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A97360 The works of the judicious and learned divine Dr. Thomas Taylor, part 1. sometimes preacher of Aldermanbury, London. Published by himself in his life time, in several smaller volumes, now collected together into three volumes in fol. two of which are here bound together. The first volume containing, I. An exposition on the 32. Psalm ... The second volume containing, I. An exposition of the parable of the sower and seed, on Luk. 8. ... The third volume is in the press, and will containe in it, I. The progress of sts, to full holinesse ... Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1659 (1659) Wing T560A 683,147 498

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over them but his Vicar neither love they the truth in the Canonical Scripture further than it will stand with their Popish Canon Law Or if a man come to read out of custom and coldly without fervency and love experience will tell him though thus he read much his profit shall bee but small 3 With repentance and faith and a good heart 2 Cor. 3.14 when the heart of Israel shall be converted to the Lord the veil shall be taken away this veil is natural ignorance and infidelity VVhere the former is no marvel if the word read and known be not understood as a blind man cannot see the Sun shining in his strength VVhere faith is absent and is not mingled with the word it must needs become unprofitable Impossible it is that the wisdom of God can dwell in a wicked heart no man puts precious liquor into a fusty cask This is the cause that men of great learning want sound understanding because they want sound conscience Hos 14.10 The ways of God are right but the wicked fall in them 4 With a purpose not only to know but to practise Joh. 7.17 If any man will doe my will he shall know whether my doctrine be from heaven The scope of the Scripture is not only to beleeve in the Son of God but to walk in the obedience of faith Now if men read over all the Bible an hundred times either for knowledge only or for vain-glory or to advance themselves into preferments or to oppose the truth as Hereticks and Papists doe no marvel if they never attain the true sense of them 5 With prayer for the Spirit to lead us into all truth because the Scriptures were inspired by Gods Spirit at first and the same Spirit is only able to acquaint us with his own meaning If any man want wisdom he must ask it of God Jam. 1.5 so did David Psal 119.18 Open mine eyes that I may see the wonderful things of thy law Is it any marvel that they who flie the judgement of Gods Spirit and stand to the Church Pope Councils and only swallow that sense which they give and never look after Gods Spirit should miss of the true meaning of the Holy Ghost and fall into and tumble in a number of errors and heresies To these might bee added meditation diligence keeping of order and time special application and the like These things let them be brought to the reading of Gods Word and no man shall lose his labour hee shall bee taught of God who hath promised to reveal his secret to them that fear him So much of the qualification of the person II. Now follow some rules which a person thus qualified must learn and keep by him to try when a Scripture is wrested or no. Rule 1 The first is that in our text conference of Scripture there the Spirit of God by plain places expoundeth those which are more difficult Thus Nehem. 8.8 Ezra opened the Scripture by comparing it with it self and so made the people to understand as Junius noteth out of the original So the Bereans having heard the doctrine of the Apostles searched the Scriptures that is compared their doctrine with the doctrine of the Old Testament Thus the Apostles themselves teaching Christs resurrection Acts 2.16 prove it out of the Old Testament viz. Psal 16.10 Thou wilt not suffer thine holy one to see corruption And to prove that those words cannot be meant of David himself he appeals to another testimony in 1 King 2. where it is said that David slept with his fathers and lay buried in his Sepulchre and so saw corruption This is a special way whereby the Scripture giveth wisdom to the simple Psal 19.7 And for this purpose the Lord hath in great wisdom tempered the Scripture with some hard places to exercise mens senses and try their diligence in comparing of Scripture whereof there were no need if there were no hard places How comes it that many pervert the Scripture to their own destruction but because they conferre not one part with another which would lead them into the right sense How come the Arrians when they hear Christ say The Father is greater than I and other such sayings to hold to the death that Christ is not true God co-essential and co-equal with his Father but that they doe not compare this with other places as Job 1.1 That word was God Philip. 2.6 He thought it no robbery to be equal with God Rom. 9. which is God blessed for ever And consequently that the former place speaks of his Human nature the latter of his Divine nature How could the Papists suffer shipwrack of faith and Heretically erre in the foundation of Religion teaching justification by the works of the Law out of Jam. 2.21 Was not Abraham our father justified by works but that they conferre not other places to help them into the right sense as Rom. 4.2 and 3.20 We are justified by faith without the works of the law and Tit. 3.5 Not by the works of righteousness which we had done but according to his grace he saved us Which places being compared shew that one speaks of justification before God as Paul the other of justification before men as James the former of justifying the person the latter of justifying the faith of the person When they read such places as these Awake thou that sleepest and Turn you turn you O house of Israel hence they conclude man hath free-will in his own conversion Whereas would they compare these with other places as Gen. 6.5 The whole imagination of mans heart is only evil continually and it is God that works both the will and the deed c. the reconciling of such places would force them to see that till God work us wee are meer patients and after that acts agimus being moved we move for his grace must not bee idle in us The lewd and disordered Libertine when he reads that wee are justified by faith without works casts off all care of his conversation What can his works doe what need they But he could not thus pervert the Scripture to his destruction if he compared it with such Scriptures as say that faith without works is dead and that faith works by love The reconciling whereof would teach them that although works be excluded from justification yet not from faith they must bee in the person justified though not in the justification of his person This conference of Scripture is either in places parallel and like or in such as seem to be opposed and unlike The conferring of like places bringeth great light to the reader As for example 1 Cor. 7.19 Circumcision is nothing and uncircumcision is nothing If we would understand what is meant by this nothing compare we it with Gal. 5.6 In Christ Jesus neither uncircumcision availeth any thing nor circumcision where nothing is to avail nothing and is not referred to Circumcision or uncircumcision it self but to the person it is
ryotous and ungracious courses to the destruction of themselves and others Nay as our Saviour said of Judas it had been good for him hee had never been born so may we say of numbers of graceless persons better they had never seen the Sun or enjoyed life than so to have consumed their lives in the service of sin and Satans temptations Vse 5. Lastly If we live by every word of God then let us be thankful to God for our lives and for his word of blessing upon the means and seeing our lives hang upon his word to prolong them or cut off the thread of them we must labour to live to him and his glory It becometh the just to be thankful A great unthankfulness were it to rebel against him by whom we hold our lives and all the comfort of them See we not how those that hold Land in Copy are willingly bound to sute and service to the Lord who is often but a mean man The Sidonians would not warre against Herod because they were nourished by his Land and shall we be in warre against our Lord by whose hand and word we live move and have our being And even this thanksgiving is his gift also for as the matter which so the grace by which wee are thankful is all from him so as we must depend on him both for blessings and for grace to be thankful Vers 5. Then the Devil took him up into the holy City and set him on a pinacle of the Temple 6. And said unto him If thou be the Son of God cast thy self down for it is written c. WE come now to set down and expound by the assistance of God the second on-set of the Devil upon the Son of God by a violent and hellish temptation nothing inferiour to the former in the furious malicious and cunning contriving of it In the entrance whereof we must remove one rubb by the way concerning the order of this temptation wherein the Evangelists seem not to agree among themselves for whereas St. Matthew makes this the second St. Luke makes it the last and puts the last in St. Matthew into the second place And herein some learned men have stumbled and have devised simple shifts to reconcile the two Evangelists Some think that they write not the same History nor of the same temptations but of temptations urged at sundry times These are confuted by the very matter phrases and words which are in both the same and need no other conviction Others think and they of the learned Papists that in some ancient Books St. Luke observes the same order in the temptations with St. Matthew and that the difference crept in by the heedlesness of some Writer which is a needless devise of them who strive to prove the Canonical Scripture to bee corrupted in their Fountains that so their corrupt Latine Translation may prevail but both impeaching the watchfulness and care of God over the Scriptures as also the diligence and faithfulness of the Church which is pretended to suffer her self wholly to be abused by the carelesness or unfaithfulness of some one Scribe But the truth is that it doth no whit prejudice the truth of the Evangelical story that the Evangelists doe not stand so much upon order where it is not so necessary as upon the matter and the things themselves done which they faithfully report and in which they joyntly accord and agree as oftentimes they stand not upon words nor sometimes upon sentences but one delivers the same fact in one style of speech another in another form but so as one is so far from crossing another as he giveth thereby more light and certainty unto the other Quest But whether of these observed the right order as the temptations were passed Ans I am out of doubt that Matthew sets down the right order as they were done 1 Because he passeth his story by such particles as imply an orderly consequent as Then the Devil took him then he took him again then the Devil left him c. whereas Luke used the particle and in his passages 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which noteth no certain order as the former doth his care was to relate the whole matter but was not so accurate for order 2 The coherence and dependance of this second temptation with the former shews that Matthew observeth the right method for Christ having by a testimony of Scripture confirmed himself in the confidence and trust in his Father Satan immediately seeks to make his advantage of Christs words and seeing hee will needs trust his Father he would have him trust him too much If hee need no bread being hungry he needs no stairs to goe down from the pinacle of the Temple the last temptation doth not so fitly cohere with the former as this second doth 3 After Christ had bidden Satan avoyd Matthew adds Then the Devil left him as being obedient to his word plainly shewing that that was the last temptation Luke hath it not in such dependance but thus And when the Devil had ended all the tentation he departed In the Combate note two generals 1 The preparation to it 2 The temptation it self The preparation containeth such necessary circumstances as by which the temptation might more easily prevail as 1 the time Then 2 The place first general the holy City secondly special a pinacle of the Temple 3 The manner how Christ was conveyed thither The Devil took him up and set him on the pinacle The temptation consists 1 Of the assault 2 Of the repulse The assault hath three things 1 The ground of it If thou be the Son of God 2 The scope or aim namely the sin or sins to which hee was tempted Cast thy self down 3 The argument or perswasion to enforce it For it as written He shall give his Angels charge over thee c. The repulse of our Saviour is by another testimony of Scripture not contrary to that which Satan alleadged but expounding it that he might in the right sense of it sence and secure himself from the temptation as after we shall see First of the preparation Then This particle shews not only the time of this temptation but also the order as I noted Satan having no success in the former renews his assault and would assay another way Hee had been kindly and gently used of Christ who had answered him courteously nay he had convinced him by Scripture that hee had nothing to say against it and yet he goes on in his malice as though he had had both great provocation and advantage Whence Doct. Note the property of wicked men ruled by Satan who by no means can be brought to lay off their malice towards Gods children Deal gently with them they are like Nettles the softlier toucht the sharper they sting Deal plainly with them and convince their consciences by the word that they have nothing to say for themselves yet being convinced they give not over no more than
proceedeth out of the mouth of God it is rather a death than a life his bread becomes poyson and as Rats-bane in his bowels because he hath it without a promise and without blessing Obj. I see no such thing Ans Many poysons are long a working but the end of such is death and the more slowly they work the more slily and certainly they kill And if the Lord doe not invert the order he hath set in nature by cursing the particular creatures be sure he hath in his justice reserved a curse for the unjust person and he shall not avoyd it This doctrin specially applied laies hold upon sundry sorts of men who live contrary to the word They are these I. Such as live out of lawful callings which are one part of the word of God that we should get our living in the sweat of our browes and so long as we are in our way we have his word we shall bee provided for And the word proceeding out of the mouth of God is that he that will not labour must not eat because he eats not his own and such as will not live after this word by Gods word they ought not to live because they are idle and unprofitable burdens of the earth who 1 abuse Gods providence who ties the ends and means together 2 infringe that good order which God hath established for the avoiding of confusion in Church or Common-wealth namely that every man should serve God in the service of man in some warrantable and profitable civil calling 3 As hee is no better than an Infidel that depends only on means seeing man lives by every word of God so he that in a lawful course of life provides not for his family is worse than an infidel Of this sort are our knots of companions of drinking and gaming company and wandring rouges and beggers I knit them together because they are all of a strain and either are Beggers or shall be These commonly come not to Church to hear their duties and therefore they must bee taught by correction and discipline of those that are the executioners of justice II. Such as think they live well enough and yet it is by deceiving others by stealing oppression extortion lying swearing and falshood in buying and selling and why say they may not a man help and shift for himself But consider 1 What a poor help it is when a man will use unlawful means and to shift out of one evil by another Hee doth as the Prophet speaks avoid a Lyon and a Bear meets him Pilate would keep his place by unlawful means the delivering of Christ to bee crucified but besides that hee brought innocent blood upon himself hee lost his place and flew himself 2 Consider That if Gods Word of blessing go not with the means his word of curse doth and so the Prophet Zachary saith that the curse entereth into the house of the swearer and of the theef chap. 5. v. 4. and this curse shall remain in the midst of his house and consume the very timber and stones This curse often scatters ill-gotten goods as fast as they were ever hastily gathered if not in his own daies yet in some unthrifty heir after him 3 Consider how God crosseth the vain conceit of unjust persons they think all that is any way gotten to bee gain and profit but the word is Prov. 10.2 that treasures of wickednesse profit nothing they cannot help a man from the hand of God nay when the evil day comes they are gone and leave a man alone to grapple with death and judgement and turn a man naked to the sentence of condemnation for his wicked getting and holding of them III. Another sort of men who live not by the Word of God Vel minimu● fructus ex pecunia pe●cip● non potest sine Dei offensione proximi inju● 2. Calv. Epist 226. but against it are Usurers who pull themselves out of all lawful callings and set up a trade for the publike evil and their own private good which were there nothing else against it proves it not to bee of Gods devising for every calling of Gods devising is helpful to men in general but the Spirit of God hath given this a name from biting and hurting But wee have the Scripture most expresly against it whether it bee manifest as is a contract for gain as for ten pound to pay eleven at the years end or covert whereby men find devices which they call mysteries to defeat the laws and seem to contract and either not to lend or not for gain The word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God saith Exod. 22. v. 25. If thou lend money to my people with thee thou shalt not be an Usurer thou shalt not oppress him Mark how usury and oppression is all one And Deut. 23.19 Thou shalt not lend upon usury to thy brother the usury of money meat or any thing that may bee lent But the Usurer that will live by his money and not by Gods word saith Yea but of the Gentiles they might though not of a brother To which I say that now the partition wall is taken away and neither Jew nor Gentile remains all are our brethren in Christ and therefore of no man must usury bee expected unless thou beest worse than a Jew Let the Usurer answer this if he can Again those Gentiles were of those nations of the Canaanites Ab hoc usuram e●ig● quem non sit crimen occultic Amb. which they were commanded to destroy and usury was as teeth given them and allowed by God to eat them up withall Seest thou a man whom thou mayest lawfully kill take use of him but not of thy brother Object I will not take usury of the poor but of the rich Answ But the text is Thou shalt not take usury of thy brother bee he poor or rich though the rich bee better able to suffer wrong yet thou art not by any word enabled to offer it The word which proceedeth out of the mouth of God saith Psal 15.5 Hee that giveth not his mony to usury shall dwell in the Lords Tabernacle and rest on his holy hill and Ezek. 18.17 Hee that hath not received usury and increase c. wherein it is plain without all tricks that either to give out or take in usury excludes out of heaven Object Hee means to oppresse a man with usury Answ Every usury is oppression and every Usurer fears not God Levit. 25.36 Thou shalt not take usury but fear the Lord. Object But that Law was judicial not moral Answ That is false for our Saviour renewed in it the Gospel Luke 6.35 Lend freely looking for nothing again Therefore it is moral Besides that usury is condemned amongst the great transgressions of the Moral law Ezek. 18.13 Object Wee may do as we would bee dealt by and it is charity so to lend as another may benefit himself Answ No man in need would borrow but freely
Spirit of God is present to pour out his treasures of wisdome and grace by means of the word and Sacraments which are his chariot and which not accompanied with the Spirit are but dead and ineffectual to regeneration where the Holy Angels are present to assist the ministery to repel hinderances to behold our order but especially desirous to look into the mysteries of our salvation where the Holy Saints upon earth are met together to seek and see the face of the Lord joyning together in all the parts of his pure and holy worship in hearing his holy word receiving his holy Sacraments preferring publikely their holy prayers greatly by this means glorifying God and inriching their own selves Surely this is Bethel the house of God and the gate of heaven Vse 1. This teacheth us not to despise our Assemblies nor to think out Churches unholy for some corruptions Look upon Jerusalem Matth. 23.37 you shall see the eleven Tribes were Apostates there were in it dumb dogs Isa 56.10 there were Scribes and Pharisees hypocrites nay at this time the Doctrin of the Law was corrupted by the false glosses of the Pharisees and the Temple almost a den of Theeves full of buyers and sellers Yet for all this the Evangelist calls it the holy City even when it had more corruptions in it than the Church of England hath at this day Why 1 Because there was the service of the true God set up in the Temple the word preached and sacrifices offered and the meetings of the Church of God 2 Because as yet they had not received a bill of divorcement Have not wee the Word truely Preached and the Sacraments for substance truely administred And for discipline I will say I wish wee had the execution of so much as the Church alloweth Or when did the Lord give us a bill of Divorce Or what Church hath convinced us that wee cannot bee acknowledged for a true Church If they say they of the Separation have I answer 1 They have laboured to discover some errors but none fundamental in us nor without as many in themselves 2 Wee may well doubt whether they bee a Church or no seeing by the profession of some of their Teachers they will not joyn themselves to any Church at this day upon the face of the earth and so renounce all Communion with all the parts of the Catholike Church in the world But wee must not think much if some unstable persons forsake our Communion seeing in the golden and flourishing age of the Apostles themselves some such there were Heb. 10.25 As for our selves wee may strengthen our selves against them by these conclusions 1 Wee know that the word of Truth is truly preached amongst us which appeareth by the daily conversion of thousands whereas never was man converted by a word of error Jam. 1.18 2 Wee know that our Ministers are of God because by them so many are begotten to God Our Saviour thought this a good reason when hee said Beleeve mee that I came out from the Father for the works sake The blinde man had good insight into this matter Joh. 9.30 saying If this man were not of God he could do nothing and a wonderful thing it is that yee know not whence hee is and yet hee hath opened mine eyes So may I say to the separatist Doest thou not know whence that Minister is who hath opened thine eyes 3 We know that our meetings are holy meetings 1 Our people is outwardly called by an holy calling and to an holy end 2 They profess faith in Christ which is an holy profession and in charity if wee see no open raigning sin are to bee judged Saints 3 Congregations are called holy in the Scripture from the better part not from the greater as an heap of wheat mingled and covered with chaffe yet it is called wheat 1 Cor. 6.11 Now yee are sanctified washed and justified but in Epist ● chap. 12. I fear that when I come among you my God will humble mee and I shall bewail many of them that have sinned and have not repented of their uncleanness and fornication and wantonness which they have committed Diverse other abuses there were yet among Saints and beloved ones 4 Mixt Congregations are holy in Gods acceptation esteeming them not as they are in themselves but as members of Christ When Israel was at the best it was a rebellious and stifte-necked people yet Balaam said Hee saw no iniquity in Jacob nor transgression in Israel not that there was none but that none was imputed 4 Wee know that wee have no warrant to separate from holy things neither for some defects cleaving to them nor for ill men either handling them or communicating in them The Prophets never made any separation in times of greatest corruption even when they cried out of their wickednesse 1 Sam. 2.24 Do so no more my sons said Eli yee make the people trespass how By making them loath the service and sacrifice for your wickedness verse 17. And when many abuses were among the Corinths in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper yet a man that did carefully examine himself might communicate of it with comfort yea our Saviour Christ was often in the Temple teaching and praying and so were his Disciples though it was a most corrupt place Object 1 How may I pray with an evil man seeing God heareth not sinners Nay his prayer is abominable Ans 1 The speech in John 9.31 is not universally true for God heard the poor Publican confessing himself a sinner 2 Though God hear him not for himself yet hee hears him for the people as Balaam blessing Israel being both a wicked man and speaking against his heart God heard him for the people Numb 23. Object 2 But how may I communicate with a wicked Minister or with what comfort Answ The wickedness of the Minister may somewhat lessen the comfort but neither diminish the perfection of the Sacrament in it self nor hinder the efficacy thereof to us seeing the efficacy depends onely upon the promise of God and the faith of the receiver and is no more to bee refused than the gift of a King though the conveyance bee drawn by a wicked Lawyer Object But how can hee bee a means of conveying grace to mee that is a graceless man Answ Grace is compared to water now may not water that passeth through a wooden or stony channel which it self is so undisposed that it cannot receive or have any benefit of it make a whole garden fruitful It is Augustines simile Besides I would ask whether any could with comfort refuse Judas his Baptisme John 4.2 even when hee was a Devil incarnate If it bee said They knew him not so to bee then belike a man may receive the Sacrament fruitfully of a secret prophane man or infidel and the wickedness of a Minister if it bee secret pollutes not the Sacrament and then it must follow necessarily that no comfort and truth of the Sacrament
the words of God when hee urgeth them spoiled of the right sense of the holy Ghost 2 Hee perverteth the right order of Gods spirit in his allegation for whereas Gods Spirit first suggests the word and then frames the heart to obedience of it for the property of the sheep of Christ is first to hear the voice and then to follow Joh. 10.27 Satan first will have men to conceive opinions or attempt practices pleasing to him and themselves and then afterwards seek out some Scripture to justify them Thus Johanan and the Captaines were resolved to go into Egypt but sent for Jeremy to see if they might have the word of God to go with them Jer. 42.3 compared with vers 20. 3 Hee wrests the right end for whereas all Scripture is written that wee might not sin 1 Joh. 2.1 hee abuseth this part of it to draw Christ to sin and whereas all the precious Promises of God should hold us in the awe and fear of God this Promise must occasion Christ to presume upon an unlawful action 4 Hee willingly mistakes the persons for whereas that Psalm and the great Promises of it hold true in Christ our Head yet notwithstanding it was principally written for the godly members of Christ and the adopted Sons of God neither can every thing in that Psalm bee so fitly referred to Christ in himself as in his afflicted members Besides that the Angels minister otherwise to Christ himself than to his members Christ by his own power bears up himself and Angels and all things Heb. 1.3 5 Hee falsifies the text by adding partly to the words partly to the sense To the words hee addes lest at any time which addes no small strength to the temptation including even that time wherein hee should bee jumping between the Pinacle and the pavement To the sense thrusting his dart into the sense of the place as if that place said so much in effect to him Cast thy self down which Chrysostome hath well observed saying Cast thy self down Homil. 5. ex va●●● in Matth. was not written but was the poyson of the Serpent cunningly mingled with the sweet comfort of the Scripture 6 Hee puts out and conceals that which most makes for Christ and against himself namely those words in all thy waies which most warreth against this headlong casting down of himself for it is not the way of a man to cast himself from such an height but to seek the stairs or the ordinary way And these words were not unawares omitted but maliciously and purposely for if Christ shall hear him speak of his waies and consider that this casting down of himself pertained not to his way one piece of his own argument had overthrown the whole 7 In this allegation hee commits the sallacy of division intending Christs overthrow by dis-joyning the things which God hath coupled together for whereas the words of that Text in the right sense consist of two parts namely 1 A promise of protection and preservation Satana● promissionem objicit Christo conditionem vero abjleu Par. in locum 2 The condition of keeping a mans self in his waies without which condition no promise of God belongs unto us for godliness hath the promise of this life and the life to come Satan rejects the condition wholly and divorceth it from the promise This is Mr. Junius his observation 8 From every part and word of a most excellent Text hee can urge his most hellish temptation and make all fair weather when he intends nothing less as if hee should say If thou bee the Son of God cast down thy self I do assure thee nay the written Word assures thee of protection and safety for in such a Psalm namely the ninety first vers 11. thou hast the word of thy Fathers promise yea in one promise a number of promises for 1 If thou wilt know the parties that shal support thee they be Angels Creatures swift mighty and powerful 2 If thou doubtest of their will they must doe it they can neither will nor chuse it is their charge they are commanded so to doe 3 If thou ask the manner how they must bear thee up that if thou wouldst thou canst not fall 4 If thou doubtest of their cheerfulness or willingness or diligence there is no fear for they must doe it as Mothers or Nurses as the word signifies who out of their tender love bear and carry or lead the infant with great watch and circumspection that it fall not and so come to hurt 5 If thou thinkest there is any limitation of their Commission there is none for they must bear thee up at all times 6 To take away all suspition of fear from thee they must save thee not only from great danger as breaking thy bones or neck but from the least danger thy foote the lowest and basest part shall not stumble or be hurt much less thy head thy self Thus subtilly intending to hold with the Hound and run with the Hare Satan hath pickt out a place which seemeth forcible enough to perswade any reasonable man to his purpose Hence note that Doct. A principal wile of Satan is to assay if he can by no means else to overthrow men by the overthrow of Scriptures Gen. 3.1 Hath God indeed said yee shall not eat of every tree of the garden It were strange and marvellous hee should say so seeing hee knows it would better your estate In this his first temptation of all other he chuseth to make Gods Word a means of their and our overthrow thinking it not an easie thing to destroy Gods Image in the soul unless he could first destroy the word of God out of their heart 1 Sam. 28.15 when the Devil would delude Saul and hasten his death he lays the ground of it in Gods Word and taking on him the person of Samuel saith The Lord hath done even as he spake by my hand abusing and alleadging that Scripture in 1 Sam. 15.28 The Lord will rent the Kingdom from thee this day and hath given it to thy neighbour who is better than thou Mar. 1.23 the Devil comes to Christ and tells him he knows him well enough Thou art Jesus of Nazareth even that holy one of God that holy One that was promised figured and expected even that Redeemer and holy One of Israel Isa 41.14 Even that holy One fore-told by the Angel Luke 1.35 And all this was by Scripture to overthrow both Christ himself and the faith of beleevers as though there were some secret compact and familiarity between him and them and perhaps hence arose that speech By Beelzebub hee casteth out Devils Reasons 1 Satan knows that Scripture is the will of God revealed and hath sway in the conscience as being inspired by the Holy Ghost as the only rule of faith and life and if he can turkis the Scripture out of his right sense and shape he perverts judgement and holds the conscience in error and these errours are
reverently acknowledged for something wherein God hath preferred them before us as for years gifts graces authority or such as are set over us as Parents and Fathers of bodies and souls of Church and Country And this is required by the fifth Commandement and Rom. 13.1 7. neither doth the Gospel and Christianity take away but teach civility And performed by the godly both in speech as Daniel said O King and Paul to Festus O noble Festus and also in outward behaviour and gesture as Jacob bowed seven times to Esau and Joseph taking his Sons from the knees of his Father Jacob having blessed them did reverence to his Father down to the ground Gen. 48.12 David inclined his face to the earth and bowed himself to Saul who pursued his life 1 Sam. 24.9 The like of Ruth to Boaz chap. 2. and of Abigail to David 1 Sam. 25.23 she fell on her face and bowed her self to the ground and fell at his feet 2 Of courtesie which is a fruit of humility when a man to his equals and inferiours sheweth reverence and respect as Abraham to Lot Gen. 13.8 9. and to the Hittites his inferiours cap. 23.12 he bowed himself before the people of the Land Farr unlike the surliness and stiffness of proud and conceited persons who being voyd of all good nature nurture and religion know not to bow to any neither their betters in the way of duty nor equalls in way of courtesie Divine worship is two-fold 1 Inward the sum of the first Commandement standing in fear love and the like 2 Outward bowing or reverence the sum of the second Commandement The former bindes the soul and the will and affections and the whole inner man the later the outward man to give God his worship and service and to give no part of that to any other For the word only only mentioned in the latter branch must bee extended and referred to the former too The latter of these is here meant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for the word properly signifieth to kiss or adore by some outward gesture to manifest a veneration 1 Because this was it which Satan required of Christ namely to fall down or bow unto him but Christ aptly refuseth it 2 This worship proceeds from an inward fear and apprehension of a Divine excellency and power not communicable to any Creature which Satan well know for even by this bowing he would have Christ to acknowledge in him a power to dispose of all earthly things which is proper to God And him only shalt thou serve By service is not meant the inward service of the heart for the words in Deut. 6.13 Thou shalt fear the Lord and serve him will not bear it the first thereof betokening the inward service the second the outward following the former as the effect the cause Neither would our Saviour invert the order in setting the stream before the fountain Therefore this word serve serveth to expound the former as an addition signifying nothing else but the outward service of God so that Christ here shews that it is not enough to give God outward reverence but that wee must as servants perform duties according to his will so the word signifies being taken from servants 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who perform service to bodily Masters in bodily actions 3 The person to be worshipped and served is God only Him only whom we call the Lord our God according to the speech of Samuel 1 Sam. 7.3 Direct your hearts unto the Lord and serve him only for his glory will hee give to no other Quest Must we give outward worship to none but God Must we not bow our knee and uncover our heads to our King and Rulers Must we not rise up to the hoare-head Levit. 19.32 Must we not serve one another in love How then must we outwardly worship and serve God only Ans We must not deny any civil worship to any man to whom God hath made it due but external religious worship must not be given to any Creature man or Angel Quest How may we know the one from the other Ans They differ greatly 1 In the kind one is servil the other social the former due to an absolute Lord and Commander the latter due from one fellow-servant to another This distinction is grounded in Revel 19.10 where the Angel refused the worship done him by John upon this ground because he was a fellow-servant and one of the brethren for John being overcome with the greatness of the Angels glory and splendor out of humane infirmity ascribed to him more than civil honour and mixed some religious worship with it which only was due to God 2 Another difference is in the intention of the mind in worshipping Religious bowing is when a man inwardly apprehends a Divine power proper to God and incommunicable to the creature or when god-head or divine properties are conceived in the thing bowed unto As for example in falling down to an Image uncovering the head praying c. the mind now conceives a Divine power in the image of knowing ones thoughts hearing helping and the like at least that God hath tied his presence and grace to such a place where such an Image is set up But the civil bowing to the King or superiour or to the Chair of estate is a meer token of civil subjection without any conceit of deity in the mind only because we see in them excellent gifts of God or in place above in the Church Common-wealth or family For the same gesture may be civil and spiritual according to the intention of the mind of the worshipper 3 The end distinguisheth them the one is to exercise godliness the other to express civility the one 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the other 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one done as a man is a member of Gods Kingdom the other as he is in the rank of an earthly Kingdom As for example Kissing of the Popes feet is a worship done to a man and so seems civil but being tendred to him as to the Vicar of Christ as one that can pardon sins and cannot erre this religious end makes it a religious worship and therefore none of his being not offered to any other Prince or Emperour upon the earth 4 Some difference may be taken from the common estimation of the thing worshipped as if it be generally esteemed or reputed Divine and deity ascribed to that which in it self hath it not The Host as they call it is generally held to be Christs very self now for a man suppose a Protestant that knows it to remain very bread and that no such deity or change is in it to bow down before it to uncover his head or use gestures of adoration to it is an external religious gesture and is unlawful although his intention bee not to worship it but because in common estimation he ascribes a kind of God-head to the creature as others doe And whereas adoration is a sign
find God sweet to their souls in trials or after them four reasons page 260 Properties of such as to whom Christ will reveal himself three page 77 All promises and threats in Scripture conditional although the condition be not ever expressed page 170 All promises of Satan are miserable soul and deceitful five reasons page 195 Promises of God differ from the Devils how page 196 Profers of Satan all upon some wicked condition or other page 203 Miserable men that accept of Satans profers four instances page 206 Publick persons must especially watch against two things page 4 Publick persons must bee above other careful of Gods glory page 215 Q. QVestion How could Christ be safe among wild beasts page 28 How could Christ be hungry being able to feed so many miraculously page 38 Why Christ took not all infirmities of every particular man three reasons page 39 Why Satan is so restless in tempting three reasons page 45 Whether Christs temptations were in inward motion or external page 48 Why Christ seeing he could would not turn stones into bread five reasons page 74 How to conceive the Word of God by which hee governeth and preserves the Ceatures page 92 Whether St. Matthew or St. Luke observe the right order of the temptations seeing they differ page 100 Whether a man may pray or communicate with an evil man or with a wicked or dumb minister page 108 Whether a man may hear the Word with profit and blessing from a wicked man page 110 Whether Christ was indeed on the pinacle or in vision page 121 How Satan a Spirit could carry Christ his body five considerations page 123 Whether Jonathans action who with his Armour-bearer only set on a whole army of enemies was presumption page 130 Why did not Satan Cast down Christ but saith Cast thy self down three reasons page 137 How Satan is said to fill Ananias his heart Acts 5.3 page 141 Whether it bee not lawful to ask a sign page 174 How Satan can prevail to bring men to worship himself in stead of God ways and means page 207 c. Whether wee may present our selves at Masse thinking to keep our hearts to God page 225 Whether on no occasion we may be present at Masse page 227 Whether the Prophet gave Naaman leave to be present at Idolatry page 228 R. REasons why our Saviour would not yeeld to the last temptation five page 210 Receive nothing from the Devils hand three reasons page 205 Redemption free to us cost Christ dear page 124 Religion set up or held up by bad means is wicked as the Romish page 202 Representation of Satan quick and short three reasons page 187 Restlesness in evil an expresse image of the Devil page 180 Strong resistance of Satan makes him fly four reasons page 235 Means of resisting Satan five page 238 Manner of resistance in five things page 239 Reverence in Gods worship urged six reasons page 229 Riches must not have our hearts four reasons page 98 Romish teachers disarming men of the Scriptures confuted by five reasons page 79 Romish doctrine Idolatrous proved at large page 222 Rules of resisting Satans temptations three page 37 Rules to know when the tempter cometh two page 50 Rules to confirm the heart in the love of God not withstanding outward crosses three page 60 Rules to sence us from using unwarrantable means of our good four page 63 Rules to avoyd seduction by Separatists four page 111 Rules to uphold our selves when Satan would cast us down three page 71 Rules to try whether a Scripture bee wrested seven page 165 Rules of trial whether our obedience be beyond that of the Devils four page 250 Rules to carry our selves free from infection of sin in all places where we come three page 120 S. SAbbath-breakers cast by Gods word notwithstanding all their pleas page 97 Sacrament may be received where open offenders are tollerated page 103 To Sanctifie a mans person hee must set up Gods worship in his heart page 112 The word Satan used by Christ in the last temptation four reasons page 213 Satan cannot hinder Gods Children of salvation he may of comfort page 3 Satans mouth may be stopped but not his malice page 4 Satan an accuser three reasons page 16 Satan tempteth two ways page 21 May allure us cannot force us page 22 Ever taketh us at the weakest three reasons page 42 Cometh to a man two ways page 48 Assayleth the Son of God knowing him so to be four reasons page 50 Aims at four things in his first temptation page 51 In tempting directly opposeth the word of God five reasons page 52 Satan the most eminent and dangerous tempter four reasons page 45 Seeketh ever to blemish the good hee cannot hinder page 63 Inferreth mischievous conclusions upon true premisses four reasons page 64 Never cometh without some stone or other page 70 Alloweth his servants stones for bread ibid. Seeketh chiefly to draw them to sin who have most means against it four reasons page 140 Can tempt but not force us to sin five reasons page 137 His subtilties to be watched six instances page 128 Can alledge Scripture to thrust forward his wicked purposes five reasons page 144 Alledgeth Scripture three ways page 145 Is not content that men sin unlesse they do it most sinfully page 141 In one allegation of Scripture out of Psal 91.11 he hideth eight faults page 147 Never overcome without resistance page 240 Scriptures being our Weapon wee must alwayes have them in readinesse page 80 Scriptures the hammer of Heresies as in six instances page 85 Scriptures how abused to establish errors in doctrin five instances page 149 In practice in many page 151 Scriptures no dumb but speaking Judg. page 158 Scriptures conferred in parallel places page 166 Scriptures collated in unlike places and reconciled in twenty five instances page 167 Scripture most aptly alledged by Christ page 172 Some Scriptures fitter for some to meditate on than others page 173 Security must be watched against after temptation foyled five reasons page 180 Senses must be diligently kept and four rules for the right ordering of them page 188 Service of God must be ruled wholly by God for 1 matter 2 manner 3 end page 231 Service of God two-fold 1 Legal 2 Evangelical page 229 Of Service Evangelical three conditions page 230 Service of God must bee cheerful three reasons page 232 Marks of a good servant of God five ib. Means to be preserved from the service of Satan five page 209 A sign may be asked in four cases page 174 Five vain ends of asking a sign page 175 Three sins above other make men most like the Devil page 181 Sins of Jerusalem the sins of England five instances page 115 Sins of this age fearfully aggravated by our means of grace page 142 Soul liveth by Gods word four ways page 90 Solitary places fittest for temptation two reasons page 14 Directions for solitarinesse four page 16 Spirit of God led Christ
which draw on such fearful falls and mischiefs and preserveth him that neither hope of promotion nor gain nor ease nor favour of man who is but a worm shall make him forget the Lord that spread the Heavens this fear which is Loves keeper holdeth the heart in the Love of God himself of his Worship of his Word of his Children and whatsoever carrieth his Image all which without it either lye or quickly grow as refuse wares out of request 4 To drive away security awake sloathfulness provoke to watchfulness stir up to prayer keep in a fitness to profit by the word to tremble at it when God threatneth to rejoice in the promises as those to whom they belong to help us to better our selves by our afflictions as the speech of the converted Theef to his fellow implieth that if hee had had the fear of God he would being in the same condemnation have otherwise carried himself towards Christ than hee did And in a word to fence the heart which is as the market-place of a City against temptation in which special use it is called a Well-spring of life to escape the snares of death By all this that hath been spoken every man that would seem religious ought to labour above all things for this worthy Grace which God specially bestoweth upon his Children with whom hee maketh his new Covenant Jerem. 32. I will put my fear in their hearts never to depart from mee saith the Lord. Which hath all promises belonging unto it for a mans Self for his Children for this life present for a better for supplies of every good for with-holding and removing of every evil so as whosoever feareth the Lord wanteth not a good and rich treasury such as all the Indian Mines cannot afford yea such as both possesseth himself and entaileth unto his posterity the rich blessing of the Almighty Blessed saith the Psalm is the man that feareth the Lord Psal 128.2 3. himself shall bee mighty on earth his Children shall bee blessed after him his Wife shall bee as a fruitful Vine Riches and Treasure shall bee in his house Psalm 112.3 hee shall want nothing that is good and let his troubles bee never so great the Lord will deliver him out of them all Here is a Jewel worth hiding and laying up in the safest closet of the soul even in the midst of the heart for there God layeth it and calleth for the Heart to make room for it Deut. 5.29 Oh that there were such an heart in them to fear mee Isa 8.13 Sanctify the Lord in your hearts and let him be your dread Another bond whereby man is knit unto God is the working of righteousnesse an immediate fruit of the fear of God Where must bee considered 1 What this righteousness is and then 2 What is the working of it For the former To work righteousnesse what it is This righteousness is a grace of God whereby the beleever is inclined unto honest actions according to the prescript of Gods Law When I say a grace of God I understand that righteousness whereof a man in the state of grace is by grace made partaker and exclude all that Original Righteousness which was set in the nature of man by his Creation whereby hee was wholly conformable to the Image and Righteousness of God further saying that the beleever is hereby inclined to honest actions three things are implyed 1 That this righteousnesse is not that imputed righteousnesse of Christ which is a most exact conformity of the humane nature of Christ with all his actions and sufferings performed of him in our stead with the whole Law of God whereby wee are wholly covered as with a Garment in the sight of God but rather a fruit of that namely that infused and inherent righteousness wrought in the heart of every beleever by the finger of the Spirit whereby the Image of God is daily renewed and repaired in him and so himself inclined to works of righteousness to which hee is now Created Eph. 4.24 2 That the subject of this righteousness is the Beleever for all the works of unbeleevers whose mind and conscience are defiled Tit. 1.15 inward or outward cannot be other than sin and unrighteousness 3 That the next efficient cause of it is lively faith being the instrument of the Holy Ghost by which hee begetteth this righteousness wheresoever it is now Faith produceth this righteousness in us not as it is a● excellent gift of God nor as an excellent quality in us but onely as it is a●●and or instrument apprehending and laying hold upon Christ who justifying us by his own righteousness imputed and by his Spirit regenerating and sanctifying our natures is the very proper cause of this infused and inherent righteousness The last words in the description according to the prescript of Gods Law shew that then a work is righteous Juste agere est agere ex praescripto juris when it is framed according to the right rule of the Law of God it being the only perfect rule of all righteousness Mens Laws are rules also but imperfect and no further yet so far bind as they are agreeable unto Gods II. The second point is the working of righteousness wherein 1 The Order 2 The Manner The Order is in the words first To fear God and then to work righteousnesse all the duties of love must bee founded in Faith and in the fear of God for whatsoever is not of Faith is sin and the fear of God is the very seed and life of all true obedience which the wise man implyeth when hee calleth it the head and beginning of wisdome Prov. 1.7 that look as all sense floweth from the head so all heavenly sense and motion from the fear of the Lord. Which sheweth that many men begin at the wrong end in the matter of their obedience some think they do God high service if they come to Church say some prayers hear a Sermon things not to bee dis-allowed but know not how far they are from pleasing God herein because they bring not hearts renewed with Faith and Repentance nor souls possessed with Hope Love and the true knowledge of God without which the Lord accounteth their sacrifices but maimed and professeth his hatred against them others place all their Holiness and Obedience in the works and duties of the second Table If they bee liberal to the poor just in their dealing sober and civil in their conversation though they live in gross ignorance of God and his Word utterly careless of the waies and worship of God yet conceive themselves in as good case as any other man which is all one as to account that man a living man who hath no head the fear of God being to true religion even as the head to the body of a man besides that they thrust the second Table into the place of the first inverting the order of God yea they pull and break asunder the two Tables which the Lord