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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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He was an eminent type of our Jesus or Joshua whose voyce speaking in the Scripture the Book of the Law we must attend unto in all things Joh. 5.39 Search the Scriptures and our Saviour said to the Sadduces Yee erre not knowing the Scriptures plainly affirming that the Scriptures rightly known were a sufficient fence from all errour Luke 16.29 They have Moses and the Prophets let them hear them Matth. 19.4 Christ by Scripture refuted the Pharisees abuse of that Scripture of Moses for putting away their wives Isa 8.20 To the Law and to the Testimony 1 This is true by reason of the perfection of the Scripture Psal 19.7 Reasons The Law of God is perfect so perfect as man and Angel are accursed that shall adde unto it Prov. 30.5 6. Every word of God is pure a shield to those that trust in him put nothing unto his words lest he reprove thee and thou be found a lyar It is a perfect Canon or rule which as a straight line shews the crookedness of that which is not strait It is a touch-stone and trial of all truths It is a perfect Law which is an universal Judgement to direct all and for all to bee led by which live under it It is perfect in the effect 2 Tim. 3.16 It is profitable to teach to improve to correct and instruct in righteousness and to make the man of God perfect Obj. The Apostle saith it is profitable but not that it is sufficient alone Ans We say not it is therefore sufficient because he saith it is profitable but because it is profitable for all purposes of teaching improving and makeing the man of God perfect therefore it is sufficient and perfect 2 In the Scripture we have the voyce of God speaking from Heaven than which voyce no voyce of man or Angel can be more clear or manifest Prov. 2. ● Out of his mouth cometh knowledge and understanding His wisdom in the Scripture is above Salomons in answering all dark and deep questions and no ca●e can be propounded which hath not there his satisfaction and determination Object But the Scriptures are a dumbe Judge and cannot determine Controversies Ans 1. We give earthly Kings leave to give definitive sentence and judgment in cases by their writing by which numbers who never heard their voyce but read the writing understand their meaning and shall we now call them ●●mb Judges or shall we deny this priviledge to the King of glory to determine by writing but wee must blasphemously account him a dumb Judge 2 The Scriptures are not a dumb Judge but a speaking Judge Rom. 3.19 That which the Law speaketh it speaketh to them that are under the Law Heb. 12.5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Yee have forgotten the consolation which speaketh to you as children Joh. 7.42 Doth not the Scripture say and what saith the Scripture so as it is a speaking Judge and gives to it self a mouth and a voyce and that a loud one 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 9.27 the Apostle quoting the Prophet Esay saith Esay cries out concerning Israel c. 3 How doth their Speaking-Judge determine all Causes in Christendom delated unto him at Rome but by Writing and Bulls and Breves and yet hee scorns to be counted a dumb Judge 3 That is the noble and infallible Judge of all Controversies to which all flesh must stand which hath his authority of himself no way delegate but the Scripture is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for it self to bee beleeved because it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inspired by God from whom lies no appeal whose judgement can by no means within or without it self be corrupted whose voyce alone cannot erre or be led by passion affection or respect of persons but is an unchangeable truth as God himself is the Author of it In every Common-wealth the fittest decider of a Controversie in the Law is the Law-maker the King himself the same is also true in the Church 4 Christ himself decided all Controversies by Scripture so did the Apostles so the ancient beleevers brought all their doubts to the Scriptures after their example Vse 1. This serves to discover the wickedness of the Church of Rome who 1 That they may be Judges in their Causes and 2 To avoyd the light of Scripture which they see so direct against them flie the Scriptures as an incompetent Judge of the Controversies of Religion between us and in stead of the Scriptures they appoint us four Judges the authority of all which is superiour by th●ir doctrine to the authority of Scripture ¶ I. The first Judge is the Church for that say they is to judge of the meaning of Scripture and but for the authority of the Church wee could not know which were Scripture Ans 1. We ask what they mean by the Church They say the Catholick Church But that is impossible to be Judge upon earth because it is a company of all the elect in Heaven and Earth which never was on earth at one time Then they say the visible Church But what if the Church bee not visible sometimes as in Elias his time or be in the Wilderness Then they say the Roman Church which hath ever been visible these fifteen hundred years Now we know our Judge and how our cause is like to goe in which it is a party But 1 It is not the Catholike Church unless a finger can bee an hand or an hand the whole body or a part become the whole and falsly and ridiculously call themselves Catholikes 2 That is no true Church which disagreeth from Christ the Head as Augustine saith and is fallen off Christ by many fundamental errors as Idolatry Justification by works and the like which yet are maintained by Romanists 3 Wee hold that the Orthodox and true Church is 1 A witnesse and keeper of the Scriptures but a jewell hath his price and excellency from it self not from the keeper 2 Having the Spirit of Christ the Church can discern true Scripture from false and supposititious writings but this by the help of Scripture as a Goldsmith by the touch-stone can discern gold from other metals but hee makes it not gold but onely tries it so to bee 3 It is to publish and declare the truth of Scripture without adding or diminishing as an Herald or Cryer manifests the Kings pleasure but it receives no authority from him 4 The true Church is a ministerial interpreter as having the gift of Prophecy but tyed to interpret and judge of Scripture by Scripture Christ is a magisterial interpreter But that the Church on earth should have authority over Scriptures is too unreasonable 1 It is to prefer mens voice and testimony above Gods 1 Joh. 5.9 If wee receive mans testimony the testimony of God is greater Joh. 5. ult If yee will not beleeve Moses his writings how will yee beleeve my sayings as if hee should say If yee beleeve not Scriptures my testimony will do you no good
that this was a convincing argument if he could perswade his hearers that hee did deliver nothing but prophetical Doctrine for all men Jews and Gentiles were easily perswaded that Moses and the Prophets spake directly from God yea and the most blinded and wilful Jews at this day profess that if wee can prove Christ the Messiah from Moses and the Prophets they will beleeve in him so as in great wisdome did the Apostle adde this testimony to all the former knowing that that is the onely sound ground of teaching when men can bee perswaded that what they hear is uttered from the mouth of God as by this testimony his hearers were Now in the verse we have three thing to consider of 1 The generality of this testimony That all the Prophets bear witnesse unto him 2 The scope and end of their witness that men might beleeve in his Name 3 The fruit of this beleef that beleevers might receive remission of sin A proof that all the Prophets witness unto Christ For the first wee will by a brief induction make it appear that all the Prophets bare witness unto Christ and then gather some observations from it To begin with Moses who by Christ his own confession writ of him Joh. 5.46 In Genesis the first thing after the creation and fall is the main promise that the seed of the woman should break the Serpents head Exodus setteth out Christ our Passeover Leviticus in all those sacrifices pointeth out Christ our Sacrifice Numbers setteth before our eyes Christ our brasen Serpent lifted up upon the Cross Deuteronomy describeth Christ our chief Prophet whom whosoever will not hear he must dye the death Deut. 8.18 19. Act. 3.21 Joshuah beareth his name and most lively resembleth him in slaying the enemies of Gods people and bringing them into the promised land The Judges were all Saviours and types of him The book of Ruth sheweth he family whence hee sprung Samuel Kings and Chronicles his Genealogy and the very persons of whom hee descended especially David and Solomon both eminent types of him Ezrah and Nehemiah built the second Temple into which hee was to enter and so to become the glory of it as both Haggai and Malachy foretold Job knew that his Redeemer lived and that he should see him at last on the earth David in the Psalms acknowledged that the stone which the builders refused was become the chief stone of the corner and expresseth the peircing of his hands and feet Solomon in the Proverbs describeth his wisdome and eternity In the Canticles his contract and espousals with the Church Isay is called the Evangelical Prophet than whom no Evangelist could more lively express his Person his Doctrin his Life Death Burial Resurrection and Ascension that hee rather seemed to write an History of something past than a Prophecy of things to come Jeremy plainly stileth him the Lord of Righteousnesse Jer. 23. Ezekiel in all his dark shadows figureth out the government of Christ from point to point Daniel reckoneth the very year and time when the Messiah shall be slain at the end of whose seventy weeks Christ was put to death The small Prophets testify of him also with as joint consent 1 Malachy mentioneth with him his forerunner John Baptist 2 Micha describeth the place of his birth Micah 5.2 And thou Bethlem of Ephrata art little among the thousands of Judah yet out of thee shall hee come forth that shall be ruler in Israel whose goings forth have been from the beginning and from everlasting 3 Zachary nameth the place of his education which was Nazaret Zach. 6.12 There must hee grow that must build the Temple of the Lord. 4 Haggai prophecyeth of his comming into his Temple and purging it 5 Nahum wisheth Judah to behold on the mountains the feet of him that declareth and publisheth peace Nahum 1.15 which tydings none can bring but through Jesus Christ the prince of peace 6 Obadiah promiseth to Judah and Jerusalem such Saviours as should advance and set up the Kingdome of the Messiah Obad. v. 21. and so the Kingdome shall bee the Lords that is Christs who shall reign in his Church for ever and of whose Kingdome there shall bee no end 7 Jonas in his own person preached his Death Burial and Resurrection in that hee was swallowed of the Whale and lay three daies in the belly of it and in the third day was cast alive on dry Land 8 Hosea recordeth his triumph and victory over death Hos 13.14 O death I will bee thy death O Grave I will bee thy destruction 9 Habakkuk the sending out of his blessed Gospel into all the World by his Apostles so as all the earth should bee filled with the knowledge of God as the Waters cover the Sea 10 Joel foretelleth of his ascension and the pouring out of his Spirit upon all flesh Joel 2.28 11 Amos of the calling of the Gentiles a fruit of that ascension which hee calleth the ●●sing of the Tabernacle of David Amos 9.11 as James notably applyeth it Act. 15.16 12 Zephany shadoweth his second coming to judgement and sheweth what a fearful and terrible day it shall bee to all the wicked of the earth Thus have wee shortly seen all the Prophets witnessing unto the doctrine taught in this Sermon by our holy Apostle And that the chief aim and drift of all these Master builders was to lay this the main foundation of all our Religion that Jesus Christ the Son of Mary was the Son of God the true Messias the Lord of all and the onely Saviour and Redeemer of the World First note hence Consent of the Church to any doctrin to be received with these cautions what is the true consent which all Teachers must aim at in the delivery of any Doctrin unto the people of God namely the consent of the Prophets and Apostles it forceth not a Doctrin to bee Orthodox or Ancient for a man to say all the Fathers are of this mind which is the Popish cry for all their Heresies but to this Doctrin give all the Prophets and all the Apostles witnesse and therefore it is sound and perswasive Yet wee refuse not but challenge to the Doctrin which wee teach the consent of the ancient Church but with these cautions 1 With the Primitive and Apostolical Churches which as they were most ancient so were they the purest 2 With the Churches which were after them five or six hundred years so far forth as they consented in doctrin and discipline with the former for many Popish errors are ancient and the Apostle telleth us that Antichrist begun to work in a mystery even in their daies And some of the Fathers were carried into some superstitions and errors and so not espying the mystery helped up Antichrist whom they intended to hold down 3 The Holy Ghost hath revealed every Doctrin necessary to salvation more holily more clearly and more eloquently than all the Fathers put together who if they had
any true wisdome had it from the Scriptures to which wee must still hold our selves both as the ground as also the judge of consent 4 If any Father or Fathers shall by a common error by word or writing condemn any point of our doctrin without the authority of the Scriptures we will willingly dissent neither do wee give credence to any Doctrin because the Fathers have taught it but because that which they teach is founded in the writings of the Prophets and Apostles 5 Wee cannot hold consent to bee a note of the true Church unless it be in the true doctrin and therefore wee justly blame sundry of the learned Papists who make unity a note of the Church but make no mention of verity at all for the strong man may hold all at peace and unity whilest Paul and Barnabas having the truth may bee at oddes between themselves On which conditions as wee are able to justify our whole Religion by antiquity and consent of the most ancient Churches and Fathers so also hath it been and may bee made as clear as the light that the Doctrin of the Church of Rome wherein they dissent from us is a stranger and novelty never known to the Prophets and Apostles nor the purest Churches after them neither had it ever that which they brag of the consent of the ancient Fathers neither do they consent in it among themselves The force of consent wherein it sta●deth Secondly Note hence what is the force and work of consent of the Church in Doctrin it is not to work Faith for that is in the next words tyed to the word and witness of the Prophets and Apostles which is called the word of Faith because it is by Gods Ordinance a means to work that Faith by which it self is beleeved but to move the heart and prepare the way to Faith For it cannot bee that any spiritual grace such as faith is can bee wrought by any but super-natural means of which kind no outward ●estimony if it come backed with the voice of all the Churches in the world can bee for all this is but an humane witness simply and in it self consider●● If they say the Churches testimony is a Divine testimony I answer so far as it carrieth with it the agreement of the Scriptures and Holy Ghost speaking therein it may bee said to witnesse a Divine truth And thus in no other respect can the voice of the Church bee called a divine testimony than the preaching and writing of some other teacher in the Church who delivereth nothing but what is agreeable to the Scriptures From this ground it followeth that the doctrin of the Church of Rome is wicked and derogatory to the Glory and Majesty of the Scriptures in that they stifly after conviction avouch and maintain that the authority of the Scriptures depend upon the testimony of the Church some of them blasphemously saying that they have no more credit than Esops Fables further than the Church giveth it unto them which is to say that God must not bee beleeved for himself and as if the Kings word should have no credit or command but from his guard In reading the prophets thou must be led still nearer unto Christ 3 Hence note That in our reading of the Prophets wee must still bee led further unto Christ for as all the Scriptures so the writings of the Prophets were reserved for this purpose and set apart by God to bee the ordinary outward stay and foundation of the faith of the Church And if our Lord Jesus himself whilest hee was yet in the flesh present with his Disciples did for the confirmation of their Faith in his Doctrin Life Death and Resurrection interpret unto them the writings of the Prophets how much more need have we now in his bodily absence to read with diligence these same writings to help us forward being so wavering and staggering in our faith and the attendent graces of it And hereunto answereth that commandement Joh. 5.39 Search the Scriptures namely Moses and the Prophets that is do not onely procure these writings to your selves nor onely read perfunctorily but diligently and studiously search to finde out the chief scope and matter contained therein which lyeth not in the crust or shell but within in the very bowels of them and this kernel himself in the next words sheweth to bee himself and life eternal through him And why must wee thus search the Scriptures of the Prophets himself rendereth the reason the very ground of our exhortation because they testify of mee This is the natural scope of them to bring men to the acknowledgement of the persons offices and benefits of Christ Thou losest all thy labour in searching the Scriptures if thou searchest any thing but Christ if thou hast not and holdest him not in thine eye if thou givest over searching before thou hast met with him and then thou hast met with him in the Scriptures not when thou Historically knowest something of him which thou didst not know before nor when thou art able to discourse or di●pute of deep points of Divinity but when thou commest unto him as the context sheweth when by the quickening of thy faith and repentance thou layest faster hold upon him for life everlasting Alas how few searchers of the Scriptures thus search them to say nothing of them who search them not at all but cast them aside as refuse waters of whom wee may renew the woful complaint of Christ against the Jews who when hee had exhotted them to search the Scriptures presently addeth But ye will not come to me that ye might have life Joh. 5.40 The second point is The scope of all the Prophets witnesse and this is to bring men to beleeve in the name of the Son of God which is by faith to receive Christ as hee hath described and propounded himself in the Word and Promises of the Gospel For although the Apostle might sooner have said that whosoever beleeve in him yet hee useth this phrase rather of beleeving in his Name thereby secretly to refer us unto the word of the Prophets and Apostles which testify of no other name to bee saved by but onely the name of the Lord Jesus For our better clearing of this point wee will consider 1 What this saith is 2 The benefit of it 3 The marks and signs of it 4 The use First What this Faith is It is a supernatural gift whereby every beleever apprehendeth and applyeth unto himself Christ and all his merits unto salvation Faith what it is I say it is a gift nay the Scripture saith that it is the gift of God Phil. 1.29 and it is given you to beleeve as also to suffer And that it is supernatural all the commandements wee have to beleeve plainly evince for were it natural we should need no commandement to do it Further it is such a gift Opera naturalia non indigent p●aecepto as whereby wee
apart to their several offices by laying on of mens hands upon them even so God laid his hands on these that is Christ immediately by his own voyce called these to be witnesses unto him which was one of the priviledges of the Apostles 2 The Apostle in the words expresseth himself by limiting them to themselves to us namely Apostles who ate and drunk with him not only who before his death lived as it were at bed and board with him but after hee rose from the dead that we might not be deceived in our witnesse of him 3 To us whom be commanded to preach and testifie namely to the whole world these things together with his coming again to judgement Now for the further clearing of this publick witnesse of the Apostles wee will consider three things 1 That these twelve were appointed by Christ himself to this witnesse which the Apostle Peter plainly concludeth Act. 1.22 where speaking of one to be elected into Judas his room he saith he must be chosen of one of them which have companied w●th us all the time that the Lord Jesus was conversant among us beginning at the Baptism of John unto the day that he was taken up implying that whosoever was not thus qualified he was not fit to be made such a publick witnesse with them of his resurrection because to the making of an Apostle was necessary either an ordinary converse with Christ upon earth or else an extraordinary sight of him in Heaven by which latter Paul who made an honourable accesse to that number proved himself an Apostle T●e second thing is how they were furnished to this witnesse By what means the Apostles were furnished to their witness and this was su●●y ways 1 By their senses they ate and drunk with him that is were in a familiar sort conversant with him after he rose again 2 By word of mouth he gave them charge and commandement to doe it of both which wee are to speak in the text 3 By a Sacrament or sign of breathing upon them he confirmed them to their vocation saying As my Father sent me so I send you 4 By adding thereunto the thing signified for he opened their understandings and made th●m able to conceive the Scriptures and unfold all the Mysteries therein so farre as was behoveful for the Church 5 By bestowing sundry other great gifts upon them sending the Holy Ghost upon them in the likeness of fiery Tongues whereby they received the gift of Tongues he gift of Miracles of casting out Devils of healing the Sick by imposition of hands of preserving from poyson and deadly things of the Apostolical rod whereby death it self was at the command of their word either to take place as in Ananias and Saphira both struck dead with the word of the Apostle or to give place as in Dorcas who by a word of the Apostle was raised to life being dead By these means the Lord put into the hands of the Apostles great power to give witnesse of the resurrection of Christ Act. 4.33 The third thing is By what means they witnessed or gave testimony to Christ Ans Because they were to bee authentical and faithful witnesses to all the world and that both in the age wherein they lived as also in all the succeeding ages to the end of the world therefore was it necessary that they should give witnesse two wayes 1 By zealous and painful preaching by voyce while they lived 2 Even after their death by the holy Doctrin left behind them in their Works and Writings and thus doe they still remain publick witnesses to us on whom the ends of the world are come Doct. Hence observe that the office of the Apostles was to give testimony unto Christ after a peculiar manner Acts 1.8 When the Holy Ghost shall come upon you yee shall be witnesses unto me both in Jerusalem Judea Samaria and to the uttermost parts of the earth I say they were to bee witnesses after a peculiar manner for these reasons The Apostles were to bee peculiar witnesses to Christ and why 1 To distinguish their witness from ours who are ordinary Ministers for every Minister is called of God to give witness to Christ but properly to speak they are rather Preachers and Publishers of things witnessed than witnesses or if witnesses yet herein they differ from the Apostles that they are not oculate or ear-witnesses nor such sensible witnesses as they were for this is an Apostolical speech and manner of preaching not derived to ordinary Pastors and Teachers to say That which wee have heard and seen and our hands have handled that we testify unto you 1 Joh. 1.1 2 They were all faithful witnesses and faithful men endued with faith and full beleef of the things they wrote and testified as all ordinary Ministers are not Whence the Evangelist John professeth of them all that they knew the testimony to bee true Joh. 21.24 True for the matter for they delivered the whole Counsel of God and kept nothing back that was fit to be known and true for the manner they all speaking as they were moved by the Spirit of God 2 Pet. 1.21 and therefore exempted from all error in their witness as we are not 3 And hence followeth that their witness is to bee beleeved as infallible being the witness of such as with their eyes saw his Ma●esty vers 16. who did not at any time deliver any thing which they either heard not of Christ or saw him not doing or suffering but all other ordinary Ministers are so far to bee beleeved as they consent with these and so far as they testify no other thing than what these oculate witnesses have left in writing Object But Christ needeth not the witness of any man hee hath a greater witnesse than John or than any Apostle therefore there is no use of the Apostles witness Answ Christ hath indeed three greater witnesses than the witness of his Apostles namely 1 His Father that sent him beareth witnesse of him 2 The Scriptures if they bee searched testify of him 3 His works that hee did bear witnesse of him Joh. 8.18 5.39 5.36 but yet howsoever in regard of himself hee need no other testimony of man that wee might beleeve and bee saved hee useth the witness of men 〈◊〉 John and the Apostles and of this Divine Testimony in the mouth of the Apostles may bee said as Christ did of the voice from heaven Joh. 12.30 This voice came not because of mee but for your sakes In divine things we must lean upon a sure word Vse 1. From this Doctrin wee learn how necessary a thing it is in causes of Faith to lean upon true and certain things and not upon tottring traditions or unwritten verities which are the main pillars of Popish Doctrin Oh how good hath our God been to this Church and Land of ours in giving us a surer word of the Prophets and Apostles to become a light unto us in
executed his doctrin notwithstanding most heavenly and as his enemies witnessed Never man spake like this man yet was condemned his wonderful miracles obscured yea blasphemed Hee cast out Devils by Beelzebub and shall the servant look to bee better than his Master Lamentable it is to see how our times accuse the first restorers of Religion Luther Calvin Beza Bucer and the rest as the Layers of sedition and rebellion and as lamentable that such as preach the same holy Doctrin as they did should under the titles of Puritans and Schismaticks bee coupled with Papists yea accounted worse And no marvel if the whole profession of Religion bee accused and religious persons made the songs of the abject and scum of the Land because the Devil is an accuser When the Devil laies off his name and nat●re and ceaseth to bee a Devil it will bee otherwise but not till then But let such as would bee wise by Gods wisdome labour to see Satans malice in all this and that if to bee accused bee sufficient who can bee innocent 4 Note Seeing Satan is such an accuser of us in himself and his instruments So many accusers should make us watchful of our selves to God to men and to our own consciences how careful ought wee to bee in our whole conversation to stop Satans mouth and the mouths of wicked men which will bee open against us How ought wee to make right steps to our feet seeing we shall bee sure to hear of the least halting How ought wee to examine the uprightness of our hearts that in those accusations wee may bee bold to go to God and say Lord do thou prove and try mee if there bee any such wickedness in mee Rules to become in-offensive and unreproveable and so stop the mouth of of Satan 1 The matter of thy work must bee good and warranted by the Word 4 Rules to stop the mouths of all accusers then God will justify that which himself sets thee about and thee in it 2 The manner of doing it must bee proportional a good thing must bee done well in good circumstances 3 The end must bee found namely Gods glory and mans good A bad end spoiles the best action 4 In every thing remember that Satans eye is upon thee to accuse thee the eye of thine own conscience to witness for or against thee and Gods eye to judge thee to whom thou must stand or fall as to thine own Lord. To be tempted The word to be tempted is spoken of 1 God 2 Man 3 Satan all tempt I God tempteth 1 When he proveth the graces of his Children so hee proved Abraham Gen. 22.1 and Job chap. 7. vers 18. 2 When he discovereth the sin and corruption which lurketh in them and thus God tempted the Israelites who when their desires in the Wilderness were not satisfied usually broke out into murmuring and impatiency and shewed naughty hearts full of distrustfulness And thus God is said to lead into temptation when being provoked to wrath he with-draweth his grace that so his Children by their falls might see their weakness as David and Peter and that the wicked might in justice bee prepared to judgement as Pharaoh burst into blasphemy Achitophel hanged himself through impatiency and Saul used unlawful means to escape his cross 2 Rules in Gods tempting of man But in these temptations of God observe two rules 1 That the word tempting referred to God is ever taken in good part for hee tempteth only to prove never to seduce and his temptations are always good because they proceed from him that is goodness it self and tend altogether to the good and profit of his children and are the execution of justice on the wicked which is good also 2 That all these temptations are not to confirm Gods knowledge of men who perfectly knows what is in them yea who seeth things that are not as though they were but to bring men being exercised by them to the clearer knowledge of him and themselves Man tempteth God two ways II Man tempteth 1 God two ways 2 Man both himself and others Man tempteth God 1 By presumption and curiosity as when men forsake the ordinary means of their good and presume too much upon Gods help to try whether God will use any other than the appointed means to succour them so it is said vers 7. Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God 2. By distrust when men by unwarrantable means try the power of God whether he can or will help or hurt Exod. 17.2 when the Israelites by murmuring would have water Moses said Why tempt yee the Lord and Psal 78.18 they tempted him in the Wilderness requiring meat for their lust and said Can God prepare a table in the Wilderness Here they tempted him by doubting 1 Of his Promises 2 Of his Presence 3 Of his Power 4 By limiting him to that straight 5 They thought he was bound to them to fulfill their lusts Man tempteth man three ways Man tempteth others 1 VVhen upon just occasion he tryes a mans affections and disposition to this or that so Jonathan tried his Father Saul how he stood affected to David 1 Sam. 19.3 2 VVhen men goe about by captious and subtile questions and with fair shew of words to get matter of reprehension and accusation against others Thus the Pharisees came to Christ tempting him Matth. 16.1 and thus the Herodians came to him to intangle him in his talk 3 VVhen men allure and entice one another to evil as Prov. 1.10.11 Come let us lay wait for bloud and have all one purse so the Harlot said to the young man Come in with me let us take our fill of love till the morning Man tempteth himself two ways Man tempteth himself two ways 1 VVhen his own concupiscence moveth and draweth him aside to sin Jam. 1.4 Every man is tempted when he is drawn aside of his own concupiscence 2 VVhen he wilfully casts himself into danger as Peter when he went into Caiaphas the High Priests Hall among Christs enemies and his here he is moved to deny his Master and Satan prevails against him III Satan tempteth and in his tempting goeth beyond all these Satan tempt●●● two ways 1 VVhen by outward objects he stirreth up inward corruption as David walking on his leds and seeing Bathsheba the Devil wrought lust in him 2 By infusing inwardly evil motions and thoughts without objects and thus stood he up against Israel and caused David to number the people a thing meerly needless as Joab confessed 1 Chron. 21.1 2 3. Now thus God cannot tempt to evil he with-draweth his Spirit by outward occasions he brings to light the sins of men and punisheth one sin with another but moveth no man to evil and much less driveth him to it and least of all infuseth wickedness into any mans heart which to think were high blasphemie So men by tempting may stirre up corruption in others but to infuse
more plain and sharp than they as appeareth 1 In the title he gives him Satan 2 In the commandement Avoyd First he calls him Satan which is the third name given him in this History for he had before been called a Devil that is a false accuser and a Tempter and now he is called a Satan signifying an adversary or enemy 1 To God directly 2 To man both in his person whom he often possesseth and vexeth Mat. 4.24 and also in his estate which hee doth often endamage and impoverish as we see in Job And Christ doth now so tearm him 1 To shew him that he takes better notice of him than before for he called him by no name before though he was called by the two former tearms by the Evangelist 2 That we should see further into his nature the more to beware of and detest him 3 To shew us how we may detect an adversary and smell a Devil namely when he sets against and opposeth the grounds of religion 4 To teach us that hee is no friend that offering us wealth and honour would draw us from God and religion The greatest kindness here is the greatest cruelty Avoyd 1 This is a word of indignation as we say to a Dogg avant for Christ was much offended and angry against this temptation when he saw and heard Satan so impudent and blasphemous So Christ gives this as a reason of the same speech to Peter Avoid Satan for thou art an offence unto mee Christ shews indignation because Satan shews his blackness 2 It is a word of rebuke and castigation of Satans importunity and impudency who would not bee satisfied at the first and second assault but still renews more hellish and horrible temptations Thus Luke expresseth it Hence behinde mee as one not worthy any longer to behold his face 3 It is a word of dismission or sending him packing and carries in it the force of a Commandement An Heretick saith the Apostle after once or twice admonition avoid Tit. 3.10 Thus deals our Saviour with Satan here who is Haereticorum haereticissimus An Arch-Heretick as a great man talking with a wrangling fellow whom no reason will perswade commands him away hee will hear him no longer Quest Why was our Saviour so angry at this temptation above the former wherein he exercised Meekness and Patience Answ 1 His Wisdome knew how far hee was to bear Satan at this time and how much to suffer from him and then how his mouth must bee stopped which Meekness and Lenity would never do there is no hope to win or overcome a Devil with kindnesse nor to shake him off that way nay rather this will more invite on his malice he will go so far as hee is suffered 2 Christ thirsted after mans salvation and his love to us and our redemption made him so angry with the Devil who sought by all means to hinder it for had hee been defiled with sin the work of redemption had availed us nothing 3 To note the hatefulness and detestation of that sin of Idolatry whether it bee covert or open that if our dearest friends should solicite unto it even the Wife of the bosome wee should pursue them to death and so shew our deadly hatred against it Deut. 13.1.6 4 The two former more concerned himself but this concerned his Fathers Glory directly hee hears him claiming all to bee his quartering the Armes and Royalties of God making himself a God and challenging worship due to God this hee could not bear his tenderness and zeal to his Fathers glory would not endure so vile a creature to carry away no not to challenge any part of his worship Doct. Gods causes must ever more affect us than our own How full of lowliness and meekness was our Lord and Saviour in all his own causes Hee did not strive nor cry neither was his voice heard in the streets Hee would not break a bruised reed nor quench a smoaking flax Isa 42.3 Matth. 12.20 When hee was reviled hee reviled not again When hee was called Glutton Drunkard a friend of Publicans and sinners Matth. 11.19 28. in stead of returning rough Language hee calleth saying Come unto mee all ye that are weary and heavy laden and I will case you Hee was led as a sheep to the slaughter and opened not his mouth when they accused him of capital things knowing that his answers would not bee taken hee answered not a word Now hee was in his own cause But when hee takes his Fathers cause in hand how doth hee cloath himself with zeal which even consumes him Joh. 2.15 in purging his Fathers house hee laies about him and whips out the abusers of that holy place Moses in his own private cause was the meekest man upon the earth being contumeliously worded by Miriam and Aaron hee presently pardons it and prayeth for Miriam and gets her cured of her leprosy In Exod. 32. that froward people was ready to stone him yet when God begins to bee angry with them hee forgets all and praies God rather to put his name out of his book than not to pardon their sins But seeing the calf his calm spirit is vanished and hee breaks the Tables of stone that were in his hand The Apostle Paul every where provokes Christians to meekness patience and laying aside of revenge and stirringness of spirit in private causes yet Act. 17.16 when hee saw the idolatry of the Athenians his spirit was stirred up in him 1 The Religion which wee profess Reasons should bind us unto God most straightly therefore Augustine noteth the word either à religando or à relinquendo that where religion is it will leave all for God And hence is self-denial enjoyned as a necessary preparation to him that will profess Religion 2 Gods Glory is preferred by himself above all his Creatures as being the end of them all and therefore must so bee of us even above our selves for of him and through him and for him are all things Wee see in the Common-wealth how the instruments of publike Justice if any service bee commanded from the King must lay aside their own business and ease and execute the Kings pleasure before their own Such a good servant for his Lord was Paul saying My life is not dear unto me so I may finish my course with joy 3 Our Lord Jesus hath more affected our cause than his own what an infinite love shewed hee in descending from his glory to work the great and painful work of our redemption what infinite misery did hee sustain to help us out of it what an happinesse forsook he to recover us to that which wee had forsaken what a dear price did hee pay for our ransome when we were lost Is it not fit now that wee should bee earnest in the cause of such a friend May not hee well disdain that any thing in the World never so much concerning us should bee preferred before him yea or equalled with or loved without him
of words and sharp reproaches unless there bee added also a direct answer and satisfaction to the matter in hand he therefore most fully answereth by the Scriptures even the Devil himself not contenting himself by his power to repel him which Satan now beginneth to feel unless also by the power of the Word hee convince him and thereby award the dart and break the temptation into pieces Which must bee our rule in dealing with vain and jangling adversaries not to answer them according to their foolish disposition or provocation not to bee like them in frowardness or stifnesse in heat and perversnesse but to answer them with words of Wisdome with sound matter and moderation both to convince them and beat down self-conceit in them which is the meaning of those two Precepts Prov. 26.4 5. which seem contrary but are easily reconciled by the due respect of persons places times and other circumstances Ever remember one rule that no adversary suppose the Devil himself is to bee answered by affection or passion but by judgement and sound reason Yea if wee have no hope to win our adversary or do him much good as Christ had none of the Devil yet wee must testify to God and his truth for the confirmation of our selves and others The testimony alledged is out of Deut. 10.20 Thou shalt fear the Lord thy God thou shall serve him and Deut. 6.13 An universal and affirmative precept by which every creature is bound to his Creator and him alone to perform Divine worship unto him And it is aptly applyed by Christ to this dart of Satan For it implyeth 1 That hee himself as now standing in this conflict with Satan is a creature of God as hee is man though otherwise as God hee hee equal to his Father As man hee is subject to the Law and to this precept among the rest 2 That Satan is not God as hee pretendeth by his unjust claimes nor any way equal to God 3 That therefore neither must hee being a creature give the least divine worship from God nor hee that thus claimes it can by any means bee capable of it 4 That the Scriptures of God reserve unto God his due worship and forbid that any creature shall share with him Christ stands not to dispute whether the sight presented were a shadow or substance nor whether hee would give it him or no but holds him to the Scripture which upholds his Fathers right Quest But why doth our Saviour change and adde to the text of Scripture as not regarding that terrible woe denounced against such as adde or take away from the word and contrary to that in Deut. 12.32 Here our Saviour 1 Changeth Moses saith Thou shalt fear Christ saith Thou shalt worship 2 Addeth for Moses hath not the word only which is of Christs putting to that text Answ 1 Here is some difference indeed in words but not in sense and therefore it is no corruption of the Text nor letting out the life of it which stands not in the words but in the true sense 2 Our Lord both in great wisdome changeth the word fear into Worship and just cause for 1 Moses useth fear which is a general word in which is contained all such Divine duties as godly men ought to perform unto God and our Saviour mentions one special which is included in that general which thing Moses speaks as well as he in the general as he that commands a whole commands every part inward and outward 2 Hereby our Saviour aptly meets with Satans temptation If thou wilt worship me he useth the same word not tying himself to Moses his words but keeping the sense but to Satans word and 3 He noteth the nearness and undividedness of Gods fear and his worship as where the cause is there will bee the effect so true fear and worship goe together where one is there will be the other and for this cause one is put for the other not here only but elsewhere as Isa 29.13 Their fear toward me was taught by the precept of men Christ alleadging it Mat. 15.9 saith You worship me in vain As for the word only added which is not in the Law it no way addeth any contrary or diverse sense to Moses but only expoundeth or giveth a fit commentary to the text and speaketh that plainly in one word which Moses doth in more as Deut. 2.13 Thou shalt fear the Lord thy God and serve him and walk after no other gods which is all one with our Saviours Thou shalt serve him only As he that saith The King is the supream Governour and none but hee saith in effect The King is the only supream Governour 3 Christ and his Apostles had a priviledge in alleadging Scriptures without error and were in●a●●ble expounders as well as alleadgers 4 This alteration of words is made by Christ to warrant us that Scriptures alleadged by teachers according to their right sense although with alterations and additions are to be taken as true expositions and allegations we being not tied so strictly to words as to sense For otherwise all our Sermons and Expositions which serve to beat out the true sense of Scriptures and apply it to several uses might be condemned as idle additions to Scripture which is blasphemous 5 To warrant us that Principles of Religion expounded by warrant of Scripture are truly interpreted though the Scriptures in so many formal words express them not As for example In the Doctrin of Justification by faith we say we are justified by faith only before God here the Papists exclaim on us as accursed Hereticks because we read not the word only in all the Scripture But we read it in effect and in true sense Rom. 3.28 and Ephes 2.8 By faith without works which exclusive is all one as to say only by faith as our Saviour interprets the exclusion of other gods by the word only As if I should say I did such a thing without help is it not all one as to say I only did it If Christs interpretation be true and warrantable so must ours in the point of justification And if the Devil himself had not yeelded to Christs allegation he might have said Thou thrustest in the word only and addest to Gods Word and therefore art not the Son of God But the Papists deal more impudently with us than the Devil did with Christ who said no such thing but yeelded to evidence of truth which they will not In the precept it self are three things 1 The person 2 The matter 3 The object 1 The peson thou the whole man and person which consisteth of a body and soul thou any reasonable Creature that challengest God to be thy God 2 The matter shalt worship and serve Worship is two-fold Civil or Divine I. Civil is a prostrating or bowing of the body or any outward testification of an high and reverent respect of man And this is due to men two ways 1 Of duty when men are to bee
The Herodians could say that Christ taught the way of God truly because he respected not the face of man Mark 12.14 What a straight charge giveth the Apostle Paul to Timothy that he should preferre no man in his ministry and doe nothing with partiality 1 Tim. 5.21 It was a worthy commendation of Levi that the law of truth was in his mouth iniquity was not found in his lips he walked with God in peace and equity and so turned many from iniquity Mal. 2.6 Whereas on the contrary what a wicked thing it is to preach for hire reward favour and yet lean upon the Lord See in Micha 3.11 3 Ordinary Professors may not accept persons 1 Not in civil things For when elections offices and common benefits are passed and bestowed partially for friendship money kindred favour or entreaty this is the ruine of all societies and a bringer in of all corruption especially when men have taken oathes to a Corporation to the contrary the sin is like an infolded disease more incurable and dangerous 2 In matters of religion much less notwithstanding this sin be many ways committed As 1 To have the faith of God in respect of persons which the Apostle James noteth in this instance Jam. 2.2 When a man with a gold ring or goodly apparrel be he never so wicked is magnified and advanced above another who is not so outwardly gaudy but inwardly arrayed with the white garments of Christs righteousness and adorned with the Jewels of faith love holiness and sincerity which the world taketh little knowledge of 2 To accept the word because he is a man of pomp that bringeth it a rich man or a friend the Corinths were justly blamed for partial hearing and holding some to Paul some to Apollos some to Cephas 1 Cor. 3.4 who is Paul who is Apollos who is Cephas are not they all Ministers by whom yee beleeve Ahab will not hear Micah because he hateth his person but he shall justly fall for it at Ramoth Gilead 1 King 22.37 3 To reject the profession of religion because it wanteth countenance and credit at most hands and a few poor ones only receive it Many Protestants can hear us justly confute the Popish doctrine and practice in that they embrace their religion in respect of persons that is of the outward appearance of it because they pretend a perpetual succession consent of Councils defence of Princes antiquity universality the most part of Europe having generally taken the mark of the Beast in their hands and foreheads and yet the same men see not how themselves are slipt into the same Popish error that refuse one course because it wants outward supporters and props and chuse that by which they may swim with the stream they hate Popery because the Laws hate it and love religion because it is now crowned established and establisheth their prosperity 4 To disdain the persons of poor professors which is so general and common a sin as that nothing can they doe or speak but it passeth much unjust censure nay things by them exceeding well and holily performed are so farre from being drawn into example as that thereby they can bee traduced Wherein yet they are conformed unto the Son of God the head of their profession whose powerful doctrine and mighty works were carped at and depraved because they knew his Father his Mother himself at the best but a Carpenters Son not brought up at study and learning For example how was that great work of healing a man miraculously so farre from affecting the Jews as that they fell very foul and were angry with him and the reason is rendred by our Saviour Christ Joh. 7.23 24. Because they judged according to the outward appearance and not with righteous judgement concerning him 5 For professors themselves to look too bigge upon some meaner ones as they conceive but by the Gospel members of Christ and his Kingdom as well as they Isa 65.1 Christ who preached to the poor as well as the rich hath spoken to their hearts as well as their own and hath equalled them or perhaps made them superiour in graces to the other Now should not those that profess God herein resemble him who though he bee high and excellent inhabiting eternity and dwell in the high and holy place yet he looks to the humble and lowly yea and dwels also with him that is of a contrite and humble spirit Isa 57.15 To think too basely of him whom God chuseth is to erre from Gods righteous judgement and what can the blind world doe more disgraceful to the profession than to pass by the graces of God as not knowing what they mean 6 Not to speak here of Popish spirits who seek to disgrace our Religion because Artificers and simple women are as they say Scripturers not considering that in Christ neither male nor female are rejected Gal. 3.23 and that God chuseth even weak and foolish things to confound the wise and mighty and the poor ones of the world to be rich in faith 1 Cor. 1.26 27. Vse 2. If God accept not persons for outward respects If outward things could bring us into acceptance with God we might see our hearts on them why should any outward thing gain our hearts our affections our studies seeing if we could gain them all we are never the further in Gods books Many are ready to say oh God loveth them and judge themselves highly in savour because he suffereth his light to shine upon their habitations their hands find out wealth they are encreased in possessions and prospered in their labours peaceable in their houses without fear therefore doth pride compass them as a chain But with one word doth the wise man shatter down all the pillars of this foolish erection Eccles 9.2 No man knoweth love or hatred of all that is before them And if outward things could commend a man to God Antiochus Nebuchadnezzar Nero and such wicked Tyrants had been highest in favour with him whose feathers hee pluckt whose pride hee brought low making them spectacles of his vengeance to all the world who for their outward greatness had been the terrours of the world And yet much less should these things swell the hearts of men with pride above others who perhaps have a better part in Heaven than themselves The proneness unto which sin the Lord perceiving he hath expresly charged that the rich man should not glory in his riches nor the strong man in his strength Jer. 9.24 but if any man glory let him glory in this that he understandeth and knoweth me All other rejoycing is not good that is is hurtful and perilous besides the vanity of such vain boasting common experience shewing that the higher scale is always lightest We must stand naked in Gods Iudgement seeing no outward thing can commend us to him Vse 3. If God accept no man for outward things then when we enter into Gods judgement we shall appear naked stript of all outward
necessarily followeth that the Scripture foreseeing that God would justifye the Gentiles through faith Gal. 3.8 that is a thing to come to pass almost two thousand years after must needs bee of God Again it followeth as necessarily that the Prophets in preaching and the Holy Pen-men of God spake and writ as they were moved by the Spirit of God and directed by the immediate assistance of God and therefore could not erre in any thing for they foretold directly such things which both for matter and manner came to pass many years after Jacob in his will foretold that the Scepter should not depart from Judah till Shiloh came this prophecy was not accomplished till above seventeen hundred years after the prediction for not much above twenty years afore Christs birth Herod became King of Judea killed the whole Colledge of the Jews called the sanhedrim wherein was the heir apparent of the Kings blood King Cyrus was named by the Prophet Esaiah an hundred years before hee was born Isaiah 44.28 and of him prophesied that hee should build the Temple The worthy King Josiah with his facts were declared three hundred fifty nine years before he was born 1 King 13.2 The Apostle Paul prophesyed of the destruction of the Romane Empire and thereby the rising of the Antichrist which was not accomplished till about the year four hundred seventy five after Christ For whereas the Roman Empire was divided into Eastern and Western the Western which onely hindred the revelation of Antichrist was in that year quite overthrown and Rome it self taken by the Gothes Joh. Funct in ●●no praedicto and after this never had any Romane Emperour his seat of Authority in Rome These and the like neither man nor Angel could ever of themselves foretell and therefore the Author and Director of them must needs be God Observ 2. Secondly from hence also note The Antiquity of the Gospel in that it was Preached by the Prophets to the ancient Israelites and known for the substance of it not onely to the Apostles and ancient Christians and beleevers but to the Patriarks and Prophets yea even to Adam in Paradise to all whom Christ was preached the Lord of all and that blessed seed in whom all the Nations of the earth were to bee blessed This Doctrin although it bee called a new Testament Our religion is the oldest religion and Popery but a novelty is no new Doctrin Let the Papists make a vain brag of Antiquity and charge us with a new religion the truth is whereas the body of their doctrin was not known to the Prophets nor Apostles nor Beleevers for many hundred years after Christ our doctrin is that which God sent to the children of Israel and therefore is most ancient and true And to prove this that I say we will goe no further than our text That doctrin which preacheth peace by Jesus Christ is the doctrin which was sent to Israel which we professe at this day but so is not Popish doctrin which preacheth peace not by Christ but by our selves our merits and satisfactions and peace by the Popes Pardons Bulls and Absolutions and Indulgences now these with other dependences thereon being the main points and pillars of their doctrin were never preached to the children of Israel by any Prophet nor ever by any of the Apostles to the Church of God but have crept in one after another many hundred years since Christ and his Apostles Let their own rule stand in force therefore with good will if we cannot plead antiquity we will lay no claim to the truth Observ 3. Thirdly hence we note That there is but one way to salvation But one way to salvation and this was declared to the Children of Israel for substance as well as to us who went to Heaven by the same way which wee doe-There is but one Christ one precious Faith one and the same Gospel common to all times one common Salvation preached by the same Christ who is the same yesterday to day and for ever Heb. 13.8 who is the Lamb slain from the beginning not actually but by the efficacy of his Sacrifice the vertue of which to come they laid hold on to salvation as wee do upon it past and accomplished already Thus Abel beleeved and received testimony that he was just before God Heb. 11.4 Thus Noah was made heir of the righteousnesse which is by faith Heb. 11.7 Every religion will not save thr professors there is but one way and that a strait one that leadeth to life Wee come into the world one way we depart many ways so there is but one way to find life everlasting but many ways to lose it only Christ is the way by his Doctrin by his Merit by his example even the new and living way his bloud is ever fresh ever trickling down and ever living it quickneth them that walk in it and refresheth them with new strength never any rent the veil but he never any but he made a high way into the Holy of Holies in the highest Heaven never any came to the Father but by him neither was peace ever preached in any other name but his who is Lord over all blessed for ever Which is Lord of all Christ may be said to be Lord of all two ways 1 More generally hee is with the Father and Holy Ghost Lord of all things unto whom all Creatures by right of Creation even the very Devils are subject Thus he ruleth in the very midst of his enemies disposing of the wicked and their malice to his own glory In this respect he is both owner and possessor of all things Bagnal Ado● and a sustainer and maintainer of all things and that by his word Heb. 1.3 2 More specially he is Lord of all men whether Jews of Gentiles beleeving in his name even a Lord of his Church and in this latter sence Christ Lord of his Church Christ is called Lord of all in this place 1 Now Christ is Lord of his Church consisting of Jew and Gentile Reasons 1 Because God hath given the Church unto him for his inheritance Psal 2.8 I will give thee the Heathen for thine inheritance which being a Prophecy of the calling of the Gentiles implieth that the kingdom of grace whereof Christ is appointed King in Sion consisteth of all Countries and peoples and is not bounded or bordered but with the ends of the earth and sheweth further that all these his subjects are given him of God to become his servants Joh. 17.2 As thou hast given him power over all flesh that he should give eternal life to all whom thou hast given him 2 They are so given unto him as he must win them before hee can enjoy them He winneth partly by ●onquest partly by ransom hee both conquereth and casteth out the strong man that held them captive spoyleth him of his armour and weakneth his arm for ever as also he payeth a precious ransome for
doctrin For never was any device so powerfully confirmed as the Doctrin and Religion of Christ which we profess For as it is said of Pharaohs Inchanters Exod. 8.17 after that Moses had brought the Lice that they assayed to doe the like but could not so in admirable wisdome hath the Lord put forth his mighty power in effecting such Miracles for this doctrin as he never suffered to bee wrought for any other For this only hath he stayed and pulled back the course of the Sun in the Heavens letted the fire from burning divided the Sea and made it stand as a wall raised not the sick only to health but the dead to life strengthned decrepit persons to beget and conceive yea more set apart a Virgin to bear a Son Let Popish impostors leave to bragge of Straw-miracles such as was taken up at Garnets execution and their childish Miracles as their late London Boy and shew us such as these Let us hear but without imposture of such as speak with new tongues drive away Serpents and drink deadly poyson and hurt them not but never was any other doctrin thus confirmed and whatsoever Signs and Wonders are wrought to weaken any part of this truth or establish any doctrin not grounded therein as we are commanded so wee hold them all accursed Vse 1. In that Christ went about doing good we note Christs life was not monastical but he conversed with men to doe good unto them that as his person was a perfect mirrour of all goodnesse so his life was no monastical or cloystered life but his delight was with the sons of men hee eat with them drunk with them more familiarly conversed with them than John did that hee might still take occasion to doe them good and communicate unto them of his fulnesse of grace Neither was his life an idle delicate or pompous life neither swelled he with abundance and wealth but poor mean industrious and painful he continually went about doing good From whom how many Ministers are degenerate who professing themselves servants would bee loath to be as their Lord was some setting up themselves as it were a fatting in a course of case and delicacy feeding themselves not the flock without fear others climbing with restless desires to honours and preferments others incessantly thirsting as if they had a Dropsie after mony and profits serving their Master only to carry the bagge others are doing perhaps but little good they doe in their places their doctrin is so cold so indigested or their lives so scandalous so offensive or their hearts so corrupt and cankred as they rather oppose themselves to the doing or doers of good amongst all whom the Master is out of sight and out of mind 2 Seeing Christ by this going about and doing good shewed himself to be that Prophet whom God would raise like Moses mighty in word and deed Deut. 18.15 We are hence bound to beleeve him and his holy Doctrine so surely confirmed by so many and mighty Miracles that so wee may avoid that fearful hardning so long before Prophecied to befall the Jews Who though he had done many Miracles before them Read John 11.37 38. yet beleeved not they on him and attain also the blessednesse of those that beleeve without desiring to see any more new Miracles For is not the doctrin wee professe sufficiently confirmed already The ancient doctrin of the Church needeth no new Miracles to confirm it an Indenture once sealed is confirmed for ever and needeth no new seals to be set to it Men doe not ever water their plants but only till they be rooted even so the Lord out of his wisdome would water with Miracles the tender plant of his Church till it was rooted in the world and brought on to some strength and stature but afterward thought all such labour neednesse If men will broach and bring into the Church new doctrins and devises of their own as the Romish Church doth at this day it is no marvail it they seek after new Miracles to obtrude them withall but if men will professe the ancient doctrin of the Prophets Apostles and Christ himself to gape after new Miracles were too lightly to esteem of the old and account of these powerful works of Christ himself and his servants no better than some nine days wonders Christians must imitate Christ in doing good 3 As Christ went about doing good so must wee also imitate his worthy example taking yea seeking occasions to doe good unto all and that readily seasonably cheerfully to our power yea and if need be beyond it 2 Cor. 8.3 And to spur us hereunto besides this example of Jesus Christ wee have 1 The Commandement of God charging us not to forget to doe good and distribute Heb. 13. with which sacrifices he professeth himself to bee well pleased whose children if we would be we must let the streams of our fountain also run to the refreshing and releeving of others as hee being the fountain of all good causeth his Sun to shine and rain to fall upon the good and the bad Secondly we are every way fitted to doe good having 1 Callings wherein to abide to the good of others as well as our selves 2 Our Lives further leased and lengthned unto us that in them we should glorifie God in making our election sure and furthering our own reckoning by doing good unto others 3 A most precious time of liberty peace plenty and prosperity that unlesse we bind our own hands we cannot but be doing good unto all especially the houshold of faith Gal. 6. 4 Fit objects of doing good are never wanting unto us For 1 The poor we have always with us the ministers of Jesus Christ and other his members that stand in need of us and many of Gods dear ones are oppressed and distressed that we might never be unmindful of the afflictions of Joseph 2 We have with us store of good men who have most right to our goodnesse the Sons of God the members of Christ the Temples of the Holy Ghost to whom whatsoever we doe the Lord doth accept and account of it as done to himself 3 We have in the worst of all Gods Image which is lovely our own nature which should draw us to respect if not the man yet man-hood or humanity in him and for ought that we know to the contrary by the rule of charity we must hope that they may participate in the death of Christ as well as our selves Lastly we are provoked to doe good by that blessed reward which God of his mercy hath promised to all those good and faithful servants who when their Master shall come shall be found well doing And healed all that were oppressed of the Devil for God was with him THe Apostle proceedeth to prove that Christ was anointed with the Holy Ghost and with power because he was able to rescue out of the hands of the Devil such as he oppressed and played the tyrant over
of God which is the curse of the Law and not onely Ceremonially and typically as they were This the Apostle Paul teacheth Gal. 3.13 that Christ was not onely dead but made a curse for us his reason is because hee dyed on a tree and therefore are wee admonished Phil. 2.8 to consider not only that Christ was obedient unto the death but to the death of the Cross for any other death had not so much concerned us Fourthly This death which so much concerned all the Church of the Jews and Gentiles must not bee obscure and therefore the Lord would not have Christ to dye in a tumult or in secret but most conspicuously and apparently at Jerusalem the great City of the Jews but tributary to the Romans as it were upon the Theatre of the World at a solemn feast when all the Males out of all quarters must appear before the Lord upon a Cross high erected that all might see him and on the Cross himself proclaimed King of the Jewes in three several Langages the Latine Greek and Hebrew that all sorts of men might come to the knowledge of it and further because in his death standeth our life hee must bee thus lifted up that all men might see him certainly dead and that he dyed not in shew and appearance only but in deed and in truth really and perfectly for which cause also our Apostle doubleth his affirmation they slew him and hanged him on a tree which most necessary ground of Faith and Religion Satan hath mightily by many Hereticks sought to overthrow the Turks at this day are held off from the faith in this Messiah by that Diabolical suggestion that not Christ himself but Simon the Cyrenian was miraculously crucified in his stead And therefore because the assurance of the death it self assureth us more fully of all the fruits and benefits of it the Scripture is careful so pregnantly to confirm it as that it cannot be denied not only that he was in the sight of a number of thousands dead on the Crosse but by his three days burial by the peircing of his side out of which came water and bloud by which was manifest that the very Call of his heart was peirced by the confession of his very enemies who would beleeve nothing but their own sences and lastly by the fact of the Souldiers who whereas they hastened the death of the Theeves by breaking their leggs they broke not his because the text saith they saw that he was dead already The fourth point is the use of Christs Crucifying First in Christ on the Crosse take a full view of the cursednesse and execration of sin and consequently of thine own wretchednesse both in regard of thy wicked nature and cursed practices every sin being so loathsome and odious in the eyes of God as the least could never be put away but by such an ignominious death of the Son of God himself If thou lookest at sin in thy self or in thy sufferings yea or in the sufferings of the damned in Hell it will seem but a slight thing but behold God comming down from Heaven and him that thought it no robbery to bee equal to his Father in glory taking flesh in that flesh abasing himself to the death of the Crosse on that Crosse sustaining the whole wrath of his Father and so becoming accursed for it and thou shalt see it in the native face of it And indeed this one consideration setteth a more ugly face upon sin than the Law possibly can for that sheweth our sins to bee a knife to stab our selves withall The most ugly visage of sin that can be but this to be the very spear that went to Christs heart which is the most odious apprehension in the world all the sin that ever was committed on the earth could not bring a man so low suppose one man had committed them all as the least sin of the elect brought the Son of God seeing he that falleth lowest falleth but from one degree in earth to another but Christ falleth from the glory of Heaven into the very sorrows of Hell whosoever thou art then that makest light account of sin and pleadest that God is merciful look a little in this glasse wherein behold Gods Justice and sins desert in the Fathers just indignation against his wel-beloved Son whom nothing but the cursed death of his only Son in whom he professed himself well pleased could appease Secondly seeing all the knowledge of Christ profitable to salvation is of Christ crucified let us desire to know nothing in comparison but Christ and him crucified 1 Cor. 2.2 seeing such a great Apostle as Paul was desired to know nothing else Now to come to the distinct knowledge of it we must consider these three points 1 The vertue and power of this death in it self 2 The application of it unto our selves 3 The fruits which must appear in us by such application For the first Look upon this death of the Son of God not as of another dead man neither think or speak of it as of the death of another ordinary felon executed but as of a death which slew all the sins of all the beleevers in the world and as a destroyer of all destroyers a death wherein was more power than in all the lives of all Angels and Men that ever were or shall bee More power in Christs death than in the lives of all men and Angels yea such a death as hath life in it quickning all the deaths of all that have benefit by it Here we have a mighty Sampson bearing away the gates of his enemies by death killing death by suffering his Fathers wrath overcoming it by entring into the Grave opening it for all beleevers by his Bloud shedding upon the Crosse reconciling all things Col. 1.20 never was there such an active suffering of any man which tormented and crucified the Devils themselves when the Devils instruments were tormenting and crucifying him it is peerlesse and unmatchable no Martyr ever thus suffered though Popish doctrin would match as Corrivals some of their Saints sufferings with it the most faithful Martyrs suffered but dissolution of soul and body but Christ besides suffered the whole Wrath of God due to mans sin they suffered in way of Christian duty and service but he to make a sacrifice of expiation of sin they having their sins removed and taken off from them but he bare all theirs and all beleevers sins in his body upon the tree 1 Pet. 2.24 Howsoever therefore Humane wisdom stumbleth at this death of Christ yet must we by the eye of faith labour to espy glory in ignominy esteem of the Crosse as an honourable Chariot and rejoyce in a triumph made as the Jews scoff by an hanged man thus shall we see the foolishness of God wiser than man and the weakness of God stronger than man thus also shall we imitate the holy men of God who looking back to the Cross of Christ could
a dark place and a sure ground whereon wee may build the truth and certainty of our Faith and religion that wee need not bee carried about with every winde of corrupt Doctrin These witnesses being sensible faithful and so extraordinarily assisted neither would not could deceive us yea and writing in such a time and the same age in which the things were done if they had written any false or corrupted thing all that lived at that time could easily have confuted them And therefore as Moses when hee had written the Book of the Law Exod. 24.7 called all the people to bee a witness of the truth of it even so the Apostles writing the books of the Gospel and finishing them appealed to the men of that age for the truth of them as John the last of them all in the last end of his book saith wee know that is all this age knoweth that this witnesse is true 2 This Doctrin giveth us direction how to carry our selves to the present Ministry for some man may say as the Devil once did Paul I know and Cephas I know but who are you Surely even wee are sent by Christ as well as the Apostles Eph. 4.11 Hee gave some to bee Apostles some Prophets some Pastors some Teachers Where it is evident that he that giveth the Apostle giveth the Pastor also Wee being then called by Christ to teach this doctrin in the Church Ordinary Ministers must be received as Apostles while they teach things hea●d seen by the Apostles whatsoever our own unworthiness bee yet to contemn us shall be the contempt of Christ himself yet wee being men subject to error as they were not must hold us to our rule which is Apostolical Doctrin for as the Apostles have faithfully performed their parts so our part and duty is faithfully to depend upon them and then not to depend upon or depart from us is to depart from Christ and his Ordinance Wee that are Teachers reserve to every Christian his priviledge which is not to receive every thing from us hand over head nor any thing at all on our bare words but to try our spirits to search the Scriptures as the B●reans They have ●r ought to have their Bibles we wish them to look and enquire there whether our Doctrin be true or no and by this note shall they know it what it is according as wee shall bee able to shew the Apostles the ear or eye-witnesses of it for else are they not bound to beleeve it Let any man come with a conje●tural or probable truth or any traditionary doctrin and cannot shew which of the Apostles heard or saw it in Christ no man is bound to beleeve it as necessary to his salvation But if any come and can back his Doctrin thus from the Apostles it is all one as if the Apostles did utter it Let every Minister if hee would bee beleeved tread in the steps of the holy Apostles and see hee bee able to clear that all he speaketh bee spoken in their Language bee seen with their eyes or heard with their eares which hee is sure so to bee if it bee contained in their writings Hereof the Evangelist John giveth a notable president The Word saith hee was made flesh Joh. 1.14 here was a great mystery and a main principle of Salvation but how knoweth hee it is hee sure of it yea that he is and therefore addeth we saw the glory of it Again it were to bee wished that hearers would take up their duty which is in reverent manner to come to their teachers in things doubtfully delivered and ask the question I beseech you tell me which of the Apostles heard or saw this from Christ which you have taught us that I may beleeve it for they delivered nothing else To which rule would Ministers and people frame themselves it would bring the Scriptures into request which for most part are least set by in many Sermons it would make men more careful of their Doctrin and thrust out an infinite deal of trash and foolish conceits of froathy brains which make it a chief part of their reputation to see with any eies save the Apostles and speak with any tongues save theirs by which means it commeth to pass that Gods own voice is least heard in Gods house in Gods business and among Gods people 3 Hence note also The Lord Jesus chose mean and weak men for his witnesses Why. What mean and weak men did the Lord choose to bee his witnesses to all the world not great Rabbies not Rich not Worldly-wise who are not so expedite and ready neither to preach nor receive the Gospel but poor simple and mean men For these reasons 1 That the conversion of men might not bee ascribed to eloquence arts power or wisdome of the world but this treasure is put in earthen vessels that all the power and glory of the work may redound to God who commonly in weak and foolish things putteth forth his admirable strength and wisdome 2 That there may bee held a difference between Civil and Ecclesiastical power the one is outwardly glorious and stately the other mean and lowly the Ministry which ever brought most men to God was least pompous and which came the nearest to the simplicity of Christ and his Apostles and on which the Sun of the World for most part as little shineth as it did on Christ himself and his Apostles 3 It made more for the glory of Christ and his Apostles of Christ in that hee chooseth illiterate and unlearned persons and presently maketh them wise learned and intelligent able by the wisdome of God to put t● silence the most Learned and exercised Adversaries they can meet withall Earthly Kings and Princes not being able to give such gifts are forced to advance such as are wise and experienced already and set over their business the wisest most learned and most noble that they can finde Christ need choose none such but honoureth himself in choosing foolish and ignoble things to make them wise and noble and every way fitted to his work Again herein hee honoureth also his instruments who being in themselves mean and contemptible yet upon their calling received such a portion of the Spirit as that they drove the wisest and most learned into admiration and daunted the greatest and most powerful when they saw that no power or glory of this world could draw or hinder them from the Execution of that Office to which they were deputed Hence was it that the wise and mighty Act. 4. seeing the freedome and wisdome of Peter and John in speaking knowing them to bee unlearned men they wondred and knew they had been with Jesus and seeing the man standing with them which had been healed they had nothing to say against them How great glory won Christ hereby to himself and his servants 4 By this choise of his hee putteth a plain difference between his Kingdome and the Kingdome of Antichrist His
in prison and at length they see there was no heavenly husbandry in all this Thirdly In confessing our sin and pleading guilty Prov. 20.13 this is the covenant that whereas he that hideth his sin shall not prosper he that confesseth shall finde mercy Psal 32.4 I said I will confesse mine iniquity and thou forgavest me the punishment of my sin Job 31.33 It is too neer joyned to our natures to hide our sin with Adam and conceal it in our bosome or else to sum up all in a word without special grief for any special sin and herein they think they have peace which is but unfeelingnesse But those that belong to God he bringeth them to found humiliation he maketh them sick in smiting them and setteth their sins in order before them like a bill of parcels to the breaking of their hearts and the utter acknowledgement of themselves to be miserable bankcrupts For this purpose he maketh their own Consciences also to be judges of their actions pronouncing sentence of guiltinesse and death against themselves As David Against thee against thee have I sinned and again I am the man and again I have done very foolishly but these s●eep what have they d●ne The penitent Thief thus judgeth himself we are righteously here To conclude this point he was never truly humbled nor ●ver aright judged himself that is more ashamed to confesse than to commit sin Fourthly After pleading guilty in pleading for pardon as for life and death and as the poor Malefactor condemned to dye c●ys for mercy and all his hope and longing is for a pardon even so this is noted to bee the practi●e of the Church Hos 14.2 3. Oh Israel return unto the Lord thy God for thou hast fallen by thine iniquity Take unto you words and turn to the Lord and say unto him Take away all iniquity and receive us graciously And which of the Saints have not placed all their happinesse in the pardon of sin or have not preferred the shining of Gods countenan●e upon them above all the outward happinesse that the earth affordeth Now in the seeking and suing for pardon because God will not hear him that regardeth wickednesse in his heart for wicked Esau shall finde no repentance nor favour with tears therefore thou must forth-with cease to doe evil as being ashamed of it and learn to doe well lay Laws upon thy self be more severe against thy self in the things wherein thou hast displeased thy God watch diligently over those corruptions which have most foyled thee this is the way both to make and preserve thy peace Bring thy self then with fear and trembling before Gods righteous Judgement accuse thy self and bewayl thy sins bee not ashamed to confesse but to commit them again be so farre from purposing any wickednesse in thy heart as rather thou bee strongly armed with full purp●se against it And thus remembring thy sins God will forget them thus wi●●ing them deep in thine own books God will blot them out of his Thus if thou hide them not but cast them out of thy heart and life he will hide them for ever and cast them utterly out of his sight so that if thou canst thus judge thy self afore-hand thou shalt never be judged of the Lord. Vers 43. To him give all the Prophets witnesse that through his name all that beleeve in him shall receive remission of sins THe Apostle Peter although he hath sufficiently proved whatsoever he hath form●rly delivered concerning the Doctrin and Miracles Life and Death Resurrection and Ascension and the coming of Christ again unto Judgement yet as though no proof could be too much or as if he could not satisfie himself in enforcing this holy doctrin and binding it upon the consciences of his Hearers he shutteth up his Sermon in this verse with another assured testim●ny above all exception drawn from all the Prophets who all consent and conspire with the Apostles in all their doctrin concerning him the sum and main end of all which is that through beleeving in his name the elect should receive remission of sins which is the sum and effect of this verse Where first may be asked Why the Apostle inferreth so many testimonies concerning Christ Reasons why doth the Apostle induce so many testimonies one in the ne●k of another In the answer whereof we shall see that none of them are needlesse or superfluous For 1 All the points of Christian religion are above and against corrupt nature as appeareth in the Heathen wh● still esteemed the preaching of Christ foolishnesse 2 Corin. 2.23 and in the Athenians who when they heard Paul preaching of the Judgement Day and Christs Resurrection from the dead they mocked him Acts 17.32 The hardened Jews at this day on whom the Wrath of God is 〈◊〉 me to the uttermost doe the like and well it were for many if professed Christians in the midst of such a light made more reckoning of our painful preaching of Christ who teach the same points than some of the former which were they so slight matters as most account them what need they be so enforced We are therefore hence fitly enformed both to make more high account of such great Mysteries which the Spirit of God is so careful t● commend unto us as also to bewayl the infidelity of our hearts that need so much working upon them to entertain such necessary truths as these be 2 Because although he was an Apostle yet would he shew his care that in all his Sermon he taught nothing of his own which the Prophets had not formerly taught Which teacheth all Ministers much more to beware lest in any of their Sermons they broach such doctrin or bring in such stuff of which they cannot prove the Prophets and Apostles to bee Patrons and Publishers For this was the commandement of the Apostles that wee teach no other doctrin 1 Tim. 1.3 neither contrary nor diverse from it no private opinions which are the causes of Schisms and Heresies nor vain conceits or jangling which breed questions but no godly edifying 3 It was not only their precept but practise also as Act. 26.22 Paul spake no other things than those which the Prophets and Moses did say should come to wit that Christ should suffer and that he should bee the first that should rise from the dead Nay the Lord of the holy Apostles Jesus Christ himself preached no other Doctrin of whom it is said Luk. 24.27 that be began at Moses and all the Prophets and interpreted unto them in all the Scriptures the things which were written of him shall the Son of God who might have made every word hee spake Scripture tye himself to the Scriptures and make them the ground of all his Sermons and shall not weak men who cannot without error depart an hair breadth from them be careful to contain all their doctrin within the limits of them especially seeing nothing else bindeth the conscience of the hearer 3 The Apostle knew
marvail if the members look thus black when the Sun looketh upon them seeing their Head Christ himself was rejected because they saw and judged him to bee plagued and smitten of God Isa 53.4 But wee must look beyond all these as the Lord himself doth who in his judgement goeth beyond the out-side and pronounceth sentence according to the grace which himself worketh within Let us imitate our Lord Jesus who notwithstanding all the infirmities yea and deformities of his Church pronounceth of her that shee is all fair and no spot is in her not because there are none but because all are covered and none are reckoned and imputed unto her yea let us remember that the pure and holy Spirit of God is contented notwithstanding much blackness to take up his lodging in those hearts where hee findeth reigning sin dispossessed Now how far are they from the mind and judgement of this blessed Father Son and Spirit who have nimble eyes to spy out every infirmity of Gods Children to blaze them nay rather than they will not accuse and slander them can of themselves coin raise up and impute unto them that whereof they are most innocent Assuredly these are of neer kindred to the Devil who is the accuser of the brethren The glory of God in his children turned into shame And surely were Christ on earth again even this most innocent Lamb of God should not want accusers wherein are so many of Cains constitution who hate their brethren because their works are good and so many Sons of men who seek to turn the glory of God in his Children into shame Alas religion is at a low ebbe already and not so reckoned of as it should bee by the forwardest and yet so malitious is the Devil in his instruments as unless this smoaking flax also bee quenched wee can see nor hear of any hope or treaty of peace the beauty of Gods people goeth disgraced under titles of niceness preciseness purity holy brotherhood and the like To go ordinarily to Sermons is to bee a Sermon-munger not to swear is the next way for a man not to bee trusted and except a man bee as black and deformed as either the Devil is or can make him by Drinking Swearing Gaming Sabbath-breaking and casting off all care of Civil Honesty as well as godliness hee may sit alone well enough hee hath a great many Neighbours that care but a little for his company What can make it more evidently appear that numbers there are in this age who never knew and without Gods infinite mercy in their timely conversion are never like to know what the blessednesse of remission of sin meaneth neither in others nor yet in themselves Vse 2. Let no man bee discouraged in the pure waies of God but walk on without weariness or faintness A strong motive to hold on in well-doing seeing that whatsoever the blinde world may deem to the contrary thou who art a beleever in the name of Christ hast blessedness between thy hands for thy sins are remitted thou must go in peace And this happinesse by the grace wherein thou standest is surer than that of nature which Adam had in his innocency that was lost because it was in his own keeping this is seated in the unchangeable favour of God by whose mighty power thou shalt bee preserved to the full fruition of it Get faith in thy heart and thou shalt dea●ly behold thy happiness if all the World should set it self to make thee miserable Get faith into thy soul and thou shalt think him only happy whom God so esteemeth although it be the misery of the world to place happiness only in misery Get assurance of faith to clasp the sure promise and word of God and thou shalt possess in misery felicity in sorrow joy in trouble peace in nothing all things and in death it self life eternal An Alphabetical Table to lead the Reader more easily unto the things contained in this Exposition A. A Basement of Christ is the Christians advancement 335 A bundle of Popish blasphemies 405 Account must bee given to God of all things done by us and received of us 381 Administration of Judgement laid upon the Son for sundry reasons 375 Afflictions though lingring no sign of Gods hatred 356 Agreement of the life of the Saints upon earth with the life of the Saints in Heaven 350 All diligence must be given to make our pardon of sin sure unto our selves 414 Anointing of three sorts of persons what it signified 308 Antiquity of the Gospel and of our religion 298 Apostles peculiar witnesses of Christ and why 362 A proof by induction that all the Prophets bear witnesse unto Christ 388 Attendants and companions of faith four 396 A strong motive to hold on in wel-doing 417 B BAptisme often put for doctrin 303 Beleevers are fellow servants under one Lord. 302 Beleevers may know they have faith by four marks 395 Beleevers may and must know the pardon of their own sins 409 Benefits flowing from remission of sin four 407 Better to goe to Heaven alone than to Hell with company 411 C. CAre of Christians must bee to suffer as Christians 331 Care must be had of our receits and expences because we must bee countable for them 383 Chief duty of every Christian whilst hee is in this world 406 Children of God delayed often but not denied in their suits 355 Christ acknowledged our Lord by four practises 301 Christ already come proved 307 Christ his life not monastical 315 Christ preached to the Israelites two ways 297 Christ first preached to the children of Israel for three reasons ibid. Christ Lord of all two ways 299 Christ both a Lord and a Servant how 300 Christ is not a Jesus but to whom he is a Lord. ibid. Christ no sooner received gifts and calling but did good with them for our example 311 Christ seasonably preached after Johns Baptisme that is Johns doctrin of repentance 305 Christ proved the only Messiah because he was Jesus of Nazareth 306 Christ his Deity proved by his glorious resurrection 339 Christ by dying offereth and by rising applyeth his one only sacrifice 341 Christ went about doing good two way 311 Christ sent of his Father and came 〈◊〉 before he was sent 3●7 Christ his righteousnesse notably witnessed 328 Christ his two natures lively set out ibid. Christ reputed an arch-traytor in his life and death 332 Christ submitted to the l●west estate of death reas five 337 Christ the Lamb slain from the beginning how 341 Christ hath powerfully trodden Satan under his feet and under our feet how 323 Christ rose early in the morning and what we learn thence 354 Christ in respect of himself needeth not any witnesses and yet hee useth them 362 Christ must bee the matter of all our preaching 373 Christians must partake of Christs annointing 309 Christians must become Kings Priests and Prophets 310 Christians must imitate Christ in doing good 316 Chosen witnesses of
indure not their lusts to be pricked in the ministery and much less crucified 336 Minister must bee careful to remove what may hinder his Doctrin 284 Ministers must expect Gods calling as Christ did 307 Ministers must urge themselves to diligent preaching why 371 Miracles of Christ had a threefold use 313 Motion of sin in the regenerate is in letting the life of it go 344 Motives to the practise of Righteousnesse 292. N NEcessity of preaching evinced by sundry reasons 369 Necessity of remission of sins in three points ibid. Neither the person nor any of the offices of Christ could suffer him long to abide under the power of death 340 New miracles not needful to confirm old doctrin 316 No less in to sin by others as by our selues 329. No need of a dumb or blind ministery 371 No man can avoid the last ●udgement unless his power be above Christs 377 No man can bee too precise seeing the judgement shall bee so precise and strict 383 None capable of Christs office because none is so annointed as he 309 No peace by Moses 295 O OBjections against preaching answered 374 Objections against special faith answered 409 One way only to salvation 299 Opening the mouth what it meaneth 282 Open the eyes to see the happinesse of the Saints 416 Offences are of sundry sorts 402 Ordina●y Ministers must be beleeved as Apostles while they teach things heard and seen by the Apostles 363 Ordinary Pastors now called by Christ though hee bee now in heaven 368 Outward things cannot bring into Gods acceptance 287 P PAttern of special grace in Peter 284 Peace wha by it usually meant 294 Peace by Christ with God man creatures how ibid. Peace wanting how to obtain it 296 Peace of conscience floweth from remission of sin 407 Person what it meaneth 284 Phrase of quick and dead what is meaneth 377 Plain preaching of Christ wherein it standeth 373 Popery a novelty 298 Popery turneth the doctrin of Christ crucified into crucifixes 336 Popish doctrin tea●heth not true faith to this day 392 Popish doctrin assenteth not to the article of free remission of sins 413 Preaching the ordinance of Christ 367 Preaching of Christ wherein it standeth 373 Priviledge of a Godly man what it is 292 Promises of God all accomplished in due season 355 Prophetical office of Christ. 312 Publike persons must give accounts for themselves and others in the judgement day 381 Q QUalities of ●hrists raised body are not divine properties they beautify but not deify it 343 R REasons against seeking to witches 325 Reasons why it was necessary Christ should rise again 340 Reasons why God delayeth to answer his children 356 Reasons why Christ must so manifest his resurrection 358 Reasons why the Apostles were specially commanded to teach the doctrin of the last judgement 374 Reasons to grow up in the strength of faith 401 Religion what and wherein it standeth 288 Remembrance of judgement to come a notable means to further godliness 374 Remission of sins what 402 Remission of sins how received 413 Resurrection of Christ not only removeth evils but procureth all our good as in five instances 346 Right and pos●ession of eternal life issueth from remission of sins 407 Righteousnesse of the Judge and last judgement described 379 S SAlvation assured beleevers from Christs resurrection 347 Saints in Heaven wholly called from three things and the Saints in earth in part from the same 350 Saints in heaven enjoy five things which the Saints in earth do also in part 351 Satans tyranny over the souls of men more fearful than that hee exerciseth over their bodies 319 Scriptures ascribe that often to the instruments which belongeth to God the principal efficient why 400 Sermons which plainest teach Christ are the best 373 Sin set out in the most ugly visage of it 333 Sins carries never so secretly shall come into a clear light 38● Sins compared to debts 403 Sor●ery of sundry kinds condemned 324 Spiritual possession very common proved at large by sundry instances 321 Strictnesse of the last judgement laid open 380 Sure grounds that God loveth a man 411 T TEmptations of sundry sorts foiled by holding the Article of remission of sins 408 Tender affection to forgive our brethren a good sign that God hath forgiven us 413 The tyranny of Satan over those whom hee bodily possesseth discovered five waies 318 The touchstone of tryal of our words and deeds is the word of God 380 Three actions of faith helping forward the free confession of it 398 Thoughts must be judged of as well as our works 382 To beleeve in the name of Christ what 406 Two things especially hinder the care of the la t judgement 384 Truth of faith as much to bee laboured for as salvation it self 400 V. VErtue of Christs death applyed two waies 334 Unbeleevers damned already how and why 400 Unregenerate men have all the mad properties of mad or possessed persons proved 320 Use of Christs crucifying at large 333 W WHy God suffereth the devil to possesse the bodies of men in all ages four reas 317 Why God suffereth the Devil so to tyrannize abuse and torture them whom he possesseth reas four 319 Why God permitteth a power of curing to them of whom we may not seek cure 326 Why the wicked prevail against Christ who had prevailed against the Devils themselves 328 Why Christ was rather to bee hanged on a tree than to dye by any other kinde of death reas four 331 Why Christ must dye in Jerusalem the theatre of the world 332 Why Christ would still vail his glory after his resurrection 343 Why Christ rose no sooner nor would defer his ri●ing again no longer than the third day 353 Why Christ would not shew himself to all the people after that he rose aga●n 362 Why Christ chose such mean men for his witnesses 363 Why the Apostle inferreth so many testimonies together concerning Christ 387 Whosoever would have his works words abide the tryal of the last day must try them before hand 380 Wicked men shall bee judged by him against whom all their villanies have been committed 376 Wicked men already judged five waies 377 Wisdome of God in every thing to be subscribed unto 360 Witches and all seekers to them condemned 325 Witnesses of Christs resurrection of sundry sorts 360 Witnesse of the Apostles to be beleeved as infallible 359 Word preached what use it hath both to the unconverted and converted 369 Word preached opposed by the Devil and all wicked ones and therefore is from God 370 Working righteousness what and wherein 190 The manner of it in four things 191 CIRCUMSPECT VVALKING DESCRIBING Several Rules As so many STEPS in the vvay of VVISDOM BY Thomas Taylor D. D. Preacher of Gods VVord at Aldermanbury London GALAT. 6 16. As many as walk according to this Rule Peace shall be upon them and Mercy and upon the Israel of God LONDON Printed for A. K. and R. I. and are to