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A17385 A commentary upon the three first chapters of the first Epistle generall of St. Peter VVherin are most judiciously and profitably handled such points of doctrine as naturally flow from the text. Together with a very usefull application thereof: and many good rules for a godly life. By Nicholas Byfield preacher of Gods Word at Isleworth in Middlesex. To which is now newly added an alphabeticall table, not formerly published. Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622.; Gouge, William, 1578-1653.; Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. Commentary: or, sermons upon the second chapter of the first epistle of Saint Peter. aut; Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. Sermons upon the ten first verses of the third chapter of the first Epistle of S. Peter. aut; Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. Sermons upon the first chapter of the first Epistle generall of Peter. aut 1637 (1637) STC 4212; ESTC S107139 978,571 754

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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
would be glad to bring their honour in exchange for it Think of it If it were such a great glory to be honoured by earthly Kings as it was done to Ioseph and Mordecai what is it to be such whom God will honour God gives more honour then Kings have and therefore much more then they give Christians shall have this honour not in the sight of a few men but before all Nations of men Angels this honour shall not be for a small while but for ever For the King of heavens mind will not change nor shall the Elect die and lose their honor or live and staine it Besides God will give fulnesse of gifts and grace to use this honor which earthly Princes cannot give and this honor shall be held without envy or opposition and they shall have eternall possessions answerable to their Honor. And thus of the 7. verse and so of the fourth reason to confute the first objection Verse 8. Whom yee have not seene and yet love him in whom now though yee see him not yet doe you beleeve and rejoyce with joy unspeakable and glorious THis verse and the next containes an answer to a second objection which might be made thus Might some one say I know not whether the former comforts belong unto me I know not whether I be borne againe c. To this the Apostle answers by giving two signes by which men might try themselves 1. The first is the love of Christ. 2. The second the joyes of the holy Ghost Concerning which the meaning is that whosoever loves Christ whom he hath not seene and hath felt those unspeakable and glorious joyes of the holy Ghost hee is undoubtedly borne againe But such are you therefore you need not doubt your estate In generall we may then note 1. First that there are certain and infallible signs of a child of God there is such a way of tryall by signes 2. Secondly that the triall of our estate by effects wrought in us is a safe and profitable way 3. Thirdly that though we see not all the signes yet if we discerne any in sincerity they are infallible therefore the Apostle here propounds two of many Whom having not seene ye love Two things may here be observed the one exprest the other implied The doctrine exprest is that the unfained love of Jesus Christ is in every one that is borne of God and where it is it is an infallible signe He that loves Christ it is certaine that both God the Father and Christ love him Ioh. 14. 21. Eph. 6.23 and contrariwise 1 Cor. 16.22 The Use of this doctrine is threefold 1. First it should teach us to try our selves whether the love of Christ be in us or no now that this may be distinctly discerned wee must understand that the love of Christ may be two waies considered either as it is in the sparkle or as it is in the flame In some the true love of Christ is as it is but in a small measure Now others have the inflamed love of Christ. First there are 7. signes of the love of Christ wheresoever it is in truth though but weak 1. First we may know whether we love Christ by our estimation of him if we doe truly love him wee esteem him above all other persons and things in the world Mat. 10 37 Phil. 3.9 2 Secondly we may know it by our constant desire after the meanes of communion with Christ he loves not Christ that loves not the meanes in which Christ makes his favour knowne to men doe we love the kisses of his mouth that is doe we affectionately desire the meanes by which hee shews his love even those sweet pledges of his love in his word 3 Thirdly we may know our love to Christ by our love to Christians that are his members we love him that begat if we love them that are begotten of him 1 Iohn 5.1 4 Fourthly we may know it by beleeving in him Iohn 16.27 For if we love him we put our trust in him and relye upon him and his merits 5. Fiftly we may know it by our care to keep his commandements For so he saith himselfe He loveth me that keepeth my commandements Iohn 14.21 The love of Christ and the love of sinne cannot stand together 6 Sixtly we may know it by our griefe for his absence if to misse Christ be the sorrow of our hearts it is a signe we love him Cant. 3.1 7 Seventhly we may know it by our willingnes to suffer for his sake Ioh. 21.19 Thus Peter must one day prove that he loves Christ by being willing to be caryed whither naturally hee would not for the confirmation of the truth 2 Now there are seaven signes also of the inflamed love of Christ For they that have such tender affection after Christ 1 Doe sometimes feele the very passions of love they are as it were sick of love for the time overcome with the wonderfull affection they beare to Christ Cant. 2.5 especially when they have felt great comfort in the meanes 2. Their love is unquenchable and unresistible it is strong as death and much water cannot quench it Cant. 8.6 7. 3. They doe wonderfully earnestly and affectionately sometimes long after his second comming greatly desiring to be dissolved and to be with Christ 2 Tim. 4.8 Phil. 1.23 4. Fourthly they doe almost onely joy in Christ. God forbid I should rejoyce in any thing but the crosse of Christ Gal. 6.14 They account all other things losse dung in comparison of the excellent knowledg of Christ Phil. 3.9 5. Fiftly they continually talk of him they never linn they have words at will their tongue is as the pen of a ready writer Psal. 45.1 They can easily praise him and admire almost every thing in him Cant. 5.9 to the end 6. Sixtly their inflamed love is shewne by a willingnesse with contentment to doe the meanest service to Christ or his religion This was a signe Mary loved much that shee could even kisse the feet of Christ and wash them with her teares and wipe them with the haire of her head Luke 7.44 to the end 7. Seventhly they are wonderfully incouraged with his praises they are more fiered with his praises of them or his acceptation of them in the word or prayer then with the applause of the whole world besides Cant. 4.16 Coherence 2. Secondly if wee want the love of Christ wee should use all meanes to get it Now there are three things that would further us in getting this love 1. To pray for it to God 2. To acquaint our selves with the word of Christ. For that sets out his praises his love to us and the singular blessings he hath purchased for us 3. To converse with Christians that doe tenderly love Christ and abound in holy affections Those daughters of Ierusalem that wondered why the Church should make such adoe about Christ when they had conversed with her
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
so matchlesse and perfect a rule and canon of holinesse written in the word of God to direct us 3. Having our natures by regeneration in part healed and freedome of will in part restored so as no● if wee be not holy it is because wee will not be holy 4. Having such mighty helps as are 1. The assistance and supply of the spirit of grace within us 2. Prayer with a promise of granting whatsoever we aske 3. Guides and spirituall Pastors to oversee and direct us 4. A cloud of witnesses even the examples of the godly of all sorts 5. Such acceptation with God if we be willing and love to be his servants Act. 10.36 But of this in the next point 4. Here is implyed how infinitely kinde God is in accepting our holy endevours if we desire to be holy in all our conversation he will account it to be holy as he is holy and yet alas it comes ten thousand degrees short of the holinesse of God yea far short of what it should be yea which is more of what it might be in us 5. The image of God is in conversation as well as nature we resemble God not onely in the renovation of our nature but in the renewed actions also so then we beare Gods image 1. In nature 2. In action or obedience Of this later here 6. A Christian should be especially carefull of his outward conversation even to shew forth the light of good works and holy carriage before men Wee should be exceeding carefull to expresse holinesse in conversing one with another There are many motives 1. We are Gods witnesses 2 Tim. 2.2 2. T is a good profession 2 Tim. 2.2 3. There are many witnesses to observe us 2 Tim. 2.2 4. Carnall men are crooked and perverse Phil. 2.16 5. A holy conversation will silence foolish men 1 Pet. 2.15 6. It will bring much glory to our heavenly Father Mat. 5. 7. It proves our justification and foretels our salvation 8. To walk upright is to walk safely Prov. 9. T is as it were to live in heaven Phil. 3.20 10. It will support us in wrongs adversity Act. 23.1.2 Cor. 1.12 11. It will shew our knowledge is not idle 2 Pet. 1.8 12. It furthers our reckoning and provides us acceptation in the day of death and judgement 2 Pet. 3.11 Rev. 14.13 7. If we would be holy as God is holy we must be holy in all conversation that is we must shew respect to all the commandements of God wee must shew a care of religion as well as vertue of godlinesse as well as honesty of mercy as well as just dealing to enemies as well as friends at home as well as abroad toward inferiors as well as superiors in prosperity as well as adversity in all companies as well as one c. Mark it in the tryall of our selves by this doctrine we may know infallibly whether wee be called or beare the image of God or no for if there be any one sinne that we will not forsake or any one commandment we are not desirous to obey it will prove all is n●ught in us Heb. 13.18 8. Lastly we must here further observe that if we would have comfort that we beare the image of Gods holinesse we must be carefull of the manner of our conversation as well as the matter For though these words ● all manner may note the extent unto the matter of all holinesse yet there is no evident reason why a great part of the meaning of the holy Ghost should not be restrained to the manner as the word sounds Now there are divers things in the manner of our conversation to be observed for the resembling of Gods holinesse 1. The first is godly purenesse we must in our conversation shew respect of God and godlinesse and keep our selves from the impurities of the times and watch against sin in all our waies 2 Cor. 1.12 2. The second is simplicity or holy harmlesnesse as it is opposed to fraud and fleshly wisdome and shews it selfe in a plaine and evident desire to doe what God requires though it be never so much scorned in the world 2 Cor. 11.3 1.12 3. The third is precisenesse or circumspection making conscience of lesser sins as well as greater and avoiding the appearances and occasions of evils as well as the evils themselves Eph. 5.15 4. Conversation in heaven which is so to use the world as to let our hearts still run upon God and his Kingdome directing all our actions some way to further that end Phil. 3.20 5. Meeknesse of wisdome which is shewed by lowlinesse and not being wise in our selves but doing good in a continued sense of our own vilenesse and unworthinesse to doe any service to God or man Iam. 3.13 This is called a conversation with feare 1 Pet. 3.2 ver 16. 6. Constancy Phil. 1.27 7. The affections of godlinesse or well-doing or zeale Tit. 2.14 Verse 16. Because it is written be ye holy as I am holy THE first argument no inforce the exhortation ver 13. is taken from the image of God in us and this reason is propounded in the first words of ver 14. and expounded in the two former verses and this and that two waies 1. By a description of the image of God in us ver 14 15.2 By the proofe in this verse In this proofe two things are to be observed 1. Whence the proofe is taken As it is written 2. What is alledged viz. Be ye holy as I am holy The meaning is that we stand bound to shew regard of our conformity to God in holinesse for this was long since required in the written word of God that wee should be holy as God is holy And first then concerning the Scripture from whence the proofes of doctrine are fetched Here I consider 1. Of the use of the Scriptures in generall for proofe of doctrine 2. Of the Scripture of the Old ●estament from whence this proofe is fetched For the first Proofes of doctrine are of three sorts 1. From men as they are men 2. From the senses 3. From God The first is not infallible the second is infallible in some respects the third is infallible simply for ever The testimonies of men work onely opinion as being but Arguments contengent and probable The testimonies of the senses and of God work knowledg or bring arguments necessary Hence it is that the Prophets and Christ and the Apostles in their teaching amongst the people almost never use any testimonies of men in matters of religion and when they doe it is chiefly for confutation of adversaries by their owne writers Now for the senses they are internall or externall Internall and so there is a double testimony 1. from the law of nature 2. from the conscience The externall are seeing hearing tasting c. and the argument from them is from experience The testimony of the senses is in●allible in some respects viz. as they are rightly
had informed themselves in some good sufficiency of knowledge herein and therefore they might not neglect his exhortation that might be proved by such a known reason For as much This word notes a dependance with the doctrine of the former reason and shewes that these reasons are linked in a chaine you cannot pull the one but you draw the other also And from hence wee may note 1. The sacred combination of holy truth in the mysteries of religion they hang all as in one chain● and 〈…〉 as in one body there is a wonderfull agreement amongst them they point one to another whereas in the writings of men by reason of their imperfection they are oftentimes discording not from other men but from themselves also their assertions sound as if they were afraid one of another or ready to fight one against another 2. That the right knowledge of Christs first comming to redeeme us serves generally to inflame our hearts to a desire after and care of his second comming to judge us For by his first comming 1. We know he hath satisfied for our sins and therefore need not feare the sentence of condemnation or Gods anger 2. We know how dearly he paid for our sins and therefore we should for ever hate sinne 3. We know that he cannot but doe us honor then since for our sakes he himselfe was judged on earth and did shed his owne bloud for us 4. We know that at that day we shall be fully redeemed and receive all the inheritance prepared for us What shall I say if this his first comming were so full of love pitty care grace and profit for us how then should we long for his second comming when he shall give himselfe not for us but to us for our eternall delight and happinesse The Use may be for tryall of the truth of our faith in his first comming if we can stirre us up with care and cheerfulnesse to provide for his second comming then we doe effectually beleeve it else it is very doubtfull whether we doe indeed know Christ crucified Thus of the coherence the insinuation followes Yee know From hence foure things may be noted 1. That we may be profitably put in mind of the things wee know yea we need to be put in mind of them for thereby wee may know things the better and more fully but especially wee need it for the use of knowledge This is true in rebu●es for sinne in consolations in affliction in directions for our lives and as here in the doctrine of the mysteries of our religion they and we know the doctrine of redemption perhaps but the powerfull use of that doctrine we are altogether wanting in besides what we know we know but in part The Use is for great reproofe of those vaine persons that neglect hearing reading admonition c. upon pretence they know it already if that were true yet this doctrine shewes we need to be put in mind even in the things we know yea wise men will receive commandments yea and rebukes too Prov. 9. It is a discreet commendable charity sometimes the better to perswade and winne affection to insinuate the praises of others as here the Apostle so did Paul to Agrippa Act. 26.3 It is certaine that by nature we are pleased highly with others opinions of our knowledge and contrariwise the a●pe●sion or ignorance is wonderfull hatefull there be some sins that vexe us more then others to have them imputed as lying and divers others so ignorance the devill knew this well in Eves case the intimation of ignorance made her ruine her selfe and her prosterity and so doth the devill still What makes many goe to hell for want of direction how to be saved even this they will not have their ignorance seene What makes many leap from the cradle of religion to the throne of censure so as to think themselves fit to judge whole Nations when troops of learned men are extreamly toyled with advising Is it not this opinion of knowledge Now as the devill useth it for hurt so may the godly make advantage of the weaknesse of our natures herein the better to direct us to good 3. Of all doctrines we must be sure to know the doctrine of our redemption for this is the most fundamentall doctrine of all others It is impossible to be saved without the knowledge of this 2. Of all doctrines this is most clearly taught in Scripture 3. Of all doctrines wee have most need of this against the discomforts of temptations infirmities afflictions and death it selfe 4. This most exalts the glory of Gods grace and mercy and all others are in a manner built upon this 5. Lastly this hath exceeding great force to perswade us to holinesse of life for it both shews us to whom wee belong and what reason we have to obey him and withall implyes how vile we are in our selves First so labour for knowledge herein that thou mistrust thy own nature and the policie of the devill even the slower thou findest thy disposition to it the more strive after it let not the devill rob thee of this knowledge above all other We are not redeemed with corruptible things as silver and gold In these words is contained the first principall point namely the invalidity of all earthly things to redeeme us they containe the disabling of the riches of this world and as the words lye two things are said against the treasures of this world First that we are not redeemed by them Secondly that they are corruptible things That they cannot redeeme the soule of man is evident 1. By proofe Psal. 49.6 7. 2. By experience we see wicked men abound in these things and yet goe to hell Psal. 17. ult 73.12 Eccles. 9.11 3. This may appeare by a distribution of the parts of redemption for they cannot appease Gods anger Prov. 11.4 they cannot restraine the devils power they cannot buy us a righteousnesse answerable to that the law requires they cannot be a ransome to keepe the soule from hell Iob 29.9 19 20. they cannot cover our imperfect work● they cannot buy us a better nature but rather choke the word of God Mat. 13. and make men carelesse of repentance and conceited of the●●elves and wilfull to entertaine sinne Prov. 28.11 Hosea 12.8 and drowne men in noysome lusts 1 Tim. 6.9 yea how hard is it for a rich man to enter into the Kingdome of heaven Mat. 19. Lastly they cannot make us immortall Iam. 1.10 11. Thus it is cleare they cannot redeeme us For the second they are corruptible This is manifest Solomon saith they have wings Prov. ●7 they vanish subject to violence or vanity Mat. 6.13 yea many times they goe away with an ill loose it may be the ruine of the owners Iob 20.18 Eccles. 5. Ier. 17.11 nor can they goe with their owners when death comes Psal. 49.17 The Use may be 1. For information It should raise the price of true grace and
might give over our trades c. For answer hereunto let all such know that though it be true that some men are waxt great rich by such courses yea though they be fat and shine yet the Lord will visit them his soule will be avenged upon them Jer. 5.28 29. For wealth gotten by vanity shall be diminished Prov. 13.11 and the tabernacles of bribery and deceit shall be desolate Mic. 6. 10. to the 16. All such as conceive with guile by that time they have reckoned their moneths aright though they grow never so big shall bring forth nothing but winde and vanity Job 15. ult What shall be given thee or what shall be done unto thee O thou lying and deceitfull tongue thou shalt be smitten with some strange and strong hand of God as with the arrows of the mighty so as thy stroke shall be incurable and deadly and thy destruction shall be as with the coales of I●niper that is both fierce in respect of thy selfe and pleasing in respect of others For men are wonderfully well pleased when they observe that ill gotten goods doe not prosper This hand of God smells like the burning of Juniper Some others might say we are servants and we must lie and defraud others to satisfie our masters The Prophet Zephany reports that the Lord will punish all those very servants that fill their masters houses with violence and deceit the servants I say as well as their masters But might some others say my courses are so secret that my deceit shall never be found out Let such m●n learne that the Lord found out this sinne in Ephraim Hos. 11. and will punish it though Ephraim said he was growne rich and in all his labours they should finde none iniquity in him that were sinne Hee thought himselfe sure enough for being discovered and therefore he would contest vehemently and cry out upon such dishonesty in men as to use false words and waights besides it is worthy to be observed that God many times doth not onely discover these secret fraudulent courses but discovers them openly so as their wickednesse is shewed before the whole congregation Prov. 26.26 But others may say in others things am I just and besides I am forward in religion and therefore this offence is not so great Shall I account thee pure saith the Lord with wicked ballances Mic. 6.12 as if he would say all the shewes of religion in the world will not serve the turne if sinnes of deceit raigne in a mans dealing And therefore the consideration of all this should in the second place instruct us and that three wayes First to look to our owne cariage and as we desire to live long and to see good dayes to refrain our tongues from evill and our lips that they speak no guil in all our dealing to detest lying and deceit Psal. 34.13 and so to live as we may be alwayes ready to put our selves upon Iobs triall Iob 31.4 5. Secondly to lay to heart the consideration of the horrible inundations of deceit that hath over-flowed all states and callings of men and so it should work in us both lamentation and supplication before the Lord. For lamentation we may take up all the old complaints of the Prophets Our times have reacht to the measure of iniquity then reproved or rather men now overpasse the deeds of those wicked men wickednesse is in the midst of us deceit and guile depart not from our streets Psal. 55.11 Treasures of wickednesse are in the house of the wicked wicked ballances the bagge of deceitfull wa●ghts and scant measures which are an abomination to the Lord and for which he threatneth vengeance every where to be found Mic. 6.10 11. Men lay wa●t as they that set snares they let traps to catch not beasts or fowle but men As a cage is full of birds so are mens houses full of deceit and deceivers It is now the usuall course for men to waxe great and rich withall Ier. 5.26 27. yea this sinne so spreadeth that we may truly say From the least of them to the greatest of them they are given to deceit and will deale falsly Jer. ● 13. Every brother will supplant and every neighbour will walke with lies and slanders They will deceive one another and not speake the truth A man can dwell no where but his habitation is in the midst of deceit and therefore certainly God hath a resolution to stretch out his hand still by publike judgements How can it be but God must visit and be avenged for these great abominations What should be else doe but melt his people in the common furnace of great judgements for such common sins Ier. 9.3 to 10. And as it should teach us lamentation so it should teach us supplication too even to goe to God and that in two respects First to implore his help and mercy for the Church that he would be pleased to spare his people and keepe them from the infection of these vile sins and if it may stand with his good pleasure to worke a repentance in mens hearts that are guilty of these crimes and withall to beseech him for our selves to keepe us that wee fall not into the hands of deceivers for as it is a sinne to deceive so is it a misery to be deceived Psal. 12.1 2 c. and to give us wisdome to beware of men Jer. 9.4 Mat. 10.17 and to deliver us from the men of deceit Psal. 43.1 Thirdly it should teach us seeing the world is so full of guil that it is so hatefull a sin therefore to honour and esteeme such as wee finde to bee true hearted Plaine men with Iacob without tricks and subtlety and true Israelites with Nathaniel in whose hearts and mouthes is no guile Wee should I say love them delight in them and stick to them never to forsake them but to account them the very ornaments of the world and great lights in this great and generall darknesse and to account our selves wonderfull rich and happy in their fellowship and friendship Thirdly this prohibition of Guile may informe us and by intimation shew us the hatefulnesse of the doctrine of the Papists and practise in the point of aquivocation contrary to the expresse Scripture that forbids all lying and deceiving of others and commands us to speake truth and that every one Priest and people and that so his neighbour how much more to the Magistrate Ephes. 4.25 And Iob sheweth that we ought not to talke deceitfully no not for God to speake for him what is not right Iob 13.7 Lastly this may be implicitly a singular and secret consolation to honest and upright hearted men that hate this hatefull sinne of Guile that speake the truth in their hearts and make conscience of their words I meane those true Nathaniels of whom Christ speakes And for the better imprinting of this use I will shew
acceptation and use of them Thirdly he loseth all reward of his good workes Mat. 6.1 An hypocrite may doe good workes though he never doth them well and for the good he doth may have his reward with men but this is all for from God he shall have no reward The Positive effects of hypocrisie may be referred to two heads For some effects may fail upon him and some effects must and will befall him The effects that may follow his hypocrisie are three For first he is apt to be seduced by evill Spirits and the doctrine of Devils An hypocrite is in the greatest danger of most men to be seduced into vile opinions 1 Tim. 4.1 2. Secondly he may fall into a spirit of slumber his conscience may be ●●ared with ●n hot iron Thirdly he may fall into most wo●ull terrors such a fearefulnesse may surprise the hypocrite that God may be to him as devou●●●g fire and as everlasting burnings Esay 33.14 Job 18. 14. The effects that will certainely fall upon the hypocrite are these which follow 1 Judgement in his owne conscience He goes about as a condemned man for he is alwayes condemned in himselfe 2. The discovery of all his villany for there is nothing had in his intents and dealings but all shall be laid open Luke 12.1.2 3. The miscarying of his hope The hope of the hypocrite shall perish Job 8.11 to 16. and that with these aggravations that his hope will perish first easily secondly speedily thirdly unrecoverably Easily for God can destroy his hope as easily as the maid can sweep downe the house of the spider with her beesome Speedily for it will wither while it seems rooted and is yet greene before any other herb yea though it grow up yet it is like grasse on the house top Vnrecoverably for his hopes being but as the house of the spider they will be dashed downe for ever and though he would leane to his house and take hold of it yet his hopes shall perish for ever and when this day comes his hopes shall be as the giving up of the ghost 4. Strange punishments in his death and condemnation And therefore when our Saviour Christ would expresse a speciall terror in the plagues of especiall sinners he saith they shall have their portion with hypocrites and workers of iniquity Mat. 24. and the last verse Job 27.8 And these effects will appeare the more terrible if we consider that the Scriptures take off all the objections of hypocrites to shew that they bee left naked to the fury of God for all this will come upon them Though they be many in number Iob 15.34 Though they be rich Iob 27.8 Though they triumph in all jollity now Iob 20.5 Though they be yong or widowes or fatherlesse Esay 9.17 Though they cry at their later end Iob 27.9 Though they doe many good deeds Mat. 6. Though their wickednesse be yet hidden Luke 12.1 2. The use may be first for information secondly for instruction and thirdly for consolation First for information and so it may shew us First what to thinke of the great shewes of holinesse and mortification made in the Church of Rome Their fastings and their prohibition of mariage vowes of chastity and wilfull poverty have a shew of wisdome and piety in not sparing the flesh but the holy Ghost tells us that all this is but hypocrisie 2 Tim. 4.1 2 3 4. Col. 2. ult 2. How miserable the estate of multitudes of our owne people is by these signes we may perceive that the plague is wonderfully spread in Israel There are whole congregations of Hypocrites that is of men that say and doe not that come neere to God with their lips and their heart is far from him that seldome or never pray but when they be sick that regard not the inward soulenesse of their hearts so their lives be either civill or evill but in secret Iob 15.34 Esay 9.17 Secondly for instruction and so it should teach us all to beware of this leaven of Hypocrisie Luke 12.11 and if we would be thought to have the true Wisdome from above then let us shew it by our fruits that they may be without Hypocrisie Jam 3.17 And for the better enforcing of this use I will put you in minde of two things First the sorts of hypocrisie you are most in danger of Secondly the remedies or preservatives against hypocrisie The sorts are chiefly these 1. The distraction in Gods worship which is a most wofull fault a●d most common This was it was shewed before that so angred God Esay 28.13 2. Secondly the omission of private worship I meane to make a shew of Religion and the love of God and yet neglect reading of the Scriptures prayers conference and secret communion with God This as was shewed will provoke God to stop his eare at our cry because we doe not pray at all times Iob●7 ●7 8 9. 3. Neglect of mortification of inward sins and secret faults taking liberty so it be but sin in the heart or in secret This will undoe thee for ever if thou looke not to it in time 4. Affectation of praise and credit with men to doe our workes to bee seen of men Now there are divers rules to be observed if we would not be poysoned with the raign of hypocrisie 1. Keep thy selfe in Gods presence forget not God remember alwayes that his eyes are upon thee Thus David set the Lord alwayes before him Psal. 16.8 And this God commandeth Abraham to doe if he will be upright Gen. 17.1 2. Thou must pray much and often to God to create a right Spirit in thee For by nature wee have all double and hypocriticall hearts Psalme 51. ●0 3. Keepe thy heart with all diligence watching daily and resisting distractions wavering thoughts and forgetfulnesse And to this end mortifie the first beginnings of this sinne in thy heart mourne for it as soone as thou discernest it and judge thy selfe seriously before God Iames 4.8 Matt. 23.26 4. In all matters of well doing be as secret as may bee Mat. 6. both in Mercy Prayer Fasting Reading and the like 5. Be watchfull over thy owne wayes and see to this point that thou be as carefull of all duties of godlinesse in prosperity as in adversity in health as in sicknesse Iob 27.9 10. 6. Converse with such as in whom thou discernest true Spirits without Guile and shun the company of open and knowne hypocrites 7. Be not rash and easie to condemne other men for hypocrites onely because they crosse thy opinions or humours or will or practise It is often observed that rash censurers that usually lash others as hypocrites fall at length into some vile kinde of hypocrisie themselves But may we not call an hypocrite an hypocrite Hypocrites are not all of one sort Some are close hypocrites some are open The open hypocrite thou maist shew thy dislike of his
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 There is much adoe about the word here rendred Contained among Interpreters The word sounds actively in the Originall as if it were rendred doth containe or hee containeth But the Translators and many Interpreters think the active is put for the passive He containeth for It is contained If we read it actively then the Name of God must be supplied thus He that is God contained it ●n Scripture noting that as a singular treasure God hath placed this Testimony in Scripture concerning Christ and faith in him and sure it is a great treasure that wee may have places in the sure Word of God that so plainly testifie of Christ and our happinesse in him wee should take great notice of them and be much thankfull to God for giving us such sentences so briefly and yet so plainly and fully to informe us Some supply the name of Christ and so they say Christ containeth that Is excelleth as the word may signifie Hee is had fully and excellently in Scripture and in particular in this testimonie of Scripture The word rendred Contained signifies sometimes barely to be had sometimes to be possessed as Luke 5.9 They were possessed with feare And so wee possesse a great treasure in Scripture when wee have such Testimonies as these There is a Nowne derived of this Verbe which is thought by the exactest Divines to meane a speciall Section or portion and when it is applied to a place in Scripture it signifies such a Scripture as is divided from the rest as a principall matter either to be meditated of or expounded Such was that speciall portion of Scripture which the Ennuch had to meditate of and Philip expounded to him Acts 8.32 where the word is used And so whether the word be used actively or passively it commends unto us this place of Scripture and withall shewes us a way how to enrich our selves namely by singling out such choise places throughout the Scripture as may most fittingly furnish our thoughts for meditation in the maine matters of Religion We may here note what cause we have of thankfulnesse to God for the helps we have in teaching seeing we have the Chapter and verse quoted to us which they had not in the Primitive Church and withall wee may observe that one may have the profit of the Scriptures though he cannot quote Chapter and verse And thus of the second thing concerning this testimony Thirdly the third followes which is the matter testified which concernes either the giving of Christ or the safety of the Christian in beleeving in him In the words that describe the giving of Christ observe First The wonder of it in the word Behold Secondly The Author of it God I lay or put Thirdly The manner of it He laid him downe as the stone of a foundation in a building Fourthly The place where In Sion noting that this gift of Christ belongs onely to the Church Fifthly What Christ was unto the Church viz. a chiefe corner stone elect and precious Behold This word is used in Scripture sometimes to note a thing that is usually knowne or ought to be knowne so David saith Behold I was conceived in sinne Psalm 51. Sometimes to note that some great wonder is spoken of and must be much attended In this place it may note both For it is certaine that the testimonies of Scriptures concerning Christ ought to be familiarly knowne of us and this as an especiall one But I rather think it is used to note the wonder of the worke here mentioned and so the word may import divers things unto us First It was a mervailous worke that God should give us his owne Sonne to be our Saviour and the fountaine of life to us Hence it is that we may observe throughout the Scripture that God doth set this note of attention and respect both upon the generall and upon many particulars that concerne Christ as it were by the Word to pull us by the eares to make us attend or to give us a signe when wee should specially listen Thus God brings out Christ to the Church and tells how he loves him and hath resolved upon it by him to save both Iewes and Gentiles and wills them to behold him and wonder at him Isaiah 42.1 So when hee promiseth the comming of Christ And of the ends of his comming he makes a proclamation all the world over that hee hath appointed a Saviour unto Sion Thus he would have us wonder at the service of the Angels about the time of his birth Math. 1.20 Luke 2.9 10. and at the miracle of his conception that he should be borne of a Virgin Math. 1.21 and at the Wisemen led by a starre out of the East Math. 2.1 9. and at the opening of the heavens when the voice came downe to testifie that Christ was the beloved Sonne of God in whom hee was well pleased Math. 3.16 17. and at the service which the Angels did him and at his wonderfull abasement for our sakes Math. 21.5 and especially that hee should sacrifice his owne body for our sinnes 1 Iohn 1.29 Heb. 10.7 and that hee is alive from the dead and liveth for ever Revel 1.18 and that hee hath opened the secret booke of Gods counsell and made it knowne to the world Revel 5.5 and that after such hard times under the raign of Antichrist he should recollect such troops of Gospellers as stood with him on Mount Sion Revel 14.1 It were too long to number up more particulars Onely thus much wee should learne that the doctrine of Christ is to be received with great affection attention and admiration Secondly This word strikes us like a dart to the heart for it imports that naturally we are extreamely carelesse and stupid in this great doctrine concerning Christ and faith in us For when God calls for attention it implies that we are mervailous slowe of heart to understand or with affection to receive the doctrine Let the use of all be then to strive with our owne hearts and to awake from this heavinesse and sleepinesse and with all our soules to praise God with endlesse admiration of his goodnesse to us in giving us his Sonne Thus of the wonder of it 2. The Author of it followes I lay or put God would have us to take speciall notice of it that it is hee that was the Author of this glorious worke Hee is the vvork-master the chiefe master-builder It is Gods vvorke and the knowledge of this may serve for divers uses For first It should direct our thankfulnesse wee should give glory to God and praise his rich grace He will not lose his thanks for Christ. Hee holds himselfe much honoured when wee praise him for so great a gift as Christ. Secondly It should much strengthen our faith and make us beleeve the love of God and his willingnesse to be reconciled He is the party offended and if he were hard to be pleased hee would never have sought
the flesh worke that which was extreemly ill for us Fourthly we hold our profession before many witnesses many eyes are upon us and the most men are crooked and perverse 1 Tim. 6.12 Phil. 2.15 and the best way to silence foolish men is by unrebukeablenesse of conversation 1 Pet. 2.15 Fifthly our heavenly Father is hereby glorified Mat. 5. 6. Sixthly it will be a great comfort to us in adversity 2 Cor. 1.12 Lastly great is our reward in heaven For hereby will be ministred abundantly an entrance into the glorious Kingdome of Jesus Christ 2 Pet. 1.11 But then we must looke to divers rules about our conversation that it may be right for First it must be a good conversation in Christ 1 Pet. 3.16 Secondly it must be a conversation discharged from those ●suall vices which are hatefull in such as professe the sincerity of the Gospell and yet common in the world such as are lying wrath bitternesse rotten communication or c●●sed speaking or the like Eph. 4.25 Col. 3.8 1 Pet. 1.14 Thirdly it must be all manner of conversation 1 Pet. 1.15 wee must shew respect to all Gods Commandements at home and abr●●ad in religion mercy righteousnesse or honesty Fourthly we must shew all meeknesse of wisedome when we hea●e outward praise or do good or are to expresse our selves in discourse or otherwise Iam. 3.13 2 Cor. 1.12 And that we may attaine to this holinesse of conversation First we must walke according to the rule of Gods Word and let that be a light to our feet and a lanthorne unto our paths Gal. 6.16 Ioh. 3.21 Secondly wee must set before us the patterne of such Christians as have most excelled that way Phil. 3.17 and walke with the wise Thirdly especially as obedient children we should learne of our heavenly Father to fashion our selves according to his nature and in all conversation strive to be holy as he is holy and as it followes in this verse we should studie and strive to shew forth the vertues that were eminent in Jesus Christ 1 Pet. 1.15 16. and 12.10 Thirdly in so much as holinesse is the prerogative of a Christian it should teach all sorts of men to try themselves whether they have attained true holinesse or no so as they bee sure their holinesse exceed the holinesse of the Scribes and Pharisees for else they cannot enter into the Kingdome of heaven For a Christian must have that holinesse of conversation which no wicked man can attaine unto Now that this triall may bee done effectually I will shew wherein the holinesse of a true Christian exceeds the holinesse First of a meere civill honest man Secondly of the most glorious Hypocrite First for the meere civill honest man The true Christian exceeds his righteousnesse both in the righteousnesse of faith and in the internall holinesse of the heart and the power of holy affections but because it is holinesse of conversation which is especially here meant I will touch the differences in conversation and so First they differ in one maine cause of orderly life For the holinesse of the godly Christian proceeds from a regenerate heart whereas the meere civill man is so naturally or onely by restraining grace he hath not beene in the surnace of mortification for sinne Secondly the meere civill honest man glories in this that he payes every man his owne and is no adulterer or drunkard or the like notorious offender But for the most part he is altogether defective in the religious duties of the first table especially in the duties of the Sabbath and the religious duties he should performe in his family Thirdly the meere civill honest man makes conscience of great offences but cares not to be stained with lesser sinnes whereas the true Christian lives circumspectly and makes conscience of the least Commandement Secondly now for the hypocrite Though the difference be hidden yet it may be assigned in divers things as First the holinesse of the godly Christian flowes from a pure conscience and faith unfained whereas there is no such repentance or faith in the hypocrite Secondly the true Christian hath his praise of God but the hypocrite of men Rom. 2.26 Thirdly the true Christian obeyes in all things the hypocrite but in some as here for the most part they may be found tainted with some evill vice Fourthly the true Christian is carefull of his conversation in all places and companies the hypocrite onely or chiefly when he is where he thinkes hee shall be observed and marked Fifthly the true Christian will not cease bearing fruit what weather soever come Ier. 17.7 8. But the hypocrite gives over when hard times come He is not like the good ground that brings forth fruit with patience The hypocrite will not hold out till the end though the times bee peaceable till his death For the most part he then beares the burthen of his hypocrisie he cannot die in peace Use. Lastly this is a terrible doctrine for open and notorious offenders For hereby it is apparent they are strangers from the Common-wealth of Israel and are not of this nation their language and their workes betray them Drunkards Adulterers Swearers Lyers Usurers and such like cannot inherit or have any lot in this heavenly Canaan For all this nation is holy and such are not they their owne consciences being Judges Nor is it a pleasing Doctrine to scandalous professors For such as give scandall are either hypocrites or godly If they bee hypocrites their scandalls betray them and testifie to their faces they have no lot among the Saints and if they be godly Christians that have fallen through weaknesse yet they have cause to be much humbled For by them the name of God is blasphemed and besides many other inconveniences that will pursue their fall this is not the least that hereby they have weakned their evidence and wonderfully darkned the markes of their happinesse For if the godly be a holy nation how discomfortably have they provided for themselves and their owne soules that have so stained their profession and holinesse An holy nation The sixth prerogative of Christians is imported in this word Nation which shewes the number For though all the wicked are more in number than the godly yet such is the glory and greatnesse of the number of all the godly of all ages that if we could behold them on earth as wee shall see them in heaven and at the last Judgement we would wonderfully admire the beauty and multitude of the Christian Armie All the godly together make a goodly Nation and though in largenesse of number they do not goe beyond the wicked yet in the priviledges of their number they goe farre beyond them They are all one and a whole Nation of them which imports divers priviledges First they are all originally of one blood borne of the blood of Jesus Christ. Secondly they are all governed by one Ruler their noble Ruler is of themselves there
can resolve to suffer the extreamest things rather than forsake our innocency This makes men acknowledge the vertue of Christ in us Thirdly by the power of practice in our conversation and so to shew them forth is First to practise them to the life to make a cleere impression of them in our workes The word here rendred to shew forth signifieth to preach and so it may note that wee should practise those vertues so cleerly that our lives might be as so many Sermons upon the life of Christ. Secondly to practise them so as others may observe them and so it imports that upon all occasions in our conversations which are before other men we should be sure not to be wanting in those vertues when we are provoked to the contrary vices Quest. But may wee do things for the shew Is not that Hypocrisie and vaine glory forbidden unto Christians Answ. There are some vertues we can never offend that waies by shewing them as we can never shew too much wisedome we may be vain-glorious in too much shew of our knowledge we may offend in bringing our zeale too much to the shew but we can never shew too much true patience or meeknesse or moderation of mind Phil. 4.5 we may offend in making shew of divers duties of piety in the first table as almes prayer fasting Matt. 6. but those vertues here mentioned may on all occasions bee lawfully held out to the best shew But that I may expresse my selfe more distinctly outward shewes are then condemned as sinfull viz. First when sinfull things are shewed as carnall passions and railing in stead of true zeale Secondly when secret duties are done openly and for shew as when private prayer and fasting is so performed as that others may manifestly observe them Matt. 6. Thirdly when outward shewes are purposely affected affectation and hunting after applause is condemned Fourthly when care in lesser things is shewed and the care of greater things is manifestly neglected this hath grievous irritation in it and is Pharisaicall Matth. 23. Fifthly when the things shewed are done deceitfully such was the practise of Ananias and Sapphira Act. 5. Sixthly when men multiply the use of the meanes of holinesse but neglect the practice of it Esa. 1. Mich. 6. Seventhly when wee shew our gifts of purpose to the contempt and disgrace of others Rom. 12.16 Iam. 3.10 1 Cor. 8.3 The use briefly may be First for humiliation and so first unto ungodly men in the Church that professe the service of Christ and claime the priviledges of Christians and yet in stead of shewing forth the vertue of Christ shew forth the wickednesse of the divell by their lewd conversation causing the name of God to bee blasphemed by Papists and Atheists and all sorts of Heretickes and Sectaries by their whoredomes swearing malice drunkennesse and the lusts of their father the divell and those of all sorts These are they that carry Christ about in scorne to be derided of the enemies of the truth for when with their words they professe Christ by their workes they deny him themselves and cause him to be denied by others Were there not a remnant that beare the Image of Christ in sincerity who would ever imbrace a religion that were professed by men of s●ch wicked conversation Secondly it should exceedingly humble scandalous pro●essers that would have the world thinke better of them than of the former sort an● yet become grievous to men by their vile offences Thirdly unfruitfull Christians which lie in a continuall barrennesse whose ground is alwayes fallow have but little consolation from hence for though they are better than the former in that they are not openly wicked yet they fall short of their duty here because they do not more effectually shew forth the graces of Christ. And that there may bee a healing of this error they must amend first their ignorance and pray to God to teach them to profit secondly their slothfulnesse rowzing up themselves to more zeale of good workes and care to answer the opportunities of well doing Use 2. Secondly for instruction All that love the Lord Jesus should hence be perswaded to increase in all care of well-doing and study how to shew forth the light of their workes before men and the rather because First they have received such singular mercy from the Lord. Secondly they shallhereby glorifie their heavenly father and make religion to be well spoken of Phil. 2.15,16 2 Thess. 3.21 and put to silence the ignorance of the foolish we should be as tender of the honour of our profession as of our owne honour Thirdly they shall hereby wonderfully establish their owne hearts in the assurance of their calling and election 1 Ioh. 1.5,6 2 Pet. 1.5 to 10. and much increase their owne contentment and joy in the Lord 1 Cor. 15.58 Fourthly they shall have a full and plentifull reward in the day of the Lord Rom. 2.7,8,9,10,11 Fifthly the hearts of their teachers shall be hereby filled with joy when they see they have not laboured in vaine Phil. 2.16.2 Cor. 3.1,2,3 Of him that c. In the third place it may be here considered of why those vertues shewed forth by Christians are yet called the vertues of Christ. For answer whereunto we may be enformed that they are the vertues of Christ in divers respects First because they are such vertues as are had onely by such as bee in Christ by effectuall calling for all the wicked are strangers from the life of God Secondly because they are received from the Spirit of Christ of his fulnesse we have all received these graces Ioh. 1.14 Eph. 1.21 Thirdly because they are shewed forth for his glory All our gifts and services are devoted to the glory of Christ as they are in him so they are for him Lastly I thinke they may bee called the vertues of Christ because they resemble his vertues as the picture of a man is called by the name of the man himselfe And the consideration hereof should the more incite us to the care of these vertues seeing wee are here to follow no worse a patterne than the example of the Lord Jesus himselfe and withall we should be the more humble when we have had and done all we can seeing we have nothing but what wee have received And since all should bee for his glory we have reason to say at the best Wee are unprofitable servants And withall it should comfort us against the sense of our infirmities to consider how weake soever wee have beene yet our gifts are acknowledged for the vertues of Christ himselfe and by the benefit of Christs intercession are accepted of God as if they had been found in the person of Christ himselfe Thus of the third point He that hath called you The fourth thing to be noted is this Periphrasis here given of Christ. Instead of saying the vertues of Christ hee saith the vertues of him that called you which he doth of
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
speed better than the Apostles who in all places left thousands of people that would not regard them nor their Ministeries 2. Tim. 2.25 26. Lastly we should learne even of wicked men how wee should entertaine the truth for if it bee so hard a matter to get men to change their minds when they hold grosse errors and falshood how ought we to stick to the truth when wee have received it and not receive any other doctrine though an Angell from heaven should teach us otherwise than is written in the Word of God Gal. 1.7 Doct. 2. Wee may hence also note that God is pleased to suffer his children in this life to live amongst wicked men A godly man can live no where but there are some wicked living there the Tares will grow up with the Wheate There may be divers reasons assigned of this why God doth not gather his people altogether from the places where wicked men dwell as first God doth hereby try his people whether they will forsake the inticements of the wicked and cleave to him and his truth the more by-waies there are the more prayse to him that keepes the right way Secondly God doth by the wicked many times refine and purifie his servants by reason of the wicked he both keeps them cleane and if they gather any filth by them he washeth them Wicked men are many times God's Laundresses to godly men for if God appoint them to chasten his servants they will doe it throughly both by reproaches and other waies Thirdly the Kingdome of Christ must bee set up among wicked men because amongst them are many of God's Elect which are in due time to bee converted from their wickednesse Fourthly hereby the power of Christ is magnified that can set up and maintaine his Scepter in the middest of his enemies Fiftly by this course God's patience is prolonged for God is pleased for the godlie's sakes to forbeare those destroying judgements which else would fall upon the wicked The use should be to teach us to beare with patience the inconveniences which befall us in our places and callings by reason of the neighbourhood of wicked men as knowing that it is the condition of all the godly and hath alwaies beene so and is so in all places and therefore to resolve with our selves rather to learne how to carry our selves fairely and honestly among them than through impatience without calling to shift our places or without charity to make any schisme or rent in the Church Secondly since on earth it will be no better with us in respect of our habitation we should therefore learne the more to desire to be in heaven where all the people shall be righteous since there is so much unrighteousnesse in this Wourld we should long for these new heavens and new earth wherein dwelleth righteousnesse We should be the more thankfull if God ease us in any degree of the molestations of wicked men either ridding out manifest Idolaters Pagans or Papists or restrayning those that are with us from unquietnesse and tumult and daily slander or comforting us with a large fellowship of the godly Fourthly it should teach us circumspection seeing the dayes are evill both to hold forth our owne light in the midst of their darkenes to take heed that we trust not every man nor beleeve every thing a holy reservednesse will become this Doctrine Fiftly the zeal of Gods house should the more overcome us to strive to winne men to God and provoke them as wee have occasion and ability to the love of God and the true Religion Sixtly we should cleave the faster to the society of the godly and strive together and contend for the faith seeing that we are alwaies in the midst of our enemies Lastly it may bee a great comfort to such as can quiet themselves well towards wicked men that can keepe their way and be still upright and undefiled that can also keepe peace and winne love from their very enemies that can doe valiantly in the winning men to the liking of Religion for their sakes To bee good among the good is not singular but to bee evill among the good is abominable and so is it an admirable prayse to be good among the evill Doct. 3. That in some cases the conversation of a Christian may extend it selfe even to wicked men Someone will say We are forbidden conversation with them how then can wee converse with them Ans. First our conversation may reach unto them by fame or report so the Christians conversed among the Gentiles in that what they did was discoursed of among the Gentiles But this is not all for in some cases we may goe among them lawfully even into their presence and company as first in case of negotiation in things of necessitie as trade publike service or the like Secondly in case of naturall or civill obligation to them as children wives servants subjects may not withdraw their attendance or service from them but may and must converse with them Thirdly in case of Religion men that intend to admonish confute perswade or winne them to the love of Religion may for that end converse with them But then two cautions must be observed first that the party that would so converse with them must be able to admonish or confute c. Secondly such an end must not bee made a pretence onely to cover needelesse society with them Lastly a difference must be put betweene the open enemies of God and such as give some hope of inclination to Religion though yet they be not manifestly religious There are some persons that are inoffensive so as they are not guily of any grosse and open crime and seeme to favour Religion and the exercises thereof and doe desire the society of the godly and take no pleasure in evill company now we must beware that we judge not rashly of these to account them as Gentiles and such as are without and with these wee may hold more sure society Doct. 4. It may be lastly hence observed That to convince or winne the Gentiles honesty of conversation is chiefly to be respected honesty I say not Religion To shew the practice of religious duties before them is a way to irritate them they must bee beaten with their owne weapons and overcome in the things they professe to bee good The way to amaze them that are without is to shew that religion formes in us such things as they confesse to be good yet cannot come to or not in such a manner or degree such as are faithfulnes chastity meekenes wisedome taciturnity mercy or the like The use should bee therefore to teach godly Christians in the places where they live to looke to this point not onely to live without offence but to strive to excell in the vertues that concerne outward honesty of life And to this end it were excellent if Christians would marke in what things the men of the world where they live doe strive to excell
them for the love hee beares to his Sonne And thus wee read in Scripture that Christ presents the prayers of the Saints Besides that the Christian may not thinke too vilely of his workes but be comforted in the Lord concerning them let him further consider these things First that his good workes have the Spirit of Jesus Christ which is in him for the fountaine of them 1 Cor. 12.11 Esa. 26.12 Secondly that the blood of Jesus Christ was shed not onely for his justification but also for his sanctification Heb. 9.14 Thirdly that though his workes are not good effectu yet they are good affectu they are good in desire his desire was to have them as good as God himselfe did require And this God is pleased to accept as if the worke were perfectly done Quest. 2. What are workes good for in that they are called good workes Answ. I answer first affirmatively they are good 1 To testifie our thankfulnesse to God for all his benefits in respect of which we are debte●s unto God Rom. 8.12 2 To assure the truth of our faith as the fruits of faith Mat. 7.17 1 Tim. 1.19 Iames 2. 3 To witnesse our election and to make our calling sure 2 Pet. 1.10 4 To discharge our duty of obedience unto which we are bound even in the covenant of grace 5 To further the edification of our brethren whom we helpe both by example and by well-doing to them 6 To winne wicked men to a better estimation of our Religion and to stop their mouthes as here so vers 15. 7 To glorifie God as is in this place mentioned 8 They are good to make us capable of rewards from God in heaven Heb. 10.36 Rom. 2.7 8. yea and in this life too 2 Tim. 4.8 Secondly I say they are not good 1 To justifie us before God as it is at large proved by the Apostle in the Epistle to the Romans and Galatians onely they are good to justifie us before men Iam. 2. 2 Not to merit or deserve heaven by them mens evill workes do merit punishment for the wages of sinne is death but our good workes cannot merit both because the Scripture denies it expresly Eph. 2.8 as also to omit other reasons because the nature of merit casteth away our workes for there must be three things in a worke that must merit First it must be a free worke that was not due by any debt whereas our workes are a part of ou● duty and we owe more to God than we can doe Luk. 17.9 Rom. 11.35 Secondly the worke that should merit must be profitable to him of whom wee would merit but no goodnesse of ours can reach to God to profit him Psal. 16.3 Iob 22.2 Thirdly the worke that must merit must be of equall value with the thing that is given for it but neither our sufferings nor our deeds in this life can be worthy of the glory that is to be revealed Rom. 8.18 and therefore is eternall life called The gift of God Rom. 6 2● The uses follow and are especially for instruction for this doctrine of good workes should teach us First to take notice of this doctrine and as we are carefull to beleeve so to be carefull to maintaine good workes and hereby to confute the malicious Papists that falsly charge us to deny and disgrace good workes Tit. 3.8 14. Secondly every man should bee ready to doe good workes yea to every good worke since they are required of God and are so many waies good and serve us for such excellent uses yea wee should bee zealous of good workes wonderfull eager and desirous to inrich our selves that way Tit. 3.1 2.14 yea wee should hereby shew that wee are indeed wise Christians and well skilled in the use of our Religion Iam. 3.13 and not men onely but women also should be forward in good workes 1 Tim. 2.10 It is their best apparell which should be a speciall motive to them that are so carefull of their attyre And indeed good workes are to be desired and laboured for as the best apparell of any Christian yea they are his armour too Rom. 13.13 yea they are a principall way for his inriching and preferment 1 Tim. 2.20 so as it is a great curse upon a Christian to have no minde to do good workes to bee reprobate to every good worke Tit. 1. ult Thirdly since there are so many things necessary to the constitution of a good worke Christians should in stead of prying into the lives of others every one trie his owne workes and turne often to the light that it may bee indeed manifest that his workes are wrought in God Gal. 6.4 for one day every mans workes shall be tried in the fire when times of triall by great afflictions either upon mens Consciences or otherwise come that mans workes that never seeme glorious and praise worthy will be rejected and cast away even by our selves as vile and unprofitable Besides at the best in our prosperity if the most of our workes be tried by the fire of these rules of Gods Word it is much to be doubted that our workes will burne though upon our repentance for the evill that cleaves to our best workes our selves may bee saved in the day of the Lord. Let Christians therefore be carefull that they lose not the things which they have wrought Now a Christian may lose his workes divers waies First if he be but a Christian in shew he may nay he shall lose all he doth The Pharisees lost all their workes because they were done in hypocrisie Secondly the Christian that hath some kindes of heavenly gifts and temporary graces by falling away in the time of temptation loseth all that hee had wrought before God requires patient continuance in well-doing Rom. ● 8 Thirdly the true Christian may lose what hee wrought if he doe his workes without respect of these Rules If it be not manifest that his works are wrought in God they are lost to him so many of his workes as are so wrought Besides he loseth the comfort of all that he hath wrought and the sense of it if he fall into grosse sinne after calling for so long time as he continueth in sinne without repentance Thus of good workes Which they shall behold It is manifest from hence that good workes may and ought to be so done as that men may see them It is not true that all good workes must be hid from the view and beholding of other men This may seeme strange because the Pharisees were blamed for doing their workes to be seene of men but yet it may be easily and plentifully proved I will first prove it and then explaine it For proofe our Saviour Christ requires that the light of mens good workes should shine that men may see their good workes Mat. 5.16 Christians in respect of their practice should be as shining lights in the midst of a froward and crooked generation Phil. 2.15 16. They must
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.
Christians as in the manner shew no scruple nor feare nor trouble of minde for breaking Gods expresse Law in requiring obedience to Magistrates while they are ignorant whether it be a sinne or no to obey and yet on the other side are extremely fearefull and troubled in themselves to vary from the advice or example of such men as they account godly or fathers to them or others in Religion and so are more fearefull to breake mens traditions than Gods Commandements Tradition is ill as well when it comes from good men as when it comes from bad men 3. The Jesuites that maintaine that horrid doctrine of deposing or murthering of Princes so farre are they from obeying them Persons rather to be confuted by strokes than by arguments as men that offend not onely against the Lawes of God but the Lawes of Nations and the Law of Nature Hitherto of the things to which they must submit themselves viz. to every ordinance of man The motive or manner followes For the Lords sake These words doe import both the cause and the manner of submission they must submit for the Lords sake and so First there are divers things in God which should move Christians to all possible care of pleasing and obeying their Magistrates as First Gods and mens Magistrates were ordained of God and therefore for his sake that set them up we should obey them Secondly Gods Commandements God hath required our submission and therefore for the respect of the dutie wee owe to God we should obey them Thirdly Gods Image Magistrates are little Gods in the world they resemble Gods soveraignty or Majesty and therefore because they are like God we should obey them even for so much of the similitude of God as wee may behold in them or their authority Fourthly Gods mercies we are infinitely bound unto God and therefore for his sake even for the love we beare to him wee should doe this which hee requireth Fifthly Gods glory God shall get much honour and his religion will be well spoken of if Christians live obediently and contrariwise if Christians be not obedient God may be much dishonoured thereby and great stormes of affliction may be brought upon the Church by the wrath of Princes Sixthly the judgements of God because they must give account to God for their behaviour toward Magistrates as well as for their behaviour towards God himselfe Secondly these words may note the manner of obedience we must obey Princes for Gods sake not onely for conscience sake but even as if wee did obey God himselfe and with a due respect unto God and so it may make also a limitation We must so obey man as we still have respect unto God so as nothing be done against the Word or pleasure of God Use. The use should be therefore for instruction to teach us to looke carefully to our selves in our submission and so to obey First from the heart because God is intituled to this service Secondly with feare because God will be an avenger of disobedience and resisting of the powers Thi●dly though our subjection should be to our losse or discredit or danger or hurt any way yet for the Lords sake we should doe it There is motive enough in God though there were not worthinesse in the Magistrate or recompence to us Againe it serves to shew the hatefulnesse of those transgressors that resist the power and will not make conscience of it to submit themselves to the ordinances of Magistrates For this is to resist God himselfe this is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and God will certainly be a revenger of this disobedience it being his owne cause as well as the Magistrates Besides it serves to informe us concerning the admirable power and wisdome of God in effecting the subjection of man to authority of Magistrates All men naturally affect to excell and like not superiority in other men And besides it is needfull that one man should governe and keepe in order millions of men disposed as before Now this well points at the cause of this order and su●jection which is the respect of God God naturally hath planted in the hearts of men a feare to rebell or disobey even for feare of God himselfe more than Princes and besides God hath made man to see by experience that he doth defend the persons and rights of Kings by revenging the disobedience of men this naturall conscience keepes under naturall men Now though the Apostle would have godly men to obey for the same reason yer it i● upon an higher ground for godly men are instructed by the Word of God to obey Princes yea herein differ● the obedience of the godly from the wicked that the godly man obeyes for the meere love hee beares to God and the wicked only for feare of vengeance from God so both obey for an higher reason than the respect of Princes themselves even for the Lords sake the one for the love of God and the care of his glory the other for feare of his punishments and judgements Lastly it shewes men must so acknowledge the glory of Princes as that especially we have respect unto the glory of God who is King of Kings we must obey Kings in the land so as God be not disobeyed Thus of the Proposition the Exposition followe● The Apostle labours to cleare this doctrine from divers scruples might be conceived by Christians whether they arise from the diversitie of the sorts of Magistrates or from their soveraigntie For the sorts hee shewes they must obey Magistrates of all sorts both superiour and inferiour the highest and those which are subordinate to them both Kings and Governours also for their soveraigntie Hee teacheth them to observe the supremacie of Kings and Monarchs In generall we may learne from the Apostles care to prevent mistaking herein that he accounts it a pernicious thing to erre about the authoritie of Princes and their Gover●ours And experience shewes it to be pernicious sometimes to the persons of Kings who are often by treason murthered upon wicked and erroneous grounds and sometimes to the subjects who draw upon themselves not onely fearefull sinnes but miserable punishment also by erring herein sometimes it is pernicious to religion it selfe and religious causes giving not onely scandall but procuring desolation in the Churches through errours sometimes on the left hand and sometimes on the right hand Whether to the King It may be questioned whom the Apostle meanes by the word King Such as understand the Epistle to be written to the Jewes may perhaps conceive that the Kings that ruled by deputation in Judea should bee meant such as were Herod and Agrippa But in as much as the Jewes were scattered thorow the Provinces and those provinciall Jewes were most in quiet and in as much as for the reasons afore given it is likely that the Epistle was written to all Christians both Jewes and Gentiles therefore by the King hee meant Caesar. And then a more scruple ariseth for the Romans
love to be his servants Isai 56.7 and in matters of his worship or the meanes thereof the zeale of his House should eat us up 3. Wisely and discreetly Kings get the wisest men they can light upon to serve before them and therefore the King of all kings will not bee served with fooles Since we serve God we should be circumspect and bee sure we understand what the will of God is Ephes. 5.15 16. And therefore wee have need to pray with David that God would give us true understanding hearts to search his Law Psal. 119.124 4. Sincerely Iosh. 24.14 And this sincerity in Gods work we should shew five wayes First in seeking none but him Deut. 6.13 We must not be the servants of men 1 Cor. 7.23 to satisfie mens humours or stand upon their liking or disliking Wee may not serve Mammon in our owne lusts No man can serve two masters God refuseth us for his servants if wee serve riches Luke 16.13 Secondly we should shew our sincerity in obeying him in all things there is no work he requires that we should think our selves too good to do it we must not dare to neglect any thing he requires They are none of Gods servants that will do only what they list in Religion Thirdly we should shew it in doing all things that may be best for his advantage seeking his glory in all things 1 Cor. 10.31 Wee must not seeke our owne praise or profit but his whom wee serve Fourthly by doing his will indeed without dissimulation 1 Chron. 28.9 Fifthly in newnesse of Spirit bringing new hearts to his worke not trusting the old man to doe any worke for God Rom. 7.6 5. Wee must doe his worke constantly A servant is not he that doth a dayes worke and so is gone but he that works all the yeere nor hath God any servants that he hires not by life He hath none from yeere to yeere Psal. 119.17 Wee must finish his worke and never give over till wee fulfill the taske appointed us Luke 1.74 Rev. 7.17 6. We must serve him with our spirits God is a Spirit and will bee served in spirit and truth If he may not have the service of our hearts he rejects the service of our bodies we must serve him with all our hearts and all our soules Deut. 10.12 Phil. 3.3 7. Confidently Servants to ill or poore masters are faine to trust them for diet and wages how much more should wee relye upon God and commit our selves wholly to him taking no care but onely to doe his worke leaving all the rest to him Esay 43.11 8. With one shoulder or with one consent they must agree one with another Zeph. 3.9 9. With all modesty Acts 20.19 without pride or selfe-conceit or conceitednesse acknowledging that when wee have done all wee are unprofitable servants Luke 17.10 and with sorrow for our failings Acts 20. Luke 15.29 and the rather because God can finde faults in his best servants Iob 4.18 Use 3. Thirdly since Gods people are Gods servants they should learne in all places to stand for the honour and glory of their Master and not suffer God to be dishonoured by the servants of a strange god Lastly since all Gods people are his servants and doe his worke it serves for the discovery of the miserable condition of multitudes in the visible Church who are hereby proved not to be Gods people because they are not Gods servants And so these sorts of men following are rejected as none of Gods people because they are none of his servants First all profane persons that aske what profit it is to serve God Iob 21. 15. Malac. 3.15 and serve their owne lusts Matth. 24 49. Secondly all worldlings that worke about nothing more than the things of this life Luke 16.13 Thirdly all unprofitable Christians that live and doe no good will doe no worke but spend their dayes in spirituall idlenesse and unfruitfulnesse making no conscience of the meanes or opportunities of well-doing Matt. 25.26 28. Fourthly all backward and dull Christians to whom it seemes evill to serve the Lord that account all religious duties to bee tedious and irksome and never from their hearts consent to obey but doe what they doe upon compulsion from the lawes of men or feare of shame c. They are Gods servants no otherwise than the divell is For the devill is forced to doe God some worke sometimes but it is alwayes against his will that God hath any glory by it Fifthly all ignorant Christians that are so farre from doing good workes that they understand not Gods will nor are carefull to redeeme the time that they might get knowledge Sixthly all hypocrites that have the forme of godlinesse but deny the power thereof promise to doe much worke but doe it not These especially so many of them as know their Masters will and doe it not shall one day feele the weight of Gods hand Seventhly all quarrelsome and contentious Christians that make division and cause offences contrary to the doctrine of Gods word These the Apostle saith serve not the Lord Jesus but their owne belly and by smooth pretences deceive the simple Rom. 16.18 Use. 4. Lastly since Gods people are Gods servants they are to bee much reproved that take liberty to judge and censure other men for infirmities or things doubtfull or indifferent for what have they to doe to judge anothers servant They are Gods servants and must make their reckoning to him and therefore stand or fall to their owne Master Thus of the first doctrine Doct. 2. Secondly we may hence learne that it is an excellent freedome to be Gods servant They are all freemen that serve God as the coherence shewes No freemen can enjoy better priviledges than Gods servants doe and never were there any servants that enjoyed such prerogatives as Gods servants doe And this may appeare many wayes for First all sorts of men are Gods servants All his subjects are his servants Psal. 135.14 yea all his sonnes are servants yea Christ himselfe Esay 42. all his elect are servants yea his friends are his servants so Abraham that had the honour to be the friend of God accounted it no disparagement to be Gods servant the Kings of the earth accounted it to be the best part of their title to be Gods servants Psal. 36.1 All which proves that it is a most free and honourable estate to be servant unto God else those eminent persons would never have sought them out such a service And this is the more evident because God accepteth not of persons but the poorest Christian may be as well entertained of God as any of those States Gal. 3.28 Col. 3.11 Secondly Gods service may become any freeman in the world if we consider what kinde of entertainment God gives his servants For First all his worke is faire worke It is no disgrace for any man to doe it and he requires no more of the meanest servant hee hath than hee
men especially about doubtfull or indifferent actions of men 1 Cor. 5.10 Iam. ● 17 2. To shew all meeknesse and gentlenesse to all men striving to bee soft and amiable in all their occasions of conversing Tit. 3.1 2. Iam. 3.17 studying to be quiet and to meddle with their owne businesse 1 Thess. 4.12 following peace towards all men Heb. 12.14 Rom. 12.19 Onely in this generall respective behaviour towards all sorts of men Christians must looke to two rules First the one is that they never justifie the wicked nor condemne the righteous Prov. 17.15 Secondly the other is that by needlesse society they make not themselves companions with open evill doers Psal. 1.1 Love the Brother-hood The second thing requisite to the framing of a complete citizen or subject is the soundnesse of his affection or carriage towards such as bee religious in the Common-weale where he lives The brother-hood is the society or company of so many as are true Christians in the place of a mans aboad or acquaintance that which is required is that howsoever wee should shew a generall respect of all sorts of men to carry our selves fairely towards them yet we should in a speciall manner set our love upon such as bee religious persons and should shew upon all occasions that wee doe honour and affect them as heartily and as tenderly as if they were our very brethren in the flesh or rather more stricter in that they are allied unto us in a far greater and better bond than that naturall consanguinity This is that which is also earnestly required and urged in other Scriptures as Rom. 10.12 Heb. 13.1 1 Pet. 1.22 Ioh. 13.34 Ephes. 2.5 Now this love to the godly of our acquaintance wee should shew divers wayes First by making choice of them as the onely companions of our lives Phil. 1.5 All our delight should bee in them Psal. 16.3 And so wee should receive them and intreat them as Christ received us to glory that is freely and with all heartinesse of affection thinking nothing too deare for them Rom. 15.7 1 Pet. 4.9 This is the noblest kinde of hospitality no fellowship like the brotherly society of true Christians so it bee without dissimulation and constant Rom. 12.10 1 Pet. 4.5 Secondly by imploying our gifts the best that we can for their good 1 Pet. 4.10 Now our gifts are either spirituall or outward gifts First spirituall gifts are knowledge utterance prayer or the like Now these are given to profit withall not our selves onely but others 1 Cor. 12. Thus Christians should help others with what they have learned when they meet together Prov. 15.7 1 Cor. 14.26 Col. 3.16 And thus they must help one another by prayer whether they be absent or present 2 Cor. 1.11 Secondly outward gifts are riches friends authority and the like and these should be imployed especially for the good of the brethren Psal. 16.3 Gal. 6.10 Phil. 2.4 And all this we should doe with all faithfulnesse 3 Ioh. 3.5 and with all compassion putting under our shoulders to beare their burthens Gal. 2.6 Now their burthens are either inward temptations or outward afflictions in both these we should help to beare their burthens If they bee burthened with infirmities or temptations wee should beare their burthens by laying their griefes to our hearts and by striving to comfort them and if their sorrows be for wrongs done us we should let them see how easily we can forgive them If it bee outward afflictions that burthen them we beare their burthens when wee sorrow with them that sorrow and are ready to the uttermost of our power to advise them or releeve and help them Thirdly wee should shew our speciall love to them by striving together with them in the cause and quarrell of Religion striving by all meanes to bee of one opinion and affection with them in matters of Religion and to the uttermost of our power to defend them by word and deed according to our callings and occasions Phil. 1.27 1 Cor. 1.10 Phil. 2.3 Uses The use may be first for the discovery of the notable wickednesse of multitudes of Christians that are so farre from loving godly men in the places where they live that of all other men they most dislike them and shew it by reproaching them by traducing them by avoyding their society by divers hatreds of them and by many injurious causes against them And this is the condition of multitudes of Christians that imbrace any fellowship with other sorts of men though never so vile and stand in direct opposition to the godly yea so blinde are the most that they almost thinke they doe God good service if they could rid the countrey of them Esay 65.5 The misery of such men is manifestly described in divers Scriptures and by this signe they are discovered to be no Christians indeed 1 Ioh. 2.9 but rather of the race of Cain or Ismael 1 Ioh. 3.20 Gal. 4.29 and therefore most hatefull to God 1 Ioh. 3.15 Secondly we may hence gather a signe of such as are in the state of salvation actually For if we love the brother-hood we shall be saved as the Apostle is peremptory 1 Ioh. 3.14 and the more apparent will be the signe if we love all the godly and for godlinesse sake both which the word brotherhood imports Thus of the first doctrine Doct. 2. Secondly I might hence observe also that all the godly are brethren and so they are in divers respects First in respect of profession they have all one faith and weare one and the same livery of Baptisme and serve all one Lord Ephes. 4.4 Secondly they have all one Father Mat. 2.10 one God begate them Thirdly they have all one mother the Church Fourthly they must needs be brethren they are so like one another they are all fashioned in the image of God and are all like the Father Use. 1. The use should be first for instruction and so to teach Christians to take heed of judging and censuring one another Rom. 14.10 of offending and grieving one another Rom. 14.13 21. of contentions and schisme one from another 1 Cor. 1.10 of going to law one with another 1 Cor. 6.1 2 c. to verse 8. of coozening and defrauding one another 1 Thess. 4.6 of accepting of persons to preferre a rich man before a poore beleever Iam. 2.1 2. of detracting one from another or grudging or complaining one of another Iam. 4.11 so also Matth. 23.8 of all dissimulation and guilefull courses Rom. 12.9 All these things ought to bee avoided in our carriage toward godly men because they are our brethren Have wee not all one Father why then doe we transgresse even more against our brethren Thus Mal. 2.10 And secondly it should teach us divers things to be done or sought after as for instance 1. It should teach us unity to live together with all concord because we are brethren For how comely a thing is it for brethren to live together in
what we learne at Church is for the most part to bee practised at home Many have little occasion of practice abroad Sixtly because the comfort and contentment of mans life lieth much in this How are the lives of many men made uncomfortable by disordered servants wicked children idle froward vicious wives God gave the woman at the first as a speciall help to man to shew that at home the chief help of his life was to be had Use. The Use should be therefore to teach Christians in their severall places in the family to make conscience of their dealing both to know it and to doe it as ever they would have God to come to them and dwell with them Psal. 10.1 2. and as they desire to be no hypocrites in Religion for such as make no conscience of doing their duties in the family whether themselves wives servants or children are not sound Christians they are but hypocrites They are not compleat Christians that are not good at home aswell as abroad they walke not in a perfect way Psal. 101.2 And besides till domesticall disorders be redressed the family will never be established Pro. 14.3 Secondly it is to be noted that Inferiours in the family are either onely or first or with most words charged about their duties as here servants and not masters and servants and wives with many words and there may bee divers reasons assigned of it 1. To preserve order God hath subjected the Inferiours to the Superiours and the Superiour in a family is Gods Image the Lord is therefore carefull to preserve his authoritie The Superiours receive lawes from God but not from their Inferiours The Inferiours are to learne their dutie without prescribing lawes to their Superiours 2. Because the disorders of Inferiours are for the most part most dangerous to the troubling of the family because the businesses of the family are done by their hands the Superiour providing for the common good by common instruments If the Master of the family bee never so godly-wise yet oftentimes the family may be destroyed by wicked servants and vicious wives Pro. 14.1 3. Because faults in the Inferiours are most scandalous against Religion especially where the family is unequally yoked as if the Head of the family be an unbeleever and the Members beleevers disorder in the beleevers is most extremely scandalous 4. Because if the Head of the family be disord●ed the orderly behaviour of the Inferiours may bring him into order and win him both to Religion and good order at home A conversation with fear in wives may win their husbands as chap. 3.1 2. of this Epistle 5. Because God would hereby shew that the Inferiours must alwayes doe their duties before they looke after the duties of Superiours they must be first served 6. By this course the Apostles did labour to intice the Gentiles to Religion by letting them see how carefull they were to breed goodnesse and love in their wives servants and children and the Apostles did wisely in so doing because it is a greater gain to Religion to gaine one master than many servants because such a master may doe more good The Use should be therefore to interest the obligation upon the consciences of wives servants and children and even the more they see that God saith unto them the more they should be carefull of their duties and ever the more desirous they see the Lord to bee to have them live without offence the more abominable they should account it to dare to offend still and if they have not masters or husbands they should strive to be good themselves before they complaine of the fault of their Superiours and should thinke with themselves If I were a better wife or servant I should finde my husband or servant better to mee Thus in the generall The first thing then the Apostle gives in charge concerns servants from verse 18. to the end of this chapter where observe First the proposition enjoyning servants to bee subject to their masters verse 18. Secondly the exposition shewing both how they should be subject viz. with all feare and to what masters viz. not only to the good but to the froward verse 18. Thirdly the confirmation of it by three reasons viz. from the consideration 1. Of the acceptation of such subjection with God verse 19.20 2. Of their calling verse 21. 3. Of the example of Christ which is urged 1. For the use of servants verses 22.23 2. For the use of all Christians by digression verses 24.25 First then of the proposition where we are to consider first the persons charged Servants secondly the duty imposed be subject thirdly the persons to whom they owe it to your Masters Servants Two things are to be inquired into about servants First the originall of their est●●e and secondly the bond that ties them to this subjection There are servants of God servants of sinne servants of men It is the servants of men that are here meant Servants of men are not all of one sort neither For first such as apply themselves to satisfie the unreasonable humors of men are said to be servants of men and condemned 1. Cor. 7.23 Secondly such as make themselves beholding to other men through their pride are forc't many times to become their servants Thus the borrower is a servant to the lender Pro. 22.7 Thirdly such as imploy their estates or bodies for the honour or preservation of their superiours are said to bee servants thus subjects serve Princes 1. Sam. 8.17 Fourthly such as imploy their labours and spend themselves for the common good are said to be servants thus Ministers are the peoples servants 2. Cor. 4.5 1. Cor. 9.19 But none of these are here meant These servants are domesticall servants such as are under the yoke of particular Masters in a family Those servants in the Apostles time were of two sorts some were bond servants such as were bought and sold in the markets over whom the Masters had absolute and perpetuall power some were hired servants that did serve by covenant and contract as servants do now for the most part with us Concerning these it may be inquired how it comes to passe that men that by creation have the same nature with other men should in their condition be abased to so low and meane estate as to serve them that are in nature alike to them This seemes to be a grievous inequalitie and therefore first to be searched into for the originall and causes of it It is out of doubt that before the Fall if man had staied in his Innocency there had beene no servitude because all men had been made after the Image of God both for holinesse and glory and so had been on earth as the Saints shall be in Heaven The first cause then of subjection and servitude was the confusion and sin of our first parents brought upon the world the earth being cursed for mans sake A necessity of toylesome ●●bour lay upon men
abusing him but the truth is it was thy sinnes and my sinnes that brought him to suffer for them our debt was laid upon him We that are principals are escaped and he that was our surety hath paid for it even to the uttermost fa●thing And if there were no other reason to shew how little reason Christ had no suffer for us even this were sufficient that our hearts are so hard as we cannot be grieved to remember his sorrows for our sinnes Thirdly it should especially worke in us a hatred of our sinnes and a fall and finall resolution to sinne no more but to consecrate our whole life unto him and to his service that hath suffered for us and by suffering ●aid so dear a price Shall we not live to him that died for us Or doe wee so little care for his sorrow as by new sinnes we would as much as in us lieth crucifie againe the Son of God Take heed of despising the bloud of Christ lest you sinne so long till there be no more sacrifice for sinne 2 Cor. 5.15 Heb. 6. Fourthly we should strive to be disposed as the Apostle Paul was to glory in the crosse and sufferings of Christ above all things seeing his sufferings were for us to satisfie and merit for us It must needs be an estate of wonderfull safety and felicity that is purchased by such variety of sufferings of the Sonne of God As the world despiseth us so we should with singular and secret rejoycing despise and contemne the world having such interest in the crosse of Christ Gal. 6.14 Lastly it should worke in us a most hearty willingnesse to suffer any thing for Christ and the Gospel that hath suffered such extreame things for us it should not be grievous to us to forsake father or mother or wife or children or house or lands or our owne lives for his sake or for the Gospel Marke 10.29 Thus of the second thing in the doctrine of the passion of Christ. The third thing is the use of it and that is to be an example unto us that we might walk in his steps Leaving us an example The end then of the sufferings of Christ is to be an example to us to learn by The word rendred an example is a metaphor taken from Scriveners or Painters and signifies properly a copy or pattern or portraiture of a thing exactly drawne out We are then set to schoole to learne by example Christs suffrings are as a writing-schoole where the copies are most exactly drawne Before I come to the particulars we should beare for Christ in his suffering divers things may bee briefely noted out of the words especially about examples Doct. 1. God would have us learne by examples as well as by precept and thence it is the Scripture is so stored with all sorts of examples Doct. 2. Such as give good example of wel-doing are as a common treasure many may learne good by them Good examples are like common schooles and the better because they are free-schooles we may learne from example without cost Though thou couldst not shew all the meanes thou desirest yet to give a good example of sound life and holinesse is a great treasure in the Church It doth not only make Religion well spoken of but it profits many to teach their wel-doing and therefore such as shine by the light of good example should be much made of in every place and they sin fearfully that wrong them c. Doct. 3. It requires a speciall goodnesse to be fit to bee an example to others which the metaphor imports for every man that can write yet cannot set copies for other men to write by so every good Christian is not able to teach by example to the life but with great imperfection some had more need to be learners than to be teachers and therefore should not bee over-hasty to shew their gifts Doct. 4. Good examples are very scarce in the world and therefore Christ is faine to leave us one of his owne the skilfull practice of Gods Word is so rare that it is very hard to finde a man whom wee would set before us as a patterne to imitate Doct. 5. There was very great need of Christs example to teach us by The world is so generally fallen away from the care of obedience and the doctrine of well-doing is entertained so dully as a very matter of for me and for outward shew and the examples of the godly are so imperfect that it was necessary after so many hundreds of yeeres in which sound practice was neglected that the Christian world should be fired with the incitations of so exquisite a patterne of obedience as Christs was Doct. 6. Christs example is to bee imitated by degrees God doth not looke we should follow the copy exactly at the first which similitude imports a great deal of incouragement to the weake but willing Christian and withall shews the doubtfull estate of such Christians as in a short time and with little labour thinke they have learned the substance of all Christianity Doct. 7. In that he saith Leaving us an example it imports that many good workes tarry behinde the godly in the world For though it bee true that their workes follow them to heaven yet it is true also they are left behinde They follow them to heaven in respect of Gods remembrance and acknowledgement of them and they tarry behind them in respect of the example of them and the praisefull memory of them amongst men Well-doing cannot be lost which withall imports that it is a great honour and comfort when a man goes out of the world to leave the memory and patterne of good workes behind him and it is a fearefull thing for such men as goe out of the world to leave an ill report behind them and die an example of evill doers though those could leave a great estate in worldly things yet are they most accursed because they leave behind them such an ill sent and savour by reason of their filthy or vaine or worldly kind of living Doct. 8. It is more than a step to heaven we are here required to follow Christs steps importing it is a long journey and we are to make many steps Doct. 9. The more good any doth the neerer they come to heaven every good work is as it were a step neerer to heaven and therefore as we desire to be with the Lord so should we hasten and finish our work nothing will bring us sooner to heaven whereas if we be barren and unfruitfull either we shall never come there or it will be a great while first Doct. 10. The way to heaven is a very hard way to hit it is marked out by steps if we step awry we are in great danger either of fouling our selves or losing our way It is like to his way that is to passe over a brooke or through thornes or through miery wayes where are placed steps or a print of some footing
conversation in the world but have no taste of religion or conscience of zeale for Gods glory fourthly all open worldlings that minde not heavenly things and savour nothing but the things of this world and lastly all hypocrites that make a shew of mortification and yet are not mortified and then suppose how small a number will be left in every place to be reckoned in this lift of true Christians Doct. 2. Mortification is the very first step of grace and the entrance into all power of godlinesse Till our sins be soundly crucified and dead no worke of Religion that is acceptable to God can be done and therefore Iohn Baptist and Christ and the Apostles call for repentance as the first thing that opens a way into the kingdome of heaven because else sin unrepented like a prison will infect all wee doe Esay 1.13 to 16. Besides the heart of man being naturally like a stone or iron till it be softned no impression of grace can be fastned upon it and if the ground of our hearts be not well plowed up the seed of the Word cannot but be lost Ier. 4.4 The seed cast upon the high way will be picked up by the fowles of the aire and not grow or if any seed or plant of grace did grow for a while in the heart yet the weeds of sin would overgrow and choake all as is evident in seed sowne i● thorny ground or plants set in ground that is not digged and weeded And f●●ther while the person is evill the worke will be vile and abominable An evill tree can●ot bring forth good fruit And therefore this shewes that such Christians as leape into the profession of Religion so easily and thinke it is no more but to give-ov●r ill courses and fall to the practice of good duties are deceived for if by ●ound mortification their sins past be not bewailed and they soundly humbled either their sins will after a while grow and revive againe or else the conscience of these sins will secretly throughout their lives torment them or else the Divell on a sudden may seize upon them with de●paire having so manifest a reason against them that they did never practise mortific●tion for their sins Besides lamentable experience shewes in those places where Christians are not soundly formed at first in the exercise of mortification they leade their lives in a dull course of profession and have not the experience of the life and power of Religion in themselves for the joyes of it or towards others in the practice of it The mourners in Sion and such as are broken-hearted are the most glorious and the most fruitfull Christians Is. 61.1 2 3 4. and continue in the greatest power of Religion And further it may be noted in the best of those that their separation from the love of the world is most really performed as hath appeared when in any speciall workes of men or for the help of the Church of God they are called upon to shew their zeale by their bounty in such cases one poore Macedonian would shame a hundred of those rich Corinthians 2 Cor. 8. Doct. 3. True repentance for sin doth in divers respects kill a man it strikes him dead to repent is to be a dead man not only in respect of the world which casts off a man that will not run in the excesses of the time as a dead man indeed Col. 3.3 but in respect of themselves For first by the assise a man must keep upon himselfe he will be found dead by sentence when he judgeth himselfe before the Lord he stands as a man condemned in the flesh he sentenceth himselfe to eternall death for his deserts by confessing what he meriteth 1 Pet. 4.6 Now a condemned man is reckoned for a dead man in Law Secondly repentance destroyes the senses and affections and conceits and reason that were wont to be alive in men it dissolves the very frame of the old conversation The word rendred dead signifies to undoe what was done about the life of man to unmake him as I may say so as all the old things passe away and all becomes new 2 Cor. 5.17 Rom. 6.6 1 Iohn 3.8 In the new Convert there is not left the savour sent lust or affections after sin and the sinfull profits and pleasures of the world he doth not find that inflammation or inticement he was wont to feele from evill example or the glory of the world or evill compa●y or the things before he most esteemed and delighted in Thus he is dead to himselfe because he denies himselfe and could be well contented to forget that ever he had beene such as he was before Thirdly in some of Gods children their repentance is performed with such griefe and sorrow as brings their life almost to the buriers as is noted Iob 33.19 20 21. Fourthly they may be said to be dead in repenting because repentance is never fully finished till their naturall death sin sticks so fast as they have daily cause of mortification in some degree and it will never be gotten wholly out till they be indeed dead men though in the mean time God accepts of their first repentance as if it were perfect This Doctrine serves effectually to discover the estate of multitudes of Christians not to be right as they That doe nothing at all about their sins That excuse their sins and hide them and favo●r them and cast the fault upon others Pro. 28.13 Gen. 3. Iob 20.11 12 13. That blesse themselves in their hearts when their iniquity is found worthy to be hated Psal. 36.2 That haunt with such persons as may make them sin more That say It is no profit to walke humbly before the Lord Mal. 3.14 and rather blesse the proud That hate and revile such as are mortified That are dead rather in faith and good workes and finde a deadly savour in the Word That have sense and savour onely in the things of the flesh Secondly this should teach all that mind their owne salvation to looke carefully to the truth of their mortification and not to thinke it is such a sleight and easie worke but to consider that in repenting for sinne they must never cease till they be like Christ dying for sinne and that is in the sense before given So our bearing of the similitude of Christs death in our repentance notes divers particular things in our repentance as 1. That our sorrowes be voluntary not inforced he gave his life it was not taken from him we must not tarry till the Divell fire us with the terrors of despaire 2. That we be pained at the very heart for our sins so was Christ it must be a hearty griefe 3. That wee shew forth the fruits of our repentance so hee suffered openly 4. That he suffered by degrees and ceased not till he died so must we by degrees resist sin and never cease untill it be quite abolished Hence also we may know whether we have truely
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
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
their trust in God Fiftly for the effect of it it adorned them Sixtly for the matter of it viz. they were obedient to their owne husbands Thus of the order of the words Before I enter upon the particulars divers things may be noted in generall about examples of goodnesse in others First we may hence evidently gather That it is not enough for us to doe good but we should strive so to doe it that we might be examples to others 1 Tim. 4.12 Mat. 5.16 Phil. 2.15 and that for divers reasons For first God is interessed in us and our workes and there is a glory due to God which must be collected from our workes do●● before men Mat. 5.16 Secondly we must so act our parts in godlinesse upon the Stage of this world that we may thereby silence and convince wicked men that out of their hatred to the truth and frowardnesse of hearts would else take all occasions to speake evill of us and the good way of God Phil. 2.15 Thirdly our Teachers have a part in our workes and we should hold forth the patternes of sound practice that they might be comforted in our learning from them and graced in their Ministerie Phil. 2.16 Fourthly by this meanes we may doe much good in helping forwards weake Christians For as the wicked take fire from evill examples so doe the godly from good examples both in piety 1 Thes. 4.7 and mercie 2 Cor. 8.16 c. Which should worke a● effectuall care in all godly Christians to strive to expresse such conscience and power of godlinesse as may be profitable to others and so chiefly in such things as may most grace th● profession of religion or profit others as wisedome mercie meeknesse just dealing contempt of the world affectionatenesse in Gods service patience undauntednesse or the like especially those that be Parents Masters Magistrates Ministers that have charge of others And this greatly reproves such Christians as undoe the soules of those that belong to them as much as lies in them by their wicked examples as Ministers that are examples to their people of drunkennesse usury covetousnesse pride or the like and Masters of families or Parents that give such wretched examples to their children and servants in swearing vanitie of apparell filthinesse of life passion or the like Secondly we may hence note two singular vertues in a good example the first is That it may profit a world of people 1 Thes. 1.7 Rom. 16. It is like the fire you may light many candles at it and yet it is neither the worse nor the lesse Many that we know no● of may receive good from our good conversation and example in well-doing as was true in the case of those holy women And the reason is because men are more apt to understand things when they are practised than when they are taught And besides good examples are so rare that they shine as a Beacon on fire in a darke night Phil. 2.15 And therefore one Use should be to teach Christians by an humble acknowledgement of the praises of others to spread abroad the light of good examples ●s far as they can 1 Thes. 1.7 8. And withall he shewes the horrible sin of those wretches that strive to blemish the good conversation of the godly and so rob the world of the profit of their examples The second vertue in a good example is the lasting of it It may doe good for a long time after yea in some cases to the worlds end The sweet savour of it may be freshly sented many yeeres after which was never true of any perfume in the world It is a light that will not out of a long time as here the example of these holy women and Sarah in particular have a fresh power to doe good many hundred yeares after it was given and will still have to the worlds end The memoriall of the Just is blessed They that are to live hereafter may praise God for the good they receive from the examples of those that are long since dead in their graves Their workes live long after they are dead Which should be a wonderfull consolation to eminent Christians that excell in gifts and good workes and have held forth a good profession before many witnesses And in as much as God by his providence keeps burning so long the light of the good examples of his children it will make the more to encrease the condemnation of such persons as will not learne goodnesse from such examples Especially their case is fearefull that have had this light in such as have beene neere to them as in Parents Masters Ministers ●p●ciall acquaintance kindred or the like and yet make no good use of it Thirdly we may hence gather That a good example ought to be given and may be taken from women as well as men Pro. 31.28 29. Mat. 26.13 Tit. 2. 3 4. And the reason is because God is no respecter of persons but gives his gifts and graces to women as well as men as Scripture experience shews And besides as their ill example may make the word of God to be blasphemed Tit. 2.5 so why should not their good example become godlines profit others And this point should teach women if they will professe Religion to looke to their waies and strive to give good example especially aged women Tit. 2.3 And withall it may be a comfort to that Sexe that God should use their service to doe his worke and many times to teach men by their waies and works God hath raised up the glory and light of many worthy women and they have bin as eminent for holines good workes as men have bin Thus in generall In this manner The first thing in the description is the manner of the pattern about which we may note three things 1. That the patterns of well-doing or the rules of life have beene the same in all ages There is no more required of Christians now than was required of Gods servants in former time which should make us the more willing to beare Gods yoake and to doe the taske that God sets us 2. That an example is then of power to bind when it agrees to some precept as here the example of holy women is urged because it did agree to the doctrine of the exhortation before named This rule is of great use in ordering of conclusions taken from examples in Scripture examples have but the power of illustration of what was before in the precept And againe it should teach us not to esteeme of any men above what is written but to follow them as they follow Christ or as their actions are warranted by the Word of God 3. God did ever stand upon subjection and an amiable and meeke behaviour in women in all ages Which should much prevaile with Christian women to teach them to make more conscience of their carriage towards their husbands seeing God had ever required such a behaviour in all holy women of
that God accepts holinesse in them as well as in men 2. That all holy women did make conscience of subjection to their husbands and therefore the Apostle speakes indefinitely of all holy women And this is the more evident because amongst all the infirmities noted in any godly woman in the Scriptures yet there is no example of a godly woman that did customarily live in the sinne of frowardnesse or rebellion against her husband the instance of Zipporah is but of one onely fact and the errour seemes to be as much in her judgement as in her affections And this doctrine should light verie heavie upon many wives that professe Religion in these times and compell them to reforme their hearts and behaviours in their carriage towards their husbands for this Text doth import that they want holinesse that are not subject to their husbands and live in customarie frowardnesse and unquietnesse 3. That Christian women ought to studie the example of holy women in old times and therefore they should do well to get a catalogue of the praises of godly women in Scripture to lay before them for their imitation and so they should learne of Sarah reverence to their husbands and of Rahab and the Midwives of Egypt to shew mercy to Gods servants in distresse and of Ruth obedience to their parents and constant love to religion and of the Shunamitish woman 2 Reg. 4.8 c. and of Lydia Acts 16.14 and of Ph●be Rom. 16.2 to be entertainers of Gods servants and to succour them and of Hanna to be humble and patient and devout in prayer and of the good woman in the Proverbs chap. 31. and of Priscilla and Sal●mons mother P●● 30.1 2. and Timothies mother and grand-mother 2 Tim. 1.4 to get the law of grace into their lips to instruct others and of that woman in the Proverbs to bee painfull in labour and to be wise in oversight of the labours of their servants and children and of Hester to keepe religious Fas●● to God with their maides and children Hess 4.16 and of the Virgin Mary to lay up the words of Christ in their hearts and with Mary Magdalen to love Christ with all tendernesse and to bewaile their sinswith sorrow and to sit as Christs feet to heare his words and of Elizabeth to live without offence L●●e 1. and of Dorcas to be merciful to the poore and of the holy women mentioned Heb. 11.3 to be constant professors of the truth in the times of persecution That trusted in God The fourth thing is the cause of their subjection and that is their trust in God about which foure things are to be observed 1. That trust in God is such a grace as is found in all the godly even wom●n that were holy had attained to trust in God All holy women trusted in God therefore if women that are the weaker sexe cannot get holinesse but withall they trust in God it is impliedly cleere That all the godly doe trust in God The house of Israel and the house of Aaron Priests and people even all that feare the Lord must trust in the Lord Psal. 115.9 10 11. and all the Gentiles must trust in the Lord. Rom. 15.12 It is the Periphrasis of God to be the confidence of all the ends of the earth Psal. 65.5 And the reasons why the godly must and doe all of them trust in God are first Gods Commandement that requires it of all which the former places shew secondly Gods promise that he will be the hope of his people even of all his people Ioel 3.16 and they have a sure word of the Prophets to warrant their trust 2 Pet. 1.19 thirdly without faith and trust it is impossible to please God Heb. 11. 6. fourthly because they have nothing else to trust in Of all people the godly are most miserable if their trust were to be placed in other things than God for as all earthly things are vain and transitorie so can they make least shift for themselves and are most opposed in these things And therefore the Use should be to teach us to trie our hearts soundly whether we be such as trust in God seeing in this thing lyeth one great part of our evidence about true grace If all the godly trust in God then we are not godly nor holy men and women if we doe not trust in God The question then is By what signes doe godly men prove that they doe trust in God and the answer is 1. By making God their refuge in all their distresses and by pouring out their hearts before him in prayer and supplication 2 Sam. 22.3 4. Psal. 62.8 2. By their feare in any thing to displease God and their care to keepe his Commandements and to cleave to God 2 Reg. 18.4 5 6. doing his worke whatsoever come of it 3. By relying upon God in times of distresse without using any ill means or courses that they know or feare to be unlawfull Esay 28.16 with 1 Chron. 10.13 14. but still wait upon God till he help them Psal. 33.20 4. By accounting God to be their portion and sufficient heritage Psal. 16.1 5 6. 5. By setting the Lord alwaies before them Psal. 16.1 18. for if we put all our trust in God then our hearts doe continually thinke of God and are lifted up to God 6. By committing all their wayes to God and leaving the successe of things to his disposing Psal. 37.5 7. By their patience in the case of wrongs and indignities having their hearts free from desires of revenge and their tongues from words or reproach or reproofe they are as deafe or dumb men Ps. 38.13 14 15 1 Tim. 4.10 8. By contemning the glory of the world and not regarding or seeking dependancies upon proud and sinfull persons Psal. 40.4 9. By the joy and contentment they take in the house of God their hearts flourishing like a greene Olive tree when they heare of the doctrine of Gods goodnesse and feele the refreshing of his name Psal. 52.8 9. 10. By their thankfulnesse and great desires to praise God when they find the experiences of Gods providence in grace and bounty towards them Psal. 13.5 6. 52.8 9. Yet by the way we m●●t know that godly persons that do truly trust in God may be burdened with cares but yet they cast their burthens upon God when they feele them Psal. 55.22 They may be affraid and yet trust in God Psal. 56.3 They may cry and make great moane and that a long time Psal. 69.3 They may seeme to want strength and yet renew their strength Esay 40 ult 2. From ●●nce we ●●y gather That it is a great praise and an excellent gift in any to trust in God to have and exercise this trust in God and therefore of all parts of holines f●nctification in this place trust in God i● mentioned And therefore in divers Scriptures they are pronounced to be very blessed that can doe it Psal. 84.12 34.8 and it
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
the dead that Christ might give them this light of life How should they unchangeably resolve to seeke Gods kingdome first above all things and above all gettings strive to get understanding What shall it profit them to win the whole world and lose their owne soules But especially the doctrine of life should melt the hearts of all the godly and imprint upon them the care of many duties as 1. They have cause to wonder at the exceeding riches of Gods kindnesse to them in Jesus Christ in providing such an inheritance for them Ephes. 2.7 2. They should pray earnestly to God to open their eyes more and more to see the glory of this life and effectually to take notice of the high dignity of their calling and riches of their inheritance in life Eph. 1.19 3. This should marvellously wean their hearts from the cares of this present life and from the love of earthly things seeing their inheritance lieth in spirituall and eternall life 1 Cor. 7.38 Heb. 13.4 5. 11.13 Col. 3.1 2. Phil. 3.20 4. Since they have found this precious life by the Gospel they should therefore take heed they be not carried about with divers and strange doctrine nor trouble themselves with doubtfull disputations or unprofitable questions They have found the words of eternall life and whither else will they goe Tit. 3.7 9. Heb. 13.9 5. This should make them love one another as such as shall be companions in life for ever Yea they should receive one another as Christ received them to glory Iohn 13.34 Eph. 4.2 5.1 Rom. 15.7 And in particular husbands should make much of their wives and masters of such servants as are heires with them of the grace of life as this Text shewes and Col. 3.14 6. They should strive to shew the power of this life and how much it excells naturall life and therefore the fruit of the Spirit should be in them in all goodnesse righteousnesse and truth Eph. 5.9 and they should so hold forth the Word of life that they should think on whatsoever things are true honest just pure lovely and of good report and if there be any vertue or any praise they should strive to act that being carefull in all things to maintaine good workes Phil. 4.8 Tit. 3.7 8. Oh what maner of persons should they be in all maner of good conversation 7. They should lift up their heads with joy and be alwaies comfortable considering the assurance they have of eternall life they have the spirit of glory resting upon them One would think they should be alwaies singing and making melodie in their hearts though they have crosses and wants in this life yet is not God their portion and is it not enough they are provided for in respect of eternitie and is there any comparison betweene the afflictions in this world and the glory to be revealed Grace Thus of the matter of their inheritance The cause followes and that is grace Grace is either a gift in us or an attribute in God Sometimes by grace is meant the gifts God bestowes upon men and if grace were so taken then would be implied this doctrine That dead men may have the grace of God There may be grace in men without life yea men may have excellent gifts and yet be not alive spiritually as gifts of government from the Spirit of God as Saul had and gifts for edification in the Church A man may be an excellent Preacher as Iudas was and may have the gifts of prophecying and working miracles as the Reprobates mentioned Mat. 7.21 a man may have the gift of knowledge of the Scriptures as St. Paul imports 1 Cor. 8.2 Heb. 6.4 a man may confesse his sins as Pharaoh and Saul did a man may be much grieved and sorrow and humbled for his sins as Ahab and Cain and may repent too as Iudas did and may make a great profession of true religion and be very forward as Demas and Hymeneus and Phyletus did a man may be very zealous for the truth as Iohn and the Galatians were a man may pray and cry hard and often to God and be heard of God as the Israelites were in their distresses many times a man may be of an unrebukeable conversation amongst men as Paul was before his conversion and such as have sinned may reforme their lives in many things as Herod did finally a man may have faith to beleeve Gods Word as the Divels doe and to beleeve Gods promises as they that have a temporary faith doe after a sort and may joy much in the comfort of them as they concerne the godly and yet in all these gifts there was no life Another point in that sense is this That there are gifts of Gods grace bestowed on the Elect which are ever accompanied with life so as their grace is the grace of life And both these points should wonderfully awaken all sorts of Christians to looke about and trie their estates and weake Christians should diligently studie their booke of signes of true grace and marke how the Scripture proveth all those saving graces to be such as can be found in no reprobate But because I think Grace in this place cannot be taken for the gifts of grace in men I passe from these points By grace then here is meant the glorious attribute of goodnesse that is in God by which he freely sheweth his love and mercy to his creatures And that it must be taken in this sense I gather from the third of Titus v. 7. where the sentence being like grace is called there His grace we are justified by his grace and made heires of eternall life Now this grace of God as it is in God I consider of two wayes first as it is in relation to this spirituall and eternall life of Gods heires and then secondly as it is in it selfe generally considered In relation to spirituall life I consider of it both in what it excludes and what it includes Grace excludes both nature and the workes of the Law It excludes nature from this life in three respects first in respect of propagation This life cannot be propagated by naturall generation we are not borne heires of life and so the sons of God we are borne only the sons of Adam not of God They that are borne after the flesh are not the seed Rom. 9.8 Secondly in respect of priviledge By nature we are the children of wrath and therefore cannot be the children of promise Eph. 2.3 Thirdly in respect of the works of nature for by nature we doe such workes as proclaime us to be children of disobedience and children of the Divell and therefore cannot be heires of life by any workes done by nature since the fall And as it excludes nature so it excludes the workes of the Law not in respect of the obedience to the Law but in respect of the merit of life so as the inheritance cannot be had but by the workes of
this duty of prayer Hence it is that where we reade of any commandement to pray in Scripture usually it is as large as any of the ten Commandements even such as bindeth all persons to the performance of it which should serve greatly to shew the profanenesse of most families that have no prayer A familie without prayer and the exercises of religion in it is a very den of wild beasts and a cage of impure birds and the wrath of God hangs over those families that have not prayer used in them as these places shew Psal. 79.6 Zeph. 3.1 2. Dan. 9.13 Ezek. 22.30 Doct. 4. Yea in that he takes for granted that Christian husbands and wives did pray onely admonishing that they looke to it that their prayer be not interrupted it shewes That every godly Christian can pray and doth make conscience of it to doe it Psal. 32.6 for every Christian that is a true Christian hath the spirit of adoption by which he cries Abba Father Rom 8. 16. And it is made a signe of a wicked man not to call upon the name of the Lord Psal. 14.4 Doct. 5. In that prayer may not be interrupted or hindred it shews plainly That this is an exercise for every day constantly while we live in this world which these places confirme 1 Thes. 5.17 Col. 4.2 Rom. 12.12 Psal. 105.4 praying by fits will not serve turne Doct. 6. Wives and husbands though they had never so many praises other wayes or for their carriage one towards another yet if they be not religious persons and in particular such as serve God by daily and devout prayer they are not true Christians nor accepted of God The Apostle takes it for granted that all Christian men and women doe make conscience of daily prayer to God Which serves notably to con●ure the vaine trust in civill honesty and the fairenesse of domesticall conversation which bewitcheth many persons in the world Doct. 7. When the heart is not right towards man it is not right towards God as here domesticall disorders hinder the exercises of religion towards God That husband that loves not his wife hath no great mind to pray Wives that make no conscience to live quietly and obediently with their husbands suffer a like alienation from God both in their ability to serve him and in his acceptance of it Doct. 8. In that he saith your prayers it shewes That every Christian must make prayers of his owne As the just man lives by his owne faith so must the true Christian thinke of getting his living under God by his owne prayers 'T is not enough that he partake of other mens prayers in publike or that he can get others to pray for him in private God lookes for prayers from himselfe Doct. 9. In that he saith prayers it imports That there be divers kindes of prayer and that private Christians must make not onely a prayer but prayers to God Eph. 6.18 Phil. 4.6 Col. 4.2 The sorts of prayer and differences arise 1. From the instrument by which it is formed for there is the prayer of the heart onely such was Hannah her prayer 1 Sam. 1. There is a prayer of the mouth only such is the prayer of hypocrites Esay 29.13 There is the prayer both of heart and mouth and such is the prayer ordinarily of all the godly 2. From the place of prayer some prayers are publike some private and a Christian must use both Some are alone some with others 3. From the forme and so we have the prayer of Christ as the patterne and rule for all prayers and the prayers of Christians agreeable to that patterne We must not r●st upon saying over the words of the Lords prayer and neglect all other prayers Againe some prayer is conceived some is in a set 〈◊〉 used A set forme is 〈◊〉 for the publike and for such weake Christians as are not yet able to expresse their owne desire to God in their owne words No● 〈◊〉 conceived formes unfit or unlawfull for such as are able and desirous to performe prayer according to the rules of prayer as is apparent by the examples of all sorts of prayers in both Testaments 4. From the object of prayer and so some prayers are made daily at set times and thence it was that the Chuch of the Jewes had their houres of prayer Acts 3.1 and some are uttered suddenly according to some speciall occasion And of this sort are ejaculations short petitions put up to God expressing the present motion in the heart Doct. 10. It is a great losse or inconvenience to have our prayers interrupted This is plaine from the Text. And there may be many reasons assigned of it I will instance but one or two first because for that time a man is thrust out of the presence of the King of heaven To pray is to stand before his face Secondly because while prayer stands still our spirituall trade stands still while we pray not we thrive not Thirdly if it were nothing else but the respect of others it must needs be a great inconvenience to omit prayer because thereby we withdraw our aides from the Church and that is as bad as in evill times of war to withdraw our succours from the house of Israel Quest. But how many waies can prayer be interrupted Answ. Prayer may be interrupted either in heaven or in earth either in the hearing of it or in the making of it Prayer is interrupted in the hearing of it or God will not heare prayer 1. If the person making it lie in any sin without repentance Pro. 15.8 Esay 59.2 Lam. 3.44 Psal. 66.18 2 Tim. 2.19 1 Iohn 3.22 2. If it be not made in faith that is if we beleeve not that we shall have what we aske Mat. 11.24 Iames 1.6 3. If not made in the name of Christ Iohn 16.23 4. If it be made carelesly and coldly if a mans head be full of distractions so as he regards not what he prayes he is not likely to be heard for how shall God heare him when he heares not himselfe and how shall God heed what he saies when he heeds not what he saies himselfe 5. If a man aske amisse that is aske for carnall and corrupt ends Iames 4.3 6. If a man be not in charitie with his neighbour and will not forgive him his trespasse Mat. 6.14 7. If a man be unmercifull and will not heare the cries of the poore Esay 58.7 Pro. 21.13 Thus prayer is interrupted in the hearing of it Prayer is interrupted in the making of it when men are indisposed to prayer and so omit the performance and thus prayer is interrupted Sometimes by the violence of wordly cares and businesse the heart of man being overcharged with these cares of life Sometimes by domesticall discords and private passions which it seemes the Apostle especially meanes in this place Sometimes by the love and lust after some particular si● for while mens hearts run after sin they
trespasse against 〈◊〉 And that we shall be i● we soundly 〈…〉 r●les If we know any fault by our brother and feele that it doth tempt us to alienation we must then remember the charge given Levit. 19.17 which is not to suffer our hearts to hate him but give a vent unto our hearts by a plaine and discreet reproofe 2. We should be soundly settled in judgement that there are infirmities in the best though we know them not and so to looke for it as when they doe breake out we should shew our selves ready to beare their infirmities and forbeare them if they be meere frailties choosing rather to crosse our selves than to irritate or provoke them in their weakenesse Rom. 15.1 2. 3. If any brother trespasse against us we should shew our selves easie to be entreated and willing to practise the rule given by our Saviour even to forgive him if he offend unto seventy times seven times when he saith it repenteth him Mat. 18.21 4. If we have done any wrong we should make haste to be reconciled and seeke it with willing acknowledgement and readinesse to make satisfaction Mat. 5.23 24. Only we must remember about this doctrine of the love of the brethren that there are three caveats to be looked to 1. That we misplace not our affections upon false brethren for there are false brethren that will creepe in privily many times for corrupt ends Gal. 2.4 2 Thes. 3.13 2. That if any brother be scandalous or walke inordinately or will not be subject to the forme of doctrine and the publike ministerie then such a one is to be avoided only he must be admonished as a brother 2 Thes. 3.6 15. 3. Servants are charged to looke to it that they be obedient and subject notwithstanding this doctrine that their Masters are brethren 1 Tim. 6.1 Pitifull The word rendered Pitifull in the Originall signifies rightly bowelled or such as have true or right bowels and so it is to be referred to mercy and is more than other Scriptures expresse when they require bowels of mercy for here it is required that these bowels be right In Mat. 25. men are sentenced to condemnation for not shewing mercie In other Scriptures it is shewed that though they doe shew mercy yet if some things be not looked to it will not be accepted as Mi●h 6.8 there is required not only mercy but the love of mercy and Mat 6. the Pharisees did workes of mercy and yet our Saviour finds fault with them because they were done to be seene of men and in 1 Cor. 13.2 the Apostle saith If a man give all that he hath to the poore and want love it is nothing So here the Apostle requires not mercy only but that their bowels be right in mercy and about this rule therefore two things are to be explicated 1. What bowels of mercy means 2. What right bowels imports For the first Bowels of mercy imports 1. Truth in shewing mercy that it be not in ceremony or word only but in deed that the heart shew mercy as well as the tongue 2. Love that our mercy proceed from hearty and Christian affection to the partie 1 Cor. 13.2 not of constraint nor with wicked thoughts or griefe of heart Deut. 7.7 8. to 12. 3. Tendernesse of affection that we be affected as if our selves were in want Rom. 12.16 4. Cheerefulnesse in expressing our mercy to such as are in misery who are sometimes as much refreshed with the respect we shew to their persons as with the supply we bring to their estates Men in misery should be comforted as well as relieved 5. The practice of secret mercy as well as open even to thinke of them and provide for them and to provoke others to mercy and to pray for them when they know not of it even when wee are gone from them still to shew them mercy For the second our Bowells are right in shewing mercy 1. If we be prepared unto such good works and so both our eares should be prepared that they may be open to the cry of the poore Prov. 21.13 and the matter of mercy should be made ready And to this purpose it were an excellent course if Christians would lay up weekly a part of their gettings which they would consecrate to God that it might be ready when there were need 1 Cor. 16.1 2. and further if we be as God is mindfull of mercy and doe exercise it speedily without delay Prov. 3.27 28. 2. If we looke not for too much beholdingnesse from them that are relieved The rich must not rule over the poore nor the borrower become a servant to the lender Prov. 22 7. 3. If we have a good eye Pro. 22.9 and shew it by dispensing of our mercy to such as have most need and to such as are best affected in religion if there be choise 4. If wee doe workes of mercy out of goods well gotten for God hates robbery though it were for burnt offerings Esay 61.8 5. If it bee for right ends as not for merit or the praise of men Mat. 6. 2 Cor. 9.19 6. If we be full of mercy rich in mercy much in mercy abundant in mercy not onely to our power but sometimes and in some cases beyond our power Wee must open our hands wide Deut. 15.8.1 Tim. 6.18 2 Cor. 8.2 9. good measure and pressed downe Luk. 6.8 if we give not sparingly 7. If we be discreet so to ease others as we burthen not our selves 2 Cor. 9.14 15. 8. If we exercise our selves in every kind of mercy both spirituall and corporall in giving lending visiting clothing feeding instructing admonishing comforting c. 9. If we be constant and not grow wearie of well-doing Gal. 6. The use may be first for reproofe and confutation of divers sorts of men 1. Of the Papists that brag of their good workes in this kind to whom it may be granted that they shew workes of mercy and perhaps have bowels of mercy but they are not right bowels both because with the Pharisees they doe their works to bee seene of men and with opinion of justification and salvation by the merit of their workes and besides though they shew compassion to the bodies of men yet are they without all true compassion to the soules of men 2 Of the house keeping of many Protestants that brag of their great Hospitalitie and good house keeping when their entertainment is either spent upon the rich or else in the profane abuse of the good creatures of God by drunkennesse or else in the entertainment of disordered and lewd persons 3. Of the great neglect of mercy in the most men that either shew not mercy at all or not bowels of mercy or not according to the rules given before especially such as hide themselves from the poore Esay 58.7 and use shifts and excuses to avoide such supplies as are necessary for the furtherance of the reliefe for the poore in such places as
life in sinne Use. And so from hence by way of use men may discerne whether they live in sin or not for he that is a servant to his corruptions and esteemeth them as the happinesse of his life and resists them not and hath a desire to sin ever i● without doubt alive in sin and dead to righteousnesse And so contrariwise where these things cannot be found there the person is not alive to sinne Doct. 2. Hence is implied also that to live in sin is but miserable living and therefore those whom God loveth he chang●th from that condition and maketh them die to sin Now this may be shewed out of other Scriptures briefly for 1. Sin infects a man and all he goes about it staines his very conscience and like the leprosie will pollute his clothes his flesh his house and whatsoever he toucheth almost Titus 1.15 It maketh all things impure 2. To harbour sinne is to harbour the divell too who alwaye● takes possession of the soule that is given over to sin so as the heart of the sinner is the Fortresse of the Divell Eph. 2. ● 2 Tim. 2.26 2 Cor. 10.5 Eph. 4.26 3. While a man lives in sin he is in danger to be crossed and 〈…〉 in every thing he doth he shall have no portion from God nor inheritance from the Almighty Iob 31.2 Good things will be restrained from him Esay 59.2 and he may finde himselfe cursed in every thing he sets his hand unto Deut. 28.16 17 18 c. his very blessings may be cursed Mal. 2.2 his very table may be a snare For certainly God will be revenged of the sinfull man that is alive in sin Nah. 1.2 3 6. 4. His soule is dead within him while he is alive Eph. 2.2 1 Tim. 5.6 And how can it be otherwise when God which is his life is departed from him and with God all spirituall blessings are gone from his soule too The end of this life is to die miserably Rom. 8.10 and 6 2● Gal. 6. and to perish for ever with the Divell and his Angels Revel 21.8 Mat. 25.45 And in a speciall m●ner it is a miserable living to be lively and joviall as they call it in sin such men are worse than the generall sort of sinners For these wretched men that are so lively in sin have a most miserable heart in them a heart like an Adamant like a very stone within them are senselesse and brutish like the very beasts that perish Psal. 49. ult Besides in many of these God scourgeth sin with sin and giveth them up to such a reprobate mind that their wickednesse oftentimes exceeds the wickednesse of the wicked Ier. 5. Rom. 1.26 28. And further many times strange punishments light upon those workers of iniquity Iob 31.3 To which may be added that oftentimes such wretched creatures conclude in most wofull and hellish terrors so as they howle for vexation of spirit while Gods servants sing for joy of heart Esay 65.13 14. Rev. 6.15 16. But in generall of all that live in sin it is manifestly here implied that they have no part in Christ Christ in respect of them and as they are in their present condition died in vaine Use. The consideration whereof should awaken men from that heavie sleep in sin unto an earnest care to live righteously it should warne men every where to repent Eph. 5.14 and the rather because this very patience of God in bearing thus long with them and the mercy offered them in the Gospel will increase to greater wrath and condemnation if men will not be warned Rom. 2.4 5. 2 Thes. 1.8 9. Doct. 3. Hence also it is cleere that Gods Elect before their Calling have lived in sin as well as others Eph. 2.3 Tit. 3.3 Col. 3.6 Which is fit to be noted for divers uses For first it sets out the rich mercy of God and his free grace in election and manifestly shewes that we merit not the blessing Eph. 2.3 4 c. And secondly it should teach the godly divers duties as first not to be proud or high-minded but rather remembring what they were to make them the more humble all their dayes Secondly to despaire of no man but rather to shew all meeknesse toward all men 2 Tim. 2.25 Tit. 3.2 3. Thirdly to cleave fast unto Christ in whose only propitiation they can be saved from their sins 1 Iohn 2.1 2. God forbid we should rejoyce in any thing more than in Christ and him crucified Gal. 6.16 Lastly we should think it more than enough that we have heretofore lived in sin we should henceforth resolve to spend that little time that remaineth in a carefull obedience unto Gods will ceasing from sin 1 Pet. 4.1 2 3. Thus of the Doctrines implied in the Text. The Doctrines that may be gathered more expresly follow Doct. 1. None but mortified Christians are true Christians It is manifest th●t none have part in Christ but such as are dead to sin such men only doth Christ acknowledge for he is a Redeemer to none but such as turne from transgress●●n in Iacob Esay 59.20 All that are in Christ are new creatures their old thi●gs are past and all things are new 2 Cor. 5.17 None are Christs but such as beare the similitude of his death in their dying to sin Rom. 6. Men lose their Baptisme if they be not baptized into the death of Christ. Such men as place their happinesse in worldly things are not the right seed but such onely as are borne by promise that is that received life by the promises of grace and a better life Rom. 9.8 Christ was sent to preach glad tidings to such as mourne in Sion Esay 61.1 2 3. The mourners in Jerusalem were the onely men that were marked for God Ezek. 9. Christ will have no Disciples but such as will deny themselves Luke 9. and are not fashioned according to this world Rom. 12.2 And this should teach men to have mortified Christians in greater honour and to esteeme highly of such as will not be corrupted with the excesse of the times and doe shew by a sound conversation that they are weaned from the lust after earthly things and are consesecrated to God and his service We should honour and acknowledge such above all other men in the world yea in the Church It should ●lso compell upon us a care of a mortified life and a daily resisting of sin and the Divell and striving to be made like to Christ. Finally if the count must be made by mortification there will then be but a short count upon earth For looke into Christian Churches and cast out first all open profane persons such as are drunkards fornicators swearers murderers railers against goodnesse such as serve vanity and shew it by strange apparell and such like men secondly all open idolaters and superstitious persons and such as hold damnable opinions thirdly all civill honest men such as have only the praise of men for a harmelesse