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A13535 A commentarie vpon the Epistle of S. Paul written to Titus. Preached in Cambridge by Thomas Taylor, and now published for the further vse of the Church of God. With three short tables in the end for the easier finding of 1. doctrines, 2. obseruations, 3. questions contained in the same Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1612 (1612) STC 23825; ESTC S118201 835,950 784

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who thinke it Christianitie enough to be harmelesse ciuill or neighbourly men or if they can say with the Pharisie I am not thus and thus an oppresser an vsu●er nor as such and such precise and nice fellowes who are as much hated of them as euer were the Publicans of the Pharisies I pay my Church duties and giue euerie man his owne and this is the religion of the common Protestant But suppose thou wert thus guiltles as thou saist yet art thou not yet halfe a Christian for the Apostle Peter writing to beleeuers enioyneth them not onely to flie the corruptions that are in the world through lust but moreouer to ioyne vertue with faith and with vertue knowledge and with knowledge temperance and patience and godlines and brotherly kindnesse and loue and addeth two reasons 1. If these things be in you and abound c. teaching that without these positiue vertues all the knowledge of Iesus Christ and consequently his profession is idle and vnfruitfull 2. If any haue them not he is blind and cannot see a farre off and hath forgotten that he was purged that is such a one seeth but a little in heauenly things and little regardeth that couering and curing of sinne goe together nor that remission and purging of sinne goe with sanctification of life and studie of well doing and consequently can be no Christian which agreeth with Christs owne posession that if any abide in him he cannot choose but bring forth much fruit Againe it shall not be enquired in the last iudgement what thou art not nor iudgement passe according to that thou hast not but what art thou what hast thou hast thou receiued the spirit of Iesus Christ if thou hast not the spirit of Christ thou art none of his hast thou reciued the fruits of that spirit such as are loue ioy peace long-suffering gentlenes goodnesse faith meekenes temperance If any haue the spirit of Christ it is life in him vnto righteousnesse these shall shewe the faith of thy heart and that thou art a sound Christian and not in shewe as the most content themselues to be Now to come neerer the vertue it selfe the word signifieth one friendly to strangers and readie to lodge and entertaine them a dutie much commended in the Scriptures vnto all Christians as a sweete fruit of liberalitie but vnto the Minister especially as a father and president vnto the flocke In the precept consider foure points 1. The occasion of it 2. whether it bindeth euerie Minister and how farre 3. the reasons enforcing it 4. the vse First the ground of it was the distressed estate and condition of the Church which by reason of many tyrants and persecutors was driuen into many straights partly perceiued in present and partly foreseene by the propheticall spirit of the Apostle not onely in the tenne persecutions then imminent but also in the seuerall afflictions in the world in which they were to finde tribulation euen to the ende of it For as it is in this aspectible world which is subiect to so many changes and mutations because it standeth in the vicissitudes of yeares moneths daies nights so much more is it in the spirituall world of the Church which in the earth is acquainted with her winter as well as summer her nights as well as dayes somtimes the sunne of righteousnesse most comfortably shining and imparting his heate and light by his neere approach vnto her yea and sometimes there be two sunnes in this firmament for together with the sunne of the Church the sunne of the world affoardeth warme and comfortable dayes for the full beautie libertie and glorie of the Church But sometimes againe this sunne departeth in dispeasure and carrieth the sunne of the world with him then is a blacke winter of the Church nothing but stormes and tempests persecutions and trialls one in the necke of another and scarse one faire gleame betweene Now in such times the poore Church is driuen to trauell for rest and the innocent doue of Christ cannot finde in her owne land any rest for the sole of her foote well may she flie abroad to seeke her securitie In all which times euerie Christian is bound by this and such like precepts to giue her harbour and safe conduct till the dash and storme be ouer Besides suppose the Church in generall at her best estate yet the particular members of the Church are for most part poore and needie and euen then subiect to many troubles for keeping the faith and good consciences by meanes whereof they are often driuen from house and home and sometime are in banishment and exile sometime in prison and bonds all whom the Lord commendeth to the charitable and Christian deuotion of Christian men and bindeth them to the cheerefull receiuing and releeuing of them in such necessitie let them be strangers yet if they be of the houshold of faith they haue right to harbour and releefe and in the practise of this dutie the Apostle requireth that the Minister be the foreman Secondly It will be inquired whether euerie minister must be harborous and hospitable and if he must what shall become of them whose liuings are scarce able to harbour themselues and much more of the swarmes of our tenne-pound men and verie many scarse halfe that to maintaine their familie it seemeth that euerie Minister ought to be a rich man Ans. It is not for me to prescribe any thing in the Church constitutions concerning Impropriations and Nonresidencie the former whereof were they restored to the Church and the latter remooued out of the Church no doubt there were but that sufficient ministers might be sufficiently maintained furnished to hospitalitie through the land But this I say that the poorest Minister may not exempt himselfe from this dutie neither is altogether disabled from it a poore man may be mercifull and comfortable to the distressed some way or other as if with Peter and Iohn he haue not money nor gold nor meate to giue yet such as he hath he can giue he can giue counsell prayers and affoard his best affections such cups of cold water shall not be vnaccepted nor vnrewarded of him whose propertie is to accpet a man according to that he hath and not according to that he hath not where he seeth a readie minde Thus must that place 1. Tim. 5.10 be vnderstood such widowes as were to be receiued into the seruice of the Church were to be chosen of such as had beene hospitable and harberous Now in all likelihood many of them if not the most were verie poore and had no great matters to be liberall of therfore the Apostle seemeth in the next words to declare wherein this hospitalitie might be shewed euen by such as had knowne want namely if they had performed bodily labour vnto them washed the Saints feete bestowed their best affections and chearefull labour for their releefe and thus might these poore widowes
of the blessed seede in whom all nations should be blessed Elizabeths speach sheweth the accomplishment thereof Blessed art thou among all women because the fruite of thy wombe is blessed which words she vttered beeing filled with the holy Ghost ver 41. or in generall looke to the whole old covenant of the old Testament it is after a sort ceased and a new established in stead of it see Heb. 8.8 In that he saith a new testament he hath abrogated the olde 2. Diuine vse was to signifie the inward circumcision of the heart wrought by Christ and therefore called the circumcision of Christ whereby he inwardly cutteth off the corruption of the heart iustifieth vs regenerateth vs setteth vs into himselfe communicateth all his merits and benefits of them vnto vs to all which purposes he once appeared in the flesh and now in his owne bodily absence sendeth out his spirit This Paul calleth circumcision made without hands Now how iust is it that when the circumcision without hands appeareth that the other made with hands should cease 3. Divine vse was to represent baptisme which was to come in place of it in the new Testament Coloss. 2.12 yee are circumcised in that yee are buried with him through baptisme Now then when baptisme which is Christian circumcision is once instituted necessarily must Iewish circumcision which was a type of it cease From which three ends we may answer that maine allegation for the continuance of circumcision in that it is called an eternall and euerlasting couenant But 1. the couenant is said to be euerlasting not simply but conditionally namely so long as the couenant of it lasted for gnolam signifieth not alwaies a time without all ende but such a time as after a long durance may admit determination and expiration 2. In respect of the thing signified that is grace in Christ it may be said to haue euerlastingnes 3. In regard of the perpetuall supplie thereof by baptisme which is to last as long as time but not in the ceremonie or shaddowe of it as the false Apostles taught much lesse with confidence in it as a meritorious cause of iustification All this hath hitherto let vs see the error and sinne of these seducers Now the danger will be descried if we consider that of Paul If yee be circumcised Christ will profit you nothing for what were this other then to denie the true Messiah and his appearing in fulnesse of time what were it but to reare vp againe the partition wall which is destroied what else then to renounce the new couenant of grace and establish againe the olde one of workes which was to giue place to the new so as truely saith the Apostle by establishing circumcision a man becommeth a debter to the whole law which cannot but be ioyned with the fall of all religion faith hope baptisme and consequently the losse of saluation it selfe Doctr. The plainnes of the Apostle in deciphering the seducers so manifestly as they might be knowne teacheth that where there is a common danger towards the Church by meanes of false teachers we are not to spare their credit but to laie them open as not onely their errors but their persons may be knowne and taken heed of in which regard Paul nameth these deceiuers And hereof are sundrie other forcible reasons 1. Because the saluation of the Church and members of it is more to be respected then all Satans synagogue 2. It is necessarie that such should be knowne for feare of infection for false teachers may do more mischeife in poysoning the flocke then a number of priuate men can doe 3. The Apostles tooke great libertie herein as Paul nameth Alexander the Coppersmith and wisheth Timothie to beware of him and Iohn in his third Epistle nameth Diotrephes for his ambition and promiseth to decipher him more plainely and so paint him out in his colours as that the Church might abhorre him But yet this text affordeth vs some conditions of such plaine reproofe which necessarily must be obserued to the right performance of the same As 1. the error must be certainely knowne as this was 2. It must not be euery small error but such a one as 1. greatly impaireth Gods glorie 2. greatly impeacheth mans saluation as we haue prooued this to doe For otherwise if their errors were either lesse dangerous in themselues or more dangerous to themselues alone although herein they must be made voide of excuse their wickednesse shewed them and their prepared damnation preached vnto them if they did not hurt others with themselues the true Pastors might with lesse danger dissemble their errors and let them rot away in their filthinesse but in the foresaid cases there must be no bearing of them 3. In the reproofe Christian loue must bewray it selfe as the minde and intention of the Apostle here no doubt was not to gall or vex these deceiuers nor to wrecke himselfe vpon them but carrie in his eye the care of the Church and the profit of Gods people Euery good action must be done well in a good manner and in a good intent and here especially the manner must discouer the intent and that is when such a spirit of meekenesse putteth forth it selfe that euen the parties openly reprooued may see their good sought in hauing their sinne discountenanced and their persons rather discouered then disgraced Vse 1. This doctrine noteth the simplicitie of some who thinke it very vncharitable so to note open offenders in open reproofs as men may carrie them leuell to the offenders or impute it to want of discretion or to some malitious intent of the discrediting of men whereas besides that no such thing is intended the propertie of charitie is more carefull to preuent the common hurt of the Church then to saue the credit of some few men of corrupt mindes 2. Whereas some idle and foolish heads haue set themselues on work to paint out some worthier men then themselues in their colours and to picture out some sort of men better then themselues men of sounder iudgement conspiring in all the maine points of true religion and of innocent and inoffensiue liues with the black coales of enuious and slanderous invectiues striuing to besmeare them these haue no colour of warrant for such a rouing and distempered practise For 1. they haue no calling God neuer setteth any man on worke to defame his seruants 2. Are such errors as are imputed to them knowne and conuinced or litigious and controuerted or are they such as ouerturne religion and saluation seeing they consent in the whole truth and substance of religion 3. Doe not all eyes which looke on such pictures see the intentions of the picturers to haue beene gall bitternes vexation and wrecking of mens persons so farre from the spirit of meeknesse that the spirit of malice hath suggested them with words as sharpe as swords and as Iob speaketh of the crocodile flames of fire goe out
imputation of the Church of Rome against our doctrine who beare the world in hand that our religion is a destroyer of good workes and an enemie vnto all charitable actions whereas we call for them as fruits of the Gosspel as ornaments to our calling as pledges of our election as witnesses of our sound faith and graces and as the very way which God hath appointed to walke to heauen in Our religion permitteth not any to stand idle in the vinyard we say let him not eate that will not worke yea we teach a necessitie of good workes i● beleeuers as well as the Papists do howsoeuer not as causes of saluation and iustification yet as inseparable companions of liuely and sauing faith only let Christ hold his place and they shall not set them higher then wee and let them giue them no more then the Scriptures doe and we will giue them neuer a whit lesse Vse 2. Seeing by good workes we glorifie God edifie our brethren and doe our selues so much good let vs be prouoked to the diligent practise thereof Neither let any man thinke himselfe exempt from this doctrine be he neuer so poore for we are not of the Popish beleefe who thinke that only such great and glorious workes as building Churches Colledges high-waies or giuing goods and Lands to the Church or almes deeds and such like deserue the name of good workes but euery man hath a double calling namely the generall calling of a Christian and the speciall calling of life wherein God hath set him and there is neuer a dutie of either of these be it neuer so base or seruill if performed in saith and obedience but it is a good worke and pleasing vnto God But what shall we say of them who by open wicked life professe contempt of God and his word hatred of the light and the bringers of it that cast backe yea pull backe many others who might be brought on and so accustome themselues to graceles courses as they can no more change them then the Ethiopian his skin certainly these although they also will bragge of a good faith to God-ward yet is it no better then the deuils haue who shall as soone be saued by their faith as these by this if timely they repent not That they be not vnfruitfull These words containe in them the reason of the former precept wherin by an excellent metaphor or borrowed speach he prouoketh Christians to the practise of good workes The metaphor implieth that as the Church is Gods orchard or garden and his Ministers are his planters and waterers so the faithfull are the trees euen trees of righteousnesse the planting of the Lord and planted by the riuers of waters that they might bring forth their fruits in due season And teacheth that true Christianitie is not a barren but a fruitfull profession vnto which Christians are euery where called In Ezech. 47.12 we haue a notable resemblance of those manifold fruits which by the power of the Gospell should be by beleeuers produced in the Church of the new Testament The vision was of waters which runne from the Temple and from vnder the threshold of the sanctuarie And wheresoeuer these waters should runne they should cause admirable fruitfulnesse in so much as on both sides of the riuer shall grow all kind of fruitfull trees whose leafe shall not fade and their fruite shall not falle These waters are the Gospel which issue from vnder the threshold that is from Christ the doore typified by that bewtifull gate of the Temple from the Temple at Ierusalem these waters were with swift current to runne not only ouer Iudea but all the world in a short space hence was the Church mightily increased for though these waters runne into the dead sea wherein if we beleeue Histories abideth no liuing thing yet such a quickning power they carrie with them as euen there euery thing shall liue such as were dead in trespasses and sinnes are hereby quickned and become trees of righteousnesse greene and flourishing yea and constantly fruitfull in all godly conuersation And this is the same which our Sauiour noteth Ioh. 15.1 that his Father is the husbandman himselfe is the vine Christians are the branches of that vine who if they be sound his Father purgeth that they may bring forth more fruite teaching vs hereby that it is the Lords scope and ayme that Christians should be abundant in fruits beseeming their profession The Apostle Paul accordingly exhorteth the Philippians to be much in goodnesse to abound in loue in knowledge and in all iudgement yea to be filled with fruits of righteousnesse which are by Iesus Christ vnto the glorie and praise of God And the same Apostle calleth rich men to be rich in good workes Now this beeing so necessarie a dutie to which euery Christian is euery where called we will for the further clearing of it consider these three points 1. The conditions of this fruitfulnesse 2. the reasons to prouoke vnto it 3. the hindrances of it vnto which we will adde and annex some profitable vse First the conditions of this fruitfulnesse are these 1. Euery Christian must be fruitfull for euery fruitlesse branch is cut downe and made fewell for the fire not only Churchmen or the Clergie as we say nor only rich men nor men only of lesser imployment but euery man high and low rich or poore learned or vnlearned must testifie himselfe a Christian by answerable fruits this word euery branch admitteth of no exception but is as a bush which stoppeth euery gap 2. Euery Christian must bring forth good fruite Matth. 7.17 Euery good tree bringeth forth good fruite and euery tree which bringeth not forth good fruit shall be hewen downe and cast into the fire and therefore the fruits which are called for at our hands are called in respect of the efficient fruits of the spirit in respect of the instrument fruits of faith and in respect of their qualitie good fruits acceptable to God and profitable to men 3. This fruitfulnes must proceede from good causes for first the tree must be good for men gather not grapes of thistles 2. he must haue a good roote that is he must be set and abide in Christ Ioh. 15.4 abide in me the branch cannot beare fruit of it selfe vnlesse it abide in the vine 3. he must draw thence good sappe and iuyce through the fellowship and communion of Christ his death and resurrection without which we can doe nothing 4. he must haue the spirit of the Sonne to be a principall agent in the setting and ripening of these fruites for they must be fruites of the spirit 5. he must haue the loue of God within him constraning him which will be as the sunne helping on these fruits to their perfection 6. he must haue good endes in his eie namely Gods glorie and mans good Philip. 1.11 4. Euerie Christian must bring forth much fruit and not for clusters
it selfe and cannot lie it beeing a part of his word who can neither deceiue nor be deceiued 2. because the penmen of it were inspired by the holy Ghost and spake and writ as they were mooued by him who is called the spirit of truth Ioh. 14.17 3. because it is a doctrine of Christ and aymeth at him who is the the truth principally as well as the way of our saluation Whence it is that the Apostles often stile it by the word of truth as Eph. 1.13 After ye heard the word of truth euen the Gospel of your saluation and Coloss. 1.5 For the hopes sake whereof ye haue heard before by the word of truth which is the Gospel True it is that the Lawe is a true word without all error but yet neuer thus called For the morall law will not now affoard such a truth as by which a sinner can be iustified in the sight of God and the ceremoniall law although it doe acknowledge such a truth yet was it a farre off and in types and not in the truth but the Gospel onely is such a truth as whereby we are raised to saluation Vse 1. Ministers must rightly devide this word of truth as such who would be approoued of Christ both the author and subiect of it for the more notable the subiect is the more care must there be in handling it Which the Apostle Peter teacheth If any man speake let him speake as the word of God The word of truth would be truely dealt with purely preached wisely applyed and so faithfully dispensed as that both God and good men and a mans owne conscience may approoue his worke 2. This word so purely handled shall euery soule finde to be truth it selfe so as beleeuers shall not faile of the saluation published in it and vnbeleeuers shall as surely meete with condemnation seeing hereby they are condemned alreadie 3. Not to haue this truth seated in our hearts is a fearefull case for it argueth a man to be giuen vp to error and delusion 2. To doubt of any part of it is to giue a lie to all the rest 3. To seeke for saluation out of it or besides it as the blinded Papist doth is to cleaue to folly and falsehood 4. To despise this truth is to contemne great saluation for if to despise Moses law bringeth death without mercie how much more sorer punishment is he worthy of which treadeth vnder foot the Sonne of God 5. But to fight against this truth is most wofull for it is strongest and will preuaile neuer man lifted against the truth but he found it too heauie for him neuer man spurned against it but to the bruising of himselfe Secondly the knowledge of this truth is the ground of faith for so our Apostle would haue vs conceiue that the faith of the elect is raised vpon knowledge of the truth as the matter of it and in this sence we read that faith is called the faith of truth euen for this reason because it is begotten in the acknowledgement of the truth and Paul in asking that question How shall they beleeue except they heare plainly concludeth that no hearing of the truth no faith in it and how may he that runneth read in the Scriptures that to whomsoeuer faith is giuen they be such as are taught of God such as to whom the holy spirit is become a schoolemaster who openeth their vnderstandings that with much assurance they can see and acknowledge the truth for seeing faith is much more then an vncertaine opinion or wauering fancie it followeth that that knowledge which is the ground of it must be no shaking reede with euery winde but a certaine acknowledgement of the truth approouing of it and assenting vnto it Neither may we thinke that the spirit of truth traineth men in blinde and vngrounded conceits nor leaueth their hearts in vncertainties but that wheresoeuer he worketh such an eminent grace as faith is he maketh men able in some good measure to giue a reason of the hope that is in them And as little reason haue we to conceiue that the worke of the Ministerie is to build castles in the ayre or the castle of faith without a foundation but that Ministers are sent to make the misteries of saluation cleare in the euidence and demonstration of the spirit and so lay men on that foundation to become a spirituall house consisting of liuing stones fit for the honour of the Lord. And to ende the proofe notably doth the Apostle Paul prooue the effectuall faith of the Thessalonians from this ground of it for our Gospel was not vnto you in word only but in power and in the holy Ghost and in much assurance which place must be vnderstood so to be both in the teachers and the hearers as the context declareth Vse 1. If knowledge be the ground of faith then sleight is the faith of the most whatsoeuer men professe Numbers of most silly creatures swarme euery wheare who pretend and presume vpon as strong a faith to God ward as the best preacher of them all and yet liue no better then Atheists euen without God in the world without the knowledge of his waies without his feare in their hearts to loue God aboue all and their neighbours as themselues is but a breath with them to beleeue in Iesus Christ is so naturall as they neuer doubted of it all their liues to bring forth fruits of faith whose propertie is to worke by loue in the obedience of the Commandements of the first and second table this they do they hope as well as God wil giue them leaue or as others of their neighbours do whereas alas euen their speach bewraieth them to be destitute of vnderstanding and consequently vtterly voide of the faith of truth 2. If the ground of faith must be a certaine knowledge of heauenly truth then hereby 1. is ouerturned that fond distinction of the Papists which masketh there more then Egyptian blindnes ioyned with wilfulnes and obstinacie vnder their modest vaile of vnexpressed faith or the faith of lay-men whereby if they can professe themselues Catholikes liue and die in the beleefe of their falsely so termed Catholike Church although they know not what it beleeueth it is sufficient for their saluation And indeed be that professeth that religion which like the apples of Egypt will abide no touch had need leane vpon an implicit faith And so some of them pretending more learning thē is common among them beeing pressed by argument haue thought they haue learnedly enough answeared in saying that their Doctors can answer for them But who seeth not these Pharisies taking away the key of knowledge and incurring that we denounced against such as will neither enter themselues nor suffer others to enter into the kingdome of heauen for surely if little or no knoledge little or no faith of a mans owne were enough how vnwise was Paul so to trouble
hence see their error that conceiue of any Church in earth so well setled and ordered that it needeth no further reformation little know such the necessitie of the Church and the continuall bendings euen of her strongest towers See we not that almost euery yeare requires a new parliament for the ordering of the commonwealth that new disorders may be restrained or redressed by new lawes doe we see any man let his house but from yeare to yeare but he will surely bind the tenant to constant reparation as often as neede shall require and yet inconsiderate men can boldly and bluntly bolt out they meruaile what men meane that seeke for more and further reformation and they cannot tell what they would haue But alas are we so neare God as we cannot possibly be drawen nearer what meane then the common blasphemings drunkennes fornications riots Sabbath breakings what sinnes not committed almost without all feare what meaneth it that such dens and breaches are vnmade vp but that hogge and swine may enter into the presence chamber of the great King Let the strong man keepe these holds we shall see all the earth fit still inough But easily may we in euery particular member see the necessitie of daily strengthning the whole against such daily declining as the first and purest Primitiue Churches planted by the Apostles themselues could not free themselues from and much lesse any since The second branch of Titus his dutie is the placing of Elders in euery citie where that we may come to the meaning of the Apostle must be considered 3. things 1. who are meant by Elders 2. who must place these Elders 3. where they must be placed 1. The persons to be placed are called Elders that is Ministers Pastors Bishops for those who are here called Elders are called Bishops v. 7. true it is that sometimes the word is vsed generally for any that beare any Ecclesiasticall function in which sense the Apostles themselues are sometimes called Elders yet here I take it it must be vnderstood of those who labour in the word and doctrine for such are described thorough the Chapter The reason of the name is taken from their age not as though they alwaies were the oldest men for wisedome is not tyed to graie haires and Timothie was one of them and yet a young man but in regard of the wisedome experience and staiednesse required in such as are to be called to this office which ought to be such as ordinarily is not to be found in young yeares For how meete is it that the man of God should be furnished with grauitie and authoritie that euery way he may be worthie of double honour both in regard of his person as also of his gifts place and workes sake The Papists euery where translate this word Priests and make praesbiteri and sacerdotes all one Wherein although the word cannot be more vnfitly translated yet would we bee loath greatly to striue with them about names and titles as hauing matters of greater moment and difference moe then we wish were it not that the very name were a supporter of that horrible Idolatrie of theirs so infinitely derogatorie to the onely sacrifice of Christ. And therefore seeing the Ministers of the newe Testament are neuer so called in the newe Testament but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and neuer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it were good and safe to keepe our selues to the titles the Gospell hath giuen vs. And seeing that the Papists impiously not onely retaine the name in the proper signification but also an office of Priesthood flatly opposite vnto the Priestly office of Iesus Christ it is no lesse then our dutie to oppose our selues against both such an office and such a title Which in the proper signification is so peculiar as it is attributed to none vnder the Gospel but vnto Christ himselfe I denie not but in the cōmon acceptation of the word it is ascribed to all Christians both Ministers and people who are called an holy Priesthood and beleeuing are made Kings and Priests vnto God Neither is it denied but that some of the Greeke and Latine fathers called the ministers of the Gospel Priests but this was by improper and translated speach partly in that by their ministerie they doe daily offer and sacrifice men vnto God Rom. 15.16 and partly because they held the places in the Church which the Priests and Leuites did before the comming of Christ imitating herein the Prophets themselues as Isay 66.21 prophesiyng of the glorie of the newe Testament saith that the Lord would take of their sonnes for Priests and for Leuites not that they were to be such as were to offer typicall and figuratiue sacrifices of that onely sacrifice as the Iewish Priests nor yet commemoratiue as the Romish seeing all sacrifices but onely the spirituall oblations of Christians were ceased but he calleth them by that name then in vse noting them onely as the successors of the Priests and Leuites but not ascribing any proper worke of that office vnto them 2 The person placing these Elders is Titus who hath commission giuen him that as the chiefe gouernour and moderator of this action should establish teachers of sound doctrine in all the cities throughout the Iland and because the whole action was to be chiefely ordered by him it is wholly ascribed vnto him as the Consull is said to create Consuls when notwithstanding there was a court or assemblie of Consulls at the choise or appointment of them Which if it be not thus to be vnderstood I see not how Elders could be appointed by election as the manner of the Apostles was Act. 14.23 and Timothie must neither lay hands on any man rashly nor yet partake herein with other mens sinnes namely such as were vsed to be ioyned with him in this businesse 1. Tim. 4.14 3 The place where is in euery citie that is wheresoeuer there is a body of people for a fit congregation there must a Pastor or Elder be placed the phrase is of the same valour with that Act. 14.23 When they had ordained Elders by election in euery Church For euen in the Apostles dayes there was a certaine kinde of distinction of Churches and congregations for the Elders had their flockes ouer which the holy Ghost had made them ouerseers and which depended on them 1. Pet. 5.2 Act. 20.28 Doctr. Euen there where the Church is planted is such an absolute necessitie of a setled ministerie as without it it is impossible that religion can either thriue or continue and therefore as the Lord had formerly dealt in planting his politie among the Iewes so doth he here in planting Christian religion among the Gentiles no sooner was his law giuen concerning his Tabernacle but Aaron and his sonnes and the tribe of Leui must be sanctified to the office of Priesthood to attend on holy things to teach and offer and performe their seuerall
head thy sword shall pearce thine owne heart Goliahs owne sword shall sunder his head and bodie Haman shall hansell his owne gallowes the Madianites that little feared to be slaine by the Israelites shall be slaine one by another For it is iust with God saith Paul to render tribulation to those that afflict his Saints that as they secretly hatch mischeife against the godly so the Lord should secretly deuise and prepare righteous iudgement against themselues And surely many a man there is that carrieth secret plagues about him some in his inward estate some in his outward some in his bodie some in his soule some in himselfe some in his with which he strugleth and toyleth and turneth himselfe to many causes and meanes of his harmes and it may be to some sinnes as causes but neuer espie this curse passed from the mouth of God against his mallice toward good men and so toyleth himselfe altogether in vaine Were these things written in the hearts of men how could it be but they should stand in awe and dread with wicked Balaam who otherwise was willing inough to curse where God hath blessed 3. Let vs learne to see our inbred hatred of good men at least our want of loue vnto them and seeing it bewaile it and bewayling it reforme it Let our louing affection cause vs to ioyne our selues to their societie among whom good is to be gotten Obiect Oh but this is a toyle indeed if we goe amongst them they are so precise we may not take the least libertie we must speak of nothing but Scripture matters Ans. If thou hadst the life of Christ working in thee and that delight in God which beseemeth a sonne or daughter of God it would be thy meate and drinke to meditate speake and spend thy thoughts and time in holy things and thinke such times happily gained from thy vanitie yea from thy lawfull calling or if thou didst fauour the things of the spirit as thou doest the things of the flesh that which is indeed the freedome of a Christian would not be such a yoke and burthen the spirit of Christ would make thee willing thus to spend thy time and become in no company neither idle nor vnprofitable and much lesse vaine or licentious and take this withall that gracious words are neuer vnwelcome but to a gracelesse heart Obiect But I see no such good in their meetings Ans. Thou maist want wisedome to draw it out of them or else thou seest it not because thou wantest eyes as the soudiers sought Christ euen in speaking vnto him or else they seeme simple and weake men as the Church is blacke but comely the sunne lookes vpon them and their infirmities falls and afflictions make them outwardly appeare as the tents of Kedar and vpon these thine eyes gaze altogether yet as the Church is glorious within so are the members in respect of sanctitie and ornaments of the soule which weighed in thy ballance are found very light I exhort therefore all those that would encrease in grace that they linke their soules to such as feare God so Dauid made himselfe a companion of all them that feared the Lord and the next words seeme to include the reason and which keepe thy statutes the statutes of the Lord are in their hearts in their mouthes before their eyes and in their hands This will keepe them from entring into the way of the wicked and from beeing so easily plucked away with the error of the wicked But to such as would faine be acquainted with an hellish life before hand let them frequent other companies then this where God is not present nor his spirit nor his loue but the spirit of mischiefe of swearing swilling vncleannes and all hostillitie against God where in stead of men are Deuills incarnate in whose minds a● in a shop Satan is euer framing and forging vnholy and vncleane thoughts and desires and according to the abundance of their hearts their mouthes speake lewd things and their hands act all manner of wickednesse hardly canst thou come neere them but they will infect thee but keepe with them and thou wilt be like them thy bodie is not fitter to receiue the infection of the plague from a person that hath a plague sore running vpon him then thy soule to be deadly poysoned and infected by such societie Wise The Papists out of their vulgar translation abuse this word to improoue the marriage of Ministers and most improperly turne and translate it chast or continent whereas the word properly signifyeth a man of a sound minde that is prudent circumspect one that carrieth a continuall consultation within himselfe for the guiding of his whole course in such moderation as wisedome may appeare in his speeches gestures countenance and whole life Besides that the Apostle requireth the selfe same vertue of married wiues 1. Tim. 3.11 and of all young men of what profession soeuer whom I hope they meane not to debarre of marriage How wise and circumspect a man the Minister need to be will appeare if we consider either the workes of his calling or his person and place it selfe For the former what wisedome is required of him who is to vtter the word of wisedome whereby both himselfe and his people should be made wise to saluation and so to speake this word as becometh him to speake that in nothing he may be blamed what a wise steward must he be that must giue euery seruant within the house of God his owne portion and that in due season how experienced had that man need to be who is as Gods owne mouth to separate betweene the pretious and the vile how circumspect and warie least his people beeing as lambs among wolues should fall into the aduersaries hands and beeing be guiled by words of humane wisedome so peruerted And for the latter their verie persons and places require euen the wisedome of serpents to walke circumspectly as persons watching vnto euery step where they meane to set their foote 1. Because they are lights set vpon hills the eies of the world are vpon them euery thing in them is marked as they are eyes to espie other mens manners so are other mens eies much more vpon them either for imitation or calumniation 2. A sober and circumspect carriage not onely shutteth the mouth of the enemie who seeketh occasion to blaspheme the glorious Gospel and through the sides of the Minister to smite Christ himselfe but remooueth a iust scandale whereby many are contented to abide without the Church namely the dissolute and disordered course of the teachers of religon which maketh euen the religion taught by such stinke and become loathsome to numbers who gladly lay hold of such occasions to be of no religion at all and therefore if women must so walke as that by their honest conuersation others may be wonne ought not men much more and yet most of all Ministers 3. Such a wise and graue carriage getteth reuerence
and progresse least we be such dunces as Paul speaketh of who were euer learning and yet neuer came to the knowledge of the truth And then we profit when we like good schollers haue passed our grounds and elements and as the Apostle speaketh when leauing the rudiments and principles of religion we are ledde forward vnto perfection and then are we ledde to further perfection when wee haue taken out the two maine lessons of a Christian man which Paul in euerie thing would be sure to keepe euen faith and good conscience by which two rules till a man be moulded and cast into this forme of doctrine he is but a novice Christian and a superficiall scholler in this schoole of Christ the former of which implyeth the knowledge of the doctrine and the latter the ordering of euerie particular action of life by it Now the examination of our selues by these notes will reprooue many of vs as non proficients who would be loth to be so deemed For 1. whereas for our time and meanes especially in this famous eie of the land our profiting might haue enabled vs to teach others many of our selues had need be taught in the principles of religion we cannot be gotten out of our A B C line of letters If a master should for diuers years together painfully striue with a boy and could neuer get him out of his letters what hope were there of his reading and much lesse of any skill in higher mysteries of learning It is the case of a number of vs. Many yeares haue the masters of the assemblies plainly deliuered doctrines fitted to the capacitie of simple men yea often repeated them and often beaten vpon them yet a number that goe for Christians are extreame ignorant in the principles of Christianitie And whereas the Apostle implieth that we may measure our owne ability by our fitnesse to teach others how fewe of vs be there that finde any competent abilitie to teach euen our pettyes in our families our seruants and children that cost and paines is ill spent when after seauen yeares schooling a boy is not able to teach an other his letters but many of vs that haue beene ●earers and learners in this schoole thrice seauen yeares and aboue and yet to omit our vnwillingnes are not able in any sort to catechize our families Further whereas he that is cunning in his profession he can speake of it to good purpose because he knoweth the mysteries of it many of vs cannot speake to any purpose but when any speach of religion is offred are as mute as fishes yea are greiued to be drawne to any speach of such things because our weakenesse is thereby discouered Finally were it so that we had proceeded but a little way in our profiting here it would be with vs as with schollers or prentises who beeing entred a yeare or two neede not alwaies the presence of their Master or Tutor for euerie action but can of themselues doe something especially in smaller matters and of lower conceit but many of vs can goe no further then our Masters are present with vs we are not come so farre as to take out a lesson now then by our selues we cannot meditate pray conferre to the increase of our knowledge and therefore we may conclude against our selues that we are but verie dullards in this doctrine And what is the reason of all this but that as negligent learners we forget as fast as we learne or as idle schollers we idle ou● our time otherwise and allot the least time to this studie Which requireth so much the more time paines care and diligence by how much things more excellent be more difficult besides that our helpes by nature are none at all to this as to all other knowledge and the benefit of it farre excelleth all other Let vs therefore stirre vp our selues and be stirred vp not to a smattering in this knowledge of God but to abound in it as Peter willeth vs. And seeing we are farre from our marke let vs aime at more fruitfulnesse in our age and walke from strength to strength from faith to faith that so growing vp in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord Iesus Christ we may in due season be lifted vp vnto our glorie Doct. 3. In that the Apostle calleth that here wholsome doctrine which in the words before he called a faithfull word and fitted for doctrine Note that the men of God when they fell into speach of the word of God they spake not ●lightly of it away but were hardly drawne from it without leauing behind thē some notable elogie or other vpon it Rom. 1.16 the Gospel the power of God to saluation Ioh. 6.68 Peter saith not Master thou hast the word of God but thou hast the words of eternall life what a number of glorious things are ascribed vnto it see Heb. 4.12 mightie in operation sharpe c. Hence according to their seuerall occasions are al those excellēt epithits ascribed vnto it through the Scrip●ures some of the penmen looking at the author some at the matter some to the qualities some to the effects and accordingly invest it with titles well beseeming it And good reason had they so to doe for 1. They considered that the word of God is the principall part of Gods name which neuer could without great sinne be taken vp in vaine but is to be taken vp into the thought much more into the lippes with all reuerence and due regard 2. They sound the power of it so forcible and comfortable in themselues as that they could not chose but speake of it as they felt within the abundance of their owne hearts 3. They saw the worke of it so effectuall vpon others and that to such ends as not all the perfection of flesh and blood nor the strength or wit of men and angels could compasse as that they could not conceiue of it without admiration 4. They saw it was such a word as was to meete in the world with most harsh entertainement and hatefull opposition that Satan sinne and all wicked ones heretikes seducers Atheists and profane persons would resolutely resist it besides numbers that would account it foolishnesse and that would take offence at it not a fewe and therefore in great wisedome they were carefull that it should carrie some maiestie with it Vse Those that find such sweetnes in the word as the Saints of old cannot but with reuerent hearts conceiue and speake of it euer with signification of some eminent goodnes in it yea if they conceiue it in the author the word euen of euill will be confessed a good word as in Hezekiah and much more will the promises be sweete in the tast And if they acknowledge it in the most proper effects of it oh how will they thinke and speake of it as of a thing more necessarie then fire and water yea then the sunne in the firmament How will
1. To mooue such as are separated to the ministerie vnto the diligent reading of the Scriptures to redeeme that time which they haue or may otherwise spend in reading filthie lewde and wanton bookes superstitious pamphlets Machiauells blasphemies or Popish errors and heresies vnlesse it be 1. with sound and setled iudgement able to discerne right from wrong truth from falshood and 2. with this end either more to detest them in themselues or fore warne others of them and thus the wise marriner neede not leaue the sea if he can avoide the rockes But let a Timothie or Titus hold him to this booke he shall hence haue supply of wisedome to saue himselfe and others or what wouldst thou wish besides wisdome for thy calling wouldst thou be fitted to exhortation deceiue not thy selfe philosophie cannot fit thee onely the word of God worketh in all the parts and powers of the soule minde will and euerie affection by Philosophy thou maist enforme the vnderstanding although but darkely in the things of God but did that euer reform● or alter any mans heart reade then this booke teach this and thou shalt ransacke the affections yea and consciences of the hearers Or else wouldst thou haue a dexteritie and facultie in the quicke resoluing of doubts studie this truth be readie in it and thou shalt finde truth manifesting both it selfe and the contrarie And seeing this is the onely euerlasting veritie it will much more make the mightie to ouerthrowe whatsoeuer is contrarie vnto it Finally wouldst thou haue eloquence added to all these former abilliments without which they could not be but obscure then studie this truth of God and thou shalt feele it framing thine heart and so ministring speech yea thou shalt speake out of the fulnesse and abundance of thy heart graciously nay it will be with thee in thy measure as it was with the Apostles thou canst not choose but speake the things thou seest and knowest 2. To confute the Popish teachers who contrarily 1. teach that the Scripture beeing so hard and obscure as they say it is may be wres●ed abused by heretikes at their pleasure and that no man can be fitted vnto these duties especially the latter of conuiction of error fully by the euidence of Scripture it selfe except he borrowe some helpe and force elswhere namely from the expositions and voice of their Church And 2. in deciding their controversies of religion according to the former position they ●lie from the word vnto Bishops Fathers Councels Decrees and Popes But to the first we answer that although we are not to neglect much lesse despise the light and direction of godly mens expositions and iudgements nor such truthes as are receiued by the true Churches of God yet without them by considering the nature of the things themselues the conference of places the knowledge of tongues the suitable correspondence of the parts of the context we may come to attaine the true meaning of the place controuerted by that be able to convince withstand all gainsayers And to the latter their practise is contrarie vnto Christs and his Apostles as we haue shewed As also the practise of the auncient Churches since as may appeare by that memorable course of Constantine the Emperour who commanded the Fathers met together in the Nicene Councel about 362. yeares after Christ to referre the great controversie then in hand against the Arrians to the decision and determination of the Scriptures Which godly course Augustine backeth who liued not past 40. yeares after when he affirmeth that it was an auncient order of disputing to haue present the books of holy Scripture and to stand to the triall thereof If this was an auncient order of disputing in Augustines dayes surely the contrarie Popish practise is but a nouel●ie and we iustly presse them to antiquitie Vers. 10. For there are many disobedient and vaine talkers and deceiuers of minds cheifly they of the circumcision 11. Whose mouthes must be stopped which subvert whole houses teaching things which they ought not for filthy lucres sake The coniunction for sheweth that the words following containe a reason of the matter preceding namely why the Minister should be a man so qualified with able parts both to maintaine the truth and confute the falshood The reason is drawne from the description 1. of teachers in these two verses and 2. of hearers in the 12. The teachers are described by three arguments 1. from their indefinite number there are many not two or three who are easily set downe but many 2. By their adiuncts which are two 1. They are disobedient or refractarie such as will not submit themselues to the true doctrine and discipline of the Church 2. they are vaine talkers that is such as beeing giuen to ostentation and vanitie contemne the studie and deliuerie of sound and profitable doctrine and search out words and matters of wit and applause both of them of more sweetnesse vnto the flesh then soundnes vnto the soule and spirit 3. By their most dangerous effects and these also are two 1. Their deceiuing of minds for which vngodly practise he especially brandeth them of the circumcision that is either by metonimie the Iewes themselues circumcised or else Gentiles Iudaizing embracing Iewish opinions mixing the Law and Gospel Moses and Christ circumcision and baptisme together making indeed an hotchpotch of religion by confounding things that can neuer stand together The 2. effect of them is their subuersion of whole houses that is they poyson and infect whole houses yea and where the grounds and foundation of religion hath beene laid they ouerturne and ouerthrowe all This last effect is declared by two arguments 1. from the instrumentall cause of it and that is by their false doctrine teaching things which they ought not 2. from the finall cause of it that is couetousnesse for filthy lucres sake Now these teachers beeing so many so dangerous and hurtfull their mouthes must needes be stopped Which is a common conclusion set betweene the two verses as hauing reference vnto them both as a common remedie against all the mischeife which any way may be let in by them and therefore those that are to be admitted into the Ministerie must be of abillitie to stop their mouthes For there are many disobedient Doctr. 1. In that the first thing taxed in these false teachers by the Apostle is disobedience we learne that disobedience commonly is the ground of false doctrine For 1. it is iust with God to giue vp those to errors and delusion that receiue not the truth in the loue of it for wheresoeuer it is receiued in loue obedience cannot but be yeelded vnto it 2. The nature of sinne is euer to be excusing it selfe and is loath to be crossed although neuer so iustly but studyeth how to defend it selfe as long as it can euen by wresting the Scriptures and by taking vp one error for the maintenance of another 3. The tenour
to say What is it that I heare my sonnes doe so no more for this is rather a saluing and too hastie a skinning ouer of a rotten sore the fester of which quickly breaketh out againe with more rage and danger but here he must put on the zeale of God yea a iust and holy anger gounded vpon the loue of God and godlines wherein he hath Iohn Baptist Matth. 3.5 and the Sonne of God himselfe going before him Math. 23. It is thought great wisdome in men so to carie their doctrine as no man is offended at it whereas howsoeuer all meeknes and patience in our owne matters is a Christian and commendable vertue yet zeale in the matters of God may not be wanting and were all men Saints or sinners but penitent we might by tendernes and compassion raise them but some are in the fire and must be pluckt out many are fooles to whose backs stripes belong many are festred in their sinnes and must haue corrasiues and fretting waters to make them smart at the quicke in which cases if any of our patients cha●e and storme and grow neuer so impatient it will be no wisedome in such as haue the ordering of them to let him haue his owne will in his desire to be let alone but still make incision search further the depth of the wound and send in taints to the bottom for such louing wounds must go before applying of salues to sound healing 3. Let all godly hearers learne to make manifest their patience and obedience by suffering themselues to be launched and pricked euen to their hearts by those whom God hath sent as his surgions to cure mens soules otherwise by sinne wounded to death as knowing that the hurt of the daughter of Gods people is not healed with sweete words but as the bitterest pill is fittest to purge and worketh kindlier then the sweetest potion and as the thunder and lightning more purifie the ayre then the calmest sunnshine euen so gall and wormewood is the portion which the Lord hath tempered for many to take off the pleasant tast of their sweet sinnes As for vs we take no pleasure in your smart or iudgement but that without it you cannot be cured You cannot but confesse that when sores are ripe and raging the next way to cure is launcing suffer vs then a while and trie whether we are not as readie with the good Samaritan to powre oyle as wine into your wounds so it make to your soundnes But all will not come vnto the supper by entreatie some must be compelled and if we bring a true word and handle it truely it cannot but deuide betweene the marrow and the bone yea betweene the soule and the spirits and the ioynts c. Heb. 4.12 And can all this be done and a man feele no smart nay surely if our Ministrie worke no smart it worketh no cure That they may be sound in the faith Doctr. The sharpest rebukes in the Church ought to ayme at this end the recouerie of diseased Christians to soundnes in religion both in iudgement and practise Which appeareth in that the greatest ordinarie censure in the Church is not mortall but medicinable For as a surgeon cuts off armes and legges that the bodie and heart may be saued so in this bodie parts and members are cut off that themselues may be saued as well as the whole bodie Paul excommunicateth the incestuous person that his spirit might be saued Himineus and Philetus were cast out to Satan that they might learne not to blaspheme Those whom Iude wisheth to be pulled out of the fire by violence must be saued thereby If any obiect against this that in 1. Cor. 16.21 If any man loue not the Lord Iesus let him be had in execration to the death and therefore edification and saluation is not the ende of this censure I answer It is one thing for the Church to excommunicate another to curse and execrate the one is an ordinarie censure the other verie extraordinarie and rare the one against those who may be freinds of the Church the other only against desperate enemies and open and obstinate Apostates euen such as Iulian whom the Church iudgeth to haue sinned the sin against the holy Ghost and therefore execrateth and accurseth So as that place nothing impeacheth the truth of the doctrine Vse 1. Much more ought Ministers in their sharpest rebukes aime at the conuersion of men what a sharpe reproofe was that of Peter to Simon Magus Act. 8.21.25 Thy mony perish with thee and thou art euen in the gall of bitternesse and yet he addeth repent therefore and pray vnto the Lord c. So is it the part of all Peters successors to whom the care of the Lords flock is committed so to reprooue not as those who would shame mens persons but disgrace their sinnes neither as insulting ouer mens euills nor delighting in their falls nor despayring of their rising but as imitating good Surgions who whilest they seare or cut or cut off still shew compassion and gently entreate the patient euer perswading him that this rough course will make to his health and soundnes 2. While Ministers thus dispense Christian seueritie in their reproofes and denunciation of iudgements the bearers must not mistake them as many doe and much lesse say vnto them as Corah and his company to Moses and Aaron yea take too much vpon you or as the Egyptian to Moses who made thee a iudge who gaue you the keyes of heauen to open and shut it vpon whom you please when did God make you of his counsell to foretell my damnation c. conceiuing that in our menacies and threatning we quite cut them off from all hope of mercie and that we take vpon vs to shut the doore of grace vpon them and to shorten the arme of the Lord that he cannot saue them Whereas the truth is while we thunder out damnation against the sinner which verie many desperately rush into while they auoid the mention of it in our mouthes it is not that we despaire of your saluation or would haue you so to doe nor we doe not admonish you to shame you but you must if you will be saued by the word we preach conceiue with vs that we desire your soundnes of faith and therefore we deale with you as with sickemen who commonly will take nothing to doe them good but what is forced vpon them which if you doe not we are not in your hearts the Surgeons of your soules but rather your executioners 3. This reprehendeth those whose rebukes tend altogether to discourage godly courses in their people and bring them from soundnes in the faith making heauie the hearts of them to whom the Lord speaketh peace 2. Those that malitiously thunder their bolte of excommunication against those that professe Christ sincerely Thus did the Iewes excommunicate whosoeuer durst confesse Christ as that blind man Ioh. 9.34 so the
as an other Some there are that seeme very religious can come to Church go in the count and companie of Christians and religious persons but verie vnmercifull ouergrowne with couetousnesse and in priuate for a pennie aduantage discharge all religion till Church time againe Others are mercifull inough but carelesse of religion altogether some are iust in their dealings but vncleane or intemperate others are temperate but vniust lyars swearers and no fidelitie in them The Apostle Iames meeteth with all these teaching vs 1. that pure religion standeth not onely in harmelesnes and keeping ones selfe vnspotted but in visiting the fatherles and widow that is the frequent practise of workes of mercie and charitie many say if I were rich I would do thus and thus but art thou a Christian art thou religious then though thou beest poore thou art mercifull Paul commended the Macedonians that beeing but poore yet they were rich in liberalitie toward the Saints 2. in cap. 2.10 that he that offendeth in one point of the law is guiltie of all and he that saith thou shalt not commit adulterie saith also thou shalt not kill now if thou dost no adulterie yet if thou killest thou art a transgressor of the law Vse 3. If a Christian must employ himselfe in euery good work then must men so cast and contriue their courses that neither duties of pietie hinder the duties of their calling nor these stand in the way of the other And he that hath the heart of the wise to know time and iudgement forecasteth both wisely and knoweth one of these to be subordinate but not opposite vnto the other Hence must Christians forecast and remember the Sabboath before hand and so order and husband their times and seasons that there may be place and time and oportunitie for euery good worke in the week-day and especially for the best workes whether publike exercises of religion or priuate prayers and exercises in the family Which wise managing of affaires because men are wanting in therefore sometimes the Sabboath must be encroched vpon and Gods seruice iustled out for some carnall matters other times weeks exercises are neglected because this inconuenience or losse in the calling was not seasonably and prudently preuented the priuate seruice of God also in the family must now and then be laid downe for a time or turne because some other domestical distraction hath deuoured the time allotted for it Let no man then seperate those duties which the Lord hath coupled if thou beest readie to the duties of thy particular calling forget not the duties of the generall if thou wouldst be seruiceable to men forget not in the meane time thy seruice of God If thou canst be diligent to prouide for thy selfe and thy family set sometime apart to looke out to enquire into and releeue the necessities of Gods children family abroad But woe to such knots of companionship tied fast by the deuil to sporting gaming or other vngodly lusts that neither the duties of their calling on the weekeday nor religious exercises on the Sabboath can obtaine them Doctr. 2. That euery Christian ought to keepe in himselfe a fitnes and readinesse to euery good worke is plaine in the Scriptures For 1. in duties of pietie we are enioyned not only to come to the house of God but to take heede to our feete and to wash our hands in innocencie before we compasse the Altar and first to sanctifie our selues before God and reconcile our selues to men and then bring our gift If we preach we must doe it readily and of a readie minde for then we haue reward If you heare you must be swift to heare and readie to heare rather then offer the sacrifice of fooles 2. In performance of duties of loue and mercie vnto men we are called to readinesse in distributing 1. Tim. 6.18 and mindfulnesse to distribute Heb. 13.16 3. In priuate duties when God giueth vs peace and opportunitie we must serue him with cheerefulnesse and good hearts Deut. 28.47 4. In priuate iniuries we must be ready to receiue yea to offer reconciliation and to forgiue which is another good worke and so in the rest Reasons 1. We herein become like vnto God whose nature is to accommodate himselfe to our good whose readinesse to giue bountifully and forgiue freely is hereby shadowed 2. Hereby we also bewtifie and as it were guild our duties when they come off without delaies without grudging murmuring or heauinesse but as from men inu●ed to weldoing 3. Hereby we may laie hold of Christian consolation in that this readie and willing mind is accepted where often power of doing good is wanting and indeed the regenerate often want power and abilitie vnto good but to want will and desire is dangerous Vse Whosoeuer would finde this grace in himselfe must trie it by the companions of it As 1. there must be a good heart cheerefully and willingly disposed vnto and in the doing of good 2. Thess. 2.17 The Lord must first mooue and perswade the heart for so the word signifieth as well as to comfort and then establish his to euery good word and worke Hence are we exhorted to do euery thing heartily as to the Lord. The Lord would haue none to offer any thing to the building of the tabernacle but whose heart incouraged him and whose spirit made him willing If thou findest not thine heart accompanying thy duties but thou doest thy religious duties for necessitie law fashion or for some sinister end and thy duties of loue with a straite heart or an euill eye thinking any thing bestowed too good or too much thou hast slaine thy action before the birth it was neuer quickned it hath no life no● soule God who loueth only a cheerefull giuer will not endure it 2. He that is continually readie to euery good worke cannot but be abundant in good workes the phrase little differing from that 1. Tim. 5.10 The widow that hath beene continually giuen to euery good worke for else this readinesse could not be other then an idle preparation Dost thou continue in prayer in all things giue thankes hast thou bin diligent in trayning vp thy family in Gods feare hast thou with Onesephorus often refreshed the Saints doth the loynes of many blesse thee and the blessing of the poore and widow returne vpon thee shew me the ●oats and garments thou hast made shew me the knowledge and feare of God in thy family expresse the faith thou professest by such fruits of faith as these are and then hast thou profited in this precept els thou as yet commest short of it 3. In such a partie will be a forgoing and departure with things of price yea the best thing he hath will not be too deare to purchase that dutie which he seeth God requiring at his hands which if it be wanting because many good works are costly a man cannot be ready to euery good worke Now to apply the
the truth of God against the aduersaries of it and where Salomon brandeth him with a note of follie that maketh no question but beleeueth euery thing he sheweth that there is a wise inquisition into necessarie truths tending to edification But the Apostle expresseth what questions he disaloweth in a Diuine foolish questions that is vnnecessarie idle of no moment of no good vse to edification neither in faith nor loue in conscience nor manners Where me thinks Paul by the spirit of prophesie foresawe forewarned and forearmed the Church of that great malice of the deuill which in after ages preuailed to the ouerthrowe of all puritie of religion and piety it selfe and that was by turning men from the comfortable practise and proper vse of Scripture to seeke out an art of diuinitie appropriat to some few and so suddenly came to turne all the sound knowledge of the Scriptures into a skeptike and questionarie diuinitie whereby the deuill kept good wits from the knowledge and studie of tongues and the necessarie fundamentall points of Christian religion and set them on worke in the speculation of strange friuolous and curious questions wherein they were not one more against another then all of them against God and his truth and the building of his Church And this is the quod libe●a●ie schoole diuinitie then which nothing is more highly magnified of many at this day who had rather tast leekes then Manna and although our Apostle graunteth that it may haue a shewe of learning and wisedome falsly so called yet as here it is called foolish so elsewhere he confidently tearmeth it both foolish and vnlearned because it is occupied in such questions as haue neither wisedome nor learning in them while they make a shew of both Such are their questions concerning their heauenly Hierarchies and orders of Angels concerning the degrees of the Saints in heauen so definitiuely and magistrally determining as though they had newly dropped out of the clouds Paul durst neuer vtter such things who was wrapped into the third heauen Others of them as though at the request of the rich man they had been sent from hell are as confident of things done in purgatorie Others are at redde warre whether things notionall or ●eall be better some sweate in disputing whether the world could be better made others to be resolued whether the Pope be more mercifull then Christ because Christ deliuereth none out of purgatorie as the Pope doth But about their Sacrament and consecrated hoast their tumults are such and so ridiculous as a iudicious Diuine would be loath to foule his mouth or his hearers eares with them These are the toyles of the angelicall seraphicall magistrall and subtile Doctors Scotus Hales Holcoth Durand and such monsters of Diuines which how much true learning they containe the darkenes of their ages in which they liued and since sufficiently manifesteth Gods righteous iudgement was vpon them and the whole world since for their sakes and that sentence verified vpon them while they thought themselues wise they became starke fooles Let students looke how they spend time in them for the truth is that if a man be deuoted to them he shall be euer learning and yet neuer come to the knowledge of the truth nay it may be feared of some who were towardly set in the truth that comming into this schoole too timely are now growne crooked and out of loue with the truth and are indeed turned into the things they read The second thing which Titus must resist are genealogies which also must be rightly taken because there alwaies was and yet is an excellent vse of them in Scripture Before Christ they were so necessarie as the Iewes were commanded to keepe publike and priuate records of their tribes and families yea and if there were any that could not tell or finde his genealogie he was not to be admitted or if inconsiderately he were was to be deposed from publike office Numb 1.18 Nehem. 7.62 and to this purpose some holy writers of Scripture haue set downe for the vse of the Church to the ende whole bookes of genealogies but especially that the Iewes might be able to bring their descent from the Patriarks as we reade of Paul who no doubt could bring his line downe from Beniamin Philip. 3.5 The vse of these genealogies was manifold I will note two First to manifest the truth of God in the Scriptures 1. In the accomplishment of many speciall prophesies to particular persons For example God promised to Abraham that he should be a mightie man that this truth might be fully known must be set downe the whole descent and posteriritie and Princes that came of him although neuer so wicked from Ismael himselfe Rebecca also had a promise of two mightie peoples in her wombe and that the elder should serue the younger how should this be knowne to be accomplished but by the genealogie of them both for which purpose euen the dukes that came of Esau were all recorded The like of Iacobs prophesie concerning Ephraim and Manasseh for otherwise the wicked should haue no name nor register in the booke of God it is not for their owne sakes whose memories should rot but for the honour of God and his seruants they are there rolled to shewe that the godly were not only inwardly but euen outwardly blessed according to promise with such a fruitfull race and posteritie 2. It is a great light to the truth of Scripture when it setteth downe the persons by whom and the times in which euery worthy thing was done what also and by whome the Church suffered how all nations were euer enemies to religion but one little point or corner of the world how God had euer a Church in the world euen in the corruptedst times a litle remnant of Israel that worshipped him in spirit and truth which things are cleared by genealogie The second and principall vse of genealogie is to manifest the true Messiah vnto the world As 1. to shewe that because God would be appeased in the same nature that had sinned therefore he was true man and not in shew and that his humanitie incarnation and natiuitie should not be obscure his naturall descent is by the Euangelists brought downe from Abraham yea from Adam shewing vs thereby what is the proper end of all genealogie in the Scriptures 2. The nobilitie of his birth and worthines of his parentage and that he was the right heire to the Iewish kingdome 3. The truth of the prophesies concerning him that he was the sonne of Abraham and of Dauid and that the scepter departed not from Iudah till his appearing 4. The blessing wherewith that family out of which he came was advanced and distinct from al the tribes of the earth 5. His humilitie who came of all sorts of men and women publike and priuate poore and rich good and bad that he might be a fit Sauiour of all sorts of men not disdaining to place in
way spreadeth further and further and subverteth the faith of verie many and concludeth that no otherwise then the contagion of the most mortall diseases as the plague or leprosie or such like euen so the infection of Poperie is as diligently to be shunned of all the faithfull This truth out of the mouthes of such two worthy witnesses we may the better beleeue not onely for the strength of arguments they haue vsed as yet vngainesaied by any aduersarie but also in that we haue some of her owne children confessing her the mother of all heresies I will not light a candle to the sunne in the former point but briefly shewe wherein especially they are to be avoided and that for more perspicuitie in two questions Quest. The former whether Popish religion may be tollerated in a countrie professing the truth of Christian doctrine as ours by Gods blessing doth I answer No if by any lawfull meanes it may be banished For beeing an heresie which 1. disannulleth the death of Christ. 2. abolisheth the humane nature of Christ. 3. destroyeth the substance of the Sacraments 4. taketh away the solace of the elect of God 5. the honour of the sonne of God sitting at his Fathers right hand 6. almost all religion all these beeing the expresse words of D. Reynolds and prooued in that thesis it followeth that it may not be suffered in a countrie which can abolish and cast it out For 1. Euery worship must be sutable to him that is worshipped If he be diuine so must it if he be ciuill it must also be ciuill if he be simple pure without mixture so must that worship which is or can be acceptable vnto him 2. We know out of the word that Samaritane worship when men will feare God but worship him according to the rites of the countrie 2. King 17. vlt. was euer hatefull to God who will not haue his feild of the Church sowne with diuerse seeds nor plowed with an oxe and an asse The Iewes meddle not with the Samaritans but must hate the workes of the Nicolaitans And indeed to halt between two to be neither Gods nor Baals is to be of no religion at all and the Church of Laodicea sheweth that the Lord can neuer digest two contraries neuer so well mixed or wisely tempered in matter of religion 3. The approbation and blessing of God on those Kings gouernments and Churches who went through-stitch in pulling downe all the high places as Dauid Salomon Hezekiah But memorable was the worthy act of Iosia who made a couenant before the Lord and called all the inhabitants of Ierusalem the Preists Levites and all the people from the smallest to the greatest and caused them all to stand to it See 2. Chro. 34.31 ad sin But whereas others otherwise good Kings are reprooued and blemished because either they left the high places standing and proceeded not to a through reformation as As● ● Kin. 15.14 Or if they did fully reforme their countrie yet that they did not so zealously hate Idolatrie but that they would enter into league and affinitie with Idolaters as Iehoshaphat Asas sonne Who lifted vp his heart vnto the waies of the Lord and took away the high mountains and groaues out of Iudah But yet Iehu is sent to reprooue him for his societie with wicked Ahab saying Wouldst thou helpe the wicked and loue them that hate the Lord A worthy commendation was it of the Angel of the Church of Ephesus that he could not beare them which were euill Rev. 2.2 4. Consider the danger and hurt in tolerating heresie in these particulars 1. It is a breach of Gods commandement Deut. 29.18 There shall not be among you man woman nor family nor tribe which shall turne his heart from the Lord to goe serue the gods of these nations There shall not be among you any roote that bringeth forth gall and wormwood 2. This mixture layeth open to Gods revenging hand and is called by no lesse title then Rebellion Iosh. 22.17 3. There is most apparant danger of infection for heresie is called in the Scripture leauen and a gangreene and here also consider the weaknesse of flesh which is as readie to be plucked away with euery error of the wicked as the most drie tinder is to receiue the sparkle of fire cast into it Hence also are Idolaters called stumbling blockes snares thornes whippes and destruction See Iosh. 23.13 4. This mixture in religion threatneth ruine vnto Church and Commonwealth it hindreth or corrupteth publicke iustice by partiallitie or too rough and exasperate proceeding it causeth distraction of affections and prepareth to tumults and massacres as the experience of many ages hath taught A kingdome or Church deuided against it selfe cannot stand Which Ieroboam well conceiuing that he might bring the people to vnitie in religion set vp two calues one in Dan and the other in Bethel How both Iewes and Gentiles wickedly resisted Christ and his Apostles vpon this same ground that two diuerse religions were vnsafe in one countrie and long could not continue but the one would eate vp the other the historie of the Gospel and the Acts of the Apostles euidently shew From whom we may frame a good argument that if they were so vigilant to keepe out whatsoeuer might disturbe their errour how much more carefully should the truth be preserued in the puritie of it of all such as haue any care of the continuance of it nay more shall the mention of a toleration of our religion in Rome or Spaine be capitall and should we by connivence at their knowne Idolatrie giue them as good as a tolleration and so strengthen their hopes for an alteration These reasons if I should now in particular applie vnto the Romish Church for the further euidence of them I know better where to beginne then to make an end and should dwell too long on the question which I purposed rather to point at then fully to handle as more largely out of the Scriptures Fathers and councells I easily might But from them all as they lie in one word may be concluded that the toleration of Poperie in a reformed country where it may be cast out is vtterly vnlawfull The second Question is whether Protestants may marrie with Papists Answ. For the right resoluing of this question two things must be considered 1. Whether the person that now professeth Poperie will yeeld to be wonne to the embracing of true religion which if he do then caseth such a one to be a Papist and may be maried withall ●hus Isaac married Rebecca the daughter of Bethuel and Iacob the daughters of Laban who was an Idolater as appeareth Gen. 31.53 On the same condition Boaz married Ruth a Moabitisse woman but who was first conuerted to the Iewish religion And thus the Lord himselfe yeelded vnto the mariages with Heathnish women taken in warre but heauily after a sort and by indulgence but on no hand vnlesse they
deeds denie him but this is not that which is in our question which is of diuersitie in religion and not of infidelitie or hypocrisie where the same religion is professed the former is a barre of marriage but not the latter Obiect But then you will say that such marriages made ought to be dissolued● I answer 1. that marriage is an externall thing and properly hindereth not faith and saluation of it selfe and 2. that it is not against christianitie to keepe contracts made with Turks and heathen 3. Besides in the Apostles dayes the faithfull beeing married to an infidell he was not to put her away 1. Cor. 7.12 if she would abide with him But as M. Zanchius after he had learnedly discussed this question and propounded reasons out of the Scriptures Fathers Councels and ciuill lawe that such mariages ought to be disanulled yet doubtfully leaueth it to the iudgement of the Church so will not I be too bold in defining this great question Vers. 11. Knowing that he that is such is peruerted and sinneth beeing damned of his owne selfe Hauing in the former verse shewed both the persons to be proceeded against called heretikes and the manner of proceeding against them namely after once or twice admonition to auoid them Now in this verse our Apostle discendeth to giue some reasons of this seueritie which are two in number First he is such a one as is subuerted or turned off the foundation Secondly he wittingly and willingly spurneth against the knowne truth sparkling and shining in his conscience and therefore is remedilesse and desperatly incurable For the former By beeing peruerted or turned off the foundation is not to be meant any falling off from the foundation of Gods election which abideth so sure as that not any one of Gods elect shall euer fall away as Hymencus and Philetus did but a falling off from some fundamentall points of Christian religion held and maintained by the Church whereof this partie yet seemeth a member As for example The maine foundation aymed at in the writings of the Prophets and Apostles is to teach that Iesus Christ God and man is the alone and perfect Sauiour of his Church and whosoeuer teacheth or holdeth any doctrine tending to ouerthrowe either of his natures or anie of his offices he is truely said to be turned off that foundation Againe the maine grounds of all our religion for matter either of faith or manners are the commandements of the law and promises of the Gospel and whosoeuer either directly or by direct consequent ouerthroweth any of the commandements of God or articles of our faith he is truly said to be turned off the foundation Now this cannot euery error in religion doe For to keepe our Apostles allegorie comparing the profession of religion to the building of a great house some errors are lesser and as it were besides the foundation such as may be thought as the breaking downe of some window some greater as the breaking downe of some side of the house and yet the house standeth although much defaced But some are such as ouerturne the whole house and rase the verie foundations of all such as is the doctrine of iustification by workes which point alone putteth men quite out of their estate in Christ and shutteth them out of the kingdome of heauen Gal. 5.2.4 Whence might be obserued how needfull a thing it is for euery one to be well grounded in points of Catechisme which is a thing most dangerously neglected by the most and beeing so grounded to looke well to themselues least they be turned off from them and so depart from the holy commandements for thus the end of such would be far worse then the beginning But we will come to the latter degree of this sinne Hee sinneth beeing damned of himselfe that is he wilfully sinneth or addeth sinne to sinne not only by maintaining an errour but 1. against the light of the word shining in his conscience 2. against the wholesome admonition of his faithfull pastor yea and of the whole Church the voice of which he will not heare 3. euen against besides other convictions that of his owne conscience whereby he is resolued to take part with the wickednesse of his heart and persist an heretike in his heresie This man if he had no other iudge is iudged and condemned of himselfe and sheweth that he is damned of himselfe Obiect But there is no man so monstrous and gracelesse that will persist in error against the light of his conscience Answ. Yes and this commeth partly by the naturall impuritie of conscience which can excuse not only intentions vnwarrantable but euen sinnes committed against the law As in the young man Mar. 10.20 who boasted that he though he had liued in the breach of all had kept all the commandements from his youth and 2. partly by the increase of that corruption through a sencelesse numbednesse and vnfeelingnes which springeth from a custome of sinne and 3. especially by the iust iudgement of God who striketh them with a reprobate sence by withdrawing euen the very light of nature from those who would faine put it out or deteine it in vnrighteousnesse and by deliuering them vp to strong delusions that they might beleeue lies who would not embrace the truth in the loue of it Now he that is such a wilfull offender and knowne so to be must be auoided But it is hard will some say to know any man thus to sinne Answ. Because we speake not now of the iudgement of certaintie which is proper to God whereby he alone can iudge of the finall estate of a man but only of the iudgement of humane wisedome which is giuen to the Church who iudgeth only for the present by the present fruits it is not so hard to doe for such a man hath beene brought to conference to the tryall of the Scriptures to the analogie of faith and to the admonition of the Church by which his reasons haue bin refelled his iudgement informed his conscience conuinced himselfe forewarned of his danger but he obstinately hath refused all these good meanes and persisteth in his error Where note 1. What patience the Lord vseth in his iust proceedings euen against the worst men whom he will not haue condemned nor cast out of the Church vpon suspicions or surmises no nor presently after an open sinne is committed but their must be a time between wherein the Church must rightly informe her selfe that she may know the nature and degree of the sinne before she turne her to any censure or sentence Yea and further the sinne beeing apparant she must not reiect any till all good meanes of reclaiming haue beene in vaine vsed Which may teach vs that to heape or hasten excommunications ipso facto or as it is often before the partie can come to the knowledge or suspition of any such proceeding is to swarue from the rules of the word and those weightie
indeed his bowells were not straitned toward Titus and the Church committed vnto him seeing he wisheth the verie fountaine of grace to be opened vnto them for this word as we shewed in the beginning signifieth both the free loue and fauour of God towards vs in Christ as also all other spirituall blessings flowing from that fountaine such as are remission of sinnes reconciliation with God iustification sanctification life eternall and all the meanes tending thereunto 3. That beeing an Apostolicall prayer it might also be a meanes of obtaining and conuaying vpon them the grace requested and although he had made the same request for them before yet it is no vaine repetition for partly he prayeth for the encrease and further feeling of this grace for them and partly teacheth vs thereby that it is the only blessing to be prayed for the cheife if not only grace which our selues are to labour for and which we must by all meanes endeauour that others may haue their portion in with vs. 4. To shew that all our greeting must beginne and end in grace and that our formes of salutation should fauour of grace and not be profane gracelesse or formall as the most are 5. Beeing a Minister of grace he beginneth and endeth with it and teacheth Ministers that their first and last action of the day and of their Ministeriall dutie should be the commending of their people vnto the grace of God in their praiers and besides if ordinarie letters much more other more weightie actions of men must be vndertaken and performed with praier and praise Secondly in that he saith Grace be with you he sheweth that howsoeuer this Epistle was inscribed to Titus alone yet was it intended to be of common vse to the whole Church and therefore we haue not vnfitly applied the most of the doctrines to the vse not of Ministers only but of all sorts of men so farre as they concerned them Last of all in that he saith grace be with you all he meaneth all the elect and only they for only they are effectuall partakers of this sauing grace called often elsewhere the grace of our Lord Iesus Christ the treasurie and fountaine of it The wicked are indeede endued with excellent gifts of Gods spirit but they want this grace of God in Christ which is the only foundation of our election to the grace of life of our effectuall vocation to the grace of God wherein we stand and of that assured hope of that heauenly inheritance which he hath purchased of his grace By this grace we are happily reconciled vnto God and adopted to be heyres of grace hereby also we haue receiued the word of grace which is made fruitfull to the planting and watering of all other sauing graces in vs and so to the furthering and finishing of the whole worke of our saluation in glorie This grace be euer with vs and all them that loue the comming of our Lord Iesus Christ to their immortalitie Amen So shall it be And so be it To God the Father of lights and to Iesus Christ that eternall word together with that annoynting euen the blessed spirit the only one true and wise God who hath happily led vs through these labours be all praise and glorie in all the Churches for euermore Amen A SHORT VIEWE OF SVCH Doctrines as are enlarged with their reasons and vses A Man may sometimes lawfully change his name Pag. 4. Such names are to be giuen to children as may put them in minde of some good dutie Pag. 4 The name of a seruant of God is full of honour Pag. 6 The chiefe offices in the Church are for the service of it Pag. 10 God hath some who are elect and other are not Pag. 11 The elect haue a faith by themselues Pag. 13 The faith of the elect is ordinarily wrought by the ministerie of the word Pag. 16 The doctrine of the Gospell is truth it selfe Pag. 18 The knowledge of the truth is the ground of faith Pag. 19 The truth intertained in truth frameth the heart vnto godlinesse Pag. 21 The ende of the ministerie is to drawe vp mens mindes from earth to heauen Pag. 24 True faith neuer goeth alone but as a Queene attended with many other graces especially with hope Pag. 27 Life eternall is the beleeuers by free promise Pag. 30 God is truth itselfe and cannot lie Pag. 33 The free loue of God appeareth in that whatsoeuer he doth for his elect in time the same he decreeth before all time Pag. 39 The doctrine of saluation is more clearely manifest then in former times Pag. 43 The Lord effecteth all his purposes and promises in due season Pag. 44 Saluation is to be sought for in the preaching of the word Pag. 48 The office of preaching is an office of trust Pag. 52 Whosoeuer entreth into the ministerie must finde himselfe pressed by the calling and commandement of God Pag. 53 Ministers may be more or lesse in the commendation of their calling as the disposition and necessitie of their people require Pag. 55 Gods calling to grace is free and powerfull Pag. 56 Ministers ought to be spirituall fathers in begetting children to God Pag. 58 Faith is one and the same in all Gods elect Pag. 62 Euerie man must be carefull 1. whome 2. to what 3. how farre he commendeth an other Pag. 65 All are not naturall sonnes that are so accounted 66 The free and euerlasting grace of God is the foundation of all blessings spirituall and temporall Pag. 69 True peace is the fruit of Gods grace and mercie Pag. 71 Whosoeuer is called to labour in the Church must by all his care further the worke of the Lord. Pag. 75 He that would Christianly and comfortably carrie himselfe through his calling must euer haue the ende of it in his eie Pag. 76 Churches must not be condemned as no Churches for want of some lawes or gouerment if they ioyne in the profession of the truth Pag. 80 No Church is hastely brought to perfection Pag. 81 There is continuall bending of good ordinances euen in the best estate of the Church Pag. 83 Such an absolute necessitie of a setled ministerie there is where a Church is planted that without it religion cannot possibly thriue or continue Pag. 86 The ordering and gouerning of the Church is not left arbitrarie no not to an Evangelist but Apostolicall direction must guide him Pag. 89 How able soeuer a man is to teach if he be of a scandalous life he is vnfit to be chosen a Minister Pag. 92 Marriage of Ministers is a lawfull and holy ordinance of God Pag. 97 Polygamie was euer blameworthy euen in the best Pag. 103 He that would reforme others abroad must begin at home Pag. 110 To haue the blessing of gracious children thou must beginne at religion Pag. 111 The carriage of a mans children is a great credit or disgrace to his profession especially of the Minister Pag. 113 Riot is an hatefull vice to be
from them but as by the learned it is called an Abridgment of all Pauls Epistles so is it fraught with such varietie of precepts sitted to all sorts sexs ages and conditions of men as whatsoeuer he hath in all his Epistles more largely handled the same he seemeth to haue summarily reduced into this one wherein as in a mappe or modell he would deliuer his whole spirit stile and vnderstanding in the doctrine of saluation And which he would leaue to the Church as a manuall or compendious summe of all Christian religion to the end that Christians beeing hence instructed in the matter of faith and manners might he made not only wise to saluation but profitable and fit for the place which God hath in any of the societies of 1. Church 2. Common-wealth 3. Familie assigned them vnto For if in any hee enlarge the doctrine of mans miserie by sinne or magnifie the doctrine of the Gospel and mans diliuerance from sinne If in any he cleare the doctrine of free iustification of faith alone or enforce the doctrine of good workes the fruites of that faith If in any he largely propound either such duties as belong to publike persons as namely the Magistrates and Ministers or such offices as are fitted to the seuerall conditions of priuate men If in any he prouoke to the practise of Christian curtesie and kindnesse or else if neede require of Christian seueritie and sharpnesse surely in this Epistle he doth with such admirable plainnes and shortnesse all these as no other nor all the other shew him a more skillfull workeman then this doth But accounting it follie to paint a pearle I will rather now giue some tast and reason of that I haue done as also remooue some scruples which may otherwise perhappes be mooued against it Gold lyeth not vpon the face but in the bowells of the earth and the richer any minerall is the more industrious hath nature beene to laid it vp in the deepest vaines Euen so considering that the price of the wisedome of God cannot be found to which the purest gold of Ophir nor all pearles are to be compared we may not thinke that the Lord is so prodigall of it or carelesse as to leaue it abroad for euery stranger that passeth by to take vp with an idle hand or to trample vnder his wandring feete but that hee hath disposed it as men doe their treasures which they hide and locke in their surest coffers and that vnder their eye And were it not so needlesly should we be commanded to seeke for her as for siluer and search for her as for treasures vpon which condition only it is couenanted that we shall vnderstand the feare of the Lord and find the knowledge of God For howsoeuer we may not ascribe darkenesse and obscuritie vnto the Scriptures vnlesse we will say that the Lord hath spoken something which he would not haue vnderstood and also falsifie that of the Apostle who compareth the word of the Prophets which of all parts of the Scriptures are the darkest to a light shining in a darke place yet the wisedome of God would haue not all but some places more difficult to our darke vnderstanding not only for the dazeling of the eyes of the worst who neuer care to know or comprehend any of these mysteries but that the best also might 1. see their owne dulnesse of conceit in heauenly things so to keepe them low in their owne eyes as who cannot attaine such an high knowledge of themselues 2. be stirred vp to more diligent studie reading hearing meditation and prayer that by this continuall exercise in the word they may profit and proceed in the knowledge of God and in the vnderstanding of these mysteries which are admirable to the Angels themselues 3. make so much the more both of the word and the ministerie of it the Lord foresaw that the things that are easie we easily contemne and that things lightly come by are lightly set by That any part of this booke is clasped and sealed it is in regard of our naturall blindnesse who cannot behold the brightnes of the sunne of righteousnes shining in the Scriptures But that this naturall corruption might not raigne in the elect for their hurt the Lord Iesus hath left to his Church the gift of interpretation which is as the key to open this closet of God and hath stirred vp faithfull men from time to time endued by his spirit who in attentiue and diligent reading of the Scriptures by the helpe of 1. Arts as Grammer Rhetorike Logicke Philosophie c. 2. knowledge of the proprieties of words and phrases of the tongues wherein they were written 3. comparing of Scriptures with themselues antecedents with consequents obscure places with plainer and figuratiue speaches with more proper 4. soundnesse of iudgement in the agreement and analogie of faith 5. diligent obseruation of predictions with their accomplishments of types with their truth and of the historie of the Church which it selfe is a commentarie of Scripture haue beene themselues enabled to vnderstand as also partly by liuely voice in the Ministrie and partly by their learned monuments and writings to make the people of God vnderstand euen the darkest mysteries conteyned in them so farre as is necessarie for the saluation of beleeuers Whose labours and writings to contemne sauoreth of a proud Anabaptisticall spirit who while they complaine of so many commētaries despise the gifts of God who by his seruants he communicateth to his Church and so are iustly left of God in the ignorance of the Scriptures or else in the grosse and ridiculous peruerting of them Well said that noble Eunuch How can I vnderstand without an interpreter what was Moses but an interpreter of the law what were the Prophets but interpreters of Moses what was Christ but an interpreter of the Prophets what were the Apostles but interpreters of Christ what are all Pastors and teachers wherewith Christ hath euer furnished his Church since he ascended into heauen but interpreters of the Apostles Well knew the Sonne of God commanding it and his Apostles commending it how behoouefull it was for the edification of the Church by interpretation of the Scriptures to draw out both the true sence and the true vse of them which are the two proper parts of interpretation seeing so many things are to vs hard to vnderstand and things which for their sense are easiest cannot so easily of euerie one be applyed to their proper vse without this helpe This is that edifying gift which the Apostle so highly advanceth 1. Cor. 14.3 4. He that prophesieth speaketh vnto men to edifying to exhortation and to comfort and he that prophesieth edifieth the Church This is that which the auncient Fathers since the Apostles haue fruitfuly laboured in as appeareth by their learned Sermons preached written This is that which the faithfull Pastors in all ages especially of later daies since the cleare light of
the words we must necessarily open 3. points First what is meant by the word 2. what by the manifesting of it 3. what is this due time here mentioned by our Apostle which beeing explaned we shall more profitably descend to the seuerall doctrines 1. By the word is meant either Christ himselfe so called Ioh. 1.1 beeing that inbred word euen that person by whome the father reuealeth all things for none knoweth the father but the sonne and he to whom the sonne reuealeth him so as the father by this word his sonne maketh himselfe and his will knowne to men as one man reuealeth his minde to another by his words This word is the matter of the Gospel Or else by the word is rather meant the doctrine of the Gospel which is the word concerning Christ both these indeede were reuealed in due time and both may be truely meant but this rather this more properly because the words containe a reddition and haue reference to the former verse which speaketh of promises which promises by the doctrine of the Gospel preached are fully reuealed to be accomplished 2. By the manifestation of this word is meant such a cleare reuelation of it as vnto which is required a great light for the word noteth so much Before this comming of Christ there was an appearance of this word but not a manifestation some light there was but darke and obscure in types and shadowes and like to that of the dawning of the day compared to the brightnesse of the sunne in his strength But now the sunne of righteousnes beeing risen as he was newly and not long before the writing of this Epistle there is a cleare publishing of the Gospel at what time not a few Prophets were sent to one people to promise the future performance of auncient predictions but that great Prophet and Christ doctor of his Church both by his appearing his preaching his life his death in his owne person cleared vnto the Iewes as also by sending out his disciples and Apostles into all the world proclaimed vnto the Gentiles the present and perfect performance of whatsoeuer was written of him This is the doctrine here meant and elsewhere so magnified by the Apostle who comparing it with former shadowes calleth it the Gospel of glorie and a ministerie of righteousnesse which exceedeth in glorie 3. The word translated due time signifieth the proper time of this manifestation that is that verie time which the Lord in his counsell appointed for this purpose called elswhere fulnesse of time that is such a full time as whereof all the parts and periods are expired More plainely this fulnes of time is when after the scepter is departed from Iudah and after Daniels seauentie weekes the Messiah is borne is put to death and raised vnto glorie then must he be preached to all the world In fulnes of time he was borne Gal. 4.4 when fulnesse of time was come God sent forth his sonne made of a woman In fulnesse of time he died 1. Tim. 2.6 he gaue himselfe a ransome in due time and in this fulnesse of time he openeth the mysterie of his will to gather into one all things Eph. 1.9.10 Quest. But why doth the Apostle so carefully adde this circumstance not here onely but also in so many other places of Scripture Ans. To stay the curious minds of men who would be inquiring into the cause why God did no sooner manifest this word in the world but suffer 4000 yeares to passe in such obscuritie Why did not he reueale things before why did he then the reason is no time was Gods time but that who hath put all times and seasons in his owne power who is most wise to dispose to all things their fittest seasons Againe no time but that was their due time their fulnesse of time was not till then their proper time compleate in all the Articles and periods of it was not till then Whereof the Scripture affordeth vs some grounds as 1. betweene the time of promise and performance must intercede a time of expectation for sundrie causes that both the wisedome and truth of God and the faith patience of his people might shine gloriously 2. There must be a time wherein the Gentiles must be suffered to walke in their owne waies before the time of calling an holy seed from among them Act. 17.30 3. There must be a time of bondage and seruitude of the Church vnder the elements of the world and rudiments of the law before this libertie and freedome was to be procured Gal. 4.4 4. If Christ and these promises had beene exhibited and accomplished to the Father the end of the world had been before we had beene borne but because God would not haue them perfect without vs the promises were deferred These words thus explaned afford vs these 3. instructions 1. That the doctrine of saluation is more clearely manifest then in former times 2. That the Lord effecteth euery thing in the due season of it 3. That the euidence of the doctrine of saluation is to be sought and found in the preaching of the word Doct. 1. That saluation is more clearely reuealed then in former ages appeareth in that all the time of the law was but the infancie and nonage of the Church which then was as a childe vnder Tutors and gouernours and as a child was initiated in rudiments and elements of Christian religion and endued with a small measure of knowledge and faith because the time was not come wherein the mysteries of Christ were vnfolded Yea euen Kings and Princes who had the greatest meanes of knowledge desired to see the things which we see and could not and to heare them but yet could not as Christ himselfe witnesseth To which purpose the Apostle Peter saith that of this saluation the Prophets haue inquired and searched and prophesied of the grace that should come vnto you not that the Prophets themselues had no comfort of that grace but in comparison it may be said to haue come vnto vs as beeing so eeuidently accomplished vnto vs as it was not vnto them the waters from vnder the threshold of the Sanctuarie reached but to their anckles which now is become a streame which cannot be passed the cloud at the first appearance to them was no bigger then the palme of a mans hand which now couereth the whole heauen Thus had the old beleeuers ●he like precious faith with vs and Abraham saw the daie of Christ but a farre off and more darkely But not to insist in the proofe because we shall meete with the point more fitly we come to the vse of it Vse 1. How blessed were we if we could see our blessednes to whom such meanes of blessednes are offered how is the land in many places filled with the knowledge of God but would God that euen in such places men knew the day of their visitation and that the things of their peace were
or countries reformed on the suddaine No this is a worke which must first be performed by seuerall persons and so brought into families and so into townes and so into countries For otherwise let neuer so good lawes be enacted for common welths neuer so pure orders in any Church the labour is no lesse then lost But especially let the Minister looke to this that first himselfe then his house and then Gods house be reformed Vse 2. Here is a note to knowe a true professor by not to deeme him as he appeareth abroad but if thou wouldst haue the iust length of his foote follow him home from Church see how wisely he walketh in the midst of his house see whether his house be a Church how his children are ordered whether his seruants be like Cornelius his seruants and in a word whether he and his house at home serue the Lord. Doctr. 2. He that would haue the blessing of gratious children he must beginne at religion planting it in them as their tender yeares will beare training them in the institution and reformation of the Lord seasoning them with the words of pietie distilling and by little and little dropping into them seeds of holinesse and the feare of God and prouiding that they might if it were possible sucke in godlines with their mothers milke For this is the way to haue his house a little Church and house of God besides the approbation of his owne faithfulnes And that this is the dutie of parents we might be plentifull in Scriptures and reasons but briefly let euery father consider 1. that he is one cause of his childs euill he hath helped him into sinne and hath begotten him in his owne image the heathen could say that there are two maine causes in a lewd father of a lewd child 1. the euill nature and disposition of the parent 2. euill education now seeing the best of vs bring too much miserie vpon them by the former we had neede be meanes by the latter to drawe them out of it 2. This is a good ground of all other nurture and discipline teach them all the doctrine of manners all tongues together with all arts sciences yet let thē want this one discipline thou leauest them to the curse of God the ende of their liues is peruerted and in stead of beeing the staffe and ioy of thine age they shall perhaps become thy greatest scourges True it is which Salomon vttereth and which euerie parent in some measure shall say My sonne if thy heart be wise I shall reioyce whereas by the iust iudgement of God many lewde sonnes neuer come to knowe or performe dutie to parents because parents haue had small or no care to teach them dutie towards God 3. Marke how the Lord looketh vpon this dutie and accordingly blesseth or curseth fathers and children Abraham was to be a mightie nation c. and the Lord would not hide his secrets from him because he knewe he would teach his familie Gen. 18. On the contrarie Ely otherwise a good man how seuerely was he with his whole house corrected for neglect of this duty see the historie 1. Sam. 2.29 4. Euery Christian must extend his care euen to posteritie and be a meanes to leaue his children the true worshippers of God in the places where he hath liued or shall liue abroad in the world for as if we would haue the Church of God and his truth continue amongst vs we must then bring it into our houses so if we would haue it continue after vs when we are gone we must leaue it with our children that they may continue it in their houses also Quest. But wherein especially doth this dutie consist and how may we performe it Ans. It standeth in two things 1. in acquainting them with the grounds of truth necessarie to saluation and this must be done by priuate catechising 2. by bringing them to the publike assemblies so soone as they are able to sit either fruitfully or reuerently and in both these watch ouer their profiting Thus maist thou and oughtest to teach euen a child in the trade of his way Obiect But this is a vaine thing to trouble children alas what would you haue children to doe Answ. But although it may seeme to be fruitlesse while they are young yet will they remember it saith Salomon they are old teach thy child to speake well while he can but speake and when he will conceiue afterwards the sense and meaning of it 2. Thou shalt not loose thy labour for by this meanes thou shalt displace at least restraine naturall folly which is bound vp in their hearts if thou dost nothing else 3. Looke vpon the examples of godly parents Hannah brought Samuel to Heli his instructor so soone as he was weined 1. Sam. 1. Salomon was but a tender child when Dauid his father taught him and said let thy heart hold fast my words Eunica the mother of Timothie taught him the Scriptures of a child and what excellent fruits and testimonies appeared in these of their timely instruction Vse Let euerie parent resolue of the timely instruction of their children that as he hath begotten them in the flesh he may be a meanes to beget them in the faith also that as he is the father of their bodies he may also become after a sort the father of their soules also and let the mother be a nurse to the soule of her little ones as of their bodies and both fathers and mothers vse meanes that as their children waxe in bodily strength and stature so also they may growe to some strength and age in Christ Iesus But this dutie is not discouered in the fruits of it nay the practise of our youth without and on the Sabbath pointeth with the finger to that rule that is within doores throughout the weeke and if to profane the Sabbath sweare raile curse game contemne superiours be notes of faithfull children there is a number such but if these be things better beseeming the education of infidels it is a shame for professors of the Gospel to haue them so rife amongst them And what other is the next cause of the generall profanenes and dissolutenes of our age surely because men content themselues to send their children to Church and yet some scarse that and many that for a fashion that if they can meete with knowledge of God or religion there so it is but they banish it out of their houses And how infinitely doe we hereby disadvantage our selues The Papists confesse that all the ground we haue got of them is by catechizing and it is to be feared we shall loose our ground againe for want of it Iulian himselfe cannot deuise a readier meanes to banish Christian religion then by pulling downe schooles and places of education of children by chatechising And when lost the Church of Rome the soundnesse of religion but when they put downe chatechisme and set vp idols
other Priests might not marrie diuorced or defiled women but he may not marrie a widowe but a maid onely Neither might he mourne at all no not for his father or mother which was lawfull for the other Priests thereby to pollute himselfe and the holy place All which with a number moe such solemne rites betokened a singular sanctimonie in such as were to be giuen vp and dedicated to the Lords seruice Whence I conclude that if in those that ministred but in a material Temple that serued but in shadows types and obscuritie that in comparison were so farre off from the ministerie of the spirit of grace of libertie of life and so after a sort from God himselfe was required such legall holynesse at the least how much more is the truth of those representations requisite in vs who serue in the spirituall house of God who carie the substance and the bodie and are so much nearer drawne vnto God by how much he beeing a spirit delighteth in spirituall seruice before elementarie In Exod. 19.22 there is a speciall iniunction that the Priests who were to come to heare the law deliuered should be sanctified least the Lord destroy them much more then those that are the mouth of God in the newe testament to deliuer the law and Gospel should be carefull of their sanctification least the Lord sanctifie himselfe in their confusion For else those should not be such sure consequents of the Apostle where he dehorteth Christians from vnholinesse and prophanenes because of their present condition in that they were not vnder the lawe but vnder grace and that they were not come to mount Sinai but mount Sion And if such arguments were strong enough to binde common Christians to followe holinesse without which no man can see God surely farre stronger are they to enforce the dutie vpon the minister whose whole doctrine meditation speaches and actions priuate as well as publike should sauour of the spirit of God and of his blessed regiment in their hearts Vse 1. Profane Ministers are hence admonished o● their danger and vnfitnes how dare they take Gods name in their mouthes when they hate to be reformed How dare they rashly attempt to touch holy things with vnwashen hands when Dauid a most holy Prophet of God would not compasse the Altar nor participate in holy things before he had washed his hands in innocencie are such fit successors of the Prophets and Apostles who were called holy men of God not only in that they were penmen of the Scriptures and immediatly assisted and inspired by the holy spirit of God and freed from error in their doctrine which priuiledge we cannot succed●●hem in but also in regard of their holy and innocent liues wherein also they shined as lights in the world expressing and shewing in life the life of that true and pure religion they taught vnto others 2. Let such as count this holines which is nothing but puritie of heart and life in Minister or people too much puritie and precisenes see their error and repent of it if they shall not see God who are without it much lesse shall such as scoffe at it We serue a God of pure eyes who hath pronounced blessing vpon the pure of heart and threatned that dogges and vncleane persons shall stand without the gate of that holy citie Notwithstanding therefore many a fooles bolt if that be puritanisme which many so esteeme it becōmeth all the people of God much more his Ministers in that way which they so tearme to serue the God of their fathers 3. Note that marriage is no impure or vncleane condition of life nor a breach of chastitie and holynes for ●e that in the words before is permitted to be the husband of one wife is here called also to holynes and chastitie Temperate The Papists to maintaine the former error of single life translate this word continentem but the words of Scripture which for most part are more generall and figuratiuely comprehend many particulars either in commanding or prohibiting may not be restrained to strengthen Popish error For although all the vertues of the seauenth commandement may be here included yet the word is more generall then so seeing he is properly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that hath any thing in his power that is Lord ouer a thing to command it and enioy it and here one who is Lord ouer himselfe his lusts affections appetite who enioyeth these and is not theirs who keepeth the command of these and they haue not him at command requiring that the Minister should be a man that can curbe and bridle himselfe in his will to ouermaster it in his affections of desire reuenge mirth sorrow c. to moderate them that they exceed not the meane and due measure in his appetite of meate drinke sleepe recreation that it be not inordinate yea in all his parts his hands his eyes his tongue c. so order himselfe as that no vnseemely kinde of gesture fashion word or dealing proceede from him which may disgrace his calling but to carie himselfe in such a temper as becommeth the former vertue of holines For euen the word hath affinitie with that which we call a right temperament or constitution whether of humors in the bodie or affections in the soule which is when none is predominant but one of them is equally mixed and qualified by another as strong wine is tempered and allaied with water and implyeth that the Minister by reason wisedome and religion especially either allay or breake off the headines and violence of those troublesome lusts and affections which may otherwise molest him and exceedingly preiudice him in the workes of his calling This vertue then standing in the moderation of our desires in the vse of all the gifts and liberties we enioy as also in laying a law vpon our selues that no inordinate lust beare sway in vs it cannot but be most nenecessarie in a Minister who may not either in his priuate course vnfit himselfe to the performance of his calling by the immoderate affection or vse of any externall libertie as of meate drinke recreation riches much lesse in his publike execution may he administer holy things as the word sacraments prayer according to distempered passion or affection as of anger sorrow lightnes or any such And further as it is a great preseruatiue in him of an equable and constant Christian course so is also a great nourisher of his inward quiet and outward peace and so procureth his freedome vnto ministeriall duties which aboue all other require that a man should be wholly his owne and the Churches for it bringeth downe high thoughts and proportioneth the minde vnto such an estate as becōmeth the simplicity of the gospel it cutteth off al affectation of state pompe sumptuousnes superfluities aboue that which becommeth a Minister of Christ which things make rich men indeed but poore Ministers for the most part Now the meanes to attaine this vertue
hearts God giues them ouer to beleeue and broach doctrines besides the word all their learning hindreth not nay rather armeth them to sticke fast to falshood and errors and to defend doctrines of much loosenesse and libertie Especially the iudgement of God is come vpon the Romish Church to the vttermost who because they lay this for a ground of their doctrine that this word is not of it selfe faithfull and certaine vnlesse the Church and Councels and the Pope authorize it to mens consciences and that any other word thrust vpon the Church by the former authoritie is euery whit as faithfull as this hence is their whole religion a mysterie of iniquitie and delusion hence comes in intercession of Saints worship of images prayer to and for the dead pilgrimages here purgatorie hereafter reuelations masses bread-worshippe propitiatorie sacrifices mixture of Moses and Christ which is a doctrine cutting them off from Christ who haue before cut off the authoritie and credit of the Scriptures which are the word of Christ which fearefull iudgement let it mooue euerie Timothie and Titus carefully to keepe the worthie thing which is committed vnto them 2. Euerie Minister is taught hence to hold him vnto this faithfull word for so he shall deliuer not things doubtfull and vncertaine but such as men may leane vnto rest and as we say write vpon And this is insinuated by our Apostle that that is a faithfull ministerie which holdeth it selfe vnto a faithfull word such as is the sure anchor of mens soules against which hell gates cannot preuaile Such was the ministerie of the true Prophets Ieremie saith of a truth the Lord hath sent me and bidden me speake these things of the Apostles who deliuered such things as they receiued of the Lord and commanded vs that if an angel from heauen or a deuill from hell should bring not a contrarie but a diuerse doctrine from that to hold him accursed yea of the Sonne of God himselfe who said my word is not mine but my fathers What horrible blasphemie then is daily practised in the Popish Churches whose teachers calling these faithfull words a nose of waxe send men to dumbe idols the teachers of vanities and lies yea to Apocryphall writers to fathers councels Bishops and Popes as though the Scriptures had lost all their faithfulnesse or as though the canons decrees summes and sentences of men were more stable then that eternall truth that shall out-last heauen and earth Was this a faithfull word in Pauls time and is it not so still doth the sonne of the eternall father pronounce of his fathers word that it is not onely true but truth it selfe and that not one iot of it can passe or faile and is it any other then the voice of Antichrist which shall say that it is no certaine word at least to me vnlesse the Church say so Shall the spirit of God call it a sure word of the Prophets and Apostles and a word of truth and shall we heare a wicked and lying spirit come out of hell and say that this stabilitie and truth dependeth vpon man whereas let God be true and euerie man a lyar and that if those men whom they tearme the Church change their minds or any sense in the Scripture so doth the holy Ghost also Let these owles flie the light of the Scriptures as such as loue to liue in darkenes carnall religion must haue carnall props like lips like lettice we say and such a Church such lawes As for vs let vs as it standeth vs in hand hold vs vnto this faithful word and not in stead of it deliuer the vnfaithfull words of men whether Philosophers or fathers or schoole-men And is it not good reason that we should be tied to this word when euen the Prophets and Apostles were Isai must take a role and write and binde the testimonie and seale the lawe among the disciples the commandement to Ieremie was preach the words that I shall tell thee In the newe Testament they must heare Moses and the Prophets Paul was separated to preach that Gospe● which was promised before by the Prophets and accordingly he witnessed that he spake nothing besides the things foretold by the Prophets Againe what ministeriall worke is it which this word doth not most naturally and happily effect for this is a sure instrument to beget faith Ioh. 17.20 and to confirme it Act. 15.32 to conuert soules Psal. 19.7 and to saue soules Iam. 1.22 Now vnto hearers this doctrine affoardeth also speciall vse of instruction 1. If it be so faithfull a word euerie man must attend vnto it 2. Pet. 1.19 we haue a surer word to which yee doe well that yee attend 2. To lay vp this word surely as beeing the sure euidence of thy saluation and of thy heauenly inheritance among the Saints Men locke vp their euidences or convaiances of land in sure and safe places delight often to read in them suffer no man to cousen them of them whatsoeuer casualtie come these are by all meanes possible safegarded and shall any man carelesly neglect such an euidence as this is without which he hath no assurance of saluation nor the tenure out of his idle conceit of one foote in heauen a lame man if he hold not fast his staffe falleth and whosoeuer looseth his part in the word looseth his part in heauen 3. Here is a ground of thankfulnesse in that the Lord hath not onely vouchsafed vs life and glorie and immortalitie when we were dead and when nothing could be added to our miserie but hath also giuen vs such a constant guid and direction therunto we might either haue groped after him in palbable darknes or haue had such direction as might haue affoarded vs lesse assurance and comfort but now beleeuers knowe assuredly that they were loued of the father before the foundation of the world and out of that loue chosen vnto life that the Sonne was sent to ransome them from sinne and present them iust before his Father that his spirit is sent out to regenerate them and to further and finish their sanctification that by his prouidence they are supplied in all their good that by his power they are protected from all their euills He might haue brought vs to heauen and neuer haue let vs know any of these comforts in earth yet would he not so slenderly leaue his Church but as our Sauiour noteth he hath spoken and written this word that our ioy might be more full which is one generall vse of the whole word of God Now what can we doe lesse then in way of thankfulnes 1. yeeld vp our selues to be directed by this faithfull word 2. Beleeue it in whatsoeuer it commandeth threatneth or promiseth in that it is such a faithfull word and hereby we set also our seale vnto it 3. Constantly cleaue vnto it in life and in death and not to be so foolish as
thee to life the vaile is still on thy heart and thou wilt not suffer it to be remooued that the glorious light of Iesus Christ should shine vpon thy soule But marke thy fearefull estate all this while For whosoeuer thou art that perceiuest not the mightie power of the word in thy chaunge and conuersion be thou sure it is mightie in working thy ouerthrow and confusion For God neuer speaketh but to saluation or perdition the words of his mouth returne not in vaine they are the sauour of life or of death they binde or they loose they be the sentence either of absolution or of condemnation oh then thou that louest thy soule deceiue not thy selfe for if the Gospel be hid now beeing a word so fit to teach thee and thou hauing bin so long taught and yet remainest vntaught still vnchanged still inwardly vnreformed still outwardly it cannot but be a fearefull brand that thou art as yet in the state of perdition and that the God of the world hath blinded thine eyes vnto destruction And ●l●tter not thy selfe in a course of securitie because perhapps thou seest not thy danger for this word cannot quicken thee but thou shalt perceiue it but it slayeth men insensibly so as if thou findest not the life of grace wrought by it thou hast great cause to feare and flie thy present estate 3. The last vse is directed against the Papists who hold that the Scriptures are 1. imperfect without tradition 2. obscure and difficult For the former Bellarmines position i● that all necessarie doctrine concerning faith and Christian life is not contained in the Scriptures but many things of this kind that is necessarie things are to be supplyed out of the traditions either of the Apostles or of the Church And for the second he affirmeth that the Scriptures are not so plaine and easie to bee vnderstood as that they be sufficient in themselues to decide the controversies of faith without the authoritie and expositions of the Church nay rather are so obscure that euen in things necessarie to be knowne they cannot without the instruction of the Church be vnderstood no not of faithfull men Against both which blasphemous positions this one of our Apostle opposeth it selfe in that the word was euer fitted to the instruction of beleeuers and did euer sufficiently instruct them in all ages according to the age and state of the Church Nay this word beeing perfectly fitted and sufficient for the instruction of the Church when yet there were but the fiue books of Moses are they not now much more sufficient and perfect seeing the expositions of the Prophets and the writings of the Euangelists and Apostles are added Obiect But as then the Scripture was imperfect without the writings which after were added so is it now without the decrees constitutions and traditions of the Church To which I answer that the written word was neuer imperfect for when the newe Testament was added vnto the old it was made not more perfect but more cleare for euen then it was entire if not in so many words yet in the same sense and substance of doctrine Let them a●ke then what the Scripture speaketh of this and that as the Baptisme of children of Maries virginitie after Christs birth of purgatorie or what by the Scripture we may thinke of the vncircumcision of women of infants dying before the 8. day of the sauing of the heathen c. I answer if the things of which they inquire be either false or fabulous as that of purgatorie or not necessarie to saluation as that of Maries virginitie the question is not of them it is no impeachment vnto the Scriptures to omit them wherein we see many of the words and facts of Christ himselfe omitted but if they aske of things more necessarie if they be of absolute necessitie these are taught fully and expressely as the substance of all Christian religion But for necessarie circumstances and inferiour truth about them the Scripture often entending to prouoke our studie and diligence is not so expresse and yet is not wanting in teaching them but by proportion and analogie As in the example of baptizing of children it is by proportion and consequence taught in Scripture though not in so many syllables as seeing that circumcision was administred to children so by proportion may children 2. Christ calleth them 3. affirmeth that they belong to him and his couenant and therefore the seale belongeth vnto them 4. the Apostles baptised whole housholds wherein doubtlesse were many children Obiect But Apostolike men who writ the Scripture had no commandement to write the word or if they had they had no intention to write a perfect rule to all the world but writ occasionally either some historie as the Euangelists or epistles and letters as the Apostles according to the condition of seuerall Churches or men to whom they writ Ans. ● They spake and writ not by priuate motion but by instinct which is equiualent to a commandement 2. Although they writ occasionally yet were they so guided by Gods prouidence that whatsoeuer things the Church ought to beleeue is clearely and largely deliuered in their writings So as we may conclude this point with this sure rule That the wise prouidence of God hath so furnished the Scriptures with sufficiencie and cloathed them with perfection that whatsoeuer they can alleadge to the contrarie they are either contained in the Scriptures or they are not necessarie As for the obscuritie of Scripture We graunt not that the Scriptures be obscure but that many things in them are difficult The Rhemists vpon 2. Pet. 3.16 that all Scripture is difficult especially Pauls Epistles whereas Peter saith onely that some things in Pauls Epistles were hard to be vnderstood and not all his Epistles Againe they forget that the same Apostle Peter speaking of the Scripture saith that it is a light shining in a darke place Now when we speake with the Scriptures that some things are difficult we must take with vs these three caueats 1. That this difficultie proceedeth either from the maiestie and high excellencie of the things of God contained in them or else from the lownes and weakenesse of man whether vnregenerate or regenerate The vnregenerate person beeing in his naturall estate is endued onely with a naturall vnderstanding so as the things of God are beyond his reach and compasse they are foolishnesse to him he cannot conceiue of them The regenerate although he hath an inward light of the spirit which the other wanteth yet these things euen to him are reuealed but in part after an vnperfect manner and in vnperfect meanes vntill that perfect come so as the best man is partly ignorant of the nature of the things themselues besides his failing in the meanes as the knowledge of the tongues his studie meditation and labour herein 2. Whereas they say that this obscuritie is in things necessarie to be knowne the truth
minde is put for all the faculties of it especially the vnderstanding reason and iudgement all which are deluded and deceiued by these vain teachers Quest. How did these false teachers deceiue mens minds Ans. Foure waies 1. by suppressing the truth for by their vaine iangling and speaking liker Poets Philosophers historians then Prophets Apostles or any successors of theirs they made a cleanly conuaiance of the light from the people and withholding the truth and light they led them from Christ from the right knowledge of the Scriptures from sound godlinesse and religion in iudgement and practise and so they remained as darke in their vnderstanding as erronious in their iudgements as froward in their affections and as wicked in their liues as euer before Secondly by flatterie for they would not deale directly against the sinnes of the age as godly Ministers doe but deceitfully that they might not displease herein imitating Satan himselfe who was wont of olde to answer in riddles as he answered Craesus that if he would transport himselfe ouer the riuer Halys he should ouerthrowe a most mightie kingdome namely his owne But Micha will not deceiue nor flatter with Ahab although it stand vpon his life Thirdly by letting men see their estate in false glasses so as they neuer see the truth of it for people taught by fables and nouelties think and are borne in hand that they are in heauens high way their soules are brought on sleepe and comming from such froathie discourses they sit downe and please themselues in that they haue done their task required especially if they can bring home a iest or some wittie sentence when perhaps they scarce heard a word of Christ of their iustification of their mortification or of their glorie 4. By placing religion in bodily exercises not in matters of spirit and truth Colos. 2.20 thus did the Pharisies in their times the Papists in these and whosoeuer more vrge the decrees of men more then the commaundements of God Quest. But whose mindes are deceiued Answ. First their owne and then others for they are blind leaders of the blind deceiuing and beeing deceiued and although here our Apostle expresseth not here who they be that are deceiued yet elsewhere he doth as Rom. 16.18 they deceiue the hearts of the simple and 2. Tim. 3.6 they lead captiue simple women and 2. Pet. 2.14 they beguile vnstable soules whence we see that ignorant inconstant and vnsetled soules which hand ouer head receiue any doctrine without examination or triall whose simplicitie disableth them to iudge betweene truth and falshood and whose leuitie makes them like shaken reeds these are the carkases on which such vultures do seaze Hence 1. note three notable properties of errour 1. it neuer loueth solitarinesse but is a spreading leauen shrowding it selfe in multitudes and compassing sea and land to procure patrons and Proselytes Example we haue in the Iesuites the arch deceiuers of minds and impostors of the world 2. It taketh the highest holds of men euen the mind vnderstanding and iudgement that the eie once beeing put out and the light turned into darknes it might cary men headlong remorslesly to all cursed practises which necessarily resemble as they proceed from the former 3. It ouerturneth all Gods order ordinances for whereas the scope of the teachers calling is to enlighten mens minds perswade their consciences rectifie their hearts so as they might growe vp in the sauing knowledge of God in Christ and the liuely sense of their owne saluation in a word whereas they are to set and containe men in the right way error in their minds causeth them to drawe men out of the right path as this word properly signifieth 2. Note what is the best fence against false teachers and an hedge against seducers namely 1. knowledge 2. loue of the truth The former armeth simple soules by letting them see the difference betweene the right hand and left without the which the minde cannot be good But the latter is the surest pace of truth and that is the loue of it for no matter it is that men know professe and can talke of the truth if their soules cleaue not vnto it for euen vpon those that receiue the truth shall God send strong delusions to beleeue lyes if they receiue it not in the loue of it Quest. But what is this doctrine to vs we all professe the truth and loue it from our hearts and therefore we hope we are fenced from deceiuers or beeing deceiued Answ. But let vs consider 1. That these are the last times which the Apostles prophecied of euen perilous times wherein many deceiuers should creepe into the Church and many should giue heed to the spirits of error 2. That these deceiuers of mindes were such as liued in the bosome of the Church among such as professed Christ and his religion 3. That they lurked secretly and that the Christians of that time could hardly of themselues descrie them and therefore the Apostle is glad to helpe them and wisheth them carefully to preuent them and therefore there may be priuie impostors among vs. 4. That we hauing set doores open for them we shal not want deceiuers for whatsoeuer many men say most men loue not the truth sincerely delt withall nay they desire to be deceiued while they hate with a deadly hatred such Michaes as would let them see their estate and helpe them out And is it not Gods manner of iust proceeding when men desire preachers that will preach of wine and strong drinke to send them such teachers as they desire that he that is ignorant and filthie may be ignorant and filthie still Those then that care not for the truth shall haue teachers which shall be Gods executioners to lead them into error that as by the great Antichrist the Lord reuenged and plagued the contempt of the light in the world so also in particular Churches and places by false teachers and pettie Antichrists If men will not abide wholesome doctrine but haue itching eares they shall haue an heape of teachers after their owne lusts to turne their eares fr●m the truth and delude them with fables Let Ahab once hate Micha the Lord presently consulteth who shall deceiue him and if this question once proceede out of Gods mouth the deuill is present and so forward in the execution of Gods vengeance as he shall preuaile against 400. false Prophets at a clappe before he shall not fall by them This truth is as a finger in the bile and beeing rubbed will perhaps make Zidkiah take his fist from Michaes face and say when went the spirit from me to thee yet ceaseth it not to be the truth of God concerning our selues who so long as we giue heede to the spirit of error cannot want deceiuers Let men therefore professing themselues members of the Church looke vnto themselues and labour to knowe the truth to affect it to stand vnto it if they would be fenced
so of such Christians as turne Iews againe beware of the concision and betake vs to the circumcision which worshippeth God in the spirit and haue no confidence in the flesh no confidence in the lawe Get Christ close him by faith in the heart he is the Lord and accomplisher of the lawe vnto righteousnesse and thus hast thou enclosed thy righteousnes as a ring encloseth a Iewel Say with that Martyr onely Christ onely Christ. 2. Seeing Popish doctrine hath not saluation but carrieth men from Christ it ought not to be tolerated where it can be abolished for the scepters of Christian Princes must hold vp the scepter of Christ the Prince of peace and as it is no good religion in Princes to set vp a religion that would abolish Christ so neither is it good policie in regard both of their treacherous positions and practises For as they teach that hereticall for so they call Protestant Kings may be depriued of life much more other royalties and temporalties so is their practise proportionable in deposing kings and Emperours practizing hellish treasons and iustifying the murdering of Princes And therefore howsoeuer we should seek to pull the poore seduced ones of them out of the fire yet if they be incurable themselues haue taught vs how we should deale with them or rather neither make nor meddle with them by the tenour of the oath taken of the old leaguers in France the forme of which was this Si ad haereticorum partes de flexero si amicitiam si foedus si matrimonium cum eis faxo si opem fidemve do si ave si vale dixero illa die fulmine ferito God make vs as wisely resolute to preserue the puritie of the truth amongst vs as they are cautelously circumspect to barre it out from themselues then should they goe farre inough and stay long enough before we should entreat their returne Whose mouthes must be stopped The phrase is metaphoricall and betokeneth such an euident conuiction of errors by weight of reason and euidence of the Scripture as wherby the aduersarie of the truth is struck dumb and hath no more to say then if he had his mouth shut vp Quest. But how should we shut their mouthes for such commonly rage against the truth and ioyne mallice to error and so prostitute themselues in impudencie as that they will euer haue some shew of words at least to pretend against the truth Ans. This precept is first and properly directed to the Minister of God who by all his endeauour must take away all the defence of such errors and then confirme the contrarie truth by such sure grounds and arguments as that all men may see they haue no sound reason much lesse Scripture at least interpreted by Scripture for their defence And thus when the Church shall heare what such persons can say for themselues it will appeare to be but vaine babling and multiplying of words flowing not seldome from such as are euen damned of themselues in their owne conscience And this practise is agreeable to that of Christ himselfe who sometimes by the Scriptures Matth. 22.34 sometimes by reason Luk. 20.25.26 Giue to Caesar sometimes by a like interrogation and question Luk. 20.7 The Baptisme of Iohn sometimes by posing and parling Matth. 22.46 so set vp and silenced the Pharisies Sadduces Herodians and others as none could either answer him or durst aske him any more questions But when men are thus confuted by argument ouerthrowne with the sword of the spirit and confounded by the power of truth and yet still proceed to trouble the peace of the Church and the faith of the Saints then may the Church and must proceed by censure and admonition to enioyne them silence the which if yet they will not heare they ought by the Church to be driuen from the societie of the faithfull if they prooue gangrenes they must be cut off Doctr. The dutie of euery faithfull Minister is when occasion is offered timely to oppose himselfe against seducers and stop the mouths of false teachers wherein also the Church ought to backe and strengthen him For 1. the example of Christ must be our president who most boldly and freely vindicated the law from the corrupt glosses and expositions of the Pharisies and that in his first sermon 2. In regard of the particular members of the Church that they may be preserued in soundnesse from starting away and forsaking of the truth Hence did our Sauiour Christ not seldome vtter holy things before dogges and swine that is the Scribes and Pharisies and malicious Iewes because of those that stood by that they might be confirmed against their corruptions And this is made one ende of the precept the madnesse of the false Apostles must be made manifest that they may preuaile no longer 3. In regard of the false teachers themselues fooles saith Salomon must be answered least they be wise in their owne conceit neither shall the labour be wholly lost vpon them for it shall be a meanes either to conuert them and bring them to the knowledge of the truth or else so to conuince them as they shall be made excuseles And further the Church must strengthen euery Ministers hands in this contending for the faith and so manifest her selfe to be the ground and pillar of truth which is committed to her trust and safekeeping against all gaynesayers Vse 1. This ministeriall dutie requireth a great measure of knowledge and a man furnished with gifts of varietie of reading and soundnesse of iudgement euen a man who hath a storehouse in his brest First he must be well read and skilfull in the Scriptures that by them in the first place he may be able to shut the mouth of the aduersarie partly by the expresse texts of Scripture partly by harmonical parallel and sutable places as by the mouth of many witnesses partly by the analogie of faith arising out of the whole bodie of the Scripture partly by the proprietie of the speach in the fountaine and partly by the apt knitting of the context that there may be full concent with it selfe the antecedents and consequents yea more he must be furnished with varietie of reading euen in the workes and writings of men that he may be able in good sort not onely to apprehend the state of the questions and originall of controuersies but also that he may refute his aduersarie partly by the concent of the Church in all ages and partly by the helpe of things that are granted and confessed on both sides and partly by the contradictions which the patrons of errors cannot but vnawares flip into for it is true of a lyar or a patron of lies that he had need of a good memorie Secondly to all this knowledge is required a sound iudgement that he may be able to inferre good and necessarie consequents vpon the graunting of the truth he standeth for and on the contrarie the absurdities and
inconueniences which necessarily follow his aduersaries false positions Now alas how farre are readers and dumb men from this one part of the dutie of a Minister how dangerous are they in their places seducers may come and doe with open mouthes into their parrishes they cannot stop their mouthes nay in truth they are as the keyes to open them and vnlocke them Well were it or much better with our Church if Theophylactus his rule were obserued that he who in some competencie could not doe these things should neither be admitted nor permitted in the Ministerie Vse 2. Hence we further see that it is rather to be wished then hoped that all Ministers should be of one minde and accord in the truth and at peace among themselues For seeing it is the constant condition of the Church to haue many daubars with vntempered morter many vaine talkars deceiuers of mindes enemies to the crosse of Christ and the libertie of it what must now in this case all the world sit still and be at rest must Christs Ministers be silent and the Pastors haue neuer a voice to driue awaie wolues from the Lords foldes must hurtfull doctrine be winked at and suffered still to creepe in to the destruction of many No no there must now be opposition and strong dissention among the Ministers themselues Ieremie must set himselfe as well against Preists as Princes and people The Ministerie of the Apostles did spend much of it selfe against the false Apostles that serued not the Lord Iesus but their owne bellies Christs owne Ministerie though the Prince and author of all our peace bent it selfe most against the cheife teachers of that age who sought glorie and praise of men and thus must his faithfull Ministers tread in his holy steps If Paul had not strongly opposed himselfe against many learned teachers Act. 15.2 where had the saluation of the Church of that age laid Let men learne therefore to be wise hearted and get knowledge whereby they may rather iudge of doctrines then take offence at the diuersitie of iudgements and practises of Ministers But if any one be sunke downe so deepe that he voweth to beleeue none of them all neither will follow any religion till they be all agreed among themselues to him I will say that this rocke was laid to breake the necke of his soule vpon and a fearefull signe it is that Christ himselfe is to him a stone to stumble at For came not Christ to make debate in the earth came he not to send fire desiring nothing more then that it should be kindled came not he with his fanne in his hand to diuide betweene the chaffe and the wheate the which shall neuer be wholly seuered till the haruest And meanest thou to be a looker on till the wheate and chaffe become one or hast thou well ridde thy selfe by beeing till then iust of Gallio his religion who cared nothing for these things I assure thee who wilt looke on whilest other contend for the faith thou shalt be a looker on too whilest other goe into heauen and haue lesse to doe in that businesse then thou desirest because thou desiredst it not when thou mightest yea when thou wast gratiously invited and desired to enter Which subuert whole houses In these words is contained the second dangerous effect of these false teachers declared by two arguments 1. by the instrumentall cause namely false doctrine for they teach things which they ought not 2. by the ende of it for filthie lucres sake The danger appeareth in three things 1. in that they subuert that is quite ouerturne the saluation of men 2. they subuert houses in the plurall number 3. whole houses The first of these sheweth that these deceiuers not onely shake men in the foundation of religion but vtterly ouerthrowe them and doe as a man who not onely beates downe a windowe or a bay or the side of an house but diggeth vp the foundation or as one who not only loppeth a tree or heweth it down by the ground but diggeth it vp by the roots and quite supplanteth it so doe these deceiuers quite destroy the faith of men and turne it vpside downe that is not onely lead men away from the simplicitie of the Gospel but wholly and altogether from euerie part of the sauing truth Thus is the word vsed among the heathen whereby they expresse such a raging of the sea as casteth vp and causeth to floate that filth and mire which lay at the bottome Quest. But how did they ouerturne mens faith and saluation Ans. By teaching iustification by circumcision that is the works and rites of the lawe But will some say could this beeing but one point subuert all I answer that fundamentall truthes are such and so linked and knit together as breake one and many fall yea some are such as being denied all of them fall to the ground A man that pulleth downe an arch of the Church endangereth the whole but yet the Church may stand but he cannot digge vp the lowest stones of the foundation but all commeth to ruine Of these the Apostle mentioneth two like the two pillars which Sampson pulling downe the whole house fell the one that of the resurrection which beeing denied all preaching and all faith is in vaine the other is this of seeking righteousnes elsewhere then in Christ who is Iehovah our righteousnesse for this makes grace no more grace and Christ to haue died in vaine Whence by the way note the dangerous estate of such as liue and die essentiall members of the Church of Rome who by their doctrine of merit and iustification by works are subuerted and plucked vp by the rootes and turned of their saluation Quest. But if this be so whether may a man be saued that erreth in a fundamentall point of religion or in such a one as by consequent raseth the foundation Ans. The things which all Christians are bound to beleeue may be reduced to two heads The former are such principles as make the rule of faith so neerely touching the matter of saluation as that a man cannot be saued vnlesse he knowe and beleeue them for all will confesse that he that must be ordinarily saued must in some measure knowe the causes the matter the obiect the manner the end and meanes of it If God I say ordinarily saue him he must knowe the platforme of Christian religion As for example 1. God in vnitie of dietie and trinitie of person for vnlesse he knowe God in Iesus Christ there is no life euerlasting 2. himselfe in the guiltines and vnder the curse of sinne seeing Christ came to call none but sinners to repentance and hunger after the meanes of deliuerance for the waters of the well of life are giuen onely to such as thirst after them 3. The meanes as that without shedding of blood there is no remission of sinne and consequenly that the Sonne of God must take the nature of
deliuered from that for then the light would discouer them so as the simplest could scarce lie open vnto them and therefore they must first insinuate themselues and then by addition and sowing of their owne both depraue and denie the truth 2. The verie nature of error beeing the child of darkenes is to flie the light and as the adulterer watcheth for the twilight so doth he that adulterateth the truth Vse 1. Not needing to applie this doctrine against the Iesuites who like so many swarmes of frogges and locusts are sent out of the bottomles pit and creepe euery where into houses especially ignorant corners to beguile the simple Let it teach vs this wisedome to know whom we admit into our houses Many dangerous men there are of corrupt mindes who dare not nor will speake again●● a doctrine deliuered to a mans face nor before such as can iustifie it but behinde a preachers backe can traduce it and before the weake and simple offer impeachment vnto it of these there are not a few who whether they be Popishly or profanely addicted must be wisely discouered and remitted for their entertainment to such as themselues 2. We must in our priuate houses cleaue to truthes publikely deliuered and beware least any deceiuer defeate vs of such a treasure The Lord might free his Church in an instant of all seducers but he suffereth such hurtfull men 1. to trie the faith of his and their loue to the truth whether they will abide with him in temptation 2. to rouse vs out of securitie that the more gins and snares are laid for vs we might be the more circumspect for thus the Lord left the Cananites in the Land vndestroied to exercise his people for which with other endes he seeth it meete that these tares should growe together with the wheate vntill the haruest 3. As these wicked ones are suttle to corrupt the truth and disperse their errors namely by infecting and subuerting houses so should we on the contrarie learne to be wise in our generations and know hence that the way of fortifying and spreading the truth and banish error is by instructing and enforming our houses And surely truth will neuer flourish in the Church and in publike till it be more heartily and with better welcome entertained in families We wish good lawes and by Gods blessing many there are for the Church but were there none to our hands euery Christian should be a law to himselfe and all that is within his gates Let vs make good orders and obserue them in our families and thus our houses shall become Churches And by whetting the truth vpon our children and seruants they shall be able to teach their families after vs and so we shall propagate the grounds of true religion euen to after ages The third point of the danger is that they subuert whole houses not one or two persons in the houses but whole houses Where note the infection of error which is therefore compared to a gangrene or running tetter which let it take any one part and destitute it of heate and vitall spirits it proceedeth on vnto all and no way is there to cure the person but by cutting off the member Our Sauiour Christ calleth the doctrine of the Scribes and Pharisies leaven for the spreading of it So also if the error be in manners let Peter dissemble a little and a number will fall with him yea and Barnabas also will be drawne into the dissimulation Vse 1. Teaching Masters of families to become more wary of themselues for on them dependeth the good estate of the whole family if they be ouerreached the whole family is seduced if the deuill hold in his power the Master of a familie he knoweth little good will be done in that house except the Lord preserue some Ioseph in Potiphars house or some Saints in Neros court to iudge and condemne the rest both here at the great day 2. They must be watchfull ouer their families to keepe Popish and prophane persons out of doores least they corrupt the rest We know little what mischeife a little leauen doth but the deuill knoweth well inough and therefore he seeketh to thrust into euery societie and familie some wretch or other not to hinder good things only but to spread euill and mischeife that if he can Christs owne companie shall not be without a Iudas W●ll knoweth he that one swearer one drunkard one contemner of God and his word will doe more mischeife in an house then many religious persons can doe good Let heads of families not take their seruants hand ouer head not caring what their seruants are or are not so they will be droyles and drudges but for their owne sake for their children sake and for the more prosperous successe of all their businesse make such choise of their seruants as they may truely say with Ioshuah I and my house will serue the Lord and with Ester I my maids will fast 3. When Satan or his Ministers goe about priuily to bring vs out of tast with the word or the preachers and professours of it be wise to espie his malice betimes and timely preuent him for otherwise he will speedily subuert thee and thy house for he doth his mischeife by degrees and if thou yeeldest thy selfe but a little to harken to his whistle God in iustice may yeeld thee wholly and thy house to delusion Thus haue we seene the dangerous effects of these false teachers which beeing so great must encrease the true Ministers 1. diligence Act. 20.28 2. faithfulnesse against them Gal. 2.11.14 Now we come to the declaration of this latter effect by the instrumentall cause false doctrine and the finall which is couetousnes or filthy lucre Teaching things which thy ought not that is either impious doctrines which derogate from the glorie of God extenuate the merit of Christ or else loose and licentious doctrine rather giuing patronage to corrupt manners then any way improouing them And all these they teach for filthy lucres sake Doctr. Where the heart is set vpon gaine it will haue falsehood to feed it True it is in all sorts of men and callings which is here said of false teachers filthy lucre and falsehood are inseperable companions The Prophet Micha telleth vs that the Preists that teach for hire and the Prophets that prophecie for mony while they bite with their teeth that is while they haue to bite and feed vpon all is peace to the feeders but if a man put not into their mouthes that is satisfie not their appetite and desire they prepare warre against him as if he were an enemy to God and man The like affirmeth Ezekiel of the false Prophets who polluted the Lord among his people for handfulls of barly and peeces of bread would sew pillowes vnder euery armehole by which type they signified ease and prosperitie to the people and made vailes for euery head
thereby signifying Gods protection and safety and so fed the people with peace and pleasing things when the Lord had not spoken peace and all this only to feed their couetousnes Which plowe of their owne that it might goe forward they would slaie soules which should haue liued and giue life to soules that should not liue make the righteous sad and strengthen the hands of the wicked ver 22. Such Merchants the Apostle Peter speaketh of who through couetousnesse with fained words would adulterate pure doctrine and make merchandise of men buying and selling soules for gaine as beasts in markets By which note the true Apostles would be discerned from the false we are not such as make merchandise of the word of God that is such as by fraud and base arts plaie the hucksters to enhanse the price and amplifie our own gaine and Phil. 3.18.19 speaking of false Apostles whose bellie is their God who minde earthly things but our conuersation is in heauen And whence can such floods of errors as daily discouer themselues flow so fast but from such a corrupt head as this is When Balaams eye is vpon Balaaks gold it must needs be blinded and when couetousnesse is become the conscience of men no marueile if they dare speake write attempt any thing if it will helpe them forward to their expected wages It is no meruaile that a gracelesse pompous teacher such as glorieth in the flesh that can put himselfe out farre further and more boldly by the shadow then an holy Christian man that hath the substance for he hath a sensible spurre within him not the glorie of God good of Gods people or puritie of religion but himselfe his bellie his backe his owne glorie which before they shall giue way or faile let the Church sinke or swim let errors and corruptions as a deluge flowe into the Church so he may rise by them he will be so farre from preuenting and refuting them as he can straine his wits to patronage and defend them yea Church and common wealth shall fall too if by it a priuately minded man can rise Further see we not the tyrannie of this sinne which hath forced so many to turne the tippet from that they haue commendably vndertaken in their former daies yea and in not a fewe who hauing missed of their expected promotion haue resolued to become Papists and traytors thrusting themselues for preferment into most desperate and ineuitable mischeifes Vse But here aboue all seducers the Church of Rome and teachers of it lie most directly vnder this Apostolicall obseruation who not seruing the Lord Iesus but their owne bellies whatsoeuer they teach is such stuffe as they ought not for filthy lucres sake their whole religion is compacted and contriued for gaine yea and whereas it was neuer heard of that any seducers made gaine of any but the liuing Popish teachers aboue all impostors not onely exact gaine of the liuing by pardons masses confessions offrings pilgrimages worshipping of Saints indulgences and which is worse making but a mony matter of the greatest and most barbarous sinnes of witchcraft periury murther euen of father mother wife childe infant in the wombe incest Sodomie bestiallitie in none of which I belie them but euen the dead escape them not but paie large tributes by meanes of the deuise of their purgatorie In one word the best of their religion is a mistery of iniquitie And would to God this sinne were confined in the Popish Clergie 2. Let all the Ministers of Christ learne 1. to want and abound and be contented in all estates 2. thinke it their riches if they can inrich the Church with spirituall graces 3. Consider their callings to draw men from earth to heauen and their titles of starres which are fixed in heauen eyes which cannot looke vpward and downward at once and imitate the eye the sight of which because it is hindred by a little mote of earth it feares nothing more then earth or dust and is quick to shut it selfe against it Ver. 12. One of themselues euen their owne Prophet said The Cretians are alwaies lyers euill beasts slowe bellies 13. This witnesse is true wherefore reprooue them sharpely that they may be sound in the faith The scope of the Apostle beeing not onely to prouoke Titus to diligence in his owne dutie but to a faithfull care in the choise of the Ministers and hauing drawne one argument to this purpose from the multitude of false teachers Now he taketh another as effectuall as the former from the disposition of the people of Creta who were naturally of an euill disposition most readie to be carried away yea euen to offer themselues to any delusion And that it might appeare so to be he describeth their manners 1. by enumeration of the vices to which they were naturally addicted 1. lyars 2. euill beasts 3. slowe bellies 2. enlargeth it by the circumstance of time alwaies But least the Cretians should challenge him either of vntruth or of hatred and vncharitable dealing with them most wisely to avoide all their envie against his person which would hinder them from brooking his doctrine he vseth a preface wherein he sheweth that he speaketh nothing of his owne but that which hath beene before testified of them and against them and that by such a one as is aboue all their exception euen one of themselues euen their owne Prophet borne brought vp and living amongst them who therefore vpon knowledge and good intelligence writ vnpartially the truth of them in that his Hexameter The which beeing repeated first he subcribeth vnto the truth of it This witnesse is true and secondly groundeth an exhortation to Titus that therefore he should reprooue thē sharpely to the ende that they might be sound in the faith These two verses then contain three parts to be in their order handled 1. The preface to this testimonie 2. The testimonie it selfe 3. The Apostles subscription vnto it and illation from it But before we come to the parts two things in the whole are to be noted First the plainnes of the Apostle with these Cretians he chargeth them verie deepely that a man would thinke he were become their enemie or spake of malice and bitternes to slander them and yet he performeth a maine dutie of loue vnto them The holy men laid not their loue aside in their sharpest reprehensions Isai charged the Iewes that their faithfull citie was become an harlot that the people were become murtherers their Princes rebellious and all of them the enemies of God of whom he would be eased and avenged but what was Isay now their enemie see cap. 24.16 how pitifully affected he was toward them and his sorrow for them was such as euen brought him into a consumption my leanenes my leanenes wo is me for the trangressors haue sore offended Ieremie telleth them cap. 3.13 that they were rebellious against God and that they scattered their wayes to strange gods
in word of our selues wherein the generall practise of men is not so answerable For 1. who doth not professe of himselfe that he loueth God with all his heart and it were pitie else that he should liue and yet indeed the most desire no communion nor fellowship with him in his word and sacraments nor in their owne prayers thinke not of him speake not of him but in others the most measure their loue by their priuate gaine so long they loue him as they gaine by him like the Scribe that would follow Christ euery where till he heard that Christ had not where to hide his head then we heare no more of him Matth. 8. 2. We all professe euen by our comming to the word as the people to Moses speake thou to vs from God and we will doe whatsoeuer the Lord commandeth vs by thee and so professe subiection to Christ as to our Lord but with the Scribes many of vs say and doe not or like the younger brother who said to his father he would goe worke in the vineyard but did not And many of vs may fitly heare that sharp rebuke of Christ Why call yee me Master why professe you your selues Christians and doe not the things that I speake doe any seruants so deale with their master and not be turned out of doores 3. Who professeth not that he serueth God and he hopeth acceptable inough he commeth to Church he heareth what is said he receiueth the Sacraments and prayeth with the congregation But follow this man home doth he and his house serue the Lord doth he read instruct pray there hath he a little Church in his house oh no he hopeth God will beare with him he is not booklearned or he hath a calling he can find no time nor ability for such matters now haue we found the man we sought for no practise of pietie at home none abroad no substance of religion at home it is but a shadow abroad 4. Lastly we all wil boldly say with Peter we will neuer denie Christ no we will die with him rather and yet we will part from nothing for him we will not leaue our lusts for him much lesse our liues and as we will doe nothing for him so we will suffer as little scarse a word of reproach for his sake much lesse a blow least of all the stroke of death and consequently seeing we cannot denie our selues for him we cannot but denie him whatsoeuer we boldly vtter to the contrarie Thus might we examine euerie particular through the commandements and in euerie branch of them discouer in our selues such manifest fruits of hypocrisie as these be in which regard let vs challenge our deceitfull hearts and sift them well and we cannot but finde seaven abhominations in them euery one making vs more odious to God then other Obiect But I hope I am no such man I cannot by these notes discerne my selfe to be an hypocrite Answ. Yet maist thou be one and receiue thy portion with them For there be two sorts of hypocrites 1. such as knowe themselues so to be they knowe they dissemble in the things they speake and doe such were the Pharisies who did all things to be seene of men these haue a cloud of witnesses against them for besides God their owne words shall be their iudges their workes shall accuse them and their hearts and consciences shall be as a thousand witnesses against thē 2. others knowe not themselues to be hypocrites but thinke themselues sound enough as that Pharisie Luk. 18. who thanked God that he was not as other men and Simon Magus Act. 8. who beleeued Phillips words was baptized wondred at the things done by the Apostles and yet had no part nor portion in them because his heart was not right with God and yet he thought that he had And so is it with many who think that because their consciences sleepe or are brawned with some raigning sinne that they are sound when they shall one day finde the Lord greater then their consciences with whom such righteousnes as exceedeth not the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharisies will not goe for paiment It behooueth vs then to take vp the Apostles counsell Take heed brethren least there be at any time in any of you an euill heart of vnbeleefe causing you to depart while yee seeme to approach vnto him from the liuing God and on the contrarie to labour to expresse the power of godlinesse daily that in the last of our daies we may reape the sweete fruite of it when we shall be glad that we haue had no part with hypocrites Thus by Gods blessing are we come to the ende of the first Chapter to him be praise for euer Amen CHAP. II. BVt speake thou the things which become wholesome doctrine 2 That the elder men be sober honest discreete sound in the faith in loue and in patience THe Apostle hauing described the dutie of a faithfull Pastor in the former Chapter and exhibited a vewe of such as the Lord calleth and approoueth who must be men both of singular integritie for their life and of skilfulnesse and abilitie to teach he now applyeth all that spech to Titus exhorteth him to the exercise of his talents receiued to his masters best advantage And first he generally instructeth him what himselfe must teach namly wholesome doctrine And secondly how he should particularly apply himselfe and his doctrine to all sorts of men who are distinguished 1. by the sexe men and women 2. by the age old and young 3. by their condition some beeing masters and some seruants the meanest of which must not be contemned but euerie man and woman of what age and calling soeuer they be although their condition be neuer so seruile must haue their portion in this wholesome doctrine from the 2. to the 11. v. Thirdly he followeth some notable reasons why this holy and wholesome doctrine must be taught and learned spoken and heard from the 11. verse to the ende of this Chapter First for Titus his owne dutie it is laid downe by way of opposition and knit to the former matter and Chapter by the coniunction But teach thou As if he had said although the false teachers whom I haue described dote vpon dreames and feede their hearers with fancyes and doctrines of men to the corrupting and poisoning of soules and turning men away from the truth thou must be vtterly vnlike them in thy preaching they speake pleasing things but thou must speake profitable they by despising the simplicitie of the Gospel fall not onely into dangerous errors which they broach but into loose and idle discourses which bring diseases vpon the soule But thou on the contrarie must plainly and familiarly discouer vnto all estates of men and women their estates and duties that thereby they may be brought to soundnes they cannot but speake and teach as they are but let them trifle as they will and liue as they list thou
of Gods deliuerance 2. Sam. 16.12 It may be the Lord will looke on mine affliction and doe me good this day not making doubt for neither did Dauid in generall but constantly cleauing to the promise call vpon me in the day of trouble and I will deliuer thee Prayer for deliuerance must be ioyned with this expectation of our deliuerance not prescribing time nor meanes nor manner much lesse vsing vnlawfull meanes but reserue vnto the Lord the glory of his wisedome in ordering the whole matter and circumstances of our deliuerance The fifth fruit is a totall resignation of a mans selfe to the will of God and a voluntarie subiection vnto his good pleasure who knoweth out of his wisedome what is the best and out of his loue maketh euery present estate worke to the best to his children example hereof we haue in Dauid 2. Sam. 15.26 Behold here am I let him doe as seemeth good in his eyes yea euen if he should say I haue no delight in thee The third point wherein the soundnes of patience consisteth is in the found durance and lasting of it And indeed not euery patience and tollerance of euill is here meant but such as implieth a delaie and continuance vnder some weight or burthen nay the very word importeth so much signifying as well perseuerance as patience neither is this sound patience a suffering only but a long suffering nor a patience but a long patience such as the husbandman waiteth withall vnto the haruest such as the Prophets endured all hard measure by such as our selues must possesse our soules by and euery possession is of continuance such as maketh not hast yea such as must waite vntill the comming of the Lord. Iames in the place alleadged exhorteth to be patient till the comming of the Lord which is not meant of his last comming to iudgement but of his particular executions beforehand for the deliuerie of his chosen the reuenge of their wrongs vpon their enemies Vse All these notes let vs see the crazines of this grace in vs. It is no patience when men beare out crosses by stoutnes and stomacke neither by a nature not so subiect to impatience for here is not silence vnto God disposing the crosse vnto them So when men can buckle well enough with and swimme out of one kind of crosse which pincheth them not so much but sinke in some other when they must choose their rods and t●ialls or else they are heartles and dead in the neast here is a crannie in their patience which will sinke their soules Some againe beare out their crosses because they are yoked and coupled to them like two spaniels which must goe together because they cannot goe asunder but without all willingnes or chearefulnes but this is farre from Christian patience and is as we say patience perforce And lastly when we cannot entertaine afflictions thankefully as finding some goodnes and sweetnes in them when deliuerance is not expected from God as by such who haue title in his promise when we desire to be at our owne hands and will not stay his leisure but hastily like infidels runne vnto indirect meanes and sometime to Sathan himselfe in sorcerers witches when we are so tugged with afflictions as we hold not out but are readie to giue vp all here is all vnsound here men may not onely suspect but conclude from vnsound patience vnsoundnes of loue of faith and consequently the want of the truth in all their profession of religion Vers. 3. The elder women likewise that they be in such behauiour as becommeth holynesse not false accusers not giuen to much wine but teachers of holy things Our Apostle hauing taught how and what doctrine should be applyed to old men he proceedeth now to make olde women matchable vnto them and therefore he beginneth with the word likewise which sheweth that the same vertues as formerly haue beene mentioned are to be vrged vpon old age of both sexes and who can denie sobrietie wisdome grauitie soundnesse in faith loue and patience to be as necessarie for auncient women as men whether we consider the same inconueniences of the same olde age lying vpon them or the impotencie of their sexe in vndergoing them which yet maketh the want of these vertues farre more miserable then in the other And then he addeth some further duties fitted to their estate which he doth 1. by prescribing such vertues as are seemely for their yeares and 2. by prohibiting such vices as in all ages are wicked but in theirs most vnseemely and scandalous The duties are two 1. an holy behauiour in themselues in the first words of the verse 2. a drawing on of others vnto holinesse and honestie in the latter part of the verse and forward The vices prohibited are two 1. of slaundring or false accusing 2. of intemperate desire or drinking of wine or strong drinkes both which are contained in the middle of the verse But we will speake of the words as they lie in the verse But before we come vnto them we may learne this lesson Doctr. In that wholesome doctrine must be taught and applyed vnto women as well as men note that no woman cannot without danger of damnation despise or neglect the ministerie of the word they beeing as straightly bound vnto the meanes of saluation and the Apostle taketh double paines to teach them their duties Reas. 1. As saluation is one to all so is there but one way to all for as women must haue their names written in the booke of life as well as men that is in the booke of Gods election to life so must they be also added vnto the Church as well as men seeing none are saued who are not added vnto the Church Now this addition to the Church standeth not onely in an outward profession of the Gospel by which they are added to the visible Church for the foolish virgins made a great shewe for a time but in vnfained conuersion and sanctification whereby they are added vnto the invisible Church True it is that women must be ioyned vnto the people of God and therefore must participate 1. in the word which must be preached to euerie creature Paul preached to a company of women among whom Lydia was conuerted 2. in the Sacraments and be both admitted into the Church by baptisme as Cornelius the Iaylor and all their housholds as also strengthned in the Church by the Lords Supper in which they must remember the Lords death vntill he come But all this is not inough yea nothing at all vnlesse they be first knit vnto God himselfe the bond of which coniunction is faith wrought in the heart by meanes of the word and working in heart and life by loue to God and men If then women must beleeue to saluation aswell as men the Iaylor and all his houshold beleeued in God nay if women must continue in faith to which saluation is tyed and not
in speach and gesture before his master and behind his backe but especially in the free obedience of all his lawfull yea and vnequall commandements so as they be not vnlawfull Coloss. 3.22 seruants obey your masters in all things that is in all lawfull and bodily things And the same Apostle mentioneth both in the Ephesians and Colossians bodily masters to shew that so farre as the soule is not hurt nor the conscience wounded the rule of the seruants obedience is not his owne but his masters will be it irkesome difficult wearisome Luk. 17.7 the wearie and toyled seruant may not come out of the field to ease and refresh himselfe at his pleasure but waite still vpon the hand of his master and sit downe and eate at his masters appointment and not before as that parable teacheth 3. In patient induring without resistance rebukes and corrections although bitter yea and vniust 1. Pet. 2.18.19 seruants be subiect to your masters not onely the good and courteous but to the froward and bitter for it is praiseworthy in conscience towards God to suffer greefe wrongfully When Agar was roughly dealt withall by Sarah she runne away and would not endure her but the Lord by his Angel controlleth this course and giueth her better counsell returne home to thy mistres and humble thy selfe vnder her hand or suffer thy selfe to be afflicted by her Quest. But may not a seruant auoid the rigour and extremitie of the vniust anger of his master Ans. It may be lawfull without despising of the masters authoritie to giue way for the present vnto his furie and if conueniently it may be to withdraw himselfe ●ill the rage be past and the storme blowne ouer as Dauid conueied himselfe from Saul and the Egyptian that directed Dauid to the Amalekites made him to sweare by God that he would not deliuer him to his master from whom he had fled neither did Dauid sinne in taking that oath because of that law Deut. 23.15 If a seruant had fled from his masters rage especially if an Heathen who cared but a little for their seruants liues he must not forthwith be deliuered to his master but humanitie must be exercised towards him they must adde no affliction vnto him but kindly intreate him till mediation may be made and his Master appeased with him Hence we note that religion and the doctrine of the Gospel freeth no man from any dutie but rather fasteneth it vpon him the Apostle saith not that seruants beeing now brought to the faith are no longer to be commanded by their masters but by Christ but writeth to them not as free but as seruants still and inforceth their subiection euen to vnbeleeuing masters and elsewhere writing vnto masters he forbiddeth them not to exercise rule and dominion ouer their seruants but only teacheth them after what manner to weld their authoritie And indeed this is a point which occasioned much trouble in the Apostles daies both vnto masters and seruants for they hearing of a libertie purchased by Christ to beleeuers in him they presently begunne to cast vp all and would not serue any longer especially vnbeleeuing masters but would be at their owne hands against which conceit the Apostles Paul Peter Iohn much laboured still recalling seruants to their former subiection and obedience Let not now any obiect that this seruile condition is against the law of nature is a fruite of sinne is against the law of Christ who hath purchased such libertie as now in him all are one is against the Apostles rule be not any longer the seruants of men which things surely the seruants of those times and some since haue taken hold of For 1. euery subiection is not against the law of pure nature who can denie but that in innocencie there was a politike subiection of the wife to the husband the children to the parents and this was no fruit of sinne although the tediousnesse and painefulnes of it came in by the fall 2. Christ hath purchased a libertie for soule and bodie but we must be content with the first fruits of it here in this world and those are the spirituall libertie we haue from Satan sinne and condemnation which shall bring on that perfect freedome we expect in heauen when we shall not only be freed from the power of sinne as here but euen from all molestation of it and not only set free from the euil of seruitude as here we are by Christ bu● euen from it selfe 3. In Christ all are one indeed but in regard 1. of the spirituall and inward man 2. of the meanes of leading men to happinesse but in respect of the outward man they abide master and seruants still Prince and people still bond and free still noble and ignoble still Paul hauing conuerted Onesimus a runnagate seruant kept him not with him at Rome because he was called nor freed him from the seruice of his master but sent him to Philemon againe who although he must in regard of the faith account him a brother yet his outward condition was to be a seruant still 4. We must be no longer the seruants of men namely in respect of the inner man and the conscience which in seruants is as free from men as in Masters no master can command that for it is onely to be commanded by God but the Apostle speaketh not of bodily seruice to men neither is there any word which belongeth to the doctrine of faith that is a maintainer of any licentious libertie nay religion teacheth them that as Christ hath set them free so also that they shall not vse that libertie as a cloake of maliciousnesse and licentiousnesse but carrie themselues the rather as becommeth the seruants of God and the freemen of Iesus Christ. Vse 1. If this be so let Masters haue a care if they would haue seruants subiect vnto them to choose such as are religious and frame to religion such as they haue chosen that knowing what it is to be subiect to their master in heauen conscience may compell them to be subiect vnto their earthly masters also Wouldest thou haue thy seruant to please thee in all things worke him to please God in all things Wouldest thou finde him faithfull vnto thee see then that he be a Ioseph who will not sinne and be vnfaithfull to the Lord. Wouldst thou haue him a profitable seruant to thee see he be an Onesimus and then howsoeuer in times past he was neuer so vnprofitable yet now will he become profitable to thee and others Many masters feele the iust smart of vndutifull vnfaithfull vnprofitable servants to the ruine often of themselues and their familyes because they haue no care of their choise nor to frame them to godlinesse and prof●ciencie in grace whome they haue chosen 2. This meeteth with the sinne of many seruants who lift vp their hearts aboue the estate of subiection and in their hearts despise the person or place of their gouernours and
then that they enioy vpon the earth and can scarsely endure to heare of any exchange 3. These lusts are fitter for the course of nature vnmortified Ephes. 2.3 We had in time past our conuersation among the Gentiles in the lusts of the flesh but now c. which let such professors thinke off who frame themselues too much to the fashion of the world in meat drinke apparell sports and other things perhappes more vnlawfull then these For thus to walke argueth little or no conscience or feeling either of sin or grace and the gentlest name the Apostle giueth it is a sleepie walking Such may indeed carrie the title of Christians but the worke of Christianitie is not present where there is a fight of lusts against the soule but not of the spirit against lusts and much lesse where these furnaces are fed and fewelled and the flames are not daily dying and extinguished Vse 2. This teacheth that only true religion teacheth true mortification and suffereth not a man to walke after his lusts though he walke in the flesh yet he cannot walke after the flesh All false religions carrie indeed pretences of the spirit as Zidkiah smote Michaiah and said when went the spirit from mee to thee but the true religion only hath the promise and presence of the spirit which indeed mortifieth the deeds of the flesh Euery water in Iudea could not heale the lame but only the water of the poole of Bethesdah in which the Angel stirred Arbanah and Pharphar the riuers of Damascus although in shew much more excellent then Iordan cannot cure the leprosie of Naaman No more can euery religion or any but this which alone is from God cure the vncleannes leprosie of our soules The religion of the Pharisies was outwardly exceeding glorious and very strict yet Paul who had liued according to the most strict sect of them all professeth that before he knew Christ he was not crucified to the world At this day Poperie which carieth with it a great shew of humblenes of mind and bea●ing downe the bodie yet is farre from teaching true mortification for what doctrine the Turkish not excepted goeth further in clayming iustification and life as the merit of their owne obseruances yea take the strictest sort of them as their heremites anchorites c. that goe barefoote pine and imprison themselues lie on the ground couer their skinnes with sacke cloath c. are they not such as the former looking for heauen as a reward for the strictnesse of their liues doe they not then as one Philosopher said of an other contemne the pride of the world but with more pride Euerie shewe of humilitie is not true mortification for not onely the Epicures who were sold ouer to pleasure were enemies to Paul but those strait and seuere sects also of the Pythagorians and the Stoicks did mightily oppose him In a word among what sort of men doth the lusts of pride vncleannes Epicurisme and couetousnesse more raigne then in the teachers of that doctrine their Monks Prelacie Cardinalls and their father the Pope himselfe so as the truth is cleare that onely true religion in which the spirit delighteth to manifest himselfe is the teacher of true mortification And that we should liue soberly Now we are come to the second lesson which the doctrine of grace teacheth namely that such as entertaine it should lead their liues in the practise of three vertues contrarie to the former vices of vngodlinesse and worldly lusts the which as they are directed either against God or our brethren or our selues so the first of these prouideth against the disordered carriage of our selues in requiring sobrietie the second cutteth off hatefull and vncharitable lusts against our brethren in requiring iustice or right dealing man with man Christian with Christian especially the third represseth impious and vngodly lusts more directly against God himselfe in requiring godlinesse to shine out in the liues of professors For all these three must be practised in the due circumstance of time euen in this present world Doctr. 1. The doctrine of grace teacheth not onely to abstaine from euill but also to doe good and is the mistris of true sanctification in both the parts of it both the mortification of sinne as also quickning in righteousnesse For as it is in the lightning of a darke house first darkenesse must giue place and light must succeede so is it in the shining of this light of grace the night must passe and then the day must come the olde man must be cast off with his lusts and then the newe man put on That the Gospel is the teacher of both these it appeareth in the ende of Pauls conuersion who for this purpose was appointed a minister of the things he had heard and seene and sent to the Gentiles that he might turne them from darkenes to light and from the power of Satan vnto God and also in the whole scope of his doctrine and ministerie from the first to the last as himselfe professeth that when he taught first at Damascus then at Ierusalem after through all the coasts of Iudea and then to all the Gentiles he reduced all his doctrine in all these places to these two heads namely that they should repent and turne to God and then doe workes worthy amendment of life Hence is it that his Epistles are full of such exhortations as these cast off lying and speake truth euerie man to his neighbour walke not after the flesh but after the spirit Be not drunke with wine but be fulfilled with the spirit The same is to be noted also in the other Apostles 1. Pet. 2.12 I beseech you as strangers and pilgrimes abstaine from fleshly lusts and haue your conuersation honest among the Gentiles and cap. 4.2 henceforth so much time as remaineth in the flesh wee should liue not after the lusts of men but after the will of God Vse 1. This doctrine confuteth profane Libertines who as Paul speaketh of some in his time because grace hath abounded continue in sinne they will be saued by such a grace as quitteth them from all holy life and conscionable obedience God is mercifull and Christ died for all here is grace but the fruit and effect of it is to cleaue vnto vngodlinesse and lusts and growe euerie day more foule and deformed then other Whereas the wisedome from aboue is pure and as he that calleth is holy so must he that is called be holy also in all manner of conuersation and if we cal him father we must passe the time of our dwelling in feare The dogges shall be without when as onely the vndefiled in their waies shall obtaine blessednesse 2. Such are iustly hence reprooued who take themselues to be tolerable schollers if sometimes they make shewe of obedience vnto God and his word that they may appeare to men to pray to heare to reade to giue almes c. and yet
For how absurd will it seeme to reason with the word to call the hungrie blessed to account the rich vnhappie to esteeme corrections loue the Iulians of the world would scoffe at such paradoxes who as the Prophet speaketh walke by the sparkles of their owne fire but the life of faith is when the heart giueth vp the whole man vnto Gods leading when his wisedome is become thy direction and his word the men of thy counsell And for the latter thou must doe three things First set thy selfe often in his sight and himselfe alwaies at thy right hand let thy heart religiously thinke vpon him and his presence let thy tongue reuerently speake of him and his goodnes Secondly whatsoeuer thou doest whether thou eatest or drinkest and much more performest the duties of thy calling to which these are but seruants doe all to his glorie beeing about any thing aske thy selfe what glorie will redound to God by this speach or by this action Thirdly by euery euent make this vse to gather still into his fellowship by euery blessing gather encrease of faith loue and confidence in him by euery crosse adde vnto thy feare reuerence watchfulnesse by euery speciall prouidence obserue his admirable wisedome truth and goodnesse and thus by euery thing growe vp in him these are worthy fruits of pietie The third rule is to keepe the set times of Gods worship both publicke and priuate for this is the pale and preseruatiue of pietie which whosoeuer hath he will vse Gods meanes to preserue it A godly heart reuerenceth and reioyceth in all holy things the word Sacraments sabbaths and striueth to make his house a little Church and he that makes little or no conscience of the sabbath and family duties let him pretend what he will is an vngodly person without all religion 4. Be carefull to attend the waies of thine owne heart both how it subiecteth it selfe to the will of God written whether it be desirous to receiue the law at his mouth whether it tremble at the word as also how it subiecteth it selfe to the will of God done whether in prosperitie it lift vp it selfe to be something besides or without God and whether in correction it be silent vnto God because he hath done it Attend it how readie or heauie it is to lift it selfe vp in prayer for wants in praise for supplies whether it pray alwaies or in all things giue thankes Watch ouer it in thy seruices that it start not away and leaue thy worship liueles without spirit without truth know that God is a spirit and will be serued of thee if aright as he was of Paul in thy spirit and looke well to this matter for Iudas can follow and reuerence Christ and yet his heart going after couetousnesse be practising to betraie him and Herod can pretend to worship when he intends to kill Watch it further in the motions to sinne whether it be zealous and resolute against it and whether it sticke fast and with full purpose vnto the Lord whether it feare the least offence of God or can swallow smaller sinnes whether it bridle the tongue from idle talke and smaller oathes vaile the eyes from wanton lookes or whether it can easily digest such things which are no small departures from God when occasion is offered and know that such is thine heart as it is found in temptation Lastly watch it in the motions of the spirit how it entertaineth them how stirring it is in the causes of God as when occasion is offered of promoting Gods glorie in his pure worship or in the establishing of a conscionable ministrie how it entertaineth such good motions offered how it entertaineth Gods counsells rebukes and exhortations in the ministerie a cleare case it is that those that neglect such motions and much more resist them are yet in their sinnes and are no better then impious and vngodly persons 5. In the loue of men ioyne the loue of God for charitie abstracted from pietie is a counterfeit and this thou shalt doe when thou louest man in and for God because of Gods image and of his commandement so as if thou seest godlinesse grow in any man thy loue groweth with him and if grace decaie as he estrangeth himselfe from God so thou for his good becommest more strange vnto him For although by vertue of Gods commandement we must loue all and do good vnto all yet we must reserue a speciall loue to the image of God renued and especially affect such as are of the houshold of faith Vse If these be the practises of pietie which cannot be attained but by these rules then shall many a one who take themselues to haue taken out this last lesson be found non-proficients and such as whom grace neuer taught any such thing as godlinesse And to omit to speake of wicked Esaus and Ismaels scoffers of such as walke in these straite waies of God tossers of reproaches against them so farre from that inward and pure worship of the heart in spirit and truth as they are open despisers of the outward ordinances of the word and sacraments who are furthest from repentance and verie seldome reclaimed yea so monstrous and black are these filthie dogges and swine as they are not more condemned of others then of themselues for most part We will leaue to wash such bricks and come first to our common people whose extreame and secure ignorance loads them with such a burthen of impietie as it is impossible for them euer to stand vnder it when Christ shall appeare and yet they thinke to get to heauen nimbly inough For this whole practise of pietie is placed in that which they call a good meaning and a good hope but replie and tell them that grace is not contented with good meaning but teacheth to liue godly and so bringeth pietie into the life they answer that they could neuer make any shewes as many men can but yet they hope they may haue as good hearts as the best to god-ward Wherevnto if you demand how that roote can be so good which sendeth out such sower fruite or that fountaine sweete which sendeth out such bitter water for in these good hearts ignorance raigneth and the goodnes of their hearts openly neglecteth the word Sacraments c. the means of saluation and preseruatiues of pietie they can answer that they keepe their Church and doe as the most doe and if they receiue not the sacrament it is because they are not reconciled to some that haue offended them vnder which pretence they can refuse that comfort for many yeares together and carrie ye● the matter further with them and tell them your good heart sendeth out wicked oathes bitter curses and fearefull imprecations then they sweare either nothing but the truth or by nothing but that which is good or if they did happe to sweare or curse much they were vrged vnto it And for the sabboath adde that whereas a good heart maketh it a
not to pa●●y and talke with him but presently make resistance for by such degrees iniquitie comes into his chaire delay to talke with sinne by reason of our inclination breeds a certaine delight in it delight begets desire desire worketh indeauour indeauour produceth the act the act ingendreth and is quickly iterated and multiplied multiplication is the mother to a benummed conscience a brawned conscience begets defence of sinne defence riseth to boasting or gloriation in it and thus is sinne brought into the chayre of estate and the quishon is damnation Now sinne is proclaimed crowned and accepted of and hath all loyaltie performed vnto him Doctr. 2. Secondly out of the words we learne what a wonderfull freedome we haue obtained by Christ. By nature we are wrapped in the guilt of sinne subiected to the stipend of sinne subdued vnder the curse of the law and lie right vnder the whole wrath and displeasure of God Our sinne proclaimed vs rebels to God through heauen and earth banished vs out of our owne countrie set hell gates open against vs and gaue vs into the hands of Satan as an hangman to execute Gods sentence of eternall death passed against vs yea further hopelesse we were in this wofull condition for Gods displeasure was so kindled against vs as men and Angels could not reconcile him the law was so transgressed as all men and Angels could neuer satisfie nor make vp the breach the sentence was so seuere as all men and angels could neuer haue stood vnder it the execution so certaine as the verie gibbet was euer standing in our sight in the horrors of soule and terrors of accusing consciences and we seemed to walk and be left in the midst of tenne thousand deaths Now when no meanes was left to pacifie God offended to satisfie the law transgressed to reuoke the sentence denounced the Sonne of the eternall Father must come from the bosome and glorie of his Father and become obedient both to the performing of the whole will of his Father as also to the ignominious death of the crosse that so becomming a curse for vs as that execrable kind of death betokened we might haue God well pleased with vs as he is with him we might present him his law perfectly fulfilled not in our persons but in his for vs we might plead the payment of all our debts both the principall and forfeiture by this our suretie and so might sue out our full discharge from all former claimes and sentences because the vttermost farthing is fully paid and discharged Vse 1. If Christ hath freed and redeemed vs from all iniquitie then hath he made no partiall redemption he satisfieth not for the fault and leaue vs to satisfie for the punishment neither redeemeth vs from the eternall punishment but giueth vs leaue to satisfie for the temporall But if Christ haue redeemed vs from all iniquitie if he said on the crosse It is finished that is the whole worke of mans redemption is consummate and perfect if at one time he made one perfect expiation and therby brought in an euerlasting redemption here is artillerie and gunshot against all Poperie downe goe all other satisfactions for sinne in this life downe goe all satisfactions after this life in purgatorie downe goeth their doctrine of all other merits saue this of Christ downe goeth all that supplie of the foolish virgins lamps with the oyle of good workes of superrogation out of the Churches treasurie and with these the Dagon of the masse and the whole Diana their worship and religion must downe also Did not I forgiue thee all saith the parable and we were sold for nought but redeemed without mony saith the Prophet What can the Papist say now for his mony-masses pardons indulgences and such trash obtruded vpon the world seeing the text is so expresse we are redeemed without mony Obiect But Dauid had his sinne forgiuen 2. Sam. 12.13 The Lord hath put away thy sinne And yet because he had made the enemies of God to blaspheame the child must surely die ver 14. and this was the temporall punishment and what are the suffrings of Gods people in this life and in the end of this life at their death but punishments for sinne Ans. The text sheweth plainely that both the sinne and the punishment was forgiuen for so those words shew thou shalt not die death beeing the iust wages of sinne yet the child must die not to make any satisfaction for the sinne but the text shewes another end that the enemies might cease to blaspheame when they should see the Lord no patron or fauorer of sinne but rather iustly offended with it And as for the afflictions which befall Gods children for sinne and lie often very heauily vpon them none of them satisfie or can satisfie any part of the iustice of God for sinne past but are fatherly corrections preuenting sinnes to come many waies seruing for their owne good and the warning of others least they should conceiue him a God bolstring sinne in those that are dearest vnto him but no way as a satisfaction to God for thus only the passion of Christ is a satisfactorie redemption from sinne And the like may be said of death which is left to the godly to conflict withall although they haue obtained full remission of sinnes but this is not as a punishment of sinne to them to whome Christ hath altred the nature and visage of death but now it is only an exercise of their faith hope and pietie yea a verie passage vnto eternall life 2. This consideration must stirre vs vp to a loue of our Lord Iesus who hath discharged vs of such a debt and ransomed vs from such an vnvtterable thraldome How would we affect such a one as would pay a trifling debt if it were but tenne or twentie pound if our selues for insufficiencie were cast in prison we could neuer forget such loue Consider now how great those debts of thine were how weake and small thine abilitie was to satisfie if thou hadst had the power of all men and angels how ruinous and rufull thy case was euery way thus the more loue will appeare to be due vnto Christ and the more thy sinne if thou returne not loue for loue 3. It must worke in vs a detestation and watchfulnes against all sinne which bringeth such vassaladge vpon vs for shall Christ take vpon him our debts that we like desperate prodigalls should doe nothing but augment them shall he ransome vs and giue vs perfect freedome that we with the vnthankefull Israelites should runne backe againe to our former bondage shall we with Salomons foole make but a mocke of sinne which cost Christ so deare to expiate he neuer knewe what this greatest benefit of Christ euer meant that can take his pleasure in the course of any one sinne Christ hauing restored the blind man his sight bad him goe and sinne no more and to the
may please him looke vp vnto his hand acknowledge thine exercise from him as Dauid did the lashes of Shemeis cursed tongue and he can take him off when he seeth good and what serueth the iustice of God for or for what serueth the Magistrate is there no iustice to be gotten at the Magistrates hand or is there none in Gods hand that by thine owne priuate reuenge thou wilt become both a Magistrate and a God to thy selfe Obiect But I haue long borne his abuses I haue sought to him and it is a bootelesse thing to seeke any more what would you haue me to doe Answ. Yet seeke it still the precept is neuer dated but in full force and hath not the Lord his heart his hand and his tongue to rule and turne to thy comfort when he seeth it seasonable for thee surely he that can by Sauls tongue testifie Dauids innocencie euen when he was out in the fe●ld hunting his life can giue thee a peaceable release from slanderous tongues and iniurious actions when his good pleasure seeth good and if thou neuer findest thy outward peace yet by this Christian pursuit of it thou hast met with the inward peace of conscience and hast made a good exchange Vse Let euery Christian man striue in the practise of this precept and prouoke himselfe hereunto by that promise of blessednesse which is pronounced vpon euery soule that keepeth his hand from euill If any aske but by what meanes shall I auoid this sinne of contention and quarelling I answer the meanes and rules are sundrie The first is in the text to bridle the tongue for this is an immediate follower of euill speaking and it runneth from the tongue into the hand 2. Let the consideration of our common brotherhood be a meanes to cut off contention Gen. 13.8 Let there be no contention betweene vs for we are brethren oh how comely a thing is it for brethren to dwell together in vnitie whether brethren by the common bond of nature which respect made all Israel bind themselues in couenant with Dauid Thou art our flesh and our bone or brethren in the profession of life and the identitie of the particular calling or brethren in regard of the generall calling of Christianitie seeing such haue all one father in heauen one mother the Church one elder brother Iesus Christ one spirit one baptisme one hope and one inheritance 3. Consider what a scandall it is to Popish persons and profane scorners of religion that such as professe themselues schollers of Christ should liue together like dogges and cattes as we say and by vngodly quarrells and heartburnes be still building vp the works of the deuil which Christ hath destroied why should such a thing be heard in G●th and Askelon why should Priamus and his sonne laugh vs to scorne This was no small motiue as is probable why Abraham the elder was so willing to take vp the controuersie with Lot least they should giue offence to the Heathen for the text induceth it as a reason for the Cananites and Perezites dwelled at that time in the land 4. Get a low conceit of thy selfe and be small in thine owne eyes for whence riseth contention and strife but from the lusts in the members namely the inordinate bearing of a mans selfe aboue that which is meete only by pride saith Salomon man maketh contention and indeed experience sheweth that the most suits at this day are not so much for right and equitie as for victorie which is most euident by all those trifling brablings which haue filled all the seats of iustice and hence is it that men will trauerse law and carrie some trifling causes through all the courts in the land before they will sit downe with the foyle and who be they among whom suits and contentions are become immortall that no sword either of Gods word nor of the Magistrate can cut off or let out their life blood but rich men who walke in many snares and hardly can auoid high mindednesse wealth maketh men that they can hardly long dwell together Let good men looke and see in Abrahams and Lots example how easily their wealth may kindle and blow vp in them a flame of contention 5. Because some in their owne temper are of more milde and quiet spirits and rather lie open to this sinne by others instigation then their owne propensitie and disposition that rule of Salomon is worthy noting to take heed of part-taking of medling and mingling ones selfe in other mens strifes and contentions for this were to take a dog by the eares or a beare by the toothe If we shall now proceede to apply these things it will easily appeare how farre most men are degenerate from these rules For how womanly haue many behaued themselues since they were taught to gouerne their tongues better most impotently yeelding their tongues in bitter and contentious speeches to serue the distempered lusts of their hearts and that for verie trifles And whereas the consideration of brother-hood should ●●int dissention among men the case is growne with vs as with little children among whom commonly brothers and sisters least agree for as for those that are called brethren and so should liue like brethren in the same corporation or societie what bones may we obserue cast daily in among them what a number of tares are sowne by the malitious man which rise suddenly to faction and hote oposition that sometime as the Prophet in his time obserued everie man is readie to eate the flesh of his owne arme Ephraim against Manasseh and Manasseh against Ehpraim and thus whereas the vnitie of great ones should be as the dewe falling from the mountaines to the watring and refreshing of the vallies their inferiours their factions are become like Samsons foxes tied by the tayles they cannot abide to looke one on an other but firebrands are betweene them which burne vp all Ioabs corne field or like the fire which Iotham speaketh of in his parable which came out from Abimelech and consumed the men of Sechem and the house of Millo and from the men of Sechem and the house of Millo and consumed Abimelech And for those that are brethren in the same profession of personall calling who euer see two men of the same trade loue and liue together in amitie as Ionathan and Dauid did who euer almost did heare them lend one an other a good word vnlesse it were bought out dearely by some present priuate commoditie nay he●e is disdaine enuie suspitions so generall and frequent that as the prouerb is one beggar enuieth that an other should goe by the doore here is supplanting vndermining plotting one against an other and reioycing one in the fall of an other a sinne which fewe trades men wash their hands of for euen religion it selfe can scarse tie the affections of two men of the same trade And for the last sort of brethren by the profession of
publike proceedings of religion or iustice so Dauid put on zeale to weed the wicked out of the land and the Minister hath bin taught if he see beasts or slow bellies to reprooue them sharply The priuate person must priuately also but yet plainely reprooue his brother and not suffer his sinne vpon him or at the least by shewing his indignation against sinne he freeth his owne soule from the guilt of it as also the punishment yea from the suspition of it in such as may be present who else may think him that holdeth his tongue a partner or of consent with the sinner Quest. What is then the vse of this meeknesse Answ. To purifie our zeale for so the Apostle Iames would haue a wise man to shew forth his good conuersation in meeknes of wisedome Which meeknes of wisdome or wise mildnesse 1. causeth a man to put a difference betweene the person and the sinne and affecteth him with pittie to the person euen in reuenge of the sinne so Ioshua called Achan my sonne when yet presently he executed the iudgement of death vpon him 2. Between sinne and sinne for Christians are no Stoiks to account all sinnes alike some are motes troubling the eye some are beames putting out the eye a mote may soone be blowne away and remooued a beame requireth more strength wise meeknesse will more shew it selfe in the one but more retyre it selfe in the other Againe some sinnes are more directly iniurious to men and perhappes the partie himselfe others more iniurious to God Now this meeknesse of wisedome will be Queene in the former but giueth place to zeale in the latter 3. It discerneth between sinner and sinner for all sinners are not of a suite some sinne of ignorance some against their light and knowledge some of weaknes some of set purpose and obstinate wickednes some are leaders and setters of sinne some are led and seduced some seeke excuses as ashamed of that they haue done others defences as glorying in their iniquitie Now commeth this meeknes of wisedome and putteth difference shewing compassion on some and others sauing with feare Thus meeknes and zeale destroie not but strengthen one another and thus all meekenes of wisedome must be shewed to all men but this is such as neither impayreth the glorie of God nor the proceedings of the Gospel nor the edification of men Vse Beware of that vice which Paul would here note in the Christians of those dayes which we may well wish they had not traduced to sundrie professors of our times for they beeing conuerted they scorned vnbeleeuers and cared not how carelesly they carried themselues towards them Which spice of pride I would it brake not out only not against the godles persons but against poore beleeuing brethren as deare to God inwardly as rich and sometimes as farre stripping them in store of grace as they come behind them in store of outward things but let this text teach vs how vnbeseeming it is for a Christian to be churlish to the worst weakest and most abiect And let the motiues be effectuall to perswade to the generall practise of this dutie 1. It is a grace verie acceptable to God The Apostle Peter wisheth women to deck themselues herewith which as a precious garment will bring them into reputation with God as their ordinarie most costly attyre maketh them bewtifull and setteth them out before men neither is it so peculiar a garment to the woman as the man also may not put it on for it serueth not to distinguish the sex as bodily clothing but commendeth euery soule possessing it vnto God of whom not male nor female but a new creature is respected 2. It is an essentiall marke of a Christian who ought herein to imitate his Lord Iesus who for the same purpose became a speciall schoolemaster of it Learne of mee for I am lowly and meeke 1. of heart 2. of speach when he was reuiled he reuiled not againe but sometime said nothing at all and when he spake how meekly receiued he the greatest wrongs appeares Ioh. 18.23 If I haue euill spoken beare witnes of the euill but if not why smitest thou mee 3. of action he was as a sheepe dumb before the sheare● This was the Sonne of God on whom the spirit lighted in the similitude of an innocent doue and euen we to testifie our selues the sonnes of God must in the practise of this grace after a sort manifest the lightning of Gods spirit vpon vs. To this purpose the Scriptures hence denominate the righteous and make it a title of the iust Zeph. 2.3 Seeke the Lord all the meeke of the earth 3. The blessings intayled vnto it should mooue vs to the prastise of it 1. spirituall God will teach none but the meeke Psal. 25. neither can any learne of God but the meeke and therefore Iames wille●h vs to heare with meeknes the ingrafted word without it prayers will be interrupted or not accepted and therefore the meeke are commanded to seeke the Lord. 2. Temporall blessings euen all outward prosperitie so farre as God seeth good for this is the blessednesse of the meeke that they shall inherit the earth And in daies of distresse and times of straitnesse and affliction they shall be safe for the Lord hath promised to hide them in the day of his wrath Zep● 2.3 Vers. 3. For we our selues also were in times past vnwise disobedient deceiued seruing the lusts and diuerse pleasures liuing in malitiousnesse and envie hatefull and bating one an other This verse layeth down a weightie reason whereby our Apostle would bow and bend the minds of Christian men to the practise of the former ●ertues namely of equi●ie lenitie long suffering and meekenes towards all men foes as well as friends yea the worst as well as the best The reason is drawne from the consideration of the present condition of conuerted Christians compared with that estate they were in before their conuersion and calling to the faith to which purpose he is verie large in describing 1. our estate of corruption in this 3. vers 2. our estate after conuersion in 4 5 6 and 7. verses from both which the Apostle thus concludeth the same thing thus First from the former If we our selues were in times past in the selfe same condition which other men are not yet called out of then ought we to be meeke and mercifull euen to those who are not yet conuerted But we our selues were in times past as they are we lay in the same puddle of corruption were hewne out of the same pit and though we may thinke we were neuer so gracelesse as we see some others yet we cannot charge them so deepely for time present but they may come ouer vs with the same in times past as this third verse will teach vs and therefore we ought to shewe all lenitie and meekenes to all men Secondly from our latter condition of conuersion thus our Apostle frameth his
sort of men as farre deceiued as the former are secure persons who beeing baptized into the name of Christ as yet neuer came vnto him but plod on in all dirtie and sinnefull waies with many pretenses vnderpropping themselues but neuer examining duly whether they be right or no. And because the waies of this error are infinite we shall not do amisse in discrying some few of them and tracing them we shall not find them so vnfrequented but that infinite numbers of secure men and women shall be found in euery of them who all of them are still deceiued and as they were borne so they liue in errour Of these I will mention fiue sorts all in seuerall pathes but neuer one in the right 1. Are superstitious persons who take vp a voluntarie religion which hath some shew of wisedome and humblenesse of minde worship God they thinke they doe but it is vncommanded deuout they are but resist the truth as those deuout women who resisted Paul What a number of Popish minded men wander after vanitie they looke at antiquitie at consent of numbers and multitudes of men who are readie inough to betake them to their owne inuentions Hence is it that you shall ouertake hundreths that are set forward on their Pilgrimages and see thousands who are set downe or kneeling before their Idols besides numbers that are wilfull prisoners cheined in their own bands and wicked vowes of pouertie single life abstinence and such like And what ground haue they for all this they haue learned the protestation of the Iewes We will doe whatsoeuer goeth out of our owne mouth we will offer to the Queene of heauen as we haue done euen we our Fathers our Princes and our people for then we had store of all things and euery thing was cheape Nay as though the truth were impropriate vnto them they are so zealous in their way that if Peter or Paul should stand against their traditions they would thinke they did God good seruice to kill them as Christ foreprophecied a pregnant marke of a Popish and Antichristian spirit to hate and cast out the brethren for the name of Christ and yet to say Let God be glorified yet sit they downe here most securely as in a good way whereas alas all is deceit this beeing the way which is good in a mans owne eyes but the issues of it are death and the end of it is foreprophecied in the place of Ieremie alledged that the Lord will watch ouer such persons for euill and not for good and consume them with sword and famine and sundrie destructions 2. Sort are generall or Catholike Protestants of all any or no religion these content themselues with the Iewes to say the Temple the Temple the Couenant Abrahams seed c. so these finde a religion established and they loue it because it is crowned and bringeth in abundance of prosperitie with it they hate Poperie also because the lawes hate it but neuer knew nor care to know what the power and life of godlinesse euer meant to whom the Lord may say as to them Say not the Temple the Temple trust not in lying words we haue the Word Sacraments Prayer Peace c. but get the power of godlinesse if you would not beguile your owne soules Amend your waies and workes execute iudgement oppresse not the stranger fatherlesse and widowe follow not after other Gods 3. Sort are a rable of idle Protestants whose carnall hearts turne the grace of God into wantonnesse Charge his conscience with his sinnes strike him downe for his vnlawfull courses or neglect of good duties he can saue his head with the doctrine of free iustification without works or tell you that the best man sinneth seauen times a day or that we are concluded vnder sinne that God might haue mercie on all or that where sinne aboundeth grace aboundeth much more and that we are not saued by the workes of the law but O vaine man saith Iames dost thou imagine a sauing faith without repentance and works of pietie and loue dost thou professe an holy religion and by the loosenes of thy life makest that holy way of God euill spoken of did not the latter end of the former Chapter teach vs that Christ died not only to set vs free from the curse of sinne but from the courses of iniquitie that we should become zealous of goodworkes Christ saueth no other and therefore deceiue not thy selfe The fourth sort may well carrie the title of craftie Christians as also of free-will Protestants who for the present walke in a secure path and will not yet be acquainted with repentance for their sinne they thinke it fit to be knowne and practised and so they meane hereafter but in the meane time because their sinne is not vnpardonable and God calleth at all houres and they may as well afterward repenting find forgiuenesse therefore are they deafe against all our doctrine of repentance all the meanes we vse auaile not for their good but by Gods iust iudgement to their hardning blinding and further damnation and this is as fearefull as flie and as generall a deceit as any of the former What meane those many exhortations seeke the Lord while he may be found and to day if yee will heare his voice harden not your hearts and this is the acceptable time the which gratious inuitations while men haue put off how hath the seueritie of the almightie cut them off suddenly by strange deaths and this most deseruedly in that they had so long abused the time of his patience Rev. 3.21 The Lord gaue Iezabel a time to repent but she repented not and what was the issue of it Behold I will cast her into a bed of sorrow and great affliction So the Lord would haue purged the impenitent Iew but he would not be purged therefore saith the Lord Thou shalt not be purged till I haue caused my wrath to come vpon thee The fifth sort of secure persons may be called sensible Protestants who by outward things iudge themselues highly in Gods bookes and many both rich and poore tread in this path Rich men need not seeke for further ground of Gods fauour then that their hand hath found out riches and they are increased in their possessions and prospered in their labours And how can it be other seeing vengeance must pursue the wicked and if they were so they could not be prospered so long and diuersly as they are Thus Dauid obserued of wicked rich men their houses were peaceable without feare and because they are not in affliction like other men pride compasseth them as a chaine they seeke not after God nor sound and setled peace in him but little knew they the end of that fat pasture he learned at the sanctuarie that they were lifted vp aboue other as fellons on the ladder to come downe with a greater mischeife and breaknecke But more merueilous it is that corrections and afflictions should
tyeth not himselfe and truth vnto it Obiect But we haue no teachers who teach not the truth Answ. We are to blesse God that the truth of religion is so happily taught and protected as it is and Satan wanteth of his will that it is so and yet can we thinke that his mallice now towards the end is so abated or that the state of the Church is now aboue all times so priuiledged as that he hath not his instruments still labouring to corrupt and depraue the truth broaching so farre as they dare their priuate opinions for which the truth is little beholding vnto them The Prophet Ieremie speaketh of Prophets who prophecied lyes in the name of the Lord and saith they prophecied false vision and diuination and vanitie and the deceitfulnesse of their owne hearts why what was that in that they said Yee shall not see the sword and famine shall not come but I will giue you assured peace in this place If we shall heare such sweet inchanting voyces all is well with vs we haue the most flourishing and most reformed Church that euer was since the Apostles dayes and we may take a nappe and rest in our peace and prosperitie what way can we be mooued surely these words may seeme the visions of mens owne hearts the rather in that the Lord by his owne hand from heauen proclaiming the contrarie by durable plagues and lasting iudgements of plagues famines vnseasonablenesse of weather by yeares together and for the troubles and oppositions in the Church when or where were they stronger since the Gospel first entred If we shall here voyces whispering oh men are too precise too pure too forward and what need so much teaching so much running trotting to sermons and disgracing such as frequent the meanes of saluation more carefully with the tearmes of sermon-gadders and sermon-mungers and such Is the truth which desireth nothing more then the light beholding to such visions of mens owne hearts or can we here acknowledge the stile of the spirit and word of truth If we shall meete with doctrines giuing libertie to profane gaming and pastimes on the Lords sabboath and then hauing gotten in a finger go on to make it an indifferent thing to keepe or not to keepe but only the times of Church required by law and further make it questionable whether we ought to keepe this present Sabboath or devise some other is not this as great a blow to the truth as she can receiue more then she looketh for in the house of her freinds which let it preuaile we shall see a poore staruen pietie among men in very few daies If we meet with other defences iustifying and approouing euery thing and any thing to be spoken in the pulpit besides the pure word of God which is profitable to teach improoue correct and instruct in all righteousnesse that a man may moyle himselfe and hearers in pudles I speake comparatiuely in regard of the pure word of God when in the meane time the sweet streames which run from vnder the threshold of the Sanctuarie are neglected how is the truth here honoured when the Scriptures the fountaine of it are so vnequally matched If it shall be affirmed that whosoeuer shall in name professe themselues to be Christians the Sacraments are not to be denied them although they be openly wicked because all men are subiect to sinne If men shall make a tush and a light or no falt to sweare by faith or trothe c. because it is but a custome of the tongue surely we may say if these be the voyces of Prophets they are of such as Christ speaketh of which deceiue many which make iniquitie abound and the loue to the truth grow key cold Vse 2. To people to pray to the Lord 1. To giue pastors according to his owne heart not such as may seeke out vaine and foolish things the froth of wit and learning but such things as may feed their soules with wisedome and vnderstanding 2. For the spirit of discerning to trie the spirits by which are of God for the guise of false teachers is priuily to bring in damnable doctrines and craftely to creepe into mens affections and men more easily run after them because they speake something pleasing to corrupt nature sometimes in the matter sometimes in the manner and therefore such as would not be deceiued by them must be prouoked to more warinesse 3. For the spirit of subiection that they may receiue the truth as truth for else it will be iust with God to giue them ouer to be seduced with false teachers and to beleeue lyes For those that despise his counsell shall eate of the fruit of their owne way and be filled with their owne devises those that regard not to know God shall by God be deliuered vp to a reprobate sence and those that will not beleeue one Micah but hate him shall fall into the hands of foure hundreth false Prophets to fall by them 4. Commend the cause of the truth vnto the Lords protection entreating him that it may be continued euen to this our Church and Land the which surely by the great contempt and abuse of the light and the bringers of it we haue iustly forfeyted and deserue to be plagued with all kind of illusions as Poperie profanesse Brownisme Atheisme the which fearefull iudgements haue made out great head alreadie and are forerunners of greater euills and beginnings of more bitter sorrowes without timely repentance And to what other ground can we ascribe all these euills but vnto the iust iudgement of God for our hatred and abuse of the light the candlesticks of it Vers. 9. But stay foolish questions and genealogies and contentions and brawlings about the lawe for they are vnprofitable and vaine Although Titus hath beene in the former verse commanded to teach and beat home such true and profitable points of doctrine as we haue heard yet must he know that he hath receiued but halfe his errand and is but halfe way in his dutie wherein if he would be compleat he must further circumspectly watch against and represse all vaine and fruitles teaching especially those kinds here mentioned either suffering them not to breake out at all or if they doe to nippe and blast them quickly and betimes if he can he must stoppe them in the head if he cannot do that he must stay them in the streame The verse standeth on two parts 1. a precept to stay foolish questions and genealogies and contentions and brawlings about the law 2. a reason of it for they are vnprofitable and vaine For the meaning of the words we must knowe that our Apostle condemneth not the moouing of euerie question in handling the word for there are many necessarie ones in diuinitie which for our instruction and edification we may enquire and dispute thus we reade that Paul disputed often and thus we are trained and furnished in the diuinitie schoole to defend
his genealogie Phares the incestuous sonne of Iudah and Bathsheba that was the wife of Vriah And in these vses these genealogies may be still with sobrietie read taught and heard Quest. What is it then the Apostle condemneth Answ. Not any such as serue to the edification of the faith of the Church whereof this of Christ a publicke person and Sauiour of the world is the cheife of all neither the keeping of the descent so farre as serueth to the preseruation of right iustice and ciuill peace In which respect Kings and Nobles yea and other inferiour persons may enquire into that right which their ancestors haue made their due and must so hold their genealogie as they may hold their right against all claimes But here is condemned all that recounting of kinred and petegree in all sorts of men which proceedeth from a vaine minde and tendeth to worldly pompe and vaine-glorie For this was the sinne of the Iewish teachers that whereas now by Christs appearance all distinction of families was in religious respect abrogated and now was no such need of genealogie as before vnlesse it were before Infidells and such as were not perswaded of the right descent of Christ yet they out of their pride would be much and often in extolling of their tribes and kinred and so not only for these accessories let goe the substance of religion but as if they would build vp that politie again which now was abolished to the great hurt of their hearers would much busie themselues in such fruitles discourses These genealogies must Titus withstand By brawling and contentions about the law are meant those hote contentions which yet many Iewes and Iudaizing teachers did trouble the puritie of religion withall striuing still to bring backe againe the obseruation of Iewish ceremonies such as was circumcision differences of meats and daies and garments as though Christ were not yet come wherewith the Church in that tender age was much molested But now our Apostle pointeth to another end of the law namely to institute the life contain in obedience and lead vnto Christ but not to shadow Christ to come as before who by his comming hath put an end to all such ceremonies Of all these endlesse questions idle genealogies and brabling contentions the Apostle giueth this censure that although they may seeme to haue a puffing kind of knowledge and be stood for as for fire and water as if the whole substance of religion were placed in them yet are they vnprofitable and vaine farre from instruction and edification of men in true godlines yea indeed great hindrances thereto as taking vp time and labour and wits of men which should better be imploied which as we said is a forceable reason to auoid and represse them Hitherto the meaning Doctr. 1. The Deuil is readie in the purest Churches to corrupt the puritie of doctrine by stirring needles endles questions either in substance of doctrine or in ceremonies wherein men will be as hote as if all religion were placed in them And thus shall the peace of the Church be troubled the free passage of the Gospel hindred the godly teachers greeued and all for things vnnecessarie and idle things sometimes so farre from profiting the Church as that they much hinder it and obscure the doctrine of true religion All this appeareth plainely in this our example The malicious man is euer sowing tares in Gods feild and if he cannot extinguish all the light of Christian doctrine if he cannot pull downe as he would the substance of truth he will doe what he can he will make dissention in smaller matters whereby many shall be offended many cast backe that were comming on and many other kept back who might come on in time So when the Disciples of Christ and Iohn consented in the substance of doctrine yet could he make them quarrell in washings and fastings and such ceremonies Paul and Barnabas consented in substance of doctrine yet for a verie trifle and indifferent thing the companie or leauing behind of Marke were so exasperated and deuided that they did seperate one from the other And if he be so forceable in good men that he taketh the aduantage of flesh in them much more doth he effectually worke in vnconscionable men who are all flesh and all corruption Easie were it in all ages to discouer this eminent note of Satans mallice in false teachers namely that they were euer more earnest in vrging and constraining of men in their owne deuises then to the duties of the morall law Christ charged the Pharisies that they placed more religion in washing potts cuppes and beddes then in keeping Gods commandements These Iewish teachers Act. 15.29 are branded that they troubled the Church with words and combred mens minds euen in the Apostles daies with things dead and vnnecessarie with circumcision and ceremonie And is not Gods iudgement come vpon the Papists at this day to the vttermost who haue called backe all these Iewish ceremonies againe and so long contended for them that they haue lost the substance of pure religion and the truth hath betaken her to her wings Their schoole diuinitie is turned away from Christs bodie to his garments their maine disputes are taken vp about workes of preparation free-will merit of workes workes super errogatorie purgatorie differences of garments meats dayes vowes pilgrimages which are such things as Christ wrapped vp together and left in his graue when himselfe rose againe And their doctrinall diuinitie to the people as we read it in the postills but schoole distinctions and legends fables or of latter times bitternes against the first restorers of religion who oppose their former false doctrines And for their heat in vrging these things aboue all the commandements of God none is so blind but may see that they more seuerely punish him that fasteth not their lent then such as are manslayers more him that keepeth not one of their Saints dayes then him that keepeth neuer a Sabboath thorough the yeare that they make it a greater sinne for some sorts of men to marie a wife then to liue in secret filthinesse all their liues long Thus the deuil hauing gotten in his head easily thrusteth in all his bodie and if he get a Church or people at this aduantage that he can comber mens mindes with needlesse things and stirre vp brabbling contentions about vnprofitable and vaine deuises of men he is in great hope and probabilitie ere long to put out that light which he hath al●eadie so farre darkned Vse Let vs acknowledge the worke of Satan when we see men who are all of one sound iudgement in the substance of religion and so should be brethren to be at such hote strife and opposition for matter of ceremonie and for things in comparison vaine and vnprofitable 2. Let vs not count it a strange or new thing to be too much offended at it 3. Let vs pray the Lord who can rebuke Satan to dissolue such
14.4 Whatsoeuer shall plea● for the entertainment of lusts a Christian must resolutely denie them all No way can profiting in grace be better shewed then by this resistance Heb. 11.13 1. Pet. 2.11 Rom. 13.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. king 22.24 Rom. 8.13 Onely our religion teacheth true mortification 2. king 5.12 Gal. 6 14. Plato of Diogenes Act. 17.18 Doctrine of grace teacheth not onely to abstaine from euill but doe good Eph. 4. Act. 26.18 vers 20. Rom. 6.17 The Gospel bringeth saluation but looketh for an answerable returne and recompence ● The proper worke of sobrietie 1. in things inward Coloss. 2.23 1. Cor. 4. ● Iam. 3.17 2. in outward Luk. 21.34 Iam. 1. ● Eccles. 2.1 1. Cor. 7.29 II. Rules of practise 1. The proper worke of iustice 2. Rules of practise Luk. 13.36 Eph. 4.28 Motiues to practise these rules 1. The proper work of pietie 2. Rules of practise Ier. 9.23 Gal. 6.10 Many sorts of men bewray the vngodlines of their hearts Reasons to 〈◊〉 to the exercise of godlines Godlines must be exercised in this present world The right ende of this present life is to learne the way to a better Philip 3.13 Spes pro re sperata meton adiunct Blessed hope why so called Christ called a mightie God Why. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Gospel receiued in truth lifteth vp the heart to waite for Christs second appearing Reasons Eph. 2.12 Philip. 3.20 Triall of our selues by the former doctrin Cant. 2.5 Cant. 2.17 To this expectation of Christ are required 1. a sound ground Lumbard 3. sent distinct 26. 2. sound qualities which are fowre Heb. 6.19 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Isa. 28.16 Prou. 13.12 Rev. 19.7 1. Pet. 5.4 1. Ioh. 3.3 3. sound effects which are also foure Heb. 12.2 Numb 14.7.10 vers 23. Act. 23.8 Motiues to the expectation of Christ. Matth. 24.46 Luk. 12.46 Ignoratur vnus dies vt observentur multi Curiosi ad cognoscendam vitam alienam desidiosi sunt ad corrigendā suam August confess lib. 10. The expectation of Christ is a notable meanes to prouoke men to Christian duties 1. To attempt them Eccles. 11.9 Act. 3.18 19. Act. 24.26 Rev. 14.7 2. To hold on in them with chearefulnes Act. 24.15.16 1. ●im 6.14 2. Tim. 4 1. 1. Pet 3 4. 1. Cor. 16.13 3. To hold out in them with perseueranc● Iude 22. Luk. 22.29 Iam. 5.8 In that most perfidious Councel of Constance 1. Cor 9.7.10 Prou. 27.18 2. Cor. 9 6. Heb. 11.26 Psal. 27.13 Christs glorie shall shine out in full brightnes at his second appearing Matth 25.31 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. Thess. 1.10 Coloss. 3.4 Philip. 3.21 1. Pet. 1.11 Act. 26.22 We must neuer speake of God or Christ but in a weightie matter and reuerent manner Reasons Ier. 10.6 Act. 17.24 25. How Christ gaue himselfe for vs. Ioh. 10.18 Luk. 2.7 There can be now no other Priest nor sacrifice besides Christ hi●s●lfe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 H●b 10 ● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ioh. 17.19 Heb. 7.23 2● 26. The Popish distinction of Priests into primarie and secondarie ouerthrowne vpon Hebr. 7. Hebr. 9.11 12. Mors necessarius modus oblationis tolle mortem tollis oblationem The Popish distinction of oblation of primarie an● commemoratiue confuted Sess. 6. cap. 2. Christ gaue himself therfore wholly both bodie and soule and why Isa. 53.11.9 Christs death and passion was voluntarie seeing he gaue himselfe Ioh. 10.17 18. 1. Tim. 6.13 Christ gaue himselfe for his Church not for euery particular man Reasons Expiatio intercessio sunt partes inseparabiles sa●●rdotij Christi Psal. 32.1 Eph. 2.25 Eph. 5. How Christ is said to reconcile the world to God Tractat. 87 ●n Ioh. How Christ is said to die for all men 2. Cor 5.21 Christ suffered not for his owne sinne for he was giuen for vs. Christus praeter ●a bona quae suis laboribus peperit nobis meru●t etiam sibi corporis gloriam nominis exaltationem Bellar. l. 5. de Chro. cap. 9. We must receiue this gift and make our best benefit of it We must giue our selues to him who gaue himselfe for vs. Seeing Christ hath giuen himselfe there neede no other satisfaction for sinne Christ redeemed his church from the captiuitie of sinne ●wo waies How so short a suffering could redeeme from infinite euills Mortem re non tempore infinitam tolleravit Christus Before this redemption we were bōdslaues vnder sinne death 2. Pet. 2.19 Ioh. 8.34 Sinne resembleth a tyrant many waies Rom. 5.21 Miserable is their estate who a●e out of Christ because they haue no part in this redemption Deale with sin as with a tyrant The Sonne hauing set vs free great is our freedome Bellarm. lib. 4. de poenit cap. 2. Concil Trid. sess 6 c. 14. Heb. 9.12 26 Christs satisfaction is not partiall but freeth vs from all iniquitie both guilt and punishment Matth. 18. Isa. 52.3 Mors piorum est medicinalis non poenalis He hath well deserued al our loue who hath paied all our debt Beware of sin which bringeth back the former bondage Full consolation to the godly from the former doctrine Christ purgeth his people two waies Hebr. 9.14 Redemption sanctification are inseparable companions 1. Cor. 1.31 Exod. 30.18 1. king 7.23 1. Ioh. 5.6 There must needs be much vncleannesse where is neede of continuall clensing Philip. 3.12 Sinne is neuer pardoned but where it is purged Rom. 6.2 Ioh. 13. Meanes of our purging to be vsed Ezek. 36. Psal. 51. 1. Thess. 4.4 2. Cor. 7.1 Malac. 3.2 Zach. 13.1 Motiues to vse carefully the former meanes Luk. 1.71 Iun. in Exod. 19.5 Deut. 7. The Church is Gods peculiar sundrie waies Cant. 6.7 Num● 23.9 Eph. 3.15 Ferendo non feriendo Qui in Christū credunt linguis loquuntur novis Bern. de ascen dom Ier. 2 3. Many consolations to Gods people from the former doctrine Psal. 105.14 We must liue vnto the Lord whose we are 1. Pet. 2 9.1● Deut. ●4 1 ● Deut. 7. Loue the Saints because they are Gods peculiar Phil 4.18 19. Zach. 2.3 cap. 3.8 The worker must be good before the worke can be so August epist. 120. Honorato Rom. 3.10 A good worker cannot but bring forth good works Ioh. 15.1 Heb. 9.14 1. Ioh. 1.7 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What vertues must attend zeale to guide it aright Act. 19. How necessarie zeale is to a good worke Psal. 119.136.158 Ier. 9.2 Ezek. 9.4 Nehem. 23.22 Numb 25. Ioh. 2.14.17 The effects of zeale about the effecting of good things Rom. 12.12 Act. 20.24 Philip. 2.17 Rom. 9. Sundrie sorts of men bewray the want of zeale Act 23.12 see cap. 1.9 ● Tim. 3.16 All proofes reproofes must be fetched frō the Scriptures The word must be so handled as the authoritie of it be preserued Reas. 1. Cor. 14.25 Isa. 6.6 Matth. 7. Prov. 17.27 Act. 26. A grieuous sin to despise Gods ministers R●as●●s 2. Cor. 3.9 Rev. 6.2 Rev. 1.20 Exod. 16.7
566 Euill speaking ranged into the sundry ranks of it 567 Meanes to avoide euill speaking in 5. rules 571 Cases wherein a man may contend and strike 5. 573 Rules to avoide the sinne of Quarelling 5. 577 The fruits of Christian equitie 4. 579 Necessi●ie of Christian equitie in sundrie points 581 Three things in the description of Christian meekensse 584 The vse of Christian meekenesse in three points 586 Motiues to meeknesse 3. 587 Notes to discerne the change of a mans selfe by 592 The corruption of the minde standeth in 3 degrees 594 Foure main properties of folly most natural to the naturall man 597 The deceit of the heart putteth forth it selfe in sundry vngodly practises 602 Fiue seueral sorts of men in seuerall paths and neuer one of them in the right 605 Grounds out of Scripture against the Popish doctrine of freewill 5. 613 Notes to trie a mans present happinesse by 632 Essentiall parts of a Sacrament three 639 Baptsme the lauer of regeneration fowre wayes 641 Baptisme hath 4. vses in them that beleeue alreadie 644 The congregation must stay the Baptisme for fowre reasons 647 Sixe things considered in the description of regeneration 648 Notes to tr●e the truth of our regeneration 5. 656 Graces of the spirit compared to waters in three things 658 The spirit is said to be powred out in three respects 658 Of barrennes of heart three maine causes 663 Sundrie consolations to those that are heires of life 677 Rules to helpe vs to forwardnesse in good works 5. 687 People that come to heare the word must pray for 4. things 691 Vses of Genealogies in the Scriptures 694 Reason to auoide curiositie in Gods matters 4. 699 To make an heretike 3. things required 701 Meanes to avoide heresie 5. 705 Two degrees of Excommunication 707 Excommunication how far it stretcheth in 4. points 709 Reasons why we are to avoide excommunicate persons 710 Excommunication must not be inflicted for trifles 4. reasons 713 Gods children must imitate their heauenly Father in vsing great patience euen to the worst for 4. reas 721 Open and obstinate sinners must be avoided for fowre reas 722 The benefit of a good conscience in 5. particulars 725 Non residencie condemned by many reasons 727 Faith doth fiue things to the producing of a good worke 734 Many necessarie vses of good workes referred to their seuerall heads 736 Conditions of Christian fruitfulnes 5. 740 Reasons to prouoke Christians to fruitfulnesse 4. 741 Lets and hinderances of fruitfulnes 743 The ordinarie salutation added to euerie Epistle for 5. reasons 750 An other briefe Table of the most of the Questions resolued in this Commentarie HOw and why Pauls name was changed 3 Why Pauls name is prefixed before his Epistles 5 How farre a man is bound to set his name to his writings 5 How a man may knowe that he hath faith 15 How could God promise any thing before the world began 30 Whether God can change his will 33 Whether there he chance or fortune 45 How Christ is a Lord seeing he is euery where called a seruant 68 How Christ is called a Sauiour seeing the Father and holy Ghost saue also and we reade of sundrie other Sauiours 69 Whether the wicked haue more peace then the godly 73 What power Titus had to redresse disorders in Creta 78 What and wherein consists the difference betweene Ciuil and Ecclesiasticall power 79 How it is in the power of ministers to haue fait●full children 109 Why in the care of the family the first precept concerneth the children and not the wife ibid. How far anger is forbidden in a Minister 134 How farre it is lawfull or vnlawfull for a Minister to vse wine 140 Whether good men onely must be loued and not euill 168 Whether the Scriptures be perfect without tradition 190 Whether the Scriptures be obscure 192 How false teachers vse to deceiue mens minds 209 How may the mouths of heretikes bee stopped 220 Whether a man can be saued that erreth in a fundamentall point 225 Why God suffereth seducers among his people 228 Why Paul calleth Epimenides a Prophet 235 How the Prophets of God were distinguished from those of the Gentiles 236 How the knowledge of God is ascribed vnto the natural man 239 How farre we may alleadge humane testimonies in sermons 242 Whether any kind of lie be lawfull 246 What are meant by Iewish fables 271 Who are meant in the scriptures by pure persons 281 How any thing may be said to be pure or impure 287 How all things are pure to the pure 291 Whether recusant Papists may be compelled to Church seeing it doth offend thē 293 Whether a man with safe conscience may eat flesh at times prohibited by the Magistrate 294 Whether can any Magistrate make lawes to bind conscience ibid. How we can stand to our Christian libertie if we suffer the Magistrate 〈◊〉 restraine vs in it ibid. Whether a man may pray for more wealth then necessaries 303 How any Minister may attaine the ende of his calling 334 Why it is no needeesse precept to exhort younger women to loue their husbaands and children 376 Whether the wife may dispose of her husbands goods without his consent 399 How may a man carrie himselfe that the word of God be not euill spoken of 402 How seruants must please their masters yet not be man pleasers 426 How farre Christ is said to die and giue himselfe for all men 507 How the short death of Christ could free from infinite and eternall euills 510 Whether Magistracy be now lawful against Anabaptists 545 Whether Mordecai did wel in denying Haman reuerence 553 Whether Naboth did lawfully denie king Ahab his vineyard ibid. Whether the people might warrantably resist Saul in rescuing Ionathā his sonne from death 554 Whether Ioab did well in numbring the people at Dauids commandement ibid. Whether hee did well in slaying Absolon against his commandement ibid. How God can be said to be so good and a louer of man seeing so many vessells are prepared to destruction 624 How we can be said to be saued already seeing we carry about vs the body of sinne and death 628 Whether grace 〈◊〉 tied to the sacrament 640 What is the ●aith of infants 643 Whether the water in baptisme carrieh in it a 〈◊〉 and efficacy of washing the 〈◊〉 where Bellarmines instances are examined 650 What is meant by iustification and what by grace in the controuersie betweene the Papists and vs. 665.666 c. How faith is said to iustifie vs. 671 Whether there be any teachers among vs that teach any thing saue the truth 690 How the Apostle condemneth genealogies of which is such necessarie vse in the Scriptures 694 Whether priuate Christians may avoide an open notorious sinner before the Church hath cast him out or what t●ey must do in this case whilest the church winketh at such a one 712 Whether heretikes may be put to death seeing the Apostle onely commandeth to auoide them ibid.
Whether Popish religion may be tolerated in a countrie professing the truth which can cast it out 715 Whether Protestants may marrie with Papists 717 Whether Popish idolatrie be any whitte lesse dangerous and odious then that of the heathen 719 Whether any man be so monstrous or graceles as to persist in error against the light of his conscience 721 Whether we may greete any but such as loue vs in the faith 747 Many other things worth obseruation might haue enlarged these Tables but I contented my selfe with these briefe collections which with the text of the Epistle will easily lead the Reader vnto them FINIS J entreate the curteous Reader to passe ouer some lesser escapes in the printing and among others to amend these which I haue obserued most altering or hurting the sense Pag. 5. in the margent for quiddam read quidam p. 40. line 7. for eternall r. internall p· 59. l. 26. f. first r. fifth p. 79. l· 31. f. God r. Gad. p. 99. in the margent f. fidem r sedem p. 112. l. 20. wanteth when p. 135. l. 39. f. world r. worke p. 121. margent f. superioris r. superius p. 144. l. 2. f. Noahs r. Lots p. 142. l. 9. f adoring r. adorning p. 143. l. 36. f. members r. memorie p. 148. l. 32. f. heart r. heat p. 151. marg f. sui aliter r. ●in aliter p. 163. ● f. ha●bourles r. harberous p. 213.25 f. they might r. they might not contract p. 210.1 f. pace r. pale p. 217.11 f. them r. Cham. p. 300. l. 24. f. argueth r. aimeth at p. 326.23 f. forte r. foote p. 327.36 f. persons r. purses p. 328. ●0 f. him r. them p. 329. l. 5. f. others r. oathes p. 343 marg f. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and f 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 r 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 350.5 put in hold on Christ. p. 354.18 f. desolation r. dissolution p. 362.6 f. cannot r. can p. 366.31 wanteth to vtter Cant. 4.11 Magis fe gaudere quod mēbrum Ecclesiae Dei esset quam caput Imperij Nec iam ferre potest Caesarve priorem Pompeiusve parem Lucan Humilitas virtus Christianorum prima secunda tertia August Quibus studio est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Scriptura commune promptuarium bonorum documentorū Basil. mag in 1. Psal. Epitome Paulinarum epistolarum Prou. 3.15 Prou. 2.4 Deus noluit taceri quod voluit scribi August Isa. 29.11 Dan. 12. Act. 8. Ioh. 5.39 1. Thes. 5.19 cap. 2.15 Per brevē scribit epistolam vt vel ex ea Titi perdiscamus virtutem virum enim tantum vt confirmaret ha●dquaquam longiori opus erat oratione sed hunc vt paucis admon●r●● Athan. in prologo A●●tius Mihi quidem huius operis Commentarij non ad ostentationem scribuntur sed ad commemorationem senectae ad oblivionis remedium quo sit mihi adumbratio rerum magnificarum diuinorumque verborum quae audire m●rui à sanctis vi●is beatis Euseb. l. 5. c. 10. Scriptura prima veritas reuelata Psal. 119.18 Iam. 1.5 Ioh. 7.17 Rom. 16.17 1. Cor. 3. 2. Cor. 10. Gal. 1.6 Eph. 4.14 Phil. 3.2 Coloss. 2 4 8. ● Thess. 2.2 Orig. in praesa● epist. ad Rom. August lib. 8. confess cap. 4. Act 9.15 1. Tim. 2.7 3. rules in changing mens names Act. 16.1 Rom. 16.22 23. Folly to giue heathenish names to them whom we desire to be godly Quiddam Christiani delectantur nominibus Hectoris A chilli● Hannibalis ad●o ipsis placet Gentilism●s Polan in cap. 1. Dan. Cases in which a man may forbeare to set his name to his writing Euseb. hist. eccl lib. 3. Iun. par praesat c. 2. ad Hebr. This reason is giuen both by Clemens Alex. and Athan. dial de Trinit See also Nicephor lib. 2. hist. eccl cap. 26. To be a seruant of God is the greatest honor Philip. 2.7 1. Tim. 1.12 Ministers are admitted into Gods presence chamber and counsell table Reasons to stirr vp their diligence in this high seruice 1. Tim. 4.6 Matth. 24.46 Matth. 25.30 Matth. 25.26 1. Cor. 4.2 And to faithfulnes Ioh. 3.30 2. King 5.22 Numb 12.7 Ioh. 7.16 and 8.28 1. Ioh. 1.1.3 1. Cor. 11.23 1. Tim. 6.2 1. King 16.10 2. Tim. 4.10 2. King 8.15 Comfort for Ministers in this seruice Reu. 1.16 2. Sam. 10.7 Isay 49.5 People account of this seruice as honourable 1. Kin. 22.14.27 Ier. 26.15 1. Thess. 5.13 1. Cor. 3.9 Let none be a shamed of this seruice Three priuiledges of an Apostle 1. Cor. 9.1 Act. 22.18 Act. 22 3. Galat. 1.1 Act. 9.15 Chiefest offices in the Church are for seruice 2. Cor. 4.5 Matth. 20.25 Mark 20.37 Matth. 25.21 Dixit se creatū Apostolum vt electione digni creder●nt pietatis ac religionis veritatem agnoscerent Theodoret. in hunc locum Men may be called elect of God 3. waies 1. Pet. 2.9 Matth. 7.13 1. Ioh. 2.19 Iob. 34.19 Rom. 9.19 20. Rom. 11.33 Eph. 1.4 2. Pet. 1.4 10. 2. Tim. 2.21 2. Cor. 4.4 Ioh. 20.28 Matth. 13.20 Matth. 7 22. The true difference of sauing faith of the elect from all other Ioh. 6.66 Matth. 16.18 Contra Concil Trid. sess 6. can 15.16 Obiect Sol. Foure notes whereby the truth of faith is discerned Luk. 6.45 Rom. 8 15. Rom. 9.16 Faith ordinarily wrought in the ministerie of the word preached 1. Tim. 3.16 1. Cor. 3.5 Ioh. 16.9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. Pet. 1.21 The Gospel called Truth for 3 reasons 1. Pet. ● ●● Heb. 10.28 Knowledge of the truth is the ground of faith 2. Thess. 2.13 Rom. 10.14 1. Pet. 3. 1. Thess. 1.3.5 Lampas fidei facile extinguitur nisi subinde infundatur oleū verbi dei Chrysost in parab virg Fides explicita implicita Matth. 23.13 Col. 2.2.5.7 Heb. 10.38 Ioh. 6.68 Matth. 26.35 Gal. 1.8 Ioh. 10 ●● 1. Cor. ● ● 1. Ioh. 2.27 1. Cor. 14.37 2. Tim. 2. This truth h●ghly aduanced aboue all other Gal. 6.2 Ioh. 23.34 1. Ioh. 2.7 8. 2. Cor. 3.18 Coloss. 3.10 Eph. 4.10 Humane truths frame not the heart to godlinesse E●amine if the truth hath thus framed thy heart Rom 6.6 Phil●● 3. ●0 Coloss ● 1 Ioh. 8.32.36 2. Cor. 3.17 Ioh. 17.17 The aime of a faithfull ministery is to bring men to heauenly mindednes Reasons 1. 2 3 Hebr. ●1 26 Rom 8 1● Matth. 19.28 Coloss. 1.5 Philip. 3.20 Ministers must then beware of earthlines Cleaue to the Ministerie which pulleth thee frō earth to heauen Trie thy profiting vnder the ministerie by this note Ier 9.23 Iob. 31.25 3. notes to shew when the heart is drawne vp towards heauē Eph. 6.17 1. Ioh. 3.2 A true description of Christian hope Eph. 1.17 Luk. 2.37 38. Rev. 22.24 〈◊〉 looketh at things within the ●a●le Hope the sure anchor of the soule Coloss. 1.5 1. Pet. 1.3 ● infallible properties of Christian hope Voluntatem spes facit Prou. 14.15 Vigilan●●um somnia ●lato D●fference between 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉