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A17310 The anatomy of melancholy vvhat it is. VVith all the kindes, causes, symptomes, prognostickes, and seuerall cures of it. In three maine partitions with their seuerall sections, members, and subsections. Philosophically, medicinally, historically, opened and cut vp. By Democritus Iunior. With a satyricall preface, conducing to the following discourse. Burton, Robert, 1577-1640. 1621 (1621) STC 4159; ESTC S122275 978,571 899

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that the conscience is bound to obey Magistrates by the vertue of God's Commandement that requires this obedience of men not simply in respect of the lawes of men Secondly that we are bound to obey every ordinance of man that is all sorts of lawes made by men This needs explication for it is evident by divers examples in Scripture of godly men that have refused to obey in some cases and the Apostles have left a rule Acts 5. that in some cases it is better to obey God than man And therefore I would consider of it distinctly in what things they have no authority to command and in what things they have authority For the first In some cases Magistrates have not authority and if they doe command we are not bound to obey For every Magistrate stands bound himselfe to looke to it that he transgresse not in these cases He is bound to the law of nature as hee is a man and to the law of God as hee is a Christian and to the fundamentall lawes of the Kingdome as hee is a Prince or Magistrate so that hee must make no lawes or ordinances against any of these Lawes especially he may command nothing forbidden in God's Word nor forbid any thing that is commanded in God's Word some instances will be given afterwards For the second In what things they may make lawes there is no question in these cases I now maintaine as if they make lawes in meere civill things for the good of the Common-wealth there is no doubt but wee must obey the expresse words of the Text require our submission and so i● they make lawes to enjoyne their subjection to doe such things as are commanded by God in Scripture or to forbid the doing of such things as are expresly condemned in God's Word There are other cases that have been by men of diseased minds doubted of but yet subm●ssion is by the Word of God required in them as well as in other cases For instance Men ought to submit themselves in these cases following as first in civill things if mens lawes be in some sort injurious as in matter of mens goods A Prince makes lawes to lay too heavie taxations upon the subject yet the subject must submit and therefore the ten Tribes did sinfully to refuse Rehoboam and rebell against him for that reason If any object that Naboth did not yeeld to Ahab when hee desired his Vineyard I answer first that some difference must be put between the occasions of Princes I meane their desires and their lawes the inordinate desires of Princes are not alwayes necessarie to be fulfilled Secondly Naboth was tied by the Law of God to keepe his inheritance for God had tied every man to keepe his ancient inheritance and to marrie within his Tribe that so it might bee cleerely manifest of what stocke the Messias should come Lev. 25.23 Num. 36.7 9. But this was an ordinance peculiar to the Jewish government Secondly in Church-matters the Magistrate may command and the Subject must obey Now because many questions are moved about the Magistrates authority in Church-affaires and about Church-men therefore I will here proceed distinctly and shew first what they cannot doe about Religion and then what they may doe These things they cannot doe that is they have no power or authority to meddle in them as First the civill Magistrate hath no power nor authority to execute the office of the Church-Minister he may not preach in the Church or administer the Sacraments or execute the censures of the Church Heb. 5.5 1 Cor. 7.10 The presumption of Ieroboam and Uzziah herein was punished 1 Kings 13. 2 Chron. 26. Secondly hee hath no power to make lawes that shall binde men to beleeve his devices as matters of faith and doctrine for these things depend upon the will of God not of Princes Thirdly hee hath not power to bring in any idolatrous service into the Church as a part of Gods worship Esay 29.13 Mat. 15.19 And therefore Ieroboam was condemned for the Calves and Ahab for Baal and Ahaz for the Altar of Damascus and all the Kings for the high places Fourthly hee hath no power to set up a Ministery in the Church that for the substance of the calling was not instituted by Christ Ephes. 4.11 12. Heb. 5.5 All Ministers of the Gospell have their mission from Christ. Thus of what they cannot doe what they can and ought to doe followes For it is certaine that in many things the Magistrates authority may and ought to bee extended in spirituall things for the good of the subject and therefore in respect of Religion they are said to be nursing fathers and nursing mothers The Apostle saith Rom. 13.5 of the Magistrate He is the Minister of God for thy good Now the good of the Subject is not onely a civill good done civilly but done spiritually a spirituall good which is the greatest good of the Subject and therefore to bee most sought for by the Prince And as in respect of their civill good he must provide that justice may flourish in the Common-wealth so in respect of their spirituall good hee must provide that Religion may flourish in the Church and to this end First he may and ought by his lawes to enjoyne the profession of the true Religion and the confession of faith according to the Word of God Secondly he may and ought to provide to the uttermost of his power that the Churches may be furnished with able Ministers and that they likewise may have power to call and ordaine other Ministers and dispose or depose as may be best for the good of the Church Thirdly he may and ought to provide by his lawes and order that the Word of God may be sincerely and purely taught and the Sacraments rightly administred and the censures of the Church executed according to the Word Fourthly he may and ought by his lawes to forbid and accordingly to punish blasphemies heresies idolatrie sacriledge and the like Now that the godly Princes have had power in these and the like cases about Religion is plaine Moses by the appointment of God gave order to Aaron and the people in the businesse of Religion Iosua appoints circumcision Iosh. 5. proclaimes the law of God Iosh. 8. renewes the covenant with God Iosh. 24. David disposeth of the officers about the Tabernacle 1 Chro. 23. and brings home the Arke 2 King 6. Salomon dedicated the Temple Asa the King made such a law as this that whosoever would not seeke the God of Israel should die Ezechias brake downe the brazen Serpent 2 Kings 18. commanded the Priests to cleanse the Temple 2 Chron. 29. and to celebrate the Pas●over and commanded the Levites to help the Priests because the Priests were not then cleane 2 Chron. ●0 Iosias destroyed the Idols sent his Princes to see to the restoring of the House of God appointed the Priests to their Ministeries in the Temple c. 2 Chron.
sake that he may see it comes from the force of religion in her a good wife discreet provident carefull to please meeke such an one as his heart may trust in her and delight in her Wives that be foolish wastfull idle froward or busie-bodies if they have never so much shew of religion yet they are not fit for this worke to win any body much lesse their husbands Secondly she must looke to her conversation in things of her religion that therein she behave her selfe as becommeth religion Tit. 2.3 and so she must take heed of conceitednesse and contempt of others or neglect of her calling upon pretence of duties of her religion and looke to it that she be not her selfe guilty of any knowne fault unreformed and withall she must strive to shew the power of her godlinesse in good fruits labouring to abound in good workes 1 Tim. 2.10 both at home and abroad being pitifull mercifull ready to help them that are in misery according to her power and in the things she hath liberty to dispose of Other things follow in the three next verses Verse 2. While they behold your chaste conversation coupled with feare IN these words is contained the second thing the Apostle chargeth upon wives in his exposition viz. A chaste conversation with feare so ordered as their husbands may daily behold it and observe it in them Where the Apostle implies what the husbands will doe viz. they will observe the conversation of the wives and expresseth what the wives ought to doe viz. in conversation to shew chastitie coupled with feare First then we are to consider of that which is implied viz. what the husband will doe and this is imported in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 While they behold While they behold The originall word signifies to observe and prie into a thing to finde out the secrets of it and so it notes That carnall men such as these husbands were doe watch and marke the conversation of such as be religious to observe all they can in them that professe true religion Thus they watched David and Christ and Daniel and so doe they all the godly and thus they imploy themselves in spying and marking the wayes of the godly sometimes out of the naughtinesse of their hearts supposing godly men to be like unto themselves and therefore hope to find out wickednesse in their practise sometimes out of malice lying in wait to find out any fault in their carriage of which they may accuse them and vilifie them in the world and sometimes they doe thus as compelled by the force of their naturall conscience which gives glory to the graces of God in the conversation of true Christians while they observe in them that holinesse which they find not in themselves or other carnall men And therefore the Use should be to teach all that professe religion to looke carefully to their waies and walke circumspectly that they give not occasion of offence but rather carry themselves so as to make proofe of their sincerity and good conversation by their workes Secondly from hence we may gather also That a Christian must looke to his justification before men as well as to his justification before God for as God beholds his waies so doe men and he is bound to seeke his justification from men as well as his justification from God And therefore as the Apostle Paul had taught the justification of a sinner before God so the Apostle Iames urgeth the justification of the godly man before men which this Apostle imports in this place when he requires such a conversation as may compell carnall men to say they are just men So our Saviour Mat. 5.16 Quest. What can carnall men see in the conversation of the godly to make them give glory to God or the truth Answ. By the good conversation of true Christians they gather the goodnesse of the law or religion which they professe And besides they thence gather that they are not hypocrites but are religious indeed whence they see what power their religion hath over them in all their waies And further the scandall of reproaches cast upon the godly is often by the observation of their conversation utterly removed in the hearts of such carnall men as set themselves throughly to observe and marke the course of the godly Your chaste conversation The word here translated Chaste in all other places of the New Testament is translated Pure and so shewes that it ought to be accepted here in a larger sense than the word chaste doth import yet so as chastity is a part of the purity of a Christian. Doct. A pure conversation is required in all true Christians yea even in women as well as men That purity is required is manifest by divers Scriptures yea to be examples in purity 1 Tim. 4.2 It is the chiefe fruit of the wisedome is from above Iam. 3.17 A pure heart is required 1 Tim. 1.5 and a pure conscience 1 Tim. 3.9 and pure hands 1 Tim. 2.8 And that it may be had is apparent for our Saviour saith Yee are all pure Iohn 15.3 Quest. How can a man in this world be pure can any man be without sinne Answ. No there is no man that sinneth not In many things wee sinne all James 3.2 Who can say I have made my heart cleane and am pure from my sin Pro. 20.9 And If any man say he hath no sin he is a liar and the truth is not in him 1 John 1.10 And yet though in that sense no man is pure yet in other senses the godly man may be called pure and is bound even by the Gospel to purity as 1. In respect of some particular offence A godly man may be so pure as to abide the triall of God himselfe as David wills God to judge him according to his righteousnesse and the innocency of his hands meaning in that point of false or treacherous dealing against Saul which was charged upon him Psal. 3.4 5. 18.15 2. In respect of imputation every beleever is perfectly pure all his sins are as if they had never beene and Christs righteousnesse is his and in that righteousnesse of faith he is perfectly pure before God himselfe Rev. 19.8.14 3. In respect of men he may be pure in conversation though not in respect of God and so he is pure when he is unrebukeable and unblameable amongst men And this ought to be found in the conversation of every Christian to live without offence and without rebuke Phil. 2 15 16. 4. There is a pure conversation in respect of God not that we can converse without sin but God is pleased for Christ his sake to account our conversation pure when it hath divers prints and markes of his true grace in us And so Christian purity hath in it many things 1. Separation from impure men Psal. 1.1 2 Cor. 6.17 2. The desire of purity in the perfection of it God accounts his servants pure because
things that concerne a religious life and then our duty to man and in particular to Magistrates This the Apostle intimates in that he first instructs them as Christians and then as Subjects and there is apparent reason first in respect of God secondly in respect of themselves and thirdly in respect of the Magistrate First in respect of God for we are first and chiefly bound to God our first covenant is made with God and we are more beholding to God than to all the world besides and therefore againe to respect his glory and obedience to him in the first and chiefe place Secondly in respect of our selves and our owne profit we must study God's Lawes as well as the Lawes of men yea with our first and chiefe cares and accordingly yeild obedience because though by keeping the Lawes of men wee may live quietly and safely and with much reputation yet all this will not protect us against the breach of Gods Law but the hand of God may pursue us while we live and we may be damned in hell when we die for want of a religious life Thirdly in respect of the Magistrate he shall have the better Subjects by it Good Christians are the best Subjects and the knowledge of Religion and Gods Word makes men obey not for feare or custome but for conscience sake and for feare of God's displeasure And besides it makes men humble and charitable humble not to thinke themselves too good to obey and charitable in not suspecting the meaning of Princes further than they must needs And it restraines the excessive pronesse of mens natures that are without Religion apt to speake evill of those that are in authority and chiefly because true Religion will make men pray heartily to God for their Governours and God himselfe doth spare or blesse them the rather for the prayers of the righteous The use should be to informe and teach all sorts of men to take heed of separating what God hath joyned together It is an extreme folly to give unto Caesar what is due to Caesar not to give unto God what is due to God and so it were to give unto God what is due to God if men could doe it not to give to Caesar what is due to Caesar. The respect of God's Lawes should make us more carefull to observe mans Lawes And contrariwise it is a fearfull case that many live in that thinke they have done enough if they live in obedience in respect of the authority that rules them in the places they live in they would bee much troubled if the Magistrate should bee offended with them but are never troubled though they provoke God to his face and they are maliciously foolish that would have the Laws of men obeyed when they are against the Lawes of God or would have men so rest in observing the just Lawes of men as not to be so forward and busie about the duties of Religion Further a question may bee here asked Why the duty of Magistrates is not here set downe as well as the duties of Subjects I answer that in those times of the Apostles the Magistrates were without so farre from being Christians that they did for the most part persecute that way and therefore they doe avoid medling or undertaking to teach them that would not learne but rather be incensed against such Teachers Besides if this and other Scriptures of the New Testament be marked we shall finde that the duty of Inferiours is both more often and more fully taught than the duty of Superiours for in that new and tender world great care was to bee had that under pretence of Religion civill obedience either in the family or Common-wealth were not neglected And it is a truth to be knowne at all times that God would not have Inferiours too skilfull in the duty of Superiours that they might first learne to shew duty before they called for duty from their Superiours That may be one reason why the duty of Masters is not here handled and in other places of the Epistles but briefly for many times the description of the duty of Superiours is used but as a glasse by the Inferiours to pry into the faults of those that rule them and so grow carelesse and wilfully stubborne under pretence of the faults of their Superiours But some one might say that by this means if the Magistrates did turne Christians they were left without rules of direction and so they should not know what to doe Answ. That inconvenience was long before prevented because the duty of Magistrates is fully taught in the Old Testament which unto a godly minde is of as great authority as the New Thus of the coherence and generall consideration of all the words The duty of Subjects followes to bee particularly considered of Submit Concerning Subjects here are five things to be considered of First the proposition of Doctrine in these words Submit your selves to every ordinance of man for the Lords sake Secondly the exposition of it in one case and that is the persons to whom they were to bee subject to all sorts of Governours to Kings or any other Governours Thirdly the confirmation by reason Ver. 14 15. Fourthly the answer of an Objection Ver. 16. Fiftly the conclusion Vers. 17. In the Proposition consider 1 The duty to be done Submit 2 The persons must doe it your selves 3 The things to which they must bee subject Ordinances where is a double extent viz to every ordinance though they be ordinances of men 4 The manner or motive For the Lords sake Submit The duty is to submit unto Magistrates Rom. 13.1 2. For Explication two things are to be considered Why we must submit and How we must submit For the first we must submit 1 Because God is the Author of Magistracy Gen. 9.6 Deut. 16.18 Pro. 8.15 Dan. 2.21 Ioh. 19.11 Rom. 13.1 4 6. Object The Divell is said to bee the Prince of this world and hee claimeth all the kingdomes of the earth Ioh. 12.31 Mat. 4.8 9. Sol. He is the Prince of this world by malicious usurpation not by any right 2 He is so in relation to wicked men he is their king but not of others 3 He speakes like himselfe that is like the father of lyes when hee claimes all the kingdomes of the earth for no part of the world is his because The earth is the Lords and all that therein is Object But God was angry with the Israelites for their asking of a King and therefore it seemes it was not his ordinance that there should be Kings Sol. He was not angry with them for desiring Governours for they had Governours before sent of God and the very King they had afterward God gave them him Hos. 13.8 but hee was angry for the cause of their request Their faith and hope was in a manner spent and they conceived more hope in a King than in God that had beene such a King to them so many yeares 2
doctrine may serve for three uses First It may confute that cavill of carnall men that Religion will make men dumpish and melancholy whereas the cleane contrary we see here is true 2. It greatly reproves the uncheerfulnesse of many professors who doe thereby greatly darken the glory of Religion and cause the way of God to be evill spoken of besides the hurt they doe themselves through unthankfulnesse and unbeleefe exposing themselves to the tentations either of sinne or apostasie together with a continuall unfitnesse to all duties of piety and this ariseth out of aptnesse either to passion of anger or worldly griefe 3. It may teach us to seek the ioyes of God and having found them to be carefull by all meanes to preserve them But what shall I doe to preserve the ioyes of God in my heart First keep thy self free from the allowance of the least sin violate not the peace of thy conscience Secondly digest the promises concerning infirmities after calling Thirdly take heed of omission or carelesse use of Gods ordinances Lastly care not for the world but retire thy selfe else from thence will flow unavoidable unrest Before I passe from these words yet two things more may be briefly touched First in that he ●aith yee rejoyce he seemeth to import that true ioy is onely in converted Christians For as for the ioyes that the men of this world have they are not true For besides there is much vanitie and madnesse in them there is also much danger in them for they breed security and men shall be called to account for them yea men may lose their soules for them Secondly where he saith wherein hee meanes in which benefits of regeneration glorification preservation c. whence may be briefly noted that the chiefest ioyes of Christians are in spirituall things it ill beseemes Christians to set their hearts on earthly things But is it not lawfull to delight our selves in earthly pleasures It is with these rules First thou must be sure thou hast repented of thy sins before thou allow thy selfe liberty for pleasures 2. Thou must not make a vocation of recreation 3. Thou must spend onely thy owne time upon them not the Lords 4. Thou must avoid scandalous delights and such games as are of evill report 5. Thou must watch over thine owne heart that thy recreations steale not away thine heart from the delight of better things but be used rather as an helpe unto them Lastly note from hence that they onely are fit to give testimony of the ioyes of a converted estate that have had experience of it themselves trust not the iudgements of carnall persons for the dignity utility and durablenesse of the graces of godlinesse And thus of the first reason Though now for a season you are in heavinesse There are divers sorts of heavinesse 1. There is the heavinesse of the desperate such was that in Cain and Iudas 2. and the heavinesse of the disappointed such was the heavinesse of Haman Ahab and Ammon when they could not compasse their ambitious covetous and voluptuous ends 3. And there is the heavinesse of the melancholy and of the scandalized 4. There is the heavinesse of the penitent for sinnes 5. and of the afflicted for crosses 6. There is a heavinesse in Gods children after calling for spirituall respects as for corruption of nature for absence of Christ for want of the meanes for the dishonour of God in publike abominations for the miseries of the Church for Gods threatnings and anger for the desire of death for hardnesse of heart and for speciall sins after calling Quest. But may not Gods children be heavy for crosses Answ. They may and I think that may be meant here but then these rules must be noted First that their heavinesse be rather for some sinne in themselves which might cause the crosse then for the crosse it selfe Secondly that their heavinesse be moderate Quest. But when is sorrow for afflictions moderate Answ. First when it exceeds not the measure of sorrow for sin 2. Secondly when it withdrawes not the heart from God and holy duties through passionate and incredulous perturbations but it is to be noted in the generall that the Apostle is very loth to grant them liberty for heavinesse but it is with many limitations as 1. it must be but a little season 2. they must be sure need doth require it 3. it may not be allowed for many crosses that will not be allowed for lesser or fewer tentations For a season The troubles and griefs of Gods children are but for a season for a moment God hides his face but a little while and the reason is because afflictions are used of God but as plaisters or medicines or as a ●urnace Now in as much as the godly will quickly judge themselves and make their peace therefo●e the Lord will soone draw off the crosse the plaister shall lie no longer than till the sore be whole and the goldsmith will let his metall lye in the fire no longer than till the drosse be● melted off or it be fit to be wrought upon Now if crosses should continue long in our reckoning say it were the whole life of a man what is mans life even a vapour that appeareth a little time Besides what can thy longest crosses be in comparison of the paines of the damned from which thou art delivered or of the joyes and glory of heaven which thou shalt possesse Yea what is that thou dost suffer in comparison of what thou deservest but yet I say it is but a season as wee account seasons even a small part of the life of the godly For either the Lord removes the crosse or takes away the sting of it or sweetens it with his mercies The Use may be to teach us to check the unquietnesse and failings of our hearts and to be ever ashamed of our selves that we should make so much of our crosses and so little of Gods mercies we should learne seeing they are but for a season to hold fast the confidence of our hope and live by faith and if the Lord be angry to hide our selves for a little season till his indignation be past If need require Here three things may be observed First that Christians man● times make crosses to themselves and draw heavinesse upon their hearts through feares and suspitions and unquietnesse where there is no need this is a great fault and usually is a great scourge For by such distempers they many times lessen the comforts of God and their credit with Gods children Secondly crosses and griefes are sometimes needfull needfull I say to hide our pride to weane us from the world to put us in minde of death to make us desire heaven to drive us to seeke more grace and holinesse to prevent sinne to come to humble us for sinnes
by the light of nature imprinting in man certaine common notions or small sparkles of divine light 2. Secondly by the booke of the creatures by these he did blow and nourish and more kindle the sparkles infused by nature 3. Thirdly when both these proved insufficient by mans sin God revealed himselfe by his word but after divers manners Heb. 1.1 Sometimes by dreames when men were asleep Sometimes by Visions when men were awake Sometimes by types and resemblances Sometimes by Christ the Son of God and so sometimes in the likenesse of a man and in the last age of the world in a true humane nature Sometimes by Angels But most usually by the ministery of man Now the men imployed to reveale Gods will were called either Extraordinarily as Prophets and Apostles or Ordinarily as the Priests and Levites under the Law or the Ministers now under the Gospell So that we now see who these Prophets were It is true that the word Prophet or Prophesie is diversly taken Sometimes more generally for any that foretell things to come so every Preacher is a Prophet and to preach is to prophesie 1 Cor. 14. sometimes it is taken more restrainedly for those that foretell by inspiration or speciall revelation these were called in old time SEERS Those students in the ancient Colledges that were of speciall gifts and more hopefull were called Prophets not that they did all prophesie but because the Spirit did use to fall upon such men Those called children of the Prophets were yonger students that attended upon and were directed by those grave and more ancient Divines Through the abuse of the succeeding time those that were taken out of these Colledges to serve Princes though many times they were men most ambitious and covetous yet were called still Prophets But the Prophets here meant were onely those holy men that by the immediate inspiration of the Spirit of God did foretell things to come concerning the Church and kingdome of Jesus Christ. Now in that the Lord refers us to the testimony of the Prophets it may serve for divers uses 1. First it shewes the excellency of Theologie or the truth according to godlinesse in that it is penned and confirmed by such admirable instruments 2. Secondly it shews that in matters of religion men must have recourse to the testimony of the Prophets their writings are the true touchstone a●d square And so in matters of consolation if the Prophets speak comfortably to our hearts it matters not what all the world besides saies or thinks of us sure it is that Christ came not to destroy either Law or Prophets and therefore by them we shall be tryed whether we will or no. 3. It should quicken us to study the writings of the Prophets wee cannot receive their persons now into our houses nor build tombs for them but wee may receive their writings into our hearts and it will be made good that hee that receiveth the writings of one of these Prophets in the name of a Prophet shall have a Prophets reward In the meane time wee have a sure woid t● which we may doe well to trust without all wavering Which prophesied of the grace that should come unto you By grace to come he meanes those excellent priviledges that God of his free grace would bestow upon the Christian Churches more than upon any Churches before The Prophets then did foretell of certain great prerogatives with which we Christians should be honoured But what were those priviledges in particular There are an eleven prerogatives of the Christian Church wherein God hath dealt wonderfully graciously with us 1. The exhibiting of Christ in the flesh 2. The freed●me from the bondage of the ceremoniall law Gal. 4.1,2.2 ● The admission of the Gentiles to be copartners with the Jewes Eph. 2. 3.2 to 7. 4. The multitude of beleevers in comparison of former ages Esay 54. 1,2,3 5. The more evident vision or manifestation of Gods speciall favour and k●●dnes●e in Christ Jesus testified more fully both by the word and spirit The Lord i● now fond over the Christian Churches and doth more famil●●rly reveale his love n●w Eph. 2.7 6. The m●re evident clearing of our release from the morall law in respest of the rigorous perfection of it we are not now under the law but under grace so that if sinne have not dominion in us our obedience will be accepted Rom. 6.14 7. A large extent in the proclamation of pardon and forgivenesse of sins so as now any man may get a pardon that will seek it out in the name of Christ Act. 10.43 8. The powring out of the holy Ghost and that either extraordinarily as in the primitive Church or in the measure of ordinary gifts as in utterance knowledge c. 1 Cor. 1.4 5 6. 9. The eminencie of holy life and that in the meaner sort of Christians as well as the greater This is onely true of a remnant that are of the election of grace and so for the power of practice that never age saw it more lively than it is now in many of all conditions that truely feare God Esay 35.8 10. Abundance of outward blessings This God hath promised Esay 60.15,17 and performed in severall states of the Church in divers ages 11. Lastly the more manifest revelation of the doctrine of heaven and eternall life immortality being brought to light by the Gospell so as now wee need not to be taught by the dark shadowes of temporall and earthly ceremonies Now since the holy Ghost hath made us to know that these are times of such excellent graces it may instruct us diversly For in some things it may order us toward our selves and in some things toward others There are foure things we may learne for our selves First let us take heed lest any man faile of the grace of God For wofull experience shews that many thousands even in this light are as destitute of this grace as ever Jew or Gentiles were Now that we may not faile of the grace of God we must doe foure things 1. We must be subject to the Gospell For the Gospell is called the Gospell of the grace of God 2. We must take heed of resisting grieving and despighting of the spirit of grace 3. We must take heed we doe not frustrate the grace of God Gal. 2.21 and so men doe 1. By seeking justification in their own works 2. By neglecting it when it is offered by the word and spirit of God 3. By turning the grace of God into wantonnesse as they doe that make the promises of God and our liberty in Jesus Christ a bawd and cloak for sinne 4. We must goe to the throne of grace and beg grace of God with all importunity giving him no rest till he heare and shew mercy Heb. 4. ult Secondly the consideration of these times of the speciall and plentifull grace of God offered in the Gospell should teach us not onely to get knowledge and grace but
an egge they savour not the things of the Spirit Rom. 8. 1 Cor. 2.13 Of this afterwards But yet it may not be denied but that some wicked men may goe so farre as to taste of the good VVord of God and of the powers of the life to come and of heavenly gifts as the Apostle granteth Heb. 6.5 6. Quest. Now there-hence ariseth a great question what should bee the difference betweene this taste in wicked men and the true taste in godly men Answ. For answer hereunto divers differences may be given First in the things tasted there is a difference For wicked men may have common graces yea and miraculous gifts too by imposition of hands and these are a great taste given them of the glory of Gods Kingdome but they never taste of saving graces or if a taste of saving graces were granted yet they taste as it were of the River running by them but not of the Fountain whereas the godly have the very Spring of grace flowing in them Secondly in the time of tasting This taste in wicked men is but for a season it cannot hold long in them and therefore is their faith and joy said to be temporary whereas godly men may keep their taste to their dying daies not only in the gifts of saving graces but in the very sense of the sweetnesse of Christ and the word too c. Thirdly in the manner of tasting For wicked men may taste of the Gospell and Religion by senses or by a dimme kind of contemplation or by a sudden illumination as by a flash of lightning but they cannot taste with their hearts clearly by Faith Or thus wicked men may in the generall taste that is know and believe that the Mystery of Christ is true but they cannot taste or know this Mystery with particular and sound application as theirs Fourthly in the grounds of this taste or delight For a wicked man perswaded by false reasons setled in the common hope or transported with an high conceit of some temporary and common gifts and graces may be much delighted and joyed in the word and the thought of going to heaven for a time but he never rightly applyed the promises of grace in Christ nor doth he ever possesse so much as one infallible signe of a child of God Fiftly in the effects and consequents of tasting for 1. A wicked man may taste but he never digests an evill conscience casts up the food againe or choakes and poisons it whereas in godly men their taste abides in them and they digest the food they receive The vertue of it continues with them 2. A godly man is transformed and made another man by this taste so is not the wicked man it is not a savour of life to the wicked 3. A true taste in the godly workes as is before noted a high estimation and sound contentment so as the godly place the felicity of their lives in this communion with God and his word But that can never a wicked man doe Sixtly and lastly wicked men may seeme to taste and yet doe not Many men professe Religion and delight in the word and in Religion and so religious duties who yet never did attaine to it but constantly found a wearinesse secret loathing and many times a secret and inward ill savour in the word and in the duties of Religion so as the taste is more in their mouthes when they talke with others then in their hearts when they are afore God It will not be amisse particularly to cleare that place in the Hebrewes in all the three instances of tasting First they are said to taste of heavenly gifts so they doe when they have common graces as sometimes some kindes of faith joy hatred of some sinnes love of Ministers or some godly praises for some ends c. Or when they have miraculous gifts confirmed by imposition of hands or otherwise as they had in the primitive times and these gifts are excellent and heavenly because they are mighty by the Spirit of God and came downe from the Father of spirits but saving graces they cannot have Secondly wicked men may taste of the Spirit and good Word of God by feeling some sudden flashes of joy either out of admiration of the meanes of delivering or frō some generall conceit of the goodness of Gods praises Iob 23.12 and the happiness of the godly Psal. 119.23 24 50. But they can get no such taste of the word as to desire it as their appointed food constantly Psal. 119.14 72. Or to make it their greatest delight in affliction or to love it above all riches 1 Thes. 1.5 or to receive it with much assurance in the holy Ghost or to redresse their wayes by it Ps. 119. 9 45 59. so as the taste of the word should put out the taste and rellish of sinne For let wicked men be affected as much as they will their taste of sinne will remaine in them I meane the taste of their beloved sinnes nor can he deny himselfe and forsake his credit friends pleasures profits much lesse life it selfe for the Gospels sake Mark 10.29 Thirdly wicked men may taste of the powers of the life to come by joying at the thoughts that they shall goe to heaven and pleasing themselves in the contemplation of it But it is still a false taste for they have no sound evidence for their hope nor doe any marks of a child of God app●are in them nor can they alledge one sentence of Scripture rightly understood for the meanes of it The use of all this may be threefold First for Tryall All men should seriously try their estates in respect of this taste by pondering upon what is before written concerning the nature and differences of it Secondly it should worke exceeding thankfulnesse to God if wee have found this sound and secret taste in the Word we should every one and for ever say In the Lord will I praise his Word Psal. 56. Thirdly Here is matter of terror unto wicked men and that first to such of them that never felt any sweetnesse in the Word How should they be amazed to thinke of it that God doth from Sabbath to Sabbath restraine his blessings from them and as contemning them to passe by them and take no inward notice of them 2. But especially here is unspeakable terror to such as have had that taste in the sixt to the Hebrewes if they should ever fall from it as is there mentioned For if this taste goe out of thine heart take heed of the sinne against the holy Ghost For at the losse of taste begins that eternall ruine of these men If thou be not warned in time thou maist come to such a condition as it will be impossible for thee to bee ren●ed by repentance Heb. 6. 5 6 7. But least this doctrine should be misapplied as it is sometimes by such as are distressed with Melancholy or vehement affliction of Spirit I will a little more
of Christ in them which is so opposed by the flesh and the divell and that it is the case of all the godly to bee assaulted with rebellious thoughts and desires and other practices of the flesh reckoned up before Secondly for instruction and so it should teach Christians and warn them to take heed of three things viz. of security despair and fainting for all these are mischievous We may not be secure sith we have such an enemy within us nor must we be too much out of hope or despair of successe for the reasons before alledged nor yet must wee give way so much as to fainting of spirit but pluck up our owne hearts and with trust in God's grace resist still the risings of corruption till we get a finall victory VERSE 12. And have your conversation honest amongst the Gentiles that they which speak evill of you as evill doers may by your good works which they shall see glorifie God in the day of their visitation HItherto of the dehortation The words of this verse are an exhortation wherein consider both what hee exhorts to and by what reasons The matter hee exhorts to concernes their outward conversation which he would have to be honest and amiable The reasons are First because the Christians lived among Gentiles that imbraced not the true Religion Secondly because divers of these Gentiles were so spitefull against the Christians that they would take all occasions to speake evill of them Thirdly because some of them that now did speake evill of them might hereafter be converted to the true Religion Fourthly because if they now observe their good works when they shall be visited of God they will much magnifie them to the great glory of God That which he then exhorts them to is the care of their conversation which he amplifies by shewing what kinde of conversation hee would have it to be viz. A faire or honest conversation And have your conversation honest Divers things may be hence observed First that a sound Christian must shew himselfe to be so by his conversation a Christian must shew the power of his Religion by his works and by sound practice and that too amongst men abroad he must be knowne by his fruits Col. 1.9 10 Tit. 2.12 and therefore the Apostle beseecheth them to prove before the Gentiles that they were true Christians by their works and conversation This reproves their discontentment that are vexed because they are not reputed for sound Christians and yet shew no care of a conscionable behaviour in their dealings and carriage among men and withall this may warne all sorts of Christians to looke to themselves that they be not deceived with vaine shadowes in pretences for 't is not talking and discoursing of Religion will serve turne nor the frequenting of the exercises of Religion nor is it enough to doe secret duties but they are bound to the good behaviour generally in their carriage amongst men This is the first point Secondly from the coherence wee may note also that a man must first reforme his heart and then his life hee must first get a cleane heart freed from lusts and then looke to his conversation holinesse must bee both within and without Hee is an hypocrite that hath a faire conversation and a foule heart neither may hee pleade the goodnesse of his heart that leades a foule conversation both must bee joyned together Thirdly we may hence note that every Christian must be carefull and looke to it in particular that his conversation be honest honesty of life is with speciall care to be intended Now this must be explicated The word translated Honest signifies properly Faire and the Translatours● respecting the matter of our conversation render it well Honest so as withal for the manner wee adde that it bee a faire conversation so that two things must bee observed in our conversation the Matter and the Manner For the Matter We must bee sure that we bee honest It is a vaine thing to thinke of being religious if wee faile in honesty wee must not onely studie the duties of the first Table but wee must be carefull to prove the power of our Religion in the sound practice of the duties of the second Table we must live righteously as well as religiously Tit. 2.12 wee must adde vertue to our faith 2. Pet 1.5 and withall we should labour to excell in honesty to carry our selves so in all our dealings that our carriage might allure through the fairenesse of our behaviour we must in the things of honesty strive for an alluring carriage There be divers things in our outward conversation which set a great glosse upon many actions and certaine particular duties which shew exceeding comely in a Christian mans behaviour those the Apostle would have us to studie and be careful of even all things that are honest and might win credit to the profession of Religion Phil. 4.8 This then is the question What are those things which would so adorne the outward conversation of Christians and make it faire and amiable For answer hereunto there are Sixe things which are of singular praise and much adorne a Christians conversation and make it faire The first is harmelesnesse to bee free from all courses of injury and cruelty and oppression and the like A hurtfull and injurious conversation is a foule and unseemely conversation The second is discretion when men carry themselves with all due respect of their words and the consideration of the time place and persons with whom they converse A discreete conversation is a wonderfull faire conversation when as a foolish vaine rash conceited talkative behaviour is extremely irkesome and loathsome Col. 4.5 Iam. 3.13 The third is quietnes and gentlenes which excels as it shewes it selfe first by humblenes of mind thinking meanely of himselfe and esteeming others better than himselfe Esay 4.2 in giving honour going before others Rom. 12.13 Secondly by peaceablenes when men study to be quiet Eph. 4.11.12 and meddle with their own businesse and avoid contention by all meanes rather suffering wrong than prove quarelsome Heb. 12.14 Thirdly easinesse to be entreated in case of offence taken willingnesse to be guided in things profitable and good Iam. 3.17 The fourth is sobriety when a man lives so as hee is not blemished either with filthines or drunkennes or covetousnes A man that is unspotted of the world for any foule crimes and withall can shew a mind not transported with the greedy desires after earthly things is much honoured and justly amongst men the worst man cannot but acknowledge the praise of such So as men shew this in their dealings evidently Rom. 13.13 Iam. 1.26 The fift is fidelity and plainnesse when men are just and true in all their dealings and will keepe their words and promises and abhor the sinnes of deceit and avoid subtilty and worldly wisedome and shew themselves to bee plaine men as it was said of Iacob that hee was a plaine man not like
subti●● Esau. This ought much to bee sought after by Christians that men may see their hearts by their words 2. Cor. 1.12 The sixt is profitablenes rendred in the end of this verse good works They lead a faire conversation that doe good and are helpfull to others and ready to shew any kindnes or mercy to any that live neere them or have occasion to use them This is an admirable prayse The use should be therefore to teach us to study how to adorne our conversation with such integrity and vertuous behaviour as may winne prayse and reputation to our profession especially we should at least shunne all those hatefull evils which by experience we finde to bee grievous and loathsome and are to be accounted as blemishes in our conversings being things as are in a speciall manner loathsome and provoke ill opinion in others as being against honesty and that faire conversation should bee found in us as First the sins of uncleannesse and whoredome and fornication and lasciviousnesse and filthy speaking Rom. 13.13 Eph. 5.3.4 Secondly the sins of drunkennes and riotousnes Rom. 13.13 1. Pet. 4.3 Thirdly the sinnes of passion malice wrath bitternesse clamour and evill speaking Eph. 4.31 Fourthly sinnes of deceit lying dissimulation and hypocrisie Fiftly pride statelinesse desire of vaine glory Gal. 5.26 Sixtly backbiting cōplaining censuring judging Mat. 7.1 Iam. 4. Gal. 5.13 Seventhly idlenesse and slothfulnesse 1. Thes. 4 11.12 Eighthly to bee a busie-body in other mens matters prying and inquiring and meddling with things that belong not to them 1. Thes. 4.11.12 1. Pet. 4. To which adde pratling and talkativenesse 1. Tim. 5.13 Ninthly such courses as have appearance of evill in them such are the use of vain apparell and wilfull resorting to persons and places that are of evill report Thus of the matter to which he exhorts The reasons follow why they should bee carefull of an honest and faire behaviour and first because they live among the Gentiles Among the Gentiles Those Gentiles were such as lived in their naturall idolatry the nations that had not received the Christian faith Those that think this Epistle was written onely to the provinciall Jews alledge the words of this verse to prove it for say they it was written to such as lived among the Gentiles and were no Gentiles and they only were the Jewes But this reason is of no force for those Gentiles that were converted to the Christian faith became Christians and so were no more Gentiles or Pagans And so these words may bee understood of all sorts of Christians that lived among the unconverted Gentiles whether they were in their naturall estate either Jewes or Pagans In that the Christians lived among the Gentiles and must by their faire conversation bee rightly ordered towards those Gentiles divers things may be observed First we may hence note how hard a thing it is to recover men from a false religion though their religion bee grossely absurd In this place whither the Gospell came we see multitudes of men remained Gentiles still and would not receive the Christian faith And this is the more to be noted if we either consider the reasons the Gentiles had to remain in their religion or the manifest causes they had to moove them to imbrace the Christian Religion For for their owne religion they might easily observe these things amongst many other First their palpable and sottish idolatry in worshipping so many gods and those so accounted to bee gods being many of them apparently but senselesse creatures as the Sunne Moon and Starres others of them but dead men and others of them such as of whom there was not the least colour or appearance of Divinity Secondly the most notorious wickednes of life which did every where abound in all the nations that were Pagans Rom. 1. Thirdly that they followed a religion that gave them no hope of a better life after death nor could describe any estate worth the desiring Fourthly there was no agreement among them what should be the chiefe good while they lived but men were carried according to the sensuall desires of their owne hearts On the other side for the Christian Religion they saw that the doctrine of it was every where prooved by miracles and that their owne Oracles in every place where the Gospel came were put to silence Besides they might observe that the Christian Religion did teach the most absolute way for holinesse of life and that the Christians did live the most unrebukeably of all others yea did with gladnes dye in the defence of their religion and further the Christian Religion did shew them the glory of heaven and discovered that certain estate of most blessed immortality Quest. But may some one say what might be the motives to the Gentiles to make them continue so obstinate Ans. There were chiefly five things which caused this obstinacy in the Gentiles The first was the tradition of their fathers forefathers thy would not forsake that religion which for so many hundred yeers their Ancestors had professed 1. Pet. 1.18 Secondly the God of this world did mightily labour to blinde their eyes that they might not understand the Gospell 2. Cor. 4.4 Thirdly they saw that the Christian Religion was persecuted in all places both by reproaches and martyrdome Fourthly they would not receive the Christian Religion because there were but few that professed it and that their wise men and great men of the world for the most part did reject it 1. Cor. 1. The last and chiefe reason was the love of their sins which they saw they must forgoe if they embraced the Christian Religion It was true also that the wickednesse of some hypocrites that crept in among Christians did make the way of God evill spoken of and many Gentiles to blaspheme Rom. 2. I might adde that the doctrine of Christs Passion was a scandall unto many Gentiles who accounted it as a foolish thing to beleeve him as a Saviour that could not save himselfe from so ignominious a death being willingly ignorant of the necessity of that oblation of Christ as the Surety and Sacrifice for our sinnes It is profitable to consider of the obstinacy of these Gentiles together with their motives for first we may see that they stood upon the same grounds in effect upon which the Papists do rest at this day for the Papists maine allegations are the traditions of Fathers and Fore-fathers together with the multitudes of people that follow their Religion but especially the consideration of the wofull estate of for●orne men should teach us with the more thankfulnesse to celebrate the prayse of Gods mercy to us that did subdue our natures and draw us out of blindnesse and wickednesse into the true Religion and into the kingdome of Jesus Christ. And Ministers should hence learne with patience to doe their worke and not to be discouraged though multitudes of people be not brought to the obedience of Christ. They must not look to
not onely lyars but such as love lies Rev. 22.8 And a good man is said to have this property that he will not receive an ill report against his neighbour Psal. 15. And by receiving evill reports a man becomes accessary to the slander guilty of it for as it is true that the receiver of evil-gotten goods is accessary to the theft so is it in the case of slander somewhat worse for there may be theeves though there be no receivers but there can be no slanderers without some to receive the slander Neither is there any great difference betweene the tale-bearer and the tale-hearer for the tale-bearer hath the divell in his tongue and the tale-hearer hath the divell in his eare Quest. But what should wee doe to avoid tale-bearers or if wee do heare reproaches or slanders of other men Answ. As the North wind drives away the raine so must thy angry countenance do the slaundering tongue thou must not any way shew any liking of his discourse but the contrary yea and further thou must as farre as thou art able make an apologie for the godly man that is evill spoken of And the tongue of a godly wise man should be in this sense healthfull because it should be ready to heale that wound which the tale-bearer hath made in the name of his neighbour Prov. 12.18 and 25.23 Thus of the second reason The third and fourth reasons are contained in these last words viz. That they may by your good workes which they shall behold glorifie God in the day of visitation The reasons are because God may visit them and if he do they will glorifie God upon the remembrance of your good workes But here I purpose to handle the words as they lie in the order of reading them and so I have foure things to consider of First of good workes secondly of the beholding of good workes thirdly of the glorifying of God fourthly of the day of visitation Good workes Divers observations are implied here First that Religion sets men to worke there is labour in godlinesse Hee must worke that will be truly godly or religious God entertaines no servants but he sets them to worke they are called to labour all the daies of their life Wee must worke out our salvation without working wee cannot be saved though our workes be not the cause of salvation This point proves that the Gospel is not a doctrine of liberty religion doth call men to working not to live as they lift but as he lists that died for them and requires their service And secondly this doctrine shewes who is a true Christian. For as the Scripture is wont to describe a profane man by saying that he is a worker of iniquity so doth it avouch that hee is a godly man that worketh truth and righteousnesse Psal. 5. Prov. 14.23 Ioh. 3.21 Psal. 106.2 To be a worker of iniquity imports three things First grosse knowne sin secondly a daily custome in the practice of it and thirdly an estimation of sinne as the means of our happie life The wicked man lives by sin as the labourer doth by his trade So here that man that will labour and that constantly about the workes of a holy life making it his every daies care to do Gods will and accounts it the happinesse of his life to doe good duties that man is a godly man It is not talking of Religion will serve the turne nor the shewes of it but hee must worke and endure the labour of godlinesse Iam. 1.25 Act. 10.36 And further this should teach Christians often to remember their holy calling and examine themselves what workes they have done as such servants as desire to give a good account to their Master and the rather because no servants can have fairer worke it is all good worke and servants were so ingaged to their masters nor did owe more service and because never was there a master that gave better wages than God doth to his servants And therefore let every Christian be daily carefull to looke to his worke that when his Master cometh he may find him so doing Thus of the first point Doct. 2. Secondly that workes do specially commend us to the good opinions of men it is our workes must justifie us before men by good workes wee must winne testimony to our sincere religion from men Faith justifies us before God and proveth us to be true Christians as works do before men prove us to be so And therefore wee should strive by well doing to win as much credit as we can to our Religion among men Iam. 3.13 Doct. 3. Thirdly that the foundest way of confuting our Adversaries is by our workes we must make reall apologies wee must put them to silence by well-doing Now in that he calls the good workes done by them their good workes I might note divers things 1 The necessity of good workes they must have workes of their owne the good workes done by others availe not them nor justifie them 2 The goodnesse of God that vouchsafeth to call those workes their works when yet they were wrought by him as having had their beginning from his grace and Spirit Esa. 26.12 3 It is true that they onely can doe good workes good workes are onely theirs a wicked man cannot do good workes because his person is hatefull to God and his nature altogether impotent and though he may doe some actions which for the matter of them are good yet he pollutes them with his sins of which hee hath not repented and cannot bring them forth compleate for matter manner and end Tit. 1. ult Mat. 6. But it is the goodnes of workes which I specially intend to intreat of in this place Good workes The goodnesse of mens workes may be diversly considered either according to the differences of workes good from such as are not so or according to the formes of good workes or according to the time of doing workes or according to the uses workes are put to For the first Some mens workes are neither good nor seeme to be so as are the apparent sinnes of men Some mens workes seeme good but are not as the almes and prayer and fasting of the Pharisees Some mens workes are good but seeme n●t so at least in the eyes of some men and so the religious duties of godly Christians seemed to be vain practices of Sectaries and innovators Act. 28. and so Pauls zeale and knowledge seemed madnesse to Festus Act. 26. Some workes seeme good and are so such are the open good workes of the godly in the judgement of godly men guided by charity For the second If workes be tried by their forme then those workes are good works which are done with correspondencie to the revealed will of God in his Word they must be commended in the Word and done according to the directions of the Word so that all workes done besides or above the Law of God are sinfull and naught and the doing of
Jesus standing at his right hand Act. 7.55 Thus we are said to appeare before the presence of his glory Iude 24. Sixthly in his Word and so the Word of God is the glory of God either in generall as it describes the excellence of Gods nature in his properties or attributes Psalm 26.8 Or in speciall the Gospel is called his glory as it sets out the goodnesse of God after a matchlesse manner relieving for lorne mankind Esa. 6.1 And thus that part of the Word of God that doth describe Gods mercy is called his glory Exod. 33.18 19.22 Ephes. 2.16 Thus also that way of shewing mercy by bringing in the infinite righteousnesse of his owne Sonne is called the glory of the Lord Esa. 40.5 Thus God glorifieth himselfe Secondly God is said to be glorified by us Man may make God glorious but that he cannot do by adding any glory to Gods nature and therefore we must search out to finde by the Scripture what waies man may glorifie God and so wee may bee said to glorifie God or to make God glorious three waies First by knowledge when wee conceive of God after a glorious manner thus we make him glorious in our owne hearts and this is a chiefe way of making God glorious and this is one way by which the Gentiles glorifie God and this God stands upon so as he accounts not himselfe to be knowne aright till we conceive of him at least as more excellent than all things Seeing we can adde no glory to Gods nature wee should strive to make him glorious in our owne mindes and hearts And we may by the way see what cause we have to be smitten with shame and horrour to thinke of it how we have dishonoured God by meane thoughts of him And hereby we may also see how farre man can bee said to have the true knowledge of God in him yea there is some comfort in it too to a Christian that humbleth himselfe to walke with his God for though at the best he come farre short of conceiving of God as he is yet God accounts himselfe to be made glorious by us when wee get so farre as to conceive of him above all creatures and that is when he comes into our hearts as a King of glory farre above all that glory can bee found in earthly Princes Psal. 14.7 9. And thus we make him glorious not when we barely judge him to be more excellent than all things but when our hearts are carried after the apprehension of him so as we love him above all and feare him above all c. And thus we make God glorious in our hearts by knowing him Secondly by acknowledgment when in words or workes wee do ascribe excellencie unto God and to glorifie him is to acknowledge his glory or as the phrase in Scripture is To give him glory and so there bee divers speciall waies by which we are said in Scripture to glorifie God as First when in words we magnifie God and speake of his praises and confesse that he is worthy to receive honour and glory and might and majestie so Rev. 4.11 Psal. 29. 86.9 Secondly when men confesse that all the glory they have above other men in gifts or dignitie was given them by God So David glorifies God 1 Chron. 29.11 12. And thus we make God the father of glory as he is called Eph. 1.17 Thirdly when men that are guilty of sinnes that cannot be proved against them yet feeling themselves to be pursued by God do confesse to Gods glory their own shame their secret offences Thus Achan gave glory to God Iosh. 7.19 And thus the penitent sinner glorifies God when he cares not to abase himselfe in the acknowledgement of his owne vilenesse that God may bee magnified in any of his attributes or ordinances by it Ier. 13.16 Mal. 2.2 Fourthly when the praise of God or the advancement of his Kingdome is made the end of all our actions This is to doe all to his glory 1 Cor. 10.31 Fifthly when we beleeve Gods promises and wait for the performance of them though we see no meanes likely for their accomplishment Thus Abraham gave glory to God Rom. 4. Sixthly when wee publikely acknowledge true religion or any speciall truth of God when it is generally opposed by the most men Thus the Centurion gave glory to God Luk. 23.47 Seventhly when men suffer in the quarrell of Gods truth and true Religion So 1 Pet. 4.16 Eighthly when on the Sabbath men devote themselves onely to Gods worke doing it with more joy and care than they should do their owne worke on the weeke dayes refusing to profane the Sabbath of the Lord by speaking their owne words or doing their owne wills Thus Esa. 58.13 Ninthly when men doe in particular give thankes to God for benefits or deliverances acknowledging Gods speciall hand therein Thus the Leper gave glory to God Luk. 17.18 so Psal. 113.4 Tenthly by loving praising admiring and esteeming of Jesus Christ above all men for when we glorifie the Sonne wee glorifie the Father Ioh. 1.14 and 11.4 Eleventhly when wee account of and honour godly men above all other sorts of men in the world and so these Gentiles doe glorifie God in that they praise the Christians above all men whom before they reviled This is one way by which the Gentiles glorified God Thus of the second way of glorifying God which is by acknowledging his glory The third way of glorifying God is by effect when men make others to glorifie God conceiving more gloriously of him or in praising God and his wayes Thus the professed subjection of Christians to the Gospel makes other men glorifie God 2 Cor. 9.13 So the fruits of righteousnesse are to the glory of God Phil. 1.10 So here the good workes of Christians do make new Converts glorifie God so every Christian that is Gods planting is a tree of righteousnesse that God may be glorified Esa. 61.3 So are all Christians to the praise of the glory of Gods grace as they are either qualified or priviledged by Jesus Christ Ephes. 1.7 Use. The uses of all should be especially for instruction and humiliation it should humble us if we marke the former doctrine in that it discovereth many deficiences in us for besides that it sheweth that the whole world of unregenerate men lieth in wickednesse and that as they have all sinned so they are all deprived of the glory of God and altogether delinquent in each part of making God glorious I say that besides the discovery of the generall and extreame corruption of wicked men it doth touch to the quicke upon divers persons even the godly themselves To give instance In the first way of making God glorious How meanly and dully doe wee for the most part conceive of God! How farre short are our hearts of those descriptions of God made in his Word What strange thoughts come into our mindes at some times Oh how have we dishonoured the most
Men must be subject because God hath taken mens consciences bound to subjection Rom. 13. 3 Because Kings are heads of the people and therefore as members it is agreeable that they should submit and bee ruled and guided 4 In respect of the benefit men receive by Magistrates both in outward things and in matters of Religion For outward things men enjoy publike peace and quietnesse and protection by the help of the power of the Magistrate And for matters of Religion earthly Common-wealths are as it were Innes to lodge the Church in and Princes power affords protection so as Christians may more safely follow their calling and if they be godly Kings they are the very nurses of Religion And thus of the reasons For the second this Submission hath in it sixe things the first is obedience to their lawes and commandements Tit. 3.1 The second is honour Rom. 13.7 for they are principalities and powers as the Angels shine in heaven so doe Princes on earth Yea they are called gods and so in two respects first as they are Gods Deputies and Viceroyes God executes a part of his Kingdome by Kings Secondly as they beare the image of God and his authority and soveraignty Now wee must performe this honour by reverence and by feare of them and by judging the best of them and their actions without conceiving suspitions of them or receiving evill reports against them or daring to speake evill of those dignities and Rulers of the people and by all thankefulnesse for the good wee receive by them acknowledging to the full all their praises The third is loyalty by which wee resolve and endevour to the uttermost of our powers to maintaine and preserve the persons rights prerogatives crownes and dignities of Princes If wee must lay downe our lives one for another then much more for our King and Country The fourth is piety we must pray for them with all manner of prayer wee must make supplications for Gods blessing upon them and deprecations for the removing evils from them and if they should sinne and God bee wroth with them wee should stand up in the gap and make intercession for them and we should give thanks for all the mercies the Lord shewes unto them 2 Tim. 2.1 The fift is maintenance tribute must bee paid Rom. 13.7 Christ himselfe submitted herein The last is subjection to their punishments Rom. 13.4 yea to their injuries as David Christ and the Apostles did submit themselves to the injurious dealing of Saul Pilate and the Tyrants when perhaps they could have made resistance Use 1. The use may be first for terror to the seditious great hath beene the vengeance of God upon Traytors the earth swallowed up Corah Dathan and Abiram for their rebellion Absolon was hanged up by the haire between heaven and earth as unworthy both of heaven and earth The words of our Saviour Christ are in an high degree true in this case Hee that taketh ●up the sword shall perish by the sword And S. Paul saith They shall be damned that resist the power Secondly it should much humble the better sort of men for divers 〈◊〉 that are too common such as are the receiving of evill reports and speaking evill with too frequent intemperancy grudging at the payment of tribute and taxations evill surmises of the actions of Princes and the aptnesse ●o f●vour themselves in the liberty of doubting concerning obedience to them in things indifferent Thirdly all good Christians should be perswaded to make conscience of this submission and to that end they should bee at the paines to study this Doctrine and withall pray to God to direct them and keepe them in his feare and obedience herein and besides they should be sure that they meddle not with the changers or with the seditious Pro. 24.22 Your selves These words may note either the manner of our submission or the matter the manner thus Submit your selves that is yeeld obedience uncompelled doe it of your selves stay not till you be forced to doe it and so the Apostle should thereby import that our submission even to men should bee performed willingly and so wee should willingly and cheerefully obey their lawes honour and defend their persons pray for them to God yeeld them tribute yea wee should without murmuring submit our selves to their punishments yea cheerefully beare their injuries and so it removes grudging and force from our submission But I rather understand the words to note the matter to bee submitted and that is our selves not our goods onely for tribute or custome but our persons also must bee at the Princes service our very bodies must be submitted both to doe the labour tha● belongs to the beating of any office for the publike good and to the enduring of any punishment by the lawes to be inflicted upon the body and to the imploying of the body and life in defence of the true Religion and of the King● person law and desire in warre or otherwise This is manifest by the frequent wars in the Old Testament both required and performed nor may any say that Christians in the New Testament are not charged in the businesse of warre for First It was Christ's maine intendment to forme a spirituall Kingdome to God he left the state of earthly Kingdomes to the condition they were in before Secondly when the Apostles doe in the generall require the submission of Christians to their Magistrates without exception of their obedience in warre or otherwise it is manifest that they leave them to the lawes of nature and the lawes of God before Thirdly even in the New Testament this is implyed by Baptist's answer to the souldiers Luk. 3.14 and the praises of those worthy warriours Heb. 11.33 34 In which place also is a manifest proofe for subjection even in our bodies to the sentences of Magistrates whether just or unjust And the Magistrate's sword Rom. 13.4 is not onely a sword of justice upon malefactors in his owne land but of revenge on the enemies of God or the Church or Common-wealth abroad And for that saying of our Saviour to Peter He that taketh the sword shall perish with the sword Mat. 26.52 it is spoken of him to whom of the Lord it is not delivered that is of him that hath not authority from God as Magistrates have to command others to take the sword and it was spoken to Peter a Pastour of soules Put up again thy sword into his place That materiall sword was not for him to use Thirdly note that it is indefinitely propounded Your selves that is all of all sorts no man can bee exempted from subjection to Princes Christians must obey as well as Pagans strangers as well as home-borne while they are within their gates All the doubt is whether Church-men are to bee subject to secular Princes The Papists deny it but wee affirme it and have reason so to doe First because the precept is generall without exception Secondly because the Apostle saith Rom. 13.1
this formality and outward shew and serving God for fashion how deeply is it seated in mens manners It is likely the most of you that heare this doctrine will say it is good and perhaps some one or two of you will be a little toucht with a kinde of consultation in your selves which way you might doe well but alas alas out and alas Oh that I could get words to gore your very Soules with smarting paine that this Doctrine might bee written in your very flesh for a thousand to one you will goe the most of you away and not redresse your wayes Religion shall not bee honoured by you more than before cursed be that worldly drosse or spirituall security that will thus rob and spoyle your soules and keepe Religion without her true glosse and bea●ty and shining glory I might here also note that submission to the ordinances of men is one part of a Christian mans well doing and a speciall ornament of the sincere profession of religion because it is the discharge of the duty enjoyned us by God and so is a part of the obedience due to God himselfe to keep their ordinances is to obey Gods commandement Secondly because such a conscionable submission to mans Lawes makes the religious works of Christians to be the more unrebukable in the eyes of wicked men and therefore they are to be warned of their rashnesse that say that conformity to mens lawes is evill doing when God sayes it is well doing they say it is a sinne God sayes it is a good worke It is neerer to the truth and safer to say that not conforming is a sin because it is a breach of Gods expresse commandement in the former verse and therefore also godly Christians whether Ministers or private persons that obey the lawes of men simply out of conscience of Gods Commandements and not for corrupt ends may comfort themselves that the good God doth like of what they doe because it is his will that so they should doe and he sayes they doe well though some good men are contrary-minded out of weaknesse censure them as evill doers Then it is implyed here that the conscionable conformity of godly Christians shall be rewarded in Heaven for all well-doing shall be rewarded in Heaven but submission to humane Ordinances is well-doing and therefore shall be rewarded in Heaven Paul is crowned in Heaven for his holding to the Jewish ceremonies to win the Jewes and further the liberty of his Ministery Thus of the matter required The end followes That you may put to silence the ignorance of foolish men The word here rendred To put to silence is diversly accepted or the force of it is shewed by diverse tearmes in severall Scriptures Sometimes it is translated to still a thing that is tumultuous and raging and so the sea was silenced or made still Mark 4.39 Sometimes it is translated To make speechlesse or dumb so Mat. 22.12 Sometimes To confute so as they have not a word to answer so Mat. 22.34 Sometimes To muzzle or tye up the mouth so 1 Cor. 9.9 1 Tim. 5.18 and so it signifies properly and so well-doing is intended here as a meanes to muzzle the mouths of wicked men The word here rendred Foolish men signifies properly men without a minde or men that have not use of their understanding and so are either naturall fooles or mad men The Doctrines that may be gathered from hence are many For it may be evidently collected from hence Doct. 1. That wicked men doe usually in all places speake evill of godly men they are prone to it they doe it usually The holy Ghost here supposeth it to be done as the usuall course in all ages and conditions of the Christian Church and no marvell For it hath been in all ages past the condition of godly men to be evill spoken of and slandered God children were as signes and wonders Esay 8. And whosoever refraineth himselfe from evill maketh himselfe a prey Esay 59.15 The throats of wicked men are the ordinary burying places for the names of the Righteous Rom. 3. And this is the more to be heeded if we mark in Scriptures either persons reproaching or the persons reproached or the matter of the reproach or the manner For the persons reproaching we shall read sometimes that men are reproached by such as are of the same Religion with them Psal. 50.16 Esay 8.18 Cant. 1.6 Yea sometimes that godly men are reproached by such as are of their owne house and kindred as Isaak was by Ismael and Ioseph by his brethren the parents are against the children and the children are against the parents and a mans enemies are those of his owne house And for the persons reproached we shall finde them to be the most eminent and godly persons as Iob cap. 30.1 Moses Heb. 11.26 David Psal. 35.15 Ieremiah c. 18.18 the Apostles 1 Cor. 4.9 10 13. yea the Lord Jesus Christ himselfe Heb. 12.3 And for the matter objected wee shall finde the godly men have beene reproached with the most vile slanders that almost might be I may spare other testimonies now seeing Christ himselfe was charged with gluttony blasphemie sedition deceit diabolicall working and to have a divell in him and he supposeth it to be the case of Christians to be spoken against with all manner of evill-saying Mat. 5.12 And for the manner two things may be noted First that many times wicked men set themselves to study and invent without all colour of occasion mischievous things to reproach godly men withall thus they devised devices against Ieremiah Secondly that when they have evill reports afoot they pursue them and divulge them with all possible forwardnesse and malice thus the abjects tare Davids name and ceased not Psal. 35.15 and ill-minded men cease not till that good men may be every where evill spoken of Acts 28. The reason of this strange kinde of ill humour in wicked men is twofold First there is their naturall hatred of goodnesse it is not because of the sin of godly men but simply because they follow goodnesse There is a naturall antipathy betweene a good life and a bad man 1 Iob. 3.13.14.1 Pet. 4.5 Psal. 38.20 Secondly the other is because it is one of the rules of the divell To be an accuser of the brethren and good livers and the works of their father the divell they will doe Iob. 8.44 The use is diverse for Uses First it should informe men not to thinke it strange when they see such things come to passe for no other triall in this point of reproach befals godly men but what hath accompanied the condition of all godly men almost in all ages Secondly godly men should be the more stirred up to prepare apologies and in all places where they come to contend for the truth and strive together to preserve the reputation of one another Prov. 12.18 Thirdly godly men should arme themselves and prepare for reproaches and accordingly stirre up their
it is not unprofitable to consider some motives that might beget in us an earnest desire after it and care for this true pious and filiall fear●of God First if we respect our selves we should strive to be such as feare God For if we were never so good subjects to Princes or never so courteous and faire-dealing men in our carriage towards all sorts yet if wee did not feare God we were but vile creatures that had not the qualities of a man in us For to feare God and keep his commandements is the whole property of a man Eccles. 12.13 And the feare of God is the beginning of wisedome Hee is not a compleat man that doth not feare God that is all in all Iob 28.28 Secondly if we consider what God is Hee is our Master and therefore where is his feare Mal. 1.6 He is our praise our good God hee worketh fruitfull things and wonderfull and shall we not feare him Ier. 5.22 Deut. 10.20 Thirdly if we consider but the benefits will come unto us if we be religious persons and truly fear God Great is the Lords mercy towards them that feare him Psal. 103.11 whether we respect this life or a better life whether we looke for temporall or spirituall things For temporall things such as feare God have a promise of great prosperity Deut. 5.29 Eccles. 8. 13. If any thing be welcome as prosperity in this world it is Religion and the fear of God For to him that feareth God is promised wealth and riches Psal. 112.1 3. and honour and long life Pro. 10.27 and 22.4 protection from the pride of men and the strife of tongues Psal. 31.19 and strong confidence Pro. 14.26 and they shall want nothing Psal. 34.9 And for spirituall things the secrets of the Lord are with them that feare God and he will shew them his covenant Psal. 25.14 and the Sun of Righteousnesse shall rise unto them that feare God and there shall bee covering under his wings and they shall goe forth and grow as fat calves Mal. 4.2 and the Angels of the Lord shall pitch their tents round about them that feare him Psal. 34.7 And for eternall things there is a booke of revelation to such as feare God where God keeps the records of them and all the good they say or doe Mal. 3.16 and at the day of Judgement they shall have a great reward Revel 11.18 Great are the priviledges of such as feare God in this life but who is able to expresse how great the goodnesse is as the Psalmist saith which God hath laid up for them that feare him Psal. 31.19 And if it should so fall out that God should not see it fit to give us any great estates in this world yet a little is better with the feare of God than great treasures and those troubles therewith which the sinne of man or the wrath of God will bring in with them But if we would have these benefits wee must be sure that we doe indeed and truly feare God For there are many men in the visible Church that beare the name of Gods people which yet God protests against as such as doe not feare him indeed as First they that pity not men in affliction feare not God Iob 6.14 Secondly they that oppresse their neighbours by any cavill or unjust dealing as by usury or the like feare not God Levit. 25.17.36 Thirdly they that make no conscience to pay their tithes or at least will not give first fruits or free will offrings such as will pay no more for religious uses than they are forced unto these feare not God Deut. 14.23 Mal. 1. Fourthly they that account it a burthen and a course of no profit to serve God or to be so religious Mal. 3.14 15. Ios. 24.14 Fiftly they that make no conscience of secret sinnes or hypocrisie in Gods worship these feare not God because they set not the Lord alwayes before them nor feare to omit or doe such things as the world cannot take notice of Sixthly they that meddle with the seditious or changers how forward soever they seeme in religion yet such as are set to be so inclinable to be led by changers have not the true feare of God in them Pro. 24.21 Seventhly they that live in any knowne sinne and make no conscience to depart from iniquitie Prov. 3.7 and 14.2 Such are they that are mentioned in the Catalogue Mal. 3.5 Sorcerers Adulterers c. especially the men that blesse themselves in their hearts when they are guilty of hatefull sinnes Psal. 26.1 2 4. On the other side such as truely feare God may bee knowne by these signes First they make conscience to obey God in their lives and keepe his ordinances Deut. 6.2 They shew that they feare him by serving of him Secondly they doe beleeve God and his servants speaking to them in his name This was a signe the Israelites feared God because they beleeved God and his servant Moses Exod. 14.31 Thirdly they that truely feare God doe depart from evill and dare not live or allow themselves in any knowne sinne whether it be sin in opinion or in life In opinion they that fear God will give him glory though it be to change for the opinions not only they but all the world have held Revel 14.7 And so in practice he that truly feares God hates all sinne in some measure It is a foule signe one doth not fear God when he will not forsake his errours or faults though he be convinced of them Fourthly they that make a conscience of it to obey God in all soundnesse of practice in their conversation and so not only in worshipping him with reverence Psal. 5.8 but in striving to doe all the good duties God requires Psal. 5.8 And that this signe may bee applyed effectually wee may try our selves by our obedience to God whether our feare of him bee right or no First if wee obey in secret and dare not leave undone such things as no man can charge us withall and doe withall strive against and resist the very hypocrisie of the heart and stand infeare of Gods offence for the evil● are found in our very thoughts this will prove us to feare God soundly in truth and uprightnesse of heart Ios. 24.14 Col. 3.22 When we set the Lord alwayes before us and with desire to approve our selves to him it is an excellent signe Secondly when we heare the Word of God and are told what to avoide or doe we are then tried whether we feare God soundly or no. For if wee dare not delay but make Conscience of it to practise Gods will as fast as we know it it is a good signe but otherwise it is a foule signe that many Christians that make a faire shew are not found because they are not afraid to live in the sinnes God reproves by his Word nor to leave still unperformed the precepts counsels and directions are given them from day to day The Religion of
many that seeme to be of the better sort is a meere formality as this very signe proves Psal. 86.11 Isaiah 50.10 Thirdly a great ghesse may be had at mens feare of God by their care and conscience they make of their obedience in their particular calling A man may have comfort that his feare of God and profession of Religion is right if he hate idlenesse lying covetousnesse deceit frowardnesse and unjust dealing in his calling For though to deale justly with all men be no infallible signe of the true feare of God yet it is a probable one and where it is not there can be no true feare of God Thus Magistrates must prove that they feare God 2 Chron. 19.27 Exod. 18.21 and thus every man in his place yea if women would have the reputation to be such as feare God they must let their workes praise them If they be idle froward undutifull busie-bodies and carelesse of their domesticall duties what feare of God can be in them Fourthly it will be manifest that our obedience flowes from the true feare of God if we will obey against our profit or ease or credit or our own carnall reasons or affections Hereby the Lord said he knew that Abraham feared him because he spared not his owne sonne Gen. 22.12 And thus of the feare of God The last part of the charge concernes our loyalty to the King Honour the King The Apostlè intends in these words but briefly to urge the practice of their duty urged in the exhortation Ver. 13. fave that the termes have something in them of explication of that doctrine and something for confirmation for we must honour the King 1. In our hearts 2. In our words 3. In our workes First we must honour him in our hearts and shew it two wayes 1. We must not curse the King no not in secret no not in our thoughts we must not entertaine impatient and vile thoughts of the King but from our hearts esteeme him for his greatnesse authority and gifts 2. When the King commands any thing that seemes to others or to us harsh inconvenient or doubtfull we must honour the King by interpreting his Lawes in the best sense If love must not thinke evill but hope all things of all sorts of men then much more of Kings It were greatly to be longed for that this note might enter into the breasts of some men they would then be afraid to charge so much evill of the Kings ordinances not only when they might finde a fairer sense but oftentimes expresly against the intent and meaning of the ordinance Secondly we must honour the King in our words three wayes 1. By reverent speeches to him and of him 2. By a thankfull acknowledgement of the good is in him and we receive by him 3. By praying to God with all manner of prayer for him 1. Tim. 2.1 Thirdly we must honour him in our workes 1. By paying him tributes and customes 2. By submitting and yeelding to his ordinances preferring the obedience thereunto before the censures or contrary opinions of what men soever And this is the maine thing intended verse the 13. of this Chapter And therefore I will omit the larger handling of this point in this place Verse 18. Servants be subject to your Masters with all feare not onely to the good and gentle but also to the froward HItherto of the duties of subjects and so of the exhortation as it is politicall and concernes the Commonwealth Now the Apostle proceeds to give directions oeconomicall that concerne the family or houshold government Before I consider of the particular exhortations some thing would bee said in generall concerning a family A family is the society of divers men dwelling together in one house for preservation and happinesse Where three things are to bee explicated First what the persons are that take upon them to constitute this societie Secondly what is the difference between this society and their humane societies Thirdly what is the end of this societie First the persons that constitute a family or families societie are to bee considered either as the family is perfect or unperfect 1. A perfect familie consists of a triple societie first the one betweene man and wife secondly the other between parents and children thirdly and the third between Masters and servants 2. The unperfect is when any of these societies are wanting as when there are not either children or servants or wives or husbands in it The Apostles directions here do forme only an unperfect familie For he gives not directions about parents and children Secondly the difference of this society from others is in those words dwelling together in one house For thereby is imported that this is the first society of all others and the foundation of all the rest For a City comprehends many families a Countrie many Cities a Monarchie many Nations and the World many Monarchies Thirdly the end of a fraternity is preservation and happinesse and so to speake distinctly there are three things requisite to make this society happy and to preserve it so namely first commodity secondly delight and thirdly Religion Unto commoditie is requisite possession of goods and the mutuall lawfull labour of the persons in the family unto delight is requisite quietnesse and love unto Religion is required the constant and right serving of God If commodity be wanting the family cannot bee at all If delight be wanting it cannot be well and if religion be wanting it cannot be for ever Thus of a family in generall and two things may be in generall noted from the Apostles charge about the family First that God himselfe doth binde all sorts of persons as strictly to the good behaviour in their owne houses or towards one another as he doth toward those in his house Secondly that the conscience is bound immediatly from God to nourish all good duties And this is proved by the fift Commandement and Pro. 14.13 with many other places of Scripture There may be divers reasons assigned why God gives Commandement to binde us to domesticall duties First from his owne right For though there be many Administrators as of a Church a Common-wealth a Family c. yet there is but one Lord God is the Head of this society as well as of any other 1. Cor. 12. Secondly because this is the first society God brought into the world and therefore he would have it honoured and carefully preserved to the end of the world The first society in Paradise was this and Religion was professed for many hundred yeers by this society only even till the people came out of Egypt Thirdly because the persons we live withall in the family are the neerest companions of our lives and therefore we should live with all due respect one of another Fourthly because the family is the Seminarie both of Church and Common-wealth Fiftly because the family is the most usuall place for us to practise our Religion in
and so from the advantages or disadvantages of particular mens estates did ar●se the freer or harder condition of some men Besides this sin had so confounded the very dispositions of men that through the inequality of naturall temper or care of education some men are made more fit to governe and others to be governed Secondly as a monument of Gods Justice it is observed that some whole nations of men have been in their very naturall inclination onely disposed to bondage being destitute of all gifts to rule or governe as it is noted by the Mu●covites and some other nations who for the most part at this day are servants yea slaves by nature Thirdly in other nations many men become servants not by nature but by necessity as being taken in mercy and thus among the Latines came up the name of servants being servi because they were servati preserved from slaughter in war and mancipia because they were manu capta things tak●● by force of armes Fourthly the horrible sinnes sometimes of the Ancestors brings beggery and so servitude upon their posterity as the sinne of Cam made Canaan a servant of servants Gen. 9.25 So doth treason whoredome riotousnesse and prodigalitie of many parents undoe their whole posteritie and leave them in a necessity of serving Fiftly wicked children for their disobedience to their parents are many times brought not only to be servants but as was noted before of Cam to be servants of servants Prov. 17.2 Sixtly many men are brought to a morsell of bread by their owne disorder and wickednesse of life sometimes open sins sometimes secret sins bringing this curse of God upon them For men became servants only to gaine by their service the knowledge or state of some science art or trade as many apprentices doe Seventhly sometimes God by his hand doth abase some men onely as a triall if they fall into poverty and so to the necessity of working for others by no sinfull courses of their owne but by the inevitable hand of God as by pyracie shipwrack fire theeves or the like and these are so humbled either to warne others and shew the power of God or to bring them to repentance or else for triall of Gods grace in them Eighthly some men are brought to this misery by the cruelty and unjust dealing of other men and so that power the Masters tooke over their bondmen to dispose of their very lives was not of God or Nature but meerely an oppression For why should they have power to take away life that could not give it And so many a man is brought to poverty and servitude by oppression and cruell Landlords or by the fraudulent dealings of other men that falsifie their trust or coozen them in bargaining Now the servants brought to this condition by any of these meanes must be subject to their Masters and this is of divine institution For God himself hath bound them to it by the first commandement and so the subjection of servants is a morall and perpetuall ordinance Uses The Use of all this may be divers For First it should teach all sorts of men the more to hate and flee from sinne which hath brought these miseries upon such multitudes of men Secondly it should teach Masters to use their servants respectively For though they be servants yet they are men made after the Image of God and they are the best part of their possession For other things they possesse are without life and servants are the living instruments of their commodities Th●s wise and godly me● in Scripture were wont to account it the best part of their possessions that they had men servants or maid servants Thirdly it should teach servants especially two things the one is humility they should runne a race fitted to their condition they should conquer pride and aspiring remembring that God hath abased them The other is they should keep themselves in their places and callings and not shake off the y●oke by running away c. seeing God hath taken them bound to serve But the former is most proper to this place Seeing they are but servants they should be content with such diet apparell labour and usage as is convenient to their condition Fourthly it may serve for great humiliation to such servants as are wicked men These are of three sorts some of them were brought to this condition by their owne wickednesse of life some of them are wicked servants too as well as wicked men some are tolerable and sometimes profitable servants though evill men all are in ill case For this is but the beginning of evill to them if they repent not For if they live in their sinnes as they serve men now they shall serve divels hereafter and so their bondage shall be invested upon them without end Quest. But seeing many godly men and women may be servants how may a godly Christian comfort himself in this estate of abasement Ans. Though it be an outward misery to be a servant yet there are many consolations to sweeten the bitternesse of this abasement First because extremities of bondage are removed from servants with us for the most part so as their service is but for a time and voluntarie too to hire themselves to whom they will and Masters have not power of their lives Secondly because their calling is acknowledged for a lawfull calling by God Thirdly because God hath bound Masters by his Word to use them well and the lawes of Princes provide punishments for unreasonable Masters Fourthly because Christ hath redeemed them from the spirituall bondage of serving the Law and the divell and Gods Justice so as he is Christs freeman Fiftly because though his body be subject yet his soule is free and not subject to any mortall creature Sixtly because their Masters are their brethren in Religion Seventhly because God hath provided by his unchangeable Law that one day in seven they shall rest from their labour Eighthly before God there is neither bond nor free but all are one in Christ Gal. 3.28 Col. 31.11 Ninthly because all the benefits of Religion whether inward or outward belong to servants as well as to Masters 1. Cor. 12.13 Tenthly because the very work that servants doe in their particular calling is accepted of God as obedience to him as well as the performing of the duties of Religion God accepts their daily labour as well as he doth praying hearing the Word receiving the Sacraments reading the Scriptures fasting or the like Eph. 6.6 Eleventhly because they are freed in that condition from many cares seeing they have now nothing to do in effect but to obey in what is appointed 〈◊〉 which is a great ease to a minde that desires to see what he hath to doe to please God seeing now only one thing is necessary which is to obey in what he is commanded and directed Twelfthly because he shall not only have wages from men but from God also E●hes 6.8 Lastly bec●●●e there shall be no
him of nothing But by renovation conscience is good for the time of this life but imperfectly and increaseth in good men by degrees and so because man is renewed but in part it is a part of the goodnesse of the conscience to accuse for sinne especially if it be presumptuous after calling as well as to excuse from faults while the man keeps his uprightnesse That a good conscience should only excuse is true in this world onely of conscience as it was good by creation Now concerning the goodnesse or badnesse of conscience these seven things are to be considered of First that all mens consciences by nature are evill Secondly the difference of evill in mens consciences Thirdly the signes of an evill conscience Fourthly the hurt of an evill conscience Fiftly the meanes how evill consciences may be made good Sixtly the signes of a good conscience Seventhly the great happinesse of the man that hath a good conscience For the first that all mens consciences are by nature evill is manifest because all have sinned in Adam and lost their originall righteousnesse in all the faculties of the soule and so every man in his naturall condition is in every point uncleane and to the impure all things are impure even their consciences are polluted saith the Apostle Tit. 1.15 For the second evill is not in the same degree in all mens consciences but after a different manner in divers men for First in most men wee see that conscience is so feeble and works so little that it seemes to be but a small sparke or like a bubble which riseth now and then and presently vanisheth Now the reason why conscience stirs so little in the most men is not to be taken from the nature of conscience for that can worke all workes mentioned before but from divers things in man For first Adams sinne as it deprived all mens consciences of originall righteousnesse which was the life of the conscience so it brought such a depravation and evill disease upon the conscience that it was never healed nor cured in the naturall man to this day but the weaknesse arising from the infection holds him downe still Secondly the generall ignorance and darknesse which is in the world is one great cause why conscience lieth so miserably weake and neglected For it cannot worke for want of light For in the mind it findes only a few naturall principles or some generall truths of religion which are altogether insufficient to direct in the particular occasions of mens lives Thirdly besides the law of nature is corrupted in man and so those principles are very muddy and uncertaine and the generals of Religion are poysoned with secret objections gathered from the controversies of so many false religions Fourthly further it is manifest that the cares and pleasures of life oppresse conscience in many and in them conscience stirs not not because it cannot stir but because there is no leasure to heare what it saith men are so violently carried to the pleasures and busines of this world As a man that runs in a race many times runs with such violence that he cannot heare what is said unto him by some that he passeth by though it were counsell that might direct him in the right way of the race so is it with men that haste to be rich conscience often cals to them to take heed of going out of the way by deceit or lying or oppression or the like but they pursue riches so violently that they cannot heare the voice of conscience And so is it with the voluptuous person and with the most men that live in any habituall gainfull sinne Fiftly yea this weaknes comes upon the conscience of some by custome of sinnes that are not sinnes of gaine or pleasure as the sinnes of negligence sloathfulnesse passion or the like in which men are wilfully confirmed and will not regard the checks of their owne conscience Finally one great reason why the most of us feele so little of conscience is the evill hearing of the Word of God for the Word of God powerfully preached would awake the conscience but that most men set themselves to neglect it by a willing wilfull entertainment of distractions and in voluntary forgetting of what they have heard and so hood-winking themselves it is no wonder they cannot see Secondly some mens conscience is starke dead it stirs not at all The conscience is compared to a part of the body that is not only without sense and rotten but is feared with an hot iron and this is the case only of some notorious either Hereticks or malefactors that have lived a long time wilfully in some monstrous wickednesse either knowne or secret 1 Tim. 4.2 This seared conscience is either joyned with a greedinesse to commit speciall wickednesse or with a reprobate minde that is so horrible stupid that it judgeth evill to be good or at the best not dangerously hurtfull Ephes. 4.18 Rom. 1.28 Thirdly in some men the evill of conscience lyeth in this that it is over busie and sinnes too much and so in two sorts of men first the superstitious or secondly the desperate The superstitious person is many times disquieted by his conscience in doing well or when he doth that which is not unlawfull as the Popish Priest is troubled for comming to our Churches or the Christian that is carried with preposterous zeale is troubled for obeying the Magistrate in using his liberty in things indifferent in the desperate the evill of Conscience is the horrible tormenting of them beyond the bounds of the offence of Conscience and that in two things First in that it presents the wrath of God to them without the hope of mercy in Christ as did the Conscience of Cain Secondly in that it drives them to doe that against themselves which is desperately wicked as to make away themselves as the desperate Conscience of Iudas and Achitophel did Fourthly in some men there was a temporary goodnesse in the Conscience of which they made shipwracke and so utterly lost the goodnesse they had for a time And thus many hypocrites doe that for a time get the forme of Religion even into their Consciences but afterward falling into the immoderate love of the world or the lust of some particular sinne fall cleane away from Religion and so lose the goodnesse which they had 1 Tim. 1.19 Thus of the differences of evill in the Consciences of divers men the signes of an evill Conscience follow But before I give the signes wee must take notice of a distinction and that is that the Conscience may have evill in it and not be an evill Conscience Conscience in this life in men regenerate is renewed and restored but in part and so may erre sometimes and in some cases and yet be no evill Conscience As for instance in certaine weake Christians in the Primitive Church who yet were godly men the Apostle shewes Rom. 14. that some Christians for Conscience sake did
So with God there is neither circumcision nor uncircumcision Jew nor Gentile bond nor free but all are one in Christ Col. ● 11 Which should be a marvellous comfort to Christians that are meaner than others in the world to think on it that God requireth as hard worke of the richest as he doth of them and makes as great account of a poore Christian as of the mightiest Monarch And it should teach Christians humility and not to strive so much for precedency but rather if men will excell others it should be in service and sufferings Fourthly all men are not called he saith here Yee are called as importing that it was a speciall honour done to them Many have not the meanes of Calling and many refuse their Calling when they have the meanes Which shewes the wofull estates of worlds of men unto whom the voice of God by his Word in the Spirit comes not Fiftly the Calling of God doth propound conditions upon which his election in time doth depend for many are called but few chosen upon their Calling and the reason is because they yeelded not to the conditions of their Calling God calls men to a new Covenant and requires first the beleefe of all things promised on his part secondly sanctity and holinesse of life thus they are said to be Saints by Calling 1 Cor. 1.1 thirdly to suffer for well-doing if there be occasion so here Now upon the Conscience and consent of the heart unto these conditions doth God make his choice or acknowledge men and therefore hereby mens hearts must bee tried or men must try their hearts and estates whether they be effectually called or no. Sixtly men are bound to take notice of and to learne and obey the will of God revealed in his Word though it be hard to finde out as here the Apostle faith They were called to suffer which is a thing that is not easie to prove by expresse Scripture but must be found out as it lies enwrapped in consequences in divers places of Scripture For if the lawes of men binde and oblige us to punishment though we know them not because we ought to take notice of them much more must we study the Lawes of God though they be many in number and hard to finde out without much labour and many helps Seventhly our generall Calling doth binde us to a carefull observation of our particular Calling as here their Calling in Religion to be Gods servants did binde them to looke to their duty as mens servants yea and to be subject to their corrections though unjust And therefore those Christians are farre out of the way that neglect their particular Calling and the charge God hath delivered them upon sentence of Religion and their generall Calling Eightly the maine doctrine in them or in the scope of them is that God calls his servants all of them to suffer for the truth Hee shewes them heaven and the salvation of their soules and bestowes rich treasure upon their hearts but withall tells them he lookes they should arme themselves with a resolution to suffer what may befall them for well-doing Our Saviour Christ told his Disciples plainely that they must thinke of taking up the Crosse daily before they come to wearing of the Crowne And therefore they do foolishly that undertake the profession of Religion before they have set downe to know what it will cost them Thus of the second reason The third reason is taken from the example of Christ who suffered greater wrongs than can be befall servants or any other sort of men and this doctrine of Christs suffering he handles at large from verse 21. to the end of the chapter Which doctrine of Christs suffering is fitted partly to the case of servants and partly to the use of all Christians Concerning the Passion five things are in all these verses noted First who suffered Christ suffered ver 21. Secondly the end of his suffering viz. to leave us an example c. verse 21. Thirdly the manner how he suffered set out 1. Negatively and so he suffered first without sin verse 22. secondly without reviling ver 23. 2. Affirmatively and so hee commits himselfe to him that judgeth righteously Fourthly the matter what he suffered viz. our sins in his owne body on the tree ver 24. Fiftly the effect of his sufferings 1. In respect of us and so his sufferings serve To kill our sins Verse 24. To make us alive to righteousnesse Verse 24. To heale our natures Verse 24. 2. In respect of himselfe and so they procured his exaltation to be Shepheard and Bishop of our soules ver 25. Thus of the order Even Christ suffered The first thing to be considered in the Apostles description of the Passion of the person who suffered is that it is named here with speciall Emphasis Even Christ or Christ also Christ is the sir-name of our Saviour as Jesus was his proper name Jesus is a name onely given him in the New Testament but Christ was his name in both Testaments and signifies Anointed being a Greek word as Messiah doth in the Hebrew And so it is a name importing his office of Mediator as being thereby proclaimed to bee the substance of the ceremoniall types even the supreme Doctor or Prophet Priest and King of the Church for these three sorts of men were anoynted in the Old Testament and were types of Christs anointing It is true that we doe not reade that our Saviour was himselfe anointed with oyle because his anointing consisted in the substance of that shadow For the shadow signifieth two things first ordination to the office secondly the pouring out of gifts by the holy Ghost for the exornation of the office Now whereas Christ is Mediatour in both natures his anointing must be distinguished according to his natures The whole person was anointed but yet differently in respect of his natures for gifts could not be poured out upon his divine nature yet as the Sonne of God the second person in Trinity he was anointed in respect of ordination to the office of Mediatour and as the Sonne of man he was anointed in respect of the pouring out of the gifts of the holy Ghost upon that nature in measure as the Psalmist saith above his fellowes Psal. 45. The first doctrine about the Passion is here briefly contained in these three words of the Apostle Even Christ suffered which is a doctrine full of excellent Uses for thence First we may see how vile the errour was of those Hereticks they called Patri-passianus who taught that God the Father suffered whereas in this and other Scriptures we are taught that it was onely Christ the second Person in Trinity that suffered The ground of their errour was that there was but one Person in the Deity which in heaven was called the Father in earth the Sonne in the powers of the creatures the holy Ghost and thence they affirme the same things of the Father they did of the Sonne that he was
with what kinde of reviling he was 〈◊〉 and that was with most hatefull 〈◊〉 as deceiving working by the Divell blasphemy sedition treason c. The Use followes Use. Was Christ reviled Then it is most manifest that the world hates goodnesse incurably if that just One cannot scape reproach and slanders then may not any godly persons promise to themselves peace that wayes Therefore carnall friends of such as suffer reproach for Religion many times say It must needs be they are faulty some way or at least are not discreet whereas this instance of our Saviour shewes that wordly-minded men will reproach such as are godly though they were never so discreet or innocent Besides this should teach us patience under such indignities and wrongs Christ was reviled and shall we be so troubled and disquieted Christ did not revile againe And the reason was partly because reviling is a sin and partly because he suffered as our surety though he had deserved no such shame and we had and therefore holds his peace not onely from reviling but many times from just apologie confessing our guiltinesse by his silence The practice of our Saviour is here reported for our learning that all Christians might hence be warned not to render reviling for reviling 1 Pet. 3.9 There are many reasons to perswade us to patience and not to render reviling for reviling First the reproaches of unreasonable men cannot take away thy innocency Secondly better men than we have beene as vilely abused Thirdly as David said God may blesse thee for their cursing and honour thee for their disgracing of thee Fourthly because we are heires of blessing and therefore such foule language as cursing and reviling should not be found in our mouthes Fiftly though thou deserve not those reproaches from men yet thou art not innocent before God Sixtly herein thou shalt be conformed to the Patterne and Image of the Lord Jesus Christ not onely in suffering wrongfully but in forbearing reviling for Conscience sake He threatned not To threaten those that wrong us is usually a blemish and a fault First because usually it ariseth of passion and desire of revenge Secondly because oftentimes it is joyned with lying when such things are threatned as for matter or degree cannot be done or are not intended to be done Thirdly because by threatning so passionately we doe injury to God to whom vengeance belongs This condemnes the usuall practice of all sorts of men that sin fearfully in the customary practice of thwarting upon all occasions of discontent and displeasure Who is he that suffers now and in his heart or words threatens not Especially how exceeding common is this sin in the most families where parents and masters can hardly tell how to speake of the faults of servants and children but it is with foolish and passionate threatning contrary to the expresse prohibition Eph. 6.9 Masters use not threatnings But all such as would have the comfort of a sound conversation and desire to carry themselves as Christ hath left us a patterne must strive to breake off this wretched habit of threatning and if they be oppressed by Superiours or wronged by the incurable faults of Inferiours they must learne of Christ to commit all to him that judgeth righteously which is the affirmative part of the manner of Christs suffering But committed himselfe to him that judgeth righteously From these words divers things may be observed Doct. 1. First that in case of wrongs from other men it is not alwaies needfull or convenient to complaine to the Magistrate for redresse Christ here commits his cause to God but complaineth not nay though he were wronged almost continually and with grievous wrongs yet we read not that ever he complained against them that did him wrong Here two things are to be enquired after First in what cases it is not fit to complaine to men Secondly in what cases it may be lawfull and fit In these cases following it is not fit to complaine to the Magistrate First where redresse of the wrongs may be had by private and peacefull courses 1 Cor. 6. Secondly where the lawes of men doe not provide punishment some wrongs are offences and yet not punishable by mens lawes Thirdly where the offence is commited of meere frailty or ignorance Fourthly where the offence is grounded upon meere surmises which in the judgement of charity ought not to be conceived 1 Cor. 13. Fiftly where the injury is lesse and the party trespassing doth acknowledge the wrong in this case the rule of Christ holds If thy brother say It repenteth me thou must forgive him Luke 17.4 Sixtly where by the suit religion will receive greater dammage by the scandall than the party suffers by the wrong as in the case of the Corinthians where a brother went to law with a brother before Judges that were Infidels Seventhly where the Magistrates have declared themselves to be enemies to justice and just men as here in the case of Christ it was boot lesse to complaine because all the Rulers were his professed enemies Contrariwise in these and such like cases following men may lawfully seek justice from men in authority First where the offence is grievous and against the lawes of God and men Secondly where the offender persists in evill-doing without repentance Thirdly where the offence is against God and Religion as well as against the party wronged Fourthly where such wrongs are usually punishable Fiftly where the party complaining is bound to complaine by his office either by charge or oath provided that the party complaining first love his enemies and secondly prosecute with continuall respect to Gods glory and thirdly use the benefit of the Law with charity and mercy without cruelty or extremity Thus of the first Doctrine Doct. 2. The malice of wicked men against the godly is so great that when they begin to oppose them though it be but in their name they will never cease opposition if they have power till they have their lives too Thus I gather from hence that our Saviour being reviled doth not only commit his cause to God but commits himselfe to God as expecting the increase of their oppositions till they have put him to death This is the reason why God indites every man that hates his brother of murther 1 Iohn 3.15 And David so often complaines of his enemies that slandred him that they also sought his life yea his soule as if they were desirous not only to kill his body but damne his soule also Doct. 3. We may here also note that God is to be conceived of according to the occasion seeing we cannot comprehend God wholly as he is we ought to raise up such conceptions in our hearts of the glory of God as may with honour answer the occasion that presently concerns us as here in the case of wrongs God is conceived as a righteous Judge in the case of death he is called the God of the spirits of all flesh in
other side The use may be for complaint of the generall and grievous neglect of these things in the most men and women Where may a man observe in any family almost that amiable carriage betweene man and wife that ought to be Quest. What are the causes of this generall disorder and unquietnesse betweene men and their wives Ans. 1. It may be God revengeth some sin in the manner of the marriage or going about it of which the parties have not soundly repented as precontracts or marriage for carnall ends without respect of Religion or Gods glory as for wealth or the like or some secret wickednesse betweene the parties before marriage 2. In the most it is the want of the true feare of God they are carnall and so their natures being not regenerate are full of all evill fruits Two carnall persons can no more agree together than two wilde beasts and what will not men and women allow themselves in when they doe not from their hearts feare Gods displeasure 3. In many it is ignorance of their mutuall duties men and women doe not studie with care and conscience the particular duties which in this estate God requires of them 4. In such as know their duties it is either unskilfulnesse to beare with infirmities or neglect of daily prayer to God to fashion their hearts to obey his will in those things as well as in other points of his service and worship 5. In some it is strange and strong lusts and inordinate desires which being not resisted and subdued the inward cause of all that absurd and perverse carriage shewes it selfe openly Quest. 2. But what should men and women doe that they might attaine to this orderly and amiable conversation Answ. 1. They should heartily in secret bewaile their former disorders and seeke pardon of God and then reconcile themselves one to another by confessing their faults and follies These things will never be mended till they be repented of 2. They should seriously attend to the doctrine of their duties and heare it with all conscience and desire to obey and take notice of Gods preceptorie commandement in requiring these things and by all meanes take heed of prejudice in hearing but make conscience to heare this part of the word of God as the word of God as well as any other Thinke not this doctrine too base or meane to be heard or studied nor imagine that it is but the severitie of the Teacher to tell of so many things to be done by men and women especially take heed of that profane jesting to put off the sound practice of this doctrine with jesting one at another Remember one thing by the way that it is a great testimonie of true uprightnesse of heart when men and women make conscience of it to be good at home as well as abroad Thus of the first generall doctrine Doct. 2. Secondly we may hence in generall note That the Word of God and the instructions of the ministry of the Word belong to women as well as men and therefore the Apostles call to the women to heare the Word of the Lord. This point is to be noted the rather because many give out that the knowledge of religion and hearing of Sermons and studying the Scriptures is not fit for women God doth not require it of them Now that this dotage may be the more evidently confuted consider that which is here intimated There are a multitude of arguments may be brought as First the image of God by creation was stamped upon the female as well as the male Gen. 1.27 2. The profession of godlinesse good workes faith charity and holinesse is required of women as well as men 1 Tim. 2.10 15. and therefore all means of grace is necessary for them as well as men 3. It is required of them to be teachers of good things though they are not allowed to teach publikely 1 Cor. 14. yet they must teach their children and the elder women must teach the younger women Tit. 2.3 4. They are commanded expres●ly to learne the doctrine is publikely taught 1 Tim. 2.11 5. The Scripture is full of instances Of the good woman in the Proverbs it is said that she was not only a good house-wife but the law of grace was in her lips Pro. 31.26 King Lemuel was taught prophecies by his mother Pro. 31.1 and women followed our Saviour to heare his Sermons some followed him I say from place to place Luke 8.3 and Mary was commended by our Saviour for choosing the best part when she set her heart about religious duties ●itting at the feet of Christ to hear his word Luk. 11. Our Saviour instructs a woman of Samaria in the great mysteries of conversion and salvation Iob. 4. At Philippi Pauls hearers at the first were onely women Acts 16.13 and an honourable narration is made of many Christian women converted Acts 17.4.12 ult and we reade of Priscilla that she was a meanes to instruct Apollos an eloqent and learned man and to make him more perfectly to understand the way of God Acts 18.26 and so we reade of women that laboured with Paul in the Gospel Phil. 4.3 6. If women must suffer for their Religion it is reason they have all the knowledge and helps in Religion but women are in danger to suffer for Religion as well as men Acts 8.3 9.2 22.4 7. Finally the way to be saved is the same for women as well as men and therefore all meanes of salvation belong to them and are to be used by them as well as men Which as it may incourage all women that are religious to study the things that belong to the kingdome of God so it should teach them to make conscience of what they heare and learne of the Virgin Mary to lay up the good word of God in their hearts and keepe it and to looke to their waies in all things that they may please God for as God is no respecter of persons but loves godlinesse in women as well as in men so he doth require sound obedience and reformation and holinesse of life of women as well as men ●or with God there is neither Jew nor Greeke bond nor free male nor female but all are one in Christ Jesus Gal. 3.27 28. Thirdly before I yet come to open the particular parts of the text it may be asked why the Apostle is so large in speaking to wives as spending so many verses upon them I answer it is not simply because wives are more faulty than husbands though many times it proves to bee so in many wives but 1. Because it is more against nature to obey than to rule 2. Because women have many hinderances or lets both in receiving the doctrine and in practising it sometimes they rest in the generall that they must obey and so never study particulars and therefore had need to have it beaten out in particulars for them Besides they are in danger to be
meant carnall Christians that had turned from Gentilisme and received the profession of Christian religion but yet followed their carnall courses we may then note that the bare change from a false religion to the profession of the true is not sufficient to salvation A man that hath professed a false religion had need of two conversions the one is from his false religion to the true and the other from profanenesse to sincerity in that religion The corne must be fetched from the field into the barne but that is not enough for so is the chaffe but it must then be taken from the barne into the garner To leave Popery and turne Protestant is not in it selfe sufficient unlesse a man turne from the profanenesse that is in the multitude in true Churches to embrace the sincere profession of the Gospel And there is reason for it for in changing from a false religion to a true a man doth but change his profession or his mind at best but he that will be changed effectually must change his heart and whole conversation and become a new creature So that then these words describe a carnall man viz. that he is such a one as doth not obey the word of God By the Word he meanes here the doctrine published by the Prophets and Apostles and now contained in the Scriptures Many Doctrines may be hence observed 1 The Scripture is Gods Word because God thereby doth expresse the sense of his mind as men doe by their words The Scripture is not the word which God the Father begate but is the word which God the Father uttered and is the word which God uttered to us bodily creatures God though he be a Spirit yet doth speake both to spirits and bodies to spirits by a way unknowne to us to bodies he hath spoken many wayes as by signes dreames visions and the like so by printing the sense of his mind in the minds of creatures that could speake and by them uttered in word or writing what he would have knowne Thus he spake by the Patriarks Prophets Christ and the Apostles They that deny that God hath any words either deny that God is as Psal. 14.11 or else that conceive him to be like stockes or stones or beasts as Rom. 1.23 or else thinke he can speake but will not because hee takes no care of humane things as Iob 22.23 These are Atheists 2. The Scripture is called the Word by an excellency because it is the only word we should delight in God since the fall did never speake unto man more exactly than by the Scriptures and we were better heare God talke to us out of the Scriptures than ●eare any man on earth yea or Angell in heaven yea it imports that we should be so devoted to the study of the Scriptures as if we desired to heare no other sound in our eares but that as if all the use of our eares were to heare this Word Let him that hath eares to heare heare 3. This Word of God now in the time of the New Testament belongs to all men in the right application of the true meaning of it Once it was the portionof Iacob and God did not deale so with other Nations to give them his Word but now that the partition wall is broken downe the Gospel is sent to every creature That is here imported in that unbeleeving husbands are blamed for not obeying the Word which should teach all sorts of men to search the Scriptures and ●o heare the Word devoutly and withall know that the comforts terrours and precepts co●●ained in it will take hold upon all sorts of men respectively 4. The Word of God ought to rule all sorts of men That is implied here in that fault is found with these unbeleevers that they obeyed it not It was given of God to that end to instruct reprove and direct men in all their waies 2 Tim. 3.16 17. It is the Canon or rule of mens actions Gal. 6. 16. It is the light and lanthorne God hath given to men it hath divine authority If we will shew any respect to God we must be ruled by the Scripture which is his Word 5. Unregenerate men have no mind to obey the Word and the reason is because they are guided by other rules which a●e false as their owne reason the customes of the world the suggestions of the divell and the like and because too the Word is contrary to their carnall desires and therefore they yeeld themselves to be guided by such rules as are most pleasing to their corrupt natures and besides too the light of the Word is too glorious for his eyes he cannot see into the mysteries contained in it because they are spiritually to be discerned and the naturall man therefore cannot perceive the things of God 6. It is a dangerous thing not to obey the Word of God they are accounted for lost and forlorne men here that doe not obey the Word Men be deceived if they thinke it is a course may be safe for to disobey Gods Word for Gods Word will take hold of them and destroy them and it will judge them at the last day Zech. 1.4 5. 2 Thes. 1.8 They are but lost men cast-awaies that care not for Gods Word 7. Nothing is to be reckoned a sin which is not disobedience to the Word That which is not contrary to some Scripture is no transgression and therefore men should take heed of burthening themselves with the vaine feare of sinning when they breake no commandement of God but only unwarranted traditions either on the left hand or the right 8. The constant omission of religious duties and good workes proves a man to be a carnall person as well as the committing of manifest injuries or grosse offences Here the Periphrasis of a carnall person is That he did not doe what the Word required 9. Men that obey not the Word may be won which should be a great comfort to penitent sinners It is true that disobedience clothed with some circumstances or adjuncts is very dangerous as when men have the means and love darknesse rather than light Iohn 3.20 and when men are smitten with remorse and have blessing and cursing set before them and see their sins and feele the axe of Gods Word and yet will on in transgression Deut. 11. 28. Mat. 3 10. or when men are called at the third or sixth or ninth houre and will put off and delay upon pretence of repenting at the eleventh houre Ma. 20. or when men are powerfully convinced and will raile and blaspheme and contradict the Word Acts 13.45 46. 18.6 and when God pursues men with his judgements and they refuse to returne Ier. 5.2 3 or lastly when men despight the spirit of God and sin of malice against the truth Heb. 10. 26 27 28 29 30. 10. The chiefe doctrine is That sound obedience to the Word of God is the Character of a true Christian a marke to distinguish the true
Christian from the false and from him that is no Christian at all God makes his count by righteousnesse Rom. 10. To professe the true religion to understand the Word to beleeve it with historicall or temporall faith to talke of the Word to receive Baptisme and the signes of the Covenants or the like makes not an essentiall difference It is obeying the Word proves us to be true Christians Not the hearers but the doers of the Word are acknowledged for just persons Mat. 7.26 27. Iames 1.22 23 24. But that we be not deceived in our obedience we must know that unto sound obedience divers things are required as 1. That his obedience be from the heart Rom. 6.17 2. That his obedience ariseth from the love of God and the hatred of sin as it is sin and not from carnall and corrupt ends Deut. 30.20 Iosh. 22.5 Mat. 4.19 3. That his obedience be in all things with respect to all Gods Commandements though it be against his profit ease credit or the like Heb. 11.8 Gen. 22.12 Psal. 119.6 Exod. 15.26 4. That he doth righteousnesse at all times that he continue in his obedience and obey at all times that is constantly and not for a fit Psal. 106.2 Hos. 6.5 Gal. 5.7 2 Kings 18.6 I●m 1.23 5. That he make conscience of obeying the least commandement as well as the greatest Mat. 5.19 6. That obeyes the commandements of the Gospel about beleeving in God and Jesus Christ as well as of the Law that practiseth obedience of faith and lives by faith 2 Thes. 1.8 Rom. 1.5 Mat. 16.16 11. It is to bee noted that the Apostle useth faire language when hee speaketh even of carnall men He gives not these carnall husbands reproachfull words but onely saith they obey not the Word and the reason may be because the conscience of a man is not won by the terror of words but by the evidence of the matter And besides the Apostle did not thinke it fit that wives should bee humoured in the violent dispraises of their husbands It is not profitable for inferiours to conceive much of the hatefulnesse of the sins of superiours 12. Religion doth not binde wives to account carnall husbands to bee religious They may know that they are carnall and yet not sin against their husbands in such judgement so as they judge by infallible grounds for though the wife must love her husband with matrimoniall love above all other men yet shee is not bound to beleeve that he is the best man in the world Lastly it is a great affliction to a Christian wife to have a carnall husband Till she have won him shee is but in a distressed estate for other wicked men she might shun and so avoide the discomfort ariseth from seeing and hearing their wickednesse but an evill husband shee cannot nor ought not to depart from him though shee must avoide his sinne 1 Cor. 7. and from such a husband shee cannot have the helps shee should have from a husband that could dwell with her as a man of knowledge Besides the many waies in which such a husband may or will hinder her in the course of godlinesse besides it cannot but bee a great griefe to her to thinke of their parting out of this world that the one of them must goe to hell and that the companion of her life when he dies if he repent not must be an eternall companion of devils 13. Good wives may have ill husbands such wives as are truly religious and obedient may have husbands that will not obey the Word of God and that ariseth sometimes from the improvidence or ill providing of parents Many parents that have children that obey them and will bee ruled by them doe dispose of them for carnall ends to carnall or ill disposed husbands Sometimes from the hypocrisie of such men as feare God but prove not so when their wives enjoy them Sometimes from an unruly affection in good women who though they know the men they choose to bee carnall yet they will have them though it prove to their owne continuall woe and affliction Sometimes from a speciall corruption of nature in some husbands who either are loving husbands and yet but carnall men or are good men but bad husbands Sometimes it ariseth from the speciall grace of God to the wife who though she was carnall when shee married the carnall husband yet afterwards is converted and effectually called and this was the case of such women ●as the Apostle seemes here to write to Sometimes it falls out by a speciall and unavoideable providence of God though all meanes have beene used to trie or prevent this evill in the husband for marriage being to be reckoned amongst outward things God for reasons knowne to himselfe and alwaies just will give ill husbands to good wives And contrariwise it may be God knowes that if some good wives had better husbands they would prove worse wives or both husband and wife would be more unapt for the kingdome of God 14. Unequall matches ought to be avoided as much as may be and that may be gathered from the maner of the Apostles speaking in that he saith If any obey not the Word If any as if he would import that it is a case he desired might be very rarely found amongst Christians They also may be won We reade in Scripture of divers kinds of winnings there is a spirituall winning or gaining and there is a worldly winning About the spirituall winning we reade of the winning of Christ Phil. 3.8 which is the worke of a particular beleever labouring and wrestling with God in the use of his ordinances to obtaine by the gift of his free grace Jesus Christ for his justification and sanctification and finall salvation Likewise we reade of the winning of grace and spirituall gifts and so godlinesse is called gaine and the good servants are said to win or gaine more Talents to the Talents they had And this gaine is gotten by a spirituall trading in the diligent emploiment of the gifts the godly have to get them encreased We reade likewise of the winning of other mens soules in many places and that is done either by the Preachers of the Gospel conquering the hearts of their hearers to the obedience of the Word of Christ and unto sound conversion or else it is done by private persons that by their examples and good carriage or by their admonitions or counsels doe perswade and incline others to a liking of a new life or to humiliation and reformation of some particular faults We reade likewise of worldly gaine and winning when men by their sports strive for prizes or in their trades labour for lucre and gaine Now this latter kinde of gaine differs greatly from the former both in the matter of the gaine and in the manner of seeking it for there is no comparison betweene the gaine of grace and godlinesse and the gaine of riches and honour the one is transitorie the
if we knew no more but that it pleased God to have it so it is his will it should be so But yet that it is a wise providence of God so to order it it may appeare in divers things for by continuing the meanes to call his owne Elect thus by degrees the wicked are left without excuse Besides the godly while they looke for the daily discovery of new converts are thereby put to the exercise of many graces and duties as diligence compassion charity a winning conversation meeknesse prayer exhortation and the like And besides the outward peace of the Church is thereby preserved for if it were knowne once that all the Elect in any place were called there would follow such violent opposition from the greater and worser sort as there would be no place of rest for the Church in the world They would all bee of Caines minde if God had declared his testimony on both sides from heaven And therefore at the day of judgement assoone as hee hath parted the Elect and Reprobate and sentenced them hee disposeth so of them as they shall never live together againe And further if all the Elect were gathered at once the world would bee at an end for then Christ would deliver up the kingdome to his father 1 Cor. 15.24 and therefore Ministers should continue painefull in their labours as remembring that they are set to worke for edification of the Church till Christ come againe Eph. 4.12 And though the most of their present hearers have refused the Word of God and are hardened yet they may see cause of constancie because God still supplies their Auditories with new generations that rise up by degrees in the roome of those hardned ones And withall they must thinke that all the yeere is not harvest they are Gods husbandmen and must not thinke much to labour and toile many daies and weekes before they see the fruit of their labours as hoping that in the end God may grant them a comfortable harvest and if Israel should not be gathered yet their reward is with God Thus of the first point imported in this word Also Secondly we may hence gather further that the Apostle would have us to account all that are won to religion to be safe He imples so much in that hee treats about winning of more to them as if hee accounted them safe that were won already And it is true of such as are won to the outward profession of religion that in charity wee are bound to hope the best of each one particularly but for such as are won to sound sanctification the signes whereof were noted before it is certaine of them they can never bee lost which is cleare by these proofes 1 Cor. 1.8 9. Phil. 1.6 Rom. 8. ult 1 Pet. 1.5 Iohn 6. 10.29 30. And it must needs be so for God will not cast off the people whom he hath chosen Psal. 94.14 Rom. 11. And besides Christ lives in the hearts of those that are truely sanctified Gal. 2.20 and Christ can die no more Rom. 6.10 He may as well die at the right hand of his Father as die in the heart of a Christian. And further God hath given us his spirit as the earnest of our eternall salvation sealing to us thereby all the promises he hath made us Eph. 1.14 15. and it is a known principle that whom God loveth he loveth to the end and finally Gods decree is unalterable 2 Tim. 2.29 Ob. This may be true of the most but alas how know I that God will looke so carefully to me in particular I may be lost Sol. Gods promise is universall Not one of them saith the Prophet shall be lacking Ier. 23.4 and God hath charged Christ to see to the keeping of the bodies and soules of every true beleever Iohn 6.39 40. Ob. It is true God will never depart from us but we may depart from him and so perish Sol. The Lords covenant is that neither he will depart from us nor we shall depart from him for hee will put his feare within us to that end Ier. 32.41 Ob. But I feele my selfe so weake and ignorant I cannot hold out Sol. The smoaking flaxe shall not be quenched nor the bruised reed broken Esay 42. Ob. But we are in continuall danger by reason of temptations within and infections of all sorts from without Sol. God is faithfull and will keepe you from evill for all that 2 Thes. 3.3 and Christ hath made intercession to his Father for that very thing that you may be kept from those evills Iohn 17. and God hath put his Spirit within you of purpose to make you keepe his statutes and to hold on your way Ezek. 36.27 Ob. But the Apostle Iohn seemes to say that we may lose what we have wrought 2 Iohn 8. Sol. The words of the Apostle Iohn are these Looke to your selves that we lose not those things which we have wrought but that we receive a full reward Which words may be understood as spoken to such as were hypocrites had but temporary grace not sound sanctification for he saith in the next words He that transgresseth and abideth not in the doctrine of Christ hath not God They never had God then that lose what they have wrought and so this toucheth not such as are sure now they have God in that they have saving grace Again it is true that the godly may lose what they have wrought when they fall into scandalls or by weakenesse fall from the profession of the truth I say they may lose what they have wrought in those sins first in respect of the praise of men all their former honour may be laid in the dust secondly in respect of the inward sense and comfort of what good they have done and thirdly in respect of the fulnesse of the reward in heaven for their glory may be much lessened by their falls but it doth not therefore follow that they may fall finally away from God for they will recover againe Ob. But we see that Christians of greater gifts than we have fallen away and never recover again but die in their Apostacie as Hymeneus and Philetus did in the Apostles times Sol. The Apostle in that place answers that Gods foundation remaines sure and hath this seale he knoweth who are his which evidently importeth that God did never know them to be his what shewes soever they made amongst men and therefore their fall need not discourage such as are sure by the former markes that they are Gods Object But wee see that the godly themselves doe fall as David and Peter did Sol. First they did recover againe and so were not lost Secondly though they fall they shall not be utterly cast downe for God staies them from falling wholly away though they fall away in some particular act Psal. 37.23 Thirdly in the worst fals of the Saints there is ever still an holy seed of grace and faith and knowledge that abideth in
all that are borne of God though in respect of outward fruits and the power or joy of inward gifts they may bee said to lose Ioh. 3.9 Without the word God hath divers meanes to further the salvation of men and he is pleased sometimes to worke by one meanes and sometimes by another sometimes by the Word preached sometimes by the Word read sometimes by Prayer sometimes by the Sacraments sometimes by the example of his Servants So that God doth worke our good sometime by one ordinance and not by another in the same thing and at the same time sometimes he will cure a man of a particular trespasse by the admonition of some private Christian Mat. 18.15 Iam. 5. ult sometimes he will bring a man to feele legall terrors by the doctrine of the Law and sometime hee will worke it by afflictions sometimes he will prepare a man to receive the grace of Christ by praier as he did Cornelius sometimes hee winnes him to it by the example of his servants as here And the reason is partly because God would shew the vertue that is in each ordinance and partly to teach us not to despise or neglect any of the meanes and partly to shew his owne power that workes freely by what meanes hee will as being not tyed to any And therefore they deale very corruptly and perversly that under pretence of commending one ordinance of God labour to abase the respect of another as they doe that say the house of God is a house of prayer and therefore there needs not so much preaching not considering that our Saviour Christ himselfe that alledged that place out of the Prophet to condemne buying and selling in the Temple yet did spend his greatest paines in preaching in the Temple and out of it thereby shewing the prime ordinance of God for the conversion of the soules of men was the preaching of the Gospel to them By the conversation of the Wives Great heed ought to be taken by such as professe Religion in looking carefully to their conversation especially towards such as are without Col. 4.5 Ephes. 5.15 1 Pet. 2.12 It is not enough to doe good duties but we must doe them as becommeth godlinesse T it 2. and so as may allure and win the very ungodly and therefore it is required that our works should shine Mat. 5.16 for by our practise wee resemble God himselfe and by our workes professe to shew not only what Gods Word is but what Gods nature is Our life must have the image of God printed upon it and therefore they doe fearefully that professe Religion amongst wicked men and by their workes order themselves so foolishly deceitfully conceitedly wickedly that they cause the name of God to be blasphemed Quest. But what should wee doe to our practise that by our conversation wee might allure and win wicked men to a love of the truth Answ. 1. First wee must avoide such things in our conversation as may irritate them as scandalous behaviour in any particular offence as deceit lying filthinesse drunkennesse pride covetousnesse passion or the like and withall take heed of mis-spending our zeale about such things wherof demonstration cannot be made to the conscience And besides in the good things we doe we must take heed of conceitednesse and ostentation but in meeknesse of wisedome have our conversations amongst men Iames 3.13 and further we must take heed of judging and censuring of others even of those that be without Iames 3.17 2. Mortification doth shine effectually into the conscience of wicked men it doth move them much if they see we be such as doe heartily judge our selves for the faults that hang upon us and doe not allow our selves in any sin Esay 61.3 3. A sound contempt of this world and the things thereof doth much affect the very naturall conscience of men if they see that not in words but in deed the love of this world and the glorie thereof be not in us and contrariwise it much vexeth them that we should professe the hope of heaven and contempt of the world and yet be as full of cares feares covetousnesse and such like ill affections as the very men of the world 4. Meeknesse and softnesse of nature exprest in our behaviour is very amiable as the coherence in this Text shewes and Tit. 3.1 2. 5. Mercie to the poore especially if we doe abound in it and be ready and cheerefull to it doth justifie us much before men Iames 1.26 Doct. 2. A good example even in inferiours may win men to Religion True Religion expressed in practise is amiable in all sorts of Christians women as well as men inferiours as well as superiours servants as well as masters children as well as parents Tit. 2.3.9.10 Luke 1. and the reason is because the true grace that is expressed by any Christian hath the likenesse of God printed upon it and so is amiable for his sake whom they by their works resemble And this may be a great encouragement to inferiours and should breed in them a great care of well-doing But the main thing intended in this Text is That religious wives ought to strive to win their husbands if they have such as are not religious or not in such soundnesse as they ought Quest. But what should a wife doe to win her husband Answ. She must in generall resolve to doe it not by her words but by her conversation as this Text shewes It is not her talking to her husband will doe it no nor her talking of religion to him that in it selfe is like to prevaile It concernes women very much to remember this point of the Apostle to seeke the reformation of their husbands by their conversation not by their words Ob. But Abraham was willed to heare his wife Gen. 16. Sol. What then hath every wife such an husband as will heare her as Abraham did his wife Besides the question is not what the husbands should doe but what the wives should doe when the husbands as not such as they should be Ob. But how shall a woman know when to speake to her husband and when not Sol. She must not speake to him no not of religion 1. when in the matter she would speake of she is not furnished to speake as becomes the Oracles of God 2. when by experience she hath found that her husband is irritated and provoked by her words 3. when she is not her selfe free from some fault as apparent in other things as that is she mislikes in her husband Qu. But what things must she looke to in her ●●nversation that she may by her workes win her husband Answ. The first thing is that she be in all found subjection obedient to her husband in all things or else God may win him but she must have no part of the praise of it And this is strongly imported in the very scope of this place In generall she must strive to be to him even for conscience
they desire to be as pure as he would have them to be 3. Sound mortification and judging of our selves for what impurity we finde cleave to our workes 't is Christian perfection to judge our selves for our imperfections 1 Iohn 3 3. 4. Freedome from the grosse impurities and vices and vanities of the time God accounts us pure when our spot is not as the spots of the wicked and when we are not infected with the corruptions which are usually in the world 1 Tim. 5.22 2 Pet. 1.4 5. Freedome from the reigne of hypocrisie in the heart and from hypocriticall courses in the life Thus Saint Iames accounts the heart to be pure when men are not double minded Iames 4.8 And in conversation he is a pure man that is like Iacob a plaine man without fraud trickes or dissimulation 6. Precisenesse circumspection or exactnesse of conversation when a man sheweth respect to all Gods Commandements and makes conscience to avoide lesser sins as well as greater Eph. 5.15 Mat. 5.19 7. Devoutnesse and zeale in matters of religion and Gods worship and glory and so a pure conversation is a religious conversation that expresseth zeale and conscience in the things of Gods service in a speciall manner seeking Gods Kingdome first and above all other things 2 Tim. 2.22 Titus 2.14 8. Chastitie in keeping the heart and life cleane from the impurities condemned in the seventh Commandement is one great part of Christian purity But before I come to entreat of chastity in particular I would apply this doctrine of purity in generall first to the Text and then to the times As for the Text a pure conversation is here considered only so far as it may fall into the observation of carnall men and so it comprehends of the former senses chiefly inoffensivenesse separation from impure men freedome from grosse impurities and dissimulation a Christian and wise strictnesse of life and devoutnesse and well ordered zeale in matters of religion Use. Now for the Use of it If these be applied to these times it shewes first how wicked and profane those sorts of people are who reproach godly men for the care and practice of these things as if to be a Puritane even in these senses were to be some vile man not worthy to live amongst men Secondly it shewes that worlds of people that beare the name of Christians are not true Christians because their conversations are not pure for their swearing or drunkennesse or whoredomes or sins of deceit or dissimulation or fashioning themselves to this world or the liberty they take to live as they list testifies against them to their faces that their workes are not pure and therefore unlesse they repent they will all perish Rev. 3.1 2. and the rather because they cause by their evill lives not only the hearts of the good to be grieved but the mouthes of the enemies of religion to be opened to blaspheme Thirdly godly men that find these cares in them should comfort themselves much in the testimonies of their owne consciences and the gracious acceptation of God who will shew himselfe pure with them that are pure 2 Cor. 1.12 Psal. 18. Thus of Purity in generall Now of Chastity as a part of a pure conversation and it may well be that which is chiefly here intended Chastitie is either of the mind or of the body and it is a most certaine truth that God requires a chaste minde as well as a chaste body and doth forbid unchaste thoughts and desires a● well as unchaste words or deeds For unchaste thoughts and desires are first foolish and noisome 1 Tim. 6.9 secondly they hinder the power of religion and true knowledge and grace 2 Tim● 4 thirdly they fight against the soule 1 Pet. 2.11 A man were as good have his body wounded with weapons as his soule wounded with lusts fourthly they cause many times many and monstrous sins in the life which arise at first from the nourishing of soule desires and thoughts in the heart The wickednesse that was in the lives of the Gentiles did in many of them spring from the l●sts which they harboured in their hearts Rom. 1. lastly if men repent not of them in time they will drowne them in perdition 1 Tim. 1.9 But it is the chastitie of the body which is especially here intended our Saviour Christ divides those chaste persons into three sorts some are termed Eunuches from their mothers wombe and so are disabled for bodily fornication some are made so by other men who by violence for their owne service made some men Eunuches Now the third sort are they that made themselves Eunuches for the kingdome of Heavens sake Of this third sort are all chaste persons who by a godly care and watchfulnesse keepe themselves from the sinnes of filthinesse as well as naturall Eunuches doe Mat. 19.12 Now these persons that are made chaste for the kingdome of Heavens sake are either single persons or married persons of chastity in single persons other Scriptures intreat as 1 Cor. 7. of chastity in married persons this place intreats Now this vertue of chastity is of purpose imposed upon godly Christians by the Apostle because the sins of fornication were so rife and common among the Gentiles who oftentimes defended their filthinesse to be either no sin or a very small sin But before I come to speake of chastity in particular some doctrines would be in generall observed as first Doct. 1. A godly Christian must shew the proofe of his religion especially in keeping himselfe free from the sins that are most common and rife in the world and even the more sinne abounds in the world the more strict they should be in resisting sinne as here even the more filthy the lives of others were the more chaste should the conversation of godly Christians be because their love to God should constraine them the more to be zealous for his glory by how much the more God is dishonoured by other men and because they are flatly forbidden to follow a multitude to sin and because God hath chosen them out of all other sorts of men to beare his name and to hold forth the light of the Word in the midst of a crooked and perverse generation and because thereby the conscience of wicked men may be the more effectually convinced and prepared to repentance Thus Lot is righteous in Sodome and Ioshua and his house will serve the Lord though all the Nation serve Idols This point as it should inflame the zeale of the godly to contend for the truth the more earnestly and to resist all the vices of the time so it shewes that they can hardly have any truth of grace in them that are so easily borne downe with the streame of evill example and are so apt to follow the fashion of the world Doct. 2. Chastity may be in married persons as well as in single persons as here wives are said to be chaste in conversation though they with-hold not
due benevolence from their husbands God himselfe hath freed the comming together of man and wife from the aspersion of impurity in that he hath said that marriage is honourable and the bed undefiled And this shewes the wonderfull indulgence of God that for the respect he beares to his owne institution of marriage and for the necessitie of marriage for the propagation of mankind and prevention of fornication is pleased to beare with and cover and not impute the many frailties follies vanities and wickednesses are found betweene man and wife And withall we may hence see reason to condemne their doctrine as a doctrine of Devils that forbid marriage as an impure thing and such as hinders holinesse and the blemish will never bee wiped away from some of the Ancients who to establish their owne Idol of I know not what virginity have written most wickedly and most basely against marriage Quest. But what then doth God allow any kinde of comming together so it be betweene man and wife Ans. No he forbids comming together in the time of the womans separation for her courses Ezech. 18.6 Nor doth he allow of brutish sensuality though it passe betweene man and wife for though God beare with many things yet the chastitie he imposeth doth not only restraine forraine beds but moderateth even the excesses of concupiscence in married persons so as in those things their conversation ought to be a conversation with feare Doct. 3. The practice of the duties of the second Table adorne religion as well as the duties of piety in the first Table Doct. 4. Some observe that a chaste conversation is especially charged upon the woman which must be warily understood for God hates whoredome in men as well as women But yet it is true that some sins as they are abominable in any so they are much more in women as we see in swearing and drunkennesse so it is true of filthinesse in the woman and therefore the whorish woman is called a strange woman in the Proverbs But I thinke it is not safe to restraine the sense of this place or other the like places so but I take the meaning of the Apostle to be so to commend chastitie in the wife as that which is necessary in all both men and women And so I come to consider of Chastity and so would shew first the motives to it secondly the meanes to preserve it and thirdly the way how Chastity may be manifested and made knowne to others For the first many things should perswade with a Christian to preserve chastity and to avoide whoredome and bodily lusts First it is the speciall will of God and a speciall part of their sanctification to avoid fornication 1 Thes. 4.3 Secondly the promises of God all of them should allure men to perfect their holinesse and to avoid all filthinesse both of flesh and spirit 2 Cor. 7.1 Thirdly the hatefulnesse of the nature of the sin of fornication and whoredome should deter●e Christians from the committing of it This is an hainous crime an iniquity to be punished by the Judges Iob 31.11 These lusts are lusts of the Gentiles 1 Pet. 4.3 A sin not so much as to be named amongst Christians Eph. 5.3 A sin that utterly corrupts naturall honesty Pro. 6.27 29. It is a sin not only against the soule but against the body of a man even that body that was bought with the bloud of Jesus Christ and was made for God and is the Temple of the Holy Ghost and is a member of Christs mysticall body 1 Cor. 6.15 to the end Fourthly the consideration of the cause of this sin should abash men it is a worke of the flesh even a fruit of a corrupted and filthy nature Gal. 5.22 Fiftly the effects of whoredome are very fearefull for it is a sin that defiles a man Mat. 15. and it makes a man unfit for the company of any Christian 1 Cor. 5.9 It brings dishonour and a wound can never be blotted out Pro. 6.33 and it causes the fearefull curse of God upon men Heb. 13 4. and that both upon their states and soules in this life By meanes of a whorish woman a man may be brought to a morsell of bread Pro. 6.26 It is a sin will root out all a mans increase Iob 31.11 12. And upon the soule it brings a fearefull senselesnesse and disability to make use of the means of salvation Whoredome and wine take away the heart Hos. 4.11 and God casts them many times into a reprobate sense Rom. 1. so as they are past feeling Eph. 4.18 so as the adulterous person goeth about like a Foole to the stockes or like an Oxe to the slaughter Pro. 7. ●2 In a word the adulterous person destroyeth his owne soule Pro. 6.32 y●● which is worst of all it deprives men of the kingdome of Heaven 1 Cor. 6.9 and casts both body and soule into the Lake that burnes with fire and brimstone Pro. 9. ult Rev. 21.8 22.15 For the second the meanes to preserve chastity in married persons are these First they must labour to excite and nourish matrimoniall love one to another P●● ● 18.19 Secondly they must doe as Iob did make a covenant with their eyes and not carelesly give liberty to their senses to wander about after vaine objects Iob 31.1 Thirdly they must store their heads and hearts with Gods word especially such words of God as doe give reasons and motives to disswade from this sin Pro. 2.1 3 4 11 12 16 17 Psal. 119.9 Fourthly they must continually meditate of their mortality and that they are but pilgrims and strangers here and must come to judgement 1 Pet. 2.11 Eccles. 11.9 Fiftly they must by confession and godly sorrow and prayer crucifie these first risings of inward lusts and so by repentance for the lust of the heart prevent the filthinesse of the flesh Gal. 5.24 Sixthly they must walke in love that is exercise themselves in a Christian and profitable society with such as feare God Eph. 5.1 3 4. Lastly they must with all care and conscience avoide all the occasions of this sin such as are 1. Idlenesse that sin of Sodome Ezek. 46.49 2. Fulnesse of bread and drunkennesse as is noted in the same place They must beat downe their owne bodies 1 Cor. 9.27 3. The desire to be rich for the love of money breeds noisome lusts 1 Tim. 6.9 4. Ignorance of God and his truth Eph. 4.17 18. 5. Evill company especially the society of such as are filthy 6. Lascivious attire and filthy dressing such as are strange colours and naked breasts this is whoredome betweene the breasts Hos. 2. 7. Lascivious pictures and profane representations of filthy practises such as are exprest by those wicked stage-players against which the very light of nature pleadeth 8. Chambering and wantonnesse and all provocations to lusts Rom. 13.13 For the third point if you aske how those husbands could behold the chaste conversation of the wives I
doth it not shall be beaten with many stripes See Rom. 1. ult Heb. 10.26 2 Pet. 2.21 Husbands and wives should in a speciall maner remember this for there is a great deale of need that they should take notice of this point Oh it is a grievous thing for a Christian to be wilfully corrupt to doe or leave things undone against his knowledge Doct. 7. One thing here is comfortable that God requires no more of his servants but to doe according to the knowledge they have Ignorances by the benefit of the new Covenant in Christ he will passe by so as they be carefull to get knowledge according to the meanes they have of knowledge This is a great comfort Doct. 8. In knowledge men should excell women therefore is knowledge here specially mentioned in giving the charge to men They are the head● of their wives and therefore in them should be the especiall seat of spirituall senses and understanding and their wives are charged if they doubt of any thing to aske their husbands at home It is a great dishonour to many men in this age in many places that women excell them in knowledge both for the measure of it and power of it and care to use the meanes to get it Thus of the generall Doctrines These words as they in particular order the duties of husbands shew divers things they are to look to in their carriage in dwelling with their wives To dwell with them according to knowledge imports 1. Matter of edification and so three wayes for first they must set up religion and the worship of God in their dwellings Iosh. 24.15 They must keepe off the curse of God from them and their wives and children by daily praying to God Ier. 10. ult They must diligently in their kinde instruct their family in the plaine things of Gods law talking and discoursing of the Word of God upon all occasions Deut. 6.7 Gen. 18.19 They must see that Gods Sabbaths bee kept and sanctified in their dwellings and therefore must not only restraine labour but bring their houshold to the exercises of religion and privately help them by examination or repetition Commandement 4. Exod. 20.4 yea and by sanctifying them to Gods worship Iob 1.5 which is done by exhorting them to holinesse and preparation and by humbling himselfe in prayer before God for himselfe and them and hee must sanctifie the creatures they use by prayer 1 Tim. 4.5 Secondly in speciall towards their wives they must use their knowledge in instructing them or resolving their doubts as there shall be occasion 1 Cor. 14.35 Thirdly they must teach their wives reformation and right order of behaviour by their example giving full proofe of their piety discretion providence painefulnesse and meeknesse not daring to commit the faults themselves they reprove in their wives and to live so as not to be liable to any just exception There is a question is often asked about the first branch of this answer and that is whether a woman may performe the duties of religion in the family in case of the absence or insufficiency of the husband Now for answer thereunto it is hard to give any peremptory rule because in this thing we have no Commandement from the Lord but yet seeing some of the duties of religion may be done by the wife as instructing of children and servants for the law of grace should be in her lips Pro. 31. and both Parents are charged with instructing the children Eph. 6. therefore I thinke by Anallogie it will follow that the wife may doe other duties as pray and repeat Sermons But yet it is most likely that this power extends not further than her children and her maids which was the power Hester used ch 4.16 or if it goe further it must be in some speciall cases and with observation of divers circumstances in which their safest way is to get direction and resolution from their learned Pastors 2. Matter of toleration and that in respect of the infirmities of his wife if her infirmities be bodily it must be the praise of his knowledge not to loath her for that because God layeth them on her and shee cannot helpe them And for her faults they are either meere frailties arising from ignorance or insufficiency she cannot help and those he must passe by altogether when he discerneth that she is not willing to offend in them Pro. 19.10 or else they are faults she committeth of knowledge and so they are either curable or incurable Curable are such faults of negligence or waiwardnesse that prove grievo●s to him or others for these his rule is he must not be bitter to her Col. 3.19 but shew himselfe to be gentle and easie to be intreated Iames 3.17 He must use all good meanes of counsell and forewarning of her and intreating and such reproofes as may be seasonable and secret as much as may be He must avoid raging and furious passion and reproaches If her faults be incurable that is such as he cannot mend by such courses then I suppose he may flie to the generall remedy of all Christians in the case of trespasses and that is to take one or two with him and admonish her and then if she mend not he may fly to his Pastor and such as have charge of soules with him and get them to admonish her But if none of these courses will serve I thinke the Pastor or others imployed in the businesse may give notice as they have occasion to other Christians of her incurablenesse and they may thereupon forsake her company and reject her as a Pagan or Publican but for the husband he must cohabite still and with patience beare the crosse God hath laid upon him waiting if at any time God will give her repentance or otherwise restraine her wickednesse 3. Matter of circumspection To dwell according to knowledge is to dwell with circumspection and that he must shew in matter of his owne right He must take heed that by no indulgence or remissenesse he lose his owne right He must keepe his authority and rule as head and not suffer things to be done or disposed ordinarily against his will And for the good ordering of necessary directions if his wife will not obey he must then provide to have things done as well as he can by his children or servants This I speake of things essentially expedient to the peace or well-being of the family he must not be his wives underling contrary to the order of nature and ordinance of God Gen. 3.16 1 Cor. 11.3 7 8 9. Eph. 5.23 1 Tim. 2.12 13 14. Secondly he must shew it in the care of his estate restraining her wastefulnesse if she be given to disorder or retchlesnesse in that kind Pro. 14.1 Thirdly in case of sin against God he mu●t take heed that he nourish not sin in her by connivence or neglect of counsell or reproofe Iob 2.9 10. Fourthly in case of difference betweene her and her servants so
vaine talkers and will have all the words and by their good wills will talke of nothing else and so hinder edification in profitable doctrine and such as is out of question Tit. 1.10 11. and when men lust to be contentious and are like Salamanders that live alwaies in the fire and know no zeale without contention 1 Cor. 1● 16 7. When men differ in judgement in the very points of foundation and erre against such truths as must be beleeved to salvation 8. If men be so ●●gh● headed and variable that they are tossed to and fro and carried about with every winde of doctrine sometimes of one opinion and shortly after of another especially when men are so new fangled as in every place to receive almost any doctrine that is new divers Ephes. 4.14 9. When men quarrell so earnestly about things of lesse moment contrary to the custome of the Churches as about praying or prophecying bare or covered or about eating the Sacrament full or fasting 1 Cor. 11. or about such indifferent things as may bee used or not used with Christian liberty Rom. 14. or about Genealogies 1 Tim. 1.4 and such like And that this reproofe may enter the more deeply upon the hearts of some Christians it will be profitable to consider of the ill causes of disse●●ing which are these and such like 1. Ignorance of the Scripture if they had more true knowledge they would not disagree and this ignorance yea sometimes palpable ignorance may bee found in some that thinke themselves to have more knowledge and to be more spirituall than a multitude of those from whom they disagree Mat. 22.1 Tim. 1.6 7. 1 Cor. 14.37 38. 2. Want of love to those found truths that mor● concerne sanctification causeth God in his justice sometimes to give men up to delusion● and to beleeve lies 2 Th●s 2. 3. Vaine-glory the very desire to be some body and to excell others makes some Christians gladly to receive or bring in different opinions 1 C●r 4.8 Phil. 2. ● Gal. 5.26 4. Over much trust upon the judgments of some ●h●n they esteeme when they respect some Ministers so much as to be of their opinion though their consciences be not enformed of any ●ound reason from the word of God for it This estimation of men above that is written hath deceived ●●●y ● Cor. 3.21 4.6 5. Respect of earthly things Some men teach and professe to hold opinions of dissenting sometimes meerely for advantage to their estates either to get maintenance or preferment in the world by it Tit. 1.10 11. Rom. 16.19 20. 6. Prejudice is the root of dissenting many times as the Gentiles would not abide yeelding to ceremonies out of very dislike of the Jewes and the Jewes would not understand the needlesnesse of their ceremonies out of very contempt of the Gentiles and so the strength of faction on both sides kept them from agreeing 7. Heaping up of Teachers disorderly when Christians are so diseased with humour and so hard to be pleased with sound doctrine that they hunt up and downe to heare all sorts of men it many times proves hurtfull in this respect that they get infection from the different humours of the many Teachers they heare Disordered hearing in this respect breeds as a surfe● of the inward regard of sound doctrine so a great aptnesse to receive divers and strange doctrines 2 Tim. 4.3 4. 8. The contempt of their godly Teachers and want of sound affection to them to them I say that have a charge over their soules whom they ought to obey And this is the more vile as some Christians order the matter because of their hypocrisie in magnifying the judgement or gifts of Teachers that are absent and have not the charge of their soules and abusing the due respect of their owne Teachers which is yet more vile if this injury be done to such as were their Fathers in Christ. Thus of the Use for reproofe By the limitation given before from other expresse Scriptures we learne so to understand this doctrine of unity as it excludes all unity of opinion or practice with such Churches or particular persons as hold doctrines against the foundation of Christian religion so as we must never agree with them As for instance We may not without the damnation of our soules be of one mind with the Church of Rome for there are many things which they beleeve and practise which we must in no case joyne with them in and it is impossible to reconcile us to them unlesse they change their minds I will instance in divers things wherein we cannot without losing Christ be of one minde as 1. In opinion of merit of workes for thereby we make the Gospel or Doctrine of Gods grace of none effect and the promise of God void which is to deny the grounds of Christian religion Gal. 5.3 Rom. 4.14 11.16 2. In the opinion of worshipping Saints and Angels for the Apostle saith expressely that they that doe so hold not the head and so cannot be true members of Christ Col. 2.18 19. 3. In their Idolatry in making and worshipping of Images and almost infinite superstitions contrary to the second Commandement expressely and so as we are commanded to get out of this spirituall Babel in respect of her spirituall fornications 4. In their doctrine of Traditions for they teach that Traditions that are not agreeable to Scripture yet are to be received if they be delive●●d by the Church in equall authority with the Scriptures If we be of one m●●de with them herein we cannot escape Gods eternall curse as these Scriptures shew Gal. 1.8 Rev. 22.18 5. In their doctrine of perfection for they teach a man may perfectly keepe the Law of God Now this is so dangerous an errour that the Apostle saith there is no truth in the man that holds it 1 Iohn 1.8.10 I omit the rehearsall of other differences Thus of the first vertue The second vertue charged upon Christians is compassion one towards another Have compassion one of another The word signifies such a fellow-feeling or sympathie that makes us like affected as if we were in their case The doctrine then is cleere That we ought to have a sympathy one towards another this is a singular vertue In handling of which point I will observe these things 1. The proofes of it from other Scripture 2. The Explication of the sense shewing in what things we should be like affected 3. The reasons of it 4. The Uses 1. The proofes are very pregnant and full in these other Scriptures Rom. 12.4 15. Heb. 13.3 2. For the explication This sympathie is to be exprest both in the case of the evills of others and in the case of the good of others In the case of the evills of others we ought to be tenderly affected towards them both in respect of their sufferings troubles griefes and crosses Heb. 13.3 10.34 Iob 30.25 whether they be inward or outward as
they live Prov. 24.11 12. But judgement mercilesse shall be to them that shew no mercy Iam. 2.13 4. Divers of the better sort are to bee rebuked about this point many Christians spend a great deale of z●ale about lesser matters and in the meane time neglect the greater things of the Law such as are judgement and mercy for few Christians are sufficiently instructed or inflamed in the estimation of the worth of the workes of mercy or the necessitie of them to the glorifying of God and the profession of Religion Matth. 23.23 Secondly for instruction and so this doctrine should worke in us a great impression of desire to shew forth the fruits of mercie with all tendernesse and sinceritie and to this end we should shew that we desire in practise to obey this doctrine as neere as we can I say we should shew it by accepting the exhortations of others that move us for any workes of this kind 2 Cor. 8.17 especially we should strive to answer the expectation of our Teachers herein and willingly give our selves first to the Lord and then to them suffering them to direct our workes herein with all readinesse 2 Cor. 8.5 24. and to this end we should use all good meanes to stirre up our selves to good workes of this kinde all our dayes and therefore we should plow up the fallow ground of our hearts by prayer and confession of our naturall barrennesse herein and indisposition Hos. 10.12 and withall thinke much of all the motives might stirre us up hereunto And so we should thinke of the matchlesse patterne of Gods mercy and in particular of his mercy to us Mat. 5. Luke 6. as also of the worth of mercy it is better than sacrifice Mat. 9.13 and of the originall of it God is the father of mercies 2 Cor. 1.3 and of the use of it it proves us to be the true brethren and true neighbours Luke 10.37 and of the great profit of it for they that are mercifull shall obtaine mercy Mat. 5.7 and to give to the poore is but to lend to the Lord and so there is no usury can be so gainfull as this of laying out of our estates for the reliefe of the poore Thus of the right bowels of mercy Be courteous Courtesie is the fift thing required in our conversation one towards another This is exacted in other Scriptures as Eph. 4. ult Tit. 3.2 Col. 3.12 this is called by the title of comitie and kindnesse Now that we may know distinctly what is meant by courtesie I will shew both what it comprehends and what it hath not in it It comprehends divers things as 1. A willing saluting of those Christians we meet 2. A conversation void of harshnesse sullennesse intractablenesse scornfulnesse clownishnesse churlishnesse desperatenesse or hardnesse to please 3. In matters of offence it makes the fairest interpretations and forgives heartily and cheerefully Eph. 4.32 4. In entertainement it is free and hearty and loving Acts 28.7 5. In hearing others speake it is patient and willing Acts 24.4 6. In giving honour it preferreth others almost of all sorts 7. In moderating authoritie over inferiours so as to be better towards them than they can require Thus of the courtesie of the Master to his Servants 1 Pet. 2.18 But yet we must know that under pretence of courtesie we must not hold needlesse conversation with the wicked nor any way countenance or honour open and notorious offenders nor use a promiscuous respect of good and bad all alike nor unadvisedly contract any speciall familiaritie or friendship with persons unequall or unmeet nor rashly discover secret things to all we meet withall The use should be to teach all Christians to make conscience of this vertue seeing God requires courtesie as well as pietie and the contrary causeth the good way of God to be evill spoken of And besides the Apostle imports here that a courteous conversation may preserve us from many troubles But yet let men be againe warned not to rest in meere complements and outward formalities but practise such a courtesie as is joined with the right bowells of mercy and good workes which may be observed from the coherence Especially let all true Christians abhorre that dissimulation that men should salute willingly and speake faire and use men with great kindnesse and yet plot malice and mischiefe in their hearts and speake evill behind mens backs and secretly labour to subvert other men who are deceived by their complement and mistrust not their envie or malice and withall men should avoid complementing with others when it is for the compassing of their owne ends especially when they are sinfull as was the practise of Absolon when he aspired to the kingdome And thus of the directions the Apostle gives for the avoiding of trouble as they concerne our conversation towards the godly Vers. 9. Not rendring evill for evill or railing for railing but contrariwise blessing knowing that ye are thereunto called that ye should inherit a blessing REnder not evill for evill Now followes the directions for our carriages to wicked or unreasonable and injurious men and so if we would live in peace and out of trouble we must take heed that wee be not provoked by them to revenge or reviling Where observe 1. That wicked men are naturally bent to doe evill and to be injurious and to revile others especially the godly Psalm 36.3 4. Destruction and misery are in their waies and the way of peace they have not knowne and their throat is an open sepulchre their mouthes are full of cursing and bitternesse the poyson of Aspes is under their lippes Rom. 3.13 14 16 17. The use should be therefore to teach godly men to provide for it wheresoever they live in this world they must looke for it to be abused and reproached they may thinke to live safely in a wildernesse as well as to live without receiving injury from carnall and profane men God can restraine the very Lyons that they should not fall upon Daniel and hee can cast a feare upon the wicked that they shall not attempt injury against the godly but though God doe thus at sometimes yet he will not be bound alwaies to doe it Secondly this should teach such as desire to live in safety to avoid all needlesse conversation with the wicked for though at the first thou mightest thinke they were of faire carriage and would doe no wrong yet after a time they will shew their nature especially if they see they cannot draw thee to run with them into the same excesse of sinning And thirdly as any desire to have evidence to their owne soules that they are become new creatures and have new natures so they should shew the proofe of it hereby viz. by avoiding all injurious courses and reproachfull and bitter words 2 All private revenge is forbidden for it is unlawfull to render evill for evill 2 Thes. 5.15 the Apostle saith See that no man recompence unto any man evill
for evill Note there three things first that hee gives this as a speciall charge as a thing most hatefull or ill-beseeming a Christian. Secondly what he saith No man must doe it Great men have no more liberty by private quarrels to revenge their dishonour or hurt than meane men Thirdly that he saith To no man wee must not render evill to any man of any religion condition or estate whatsoever the injurie bee So Rom 12.17 the like charge is given and two excellent reasons against private revenge One because vengeance belongs to God onely it is his office And it is best God should revenge because he gives recompence to every transgression and besides he gives a just recompence Heb. 2.2 whereas men that will perform their owne revenge give or seeke many times an unequall revenge as when our Gallants will have blood for a reproach this is not equall that a mans life should be taken for a supposed wrong to their reputation And further God hath never failed to execute vengeance whereas men many times fail and cannot perform the revenge they seeke but rather the contrary Gods vengeance falls upon them for taking his office out of his hands as many of those that seeke the bloud of others in revenge lose their owne Heb. 10.30 Also it is worth the noting that in that place to the Romans the Apostle adds another reason against private revenge which greatly crosseth the proud and passionate spirits of our times and that is couched in these words Be not overcome of evill but overcome evill with goodnesse which words import That he is over com●● and hath lost his honour that will revenge and contrariwise he doth overcome that will render good for evill If this point were seriously considered it would mightily subdue that unruly pride and passion● that discovers it selfe in the most men and it doth directly prove that Duels or single combats are simply unlawfull and intolerable in any well governed Common-wealth and should warne all Christians to take heed of allowing themselves in the desires or projects of revenge Nor is their sin the lesse that seeke revenge but it is closely and much dissembled while they watch for an opportunity to be even with them that have wronged them Nor reviling for reviling Observe 1. That people that are ungodly are very prone to reviling This we may see in the conversation they have among their neighbours what brawling and scoulding from day to day and also in the case of religion how doe they continually reproach and slander the true Christians so in family affaires with what disgracefull and hatefull termes are all the businesses almost of the household dispatch But of this I spake before 2. That reviling and railing is a very hatefull sin It is here accounted a great suffering to suffer reviling Our Saviour reckons it murther in his exposition of the sixt Commandement Mat 5. And if godly men be reviled it is termed blasphemie in divers places of Scripture in the Originall It proceeds from vile and base natures Heb. 12.14 15. Iames 1.21 3.9 Gods spirit is a Spirit of meeknesse and evill words corrupt good manners 1 Cor. 15.16 The Use is therefore for great reproofe and shame to all those that are guilty of this sin especially such as have their mouthes full of cursing and bitternesse Rom. 3.14 and such as revile men for this very reason because they follow goodnesse calling good evill Esay 5.20 21. 1 Pet. 4.5 and such as revile those that are neere unto them in the strong bonds of nature or covenant as when wives revile their husbands or children their parents 3. That though we be reviled yet we must not revile againe because reviling is a sin and God hath flatly forbidden it in this and other Scriptures and besides we have an excellent example of our Saviour himselfe that suffered all sorts of reproaches and yet was so far from reviling that he threatned no● 1 Pet. 2. and all sorts of godly men have endured reviling that were many degrees better than thou And further what knowest thou but God may blesse thee for their cursing as David said And therefore all that are true Christians should be effectually warned from hence to resol●e against bitter words and reviling though they be never so much provoked Thus of the rules the Apostle gives for avoiding of troubles Now followes the arguments for the confirmation of those rules especially of the later and the first is taken from the estate or condition of a Christian in this verse the second from the Prophet David ver 10 11 12. and the third from the probable event or effect of such a course ver 13. In the rest of this verse he infers from their calling to Gods blessing That they should be so far from cursing and reviling that they should use no other language than blessing even to the wicked and their adversaries But contrariwise This very terme imports That the life and discourse of a true Christian should be not onely different from the life and language of wicked men but in many things contrary And it must needs be so because the godly and wicked arise from a contrary fountaine the one borne after the flesh the other after the spirit Gal. ●4 and their words and actions flow from contrary principles for the one is led by the old man the other by the new man● and they have from without contrary leaders the one led by the Divell Eph. ● the other by the Spirit of God Rom. 8. and further they trade about contrary commodities the one for earthly things only i● the ●ther for heavenly the one for things of this world the other for things of another world and lastly they goe contrary waies the one to hell the other to heaven and therefore there can be no agreement betweene them no more than between ligth and darknesse Christ and Belial This point serves for great reproofe of some weake Christians for comming so neere the waies of carnall men as they can hardly be distinguished from them that looke so like them Such were those Corinthians Saint Paul reproves 1. Cor. 3. 1 2 3. Blesse It is required of all true Christians that they should blesse their conversation should expresse blessing continually Now for the understanding of this point wee must know that man is said in Scripture to blesse ●ither God or man He blesseth God when he praiseth his mercy and acknowledgeth his blessings he adds nothing to Gods blessednesse but onely acknowledgeth Gods blessed nature and dealing towards man This exercise of blessing God began betimes in the world as Gen. 14.20 and was constantly continued in all ages among the godly But in this place the Apostle meaneth it of blessing man and to blesse man is either a vice or a vertue There is a vicious blessing of men which must be separated from the doctrine of this Text. Now it is vicious first when a man blesseth himselfe
say that is he may be insallibly assured of it And this is true in two respects first he may know that he is truely called and converted and elected of God secondly he may know his calling in respect of the warrant of all his particular actions as here he may know what is required of him in his carriage towards his enemies Now that every true Christian may be sure of his calling and election and may know his conversion is most apparent by these Scriptures 2 Cor. 13.5.1 Cor. 3.16 2 Tim. 1.12 Heb. 8.11 1 Iohn 2.3 3.14 4.16 5.13 19. And that every Christian is bound to seeke this assurance and knowledge is apparent by many reasons As first from Gods Commandement he requires it of us that we should with all diligence seeke to make our calling and election sure 2 Pet. 1.10 Secondly many reasons may be gathered from the effects and benefits such knowledge and assurance will bring to us Assurance is profitable for many things In generall it is our best riches on earth Col. 2.2 and in particular 1. It estates us in all the promises of God when we know we are truely called then we know our right to all the promises of Gods Word 2. It purifieth the heart and life of man Acts 15.9 for when we know we are the children of God we are thereby stirred up to the greater care to please God and walke in his waies 3. It greatly staies and supports the heart of man in the evill day when temptation or afflictions befall us yet the comfort of our assurance sustaines us and refresheth us greatly For helpe in the evill day the Apostle saith we should above all things put on the shield of faith which if it remove not the crosse yet it qu●ncheth the fiery temptations of Sathan with which we may be assaulted Eph. 6.16 and it greatly helps us against the feare and terrour of death Heb. 10.19 20 22. In a word it overcomes the world 1 Iohn 5.4 5. 4. The faith of a Christian is all his living he lives by faith in all the occasions of life as his faith helps him when all other meanes faile him and makes all other meanes more successfull when he useth them The just man lives by faith The people in captivity that were Gods children raised a living for themselves in a strange land by their faith Hab. 2.5 5. It puts life into all the duties of religion or righteousnesse it worketh by love it ●ets all our affections on worke towards God and his people and creatures Gal. 5.6 6. It opens a spring of grace in the heart of a Christian every good gift from above is excited and made to flow from within him by the benefit of his certaine knowledge and assurance of faith Iohn 7.38 Now if any aske how a Christian comes to know his calling I answer 1. By his sensible feeling of his sins to be a heavie burthen to him of which he is truely wearie so as he desireth more to be rid of them than of any burthensome crosse whatsoever Mat. 11.29 9.13 2. By his manner of receiving the voice of Christ and the preaching of the Gospel not in word but in power The voice of Christ hath a marvellous power over him above all things in the world which appeares by the effects of it for he seeles in hearing the word first such an estimation of it as he acknowledgeth nothing like it for power and wisedome 1 Cor. 1.23 24 Secondly he finds at some times especially such an assurance of the truth of his religion and the doctrine he heareth that he is fully established and freed from his naturall uncertainties about the true religion Thirdly the Word worketh in him spirituall senses and very life from the dead which he feeles in all parts of his conversation making conscience of his waies in all things bewailing his frailties and striving to be such as God would have him to be Fourthly it makes him to separate himselfe from the world avoiding all needlesse societie with the wicked and exciting in him constant desires to use the world as if he used it not Fiftly much spirituall joy before the Lord even then when in respect of outward things he is in much affliction The most of these effects are noted 1 Thes. 1.4 5. 3. By the image of the vertues of Christ in his heart by new gifts in some measure for when God calls a man he reveales his Son in him Gal. 1.15 16. There is begotten in him a likenesse of Christ his very disposition is changed into the similitude of the vertues of Christ God gives him a new heart with the image of Christ stamped upon it and he is like Christ in respect of lowlinesse of minde and meekenesse and contempt of the world and love of God and the godly mercy wisedome patience love of his very enemies and desire to live without offence and praying to God as to his Father Quest. But if Christians may know their calling what should be the reason that so many Christians are so unsettled and are not assured of their calling Answ. Distinguish of Christians some are Christians in name and outward profession but not in deed being not at all converted though they have the meanes of conversion and this is the estate of the most men and women in all places Now some are indeed converted but are weake Christians as it were infants that lie but in the cradle of religion Now for the first sort the answer is easie They know not their calling because they are not called yea they are so far from knowing it that they generally are offended at it that we should teach that any body can know his owne calling certainely Carnall Christians then know it not because they have it not and in particular the causes why these Christians attaine not assurance is because they rest upon common hope of mercy in God which house is but like the house of a Spider and will give up the ghost when the evill day commeth upon them And besides they live in knowne sins which they love and preferre before all things can be offered to them by the Gospel Now it is impossible to have true assurance and to lie at the same time in knowne grosse sins without repentance And further many Christians by their wilfull unteachablenesse and incurablenesse in sinning doe so provoke God that all meanes notwithstanding yet those things that concerne their peace are hidden from their eyes Luke 19.42 Now for the weake Christian the causes of his want of assurance are such as these sometimes ill opinions about assurance either that it may not be had contrary to the charge given 2 Pet. 1.10 or if it be had it will not be profitable contrary to the reasons given before Sometimes it is their ignorance they are so unexpert in the Scriptures that not discerning the frame of godlinesse in generall they can never tell when
carefull to prevent these it shewes that it is needfull mens objections should be answered and to that end if the Lord doe not answer otherwise men should not represse and smother them but propound them by seeking resolution These sparkes not quenched may breed a great flame these drops of poyson may infect the whole soule a little leaven may sower the whole lumpe Fiftly A question may be here demanded and that is why the Lord here and in many places of Scripture else doth expresse the answer and suppresse the objection For answer hereunto divers things may profitably be supposed 1. First the Lord hereby shews unto men in their owne experience what a divine light is in the Scpiptures that can thus discerne the hidden things of man 2. Secondly it may be the objections are suppressed lest men hearing the objections should learn to object 3. Thirdly the Lord hereby shews mans nature who usually will not say so much yet the Lord saith they doe thinkeso 4. Lastly I thinke for the most part the Lord doth it out of his compassion and tendernesse towards his people these things arising out of mens frail●y he is willing many times to lay to the plaister and yet not uncover the soare and for feare of discouraging them hee rather implies their weaknesses then expresseth them that they might be assured that he is inclined rather to pitty them than to hate them rather to succour them than to reprove them And thus of the generall Wherein yee greatly rejoyce The maine thing that I observe out of these words is that converted Christians though they have many afflictions yet they are greatly solaced and finde great joy even in this world Now because this point is not believed by the most who are loath to acknowledge so much gaine in godlinesse and because also many Christians are not wise either to discerne or to make use of their owne felicity herein I would before I come to the use of this doctrine for explication propound three things 1. How it can be made manifest out of Scripture that a Christian life is such a joyfull life 2. What are the particular waies whereby Christians can meet with such a joyfull life and comfort as by Scripture is proved they might have 3. And in the third place I answer an objection or two For the first The Scripture instanceth in nine things all which doe manifestly import that such as feare God may have exceeding much joy 1. For first God commandeth his servants to rejoyce yea hee commandeth his Embassadors to comfort them 2 God is bound by promise to give them joy For besides that the Gospell in generall is a doctrine of glad tidings there are particular promises for joy as the places in the margent shew 3. Thirdly joy is one of the expresse fruits of the Spirit 4. Fourthly it is a maine part of the Kingdome of God 5. Fiftly God threatneth his when he finds them without it as is manifest in Deut. 28. this was one cause of his displeasure that they did not serve him with joyfulnesse and a glad heart 6. The Scripture is plentifull in the examples of men that have found exceeding much joy in the waies of God some few places I instance in the margent 7. If a temporary faith finde such joy in the word how much more a justifying faith 8. The nature of God is such as hee is as willing to communicate joy as well as other graces 9. Lastly this is most apparant by this that the Scriptures shew that God hath provided joyes for his servants in such things as might seeme most to crosse them or their contentment as in tribulation yea and in affliction of conscience it selfe Now if we can beleeve it of them in such times then wee need never doubt of it but they either have or may have great joy But some one may say Which way can they finde such great joy what meanes is there for their consolation I answer They finde joy nine waies 1. They have in them the Spirit even him that is called a Comforter which no wicked man hath and this Spirit of God is an everlasting spring of joy 2. Gods ordinances are unto them as wells of joy the word is a well so is prayer reading the Sacraments and conference 3. They have their right to all Gods promises to comfort them and certainly the Gospell is a deepe well 4. They have the presence of God ●●ke the sunne to refresh them 5. They finde secret joy in the communion of Saints both to hear of them absent and to have fellowship with them present and that both publike and private For if this be a great part of the joy of heaven then may it be some part of a Christians joy on earth 6. There is joy in the graces of the Spirit to see the buds of the Lord grow in the garden of their hearts and the weeds of sinne to be rooted out yea great is the content of grace and well-doing 7. There is joy in the meditation of the misery they are delivered from 8. They are not barred from the joy in outward things which is all the joy wicked men have and in these the worst Christian hath more right to rejoyce then the best carnall man 9. Lastly they find much joy even of the hope of the joy they shall have in heaven Ob. But might some ungodly person say Wee see no such matter in them Sol. The stranger shall not meddle with their joy Ob. But might some scorner say If any have found such joy in following the word and godlinesse it hath beene such as have had nothing else to rejoyce in Sol. That is false The Psalmist shewes by prophesying that even Kings that have abounded in outward things yet comming to taste the excellency of the comforts of godlinesse and to feele the power of Gods word should sing for joy of heart and greatly acknowledge the exceeding glory of God and godlinesse Ob. But might some others say Wee have beene hearers thus long and have followed godlinesse and yet can find no such comfort in it Sol. I answer it may well be so but then lay the blame where it is to be laid let men examine thēselves concerning the cause For if thou find not much joy in godlinesse it is either because thou hast not sorrowed for thy sinnes or thou hast not seriously sought the pardon of thy sinnes or thou sowest not good seede thou art not conscionable in practice If men were more fruitfull in well-doing they would finde more ioy or thou livest not in peace or thou art not much in prayer or thou receivest not the law into thy heart or thou art intangled with some grosse sinne or thou art intemperate in thy earthly pleasures or thou art not in all things thankfull This
or no. Quest. But how may I know that I am won effectually now at this time of remorse or now that I resolve to take a new course Answ. Thou art right and effectually converted if these things following be true of thee 1. If thou be inwardly abased and humbled in the sight of thine owne vilenesse if in thine owne eyes thou discerne thy selfe to be a foole and unapt for Gods kingdome and if thy sins be a sensible lo●d and burthen unto thee of which thou art weary Mat. 5.3 11.29 1 Cor. 3.18 and thy pride and conceitednesse be subdued 2. If thou have overcome the world 1 Iohn 5.4 5. 2.15 and canst shew it by forsaking the fellowship of ungodly persons 2 Cor. 6.17 and canst deny the carnall counsell of carnall kindred Mat. 10. and canst hold on this course notwithstanding the reproaches will be cast upon thee and others Esay 8. 59.15 1 Pet. 4.5 and dost find that thy taste in earthly things is marred so as thou dost not find that favour in them thou wast wont to doe Rom. 8.5 3. If nothing can heale thee of those remorses thou feelest but the Word and Ordinances of God Hosea 6.1 2. If merry company carnall counsell or time will heale thee without spirituall medicine thou art not right 4. If thou have attained to an es●imation of Jesus Christ above all things accounting him only precious and findest that thy heart striveth to settle it selfe in the trust upon him and his merits Phil. 3.8 Gal. 6. 1 Pet. 2.6 5. If thou have a spirit without gu●te Psal. 32.2 and that will appeare 1. By thy desire to bee godly and religious more than to seeme so Rom. 2.26 2. By thy desire to be rid of all siu and to be turned from all thy transgre●●ions Ezech. 18.30 setting thy selfe against thine owne iniquity 2 Sam. 22.24 If thou feele a combat within thee the spirit striving against the flesh as well about inward sinnes as outward against the very evill that cleaves to thy best workes and against those sinnes that thou most lovest or have beene most gainefull or pleasing to thee Gal. 5.17 3. This will be clearer if thou desire to forsake thy sinnes in thy youth or prosperity while thou couldest yet securely commit them 4. If thou keepe thy goodnesse in all companies as well when thou art absent farre as when thou art present with such as are religious Phil. 2.12 doing righteousnesse at all times Psal. 106.2 6. If thou love the house of God above all the places in the world and that thy thirst after meanes continue and last and be renewed after the food of thy soule as thy stomacke is afte● thy bodily food Psal. 26.8 84. Iob 23. 12. Psal. 119.20 7. If thou honour them that feare the Lord and are religious above all the people in the world discerning betweene the righteous and the wicked contemning vile persons and joyning thy selfe to the godly as the people thou wilt live and die with and as the best companions of thy life Psal. 15. Mal. 3.17 Psal 16.3 1 Iohn● 14 8. If the vaile be taken off thy heart so as thou canst heare as the lear●ed and understand spirituall doctrine that before was harsh and foolishnesse to thee 1 Cor. 2.14 2 Cor. 3.15 16 18. Esay 51.6 9. If thou find that thou canst not sin Marke it the Apostle Iohn saith he that is borne of God cannot sin he meanes he cannot sin as he was wont to doe for either God crosseth him still and hinders him or he finds that he cannot affect his sin so heartily or commit it with his full consent or with his whole heart as he was wont to doo 1 Iohn 3.9 the power of sinning is marred and dissolved in him Now that this worke may prosper if you find your selves any way effectually won be advised then to looke to these rules following 1 Take heed of smothering of doubts aske the way to heaven and seek resolution in things of so high importance as your Vocation Justification Sanctification and Salvation are Ier. 50.4 2 Looke to it what teachers and what doctrine you heare choose that food for your soules that is most wholesome be not carryed away with the inticing words of mans wisedome 3 Be carefull to humble your soules in secret judging your selves for your sins before the Lord. Be not sleight in this great worke though you have repented yet repent still till your hearts be fully settled and the power of your corruptions broken rest not upon common hopes or probabilities or the good opinion others have of you but lay a sure foundation for your owne faith and hope Ier. 31.20 4. Come constantly to the light that it may be manifest that your workes are wrought in God and let the Word of God be the light to your feet and lanthorne to your pathes Iohn 21.22 Psal. 50. Gal. 6.16 What remaines now but that I should beseech you to returne unto God with all your hearts Give your selves to God he will keepe that which you commit to him till the day of Christ. Let not our words be as water spilt upon the ground Oh that the Lord would bow the heavens and come down amongst you and take possession for himselfe and perfect the worke he hath begun in some of your hearts Remember the covenant you have made with God in the Sacrament made it I say over the dead body of your Saviour Now is the axe laid to the root of the tree now or never beare fruit This is the day of salvation say you This is the day the Lord hath made for our conversion God is gracious if you turne to him with all your hearts and just if you prove false in his covenant Though grace in you be but as the smoaking flaxe yet it shall not be quenched the Lord establish his worke I● you hold out to the end you shall be saved That they which obey not the word The persons that may be won are described by these words as a Periphrasis of carnall persons men that are not in Christ and so may note either such husbands as were Gentiles or such husbands as were carnall Christians If by those husbands be meant unbeleeving Gentiles a question may be asked viz. how the Gentiles are said to disobey the Word of God seeing it was never given unto them For answer we must understand that at this time the Word was brought among the Gentiles by the Apostles and other Ministers of the Gospel and therefore now they are bound to obey it as well as any others and this was the condemnation of a world of them that light was come amongst them and they loved darknesse rather than light Otherwise considering the Gentiles without the Law brought to them they shall be judged not by the Law written which they had not but by the Law of nature which they had in their hearts Rem 2.15 16. Now if by these words be