well le ts be merry while we may sadness will come time enough Thou wrongest thy self thy case will be the worse thy condition the more fearful if either sickness poverty pain or any other calamity should take thee unprovided For persecution who is there that now thinketh of any such matter most think that they shall never be moved and that they shall dye in their nest whereas alas it may fall out far otherwise Have we not many enemies and what doth not our sins deserve God hath indeed wrought for us many deliverances as from the Spanish Invasion and Gunpowder Treason c. but are we sure he will do so still Hath not our grievous unthankfulness deserved the contrary Do we think that our enemies do not now plot mischief against us No doubt they make use of peace to prepare for war and they will plot now towards their latter end to uphold their tottering Babel and do as fishes feeling the water almost gone from them flush and make a stir and when death draws near men they have strong pains So what now at the last the Lord may suffer them to do against us we know not It s the more likely there wil be some judgement because all men cry Peace and Safety and are so sensless if there should be any such alas how unprovided are we nay what were all our provision strength multitude of men c. if God should set himself against us On the contrary if we have God on our side as he was with Gideon and his three hundred with Jonathan and his Armor bearer we need not fear them though never so many so strong Now if any such judgement should come on the Land which the Lord turn away for his mercies sake wherein multitudes should be slain with the Sword others made Slaves and carried away our Wives and Daughters abused before our faces our houses and chests rifled the godly imprisoned and brought forth to torment except they would forsake their Religion O Lord how far are we unfit for any such matter and the rather for that we never think of it Never would any Land think trouble and misery more strange then we which have been used so delicately O then let us think and provide for this before that if it should come it may not be strange unto us If we look to our selves have not we cause enough to be humbled and purged from our dross and for the world shall we wonder if they hate and persecute us Haply we think because we be honorable persons the Sons of God they should not so deal with us It s true but alas they know not our Father much less know they us his Children Haply we think because we be now godly and make conscience of all our ways and love God and live with our brethren Christianly and desire nothing so much as to please God that therefore all should make much of us True God Angels and good Men will do so and that must content us but the world is the world and will hate us the more for our goodness which hath been thus ever since Cain hated Abel we need not think it strange for may not the Lord justly after long schooling us now call us out to try what we have profited Again hereby he would have the wickedness of the wicked break out that he might get glory in confounding them Also he will hereby confirm the hearts of the weak
pass to it at death so shall they have no stop at the day of judgement Among earthly Judges when a cause hath gone current on a mans side a great while yet at last either by corruption of Jury or Judge or by some evidence come to light not seen before all may be dasht and turn'd the other way It shall not be so at Gods judgement seat there will be question made of the damnation of some but no question made of the salvation of any of the godly But the difficulty is in this life it s an hard thing for a man to get to heaven called therefore a Straight gate and Narrow way a hard thing to come to be a Christian a converted person and an hard thing to continue therein and grow forward God hath much ado to bring us to grace and then much ado to hold us therein as he had a great deal ado to get his people out of Egypt and into Canaan sometimes themselves by murmuring lingering c. and sometimes others as Pharaoh the Red-sea c. proving hinderances thereto so hath he to get one of us out of the bondage of the Devil out of the Egypt of sin The Devil holds the world hinders yea our own wretched nature is not willing to come out What a stir hath he how many Sermons Threatnings Promises secret gripes of Conscience Warnings of the Spirit purposes to come out and yet keep in still ere we will yield yea how is God fain almost to pull us out by some crosses or sharp afflictions as the Angels pulled Lot out of Sodom how hardly are we throughly humbled for our sins when cast down how hardly comforted when we have got it how hardly do we keep it what a stir with our hearts to leave our old courses and take new and when we have begun yet what ado to hold out what revolting and backsliding hearts have we ready to wax cold and to linger after our old lusts so hard it is to do any good duty well The Devil like Pharaoh pursueth us and labors by all means possible to hinder us from all good altogether or from the right performance of it so also to draw us to all evil Then the world like Pharaohs Soldiers labors to hinder us by their ill example by ill counsel by vails of profits and pleasures and if these not by reproaches and troubles that it will raise up Our own Nature is worst of all as having a lingering after our old sins as the Israelites after the fleshy pots of Egypt sometimes we think like them we shall never hold out there be such lets in the way high walls and Anakims c. so that we get forward hardly as a man that were to go up a steep hill and had three great weights hung at his back so that we have such continual need of the Word Sacraments Prayer Meditation Conference Watchfulness that unless hereby we wax cold and grow out of order nay notwithstanding all these yet what ado to keep our hearts and lives in order and our selves within compass but we slip and stumble and grieve and up again and down again yea if the Lord to all these means should not adde some one or other affliction it would be yet more hard The Lord is fain to pull us with that strong cord also and this is chiefly meant here they are scarcely saved even because they are forced to be brought through many troubles so that as a man that is to climb such a steep hill as he cannot fasten his feet but is fain to get Daggers in his hands and sticking them into the ground c. may be said hardly to get up and as when two Armies fight for a Town one while one part prevails another while the other at last the better side prevails but notwithout much pains many wounds shrewd blows and continual labor we may say They got the Town hardly the like may be said in this particular Who knoweth not the truth hereof in his own experience how hardly canst thou be humbled how hardly drawn to renounce thy lusts how art thou fain to wrestle before thou canst do any good what continual need hast thou of prayer good company c. yea who knowing any thing seeth not he hath need of his crosses and that it was good for him that he was afflicted 1. This crosseth the most gross and yet most common conceit of the world that its an easie matter to be saved that there 's no need of such preciseness but that if men mean well God will be content and though one have lived badly yet at what time soever they repent for which a quarter of an hour is enough it shall be well with them and hence it is that the Word and our Preaching is of such small account and that so few take any pains to be saved but take pains for the belly and back and to grow rich c. Ignorant persons look not out but content themselves with a blinde good meaning without any part of a good life so prophane persons so worldlings so civil ones Though the Scripture requires us to labor strive give all diligence study seek yet will not they take any pains nay not onely so but they laugh and gibe at them that labor herein as fools or idle persons What art thou woful wretch that darest cross the Lord so directly He saith It s a strait way and few finde it and to this end bids Strive Thou sayest it s no such matter If it were as thou dotest Christ might not onely have spared those speeches but indeed the whole Scriptures for what use of any but to bid people live as they list and at last cry God mercy and all is well No God must make new Scriptures and chalk a new way to Heaven ere ever thou shalt finde that thou lookest for But what art thou that neither wiltst take pains to save thine own soul nor canst be content that others should Dost thou think that they be idle persons that take pains to hear the word O they could follow the world and that too hard but that they know one thing is needful Could they not sit at home in their chairs or keep their beds as well as rise and toil c. but that they know that they cannot so get Heaven but that they have need to use all means and that little enough though thou seest no such thing Indeed to lead a careless life to do good if it come in the way and if ill come in the way to be as fit for that c. a few Sermons and little hearing may serve for such a life but this is not the way to get Heaven If ever thou wouldst be saved thou must change thy minde and practice and believe the Scriptures that its a strait way and accordingly bend thy self to begin to take pains to see and confess thy sins to labor for faith to turn
Gods Sheep husbanding Gods Heritage carefully that it may yield fruit in abundance to the owner the Lord we must not use them as we list but as we will answer for every sheep They be dear to God and he will have account of every sheep in our fold we should be thankful to God that hath trusted us with such a jewel as a part of his Heritage and therefore be faithful to him and them 2. If People be Gods Heritage and every Congregation as a particular Farm they must look they yield fruit that God may take delight therein and may say It s the fruitfullest Farm that I have within a great way I have more obedience yielded to my Word my Sabbaths better kept my Sacraments better resorted to Families better instructed and governed in that Town then in many others more love mercy zeal c. As an Husbandman that hath a rich piece of ground and which bears a great crop he will delight to be much in it looking on it walking about it looking that no damage come to it c. but if it prove barren he cares not for coming at it So where theirs a fruitful piece of ground to the Lord he wil delight in it boast of it bless it fence it and continue his favor to it and to their posterity after them they paying the rent of the Gospel and fruit which is the obedience thereof and outward mercies as he seeth best c. But in Towns where there is no fruit no obedince yielded no Prayer no regard of Sabbaths or Sacraments but on the contrary Prophaness Swearing Sabbath-breaking Contention Whoredom Drunkenness c. God will take no pleasure in such a Farm but if it hath had a good Husbandman will take him away and put it over into the hands of some hireling or base person good enough for such a place But being ensamples to the flock Now of the duty exhorted unto which is the third and last the two former are not enough to those this must be added Though it may be said Better Preach well and live naughtily then live jollily well and preach not or altogether without edification yet indeed both ought to go together Ministers must not onely teach well but also do the same be paterns unto their people go before them in practice they must not be like Statues in a high-way like Noahs builders which framed the Ark but were not saved therein or like the Scribes and Pharisees which laid heavy burthens on others which they themselves would not touch This was signified under the Law none that were to minister before the Lord were to be deformed Our Savior both taught and did Ministers must be as shining Lights they must be unrebukeable as people must joyn doing with hearing so must Ministers doing with Preaching Reasons 1. Hereby it shall appear that they mean in good earnest and require nothing of others but that whereunto they themselves are willing to yield 2. Hereby Atheists will be put to silence whose usual speech is after this maner Tush if there were any such matter to be feared as they talk of would not they live otherwise but there 's no such thing they must say something in place to scare the people and keep them in awe The common sort of ignorant and careless people profit not by preaching as long as the Preachers life is contrary to his Doctrine as who go more by seeing then by hearing If a man should speak as an Angel and not live thereafter such is their weakness they would not regard him yea in the better sort it doth greatly abate the edge of all they hear yet doth not the power of the Word and efficacy of the Sacraments depend on the lives of the Ministers but whether they be good or bad sitting in Moses Chair they are to be followed and obeyed in those things which they teach truly 3. Hereby they shall procure themselves a good degree and great liberty and boldness in their Ministery whereas otherwise it 's not possible but that their ill consciences must stop their mouthes How can they rebuke sin zealously they themselves being addicted unto those very sins which they would reprove If they do will it not be replyed Physitian heal thy self 4. Ministers have such a Calling as that whil'st others are busied about worldly things most part of their time theirs lies in the study of the Scriptures and about holy and Spiritual things whereby they may daily be further and further built up 5. It s the way to do most good when the one is seconded by the other holy Preaching with an holy life else there 's a very ill harmony when upon both good is not done people are left without excuse 6. The Devil labors to stain Ministers lives as knowing that hereby their Doctrine becometh for the most part ineffectual Therefore he labors by all means to bring in ill livers into the Ministery neither cares he what their gifts be so their lives be stained or else he labors with those that be in to pervert them one way or other by loosness riot c. or get them to be covetous c. If he cannot prevail in those then in some lesser things as in their apparel the government of their Families and the like If he cannot do thus much yet will he rather play at some small game then sit out he will then raise up false reports of godly Ministers which he knows will be listened unto and do some hurt 1. For Ministers 1. They must live among their people else how can they give them good example and so win them 2. They must look exceeding warily to their lives yea to their Wives and Childrens behavior we must watch over our own hearts bridle and beat down our corruptions avoid all appearance of evil all the least occasion of evil for a mote in us will be counted a beam and do more hurt then a beam in another yea we must not onely beware in things evil but even abridge our selves in lawful things of something we might do and that for the peoples weakness as of our lawful recreation or refreshing so that we wrong not our selves too much herein and in the matter of the maintenance seeking our own or providing something for Wife and Posterity which we might and ought to do yet we must forbear somewhat for the peoples weakness who are ready to think a man covetous if he hath any thing more then from hand to mouth or looks to save any thing as they do for theirs And yet people must here again be admonished that they stand not too much upon their Ministers life but look to his Ministery and labor to profit by it the Word of God is holy and ought to be of power with us whatsoever the life of the Minister be But alas how many Ministers be as bad as the worst in the Parish as
effectually called heretofore I have laid down the marks hereof if thou findest thou art then be of good comfort Be thankful for that God hath called thee leaving others there being no more worth or aptness in thee then in them and study how to walk worthy of this high and holy calling even in all zealous and godly conversation not fashioning our selves like unto the world from which we be called but differing as much in our behavior as we hope to do in our end not defiling our selves with any evil not yielding to our lusts not doing any thing unbeseeming our holy calling but as he is a holy God that hath called us and its an holy Gospel whereby we are called so we may be holy in all maner of conversation This is the end as of our Election and Redemption so of our calling So that we must not serve God coldly who hath singled us out from the world but look we be singular persons a peculiar people to him On the other side if our hearts tell us that we be not effectually called then is our case bad Gods callings which we have not obeyed will be accusations against us O how few be truly called most hold on in a prophane and bad course others having reformed some things and thereupon counted themselves in a good estate nay given some good hopes yet have after fallen shamefully some to the world some to open prophaneness for there is no stay of a man till he be effectually called O then entreat God now to work on your hearts you know not whether you shall ever be called more or not To day if ye will hear his voyce harden not your hearts listen to Gods voyce call upon him to open thine eyes and change thine heart When thou comest to the Word pray O Lord strike that stroke that may truly convert my Soul yea let all Gods mercies and thy several afflictions and crosses be as so many voyces calling thee to God count them so and listen and yield to them and though heretofore thou hast turned the deaf ear to God yet now let it be so no more Into his eternal glory The end why and whereunto they be called even that they might have glory not vanishing but eternal glory so that it was not possible but that they should be saved See 1 Thess. 2. 12. 2 Thess. 2. 13 14. 1 Pet. 1. 3. 1. He that is effectually called is an happy man and of high dignity 2. Let such walk worthy hereof glorifying God with all their might 3. It should whe● on others to listen to the voyce of the Lords call What shall they lose they shall come from sin and shame from wrath and damnation and shall be admitted into Gods favor partake of grace here and of glory hereafter No marvel people be so loath to yield and we have so many delays and hard answers of them Are they not shrewdly hurt to be called to this estate Now in that the Apostle useth this as an Argument that the Lord would confirm strengthen and stablish them even for that he had called them we may note that Whom God hath effectually called he will never forsake but continue them to the end His nature is unchangeable whom he loveth once he loveth always to the end we are indeed apt to fall away daily but Christ hath prayed for us and our salvation is not now in our own keeping By Christ Jesus Christ is the way by which all good comes to us as our Election so also our effectual calling 1. It s therefore not from any merit of ours but for Christs sake that we are called we must not be proud of our selves but thankful unto God through Christ. 2. This also may comfort us we shall never fall our calling hath such a sure foundation After that ye have suffered a while He prays that God would make them perfect c. but in the due time even when they had passed the few afflictions and tryals he had appointed Here note 1. That we must go through troubles ere we come to our perfection in Heaven There 's a time for all things a time for Soldiers to fight and a time for them to rest and enjoy the spoil after victory The cross is the Christians companion Many are the troubles of the Righteous and we must look for such in this world It hath been the Kings-road and High way to Heaven that sanctified way wherein from Abel until this time all Gods Worthies the Patriarchs Prophets Apostles Christ himself c. have walked Neither is this without cause for afflictions serve to humble us for sins past and fetch us from wandring as the Shepherds dogs doth the sheep whereof David had experience Psal. 22. and 119. They serve also to mortifie our lusts tame our pride subdue and kil our rebellious old man helping us against it which would else be too strong for us so to hold us in compass when we be well as an hedge of thorns Children must be washed and made clean though they cry so must we from our sins and as they by mustard or the like must be weaned from the dug so must we by afflictions from the world which we love too well and as as there were no rule with children without the rod so would we be unruly were it not for afflictions They also make us heavenly minded and hereby our Faith Patience and such other graces are tryed as whether we have such or not whether more or less then we thought yea they serve to purifie and encrease that measure we have for as standing waters gather mud and bodies without exercise wax unhealthful so but for afflictions we should be in a bad case Hereby grace is made more active and fruitful as the vine is by pruning 1. Therefore we must be content to go this way to heaven and glad to We must not think to have a new way strewed and paved and covered as it were with carpets when as the other Worthies of the Lord have waded to the ankles in blood 2. How can they that give themselves to all jollity and put away all hearts grief and do wholly give themselves to profits pleasures feasting c. How can these I say think they are going to Heaven-ward They will have their will here whatsoever befal them hereafter 3. If any should hereupon doubt that they are not in the way to Heaven because they have no troubles c. What have you no troubles Are you not troubled with a rebellious and sinful heart and fight you not with Principalities and Powers and Temptations that make you cry our sometimes O wretched man that I am c and do you never meet with ill tongues for the profession of the truth you do Then are not you without troubles though it may be you have not had