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A14185 Lectures upon the vvhole Epistle of St. Paul to the Philippians, deliuered in St. Peters Church in Oxford: by the reuerend and faithfull seruant of Christ Henry Airay ... and now published for the vse of Gods Church by C.P. ... Airay, Henry, 1560?-1616. 1618 (1618) STC 245; ESTC S100494 890,650 1,118

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tongues full of deceit c. So vnpure that euen our mindes and consciences are defiled so vntoward that wee cleane peruert the straight waies of the Lord and in stead of giuing our members weapons of righteousnesse vnto God making them weapons of vnrighteousnesse vnto sinne and in stead of seruing God altogether yeelding our selues seruants vnto sinne Most miserable and wretched is our state darknesse without light igno●rance without vnderstanding foolishnesse without wisedome before such time as all mists of darknes ignorance and foolishnesse be expelled by the bright beames of Gods holy Spirit and we brought vnto the glorious liberty of the sonnes of God Yea and such thou standest as by nature thou art whosoeuer thou art that sleepest in sinne and delightest in vnrighteousnesse making no conscience of thy waies but treasuring vnto thy selfe wrath against the day of wrath and of the declaration of the iust iudgement of God But thou that fearest God and walkest in his waies consider from what bondage into what freedome the Lord hath brought thee how of a childe of wrath of death and of hell he hath brought thee into the glorious libertie of the sonnes of God and made thee an Heire of euerlasting glory how he hath sanctified thy corrupt will and heart and vnderstanding how hee hath new moulded thee and framed thee and renewed thee how hee hath begotten thee againe not by flesh and bloud but by the immortall seed of his holy word consider these things I say and let them be as goades and spurres vnto thee to stirre thee vp as vnto thankefulnesse to thy God so vnto obedience to his will Hath he made thy darknesse to be light walke not in the vnfruitfull workes of darknesse Hath hee freed thee from the bondage of sinne flie from sinne as from a Serpent and haue nothing to doe with the stoole of wickednesse Hath he sanctified thy will and all the powers and faculties of thy soule glorifie thou thy God with all the powers and faculties of thy soule Hath he washed and cleansed thee both in thy body and in thy spirit glorifie thy God both in thy body and in thy spirit So shall the King haue pleasure in thy beauty so shalt thou make true and right vse of thy naturall corruption and of thy regeneration by God his spirit and so shalt thou shew thy selfe to be the sonne of God without rebuke in the middest of a naughty and crooked nation LECTVRE XXXVII PHILIP 2. Verse 15. Among whom ye shine as lights in the world holding foorth the word of life AMong whom ye shine c. In this last clause of the Apostles former reason we haue a notable commendation of the Philippians which the Apostle so truely giueth vnto them that withall in the wisdome of God giuen vnto him hee doth implie a duty or an exhortation that they shew themselues to be such as hee commendeth them to be insomuch that some read these words thus among whom do yee shine as lights c. Their commendation ye see is that they shine amongst that naughty and crooked people with whom they liue euen as lights which shine in darknes and which hold forth the word of life to giue light to them that sit in darknes they are called lights shining lights lights shining in the midst of a naughty and crooked nation lights holding forth the word of life vnto others The whole forme of speach seemeth to be drawne from those high places by the sea-coast whence continually lights and fires are set out for the direction of sea-men into the hauen and safest entrance For euen such the Apostle here commendeth the Philippians to be lights which shined in holinesse of life vnto them that sate in darknesse round about them by the direction of which their light they might come into the hauen of euerlasting rest where they might find rest for their soules Now let vs see what we may obserue hence for our vse 1. In that the Apostle calleth the Philippians light I note the singular prerogatiue and honour of all the faithfull members of Christ Iesus For that which the Apostle here giueth to the Philippians belongeth to all the faithfull All the faithfull children of Christ are called lights shining lights lights shining in the world Now for our better instruction how they are called lights we are to vnderstand that there are foure speciall lights mentioned in the holy Scriptures The 1. is that light Christ Iesus the light of the world and the brightnesse of his father This light by a principall prerogatiue is called that light that true light which lighteth euery man that commeth into the world that sonne of righteousnesse that starre of Iacob that day spring from an high that brightnesse of his fathers person 2. The word of God in many places of the Scriptures is tearmed a light as where it is said Thy word ô Lord is a lanthorne vnto my feete Psal 119.105 2 Pet. 1.19 and a light vnto my pathes As also where the godly are commended by the Apostle Peter for that they attend vnto the sure word of the Prophets as vnto a light that shineth in a darke place By this light the holy Ghost illuminateth the blindnesse and darknesse of our grosse vnderstandings and directeth vs in the waies of God which leade vnto saluation 3. The Apostles and Ministers of Christ Iesus are called lights as where our Sauiour saith vnto them yee are the light of the world Mat. 5.14 Which glorious title is giuen vnto them both because of that testimonie which they giue vnto that true light the euerlasting sonne of God Christ Iesus and because of the Gospell of Christ Iesus which they preach vnto vs. 4. All the faithfull members of Christ Iesus all Christians are called lights as where the Apostle telleth the Ephesians that they were once darkenes Eph. 5.8 but are now light in the Lord and therefore exhorteth them to walke as chrildren of the light and in this place of our Apostle where they are called lights in the world shining among the sonnes of darknesse and holding forth the word of life Now the faithfull are called lights in these respects 1. In respect of Christ Iesus that true light which lighteneth euery man that commeth into the world inasmuch as he hath vouchsafed to communicate his light vnto vs and by the bright beames of his holy Spirit shining into our hearts to expell thence the thicke mists of blindnes darknesse and ignorance For whatsoeuer light the faithfull haue they haue it from him who hath light in himselfe and of himselfe and in whom is no darknesse They borrow their light from him euen as the Moone and the starres doe borrow their light from the Sunne in the firmament For hee is the sonne of righteousnesse which springing from an high hath through the tender mercy of our God visited vs to giue light to them that sit in darknesse and in the shadow of death and to
foreskin of the flesh instituted by God for a signe of the couenant which was made betweene him and Abraham Gen. 17.11 another of the heart in the spirit which is a cutting of from the heart of all carnall affections whereby we might be hindered in the spirituall seruice of God and in our reioycing in Iesus Christ whereof Moses maketh mention where he saith The Lord thy God will circumcise thine heart Deut. 30.6 and the heart of thy seede that thou mayest loue the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soule that thou mayest liue That carnall circumcision was that wherein the false Apostles gloried and of which they told the Philippians that except they were so circumcised they could not be saued But that being a ceremonie which when Christ came was abolished the Apostle saith plainely that that is no circumcision which is outward in the flesh Rom. 2.28 nay he saith farther vnto the Galathians Gal. 5.2 that if they be circumcised Christ shall profit them nothing And therefore the Apostle calleth them the concision because they cut and rent the peace of the Church by vrging that as necessarie to saluation which was abolished and was now not onely vnprofitable but hurtfull The other circumcision which is of the heart in the spirit made without hands by putting of the sinfull bodie of the flesh through the circumcision of Christ that is he circumcision wherein the Apostle glorieth and saith we are the circumcision .i. we are circumcised with the true circumcision that which is outward in the flesh being no circumcision Againe where it is added which worship God in the spirit by worshipping God in the spirit he meaneth the spirituall worshipping of God as if he should haue said we are the circumcision which worship God spiritually not after the outward ceremonies of the law but in the spirit of our minde lifting vp our soules vnto him and reioycing in his holy name Againe where hee saith that they reioyce in Iesus Christ and haue no confidence in the flesh he opposeth the one against the other and both signifieth that the confidence of their saluation is onely in Christ Iesus not in any outward thing either circumcision of the flesh or what outward thing else soeuer and withall implieth t●at they that haue confidence in the circumcision of the flesh or in any outward thing whatsoeuer and not onely in Christ Iesus they indeede reioyce not in Christ Iesus as in the borne of their saluation It is then in briefe as if the Apostle should thus haue said I haue warned you to beware of the concision and doe yee beware of the concision The reason is for they who glory that they are the circumcision are not the circumcision but the concision and we are the circumcision we are circumcised with the true circumcision we I say which worship God not after the outward ceremonies of the law but in the spirit and in truth and which renouncing all confidence of our saluation in the flesh or in any outword thing doe onely reioyce in Christ Iesus as in the horne of our saluation Thus yee see the purpose of the Apostle in this place what he proueth how he proueth it and the meaning of the words Now let vs see what we may obserue hence for our vse and instruction 1. Here I note the Apostle his elegant allusion betweene concision and circumcision where he calleth himselfe and the Philippians the circumcision and the false teachers the concision by way of allusion vnto circumcision whe●eof they boasted in vaine The like allusions we haue diuers times in holy scriptures Esa 5.7 as in Esay The Lord saith the Prophet looked for iudgement but behold oppression the allusion is plaine in the Hebrue betweene mishpat m●shpach and againe for righteousnesse but behold a crying where the allusion is as plaine betweene 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Also in the new Testament as in the Epistle to the Romanes Rom. 12.3 where it is said I say vnto you that no man vnderstand aboue that which is meete to vnderstand but that euery man vnderstand according to sobriety where in the originall the allusion is notable betweene 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Diuers the like might be produced both out of the old Testament and likewise the new but let these for this time suffice Hence I make this obseruation that it is not vnlawfull for the Ministers and teachers of the word sometimes to vse allusions and elegancies of speech for we see that the Holy Ghost by vsing them sometimes hath sanctified the vse of them But yet great moderation and discretion is to be vsed therein lest if we grow to take too great a felicitie and pleasure therein we fall into such a ryming vaine and curious affectation as is vnbeseeming the maiestie of the word and the grauitie of the Minister of the word That rule of the Apostle is by vs diligently to be kept that no iesting or vaine or light or foolish speech proceede cut of our mouthes Eph. 4.29 but only that which is good to the vse of edifying that it may minister grace vnto the hearers From this obseruation yee for your vse may learne not hastily to iudge or presently to condemne such Ministers and Preachers of the word as sometimes vse allusions and other elegancies of speech for yee see the Holy Ghost doth not altogether auoide them And albeit ordinarily the most plaine and the most familiar forme of words be farre the best for you and the most to be accepted by you yet sometimes such an allusion or such an elegancie of speech so graceth the speech as that both it best liketh you and likewise maketh the best impression in you In a word both in the speaker moderation is required that such allusions or elegancies be not too often vsed and in the hearer likewise iudgement is required that such allusions or elegancies be not too rashly condemned 2. It is to be noted that the Apostle saith for we are the circumcision For thereby both the Apostle denieth that circumcision which is made with hands and which is outward in the flesh to be truely circumcision and likewise affirmeth that spirituall circumcision which is made without hands by the spirit in the heart by purging thence all euill affections to be truely circumcision so that not they which are circumcised with carnall circumcision are the circumcision but they onely which are circumcised with spirituall circumcision are the circumcision Whence first I obserue that as all other ceremonies and sacrifices of the law so likewise the circumcision of the flesh had then an end when Christ came in the flesh so that the vse of them afterwards was not onely vnprofitable but hurtfull For albeit it be said both of circumcision and of other ceremonies Gen. 17.13 Ex. 12.14.31.16 and sacrifices of the law
of holy men of God for Abraham as we reade swore vnto Abimelech by God Gen. 21.23 26.31 31.53 that hee would not hurt him nor his children nor his childrens children And Isaac and Abimelech afterwards sware one to another to the like purpose And so Iacob and Laban sware one to another to the like purpose Likewise our Apostle oftentimes in his Epistle protesteth and calleth God to witnesse of that he saith Rom. 1.9 2. Cor. 1.23 12.19 And God himselfe Esay 45.23 Heb. 6.13 because hee had no greater to sweare by sware by himselfe as it is said in the Prophet and as the Apostle witnesseth Lastly it is proued from a necessary consequent for if an oath be a part of Gods worship will it not then necessarily follow that an oath may lawfully be made Now that an oath is a part of Gods worship appeareth by many places of holy Scripture as Es 19.18 where it is said in the Prophet In that day shall fiue Cities in the land of Aegypt speake the language of Canaan and shall sweare by the Lord of hosts Ier. 4.2 that is shall renounce their superstitions and serue God as he hath appoynted And againe where it is said Thou shalt sweare the Lord liueth in truth in iudgement and in righteousnes And therefore the Lord by that Prophet 5.7 in the next Chapter complaineth of Iudah and Hierusalem that they had forsaken him and how did that appeare because they swore by them that were no Gods Thy children saith he haue forsaken mee and sworne hy them that are no Gods So that to sweare by them that are no Gods is to forsake God And why because it is to giue his worship to another euen to them that are no Gods which who so doth he forsaketh God O but will the godly soule say this needed not in such a swearing age to proue the lawfulnes of swearing and will the cursed swearer say this is well indeed that I haue so good allowance for my swearing from the Preacher Hearken therefore yet a while and know how we may protest and sweare lawfully First therefore if wee will sweare lawfully we must sweare by the name of God For both the cōmandement practise are so as already we haue heard the reason therof is very plain for who can witnesse that he that sweareth lyeth not but God onely that beholdeth the heart and knoweth what is in man Or who is omnipotent and able to maintaine and defend him that speaketh truth or to punish and take vengeance on him that sweareth a lye but God onely which is able to destroye both soule and bodie in hell Secondly if wee will sweare lawfully wee must sweare in truth Ier. 4 2. in iudgement and in righteousnesse In truth for the confirmation of the truth because wee may not call God to witnesse a lye least hee giue vs our portion with lyers and swearers in the lake that euer burneth In iudgement vpon causes weighty certaine and necessarie when the glorie of God or the good of our neighbour doth require it because we may not call God lightly or rashly to witnesse vpon triall or vncertainetie or vnnecessarie causes least our iudgement be as theirs that take his name in vaine In righteousnes for the confirmation of things godly iust and lawfull because wee may not call God to witnes things vngodly vniust or vnlawfull lest we be not holden guiltles for taking his name in vaine for thus much those three points imply Thirdly if we will sweare lawfully it must be when wee haue no other way of proofe of our words or confirmation of our promise for if otherwise the thing for which we are to sweare can be debated decided ended then by an oath we are not to sweare as by the end of an oath it doth appeare which is to end a strife so that where the strife may otherwise be ended there an oath is not to be vsed Sweare then wee may lawfully but not otherwise then by the name of God and that in truth and in iudgement and in righteousnesse and that when things cannot otherwise be cleared and ended then by an oath Which serueth first for the confutation of that error of the Anabaptists who deny it to be lawfull for a Christian to sweare at all the plaine contrary whereof wee haue heard euidently proued out of the scriptures The places of scripture whereon they ground their error are two Matth. 5.34 35 36 37. Jam. 5.12 the one the saying of our blessed Sauiour in Matthew the other the words of Iames in his Epistle The saying of our Sauiour in Matthew is Sweare not at all neither by heauen for it is the throne of God c. The words of Iames are Before all things sweare not neither by heauen nor by earth nor by any other oath c. from both which places they conclude that a Christian may not sweare at all For answer whereunto wee must vnderstand 1. that not all kindes of othes are forbidden in these places 2. what kinde of othes are there condemned For the first that not all kinde of othes are forbidden in Mathew appeareth by the very scope and drift of our Sauiour in that place For what was his scope and drift there It appeareth by his exposition there of sundry lawes that his meaning was not to destroy the law for so he saith Mat. 5 17. I came not to destroy the Law and the Prophets but his meaning was to purge the Law from the corrupt glosses of the Pharisees and to open the true meaning of it as he doth first in the Law touching murther and then in the Law touching adulterie and not in the Law touching swearing The Law then not hauing simply forbidden swearing neither doth our Sauiour simply condemne swearing Againe if all kindes of othes be simply here forbidden and onely yea and nay commanded what shall we say for our Apostle that contenteth not himselfe onely with yea and nay What shall we say for our Sauiour himselfe that not therewith content saith Verily verily I say vnto you And againe othes being a part of Gods worship as before we heard if all kinde of othes be here forbidden a Christian then is a part of Gods worship forbidden and condemned Seeing then thus it may appeare that not all kindes of othes are here forbidden let vs now see what kindes of othes are here forbidden and condemned And this will appeare by a short view of the corrupt glosses which the Pharisees added to the Law touching swearing The Law was Thou shalt not forsweare thy selfe but shalt performe thine othes to the Lord. Their glosse was that if any sweare by the name of God or by the things that were immediatly belonging to the seruice of God as by the gold of the Temple or the offering on the Altar vainely or perfidiously not performing his oath he offendeth but if he sweare by any other creature as by heauen
My brethren saith the Apostle be not children in vnderstanding but as concerning maliciousnes be children but in vnderstanding be of a ripe age The Apostle had before signified his owne minde of praying and speaking in strange tongues without vnderstanding and in a knowne tongue with vnderstanding therein taxing their too great admiring of strange tongues and too little regard of knowledge and vnderstanding Now in effect hee tells them that therein they are like vnto little children which if they see faire and great and coloured letters in a booke are in great loue with the letters but care not for the sense and vnderstanding of the words But he exhorteth them be not children in vnderstanding as if he should haue said Children indeed care not for vnderstanding but it may not be so with you yee were children sometimes and cared not for vnderstanding and yee were children sometimes and but yong in vnderstanding and knowledge but yee may not be so still but yee must grow to be of a ripe age in vnderstanding yee must increase in knowledge as in yeeres yee doe increase And lest they should say that Christ would haue them to be like vnto little children he preuenteth that Mat. 18 3. and tells them that he would haue them to be like vnto little children concerning maliciousnesse but concerning knowledge and vnderstanding he would haue them to be no children but of a ripe age So that hence we see that our care is to be that we be not children but men of a ripe age touching vnderstanding .i. that wee may increase and grow forward more and more in knowledge euen from knowledge to knowledge To the like purpose is that of the Apostle where he saith Heb. 6.1 Leauing the doctrine of the beginnings of Christ let vs be led forward vnto perfection He had in the end of the former chapter somewhat sharply told the Hebrewes that when as concerning the time they ought to be teachers yet they had neede to be taught the very principles of the word of God Now therefore he doth exhort them that they would not be still a learning the principles and beginnings of religion but that they would goe forward from perfection to perfection and abound more and more in knowledge We may not then be as idle loyterers which spend their time and profit not but as our time spent in the schoole of Christ doth require of vs so must our profiting be in the knowledge of his will out of his word Yea looke into our owne practise and we shall finde our owne iudgment to be such If wee haue children and set them to their books we looke that according to their time spent thereat their profiting should be and that they should increase in knowledge and learning as they grow in yeares and in time spent at their booke and if they doe not so profit we take them from the schoole and set them to some other thing So that by our owne iudgement so many of vs as are taught in the schoole of Christ we should increase in the knowledge of Christ and as we spend more and more time in the schoole of Christ so should wee abound more and more in the knowledge of Christ and if we doe not so by our owne iudgements we are to bee excluded as non proficients out of the schoole of Christ And what then becomes of vs Nothing then to set vs vnto but as it was said to the vnprofitable seruant Cast that vnprofitable seruant into vtter darknes there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth Matth. 25.30 so shall it be said to such non proficients cast that non proficient scholar into vtter darknes there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth This then first may teach vs to beware of that leauen of theirs that would haue vs misled vp in ignorance and beare the world in hand that ignorance is the mother of deuotion For such a brood of Sathan there is as will tell you that the Scriptures are darke and hard to be vnderstood and perilous to bee read that will highly commend your modestie if yee presume not to read the Scriptures that will tell you it is enough for you to beleeue as the Church beleeueth though yee know not how to giue account of your faith that will allow well of learning nothing and after many yeares to be neuer the wiser in a word that will the sooner suspect you of heresie the more knowledge yee haue in the Scriptures Such are they that would haue praying singing reading and all other rites of the Church done in a strange language that would haue vs barred from the reading of the Scriptures in a knowne tongue that would haue none but great Clerks and Diuines seene in the Scriptures But what saith the Holy Ghost Search the scriptures saith our blessed Sauiour Ioh. 5.39 for in them yee thinke to haue eternall life and they are they which testifie of me Grow saith Peter vnto the Church in grace 2 Pet. 3.18 and in the knowledge of our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ And our Apostle Let the word of Christ dwell in you plenteously in all wisdome Col. 3.16 And in this place his praier is for the Church of Philippi that they may abound more and more in knowledge Now what can be more contrary and repugnant vnto other then this doctrine of the Holy Ghost vnto that doctrine of theirs Our blessed Sauiour sets vs vnto the Scriptures to search them and they would not haue vs to presume to read the Scriptures The Apostle Peter would haue vs to grow in the knowledge of our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ and they would not haue vs looke into the scriptures lest we fall into heresies Our Apostle would haue the word of Christ to dwell in vs plenteously and they would haue vs onely to beleeue as the Church beleeueth and care not though we know not how to giue account of our faith Our Apostle would haue vs to abound more and more in knowledge and they tell vs that ignorance is the mother of deuotion See then whether there be not cause to beware of them and to bid fie vpon the beast that speaketh so presumptuously against the word of God As the Apostle saith vnto the Galatians touching the false Apostles they desire to haue you circumcised Gal. 6.13 that they might reioyce in your flesh so I say vnto you touching these false Apostles they desire to haue you close shut vp in ignorance that they may lead you blindfold at their pleasures into all their deuilish errors and that they may reioyce in their aduantage by your ignorance Beware therefore of them and hearken not vnto them lest if yee erre in your hearts because yee know not his waies through your ignorance in the scriptures he sweare as sometimes he did vnto the Israelites in his wrath that yee shall neuer enter into his rest euen to the heauenly Canaan whereof that
which is his body 2. When ●e saith that at the name c. Whereby is meant that God ●ath made all things subiect vnder his feete and that all crea●res shall confesse that Iesus Christ is the Lord vnto the glo●●e of God the Father It is then as if the Apostle had thus ●●d Christ when he was God humbled himselfe to be man ●nd being God and man he humbled himselfe and became o●edient vnto the death for vs therefore God hath highly ex●lted him that thus humbled himselfe and hath crowned him ●n the heauenly places with glory and honour farre aboue all ●rincipalitie and power and might and domination and e●ery name that is named so that all creatures now doe and ●hall cast downe their crownes and fall downe before him ●nd say praise and honour and glorie be vnto him that set●eth vpon the throne and vnto the lambe for euermore And ●et this be spoken touching the order and the meaning of ●hese words in generall Now let vs a little looke vnto the ●enerall scope of them and see what lessons we may learne ●rom them Wherefore God hath c. The generall scope and drift of ●he Apostle in these 3. verses is by the consequent and good ●nto which God giueth vnto humility further to perswade vs ●nto humilitie and lowlinesse of minde that so if the exam●le of Christ his humiliation cannot preuaile with vs to moue vs vnto humilitie yet the excellencie of that dignity where●nto he was exalted after and for his great humility may per●wade vs thereunto Whence I gather these three obseruati●ns for our instruction 1. Hence I note the gracious goodnesse of our mercifull God who seeketh euery way to win vs vnto that which he requireth of vs. Somtimes he threatneth that so for feare of 〈◊〉 iudgments we may walk in the law that he hath appointed for vs sometimes he punisheth for that in our affliction we see●● him diligently as the Prophet Hosea speaketh somtimes 〈◊〉 promiseth Hos 5.15 2 Pet. 1.4 that by his promises we may be partakers of the d●uine nature as Peter speaks 1. that so we may be drawn from the corruptions which are in the world through lust as the same Apostle there expoundeth himself In this place hauing press●● vs with the example of Christ his humiliation vnto humility he setteth downe the excellencie of that dignitie whereunto Christ was exalted after his humiliation that so seeing the reward or at least the consequence which followeth humilitie we may embrace this holy vertue which hee requireth of vs. A man would haue thought that this should haue beene enough to perswade vs to set before vs the example of Christ Iesus And we when we haue vsed any reason to such or such purpose we thinke we haue done well and bidde him whom we speake vnto looke to the afterclappes if he hearken not vnto vs. But such is the mercy of our good God that hee leaues not with a little but he heapeth reason vpon reason and addeth motiue vnto motiue and rather then he will not preuaile with vs he will doe with vs as we do with little children by most great and precious promises hee will perswade vs vnto that he requireth of vs. O let vs take heede how we hearke● not vnto the voice of so good and gracious a God! 2. Hence I note the dulnesse of our mindes vnto euery good motion of the spirit vnlesse the Lord doe as it were draw vs with the cords of loue and euen force vs by multiplying his mercies towards vs. There must be precept vnto precept line vnto line reason vnto reason and after all this promise or hope of reward or else bee the motion neuer so good yet we will not hearken vnto it Vnto pride and vaine-glory vnto contention and oppressing one of an other wee runne apace and neede no spurre to set vs forward nay not any reason here shall rule vs but runne we will after our owne vnbridled affections But to preuaile with vs to put on tender mercie kindnesse meeknesse humblenesse of minde to perswade vs to be curteous one vnto an other and to submit ●●r selues one vnto an other there must be exhortation vpon ●●hortation the example of Christ Iesus must be proposed ●●to vs and besides all this there must bee certaine hope of ●●ory after humility and well if all this can perswade vs vnto ●●mblenesse and lowlinesse of minde Such is our backward●●sse and so slow are wee to hearken vnto the things that be●ng vnto our peace We should loue our God euen for him●●●fe because he is good and goodnesse it selfe wee should ●●epe his commandements because they are his and good ●●d righteous altogether we should embrace humilitie be●●use we should be conformable to the image of Christ Iesus ●ut to stirre vp our slacknes and dulnesse vnto these and the ●●e duties he hath giuen vs most great and precious promises ●●d assured vs that the performance of these duties shall not 〈◊〉 in vaine in the Lord. Let vs not still harden our hearts as 〈◊〉 the day of slaughter let vs not still stoppe our eares at the ●●ice of the Charmer charme hee neuer so wisely but if no●●ing else will preuaile with vs yet let his promises perswade ● vnto our duties and let the sure hope of glory stirre vs vp ●nto humility 3. Hence I note that the high-way to be exalted into glo●y is to decke our selues inwardly with lowlinesse of minde Which is not only prooued by this example of our Sauiour ●●e consequent of whose humility was an eternall weight of ●lory as here we see but by many other places of Scripture ●oe Our Sauiour Christ saith Whosoeuer exalteth himselfe ●●all be brought lowe and whosoeuer humbleth himselfe shall be ex●lted Salomon saith the reward of humility and the feare of God Pro. 22.4 ●●riches and glorie and life And in an other place the feare of ●he Lord is the instruction of wisedome 15.33 and before honour goeth ●umilitie The reason is giuen by the same Salomon in an other ●rouerbe where hee thus saith 3.34 with the scornefull the Lord ●corneth but he giueth grace vnto the humble which the Apostles Paul Peter and Iames doth thus read God resisteth the proud ●nd giueth grace to the humble How humble and lowly min●●led Dauid and Salomon were the Scriptures do witnesse as al●o how high the Lord exalted the throne of their glorie The like might be said of many others mentioned in holy Scriptures which I willingly now passe ouer because I haue her●tofore pressed this point Only in a word with Saint Iames ● exhort you to cast your selues downe before the Lord and hee sha●● lift you vp Pro. 29.23 The pride of a man shall bring him lowe but the humble in spirit shall enioy glory Swell not therefore with pride one against an other whatsoeuer blessings you haue of wisedome wealth or honour one aboue an other Let nothing be don● among you
giuen of God by grace in Christ Iesus are no way of our selues To take a little view thereof ●e Lord by Ioel exhorteth or commandeth saying Ioel 2.12 Turne vnto mee with all your heart with fasting weeping and mour●● and yet Ieremy sheweth plainly that conuersion vnto the ●●d is wholly the gift of the Lord when hee thus praieth ●uert thou mee and I shall be conuerted Ier. 31.18 for thou art the Lord God Likewise our Sauiour Christ exhorteth Mat. 11.28 Come vnto all yee that are weary and laden and I will ease you and yet sheweth plainly that to come vnto him is wholly from Father when he thus saith No man can come vnto mee Ioh. 6.44 ex●● the Father which hath sent mee draw him In another place exhorteth saying Take heed and beware of couetousnesse Luk. 12.15 to doe thus is wholly from the Lord as the Prophet shewby that his praier vnto the Lord Ps 119.36 Incline mine heart vnto thy ●●●nies and not to couetousnesse Generally the Prophet ex●eth to flie from euill and to doe the thing that is good 37.27 Iames telleth vs that to doe good is wholly from the ●d saying Euery good and perfect gift is from aboue Iam. 1.17 and com●●h downe from the Father of lights c. The like is to be said ●eproofes Ma● 16.14 Christ reproued the eleuen of their vnbeleefe hardnesse of heart and yet the Prophet sheweth that it is Lord that taketh away the stonie heart out of our body EZ 36.26 giueth vs an heart of flesh and the Apostle that faith is gift of the Lord. The like is to be said of all precepts pro●●e● threatnings reproofes admonitions exhortations and like in holy Scripture The Lord vseth them all as meanes to worke his owne will in vs and giueth vnto vs whatsoeuer he requireth of vs He setteth downe lawes and statutes 〈◊〉 as if it were in our owne power to keepe them but that 〈◊〉 may know what to aske of him and with the Prophet to 〈◊〉 O be gratious vnto thy seruant that I may liue and keepe thy 〈◊〉 He promiseth good things to those that will obey him not 〈◊〉 if it lay in vs to obey him if our selues would but that b●● may worke such a will in vs by his promises He admonish●● and exhorteth vs not as if we were able of our selues to w●● or do the things but that so we may looke into our own ●e●nesse and turne vnto him and he may heale vs. You see 〈◊〉 how vaine their whole reason drawne from admonitions exhortations and the like in generall is for that neither 〈◊〉 argue any power in vs of our selues to doe good neither a●● they needlesse and vaine because they are the meanes wh●● by the Lord worketh in vs both to will and to doe that whi●● we are commanded and exhorted Now to the reason de●● in particular from this exhortation in briefe I answer that a●beit the Apostle exhort vs to worke out our owne saluation yet it doth not follow that it is at all in our power so to do Fo● as it followeth in our Apostle it is God which worketh in 〈◊〉 both to will and to doe euen of his good pleasure The Apostle therefore exhorteth vs to make an end of our owne saluation not for that we are able to doe so but to teach ●●flie vnto him who worketh in vs both the will and the de●● euen of his good pleasure Now let vs make this vse of that which hath beene spok●● for the resoluing of this doubt It is not in our owne pow●● we see to flie the euill we are forbidden to doe the good 〈◊〉 are commanded or to embrace the vertuous and godly 〈◊〉 whereunto we are exhorted but wholy from grace on●ly from the Lord. So often then as wee heare or read any p●●cepts or lawes in the booke of God let vs therein ackno●ledge our duties and seeing it is not in our power to keep them let vs flie vnto our God and pray to him Lord g●●● me grace to do that thou commandest and then comma●● mee what thou wilt So often as we heare or read any pr●mises or threatnings let vs therein acknowledge our o●● frowardnesse and seeing it is not in vs to bend at promises threatnings vnlesse he touch vs with his holy spirit let vs 〈◊〉 vnto our God and praie vnto him Lord take from mee ● hard and stony heart and giue me for it a soft and fleshie ●●rt that thy promises and thy threatenings may worke in 〈◊〉 obedience to thy will So often likewise as wee heare or ●●de of admonitions or exhortations let vs therein acknow●●●ge our owne infermities and seeing we cannot of our selues 〈◊〉 or do the thing whereunto wee are exhorted let vs flie to our God and pray vnto him Lord frame my will accor●●●g to thy blessed will that I may doe what thy will is And conclude this point seeing we cannot run this rase where●o the Apostle exhorteth vs but God must worke in vs both 〈◊〉 will and the deede let vs flie vnto our God and pray vn him Lord sanctifie mee with thy holy spirit that by thy ●ce guiding mee I may walke in those good workes which ●●u hast ordained mee to walke in vnto my liues end LECTVRE XXXIV PHILIP 2. ●ers 12.13 With feare and trembling For it is God which worketh in you both the will and the deede euen of his good pleasure WIth feare and trembling From these words some there are that gather that vncomfortable doctrine of the vncertaintie of our saluation Rhem. in loc affirming it to be pride and presumption to dare to be so bold as to be assured of our saluation and cleane contrary to the teaching the Apostle in this place So that the meaning of the A●●stle by their iudgements in this place is this that we should worke our saluation that yet wee should alwaies doubt of ●●r saluation But how farre this is wide of the Apostles meaning may easily appeare by those manifold Scriptures whe●● by the certainety or our saluation is affirmed and consequ●●●ly this vncomfortable doctrine of the doubting of our sal●●tion is vtterly ouerthrowne I am sure Iob. 19 25.26.27 saith Iob that m●●●deemer liueth and he shall stand the last vpon earth and though after my shinne wormes destroy this body yet shall I see God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 flesh whom I my selfe shall see and mine eies shall behold and 〈◊〉 other for mee Lord how this holy man so assureth himselfe of his saluation that he beates vpon it as if hee could ●●satisfie himselfe with any words but fills his mouth with●● ioycing hereat amidst all his afflictions Rom. 8.38 I am sure saith ●● my Redeemer liueth I shall see God in my flesh I my selfe shall 〈◊〉 him mine eies shall behold him none other for mee but I my 〈◊〉 shall behold him He doth as fully assure himselfe of his saluation as if he were already in full
modest conuersation towards our neighbour towards our brethren in these words Doe all things without murmuring c. For as the example of Christ his humilitie and obedience should stirre vs vp vnto all humble obedience vnto our God to walke before him feare and with trembling so ought it likewise to perswade vs vnto all humble and modest conuersation toward our brethren laying aside all secret murmuring and all contentious reasonings and with meeknesse euery one yeelding one vnto another and euery one forbearing one another Doe all things without murmuring c. These words you see are a dehortation and disswasion from things to be eschewed and by consequent they are an exhortation vnto things to bee embraced Two things there are you see which the Apostle disswadeth the one murmuring the other reasonings By murmuring the Apostle I take it in this place doth not so much meane murmuring against God as secret grudgings in our selues against our brethren and priuie whisperings such as closely runne from hand to hand to defame or to disgrace those whom wee like not By reasonings are meant such open discords and contentions as those secret grudgings and priuie whisperings doe for the most part breake out into Both these faults the Apostle would haue auoided and eschewed amongst men one towards another that neither there should be secret grudgings and priuie whisperings one against another neither there should be open quarrelling or contending one with another Now it is further to be vnderstood that in this dehortation from these faults the Apostle implieth an exhortation to those good vertues whereby these bad faults may be redressed namely vnto a modest conuersation with our brethren and a peaceable agreement with all men When the Apostle therefore saith Doe all things without murmuring it is as if he had thus said Let there be no secret grudgings amongst you one against another nor any priuie whisperings running closely from hand to hand to defame or to disgrace one another but let euery one amongst you approue himselfe vnto another in all modestie of conuersation modestly yeelding vnto his superiour and equall and willingly making himselfe equall vnto them of the lowest degree Againe when he saith Doe all things without reasonings it is as if hee had thus said Let there bee no open discords or contentions amongst you either through bearing out your selues one aboue another or vpon any occasion what else soeuer but follow peace and loue with all men and doe all things with patience and mildnesse This I take to bee the meaning of these words Now before wee proceed vnto the opening of the rest that follow let vs see what vse wee may make of this exhortation Doe all things without murmuring The first thing which the Apostle here disswadeth is murmuring Now wee reade of two sorts of murmurers in the holy Scriptures the one of such as murmur against the most high God Lord of heauen and earth So wee reade that the Israelites often murmured Num. 21.5.11.5 sometimes for want of water sometimes for want of bread sometimes for want of the cucumbers and the pepons and the leekes and the onions and the garleeke and the flesh-pots of Egypt and for want of such things as caused their often murmurings it is said that they returned in their hearts into Egypt And such murmurers against God at this day are they who in this our time of want of bread either breake out into such impatient speeches as these What meanes the Lord to kill vs with famine what greater sinners are wee than such and such that haue the world at will and all things at their desire Would God hee would either mend these things or make an end of vs who can endure such a●●ard time better to die any way than to die of famine c. they I say that either breake out into such impatient speeches or through male-contentednesse seeke to raise vp seditions and vprores and rebellions in the common-wealth so to procure a remedie by a worse mischiefe are found to be murmurers against God grudging at that which he doth and seeking a way without him to redresse it But what was the end of those murmurers amongst the children of Israel Some of them were consumed by fire from heauen others were smitten with an exceeding great plague others died being bitten and stung with fierie serpents and of all of them this was true that none of them came into the promised land A fearfull end vpon murmurers against God some die one way and others are slaine another way euery one hath a fearfull end and neuer a one comes into the promised land neuer a one enters into that heauenly rest where only is rest and ioy for euermore As therefore the Apostle exhorted the Corinthians saying 1. Cor. 10.10 Murmur not as some of the children of Israel murmured and were destroied of the destroier so I say vnto you Take heede that none of you be found murmurers against God either for this his iudgement whereby hee now doth most iustly visit our sinnes and our iniquities vpon vs or for any thing else lest his wrath bee kindled against you and there bee none to deliuer you For all these things whereof wee haue spoke came vnto the children of Israel for ensamples and were written to admonish vs vpon whom the ends of the world are come Another sort of murmurers there are which murmure against their brethren grudging either at their wealth or at the loue and fauour or at the credit and preferment wherein they go before them and closely seeking their discredit whispering amongst their neighbours whatsoeuer euill they can deuise against them So the Euangelists euery where testifie that the Scribes and Pharises murmured against Iesus and against his Disciples because they saw that the people fell euery where vnto them and followed them So we read that the Grecians murmured against the Disciples of Christ Act. 6.1 pretending that their widowes were neglected in the daily ministring And this principally is that murmuring which our Apostle in this place would haue abandoned that wee should not maligne one another that we should not haue any grudgings or heartburnings within our selues one against another that we should not secretly and closly seeke the discredit or disgrace one of another A fault whether more bad or more common it is hard to say and that euen amongst neighbours amongst brethren For what more ordinary then one neighbour for some cause or other to murmure against another If hee be our superiour in wealth or in honour or in credit wee murmure against him as too great to dwell so neere vs and be hee neuer so kinde vnto vs yet still we doe imagine that hee beares himselfe too much vpon his wealth or vpon his birth or vpon his place c. and ouerlookes vs. If hee be our equall wee grudge that hee should come forward as well as our selues that he should be as much honoured that hee should be as
warne the Philippians of false teachers euen that the more carefull they saw the Apostle to giue them warning of false teachers they might be so much the more warie of them As then it ought not to grieue vs to speake the same things often vnto you so let it not bee wearisome vnto you to heare the same things often of vs. You see the Apostle saith it is a sure thing and a good thing for you and yee heare the reasons why it is good for you Let this suffice to moderate that ouer great nicenesse and daintinesse that is in some and that such an ouer-itching humor that is in some after varietie that they cannot at all away with it to heare the same things often When the things are of necessarie moment and behoofe for you let it not be tedious vnto to you to heare of them againe and againe and when things are so carefully and so often suggested vnto you aboue all things take heede that yee harken vnto the things so suggested lest that come vpon you which is mentioned in the place of Esay before alledged that is lest when there hath beene precept vpon precept precept vpon precept line vnto line line vnto line there a litle and there a litle and yet yee would not heare afterwards it come to passe by the iust iudgement of God that there be precept vpon precept precept vpon precept line vnto line line vnto line there a litle and there a litle but then hearing you shall heare and not vnderstand and seeing yee shall see and not perceiue For it is a iust thing with God that if yee will not heare when the booke of God is so wide opened vnto you and the same things so often gone ouer and ouer afterwards the word be vnto you as the words of a booke that is sealed vp that is altogether vnprofitable or else that it bee quite taken from you and giuen vnto them that will hearken and obey Let it therefore neither grieue them that speake to speake the same things often when they are good and profitable neither let it seeme tedious and wearisome vnto you that heare to heare the same things often when they are such and aboue all things hearken vnto such things so often suggested lest the things so often spoken vnto you turne vnto your farther iudgement Now let vs see what it was that the Apostle thought it not amisse for himselfe so often to speake of and a sure thing for them so often to heare of it was the taking heede of false teachers such as would seeke to seduce them from that truth of Christ Iesus which he had taught them And this is the exhortation or admonition which now followeth after this excuse of the Apostle for himselfe Beware of dogges c. This is the first principall part which we obserued in this chapter which in briefe is an exhortation or admonition to beware of false teachers and especially the Apostle giueth his caueat of those false Apostles which were then crept in amongst them as the article vsed in the originall doth shew who taught that not Christ alone and faith in his name but circumcision also and the workes of the law were necessarie to iustification and saluation These false teachers who taught this erroneous and false doctrine the Apostle here noteth by the name of doggs of false teachers and of the concision He calleth them dogs in respect of certaine bad qualities wherein they did resemble dogs 1. In respect of their snarling and barking because as dogs they barked at him and snarled at his doctrine and that as much without reason as the dogge that barks not vpon reason but vpon custome 1 Sa. 16.9 And so we see Abishai called Shimei a dogge in respect of his causeles barking against Dauid 2. In respect of their greedinesse because as dogs they minded onely their bellies making as afterward he saith their belly their God And so we see the Prophet called blinde watchmen and dumbe dogges Esay 56.11 greedy dogges which could neuer haue enough 3. In respect of their absurdnesse because as the dogge returneth to his vomit so they of Iewes being made Christians returned againe vnto their olde Iudaisme not teaching Christ purely but making a mixture of Iudaisme and Christianitie Againe he calleth them euill workers 1. in respect of the workes which they vrged because by preaching the necessitie of workes vnto saluation and ioyning them with Christ as workers together with him of our saluation they made those workes which in themselues were not euill euill workes For those workes which as they are done according to the law are good by this addition of necessitie that not Christ alone but they also are necessarie as causes vnto saluation are made euill workes 2. In respect of the euill minde wherewith they vrged these workes because they vrged them in hatred of him and to crosse that which he had taught touching the sole sufficiencie of Christ his righteousnesse vnto saluation 3. In respect of their vnfaithfull working in the Lord his vineyard because together with good seede they did sow tares in the Lord his field ioyning with Christ the workes of the law in the worke of our saluation Lastly he calleth them the concision 1. by allusion vnto circumcision which they vrged as necessarie to saluation Act. 15.1 saying as it is in the Actes Except yee be circumcised after the manner of Moses ye cannot be saued 2. Because by vrging circumcision they did indeed cut the seamlesse coate of Christ and rent the vnitie of the Church which had now receiued the circumcision of Christ through baptisme and had left off that ceremonie of the law 3. Because by vrging circumcision they shewed themselues to be onely cut in the fore-skinnes of their flesh but not to be circumcised in the heart by putting off the sinnefull body of the flesh through the circumcision of Christ Thus the Apostle vpon these causes and respects noteth those false Teachers which were crept in amongst the Philippians and of these hee warneth them againe and againe euen three times to beware Now touching the obseruations hence to be gathered here 1. I note that the Apostle speaketh vnto the Philippians in generall that they should beware of false Teachers Whence I obserue that not Clergie men alone as they call them but euen all the faithfull children of God may and ought to trie and iudge by the Scriptures whether their Teachers Preachers doctrine be true and so to reiect whatsoeuer they finde not proued by the Scriptures or agreeable to the Scriptures For how should the Philippians beware of false Teachers they should examine and trie their doctrine and receiue that which was agreeable to that which he had taught them and reiect that which was not agreeable thereunto So wee read it registred to the perpetuall commendation of the men of Berea Act. 17.11 that they searched the Scriptures to trie whether those things
Church so reformed but hath somewhat amisse 286 All Christians are to striue to be like minded in the Lord. 289 Contentions to be auoided 299 Humilitie a preseruatiue against contention and vaine-glory 305 Christ Iesus a perfect patterne of humilitie 315 The obedience of Christ the ground of all our comfort 325 Christian confession of Christ necessarie 363 To begin in the spirit is not sufficient vnlesse we continue 396 Doubting of saluation a desperate and vncomfortable doctrine 402 We are to passe the time of our dwelling here in feare 411 Murmuring against God or men forbidden Christians 420 How Christians may liue blamelesse in the midst of a crooked nation 438 All the faithfull are lights in the world 443 The glory of Gods Minister is the gaine of soules 456 The issue of all actions is in the hand of God 467 A great sinne in Ministers to seeke their owne more than Christs 478 Superiors in place or gifts ought not to contemne their inferiors 503 The Ministry is a painefull labour 507. and a warfare 512 Children of God neuer quite rid of sorrow in this life 546 The Ministers of Christ are to be entertained with all respect 549 Christians are not to respect their liues for the worke of Christ 558 CHAP. III. THe Minister of God is to temper his speech according to the quality of his hearers 568 The ioy of Christians must be in the Lord. 572. 7 6 False teachers are diligently to be auoided 589 Christians in some cases may lawfully stand vpon their owne commendations 624 Conuersion workes an alteration in the whole man 632 Good workes are no part of our righteousnes before God 634. 659. 674 The best of our workes are but losse or dung and how 637. 661 The knowledge of Christ Iesus is excellent and precious 649 To renounce our owne righteousnes is both difficult and yet necessarie 657 Righteousnes imputed and inherent in iustification cannot stand together 671 We are iustified by righteousnes imputed 677 Experimentall knowledge of Christ necessarie to a Christian 684 To be afflicted for Christ is an aduantage 700. 707 The best of Gods Saints in this life come short of perfectiō 716. 735 Gods children may be certainely assured of their saluation 726 Christians are to striue toward perfection 721. 729. 747 Life eternall the reward of our Christian race 753 God alone opens the heart to attend vnto the word 774 In our Christian imitation we are to make choice of the best examples 790 It is not alwaies safe to follow a multitude 808. 905 The reward of the impenitent is damnation 815 We are here but pilgrims our Citie is aboue 832 Christ will certainely come the second time to iudgement 843 The faithfull desire and long for that comming 846 Christ will raise vp his children from the graue to glory 854 CHAP. IV. MInisters to instruct and admonish publikely priuately 736 It is a Christian dutie to compose quarrels contentions 738 Christians are to reioyce in the Lord in all estates 756 For vnities sake we are to yeeld of our right 774 The prouidence of God is euer neere his children to succour them in troubles 791 Worldly and distrustfull care by all meanes to be auoided 800 Thanks-giuing vnto God a necessarie Christian dutie 809 Whatsoeuer thing● are true honest c. we are to practise 826 Practise must be ioyned with profession 848 The Minister should be a patterne of holines to his people 850. 796 Gods graces are not alwaies alike manifest in his children 869 We are charitably to censure the slips of our brethren 869 We are to be cōtent with that estate wherin God hath placed vs. 875 The power of doing any good is from Christ 892 Ministers are to partake of our temporall things 901 Good workes further our reckoning in the day of Christ 915 Workes of charitie are sweet smelling sacrifices 923 God will surely recompence what good soeuer is done vnto his Saints 929 Alwaies in all things God is to be praised 939 ERRATA PAg. 117. for Sauiour read sauour p 153. in whatsoeuer good deleatur p. 245 secrets read streets p. 249. conuersion r. conuersation p. 404. promises read praemises p. 493. was a mother read was as a mother p. 500. courses of Gods house read courts p. 590. Martyn read Martyr p. 751. viri fraetres deleatur p. 769. diuine eyes read dimme eyes p. 809. Et hoc sciamus fortiorem c. deleatur Chap. 4. in the beginning for folio 721. read 865. 866. and so forwards to the end LECTVRES ON THE WHOLE Epistle of S. PAVL to the PHILIPPIANS LECTVRE I. CHAPTER I. Verse 1. Paul and Timotheus the seruants of Iesus Christ to all the Saints in Christ Iesus which are at Philippi with the Bishops and Deacons 2. Grace be with you and peace from God our Father and from the Lord Iesus Christ WHEN first it pleased the Lord to call me to this set worke in this place by reason of my short time to deliberate I chose for the time that text of scripture which was appointed to be read for the Epistle the next Sabbath beginning at the 5 verse of the 2 chapter of this Epistle purposing afterward to make choise of some other scripture which happily might better fit this place But so it pleased the Lord to dispose that I should goe forward euen throughout the Epistle vnto the end and the last day conclude my obseruations therevpon in your hearing Now I haue thought good againe to begin with that whereof I haue made an end that so if the Lord will the meaning of this whole Epistle and the doctrines thereof may in good time be deliuered in your hearing Paul and Timotheus I shall not neede to speake much touching the occasion wherevpon the Apostle wrote this Epistle because I haue already spoken almost of all the things that occasioned it The Philippians hauing heard of the Apostles imprisonment at Rome sent their Minister Epaphroditus vnto him with reliefe from them to supply his necessities Wherevpon Epaphroditus comming to Rome told the Apostle the state of the Church at Philippi how that there were false Apostles crept in amongst them which vrged circumcision and the works of the Law and that the Philippians constantly withstood them The Apostle therefore to commend their constancy for their further incouragement therevnto to arme them against the false teachers for their cleare satisfaction in the points which they vrged and to giue them thanks for their great liberalitie towards him wherein they shewed their care for him wrote this Epistle vnto them Wherein as in all other his Epistles is 1. set downe the inscription 2. the salutation 3. the body of the Epistle it selfe In the inscription 1. we haue the persons saluting 2. the persons saluted The persons saluting are described 1. by their proper names and then by a title of dignitie commune to them both The names of the persons saluting are Paul and Timotheus Paul called also sometimes Saul the
this purpose then the rest for 1. it is a vision and no thing so done as here is set downe and therefore no cleare argument will hence be drawne Againe here is nothing spoken of the saints in heauen for it is generally agreed vpon that the 24 elders represent the Church militant here on earth whose conversation is in heauen whose golden violls full of sweet odours were their own praiers powred out of faithfull hearts vnto the Lord. Lastly they say that praying one vnto another here on earth to be assisted by their praiers is lawfull therefore praier vnto Saints in heauen is lawfull But to this wee answer 1. that to desire one anothers praiers is warranted by the word which they grant but to request the praiers of the Saints departed hath no warrant in the word howsoeuer they contend the contrary 2. There is no such reason of desiring the praiers of the Saints in heauen as of desiring one anothers praiers for wee know one anothers necessities but they know not our necessities as hath beene proued 3. Our praying one for another to be holpen by their praiers is a godly request to our brethren but no religious invocation of them as by their merits or worthinesse to bee brought into Gods fauour such as is praier vnto Saints And as we are in a Christian sort to giue thanks one vnto another for benefits receiued so are we in a Christian sort to request one anothers praiers But that religious thanksgiuing and that religious invocation whereof we now speake are in no sort due to any but to God So that the Saints departed not knowing what wee say or thinke nor giuing either grace or glory to vs nor any way warranted by the scripturs to haue such honor giuen vnto them we conclude that we are not to pray or to giue thanks to them Nay absolutely we say that it is vtterly vnlawfull to pray or giue thanks to them For 1. praier and thanksgiuing are honors onely due vnto the Lord and therefore he saith Call vpon me in the day of trouble Psal 50. and I will deliuer thee and thou shalt glorifie me praise me giue thanks vnto me Where albeit the word onely be not expressed but it be said Call vpon me as neither it is expressed in Deuteronomie but said thou shalt feare the Lord thy God Deut. 10.20 and thou shalt serue him yet as our Sauiour Christ sheweth that it is there to be vnderstood by his adding of it Matth. 4.10 and saying him onely shalt thou serue so is it plaine that in this place where the Prophet speaketh of the same thing it is vnderstood as if he had said Call vpon me onely and I will deliuer thee and thou shalt glorifie mee onely Therefore it is vtterly vnlawfull either to pray or to giue thanks vnto the Saints vnlesse we will communicate that to others which belongeth vnto him and so make other Gods beside him Exod. 20.3.23 and with him contrary to the commandement 2. It is vnlawfull to beleeue in them which they will grant therefore vnlawfull to pray or to giue thanks vnto them for so it is written How shall they call on him in whom they haue not beleeued Rom. 10.14 3. To pray vnto Saints is iniurious vnto Christ who is ordeined the only mediator betweene God and vs 1 Tim. 2.5 Rom. 8.34 who sitteth at the right hand of God and maketh continuall request for vs Heb. 4.16 Ioh. 16.23 vnto whom we may goe boldly and for whose sake whatsoeuer we aske the Father in his name he giueth it vs. Many other arguments of like weight might here bee brought to the same purpose But these for this time may suffice Neither let any man thinke that because wee thus teach we make not that reckoning of the Saints departed which we ought Yes beloued of the blessed Virgin Mary we say that shee was blessed aboue other women that shee was dearely beloued of God that shee was adorned with excellent gifts and graces of Gods holy spirit and that her memory is to be reuerenced for euer and of all the Saints departed we say that their memory is blessed and that they are to be commended vnto the Church that by their doctrine and examples others may be strengthned in true faith and inflamed to follow true godlinesse yea and that in a generall desire both for vs and for themselues and for all the elect of God they pray that the day of our refreshing were come and that all the people of God were ioyned in one and that their enemies were vanquished and destroyed and farther that it may bee that God sometimes may reueale some things in particular vnto them at his pleasure and as it seemeth good vnto him Onely as the Holy Ghost hath taught vs so wee teach you that in the word is nothing written whereby to proue that they know our affaires in particular that they pray for vs in particular or that they doe any thing for vs in particular and therefore that we are not to pray vnto them or to giue thanks vnto them but onely to the Lord to whom alone that honor is due Giue thanks therefore ô Israel vnto God the Lord in the congregations from the ground of thine heart Psal 68.26 55.17 Pray vnto the Lord as Dauid did euening and morning and at mid-day and that instantly As your occasions are for blessings in good things or deliuerance from euill so let your requests be shewed vnto God in praier and supplication with giuing of thanks Yea in the middest of troubles giue thanks vnto the Lord that ye are not ouercome of them and pray vnto the Lord that he will giue you patience in them And amongst all things giue thanks vnto the Lord for that fellowship which ye haue with other Churches in the gospell and pray vnto the Lord that yee may continue in that grace wherein yee stand through the gospell of your saluation vnto your liues end And I am perswaded As before the Apostle testified his loue toward the Philippians by his reioycing on their behalfe for the grace of God already bestowed on them so now likewise he testifieth his loue towards them by signification of his assured hope of Gods farther mercy towards them in their perseuerance in the same grace vnto the end Where 1. he signifieth his assured hope of their perseuerance vers 6. 2. Hee setteth downe the reason which caused him so assuredly to hope thereof namely their piety and his loue of them v. 7. 3. He maketh earnest protestation of his loue towards them vers 8. For the first the Apostle sheweth his great confidence and assured hope of their perseuerance when he saith I am perswaded of this same thing c. And closely he implieth a reason of his confidence drawne from the constant immutabilitie of God in his doings when hee saith that he which hath begun c. for it is as if hee had thus reasoned
that they were partakers of his bands for the defence and confirmation c. Whence I obserue that to suffer bands imprisonment persecution and the like for the Gospels sake is a speciall grace and gift of God So the Apostle againe in the latter end of this chapter affirmeth saying Vnto you it is giuen for Christ Phil. 1.29 that not onely yee should beleeue in him but also suffer for his sake Whence it is plaine that as faith in Christ Iesus so to suffer for his sake is a speciall gift of God And herevpon the Apostles reioyced when they were beaten Act. 5.41 that they were counted worthy to suffer rebuke for Christ his name 2 Cor. 11. And our Apostle reioyced asmuch in his sufferings as in any thing And why but because they counted their sufferings as speciall gifts and graces vpon them Where yet first we must note that simply to suffer bands and imprisonment persecution and trouble is no grace or gift of God but to suffer these things for Christ his sake for the Gospels sake for righteousnes sake And therefore Peter saith Let no man suffer as a murtherer 1 Pet. 4.15 or as a theefe or as an euill doer or as a busie-body in other mens matters But if any man suffer as a Christian 16. .i. for Christ his sake and the gospels let him not be ashamed but let him glorifie God on this behalfe Secondly that to suffer bands and persecution for Christ his sake and the gospels is no grace or gift of God in it selfe and in the nature of the thing but onely by way of consequent for if to suffer bands or affliction for the gospels sake were in it selfe and in the nature of the thing a grace and gift of God then were we to pray for affliction and trouble for the Gospels sake as we doe for other graces of the spirit But now no man doth pray to be tried and troubled to be persecuted and imprisoned for the Gospells sake neither is any man so to pray because this were in deede to tempt God But our praier is for strength and patience and helpe in trouble whensoeuer it shall please the Lord by troubles for the Gospels sake to try vs as the praiers of the godly at all times doe shew To suffer bands then and trouble for the Gospels sake is no grace of God in it selfe but onely in euent and by consequent For what is the euent fruit and consequent of suffering for the Gospels sake First in respect of our selues it bringeth forth the fruits of patience experience and hope as it is written We reioyce in tribulation knowing that tribulation bringeth forth patience Rom. 5.3 and patience experience and experience hope and hope maketh not ashamed It is the meanes to make vs like vnto the Sonne of God as it is written 8.29 Whom God knew before he predestinate to be made like to the image of his Sonne Where by the order of our election hee sheweth that afflictions in generall are the meanes to make vs like vnto the Sonne of God And it causeth vnto vs eternall glory in the heauens as it is written Matth. 5.10 Blessed are they which suffer persecution for righteousnes sake 11 for theirs is the kingdome of heauen Blessed are yee when men reuile and persecute you and say all manner of euill against you for my sake 12. falsly reioyce and be glad for great is your reward in heauen Againe in respect of God by suffering trouble bands and death for the gospels sake God is glorified as it is written This spake Iesus vnto Peter Joh. 21.19 signifying by what death he should glorifie God And thereby also the power of Christ dwelleth in vs as it is written 2 Cor. 12. Very gladly will I reioyce in mine infirmities that the power of Christ may dwell in me because the power of Christ is most seene in helping our infirmities in loosing our bands and deliuering vs out of troubles And againe in respect of the Church by the sufferings of the Saints for the Gospell many children are strengthned and many begotten vnto the Church as it is written in this chapter afterward Many of the brethren in the Lord are boldened through my bands Phil. 1.14 and dare more frankly speake the word To which purpose also it is said that the blood of the Martirs is the seede of the Church Because then of the grace which followeth our bands and troubles for the Gospels sake both in respect of God and of his Church and of our selues therefore it is that they are called a grace and gift of God So that to suffer bands and troubles for Christ his sake and the Gospels is a grace and gift of God nor in the nature of the thing but because of the grace giuen vs constantly and patiently to endure those troubles and because of the grace which issueth thence for the good of our selues for the glory of God and for the benefit of his Church Yea but if to suffer bands and affliction and trouble for Christ his sake and the Gospels were a grace and gift of God any way why should the children of God be often so much perplexed thereat as they are why should they not alwaies be more welcome vnto them then they are For answer whereunto we must vnderstand that in the children of God there is the flesh and the spirit an outward man and an inward man Are then the children of God often perplexed at their bands and sufferings for Christ his sake and the Gospels It may be in their flesh and outward man but in their spirit and inward man they are alwaies welcome vnto them as our Apostle saith though our outward man perish 2 Cor. 4.16 and euen sinke vnder the burthen of our afflictions yet the inward man is renued daily and made stronger and stronger through afflictions And so we must vnderstand all the places of scripture where the Saints seeme to faint vnder their afflictions Dauid in his Psalmes often complaineth of his troubles no doubt because they were heauy vnto his outward man but vnto his inward man they were so welcome that he saith Psal 119.71 It is good for me that I haue beene afflicted that I may learne thy statutes and againe Before I was afflicted I went astray 67. but now I keepe thy word So our Apostle saith that he was pressed out of measure passing strength through affliction 2 Cor. 1.8 so that his outward man no doubt was not able to susteine them yet in his inward man he reioyced in them and boasted of them and fainted not vnder them So our blessed Sauiour himselfe saith Mat. 26.38 My soule is very heauy euen vnto the death so that by his owne will he would haue had that cup to passe from him but knowing his Fathers will immediatly he addeth neuertheles not as I will but as thou wilt So that
life of righteousnesse in himselfe that as he knew by the word Christ his resurrection to haue such a vertue so by experience in himselfe he might know Christ his resurrection to haue such a vertue And this care the Prophet exhorteth all men vnto where he saith Psal 34.8 Taste and see how gracious the Lord is Where yee may not thinke that the Prophet speaketh as if the gracious goodnesse of the Lord could be tasted on with the mouth or seene with the eye but his meaning is that such is the gracious goodnesse of the Lord vnto his children that they may haue as sound experimentall knowledge thereof as if they should taste it with their mouths or see it with their eyes It is then as if the Prophet had thus said Know yee doe the gracious goodnesse of the Lord by his manifolde mercies and more then so yee may know it by your owne experience Acknowledge therefore him to bee gracious whom by your own experimentall knowledge ye doe as it were taste and see to be gracious As then the Prophet doth exhort vs and as our Apostle both by example and exhortation moueth vs our care should be that besides our knowledge out of the word we might haue a feeling knowledge of that wee know out of the word by experience in our selues This then should teach vs to obserue the mercies and iudgements of the Lord to obserue the proofe and experience in our daily life of such things as wee know by the word that so we may haue not a contemplatiue onely but an experimentall knowledge of things in our selues As for example the scripture telleth vs that the poore crieth and the Lord heareth him and saueth him out of all his troubles Psal 34.6 This we know to be true because wee finde it so in the word But our care should be farther to know it by a feeling experience in our owne selues We must then obserue the mercies of the Lord in hearing vs when we call vpon him and deliuering vs in euery needfull time of trouble so shall we know not only by the word but by experience in our own selues that the Lord heareth the poore when they cry vnto him and saueth them out of all their troubles Psal 34.7 So Dauid besides this knowledge out of the word 1 Sam. 17.37 that the Angell of the Lord pitcheth round about them that feare him and deliuereth them had obserued the truth of it by his owne experience in his deliuerance out of the paw of the Lyon Matth. 16.18 and out of the paw of the Beare and thereupon was bold to encounter that great Goliah that vncircumcised Philistim Againe we know that the gates of hell shal not preuaile against Christ his Church because the scripture saith so But will wee so know it to be so as if our owne senses should tell vs that it were so Then we must obserue the stormes and tempests the persecutions and troubles the batteries and assaults that Satan in his members makes against the Church and how the Lord bringeth all their counsels to naught and maketh their deuises to be nothing else but the imagination of a vaine thing And thus in all things we must obserue that by long experience our spirituall senses may be exercised to know the truth of euery thing that wee know out of the word But so carelesse commonly we are that wee passe ouer the mercies and the iudgements of the Lord without obseruation at all whereby we might grow in all iudgement and sound experience It may be that some of vs sometimes will desire to know somewhat out of the scriptures touching the Sacraments touching the resurrection touching faith touching good workes c. But what is it It is onely to know it there it is not to haue a feeling of it in our owne soules If wee haue the text of scripture for proofe we thinke we haue knowledge enough but for proofe out of our owne experience in our owne soule we look not after it But beloued ye see we should haue a care as to abound in knowledge out of the Scriptures so in sound iudgment out of a feeling experience in our selues of the truth of that we know Let vs not therefore ●ightly passe ouer the things that we know out of the word but let vs labour to increase in a feeling knowledge of them in our owne soules Let vs obserue in our daily experience that as it is written so it is indeed that when we heare or read such and such things out of the word our owne soules within vs may giue witnesse vnto the same and say it is so indeede in mine owne experience I finde it to be most true Thus the Apostle exhorteth and thus it behoueth vs to doe The next thing which here I note is that the Apostle praieth for the Philippians that their loue may abound more and more in knowledge and in all iudgement which is that their loue might bee founded and grounded in sound knowledge and in sound iudgement that each hauing helpe of other and each being furnished by other they might the better discerne things that differ c. Whence I obserue yet a farther continuall care necessarie for all Christians and that is that their loue may abound in knowledge and in all iudgement Though saith the Apostle I had all knowledge and had not loue I were nothing 1 Cor. 13.2 So on the other side though we say we haue all loue and haue not knowledge it is nothing for what is all our loue if it be not grounded in knowledge and in iudgement Then these are good when they grow vp together and each hath helpe of other and which of these soeuer growes vp without other like vnto Ionas gourd it will quickly wither Our care then must be that our loue may abound in knowledge and in all iudgement In knowledge that we may know on whom our loue ought principally to be set And in all iudgement that knowing whom we ought to loue we may loue them whom wee ought Gal. 6.10 and as we ought Let vs doe good saith the Apostle vnto all men but especially vnto them which are of the housholde of faith Here we are taught whome we ought principally to loue We are to loue all men but especially them that are of the houshold of faith thē that are ioyned vnto vs in the band of Christianity And knowing that they are those whō we ought principally to loue we are to loue them in deed in truth the more neerely that they are linked vnto vs in the bands of Christianitie the more dearely we are to loue them Otherwise our loue If it be not in knowledge and in all iudgement may do more harme then good euen as wee see that zeale doth without knowledge for it was in zeale but without knowledge Gal. 1.14 that Paul persecuted the Church of God extreamely and wasted it And it was in
we are iustified before God Thirdly let this teach vs how to examine our workes whether they be good or no. Are they the fruites of righteousnesse Do they proceed from a true and liuely faith in Christ Iesus Is the fountaine pure whence they spring and their end good whereunto they tend Then bee bolde they are good workes Otherwise if there bee no such warrant for them seeme they neuer so good yet they are not good Examine but our works according to this rule and surely we will not all of vs be found full of good workes The third thing which here I note is that the Apostle saith that these fruites of righteousnesse wherewith hee would haue the Philippians filled are by Iesus Christ Whence I obserue the Author of euery good worke in vs and that is Christ Iesus by the grace of his holy spirit 2 Cor. 3.5 for as the Apostle saith We are not sufficient of our selues to thinke any thing as of our selues but our sufficiencie is of God Now if of our selues we be not sufficient to thinke a good thought but that must onely be suggested by Gods spirit then how shall wee bee sufficient of our selues to doe any thing that is good Nay our Apostle tels vs in the next Chapter 13. that it is God which workes in vs both the will and the deed euen of his good pleasure Neither thought of the heart nor affection of the will nor worke of the hand but if it be good it is by the operation of the holy spirit in vs. Nay take an argument euen from hence Good workes they are the fruites of righteousnesse Now doth the fruite of a tree bud or grow by the labour or skill of man Nay hee planteth and watereth but God onely giues the fruite in due season Right so it is not in man to doe that is good but if he doe that is good it is of God Worke of himselfe he may and to worke that which is euill hee is too proane of himselfe but if he worke any thinke that is acceptable vnto God it is wholly by the spirit of God And why That God may be all in all and that he may haue the glorie of all Let this sufficiently warne vs to beware of them and arme vs against them that would perswade vs that wee are able of our selues to doe that is good at least if wee be holpen by grace If wee thinke or will or doe any thing that is good whatsoeuer fruite of righteousnesse it is that is in vs it is by Iesus Christ not of our selues for then we had wherein to reioyce in our selues but only of his good pleasure that by his good spirit worketh it in vs. This our Apostle telleth vs and this wee learne from him and if any man preach vnto vs or teach vs otherwise then this that wee haue receaued let him bee accursed Secondly let this teach vs vnto whome all praise is ●ue for whatsoeuer good is in vs. Whatsoeuer good is ●n vs it is by Iesus Christ So that our song is alwaies to ●e as the song of the Angels in the Apocalips Praise Apoc. 5.13 and honour and glorie and power be vnto him that sitteth vpon the ●hrone and to the lambe for euermore His name is to bee blessed and the power of his spirit is to bee acknowledged in whatsoeuer good in whatsoeuer good worke is wrought in vs. The last thing which here I note is touching the end of good workes which as they are by Iesus Christ as the author and worker of them in vs so they are to be done to the glorie and praise of his name Whence I obserue vnto what end our workes must be done if they be good and that is vnto the glorie and praise of God Ye know that of the Apostle where hee saith Whether yee eate 1 Cor. 10.31 or drinke or whatsoeuer ye doe doe all to the glorie of God As also that of our Sauiour where he saith Matth. 5.16 Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good workes and glorifie your father which is in heauen And that of Peter 1 Pet. 2.12 where he saith Haue your conuersation honest amōg the Gentiles that they which speake euill of you as of euill doers may by your good workes which they shall see glorifie God in the day of the visitation By which and many other places which might be alleaged to this purpose it appeareth that the end whereunto our workes if they bee good must bee referred must be the glorie and praise of God that thereby he may be glorified both by vs and by others which see our good workes Here then first we learne not to credite any that shall tell vs that any action of any vnregenerate man can be good For what is the end of such men in their actions Is it the praise and glorie of God Nay it is their owne praise and the praise of men which they seeke after in all the most glorious things that they doe But hence wee learne that so our workes are good works if they be by Iesus Christ vnto the glorie and praise of God Secondly hence we learne that the end of our good workes is not to be that thereby we may merite heauen but that thereby God may bee glorified Nay if our workes bee thereby to merite heauen they cannot be to the glorie and praise of God For how much so euer is giuen to merite so much is taken from the glorie of God Either therefore we must renounce all merite or else whatsoeuer we say our workes are not to the glorie of God Thirdly this teacheth vs whatsoeuer we doe to do it to the honour and praise of God Let this therefore bee our end in all that euer wee doe that thereby God may be glorified and let vs know that so onely that which we doe is good if we do it to this end LECTVRE XIII PHILIP I. Verse 12. I would yee vnderstood brethren that the things which haue come vnto me are turned rather to the furthering of the Gospell 13. So that my bands in Christ are famous throughout all the iudgment hall in all other places 14. Insomuch that many of the brethren in the Lord are boldened through my band and dare more frankly speake the word WE haue spoken of the Apostles exordium or entrance to his Epistle and therein of such things as whereby he testified his loue towards the Philippians thereby to winne their attention vnto him and likewise of such obseruations as that scripture offered together with such vses and instructions thence as seemed most behouefull for 〈◊〉 Now in the rest of this chapter is set downe the Apo●●les narration Wherein first he tells them of his pre●●nt state how at this present when he wrote vnto them ●atters stood with him and this he doth from vers 12. 〈◊〉 19. Secondly hee tells them for hereafter what his ●ope is namely that
we suffer with Christ we shall also reigne with Christ Where it i● to be noted that the Apostle saith this is a sure word this is a true saying that if we suffer with him we shall also reigne with him This then is a promise of the Lord vnto his children that loue him that if they suffer with him for his sake and his Gospels they shall also reigne with him and be glorified with him So that either the godly must doubt of the Lord his promises all which are yea and amen most certaine and sure or else the godly may assure themselues that their sufferings and their wrongs shall turne to their saluation in the day of Christ Iesus For what better assurance then that which is grounded on the Lords promise Or what plainer promises can there be then these of the Apostle in these places or rather of the Holy Ghost by the Apostle And therefore the Apostle saith in another place that ●t is a righteous thing with God to recompense tribulation to them which trouble others and to them that are troubled rest 2 Thess 1.6.7.10 when the Lord Iesus shall shew himselfe from heauen with his mighty Angels and shall come to be glorified in his Saints It is a righteous thing with God righteous indeed for his iustice sake to recompense tribulation to them that trouble others and righteous for his promise sake to recompense rest to them that are troubled Because then God is righteous and keepeth promise for euer therfore the godly may assure themselues that their sufferings and wrongs shall turne to their saluation in the day of Christ Iesus Here then is a notable consolation for all the godly in Christ Iesus against all crosses persecutions and troubles whatsoeuer As Christ was to suffer many things and so to enter into his kingdome so the godly in Christ Iesus are through many tribulations to enter into the kingdome of God But the comfort is that they shall all turne vnto their saluation in the day of Christ Iesus when they shall be for euer in the presence of the throne of God Apoc. 7.15.16 and serue him day and night in his Temple when they shall hunger no more nor thirst any more nor the sunne shall light on them nor any heat when he that sitteth on the throne shall dwell among them 17 and the Lambe which is in the middest of the throne shall gouerne them and wipe all teares from their eyes as the Lambe himselfe witnesseth touching them that haue suffered tribulation and washed their long robes in the bloud of the Lambe 14. The flesh I know will suggest and say in the meane while our case is hard no man with vs euery mans hand against vs we hunger and thirst we are reuiled and persecuted we are cast into prison and made the talke and wonder of the world we are driuen to many hard shifts and put to shreude plunges But what of all this when wee know that these shall turne to our saluation Be they what they will how great they will how lasting they will yet they are but light and but for a moment in respect of that farre most excellent and eternall weight of glory which they cause vnto vs as our Apostle witnesseth where he saith that our light affliction which is but for a moment 2 Cor. 4.17 causeth vnto vs a farre most excellent and an eternall weight of glory Here is the fruit and consequent of our affliction glory our affliction causeth vnto vs glory and here is both the smallnes and the shortnes of our affliction in comparison of that glory which shall be reueiled be it neuer so great and heauy it is but small and light in comparison of that farre most excellent glory be ●t neuer so long and lasting it is but for a moment in comparison of that eternall weight of glory laid vp for vs in the heauens Howsoeuer therefore when we suffer any crosse persecution or trouble these things for the time be grieuou● vnpleasant vnto vs as no chastizing for the present seemeth to be ioyous but greeuous Heb. 12.1 yet seeing they bring the quiet fruit of righteousnes vnto them that are thereby exercised seeing they cause vnto vs a farre most excellent and an eternall weight of glory seeing they shall turne to our saluation let vs be of good comfort whatsoeuer in this kinde doth befall vs. And let vs 1. as the Apostle willeth runne with patience the race that is set before vs looking vnto Iesus the author and finisher of our faith 2. who for the ioy that was set before him endured the ●rosse and despised the shame and is set at the right hand of the ●hrone of God And whatsoeuer our sufferings be let it be with vs as it was with the Apostle that with him we may say as the sufferings of Christ abound in vs 2 Cor. 1.5 so our consolation aboundeth through Christ Againe here is a good ground and warrant for vs against ●hat vncomfortable doctrine of doubting of our saluation For if we may assure our selues that our sufferings and our wrongs shall turne to our saluation then may wee assure our selues of our saluation Yea but it will be said what an argument and reason is this Paul might therefore wee may I say it is a good one because vpon the same ground that he might we may Yea but he might know this by the reuelation of the spirit which now we are not to looke for True but he might also know this out of the holy scripture where the Lord hath passed his promise for this and so we may on the same promise whereon he might build his knowledge and assurance on the same may we and all the faithfull children of God build our knowledge and assurance the promise being made vnto all that loue God and are in Christ Iesus Many doubts indeed we haue and full of distrustfulnesse we are oftentimes euen the best of vs but yet yee see that vpon good ground of Gods promise by the example of our Apostle we may assure our selues of our saluation if as the Apostle did so we doe belong vnto Christ Iesus at least if we suffer persecution and trouble for his sake for so farre this place will go that if we suffer persecution and trouble for Christ his sake then we may assure our selues of our saluation because we may assure our selues that our sufferings and troubles shall turne to our saluation Suffer not your selues therefore to be deceiued by those vncomfortable teachers of doubting which teach that not any man to whom it is not reuealed by the spirit in particular can be sure of his saluation but onely in an vncertaine hope As this place doth shew that such of the godly as suffer persecution and trouble may assure themselues that their troubles shall turne to their saluation and so consequently may assure themselues of their saluation so many other places
that being God hee for our ●●kes became also man how then ought wee to submit our ●elues one vnto another in all humblenesse and meeknesse of ●inde The like motiue or reason is vsed by our Sauiour Christ himselfe where he saith vnto the people that were with ●im Learne of me that I am meeke and lowly in heart Math. 11. ●0 Ioh. 13. ●5 as also ●here he washeth his Disciples feet to teach them humility and ●hen saith vnto them I haue giuen you an example that yee should ●n euen as I haue done to you What should I go forward to ●uote Scriptures to this purpose Nothing more vsuall in the ●criptures then by the example of Christ to stirre vp vnto our ●euerall duties and what ought to be more effectuall with vs ●o perswade vs when the souldier sees his Captaine fight ●here needes no further spurre to set him into the batteil Christ is our Lord and we his seruants if hee our Lord and Master haue giuen vs such an example and haue said vnto vs ●oe as ye haue me for example should there neede any further ●purre vnto vs for this duty If he haue so humbled himselfe ●or vs that being God he became also man if hee haue had ●uch compassion on vs that when wee were enemies vnto him ●e reconciled vs vnto God if he so loued vs that he laid down his life for vs how ought we to be humble and lowly minded one towards another how ought wee to haue compassion vpon our poore brethren especially in this heauy time how ●ought we to loue one another with brotherly loue Christ my brethren is our head If we be members of his bodie we must draw our life and our spirituall nourishment from him we must in all things grow vp into him which is our head Fare be it therefore from vs to disdaine our brethren to wrong them to oppresse them to contemne them to swell in pride against them Nay rather let vs vse one another with all kindnesse with all gentlenesse with all meeknesse Let vs submit our selues one vnto another let vs be like minded one toward another in Christ Iesus Himselfe exhorteth vs hereunto he hath giuen vs an ensample Let the same minde c. Thirdly I note the humilitie of Christ whose example the Apostle here exhorteth vs to follow His humilitie is here described by the Apostle first by his incarnation in that being God he vouchsafed to take flesh of the blessed Virgin and to become man like vnto vs in all things sinne only excepted secondly by the worke of our redemption in that being man he yet againe further humbled himselfe and became obedient to the death euen the most shamefull death of the Crosse In the description of Christ his incarnation are very many things most worthy our obseruation touching both the natures in Christ his God head and his Manhood I can only point at some of the heads of those obseruations which hence were to bee made and more fully handled First for the Godhead of Christ in that it is here said that hee was in the forme of God it is thereby proued that Christ was true God for in the selfe same manner and phrase of speech that here he is said to be in the forme of God in the same is it afterward said that hee tooke on him the forme of a seruant Where by the forme of a seruant the Apostle expresseth his Manhead as here by the forme of God is expressed his Godhead Neither indeed can any be in the forme of God who is not true God And as in this place he is said to be in the forme of God whereby is meant that he is God so in other places plainly and directly heads said to be God Rom. 9.5 as in the Epistle to the Romans Of when are the Fathers and of whom concerning the flesh Christ came wh● is God ouer all blessed for euer and to the Colossians In Christ dwelleth all the fulnesse of the Godhead bodily Coloss 29. and in the Acts Take heede c. Act. 20.28 to feed the Church of God which he hath purc●●sed with his owne bloud The phrase of speech in this place is somewhat different but it is all one as if he had thus said who ●eing God Secondly I note touching the Godhead of ●hrist that he was equall in all things vnto God the Father the Apostle plainly sheweth where it followeth that hee ●ought it no robberie to be equall with God for in that he saith thought it no robberie hee plainly sheweth that it was his ●ght and no iniurie at all vnto the Godhead for him that ●as God to be equall vnto God If then it be Christ his right ●●d no iniurie at all to the Godhead that Christ be equall vn●● God the Father then Christ as touching his Godhead is ●quall vnto God the Father howsoeuer touching his Man●ood he be inferiour to the Father And this be noted tou●●ing the diuine nature of Christ Now touching Christ his Manhood First in that it is here ●id that he made himselfe of no reputation or as the word signi●●eth that he emptied himselfe and of all brought himselfe vnto ●othing I note Christ his Manhood not forcibly to haue ●eene imposed vpon him but himselfe voluntarily to haue ●●ken on him the forme of a seruant When therefore it is said ●●at God sent his Sonne in the similitude of sinfull flesh and againe ●●at God so loued the world that he gaue his only be gotten Sonne c. where God the Father is said to haue sent and to haue gi●en his Sonne and the Sonne is said to be sent and to be gi●en wee are to vnderstand the speeches thus that God the ●●ther sent his Sonne and God the Sonne was sent of the ●●ther yet God the Father and God the Sonne being not ●wo Gods but one God distinguished into two persons it is ●ghtly said that God the Father sent the Sonne and that the ●onne being one God with the Father made himselfe of no ●●putation voluntarily descending from his Maiestie to bee ●artaker of our miserie for if himselfe had not thus humbled ●imselfe who could haue imposed this base estate vpon him ●●mselfe being God blessed for euer The Angels which kept ●ot their first estate they were throwne downe lower than ●he earth euen to bee reserued in euerlasting chaines vnder ●arknesse vnto the iudgement of the great day But Christ ●hen he was equall vnto God in fulnesse of power glory ma●●estie knowledge abased himselfe and of almightie made himselfe full of infirmitie of immortall made himselfe mortall Secondly in that it is said hee tooke on him the forme of a seruant I note that Christ so became man as that hee ceased not to be God For it is not said that the Godhead was changed into the Manhood but that Christ being God tooke 〈◊〉 him the forme of a seruant so vniting the God head and Manhood in the vnitie of person
vs. A ●riuiledge only proper vnto Christ that by his sufferings hee ●ould merit at all either for himselfe or for others For of all ●ur afflictions and sufferings that is to be said which Paul saith ●f his afflictions Rom. 8.18 I account saith hee that the afflictions of this ●resent time are not worthy of the glory which shall be shewed vnto ● Where the Apostle plainly renounceth all merit of life ●nd glory vnto his sufferings and afflictions And our Sauiour ●hrist likewise plainly telleth vs that when wee haue done all ●hat wee can euen all that is commanded vs wee must say ●ee are vnprofitable seruants Luk. 17.10 wee haue done onely that which ●as our dutie to doe If when wee haue done all that we can ●ee are vnprofitable seruants if when wee haue done all that commanded vs wee haue only done our dutie then what ●aime can wee make by merit or desert Nay if wee looke ●nto our merits wee shall finde that eternall life is the gift of ●od through Iesus Christ and that wee haue onely deserued ●eath and euerlasting condemnation Iam. 2.10 For whosoeuer keepeth ●e whole Law and yet faileth in one point he is guiltie of all and ●f the condemnation due to the breach of them all Now cer●ine it is that in many things wee offend all and that our best ●●ghteousnesse is but as the menstruous clothes of a woman ●uen the best thing that wee doe is stained with sinne and full ●f vnrighteousnesse so that if wee stand vpon our owne me●ts wee see wee must needs perish all Wee must then flie ●rom our selues and renouncing our owne merits rest our ●elues wholly only on the merits of Christ Iesus by whose ●eath and passion wee haue an entrance into glory For his ●assion being the passion of the Sonne of God was both a ●ll satisfaction vnto Gods iustice for vs and worthily deser●ed the glory which hee hath purchased for vs and giuen ●nto vs. And let this bee spoken touching the sequele of Christ his passion or the cause of his exaltation into glory ●t followeth Wherefore God c. The second thing which hence I obserued was who exalted him and that is here set downe when it is said God hath highly exalted him Christ then hauing humbled himselfe and beene obedient euen vnto the death God euen the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ raised him from the dead and set him at his right hand in the heauenly places Act. 2.31 So Dauid had said long before saying Th●● shalt not leaue my soule in graue neither shalt thou suffer thine holy one to see corruption Which Peter auoucheth to be spoken of God raising vp Iesus from the dead To this likewise giue all the Scriptures witnesse that God raised vp Iesus our Lord from the dead the Father by the Sonne and the Sonne by the eternall Spirit that was within him Here then is our comfort that he who hath loosed the sorrowes of Christ his death and raised him vp by his power will also giue a good end vnto all our troubles and raise vs vp also by Iesus and set vs with him Many are the troubles of the righteous Psal 34.18 but the Lord deliuereth him out of all And if it be so that thou see not the fruit of this promise in this life but goest to thy graue in mourning vnde● the crosse yet know this that hee which hath raised vp the Lord Iesus shall raise thee vp also by Iesus and set thee with him and there wipe all teares from thine eyes and couer thee with the garment of gladnesse But withall let mee giue you this caueat 1 Pet. 4.15 16 Let none of you suffer as a murtherer or as a theefe or as an euill do●r or as a busie body in other mens matters But if any man suffer as a Christian pouertie sicknesse persecution imprisonment or what crosse else soeuer let him not be ashame● but let him glorifie God in this behalfe For Christ hath also suffered once for sinnes the iust for the vniust that hee might bring vs vnto God and God for our momentanie and light afflictions in that day will giue vs an eternall weight of glory Wherefore as the Apostle doth so I exhort you Let him that suffereth 1 Pet. 4.19 what crosse soeuer it be according to the will of God commit his soule to God in well-doing as vnto a faithfull Creator and hee that loosed the sorrowes of death from Christ shall giue in his good time a good end to all his troubles And thus much touching the second point to wit who exalted him It followeth Wherefore God hath also highly exalted him Where wee are to see in what sense Christ is said to haue beene exalted and not onely so but highly exalted which was the third thing which I proposed hence to be obserued 1. Therefore Christ was exalted when he was raised from the dead when his bodie which was sowen in dishonor was raised vp in glory 2. He was highly exalted when ascending into heauen he was set in the heauenly places farre aboue all principalitie and power and might and domination and euery name that is named not in this world onely but also in that that is to come Thus God exalted ●nd highly exalted Christ Iesus whom the Iewes had crucified Here then first we haue the testimonie of the Apostle for that ●oint of our faith the resurrection of Christ Iesus He made his graue with the wicked as the Prophet had prophesied He was buried and the pit had shut her mouth vpon him Esay 53.9 euen the ●ombe of the earth had enclosed him in but God the third day ex●lted him raising him from the dead and not suffering his body to ●ee corruption If I thought it needfull further to proue the resurrection of Christ Iesus vnto you his sundry appearances ●fter he rose againe from the dead first vnto Marie Magdalen ●hen vnto the two Disciples that went to Emmaus then to Pe●er then to all the Disciples together saue Thomas then to all ●he Disciples then to moe then fiue hundreth brethren at ●nce these I say his manifold appearances and many other ●estimonies of holy scripture might at large proue the same ●nto you But my desire rather now is to lesson you in such ●hings as Christ his resurrection may teach vs. First therefore the resurrection of Christ Iesus may put vs ●n minde of this dutie that as he was raised againe from the ●raue wherein he lay dead vnto life so we ought to rise from ●he graues of sinne wherein we lie dead vnto newnesse and ●olinesse of life If yee be risen with Christ saith the Apostle Colos 3.1 ●hen seeke those things which are aboue as if he should haue ●id Christ is risen from the dead if yee be risen with him ●nd lie not still dead in your sinnes then seeke those things ●hich are aboue Where yee see how the Apostle putteth ●hem in
the like How then doth he giue them this testimonie that they had alwaies obeyed Lied the Apostle vnto them or did he flatter them God forbid let God be true and euery man a lyer He lieth not vnto them neither doth he flatter them and yet their obedience vnto God and vnto his word was not perfect for no doubt such faults were amongst them as already we haue spoken of In this sense then we are to vnderstand the Apostle when he commendeth the Philippians as hauing alwaies obeyed God and his word not as if there had nothing lacked in their obedience for in many things we sinne all Iam. 3.2 and if wee say that we haue no sinne we deceiue our selues 1 Ioh. 1.8 and the truth is not in vs but therefore are they said alwaies to haue obeyed because howsoeuer their obedience in it selfe was vnperfect yet was it vnto them reputed as perfect because through faith they were ingrafted in Christ and for his sake their very desire to liue godly was accepted with God as a life most holy For such is the fruit of our communion with Christ that being ingrafted into his bodie and made bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh through him and for him our faith in him is accounted to vs for righteousnesse and our very desire to liue goldy in this present world is accounted vnto vs for holinesse of life If there were no other proofe for this point but euen this whereof I speake that the Apostle here maketh reckoning of the Philippians as hauing alwaies obeyed though there lacked much in their obedience because they beleeued in Christ and desired to liue godly it were enough but the scriptures euery where witnesse the same Here then we haue an exceeding great comfort in Christ Iesus that howsoeuer our obedience be vnperfit yet if we beleeue perfitly in Christ Iesus and studie to liue soberly and righteously and godly in this present world it is accounted as if we had alwaies obeyed Our iniquities are forgiuen one sinnes are couered our infirmities are passed ouer our vnrighteousnes is not imputed vnto vs only that which we haue well done is had in remembrance and if we haue giuen but a cup of cold water in his name it looseth not the reward This is that which doth and may vphold our weary and fainting soules which otherwise would fall vnder their burthens and this is that which may ought to perswade vs to follow peace with all men Heb. 12.14 and holinesse without which no man shall see God Not as in my presence onely but now much more in mine absence In these words the Apostle lightly toucheth a defect in their obedience that it was not altogether such now in his absence from them as it was when he was present with them but he doth not touch it as with purpose much to note them for it but his drift rather is in these words to instruct them in the qualitie of their obedience that it ought not to be fained as seruice onely to the eye but it ought to be sincere and from a pure heart as vnto the Lord who seeth all and is present euery where Here one or two things may be noted but only by the way because the Apostle doth onely lightly touch them and as it were by the way aduise vs of them 1. In that the Apostle ●mplieth a change in them now in his absence from them which was nto in his presence with them thence we may note ●ow requisite the presence of the Pastor with his people is True it is that the Apostle was not their Pastor but sent to reach vnto the Gentiles in all places and Epaphroditus was ●heir Minister who remained with them after Pauls departure ●rom them But if in Paules absence from them when yet ●heir Minister was present with them they began in a short ●pace somewhat to decline how can we thinke but that they must needes decline where their Pastor is neuer with them Where prophecying faileth the people perish and when the Pastor is not present the Wolfe commeth and the flocke is scattered 2. In that the Apostle onely lightly toucheth a defect in ●heir obedience but not with purpose much to note it in ●hem we may note what care is to be taken that we doe not sharply censure euery defect or fault which is in the godly Some things in them must be lightly passed ouer and they must be drawne on with all kindnesse and meeknes to runne on in the race that is set before them The godly is admonished by a word but the wicked goeth on in his folly and careth not what is said But chiefly hence we are to note the qualitie of our obedience vnto our God that it ought not to be fained as seruice to the eye but sincere and from a pure heart as vnto him that seeth all and is present euery where Which of vs is there that will commend that seruant which is onely an eye-seruant which will worke well in his masters sight but not at all when he is absent Nay we will all condemne such a seruant But let vs take heede that therein we do not giue iudgment against our selues If onely we make an outward shew of holinesse and serue not the Lord with our whole hearts making his law our delight and a single obedience therevnto our chiefe desire what are we but eye-seruants and our portion what shall it bee but the portion of hypocrites Beloued our God whom we serue is not as man he seeth all things he is present euery where he searcheth the hearts and the reynes and he vnderstandeth all our thought long before they be conceiued It is no halting with him Whatsoeuer we doe in the darknes it is vnto him as if it were done in the light for the darknes and light to him are both alike Gehazi may offend when Elisha sees not and may hope to conceale it from him because he sees it not But if Elisha can descry his fault how much more can our God descry all our waies how hidden soeuer they be Let vs therefore walke before him with a single heart let vs serue him in spirit and in truth let our obedience vnto him and vnto his law spring from a pure heart from a good conscience and from an vnfeigned faith Such obedience he requireth of vs and such obedience is the way wherein we must walke to our heauenly Ierusalem LECTVRE XXXIII PHILIP 2. verse 12 13. So make an end of your owne saluation with feare and trembling For it is God that worketh in you c. MAke an end of your owne saluation The Rhemists read thus out of the vulgar translation worke your saluation out of which reading that doctrine of saluation by workes is by some in part maintained Doth our Apostle then in this place teach vs that we are to worke our saluation so that by the merit of our workes we may obteine saluation Surely in
saued vs Tit. 3.5 ●e by the works of righteousnesse which we had done but accordi●g to his mercy immediatly after he speaketh thus vnto Titus 8. is I will that thou shouldest affirme that they which haue beleeued God might be carefull to shew forth good works By which pla●es it doth appeare that howsoeuer our good works are not ●e cause or the meanes of our saluation yet they are that way ●hich leadeth vnto saluation yea and that way wherein if ●e doe not walke we cannot be saued So saith our Sauiour ●imselfe Euery branch that beareth not fruit in me Joh. 15.2 the Father ta●eth away and it is cast into the fire and burnt He doth not say ●uery plant that is not planted in me albeit that likewise be ●ost true but euery branch that beareth not fruit in mee What fruit Euen the fruit of the spirit which is in all goodnes Eph. 5.9 righteousnes truth as the Apostle speaketh Euery branch ●hat beareth not such fruit in me he is taken away and cast into the fire and burnt To like purpose is that of the Apostle where he saith Heb. 12.14 Follow peace with all men and holinesses without the which no man shall see the Lord. And to the like purpose now many places might and ordinarily are by vs produced in our Sermons Here then first I beseech you learne to beware of such a traduce vs and the doctrine which wee preach as if by preaching of faith wee had banished good workes and as if wee were so farre from exhorting men to good workes in our Sermons that either we mention them not or condemne the● for such there are that are not ashamed to say that now we are afraid to handle the doctrine of good workes that we have preached saluation by faith so long that wee haue banished good workes out of the Country that either wee dare 〈◊〉 speake of good workes or if we doe yet so coldly that as good neuer a whit as so barely and coldly But beware of such for hauing their foolish hearts seduced to beleeue lies they speake euill of the way of truth which they know not and of ● whom either they will not at all heare or with such enchanted eares that they peruert whatsoeuer things are spoken vnto their owne destruction Such if they would they might heare and know that these are false suggestions wherein they slander vs and the truth which wee teach For we preach both faith and workes and in all places wee exhort all men that they abound in euery good worke But why is it that the● thus traduce vs and our doctrine Forsooth because we teach that our workes are no causes of our saluation And are wee then thus to be traduced because wee tell you the truth Wee tell you that which the Scriptures haue taught vs and wee bring with vs the euidence thereof to confirme that which we teach Wee dare not challenge any part of our saluation a● due vnto our workes because all the honour thereof belongeth vnto the Lord whose free gift it is according to his mercie But the way wherein God hath ordained vs to walke vnto saluation we say is holinesse of life without which no man shall see the Lord. This the Scriptures teach vs this we teach you beware therefore of such deceiuers as tell you otherwise Againe if good workes be the way which God hath ordai●● vs to walke in and if without holinesse of life no man ● I see the Lord then walke with God as Henoch did in ho●●esse and righeousnesse You beleeue in Christ Iesus shew ●th the fruits of your faith your workes must testifie your ●●h both vnto your selues and vnto vs for it is a vaine and ●ead faith where no fruits of holinesse of life doe follow ●ree is knowne by his fruit a good tree bringeth forth good it and a corrupt tree bringeth forth euill fruit As many ●re lead by the spirit of God they walke after the spirit and ●y bring forth the fruits of the spirit Beloued God hath ●t a time wherein to trie the faith and religion of such as hee ●h enabled to doe some good vnto his children Now hee ●●keth that wee should shew forth the fruits of faith and the ●ens of religion by shewing mercy and compassion vpon 〈◊〉 poore afflicted and distressed brethren Pure religion Iam. 1.27 and defiled before God euen the Father is this that wee visit the fa●lesse and widowes in their aduersitie and that wee keepe our ●es vnspotted of the world If therefore there be any faith if ●re be any religion if there be any bowels of compassion in ●● withdraw not your morsels from the poore nor your re●●fe from the needie According to that where withall God ●●h blessed you be it small or great bee ready to doe good ●●d to distribute laying vp for your selues a good foundation heauen Blessed is he whom the Ioines of the poore in their ●uersitie blesseth Generally this I exhort that yee studie to ●e soberly righteously and godly in this present world and glorifie God by the holinesse of your conuersation for ●ow this that whom God hath iustified forgiuing their sins ●d iniquities them also hath hee sanctified that they serue ●n in holinesse and in righteousnesse and whom hee hath ●actified them also and them only he glorifieth in the king ●●me of his Sonne As he then which hath called you is holy be yee holy in all manner of conuersation Hereby yee ●ll know that yee are the sonnes of God if yee walke as hee ●●th walked and keepe his commandements And this is a ●e witnesse that yee belong not vnto him if yee delight in righteousnesse and defile your selues with the vncleane conuersation of the wicked and vngodly Giue therefore a diligence to make you calling and election sure sure I say vnto your selues and to your owne soules by walking in such holinesse of life as God in Christ Iesus hath ordained your walke in And thus much of that holy course and race of godlinesse wherein the Apostle exhorteth vs to runne when he saith Conficite salutem c. Make an end c. What it is whereunto the Apostle in these words doth exhort vs in part we haue already heal by the way wherein hee prescribeth vs to walke The 〈◊〉 which leadeth vnto saluation being holinesse of life the Apostle exhorteth vs to walke in this way to runne in this 〈◊〉 Now it is to be obserued that the Apostle doth not only prescribe the way which leadeth vnto saluation and exhort v●●● walke and runne in that way but he exhorteth vs to runne 〈◊〉 in the same race vnto the end and fully to finish our course● doing such good workes as God hath ordained that we she●● walke in Whence wee are to learne this lesson that we 〈◊〉 not onely beginne in the spirit and grow forward like●●●● from grace vnto grace but wee must perseuere and conti●●● vnto the end
that as the beginning and progresse were in 〈◊〉 spirit so the end also may bee in the spirit that after the 〈◊〉 runne wee may haue eternall life It is a good thing to begin well but how little it profiteth vs vnlesse we continue le●● example of Lots wife whose temporall punishment bec●●● she looked backe vnto Sodome is registred in the old and 〈◊〉 example of Iudas the betraier of Christ whose fearfull end because hee went astray from that ministration and Apostle 〈◊〉 which he had obtained with the rest of the Apostles is r●●stred in the new Testament 1 Cor. 9.24 beare witnesse Know ye not 〈◊〉 the Apostle that they which runne in a race runne all yet ●●e receiueth the price namely he that runneth to the end So 〈◊〉 saith the Apostle that yee may obtaine How is that that is to the end Runne to the end that ye may obtaine the pri●●● for none are crowned but they that striue as they ought 〈◊〉 doe 2 Tim. 2.5 Now who are they that striue as they ought to doe b●● they that without fainting and failing in the way hold our vnto the end In most miserable case then are they that like 〈◊〉 Church of Ephesus forsake their first loue that is that hauing ●●ce followed the truth in loue and embraced pure religion ●●d walked in the paths of righteousnesse doe afterwards fall ●ay and runne themselues vpon the rockes either of errors opinion or of corruption in life Luk 9.62 No man saith Christ that ●●teth his hand to the plough and looketh backe is apt to the king●●me of God And the Apostle saith further 2 Pet. 2.21 that it had beene ●●ter for them not to haue knowne the way of righteousnesse than ●er they haue knowne it to turne from the holy commandement ●●en vnto them The reason is giuen by the Apostle Heb. 10.26 For if we ●ue willingly after that wee haue receiued the knowledge of the ●th there remaineth no more sacrifice for sinnes 27. but a fearefull king for of iudgement and violent fire which shall deuoure the ●●uersaries Take heed therefore brethren Heb. 3.12 lest at any time there in any of you an euill heart and vnfaithfull to depart away from 〈◊〉 liuing Lord For wee are made partakers of Christ 14. if we keepe ●e vnto the end the beginning wherewith wee are vpholden Let runne with patience the race all out that is set before vs. ●ur Sauiour Christ did so before vs Heb. 12.2 who for the ioy that was set ●ore him endureed the crosse and despised the shame And shall ●e be weary and faith in our mindes We serue a most boun●●●ull Lord which giueth vs all things liberally let vs serue ●●en with all that wee haue Wee serue a most louing Lord no will not change his fauour for euer let vs not serue him ●e a time but for euer And this let vs know for a suretie ●t if at our last end when death doth summon vs to yeeld ●r bodied vnto the graue and our spirits into the hands of ●m that gaue them if then with Paul we can say I haue fought good fight I haue finished my course I haue kept my faith wee all finde more sound ioy and sure comfort herein than in I things else vnder the cope of heauen whatsouer Mat. 24.13 for he that dureth vnto the end he shall be saued saith our Sauiour Christ ●nd againe He that ouer commeth Ap. 2.26 and keepeth my workes vnto ●e end to him will I giue power ouer nations and he shall rule them ●●th a rod of iron and as the vessels of a potter shall they be broken 27. ●uen as I receiued of my Father 28. so will I giue him my morning ●urre Make an end therefore of your owne saluation Now before wee proceed vnto the manner how wee are to runne in this race and to finish this course a doubt arising from the Apostles exhortation is first to be resolued and answered The Apostle as yee see exhorteth vs to make an end of our owne saluation to runne on the race of righteousness which leadeth vnto saluation outright vnto the end Whe●● upon some doe gather that our freewill is here called vpon that is that wee are not wholly and onely assisted by grace● the way of saluation and in the workes that leade thereunto but that it is in vs to consent vnto the grace which is offered and that wee of our selues being holpen with grace by the power of our free will are able to worke the things that a●● good and acceptable vnto God For why else say they do●● the Apostle exhort vs to worke out our owne saluation it ● vs there be no power at all to worke And generally they 〈◊〉 conclude that all admonitions exhortations reproc●es ●●cepts promises and threatnings in the Scriptures are in va●● if free will in man be not granted by the power whereof 〈◊〉 may together with grace worke that which is good The doubt then is whether this exhortation of our Apostle d●● not implie that we by the power of our free will are able pa●● of our selues to make an end of our owne saluation and 〈◊〉 runne the race of righteousnesse which leadeth to saluations The resolution and answer whereunto is that it doth not at 〈◊〉 implie any such thing which yet more cleerely will appeare if first wee shew the friuolousnes of their whole reason dra●● from admonitions exhortations c. in generall which 〈◊〉 this If it be not say they in our owne power to doe the thing which is good and whereunto wee are exhorted and ad●●nished c. then in vaine are admonitions exhortations pr●cepts reproofes and the like But see the vanitie of their reason Are not admonitions and the like needfull if it bee 〈◊〉 that it be wholly of grace and no way of our selues to doe those good things whereunto wee are exhorted It is as if they should say If the increase of the earth be wholly the blessing of the Lord then it is not needfull for the husbandman to 〈◊〉 his ground if faith be wholly the gift of God it is not needfull to come to heare the word preached c. for as he giueth corne and wine and oile and all things needfull for this life b●● yet by such meanes as he hath ordained thereunto and as ●his his gift but yet giuen to vs by the meanes of hearing word preached so God worketh in vs both to will and to ●●e those things whereunto he exhorteth and admonisheth but by the meanes of such admonitions exhortations and like Howsoeuer then it be not in our owne power to doe good things whereunto wee are exhorted in holy Scrip●●e yet admonitions and exhortations there vsed are there●e needfull because they are the meanes whereby God wor●h his graces Againe if wee looke into the booke of God ●e shall easily see that all these things whereunto wee are ex●ted they are wholly
are afflicted but the wicked many ●●nes flourish more than the iust and the hand of God many ●nes lieth heauier vpon the iust then vpon the wicked but ●aketh nothing against assurance of saluation by faith which ●neth not vpon any outward things but onely vpon the ●●omise of God in his word Yea but Saint Paul say they ●●rst not assure himselfe that he was iustified as appeareth by ●●at he saith I know nothing by my selfe 1 Cor. 4.4 yet am I not thereby iusti●●d and therefore no man may assure himselfe of his saluati●● But they might see Rom. 8.33 1. that the Apostle there speaketh ●t of any vncertainety of his iustification whereof else where assureth himselfe but by expresse negatiue plainely denieth at he was iustified by the cleanesse of his conscience that he ●oweth nothing by himselfe 2. That he speaketh there of ●s ministerie and seruice therein and acknowledgeth that ●ough his conscience accuse him not of any crime therein ●r he is not thereby iustified Which maketh against iustifi●●tion by any thing in a mans selfe though done in as great ●●rfection as mortall man can doe it but not at all against iu●●fication or assurance of saluation by faith Yea but when ●e saith worke your saluation with feare and trembling Phil. 2.12 he speak ●h against the vaine presumption of Heretikes say the Rhe●●sts on that place that makes men secure of their predesti●●tion and saluation and willeth the Philippians to worke ●●eir saluation with feare and trembling Pro. 28.14 according to that ●her scripture blessed is the man that alwaies is fearefull Wher●nto the answere is 1. that both the Apostle here and Salo●on in that other Scripture and the same Apostle againe when ●e saith be not high minded but feare and Peter when he saith Rom. 11 20 1 Pet. 1.17 ●sse the time of your dwelling here in feare and the Spirit of God generally when he speaketh to like purpose speaketh other against vaine presumption in our strength without doe acknowledgment of our owne frailty and due depending vpon the Lord or against carelesse securitie of our saluation without due regard of Gods threats and iudgments and without inward grace and feare of God issuing into a godly life and conuersation but not against faithfull boldnes and confidence not against assurance of our saluation by faith grounded vpon the promises of God in Christ Iesus 2. That there is a twofold feare a seruile feare and a fili●● feare a feare opposite vnto faith and a feare attending vpon faith a doubting and distrusting feare and a carefull and louing feare a feare of discouraging diffidence and a feare o● awefull reuerence a feare from the law to be punished and a feare from grace to offend and deserue punishment a feare begotten by the spirit of bondage and a feare begotten by the spirit of adoption a feare whereof S. Iohn saith there is 〈◊〉 feare in loue 1 Ioh. 4.18 2 Co. 7.11 Pro. 28.14 but perfect loue casteth out feare and a feare when of S. Paul saith that godly sorrow causeth feare and Salomon that blessed is the man that feareth alway Now from that feare the Holy Ghost euery where dehorteth saying Feare not for I am with thee Esay 41.10.43.1 be not afraid for I am thy God and againe feare not Mat. 8.26 for I haue redeemed thee c. and againe why are yee feare full O yee of litle faith But vnto this feare he euery where exhorteth Psal 2.11 saying Serue the Lord in feare and reioyce vnto h●● in trembling or with reuerence and againe feare him which after he hath killed hath power to cast into hell Luk. 12.5 yea I say vnto you 1 Pet. 2.17 Apoc. 14.7 him feare and againe Feare God honor the King and againe Feare God and giue glory to him generally where ●e exhorteth vnto feare it is to this feare So that when the Apostle exhorteth to worke our saluation with feare and trembling ●e exhorteth vnto this feare euen to feare the iudgements and threatnings of God which the faithfull alwaies doe because faith beleeueth them and to feare to trust in our selues which euery faithfull man also doth because faith it selfe importeth trust in God and as the Apostles reason also sheweth we should because it is God which worketh in vs both the will and the deede euen of his good pleasure and so to feare as the Prophet doth when he saith serue the Lord in feare and reioyce to 〈◊〉 with reuerence the words are as in the Apostle cum timore tremore but neither here nor any where doth the Holy ●host exhort vnto that seruile and doubting and distrusting ●●re as to stand in feare of our saluation Yea but seeing the ●●rd of God doth no where speake namely and particularly 〈◊〉 or of any of vs therefore by faith which is to be grounded on the word of God we cannot assure our selues of our ●●●uation Whereunto first we answer that though the word God speake no where immediatly by name and personally any of vs yet what it saith to beleeuers generally it saith to ●●ery beleeuer and what to sinners generally it saith to euery ●ner and euery man is to conceiue it as particularly spoken himselfe and to beleeue the same word preached by the ●inister of the Gospell as if Christ himselfe did perso●ly speake vnto him So that when as the word saith ●ecept yee repent yee shall perish Luc. 13.3 hee that beleeueth this ●rd beleeueth also touching himselfe that except he repent shall perish so when the word saith that whosoeuer belee●●h in Christ shall not perish but haue euerlasting life Joh 3.15 as hence ●●ul said to the Iaylor Beleeue thou in the Lord Iesus Act. 16.31 and thou ●t be saued so euery Minister of the Gospell may say to ●omas such a one Iohn such a one and Iames such a one c ●eeue thou in the Lord Iesus and thou shalt be saued and ●ery beleeuer which beleeueth this word may by faith ●ounded on the word particularly assure himselfe of his sal●ion because he beleeueth inasmuch as otherwise the word ●e not true whosoeuer beleeueth shall be saued Secondly we ●e them whence their Priests seeing the word doth no ●ere speake namely and particularly to any of them haue ●horitie to remit the sinnes of their poenitentiaries They ●●l tell vs though vntruly as they practise it that they haue of them particularly authoritie from Christ his word where saith whosoeuer sinnes yee remit they are remitted vnto them Joh. 20.23 ●d their poenitentiaries must beleeue it Thus they will take ●●ue to themselues though they will not giue vs leaue from ●enerall to inferre a particular But if their seduced ones ●st beleeue that though their Priests be not there named yet thence they haue all of them particularly authoritie to f●● giue sins much more may euery man that beleeueth though he be not named where Christ saith
whosoeuer beleeueth s●● be saued yet thence assure himselfe particularly by faith of 〈◊〉 saluation Yet but seeing it is no article of the Creede to beleeue a mans owne saluation therefore no man is bound 〈◊〉 beleeue it Whereunto we answer that in professing the art●cles of our Creede we professe the assured beleefe of our o●●● saluation for each man in his particular to professe and say I belieue in God the Father I belieue in Iesus Christ his Sonne c. is all one as to professe and say I beleeue in God that he is 〈◊〉 God and my Father and my strong saluation I beleeue 〈◊〉 Iesus Christ that he was borne vnto me and died for my 〈◊〉 and rose againe for my iustification I beleeue in the H●● Ghost that being sanctified by his worke I shall be glori●● with my Sauiour and I beleeue the holy Catholike Church that I am a member of it and that vnto me belongeth the forgiuenesse of my sinnes the resurrection of my bodie a●● life euerlasting without which particular application to 〈◊〉 selues the Deuill may beleeue the articles of the Cree●●● And albeit we doe not alwaies so infallibly beleeue our o●● saluation as we doe assent vnto the articles of the Creede 〈◊〉 as our faith is in degree lesse or greater so our apprehension of saluation is weaker or stronger yet in our weake apprehension of our saluation we truely beleeue it and ought● waies strongly and stedfastly to beleeue it and to pray wi●● the Apostles that from weaknesse of faith and slender assurance Luc. 17.5 we may grow vnto strength of faith and full assurance as the Apostles did Yea but the greatest certaintie we ●●● haue of our saluation is onely the certainety of hope not an● certainety of faith we may hope well of saluation doing o●● duties but we may not without great presumption assure ●●●selues by faith of it Wherevnto we answer 1. that howsoeuer hope as vulgarly men talke of hope and as the Pap●● speake of it be alwaies ioyned with feare and doubt and 〈◊〉 vncertaine yet the certainty of that Christian hope where●● the scripture speaketh and which nothing else but a const●● and patient expectation of that which we beleeue shall be 〈◊〉 a vndoubted and sure as the certainety of faith whereon it grounded and whereof it is the proper effect Rom. 5.5 inasmuch as ●e scripture saith of it that hope maketh not ashamed which as Iustin noteth it should doe in Ps 36. Rom. 5.2 if he that hopeth failed of his ●pe and againe that hope makes vs to reioyce which it should ●t if it made vs not certaine and sure of that we hope for ●●d againe he calleth hope an ancre of the soule Heb. 6.19 both sure and ●●dfast and giueth vnto it confidence 3.6 and reioycing and assu●●nce 2. That doing our dutie can yeeld vs neither faith ●r hope truely so called because wee come so short of ●ing our dutie that as Hierom saith if we consider our owne ●erits we must needs despaire and so our hope is grounded ●t vpon doing our dutie but vpon faith and it vpon the ●●omise of God in his word whence both faith and hope are ●rtaine of that they beleeue and hope for 3. That it were ●eat and wicked presumption to hope for saluation by vertue our owne doings but no other presumption then godly to sure our selues of our saluation by faith inasmuch as this is ●e presumption of true faith which presumeth not vpon our ●●ne workes but vpon the grace of Christ and vpon the ●●●omise of God made in his word Let vs now looke a litle ●erer into the words and the meaning of the words in this ●●ace of our Apostle is euident With feare and trembling We are therefore to remember ●hat I haue already told you that there is a double feare men●●oned in holy scriptures the one a seruile and slauish feare ●●ch as is in the children of disobedience who feare not to ●●end and displease the most high God but so feare the hor●r of that punishment which is due vnto their sinnes that ●●ey carry with them euen an hell within their owne bosome ●●ch a feare in the end breedeth despaire and is alwaies so re●●gnant vnto loue that in loue there is no such feare but per●●ct loue casteth out such feare There is another feare 1 Ioh 4.18 which is godly a sonne-like feare such as was in Iob of whom it is ●id that he was one that feared God and eschewed euill Job 1.1 and such was in Cornelius of whom it is said that he feared God with ● his houshold and that he gaue much almes to the people Act. 10.2 that ●aied continually This is such a feare as wherewith the good childe standeth in awe of his father and feareth to displease him For as the good and dutifull childe feareth his father albeit he doubteth not of his fathers loue towards him nay as he doth the more feare to displease his father the more certainely that he is perswaded of his fathers loue towards him so the childe of God in whom this godly feare doth dwell the more certainely he is perswaded of the loue of God towards him in Christ Iesus the more he feareth him with this feare the more he feareth to displease him and therefore doth the more eschew that which is euill and follow after that which is good and acceptable in his sight And this is so farre vnlike vnto that seruile and slauish feare that this feare is neuer seuered from loue but the more we loue the more we feare to displease him whom we loue and the more we feare to displease him whom we loue the more we loue him Now it is not to be doubted but that the Apostle in this place speaketh of this godly feare the other being such a feare as the Holy Ghost throughout the whole scriptures would haue vtterly abandoned in all the children of God Yea but it is added with feare and trembling which sheweth that the Apostle doth not speake of such a feare as hath with it ioyned assurance of loue but of such a feare as is full of doubt for trembling must needs argue doubtfulnes See then I beseech you that place of the Prophet where they are both ioyned as here in the Apostle Serue the Lord with feare Psal 2.11 saith the Prophet and reioyce in trembling Where by trembling cannot be meant any doubt or distrust for what reioycing can be in such trembling as ariseth of doubt or distrust but by trembling is meant a reuerence of his maiestie in whose loue we are so to reioyce as that withall we feare to displease him And as there the Prophet so here our Apostle would haue vs to serue the Lord with feare to exclude all carnall securitie whereby we grow carelesse and negligent to doe that which is good and with trembling to exclude arrogant presumption whereby we grow pharisaically proud
hope in the Lord Iesus to doe it if God will I will doe it c. For as in God alone we liue and mooue and haue our being so he alone directeth all our waies and ordereth all our counsels as seemeth best vnto his godly wisedome We may purpose and we may intend such and such things as come into our heads or our occasions lead vs vnto but neither lies it in vs to bring the things to passe neither doe wee know what shall be the euent of such things as wee purpose It is God that by his speciall prouidence doth direct the euent of whatsoeuer we purpose euen as it best pleaseth him This is plaine by diuers places of scripture which might be alledged to this purpose The hart of man purposeth his way Pro. 16.9 saith Salomon but the Lord directeth his steps His steps What is that euen all mens actions whatsoeuer he taketh in hand are gouern'd by God and directed as seemeth best vnto him Again it is an other prouerbe of Salomon Pro. 20.24 The steps of man are ruled by the Lord how can a man then vnderstand his owne way the meaning is that whatsoeuer a man doth it is wholy and onely guided and ruled by God his almighty power and prouidence so that he cannot possibly vnderstand certainely the issues of his owne thoughts and purposes And therefore the Prophet Ieremie thus confesseth vnto the Lord and saith O Lord I know that the way of man is not in himselfe Jer. 10 23. neither is it in man to walke and direct his steps Which the Prophet spake vpon occasion of Nebuchadnezzars turning his power to goe against Ierusalem because of Zedekiaes rebellion when at his first setting forth from home he had purposed to haue made warre against the Moabites and Ammonites Such is the power of the Lord to turne the purposes and deuises of mans heart which way it seemeth best vnto him so that whatsoeuer his purpose be yet can he not tell what shall be the issue thereof Nay if we looke a litle farther into the matter we shall finde that howsoeuer it seemeth vnto man that it is in himselfe to purpose and deuise what himselfe listeth yet can he not deuise or purpose any thing that is good vnlesse God by his grace preuenting him put them in his heart according to that it is said It is God which worketh in vs both the will and the deede euen of his good pleasure And therefore that place mentioned before The heart of man purposeth his way and that in the beginning of the same chapter The preparations of the heart are in man c they are to be vnderstood onely by way of concession as if Salomon had thus said Be it that man hath innumerable thoughts in his heart be it that in his head he deuise this and that as if it were in himselfe to purpose and deuise what he would which is not yet the answer of the tongue is of the Lord saith Salomon The meaning of the whole indeed is this that both the thoughts of mans heart and the words of mans mouth are wholy guided and gouerned by the Lord. Not onely then the successe and euent of whatsoeuer we purpose but both the purposes of our hearts by grace preuenting vs and likewise the issues thereof by grace following vs are wholly gouerned of the Lord. He in his speciall prouidence ordereth and disposeth all things as seemeth best vnto him We are therefore to learne wholly to depend vpon him in whose hand are our hearts and all our waies and whatsoeuer it be that we purpose to do we are not resolutely to set downe this or that will I doe as if our owne waies were in our owne hands but still with submission vnto the Lord I hope in the Lord Iesus and if the Lord will It was the Apostle Iames his complaint that men too much presuming of themselues would set downe and say Iam. 4.13 We will goe to day or to morrow into such a Citie or such a Citie we will continue there so long and so long we will buy and sell such and such wares and we will make such and such gaine And I wish it might not iustly be complained of at this day that we doe too too resolutely breake out into such speeches as these mentioned by the Apostle and other such like Well that which the Apostle laid downe for a rule vnto them ought also to be a rule vnto vs we ought to say in all such cases if the Lord will we will doe this or that or as our Apostle saith in this place I hope in the Lord Iesus to doe this or that This forme of speech best beseemeth Christians and vsing this forme of speech we shew plainely whatsoeuer it is we goe about or purpose to doe that we depend wholy vpon the Lord his pleasure for the successe and issue thereof and acknowledge that onely what he will shall be done therein Howbeit I doe not vrge this forme of speech as so precisely necessarie that I put any religion therein or condemne the omitting thereof as prophane and wicked For I know that many godly men who gladly acknowledge that truth which I haue taught and likewise that many of the saints and seruants of God euen in the holy scriptures haue not vsed this forme of speech alwaies vpon such occasions Yet could I wish and would exhort euen all the children of God vpon all such occasions euen precisely to obserue this forme of speech and that with such reuerence and holy feare as that thereby they would plainely shew that indeede they doe not forget themselues but know that it is the Lord that ordereth them and all their waies euen as it best pleaseth him and what successe he giueth to their purposes that they shall haue whether it be to prosper them or to ouerthrow them I adde this of obseruing this forme of speech with reuerence and holy feare because it so falleth out I know not how that oftentimes we vse good formes of speach when as notwithstanding our thoughts are litle set at least not so reuerently as they ought vpon that we say For example what more common then when we haue sworne to say God forgiue me that I sweare when wee haue done such an euill thing to say God I cry thee mercy what meant I to doe that and in this that we now speake of when we meane to do such a thing to say I le doe it and God will Speeches commonly vsed and oftentimes I doubt not very well vsed but oftentimes in such an idle and onely customarie maner that therein we greatly offend because thinking not what we speake we speake not with that reuerence we ought to speake And indeede it is a plaine breach of the third commandement wherein we are forbidden to take the name of the Lord in vaine for so often is this holy name taken in vaine as it is vsed without great reuerence
great commendation of the men of Berea that they searched the Scriptures daily and sought whether the things which they heard of Paul and Silas were so Obserue the same rule search the Scriptures for they testifie of Christ and of his truth It is our desire that ye would trie by this rule both vs and them which teach otherwise then we teach and then that yee would approue them whom by proofe ye shall know to serue the Lord with Paul in the Gospell The rule which wee haue giuen whereby to know them that serue the Lord in the Gospel is most certaine and sure and it standeth you aswell vpon to approue them them alone who giue plaine proofe that they serue the Lord in the Gospell as it standeth vs vpon to labour by faithfull walking in our calling to approue our selues before the Lord and before men The next thing which I note out of these words is that which the Apostle addeth by way of amplification that Timothy serued with Paul as a sonne with the father for the Apostle doth not simply say ye know the proofe of him that he hath serued with me in the Gospell but by way of amplification vnto Timotheus greater commendation he addeth that as a son with the father he had serued with him c. Whence I obserue a notable example of that modesty and reuerence which ought to be in particular in younger Ministers towards them that are their auncients and haue gone before them in that worke and which ought to be in generall in all the sonnes of God towards their Elders but especially towards those that haue begotten them in the faith Young Timothy seruing with aged Paul in the Gospell euen as a son with his father should teach younger Ministers to honour and to reuerence their ancients in the ministery and to walke as they haue them for example especially if they walke as aged Paul did faithfully and painfully in the workes of their calling Otherwise if they delight in idlenesse or mind earthly things if they seeke their owne more then that which is Iesus Christs they are to be no more patternes vnto vs to follow then the examples of old Eli or Demas or the like Nay I thinke the younger may and ought yet with all modesty because of their yeeres to put them in minde of their duties and to beseech them that as fathers they will go before them in all holinesse of example with incorrupt doctrine with grauitie integritie and with the wholesome word which cannot be reproued But if they walke as aged Paul did faithfully and painefully in the worke● of their calling if in all holinesse of example they walke before them as fathers before their children if as fathers they haue begotten them in the faith then surely ought the younger Ministers to honour and to reuerence them euen as sons do their fathers and as Timothy did honour Paul A note wor●hy the vrging and enlarging if the place were as conuenient for the vrging of it as the time requireth the vrging of it A sonne will not easily get himselfe vp to the toppe of an hill thence to glance at such things as may turne to his fathers shame much lesse thence to cast dung in his face and purposely to speake such things as iustly may grieue him least of all vpon an imagined error in his father will he thence loade him with blasphemies A sonne I say will not thus doe and a minister should not thus do For he should serue the Lord with him in the Gospell as a sonne with the father Againe young Timothy vsed himselfe towards aged Paul as a sonne towards his father A good lesson for those of yonger yeeres to teach them in what regard they ought to haue their elders and their betters they ought to honour and to reuerence them and to performe other duties vnto them in some sort as to their fathers For so we see the Scripture would haue them accounted as fathers as where the admonition is rebuke not an elder but exhort him as a father and the elder women as mothers And the fashion and custome of them is good whose manner it is to salute elder men as fathers 1 Tim. 5.1.2 elder women as mothers I doe only point at this note by the way because of the ill education of many of our youth who regard not at all the gray haires of the aged but oftentimes most contumeliously do abuse them calling them old fooles dooting fooles and the like Well the precept is Leuit. 19.32 Thou shalt rise vp before the hoare-head and honour the person of the old man But this punishment is iust with the Lord vnto him that reuerenceth not the person of the old man that either hee shall not come vnto the honour of old age or else his old age shall be without honour But an especiall thing which all of vs hence should learne is how we should walke in respect of them that haue begot vs in the faith of Christ Iesus As Timothy regarded Paul who had begot him in the faith so must we regard those that haue begot vs in the faith euen as a sonne carrieth himselfe towards his father so should we carrie our selues towards them And therefore are they called our spirituall fathers in the Scriptures and we their sonnes if by their ministery they haue begotten vs in the faith I beseech thee saith the Apostle in the Epistle to Philemon for my sonne Onesimus Philem. 10. whom I haue begotten in my bonds where he calleth Onesimus his sonne In the Epistle to the Corinthians Though yee haue saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 4.15 tenne thousand Instructors in Christ yet haue ye not many fathers for in Christ Iesus I haue begotten you through the Gospell Where he calleth himselfe their father in the same respect that before he called Onesimus his sonne euen because hee had begotten them in the faith And in the Epistle to the Galathians Gal. 4.19 My little children saith hee of whom I trauell in birth againe vntill Christ be formed in you where he sheweth that he was a mother and they as the sonnes of his wombe And wherfore is it that the ministers of Christ his Gospell are thus called our fathers and mothers as it were and we their sonnes but to note vnto vs that we haue our life in Christ Iesus through their ministerie and so to put vs in minde of that duty which we owe vnto them in respect of our regeneration and new birth by the immortall seede of God his word through their ministery Looke then what honour is due by children vnto their parents whether it be reuerence or obedience or maintenance or whatsoeuer else it be the same wee must account due by vs vnto our spirituall fathers in Christ Iesus And therefore faith our Sauiour Christ Luc. 10.16 Heb. 13.17 He that heareth you heareth me and he that despiseth you despiseth me And the Apostle obey
he wept and was much troubled for him Well then Epaphroditus and the Philippians might be full of heauinesse each for other in regard of that loue and tender affection which they had each to other and yet might they well both acknowledge the prouidence of God in his sicknesse which was the cause of heauinesse each in other To the point in generall in one word I say that in that loue which we beare and ought to beare one towards another we may be sorry one for the things that befall vnto another albeit we know certainely of the prouidence of Almighty God therein yet so in loue one towards another we must be sorrowfull one for another that our faith in Gods prouidence must stint our sorrow that it be not exceeding sorrowfull because we know that all things worke for the best for Gods children LECTVRE XLIV PHILIP 2. Verse 27. And no doubt he was sicke very neere vnto death but God had mercy on him and not on him only c. AND no doubt he was sicke c. In these words the holy Apostle 1. confirmeth that report which the Philippians had heard touching their Ministers sicknes that it was no vaine or false reporte but a very true reporte and secondly hee signifieth his recouerie and restoring vnto health That the report which they had heard was true the Apostle doth assure them first affirming his sicknes and no doubt hee was sicke and then the extremitie of his sicknes very neare vnto death In the signification of his recouerie and restoring vnto health which is in the next words the Apostle 1. setteth downe the cause of his recouerie which was Gods mercie but God had mercy on him 2. The extent of Gods mercie herein which was not to Epaphroditus alone but to Paul also and not on him onely but on mee also 3. The cause why the Lord in mercy to Paul also restored him vnto health to wit least he should haue sorrow vpon sorrow i. least his sorow which hee had by his owne bonds and imprisonment should be increased by the death of Epaphroditus their Minister least I should haue sorow vpon sorow The words need no farther opening or explicating being in themselues easie enough to be vnderstood Let vs therefore now see what notes and obseruations we may gather hence whereof wee may make some vse vnto our selues 1. Here we see that Epaphroditus a faithfull seruant of Iesus Christ a painefull Minister of the Church one whom the holy Apostle made that reckoning of that hee called him his brother his companion in labour his fellow-souldier was sick and that very sore sicke Whence I gather this obseruation that the children of God and most faithfull seruants of Iesus Christ are subiect as vnto many miseries and troubles and infirmities of this life so vnto sicknesse and diseases of the body How faithfull a seruant of Iesus Christ Timothy was ye heard a little before vpon occasion of the Apostle his promise to send him vnto the Philippians vers 19. And how subiect he was vnto sicknesse may appeare by that aduise which the Apostle giueth vnto him in his former Epistle vnto him 1 Tim. 5.23 where he aduiseth him to drinke no longer water but to vse a little wine for his stomachs sake and for his often infirmities Of Epaphroditus his sicknesse likewise ye see how plaine testimonie the Apostle giueth in this place Nay what childe of God freed or exempted from bearing of this crosse and drinking of this cuppe What shall wee say then Are not sicknesses and diseases of the body the rodde of Gods wrath a herewithall he doth punish the sinne and rebellion of the wicked Or doth the Lord lay the rodde of his wrath wherewith he punisheth the wicked vpon his owne children and faithfull seruants True it is that sicknesse and diseases of the body are the rodde of Gods wrath wherewith hee punisheth the disobedience and rebellion of the wicked as the Scriptures plainely proue vnto vs. Let that one place in Deuterenomie serue for all the rest where the Lord hauing made great promises of blessings vnto them that obey his commandements afterward threatneth curses and plagues vnto them that will not obey his voice and keepe his commandements And amongst other of those plagues which the Lord would bring vpon them Deut. 28.2.3.15 it is said the Lord shall smite thee with a consumption and with the feauer and with a burning ague and with a feruent heate c. Where ye see plainely that consumptions and feauers and hot-burning agues and such like diseases are reckoned among those plagues and roddes of his wrath wherwith he punisheth the sinnes of that Land 22 or that Countrie or that towne or that people whatsoeuer that wil not hearken vnto his voice nor obey his commandements And may we not iustly feare that the Lord hath taken this rodde into his hand and already begunne to punish vs therewith Looke vnto the disobedience and rebellion and neglect of walking in the waies of Gods commaundements that is generally amongst vs and see whether wee haue not giuen him cause to take this rodde and to punish vs therewith Againe looke vnto such hot agues vnto such sharpe and strange and pestilentiall diseases and sicknesses as are now generally amongst vs and see whether hee haue not begunne to doe with vs as he threatned in his law Surely for our sinnes euen because wee haue not obeyed his voice and done after his commaundements he hath taken his rodde and already begunne thus to punish vs therewith And this rodde of his wrath as wee our selues may see he doth lay euen vpon his owne children and faithfull seruants aswell as hee doth vpon the wicked and vngodly of the earth but yet with this difference Vpon the vngodly he layeth this rodde of his wrath in wrath and displeasure to render vnto them according to the wickednesse of their waies the same rodde also he laieth vpon his children not in wrath but in loue to reforme them and to reclaime them from the wickednesse of their waies Vpon the vngodly he layeth this rodde and the stroke thereof enrageth them against God so that in their sicknesse they are not onely with out all comfort and patience but like vnto cursed Caine they crie my sickenesse is greater then I am able to beare why am I thus what a seuere iudge is this that lieth his hand so heauily vpon me the same rodde also hee lieth vpon his children but he giueth them patience vnder the rodde and strength to beare whatsoeuer he laieth vpon them so that in their sicknes they are comfortable both in themselues and vnto others So that albeit the same rodde lye vpon both yet doth God lay it vpon them with great difference Which yet will better and more plainely appeare vnto vs if wee shall briefly touch some of those reasons why he lieth this rodde vpon his children why his children are visited with sicknesse One reason is as
euen the like extremitie of sickenesse that Epaphroditus was brought vnto A step onely betweene them and death or rather no steppel but they deliuered out of the iawes of death as a pray out of the teeth of the wilde beast or as a bird out of the snare of the fouler And this the Lord may seeme to doe for these causes amongst many other 1. Thereby to make his power more to be knowne amongst the sonnes of men For what can more manifest the power of almighty God then to saue vs when the pit is now ready to shut her mouth vpon vs and nothing but present death before vs 2. To encrease their thankefulnesse who being brought vnto the gates of death are thence deliuered For how much neerer they were vnto death so much greater praises are due vnto him that hath deliuered them from death 3. Thereby to humble them for euer vnder his mightie hand by whom they yet liue moue and haue their being For what should more humble vs then plainely to see that it is no way in our selues but in the Lord only to saue our life from death and to deliuer vs from the power of the graue Seeing then it pleaseth the Lord oftentimes to bring euen his dearest children and choisest seruants into such extremities as of other dangers so of sicknesse let vs take heed how we iudge them as plagued of God for their offences because they are so extreamly visited Yee know it was the great fault of Iobs friends that still they vrged him that surely hee was a great and grieuous sinner a wicked and an vngodly man because the Lord his hand was so heauie vpon him Nay my brethren though some of our brethren in these hot and sharpe diseases through extremity of paine or otherwise howsoeuer should somtimes breake out into impatient speaches yet let vs take heede how we iudge them as forsaken of the Lord ye know the example of Iob into what execrations and words of impatiencie he brake out through that extremitie of griefe wherewith he was holden who yet was a very choise seruant of the Lord and whose patience is commended in the Scriptures Againe seeing it pleaseth the Lord oftentimes to bring euen his dearest children and choisest seruants into such extremities of sicknesse let this be a comfort vnto vs in what extremitie of sicknesse so euer we shall be For no new thing herein doth befall vs but such as oftentimes doth the dearest children of God and he which deliuered them from the hand of the graue when the pit had euen shut her mouth almost vpon them will also deliuer vs if it shall be for his glory and our good Sicknesse and extremitie of sickenesse all are of the Lord and all for the best vnto his children Let vs therefore in all things that befall vs so submit our selues vnto the will of the Lord as that both in heart and voice we euer pray and say thy will be done in earth as it is in heauen LECTVRE XLV PHILIP 2. Verse 27. But God had mercy on him and not on him onely but on me also lest I should haue sorrow vpon sorrow BVt God had mercy on him Where the Apostle first setteth downe the cause of his recouerie and restoring vnto health which was Gods mercy 2. The extent and bountifulnes of Gods mercy therein reaching not to Epaphroditus alone but to Paul also 3. The Apostle setteth downe the cause why the Lord in mercy towards him also restored Epaphroditus vnto health to wit left he should haue sorrow vpon sorrow .i. lest vnto that sorrow which already he had by his bands and imprisonment there should haue beene added another sorrow for his death The words are so plaine and easie in themselues to be vnderstood that there needeth no farther opening or explication of them Let vs therefore see what notes and obseruations we may gather hence whereof we may make some vse vnto our selues But God had mercy on him By which phrase of speech the Apostle signifieth Epaphroditus his recouerie and restoring vnto health Yet see how the Apostle was not content barely to say but he was restored vnto health but signifying euen this same thing he withall noteth both who restored him wherfore he was restored vnto health saying But God had c. As if he should haue said but God for his mercies sake restored him vnto health Whence I note that it is the Lord that woundeth and maketh whole that both visiteth vs with sicknesse and also holdeth our soule in life and healeth all our infirmities For so the Lord himselfe saith Behold now for I Deut. 32.29 I am he and there is no God with me I kill and giue life I wound and I make whole And againe in Exodus saith the Lord Ex. 15.26 I am the Lord that healeth thee And therefore the Prophet thus praieth Heale me ô Lord and I shall be whole saue me I●r 17.14 Ps 103.2.3 and I shall be saued And the Prophet Dauid thus stirreth vp himselfe to praise the Lord saying Praise the Lord ô my soule and forget not all his benefits which forgiueth all thy sinne and healeth all thine infirmities or all thy sicknesses and diseases It is the Lord then yee see that healeth our sicknesse and holdeth our soule in life yea it is euen he that deliuereth vs both from the first and likewise from the second death Yet I would not here be so mistaken as if I iudged that because it is the Lord that healeth our infirmities therefore in the bed of our sicknes we should onely call vpon the Lord and neglect the meanes ordeined for the recouerie of our health For as he hath appointed the end so hath he ordeined the meanes vnto the end And albeit sometimes he worke without meanes and restore vnto health without any medicine or physicke at all yet most ordinarily he worketh by meanes and restoreth vnto health by medicine and physicke And therefore we are not at any time to neglect the meanes of physicke and such like helps for the recouerie of our health but rather we are to vse them with all thankfulnesse vnto the Lord for them and with all praier and supplication in the spirit for his blessing vpon them We see how that good King Ezechias when it had beene told him of the Lord by the Prophet 2 Reg. 20.5.6 thus Behold I haue healed thee and the third day thou shalt goe vp to the house of the Lord and I will adde vnto thy daies fifteene yeere yet for all that 7. when the Prophet said vnto him take a lumpe of dried figs and lay it vpon the boyle and thou shalt recouer he tooke it and laid it on and recouered He might haue said hath the Lord spoken and will he not performe it He hath promised me heal●h and a lengthning of my daies for 15 yeeres what neede I more then his word what neede I any medicine or prescript from any Physician
which Paul preached vnto them were so as he preached For they hauing receiued the Scriptures in credit before were so to accept of those things which Paul preached vnto them if they were consonant to the holy Scriptures according to that of the same Apostle Gal. 1.9 If any man preach vnto you otherwise then that ye haue receiued let him be accursed then that ye haue receiued 1. Then that which God had promised before by his Prophets in the holy Scriptures as the same Apostle speaketh And as the men of Berea did Rom. 1.2 so wee read he willed the Thessalonians to doe where he said vnto them trie all things 1 Thes 5.21 and keepe that which is good where it is plaine by vers 12. that he speaketh not onely to the Pastors but also to the flocke So the Apostle Iohn in his Epistle vnto the faithfull dispersed Iewes saith dearely beloued belieue not euery spirit 1 Ioh. 4.1 but trie the spirits whether they are of God for many false Prophets are gone out into the world Where the Apostle deliuereth a generall doctrine that concerneth euery one of the faithfull as he will auoide the seducing and deceits of false Teachers which is that euery man should trie by such rules as the Scripture setteth downe who is a true or false Teacher which is true or false doctrine And therfore we see that the Apostle rebuketh the Galathians very sharpely because they had giuen place vnto false Apostles which corrupted the pure doctrin of Christ Gal. 3.1 and had suffered themselues to be seduced by them By which his sharpe reproofe of them hee plainely sheweth that they should haue tried and examined the doctrine which those false Apostles brought by that which he had taught them and so reiected that which was not agreeable vnto wholesome doctrine And what else meane those often admonitions in the Prophets vnto all the Iewes to beware of false Prophets Ier. 23.16 heare not saith Ieremy the words of the Prophets that prophecie vnto you and teach you vanitie they speake the vision out of their owne heart and not out of the mouth of the Lord heare them not How then Esa 8.20 what is to be done Esay telleth thee To the law and to the testimonie if they speake not according to this word it is because there is no light in them This then is to be done when the false Prophets and Teachers speake vnto you heare them not so as to rest on what they say but so heare them as that yee examine them by the law and by the testimonie and if they speake not according to this word surely they haue no knowledge but are blinde leaders of them and so account of them Thus then both by the commendable example of the men of Berea and by the precept of the Apostles Iohn and our Apostles and by the sharpe reproofe of the Galathians and by the warrant of the Prophets it doth and may appeare that euen all the faithfull children of God may and ought to trie and iudge by the Scriptures whether their teachers doctrine be true and so to reiect whatsoeuer they finde not agreeable to the Scriptures Yea but it will be said that this were to make the sheepe iudges of their shepheards and the people to controll their Ministers No not so but the people must heart their Ministers and obey them and be ordered by them which they will the more cheerefully doe when by searching the Scriptures they shall finde their Minister and Teachers doctrine to be the doctrine of the holy Ghost and not the inuention or tradition of men If the teachers bring not the truth thus their errors will indeed be descried and no reason that when they bring not the truth their doctrine should be receiued as sound and good But if they bring the truth by this search of the scriptures the truth which they bring is with the greater lacritie reuerenced and embraced and themselues the more honoured and esteemed Learne ye then men and brethren to make this vse of this doctrine 1. To beware of such as teach you otherwise then now we haue taught you Beware of such as will tell you that yee are not to meddle with the sense of the Scripture or to iudge of such doctrine as ye heare whether it be true or false but yee are onely to trie the spirits by taking knowledge of them to whom God hath giuen the gift of discerning spirits and by obeying the Church to whom Christ hath giuen the spirit of truth and this Church say they is the Church of Rome By this that ye haue heard ye see that such are false Teachers deceiuing and being deceiued 2. Learne hence to be diligent in re●ding and in hearing the Scriptures that so ye may be able to trie the spirits Ioh. 5.39 In the Scriptures as saith our Sauiour wee thinke to haue eternall life and by meditating therein wee shall easily skill of those that would lead vs out of the right way that guideth to eternall life Let vs therefore exercise our selues in the doctrine of the Gospell of Iesus Christ which we haue receiued and let vs marke them diligently which cause diuision and offences contrarie to the doctrine which we haue learned and let vs auoid them yea if any come vnto vs and bring not this doctrine 2 Ioh. 10. let vs not receiue him nor bid him God speede let vs haue no familiarity with him but let vs abandon all fellowshippe with him The 2. thing which here I note is the Apostles often iteration of this caueat vnto the Philippians admonishing them aga●ne and againe euen three times to beware of false Teachers Whence we may obserue how needfull a matter it is for vs to take heed of false Teachers which seeke to seduce vs from that doctrine which wee haue learned in the Gospell of Christ Iesus Which thing as this often iteration of this caueat may confirme vnto vs so this circumstance also euen in this matter that the Apostle hauing often before by word of mouth warned them of false Teachers yet aduentured the reproofe if they should blame him for warning them againe by writing Againe when our Apostle tooke his last farewell of seeing the Ephesians any more how carefully did he warne them of false Teachers Take heede saith hee Act. 20.28 29.31 vnto your selues c. For I know this that after my departing shall grieuous wolues c. Therefore watch and remember that by the space of three yeares I ceased not to warne euery one both night and day with teares He beginnes with take heede vnto your selues hee ends with watch and remember c. as if this taking heede of false Teachers were a thing most needfull for them to be diligent in And our Sauiour Christ Mar. 8.15 Take heed and beware of the leauen of the Pharises and of the leauen of Herod Where willing his Disciples to beware of the contagious
couetousnesse 2 Pet. 2.14 3. through couetousnesse making marchandise of mens soules Such a one was Balaam of whom the Apostle Peter saith in the same chapter that he loued the wages of vnrighteousnes Such were those of whom Esay speaketh Esa 56.11 that they were greedie dogges which could neuer haue enough Such were these among the Philippians whose God as the Apostle saith was their bellie Marke then who now at this day they are that through couetousnesse would make marchandise of your soules Who are they now that set on sale the forgiuenesse of your sinnes and the kingdome of heauen for money Who are they now that vnder colour of long praiers deuoure widowes houses that for such or such lands such or such summes of money such or such releefe vnto such or such places will promise you to say so many praiers for so many dayes or yeeres for you or for your friends Who are they now that make gaine god●inesse and doe all that they doe in deede and an truth for the maintenance of their state and of their bellies Erasmus when hee was asked by Fred●ricke Duke of SAXONIE his iudgement of Luther said that there were two great faults of his one that hee medled with the Popes Crowne another that hee medled with the Monkes bellie Erasmus his meaning was that those two things they were most of all carefull for and therefore could not endure the medling with them Doe not such like dogges serue their bellies and through couetousnesse make marchandise of you Whosoeuer they be that doe so they haue a marke of false teachers Marke them therefore and take heed of them Beware of dogges of barking and greedie dogges My next two notes I gather from that that these false teachers are called euill workers A third note therefore of false teachers it is so to teach the necessitie of workes vnto saluation as to make them ioynt workers with Christ of our saluation as if our saluation were not by Christ alone but by the workes of the Law also True it is that we must walke in those good workes which God hath ordained vs to walke in ●p● 2.10 or else wee cannot be saued but ye● by grace are wee saued through faith 8.9 not of workes lest any man should boast himselfe To teach therefore that our workes are any part of that righteousnesse whereby we are iustified or saued is a note of false teachers Which thing also our Apostle witnesseth in another place Gal. 5.4 where he saith that such make the grace of God of none effect Such were those that had bewitched the Galatians whose doctrine in his epistle vnto them he doth at large confute and sheweth that wee are iustified onely by grace through faith in Iesus Christ and not by the workes of the Law Such also were those that were crept in amongst these Philippians whom in this chapter he confuteth shewing that Christ alone is our righteousnesse and that wee haue no righteousnesse of our owne at all by any workes of the Law Marke then who now at this day they are that teach mans righteousnesse or saluation to be of his workes Who are they now that tell you that we are made righteous before God not by faith alone in Christ his bloud but by workes also Who are they now that tell you that not by Christ his merits alone but by the merit of our owne workes also wee gaine heauen and that not to our selues alone but to others also Who a●e ●hey now that tell you that together with Christ good workes must be ioyned as workers together with him of our iust●fication and saluation Whosoeuer they be that doe so they haue a marke of false teachers Marke them therefore and take heed of them Beware of them they are euill workes making those workes which as they are done according to the Law are good workes by this peruerse doctrine euill workes A fourth note of false teachers it is like vnto vnfaithfull workmen in the Lord his vineyard to teach for doctrines mens precepts and traditions of men For this false teachers take of euill and vnfaithfull workers in the Lord his vineyard that either in stead of the word or at least together with the pure seede of the word they sow mens precepts and traditions of men Our Sauiour noteth it in the enuious man that he sowed tares among the wheat Mat. 13.28 Mar 7 7. and it is notable in all his brood Such were those Scribes and Pharises that we reade of in the Gospell of whom it is said that they taught for doctrines the commandements of men Whereupon our Sauiour told them that they worshipped him in vaine Marke then who now at this day doe thus resemble vnfaithfull workmen in the Lord his vineyard Who are they now that teach you to doe a great number of things for the doing whereof there is no rule at all in the Scriptures Who are they now that fill your eares with traditions of the Apostles as they say and traditions of the Church as they say making them euen of equall authoritie with the writings of the Apostles Who are they now that teach you to beleeue otherwise then yee are warranted by the Scriptures the rule of faith Who are they now that mingle with the pure seede of Gods word the chaffe of mans braine and giue equall authoritie to the written word and to vnwritten traditions Doe not such shew themselues to be of the brood of the enuious man Whosoeuer they be that doe so they haue a marke of false teachers Marke them therefore and take heed of them Beware of them they are euill workers working vnfaithfully in the Lord his vineyard Now from this also that these false teachers among the Philippians were called the concision arise two notes whereby to discerne false teachers A fift note therefore of false teachers it is like vnto these of the concision to cause diuision and offences contrary to the doctrine of the Gospell of Iesus Christ and to cut themselues from the vnitie of the Church for this they take of the concision that as they cut themselues from the vnitie of the Church and caused diuision in the Church by vrging the circumcision of the flesh which the Church had done with so commonly false teachers rent the vnitie of the Church and cause diuisions by teaching other doctrine then the spirit of God hath taught the Church to receiue This note of false teachers our Apostle also giues elsewhere where hee saith Marke them diligently which cause diuisions and offences contrary to the doctrine which yee haue learned Rom. 16.17 and auoid them Such were those false Apostles and teachers which troubled the Church of Corinth after Paul had planted it who by their ambition brought in such factions and schismes and dissensions into the Church 1 Cor. 1.11 that the house of Cloe a vertuous and zealous woman aduertised the Apostle thereof Marke then who now at this
the one a contemplatiue and knowing knowledge .i. such a knowledge as whereby we know that Christ is the onely begotten sonne of God that he was sent into the world to saue sinners that he was crucified that he died that he was buried that he was declared mightily to be the sonne of God by his resurrection from the dead that he was highly exalted and had a name giuen him aboue euery name c and whatsoeuer else the scriptures of God doe storie of him Such a knowledge of Christ was that which the Samaritans had by the saying of the woman which testified of him saying Ioh. 4.39 he hath told me all that euer I did and such a knowledge the Physitian hath of his physicke and the vertue thereof by relation of others and by reading in his bookes The other knowledge of Christ is an experimentall and feeling knowledge of Christ whereby we feele know in our own soules that he is such a one as the scriptures describe him to be that he is made of God vnto vs wisdome and righteousnesse sanctification and redemption that he died for our sinnes and rose againe for our iustification Such a knowledge of Christ was that which the Samaritans had when they had heard Christ themselues 42. and so knew that this was indeede the Christ the Sauiour of the world and such a knowledge of Salomons wisdome and prosperitie the Queene of Sheba had when shee had seene it with her eies and heard it with her eares and such a knowledge the Physitian hath of his physicke and of the vertue thereof when he hath had experience of it in himselfe Now when the question is here asked whether Paul did not know Christ because he saith that I may know Christ we must vnderstand that the Apostle doth not here speake of the former sort of the knowledge of Christ for it is out of all question that he that had preached Christ among the Gentiles so many yeares that had planted so many Churches in the faith of Christ knew whatsoeuer the scriptures of God did witnesse of Christ But the Apostle here speaketh of that experimentall and feeling knowledge of Christ whereby we feele and know in our own soules that such as the scriptures describe him to be such he is vnto vs. What then Had not the Apostle this experimentall and feeling knowledge of Christ It is not to be doubted but that this holy and elect vessell of God had this same feeling knowledge of Christ Iesus How then would he be found hauing the righteousnesse of Christ which is through faith that he might know Christ It is not simply meant that he would be so found that he might haue that feeling knowledge of Christ but that he might grow vp daily more and more with all godly increasing in that feeling knowledge of Christ He would be found righteous with the righteousnesse which is of God through faith that he may daily grow vp with all godly increasing in this feeling knowledge of Christ Whence first I obserue what knowledge of Christ it is which all Christians should principally long and thirst after and that is that they may know Christ with such a feeling knowledge as that they feele and know by experience in their owne soules the infinite treasures of wisdome and knowledge and saluation that are hid in him for them for this is the sauing knowledge of Christ to know him not onely to be a Sauiour but to be our Sauiour Many there are that know Christ to be the sonne of God to be the Sauiour of the world to haue payed the price of mans sinnes by his one oblation of himselfe and to be hee that is appointed iudge both of the quicke and dead in that day Many there are that can and do speake of his praises in the great congregation that preach vnto others the infinite treasures of wisdome knowledge and saluation that are hid in him that talke of his saluation from day to day that speake as if they had all knowledge and vnderstanding and knew Christ as well as the best Many I say such there are and I wish that the number of them were far greater then it is But yet here is not all that knowledge of Christ that we should long and thirst after For thus farre many come whose knowledge is nothing else but the increasing of their iudgment and condemnation as the Apostle plainely witnesseth where he saith Heb. 6.4 5 6. that it is impossible for them which were once lightened and had tasted of the heauenly gift c and likewise the Apostle Peter where he saith that if they that haue once escaped from the filthinesse of the world through the knowledge of the Lord and of the Sauiour Iesus Christ be yet againe tangled therein and ouercome their latter end is worse then the beginning By both which places it is plaine that men may haue a good measure of the knowledge of Christ whose end notwithstanding is death and damnation We must therefore long and thirst after a farther knowledge of Christ This is the sauing knowledge of Christ Iesus that we know that wee are the sonnes of God that he died for our sinnes and rose againe for our iustification that he is made of God vnto vs wisdome and righteousnesse and sanctification and redemption that he is the reconciliation for our sinnes that he sitteth at the right hand of God to make request for vs that an inheritance immortall and vndefiled and that fadeth not away is reserued in heauen for vs. To haue such a feeling knowledge of him as that by our owne experience in our soules we finde in our selues the fruits of his sufferings the comforts of his promises the riches of his mercies knowing by the testimonie of the spirit witnessing vnto our spirit that what righteousnesse hee hath fulfilled for his children he hath fulfilled for vs what benefits of saluation he hath purchased for his children he hath purchased for vs what promises he hath made vnto his children belong vnto vs what ioyes he hath prepared for his children are reserued for vs this is that knowledge which passeth all knowledge this is that knowledge which is that sauing knowledge this is that knowledge which we must long and thirst after 1 Ioh. 3.14 By this knowledge it is that Iohn saith We know that we are translated from death vnto life because we loue the brethren 5.15 and againe We know that he heareth vs in whatsoeuer we aske and we know that we haue the petitions that we desire of him 19.20 and againe We know that we are of God we know that the sonne of God is come and hath giuen vs a minde to know him which is true How knew the Apostle these things He felt the comforts of these things in his owne soule his owne heart did leape within him reioycing at these things O my brethren try and examine your hearts how many of you haue
vnto lear●●ng continue therein for in doing this thou shalt both saue thy ●●lfe and them that heare thee Whereunto I answer that the ●●ing which properly belong vnto God are oftentimes in the ●criptures attributed vnto Gods Ministers because they are ●●struments which God vseth and whereby God worketh So ●n the places alleaged I saith the Apostle haue begotten you ●hrough the Gospell the Apostle because the Lord vsed him as ●is instrument to beget the Corinthians in Christ Iesus there●ore taketh that vnto himselfe which the Apostle Iames shew●●th properly to belong vnto God where he saith Iam. 1 1● that God of ●is owne will begat vs with the word of truth that we should be as ●he first fruits of his creatures And in the other place where ●he Apostle saith to Timothy In so doing thou shalt saue both ●hy selfe and them that heare thee there power of sauing Hosea 13.4 which ●oth onely properly belong vnto the Lord for it is he that ●aueth and none besides him is giuen vnto Timothie because ●ee was ordeined the Minister of Christ whom he would vse ●n granting repentance vnto saluation Many like places might be brought where that which properly belongeth vnto God is attributed vnto Gods Minister because of the powerfull operation of Gods spirit by his ministrie But by this already spoken yee see what in the worke of the ministrie God doth and what man doth Man preacheth the truth b●● God only reuealeth the truth man soweth the mortall seede of the word but God onely maketh it to grow and fractifie men speaketh the wonders of the law but God onely openeth our eyes that wee may see the wondrous things o● his law This then should teach you so to thinke of vs as of the Ministers of Christ and disposers of the secrets of God b● to depend vpon the Lord for the reuelation of those holy mysteries which we bring vnto you We can onely speake vnto your eares but it is the Lord that must worke in your hearts we can onely beat vpon the outward sense but he it is that must open the eyes of your vnderstanding we can onely bring the word of saluation vnto you but he it is that by his blessing vpon it must make it the word of saluation vnto you And therefore when you come vnto the house of God yee should remember to sanctifie your selues and as the Preacher exhorteth When yee enter into the house of God yee should take heede vnto your feete Eccl. 4.17 yee should take heede with what affection with what deuotion with what religious desire yee come to heare the word of the Lord. Yee should not not come hither as to an ordinarie meeting or to a place where yee can be well content to bestow an houre but yee should come hither prepared with all holy reuerence with soules thirsting after the word of your saluation and with hearts and eyes lift vp vnto the Lord that hee will blesse the preaching of the word vnto you that hee by his spirit will so worke together with his word that it may bee vnto you the sauour of life vnto life that hee will incline your hearts to hearken what the Spirit saith and that he will open your eyes that yee may see the wonderous things of his law And then surely yee should wrestle well and should not depart without a blessing For though wee be but men that speake vnto you whose breath is in our nostrils and though it bee not in vs to ●e grace or vnderstanding to our hearers yet are wee ●e Ministers of Christ by whom yee beleeue wee are as 〈◊〉 were the conduits through whom the spirit and the gra●●s of the spirit are conueighed vnto you and we are his ●mbassadors by whome hee openeth and declareth his ●●ly will vnto you Yea into such a communion hath ●ee ioyned vs with him Act. 5.3 that when Ananias had lied vn●● Peter he asked him why he had lied vnto the Holy Ghost ●nd that our Sauiour saith Luc. 10.16 Hee that heareth you heareth ●●e To conclude this point wee doe pray you in ●hrist his stead as though God did beseech you through 〈◊〉 and whatsoeuer good grace is wrought in you it is ●od that worketh the same in you through our ministe●●e Be yee therefore diligent to frequent holy exercises ●repare your selues with all holy reuerence thereunto ●ray vnto the Lord that he will blesse his holy ordinance ●nto you hearken vnto the word not as the word of ●an but as it is indeede as the word of God and receiue ●ith meeknesse the word that is graffed in you which is ●ble to saue your soules For thus the Lord reuealeth his ●●uth and his will vnto his children neither are we now to ●ooke for any other reuelations but such as the Lord manife●teth in and by the word Now remaineth the third point to be handled where the Apostle exhorteth that in the meane time till God reueale ●hat truth which he hath professed vnto them such grounds of the truth as already they had might with one accord be reteined and maintained which he doth in these words neuerthelesse in that whereunto we are come c. LECTVRE LXVI PHILIP 3. Vers 16. Neuerthelesse in that whereunto we are come Let 〈◊〉 proceede by one rule and let vs minde one thi●g NEuerthelesse in that c. In which words the Apostle exhorteth that in the meane time till God reueale vnto the Philippians that truth which he hath professed such grounds of the truth as already they had receiued might with one accord be retained and maintained This is the generall scope and meaning of the Apostle in these words But it will not happily be amisse for the better vnderstanding of them to vnfold and open the meaning of them yet a little more particularly They depend as ye see vpon that which went before For the Apostle hauing before exhorted the Philippians to be so minded as hee was in the points before mentioned had also said and if yee be otherwise minded God shall also reueale it Now saith he neuerthelesse 〈◊〉 that whereunto we are come as if he should haue said but in the meane time till God reueale this truth vnto you wherein yee now dissent from mee in that whereunto we are come i. for so farre as we are come for such grounds of the truth for such articles of the faith and Christian religion as already wee doe generally embrace and agree vpon let vs proceed in them by one rule and let vs minde one thing The word which the Apostle vseth when he saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 let vs proceede by one rule is a militarie word borrowed from the marching of souldiers vnto the battell whose manner it is to keepe their ranke and without any outraying to march along after the prescript rule of their Generall or Leader So that it is as if the Apostle had thus said vnto them let vs for so farre as
Church as that they should be grieued at the heart for the wicked that trouble them for the sinnes that reigne amongst them and for the desolation that will follow if speedy conuersion and repentance preuent it not Yea they should water and wash their threatnings and their exhortations with their teares in token of their tender affection and great compassion towards their people and towards the Church And should we men and brethren mourne for you an● should you giue place to the Deuill and to such his wicke● instruments as seek to drowne you in perdition should we 〈◊〉 grieued at the heart for you and should yee walke on in th● counsell of the vngodly and stand in the way of sinners an● sit in the seat of the scornefull should we be touched in 〈◊〉 soule that our labour should be in vaine amongst you an● should yee go on in the wickednsse of your waie drinking iniquitie like water and drawing on sinne with cord● of vanitie as it were with cart-ropes Nay beloued by th●● ou● duty learne yee your duty For if we ought to be thus affecte● towards you then bethinke your selues well how yee ough● to be affected in your selues Surely if it should wring te●● from our eies to see you sort your selues with the wicked and to suffer your selues to be drawne away with their error 〈◊〉 should make you to water your couch with teares and to mingle your drinke with weeping If it should touch vs in ou● soules to see you giue your members weapons of vnrighteousnes vnto sinne and to serue sinne in the lusts thereof i● should fill your soules full of heauinesse and plunge you i● sorrow of heart vnto the nethermost hell If it should grieue vs to see you after that yee haue escaped from the filthinesse of the world through the knowledge of the Lord and of the Sauiour Iesus Christ to be yet againe intangled therein and ouercome it should vex you euen vnto the death and caus● you to powre out your soules vnto the Lord in the bitternesse of your spirit Whatsoeuer it is concerning you should grieue vs should much more cause you to mourne in soule and to be troubled in your spirits For what is it that doth o● should cause vs to mourne for you and to be full of heauinesse for you Our desire is to present you holy and vnblameable in that day And here is our griefe that you suffer your selues to be seduced by the world and wicked ones and that our labour is in vaine amongst you Consider then with your selues how yee ought to be grieued in your selues and take heede how yee be not grieued in your selues for the things whereat your godly Pastors are grieued It grieued no doubt then Noah that preacher of righteousnesse that the Gen. 6. people in his time so prouoked the Lord to anger by their ●ruelty and wickednesse but they regarded not his griefe and therefore the Lord brought in the floud vpon the world of the vngodly Gen. 19. Iust Lot vexed his righteous soule with the ●ncleane conuersation of the wicked and with their vnlawfull deeds But they regarded it not and when he told them of ●o●● iudgements hee seemed euen to his sonnes in law as though he had mocked and therefore the Lord raind vpon ●hem fire and brimstone and destroyed them Ieremiah was 〈◊〉 great anguish of spirit for the rebellion of the stiffe-necked 〈◊〉 but they regarded it not therefore the Lord deliuered ●hem into the will of their enemies and they that hated them ●ee Lords ouer them Take heede then how yee regard it not when your Pastors are grieued on your behalfe take ●●●de how yee make light of such sinnes as they grieue to see ●ou defiled withall but rather sorrow for them that their sorrow may be turned into ioy and your ioy may be full euen ●oth yours and theirs In their ioy ouer you yee haue iust ●●●e of reioycing and in their griefe for you yee haue 〈◊〉 cause of griefe Looke therefore that they may re●oyce ouer you for that shall be your ioy and take heede that they may not mourne or grieue for you for that shall be your griefe Againe hence I obserue a notable comfort for the faithf●ll and painefull Ministers of Iesus Christ Hath he in all good conscience laboured in the worke of the Lord and doth he not see the desired fruits of his labours Paul the great Apostle of Christ mighty in the scriptures and much renow●ed for many great miracles which he wrought yet laboured 〈◊〉 vaine with many which he taught insomuch that the con●●deration of them with whom he laboured so much with so ●●●le profit made him weepe and shed teares as in this place It may not then seeme strange vnto vs if our labour with many be in vaine But it standeth them vpon that heare vs to looke vnto it that our labour be not in vaine amongst them for though they be not gathered yet shall we be glorious in the eyes of the Lord and our labour shall not be in vaine in the Lord but if they be not gathered they shall be scattered from the presence of the Lord and of the Lambe for eue● more Giue therefore all diligence that we may reioyce 〈◊〉 the day of Christ that we haue not runne in vaine nor l●boured in vaine amongst you for that will bee profitab●● for you Labour that we may giue accounts for you with io● and not with griefe Heb. 13.17 for that will bee vnprofitable for you L●● vs haue mutuall ioy one of another and let our ioy be in th● Lord. The third thing which I note is that the Apostle saith th● many walke vp and downe which are the enemies of the crosse 〈◊〉 Christ Whereby the Apostle signifieth the great danger th●● there was of them because they were many for that it woul● be hard for the Philippians not to light on some of them and t● be seduced by them vnlesse they should diligently looke o● him and such as he was Whence I obserue that it is not a●waies safe to follow a multitude but commonly rather dangerous Mat. 7.13 For many there are that goe in at the wide gate and walk● in the broad way but it is dangerous to follow them for th● way leads to destruction And againe our Sauiour hath told vs that many should come in his name Mat. 24.5 and deceiue many Yea commonly the multitude is the worst What were the rest of th● old world besides Noah and his familie Ten had beene bu● a small number of righteous men to haue beene found in th● great Citie of Sodom yet were not ten found there How often were all the multitude of the Israelites ready to ston● Moses and Aaron But one Elias vnto 450 of Baals Prophets but one Micah vnto 400 false Prophets And how ofte● doth Paul complaine that a great doore and effectuall being opened vnto him he had many aduersaries that there were
God nor abide the Ministers of Christ his Gospell And so it is generally wheresoeuer the affection is set on earthly things ther● their walking is inordinate whether it be in Pastor or in people And therefore the Apostle hath most carefully euery where admonished vs not to minde earthly things Colos 3.2.5.6 Set no● your affections on the things which are on the earth And againe Mortifie your members which are on the earth fornication vncleanesse the inordinate affection euill concupiscence and couetousnesse which is idolatrie for the which things sakes the wrath of Go● commeth on the children of disobedience The like admonition● are very vsuall in the holy Scriptures Marke then the Apostles rule Yee may not walke after them which minde earthly things and therefore ye may no● walke after them that be the enemies of the crosse of Christ For for this cause they whom we haue noted to be the enemies of the crosse of Christ whose end we haue noted to be their damnation whose God to be their belly whose glory to be to their shame for this cause I say they were such because they minded earthly things O but some will say that these whom I noted to be such are the onely men many of them that sequestred themselues from earthly things and haue no minde of earthly things See then whether that which hath beene said shew not plainely that they are the enemies of the crosse of Christ that their God is their belly that they seeke the praise of men more then of God For if they be such these are plaine and euident tokens that they doe mind earthly things whatsoeuer be said and whatsoeuer shew be made to the contrarie Neither were it otherwise hard to shew by their whole practise that their whole minde and all their affections are set on earthly things But it shall not be needfull That which hath beene said may serue to cleare the point and to be a sufficient caueat vnto you that ye doe not walke after their example And let this be set downe for a generall rule that we may not follow their example which minde earthly things Yet if our practise be lookt into it will be found that generally we follow them and none else For whereon else are our mindes our delight our affections set but on the things which are on earth The rich man what minded hee but riches the ambitious man what but honours the voluptuous man what but pleasures the dainty man what but ease the carnall man what but the flesh and the lusts thereof Generally our thoughts are earth creeping thoughts our desires earth-creeping desires our actions earth smelling actions our waies earth-smelling waies We thinke and care some of vs how to liue some of vs how to liue well But how is that to liue at ease to swimme with pleasures to haue wealth at our wils and to leaue the rest of our substance for our children And hence it is that the voice of vnmercifulnesse towards the poore of deceit in buying and selling of oppression of our brethren of slandering one another and stealing one from another is heard in our streetes Hence it is that there are diuisions and dissensions emulations strife enuying and th● like amongst vs. Hence it is that wisedome crieth withou● and vttereth her voice in the streets but no man hearkeneth nor receiueth instruction euen because wee minde earthl● things and set our affections thereon But what saith our Apostle 2 Tim. 2 4. No man saith he that warreth entangleth himselfe wit● the affaires of this life because he would please him that hath ch●sen him to be a souldier Now we are all of vs euen so many a● are baptized into the name of Christ Iesus billed souldiers to fight vnder his banner against euery thing that exalteth it self● against God And our care should be in all things to pleas● him that hath chosen vs to be his souldiers And for this caus● we should not suffer our selues to be entangled with the affaire● of this life so that we should set our affections on the thing● which are on the earth For it is the course of militarie discipline that hauing billed themselues to be souldiers they minde no more houshold or other ordinarie affaires but only their warre Right so should it be in the course of ou● Christian warfare that hauing giuen our names vnto Christ to fight vnder his banner wee should not henceforth mind● earthly things but still haue close girt vnto vs the whole armour of God that we may be able to resist in the euill day and hauing finished all things stand fast The faithfull Minister of the Gospell should not seeke his owne but that which is Iesus Christs The faithfull Christian should weine himselfe from the transitorie things of this life and at no hand set his affections on them Howbeit let no man so vnderstand me as if I thought that we should not meddle with the transitorie things of this life or haue nothing at all to doe with earthly things For no doubt we may medle with them and vse them and make a godly vse of them The Patriarches and Prophets our blessed Sauiour and his holy Apostles as the Scriptures beare witnesse vsed them and made an holy vse of them Nay not onely we may vse them and make an holy vse of them but we must count them the good blessings of Almightie God and we must take care to vse them to his glory We may not lightly regard ●hem or wrechlesly neglect them but we must carefully hu●band them and wisely employ them to our own vses and the good of Gods children For therefore wee haue them that therewith we may doe good vnto all but especially vnto those that are of the houshold of faith wealth that wee may helpe to supply the wants of our brethren honour and might that we may helpe to lift the poore out of the mire fauour and friendship that so we may be the better able to relieue them that are oppressed all things needfull and profitable for this life that therewith wee may doe good vnto those that be in neede or necessitie and that thereby we may glorifie our Father which is in heauen So then to take me as if I thought that we may not medle with or vse earthly things temporall blessings were to mistake me But this I say with the Apostle that we must vse them as though wee vsed them not 1 Cor. 7.31 namely so we must vse them as that we be not entangled with them nor mastered by them 2 Tim. 2.4 Wee must not be entangled with the affaires of this life as the Apostle speaketh And as the Prophet saith of riches that if they encrease wee may not set our hearts vpon them Psal 62.10 so is it to bee said in generall of all earthly things we may not set our hearts vpon them We may not Colos 3.2 as our Apostle saith elsewhere set our affections on
liue here in the body climing vp into heauen that when death comes and ye must remoue out of the body ye may dwell for euer with the Lord and be receiued into the full possession of that inheri●ance immortall and vndefiled which is reserued in heauen for you LECTVRE LXXII PHILIP 3 Verse 20.21 From whence also wee looke for the Sauiour euen the Lord Iesus Christ who shall change our vile body c. FRom whence This is the second Christian profession which the Apostle maketh in behalfe of himselfe and such others as walked as he did and it is of their expectation of Christ his second comming to saue them Which also yeelde●h a reason why they haue their conuersation in hea●en Our conuersation saith the Apostle is in heauen And why so From heauen we certainly looke and wait for the appearing of our Lord Iesus Christ when hee shall come as a swi●● Iudge against all them that haue made their bellie their Go● but as our Sauiour to giue vnto vs an inheritance among the● that are saued therefore our soule-conuersation is in heaue● where now Christ is and whence he shall come in that day t● saue vs. In that the Apostle saith from whence hee noteth th● place whence Christ his second comming shall be and consequently the place where now he is according to his humanitie● for there now he is whence at that day hee shall come sittin● now in glory at the right hand of the throne of God in heauen whence hee shall also come in glory to iudge both th● quicke and the dead Againe in that he saith from whence als● wee looke for the Sauiour he signifieth their patient expectation and waiting for the appearing of our Lord Iesus Christ when he shall appeare the second time without sinne vnto saluation 〈◊〉 for Christ being then already descended from the bosome o● his Father and hauing offered vp himselfe without spot vnto God to take away the sinnes of such his chosen children a● through faith in his bloud haue their consciences purged from dead workes to serue the liuing God now they waited and looked for the promise of his second comming when he should come in the clouds to be glorified in his Saints but to render vengeance vnto them that know not God nor obey the Gospell of our Lord Iesus Christ Againe in that he saith from whence also wee looke for the Sauiour euen the Lord Iesus Christ he noteth the person of him whose second comming from heauen in the clouds they waited and looked for which is the Lord Iesus Christ the Sauiour The Lord who is to be feared hauing all soueraigne power giuen vnto him in heauen and in earth The Lord Iesus who is to be feared and loued hauing laid downe his life for vs to saue vs from our sinnes and to free vs from condemnation the due desert of our sinne The Lord Iesus Christ who is to be feared loued and reuerenced hauing as our Priest reconciled vs vnto God and as our Prophet instructed vs in the will of God Vnto all which the Apostle addeth this that further he calleth him the S●uiour for that then in his second comming he should not only saue them and free them from sinne and condemnation which he did at his first comming in his humilitie but shou●d ●●ue them and free them from death and corruption and ●ring them into the full possession of that inheritance pur●hased in heauen for them So that yee see the generall point ●ere spoken of is Christ his second comming in glory the ●articular points are the place whence the second comming ●hall be the patient expectation and waiting of the faithfull ●or the second comming and the person of him that shall ●ome in this second comming which the faithfull so looke ●or Now let vs see what notes and obseruations wee may ga●her hence whereof to make some further vse and instruction ●or our selues The first thing which I note is the Apostles Christian pro●ession which he maketh in the behalfe of himselfe and such others as walked so as he did touching the place whence they waited for the appearing of our Lord Iesus Christ They loo●ed for the comming of the Lord Iesus Christ from heauen ●here they had set their affections where they had their soule-conuersation Hence then I obserue a ground of that point of an article of our faith wherein we beleeue that Christ shall come from heauen with glory to iudge both the quicke and the dead Whereunto also the Scriptures giue witnesse often elsewhere as where the Angels told the Apostles saying Act. 1.11 This Iesus which is taken vp from you into heauen shall so come as yee haue seene him goe into heauen and againe where the Apostle saith that the Lord shall descend from heauen with a shout 1 The. 4.16 and with the voice of the Archangell and with the trumpet of God and againe where our Sauiour himselfe tels his disciples Mat. 24.30 that the sonne of man shall come in the clouds of heauen with power and great glory But what needeth further proofe of this point It is a thing which wee all beleeue and confesse that Christ being ascended into heauen where he sitteth at the right hand of the throne of God shall come againe from heauen in his appointed time with power and great glory so that euery eye shall see him yea euen they which pierced him thorow and shall render vnto euery man according to that he hath done whether it be good or euill The vses which we are to make hereof are these First to beware of such false teachers as tell vs that the body of Christ is not only in heauen but in earth also in euery Kingdome in euery City in euery parish in euery loafe i● euery peece of bread and cup of wine where the sacrament i● receiued For doe wee looke that he shall come from heauen the second time with power and great glorie And shall we● not thinke that now he is there whence then hee shall come True it is that Christ as hee is God is not in heauen alone o● limited vnto any place but filleth all places being infinite and incomprehensible But as he is man so is he there alone whence hee shall appeare the second time vnto saluation for so it is written Act. 3.21 that the heauens must containe him vntill the time that all things bee restored And wat else is it but to destroy the nature of a true body to say that it may bee in diuers places at one time Let this for this time suffice vs Wee looke for Christ as he is man from heauen therefore as hee is man he is in heauen the heauen must containe him till all things be restored therefore he is alone in heauen hee hath a true body therefore hee cannot be in diuers places at once Beware therefore of such deceiuers that yee giue no place vnto their errour and trust perfectly that Christ sitteth at
the Scriptures vse to double and redouble his speech euen to shew both the needfulnes of his speech and the difficultie in respect of man of enforcing his speech In the Psalme how often doth the Prophet exhort the faithful vnto the praises of the Lord euen before all the people that they their posteritie might know them Psal 107. saying O that men would therefore praise the Lord for his goodnesse and declare the wonders that he doth for the children of men Euen foure seueral times in that one Psalme And wherefore but to shew how needfull it was they should do so and how hardly men are drawne to do so How often likewise doth our Sauiour exhort his disciples vnto humilitie meeknes Mat. 11.29 sometimes saying vnto them Learne of me that I am meeke and lowly in heart sometimes telling them that whosoeuer among them would be great 20.26 should be seruant vnto the rest sometimes washing their feete Ioh. 13. c. thereby to teach them humilitie And wherefore doth he so often beate vpon it but to shew how needfull it was they should be humble and meeke and likewise how hard a thing it is to draw men vnto humilitie and meeknesse How often likewise doth the holy Ghost exhort to the putting off of the old man and the putting on of the new man No part of Scripture throughout the whole Bible wherein the holy Ghost doth not speake much though not haply in these words yet to this purpose And wherefore else is it but to imply both how needfull a matter it is to be perswaded and how hard a matter it is to perswade the mortification of the old man and the quickening of the new man And to let other instances passe in the point whereof we now speake how oft doth our Sauiour exhort to reioyce and be glad in persecution Mat. 5.12 because of the reward laid vp for vs by God in heauen Luc. 10.20 to reioyce because our names are written in heauen by the finger of Gods own hand Ioh. 16.33 to be of good comfort because he hath ouercome the world that is to reioyce in the Lord And wherefore but to shew how needfull it is to reioyce in the Lord and how hard it is to perswade this reioycing So that by the vsuall course of the Scripture it appeareth that our Apostle doubling and redoubling this his exhortation thereby sheweth both how needfull and withall how hard a matter it is to perswade this constant reioycing in the Lord to reioyce in the Lord alwayes so needfull that it must be perswaded again and again and withall so hard to be perswaded that it cannot be too much vrged beaten vpon But it wil not be amisse yet a litle more particularly to looke into the reasons why it is so needfull to reioyce in the Lord alwayes and why we are so hardly perswaded to reioyce in the Lord alwayes Who seeth not that considereth any thing what mightie enemies we haue alwayes to fight withall the flesh within vs to snare and deceiue vs the world without vs to fight and wage warre against vs and the diuel euer seeking like a roaring Lion whom he may deuoure Who seeth not what fightings without what terrors within what anguishes in the soule what griefes in the bodie what perils abroade what practises at home what troubles we haue on euery side When then Satan that old dragon casts out many flouds of persecutions against vs when wicked men cruelly disdainfully and despitefully speake against vs when lying slandering and deceitfull mouthes are opened vpon vs when we are mocked and iested at and had in derision of all them that are about vs when we are afflicted tormented and made the worlds wonder when the sorrowes of death compasse vs and the flouds of wickednesse make vs afraid and the paines of hell come euen vnto our soule what is it that holds vp our heads that we sinke not how is it that we stand either not shaken or if shaken yet not cast downe Is it not by our reioycing which we haue in Christ Iesus Yes verily we lift vp our eyes vnto heauen and we are of good comfort because he hath ouercome the world we lift vp our eyes vnto the Lord and we reioyce in him because he shal giue a good end vnto all our troubles and shall wipe all teares from our eyes In Dauids troubles he was all his stay as himselfe euery where almost protesteth and when the Apostles were persecuted beaten and cast in prison they reioyced because of their strong consolation in Christ Iesus And so it is with all the faithfull children of God whatsoeuer flouds do beate vpon them whatsoeuer causes of sorrow do ouertake them yet do they stand and quaile not because of the reioycing they haue in Christ Iesus On this rocke all the surges of the sea of this world are broken Againe when others of vs are assaulted by that mightie Prince of darknesse when we are tried by mockings scourgings by bonds and imprisonment when we feele the smart of losse or hurt in bodie goods or name when the Beast of Spaine and with him that false Prophet of Rome thunder out threatnings and imagine all kind of mischiefe against vs whē the paines of death take hold of vs and multitude of sorowes beset vs round about why is it that our hearts do faile within vs how is it that we fall from our former loue and that feare commeth vpon vs as vpon a woman in her trauell Is it not through our want of reioycing in the Lord Yes verily we feele not in our soules the treasures of mercies that are hid for vs in Christ Iesus which should keepe vs standing against all batteries and assaults whatsoeuer and therefore we are not onely daunted and dismayed with these things but are quite affright and vtterly ouercome of them If any one of Iobs afflictions lie vpon vs we breake out into all the impatiencies that he did but we cannot lay hold of any such comforts as he did If death seize vpon sonne or daughter or any deare vnto vs 2. Sam 18.33 we breake out into like outcries with Dauid saying Absalon my sonne my sonne Absalon would God I had died for thee O Absalon my sonne my sonne but though Ioab would yet can he not comfort vs as he did Dauid Est 6.12 If Haman do but feare the Kings displeasure he hastes him home mourning and couers his head and will not be comforted and if Ahitophel do but see that his counsell be not followed 2. Sam. 17.23 he saddles his asse and rides home and hangs himselfe And this it is when men haue not their comfort in God whatsoeuer do befall them in this life If this or that thwart them by and by they are cast downe And why euen because they haue not learned to reioyce in the Lord alway Very needfull then it is ye see that we reioyce
or proude or forgetfull of our Christian duties neither let penury and want make vs murmure or faint or cast vs downe through heauinesse Let vs walke constantly in both in both let vs be content and in both walke in those holy waies which God hath ordained vs to walke in If we can once take out this lesson it will bring with it such a Christian perfection that we shall not be to seeke almost in any point of Christianitie Let vs therefore apply it and as we grow either in wealth or in want let vs thinke on it that daily more and more we may know to be abased and to abound and that daily more and more we may be instructed euerie where and in all things both to be full and to be hungrie to abound and to haue want LECTVRE XC PHILIP 4. Verse 13. I am able to do all things through the helpe of Christ which strengtheneth me 14. Notwithstanding ye haue well done that ye did c. I Am able to do all things c. We haue heard what things the Apostle assumed to himselfe and they were great things as that he had learned to be content with his estate whatsoeuer it were that he knew both to be abased and to abound that euery where and in all things he was instructed both to be full and to be hungrie both to abound and to haue want Now lest he should seeme to boast too much of himselfe or to giue others occasion of boasting themselues he giueth the whole glorie of all that he is able to do in all the things that he speaketh of vnto Christ that enableth him thereunto For the better vnderstanding of which words first it will be needfull to cleare them from that sence whereunto some wrest them For thorow the malice of Satan no doubt either blinding the eyes of our Aduersaries that they should not see the truth or hardening their hearts that they should peruert the waies of truth these words which by our Apostle are added lest he should seeme to boast too much of himselfe are wrested by our aduersaries vnto the greatest boast of mans perfection that can be these words wherein our Apostle giueth all glorie vnto Christ are drawne by our Aduersaries vnto the glory of man and his perfect obedience For to proue that man in this life is able perfectly to fulfill the Law of God they alledge this place as making to that purpose where it is said I am able So that they giue this meaning of these words I am able not onely to be abased and to abound c. but generally I am able to do all things euen all things that the Law requireth through the helpe of Christ which strengtheneth me is if he helpe and strengthen me by his grace that what abilitie I want in my selfe may be supplied by him And hereupon they conclude that man regenerate is able by the grace of Christ working together with him and strengthening him perfectly to fulfill the whole Law of God Whereby how much they peruert the meaning of the Apostle in this place we shall easily perceiue if we looke but a little into the doctrine which hence they deliuer For who is he that is able to loue the Lord his God with all his heart with all his soule with all his minde and his neighbour as himselfe And yet this the Law requireth Deut. 6.5 saying Thou shalt loue the Lord thy God with all thine heart with all thy soule and with all thy might and Leuit. 19.15 Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe Againe who is he that is able to continue in all things that are written in the Booke of the Law to do them Deut. 27.26 And yet the Law saith Cursed is euerie man that continueth not in all things that are written in the booke of the Law to do them Againe who is he that doth good and sinneth not Iames 3.2 1. Iohn 1.8 In many things saith Iames we offend all And Iohn If we say that we haue no sin we deceiue our selues and the truth is not in vs. And sinne we know is the transgression of the Law 3 4. so that whosoeuer sinneth transgresseth also the Law We know in part 1. Cor. 13.9 saith the Apostle we prophesie in part Now as is our knowledge so is our faith our loue our obedience For so long as we are clothed with the earthly house of this tabernacle as our knowledge is vnperfect so our faith our loue and our obedience are vnperfect Yea in the very best of vs there is alwayes a rebellion betweene the flesh and the spirit and the better we are the sharper oftentimes will the combate be Who is he then that is able in this life perfectly to fulfill the Law of God Vnto Christ Iesus God gaue the Spirit without measure and he was able perfectly to fulfill the whole Law of God and did fulfill it for vs that the righteousnesse of the Law might be fulfilled in vs and we might be made the righteousnesse of God in him But vnto vs I meane euen vnto the most regenerate and sanctified man the Spirit is giuen onely by measure so that the flesh and the lusts thereof are not altogether mortified and vtterly tamed thereby but oftentimes prickes they haue in the flesh and messengers of Sathan to buffet them How farre off then are the best from perfectly fulfilling the whole law of God Some indeed are said in the Scriptures to haue walked in all the commandements and ordinances of the Lord without reproofe as Zacharie and Elizabeth and others to haue sought the Lord with their whole heart as those godly Kings Dauid Asa Iosiah c. But we must vnderstand that as Ieroboam and others are said not to haue followed the Lord with their whole heart because they made worshipped other gods so those godly kings are said to haue sought the Lord with their whole heart because they haue the honor which was due vnto God to him alone and that Zacharie and Elizabeth were onelie in comparison of others said to haue walked holily vnblamably before men For if their waies should haue bin examined before the Lord then that of the Prophet should haue bene found true In thy sight O Lord Psal 143.2 shall no flesh liuing be iustified and well might that of Eliphaz vnto Iob haue bin said of them What is man that he should be cleane Iob 15.14 and he that is borne of woman that he should be iust Behold 15. he found no stedfastnesse in his Saints yea the heauens are not cleane in his sight how much more is man abhominable and filthie 16. which drinketh iniquitie like water In a word not any of the sonnes of men that euer were since the fall of man or are were or are able to fulfill the law of God but onely vnperfectly and not in any sort perfectly otherwise then by imputation Christ his perfect obedience
being imputed vnto them through faith and that which is vnperfect in their obedience being couered and not imputed vnto them through Christ So that ye see the doctrine which they deliuer from these words is quite repugnant vnto the doctrine of the holy Ghost throughout the whole Scripture And therefore that cannot be the meaning of these words which they do giue Againe if the Rhemists had thought these words to haue made any whit to that purpose it is very like they would not haue failed to haue giuen that note hence For we see how ready they are to wrest all places to the maintenance of their erronious opinions So that they passing this place ouer with silence it is very like that they otherwise thought of the meaning of these words then others of their profession haue done and do Whether then we looke vnto the doctrine which they gather from these words quite repugnant vnto the doctrine of the holy Ghost throughout the whole Scripture or vnto the iudgement of some of themselues as it may seeme it appeareth that the Apostles meaning is not as our Aduersaries do imagine that he was able of himselfe to do al things not onely the things spoken of before but all things generally which the Law of God required through the helpe of Christ which strengthened him and gaue further strength and vertue vnto his owne strength and vertue What then is the Apostles meaning in these words Surely this as appeareth by the tenour of them To cleare himselfe of boasting himselfe touching the things that he had spoke of he renounceth all his owne power and strength as if by his owne power and strength he had bene able to do those things and he attributeth all vnto the power and strength of Christ saying I am able to do all things euen all the things that I haue spoken of that is I can be abased and I can abound c. For so this vniuersall speech is to be restrained vnto the subiect and matter here spoken of as vsually it is in other places of the Scripture or if we will needes enlarge it further then thus I am able to do all things that is all things that belong vnto my duty and calling But how by my owne power or strength No but through Christ which strengtheneth and enableth me He doth not say through the helpe of Christ as it is in our English Bibles albeit that also might be said for that he is often said to helpe vs in the things wherein he alone worketh altogether without vs but he saith I am able to do all things through Christ whose worke wholly and onely it is to strengthen me by his holy Spirit in my inner man for so the word seemeth here to signifie to do these things euen to suffer aduersitie and not be cast downe through heauinesse and likewise to enioy prosperitie and not be puffed vp with pride This I take to be the simple meaning of the Apostle here Where I note these two points first that the Apostle saith that he is able to do all those things secondly by whom it is that he is able to do all things euen by Christ which c. In the first point where the Apostle saith that he is able c. it is to be noted that he saith I am able He doth not say I was able c. for indeede before he was called to the knowledge of God in Christ Iesus he was not able to do so But he saith I am able implying that now that Christ dwelleth in him by his holy Spirit now that he is engrafted into Christ his bodie by the washing of the new birth and the renewing of the holy Ghost he is able to do all these things to be abased c. Whence I obserue this lesson for vs that being regenerate by the Spirit of God and engraffed into the true oliue tree Christ Iesus we are able to be full and to be hungrie to abound and to haue want and to do the things that are good Before such time as we be borne againe of water and of the Spirit and be made partakers of the roote and fatnesse of the true oliue tree Christ Iesus the very imaginations of the thoughts of our hearts are onely euill continually our throates are open sepulchers our tongues are full of deceit the poison of Aspes is vnder our lippes our mouth is full of cursing and bitternesse our feete are swift to shed bloud destruction and calamitie are in our wayes the way of peace we know not the feare of God is not before our eyes and in one word we are wholly auerse from euerie thing that is good and onely inclined vnto that which is euill being not grapes but thornes not figs but thistles not good but ill trees not liuely but dead branches not friends but enemies not the sons of God but the children of wrath not citizens but aliants from the common-wealth of Israel and strangers from the couenants of Promise But being renewed by the Spirit our hard hearts are softned our froward wills are reformed our darke mindes are inlightned our inordinate affections are ordered our wicked thoughts are bettered and our whole man so made partaker of the godly nature that we flie the corruption which is in the world through lust and study to liue soberly and righteously and godly in this present world So that henceforth we are able to flie that which is euill and to do that which is good which also those manifold exhortations in holy Scripture imply when we are exhorted to follow the truth in loue to mortifie our earthly members to procure things honest before God and all men c. For albeit vnto the wicked and vnregenerate the Lord hath not opened their eyes or their cares that they can see the things that belong vnto their peace or hearken vnto instruction and receiue vnderstanding yet hath he appointed thus to stirre vp his children and made them able to do the things whereunto they are exhorted We do not then as our aduersaries falsly charge vs in the question of Free-will make men stockes and stones such as in the things that are good do nothing at all Ye see we say that being regenerate by the Spirit of God we are able to be abased and to abound c. to do the things that belong vnto our peace and such as accompany our saluation As therefore the Apostle saith vnto the Corinthians 2. Cor. 4.3 If our Gospel be hid it is hid to them that be lost so I say If any man be not able to do the thing that is good it is the man vnregenerate in whom Christ dwelleth not by the power of his Spirit Here then is the point not whether we be able to do the things that are good for that we hold but whether we be able by our owne power and strength at all to do the things that are good by whom it is that we are able to do these