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A97360 The works of the judicious and learned divine Dr. Thomas Taylor, part 1. sometimes preacher of Aldermanbury, London. Published by himself in his life time, in several smaller volumes, now collected together into three volumes in fol. two of which are here bound together. The first volume containing, I. An exposition on the 32. Psalm ... The second volume containing, I. An exposition of the parable of the sower and seed, on Luk. 8. ... The third volume is in the press, and will containe in it, I. The progress of sts, to full holinesse ... Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1659 (1659) Wing T560A 683,147 498

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He was an eminent type of our Jesus or Joshua whose voyce speaking in the Scripture the Book of the Law we must attend unto in all things Joh. 5.39 Search the Scriptures and our Saviour said to the Sadduces Yee erre not knowing the Scriptures plainly affirming that the Scriptures rightly known were a sufficient fence from all errour Luke 16.29 They have Moses and the Prophets let them hear them Matth. 19.4 Christ by Scripture refuted the Pharisees abuse of that Scripture of Moses for putting away their wives Isa 8.20 To the Law and to the Testimony 1 This is true by reason of the perfection of the Scripture Psal 19.7 Reasons The Law of God is perfect so perfect as man and Angel are accursed that shall adde unto it Prov. 30.5 6. Every word of God is pure a shield to those that trust in him put nothing unto his words lest he reprove thee and thou be found a lyar It is a perfect Canon or rule which as a straight line shews the crookedness of that which is not strait It is a touch-stone and trial of all truths It is a perfect Law which is an universal Judgement to direct all and for all to bee led by which live under it It is perfect in the effect 2 Tim. 3.16 It is profitable to teach to improve to correct and instruct in righteousness and to make the man of God perfect Obj. The Apostle saith it is profitable but not that it is sufficient alone Ans We say not it is therefore sufficient because he saith it is profitable but because it is profitable for all purposes of teaching improving and makeing the man of God perfect therefore it is sufficient and perfect 2 In the Scripture we have the voyce of God speaking from Heaven than which voyce no voyce of man or Angel can be more clear or manifest Prov. 2. ● Out of his mouth cometh knowledge and understanding His wisdom in the Scripture is above Salomons in answering all dark and deep questions and no ca●e can be propounded which hath not there his satisfaction and determination Object But the Scriptures are a dumbe Judge and cannot determine Controversies Ans 1. We give earthly Kings leave to give definitive sentence and judgment in cases by their writing by which numbers who never heard their voyce but read the writing understand their meaning and shall we now call them ●●mb Judges or shall we deny this priviledge to the King of glory to determine by writing but wee must blasphemously account him a dumb Judge 2 The Scriptures are not a dumb Judge but a speaking Judge Rom. 3.19 That which the Law speaketh it speaketh to them that are under the Law Heb. 12.5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Yee have forgotten the consolation which speaketh to you as children Joh. 7.42 Doth not the Scripture say and what saith the Scripture so as it is a speaking Judge and gives to it self a mouth and a voyce and that a loud one 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 9.27 the Apostle quoting the Prophet Esay saith Esay cries out concerning Israel c. 3 How doth their Speaking-Judge determine all Causes in Christendom delated unto him at Rome but by Writing and Bulls and Breves and yet hee scorns to be counted a dumb Judge 3 That is the noble and infallible Judge of all Controversies to which all flesh must stand which hath his authority of himself no way delegate but the Scripture is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for it self to bee beleeved because it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inspired by God from whom lies no appeal whose judgement can by no means within or without it self be corrupted whose voyce alone cannot erre or be led by passion affection or respect of persons but is an unchangeable truth as God himself is the Author of it In every Common-wealth the fittest decider of a Controversie in the Law is the Law-maker the King himself the same is also true in the Church 4 Christ himself decided all Controversies by Scripture so did the Apostles so the ancient beleevers brought all their doubts to the Scriptures after their example Vse 1. This serves to discover the wickedness of the Church of Rome who 1 That they may be Judges in their Causes and 2 To avoyd the light of Scripture which they see so direct against them flie the Scriptures as an incompetent Judge of the Controversies of Religion between us and in stead of the Scriptures they appoint us four Judges the authority of all which is superiour by th●ir doctrine to the authority of Scripture ¶ I. The first Judge is the Church for that say they is to judge of the meaning of Scripture and but for the authority of the Church wee could not know which were Scripture Ans 1. We ask what they mean by the Church They say the Catholick Church But that is impossible to be Judge upon earth because it is a company of all the elect in Heaven and Earth which never was on earth at one time Then they say the visible Church But what if the Church bee not visible sometimes as in Elias his time or be in the Wilderness Then they say the Roman Church which hath ever been visible these fifteen hundred years Now we know our Judge and how our cause is like to goe in which it is a party But 1 It is not the Catholike Church unless a finger can bee an hand or an hand the whole body or a part become the whole and falsly and ridiculously call themselves Catholikes 2 That is no true Church which disagreeth from Christ the Head as Augustine saith and is fallen off Christ by many fundamental errors as Idolatry Justification by works and the like which yet are maintained by Romanists 3 Wee hold that the Orthodox and true Church is 1 A witnesse and keeper of the Scriptures but a jewell hath his price and excellency from it self not from the keeper 2 Having the Spirit of Christ the Church can discern true Scripture from false and supposititious writings but this by the help of Scripture as a Goldsmith by the touch-stone can discern gold from other metals but hee makes it not gold but onely tries it so to bee 3 It is to publish and declare the truth of Scripture without adding or diminishing as an Herald or Cryer manifests the Kings pleasure but it receives no authority from him 4 The true Church is a ministerial interpreter as having the gift of Prophecy but tyed to interpret and judge of Scripture by Scripture Christ is a magisterial interpreter But that the Church on earth should have authority over Scriptures is too unreasonable 1 It is to prefer mens voice and testimony above Gods 1 Joh. 5.9 If wee receive mans testimony the testimony of God is greater Joh. 5. ult If yee will not beleeve Moses his writings how will yee beleeve my sayings as if hee should say If yee beleeve not Scriptures my testimony will do you no good
their own Language not onely for the learned but unlearned also that it might bee familiar to all sorts of men Deut. 31.11.12 Thou shalt read the words of this Law before all Israel that they may hear it and learn to fear the Lord and hee names their men and women children and strangers Object But this belongs to the Jews alone Answ No The reason is perpetual all of all ages must fear the Lord and therefore have the means the word of God Jerem. 36.6 Jeremy commanded Baruch to read the word of the Lord in the hearing of all Judah and in the audience of the people Joh. 5.39 Search the scriptures Object Christ spake to the learned the Scribes and Pharisees Answ But the reason of the precept belongs to all who desire life eternal Col. 3.16 Let the word of God dwell plentifully in you and 1. v. 9. hee prayeth they may be filled with the knowledge of the will of God in all wisdome and spiritual understanding now all the Colossians were not Clergy-men And how doth the Lord incourage all his people to understand and obey the words of the Law Deut. 4.6 Onely this people is wise and of understanding c. 2 It is against the example of Christ and the Apostles 2 Against the example of Christ and his Apostles Christ taught in a known tongue so the Apostles were indued with divers Tongues to preach to every Nation in their own Tongue and all the writers of holy scriptures did write them in the tongue best known most vulgar and common whereby it might more easily come to every ones knowledge for whatsoever was written was written for our learning Rom 15.4 that wee by patience and consolation of the scriptures might have hope so our Saviour saith These things are written that yee might beleeve so as whosoever must have faith hope patience comfort must bee acquainted with the scriptures and if these be entailed onely to learned men so may they 3 It is against common sense 3 Against common sense and as if one should advise another who is to meet his enemy in the field that if hee would drive away his enemy and get the victory hee must lay down his weapon or leave it behind him Object But the Popish Doctors put other weapons into their hands to fight with as crosses holy-water charmes and conjurations wherewith the vnder sort yet content themselves Answ These are weapons of the Devils own forging the Leviathan of Hell accounts of these spears but as straw and laughs at them as if a man being to encounter a most furious and furnisht enemy should cover himself with a cob-web and think hee were well furnished No no Satan puts these into mens hands to keep them from the word which is the only charm the only cross the onely hallowed water that can conjure him which our Lord by his blessed example hath taught us to use 4 Against the Fathers Ad Volusianum Epist 3 Contra Valent. lib. 3. cap. 12 4 It is against the Antient Fathers Augustine saith Deus in Scripturis quasi amicus familiaris loquitur ad cor doctorum indoctorum The Lord in the Scripture speaketh familiarly to the conscience of the learned and unlearned Irenaeus saith Hac omnia contulit eis Scripturarum Dei ignorantia The Valentinians fell into all their heresies through their ignorance of the scriptures But how should Papists beleeve Irenaeus when they will not beleeve the Son of God who tells the Sadduces that they erred because they knew not the scriptures Chrysostome hath these words Ad Coloss hom 9 Audite quotquot estis mundani uxoribus praeestis ac liberis quemadmodum vobis Apostolus Paulus praecipiat legere scripturas idque non simpliciter neque obiter sed magna cum diligentia and again Audite omnes seculares In Epist ed Coloss cap. 3. v. 16. In Isa hom 2 comparate ●obis biblia animae pharmaca And Hieroms gloss is good Hic ost enditur saith hee verbum Christi non sufficienter sed abundanter Laicos habere debere se invicem docere vel monere Lastly Origen shews his judgement in this affectionate speech Vtinam omnes faceremus illud quod scriptum est scrutamini scripturas Oh that wee would all do as it is written search the scriptures 5 Against learned Papists themselves 5 It is against the Popish writers themselves Cajetan a very ingenuous man and a great scholar saith Hinc discamus arma nostra esse sacras scripturas Let us take this for a good lesson that the holy scriptures are our onely weapons Diez a Portugal Fryer saith That as Laban in the night deceived Jacob by giving him instead of fair Rahel blear-eyed Leah so Satan deceives us in the night of ignorance with vain traditions for divine Scripture Yea and Bernard himself whom Harding brings in as a favourer of his cause herein saith That at Bethlehem the common people sang Psalms and Halelujahs yea in the fields as they were plowing and mowing c. By all this wee conclude with our Saviour Joh. 3.20 They do evil and therfore they hate the light They have a long time deceived the World by holding it in ignorance a principal pillar of their Religion and labour still to hold it in blindness dealing no otherwise than the Philistims dealt with the Israelites 1 Sam. 13.19 who to hold them in base bondage and servitude took all their weapons from them and left them not a Smith in Israel lest they should get weapons and so get from under their power Use 2. If the word of God bee a principal part of our spiritual armour then ought we alwaies to have the Scriptures in a readiness not onely the Bibles in our houses which many have not who have their corslets hanging by the wals but put on upon us Eph. 6.17 and that is when by diligent reading hearing meditating and study of it but especially by earnest prayer that God would open our understandings to see his good pleasure in it wee have attained such skill as wee can wisely shape an answer to the nature and quality of any temptation Alas how lamentable is their estate that regard not the sound knowledge of the Word but content themselves in their ignorance whereby Satan holds them under the power of darknesse for impossible it is till men come to know the truth that ever they should come out of the snare of the devil and to amendment see 2 Tim. 2.25 26. Many spend their daies in reading fables or profane Histories or cannot tell how to pass their time but by taking in hand the Devils books and bones as one calleth them cards and dice or some other unwarrantable exercise all which give Satan more power over them But the armour of proof against Satan and their own corruption which is the Word of God lies in the book untouched untossed as if men were at league not to disturb Satan at
Parents 1 Cor. 7.14 In communion in one kind 6 If they will administer the Communion but in one kinde Against this their sacrilegious practice wee have Christs institution and the example of the Apostles besides the Primitive Church Vse 3. This mighty effect of the Word in the right use of it shews the Scriptures to bee of God and the authority of God and not of man as the Papists teach us not of the Church of Fathers Counsels Popes in Peters fictitious chair or the company of Cardinals What writing of man can have authority over mens consciences as Gods Word hath Or who will beleeve the Church that will not beleeve the Scripture Is not the Word Truth and all men lyars and subject to error Now shall that which is not subject to error bee subject to that which is subject to error Vse 4. Whatsoever writing doth indeed confirm error is not Canonical Scripture for this confutes all error in practice and in judgement therefore Apocryphal Books are not Canonical and divine Scripture 1 because in every of them there is some repugnance to the Scripture 2 because they were not written by any Prophet nor in Hebrew not 3 given to the Jews as Gods Oracles as all the Old Testament was Rom. 3.1 2. 4 because Christ and the Apostles cited not any of them This I speak not against the books which contain in them many good Morals and in my judgement m●●● of all humane Histories bee best used but against the Papists who would thrust upon us Invocation of Saints and Prayer for the dead c. from their authority Vse 5. See hence the Reason why Satan and all his instruments were ever enemies to the true Preaching and professing of the Word namely because in the right use it is the onely hammer of the Kingdome of darkness Hee storms not at frothy and foolish delivery or at professors that are loose and ungirt and can take liberty for any thing they list Onely faithful Preachers and Professors that rightly preach and profess bear the burden of Satans and the Worlds malice Christs innocency and the Apostles power could not fence them from it Use 6. Lastly acknowledge it a singular priviledge of the Church so beset with enemies to have so sufficient and perfect a word 1 written that all men might have the benefit of it 2 Preached and rightly divided according to every mans particular necessity It is a great comfort that poor as well as rich base as well as noble have a share in it in an equal large manner The chief priviledge of the Church of the Jews was to keep Gods word in the letter Psal 147.19 20. and Rom. 3.2 but it will bee our preheminence above them if wee lock up the true sence of it in our hearts Job 22.22 and Prov. 22. It is a sure stay and a shield to them that walk uprightly No theef nor robber can steal it no it cannot bee taken away with our lives It is Maries good part which was never taken from her neither can bee from us being a perpetual freehold IV. Now followeth the fourth thing in this allegation of Christ to wit the parts of the Divine testimony 1 Negative Man lives not by bread only 2 Affirmative But by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God First Of the sence of the negative part Man that is a meer common and ordinary man and much less I that am the Son of God Liveth not that is preserveth not the natural life of his body By bread is meant all necessary and ordinary means of meat drink rest sleep physick recreation for so it is also used in the fourth petition of the Lords prayer Onely here bread is not opposed to other means of sustenance as flesh fish c. but to Gods blessing without which it cannot sustain our bodies But by every word that is every thing a common Hebraisme verbum for ●es and more specially for the decree and ordinance of God appointed to sustain man so the words following imply That commeth out of the mouth of God that is whatsoever God hath decreeed commanded or promised that it shall preserve life Now the sum of Christs answer in more words is this Thou sayest I must now have bread to satisfy my hungry or else I cannot live but thou speakest like thy self If my Fathers word bee to sustain mee without this means I shall live thereby without bread my Father is not tyed to ordinary means for preserving of life who is all-sufficient and Almighty and doth what and how hee will And this cannot bee doubted of seeing it is written in Deut. 8.3 by Moses that when the Israelites were in the wilderness as I am hungry and having nothing to eat no more than I have hee fed them with MAN forty years to teach them that man liveth not by bread onely for they had none but by every word and means which himself appointed Besides if I should distrust my Fathers providence and turn all these stones into bread yet if his word come not to give vertue and life unto them all this would not help all this bread would bee no better than stones as it was before And therefore I will still expect his word and not turn stones into bread at thine The negative part affordeth us this lesson that Doct. Outward and ordinary means are not of themselves sufficient to sustain and preserve the life of man Luke 12.15 mans life standeth not in abundance Outward means not sufficient to sustain the life of man If wee make an induction of all the chief means either of the being or well being of mans life wee shall easily see their insufficiency 1 Bread is a special means appointed to strengthen the heart Psal 104.15 1 Bread but yet there is a staft of bread which is another thing than bread and this being broken wee shall not bee strengthened but fade in the middest of bread Hence is the sentence accomplished against many Lev. 26.26 Ye shall eat and not hee satisfied The Lord gave the Israelites Quails in the wildernesse enough to maintain six hundred thousand footmen for many daies but a secret poison was in it that the more they had the more they dyed as of an exceeding great plague so as the place was called the graves of lusting Numb 11.33 Yea although our bread did not grow out of the earth but fell from heaven as Mannah did yet our Saviour saith Job 6.49 Your Fathers did eat Mannah in the wildernesse and are dead 2 Clothes are a special means to preserve a man in natural heat 1 Cl●thes but yet raiment of it self cannot keep him warm Hag. 1.6 Ye clothe you but yee bee not warm and of David in his age it is said that they covered him with clothes but no heat came to him 1 King 1.1 3 Physick 3 Physick is a remedy appointed by God to regain health and strength distempered or decayed but Asa
searched whether the things spoken were so We take no coin without due tryal Quest How shall I try the spirit that brings a sentence of Scripture Answ 1 By diligent study and reading of Scripture diligently searching out the truth for the determination of every truth must bee by scripture Dubiu●● and though scripture seem to bee opposed to scripture wee must not with Papists draw determination of matters from scripture so saith the Apostle in Eph. 4.14 Let us not bee carried about as children with every wind of doctrin how should wee do other but follow the truth in love Examine the places circumstances antecedents and consequents confer with other scriptures to all which it must agree 2 Follow and frequent the Ministery as not content with the knowledge of the scriptures without the true understanding of them Non in legendo sed in intelligerdo Hieron for they consist not in the bare letters but in the pithy sense said the Father And this true understanding wil help us to lay it to the Analogy of faith wherunto it must bee agreeable and will make our senses exercised in the word 3 Adde hereunto prayer which procureth the spirit to lead us into all necessary truth David never ceased to Pray to bee taught as we may see through the whole 119. Psalm 4 Consider the end and scope of the scripture alledged If it lead thee into an action condemned by the law of nature or against other direct scriptures or principles of religion it is of the Devil the father of Lies for Gods Spirit never alledgeth scripture but to lead us into the knowledge and practice of some truth This is Moses his rule Deut. 13.1 If a false Prophet rise up see what hee aimeth at if it bee to draw thee from the Lord his worship or word take heed of him so if Satan by any instrument of his shall bring the word and pretend great zeal if the end bee to draw thee to superstition Idolatry or Popery beware of him his scope discovers him If a doctrin or scripture be alledged to nourish any fleshly delight or to hold men in sin though the words bee Gods the allegation is the Devils as At what time soever a sinner repenteth c. and the Theef was saved at the last hour and therefore if thou canst say two or three good words at thy death all shall bee well here is the Devil saying It is written for all scripture truely cited by Gods Spirit aims at mortification and the furtherance of Repentance If a Scripture bee alledged and urged to threaten and discourage such as fear God and shew forwardness in good waies or to animate the sinner promising him peace and life it is Satans allegation for if Gods Spirit alledge scripture that word is good and comfortable to him that walks uprightly and the threats of the law are fit provision for impenitent persons Vse 2. This teacheth us not to content our selves to know the Scripture and bee able to speak of it or to alledge it for the Devil knows the word and can alledge it readily yea hee is expert in it Many men deceive themselves in their estate and think themselves sure of salvation if they can get a lirtle knowledge of the scripture above others as though Satan could not alledge it or as though the wicked could not preach it as Judas did or ungodly men profess it who take the word into their mouth and hate to bee reformed Psal 50.16 17. Use 3. But let us take heed wee come not behind the Devil himself while wee thus highly conceit our selves for 1 Are there not a number of ignorant men almost as ignorant as if the scriptures had never been written and shall not the Devil condemn these who hath gained so much knowledge in the word which containeth not one word of comfort for him but judgement that makes him tremble Yet these whom they would make wise to salvation and to whom they offer the joyes and comfort of life eternal are utterly ignorant of them 2 Many read the Scripture but as Satan not to inform or reform themselves nor to make themselves better but both themselves and others far worse as not only Hereticks and learned Papists who bend all their knowledge to suppress and hide the truth but all such as by the scripture se●k to maintain their own errors and sins which they will not part with And these are no better than the Devil 3 Others will read Scripture and hear and know it but without all special application and grace in the heart wherein they should differ from the Devil and wicked men who know the word but affect it not do it not nay cannot abide the special application of it to do them good and this doth nothing but increase sin and judgement sin Jam. 4.17 to him that knoweth to do well and doth it not it is sin a great sin without excuse or cloak Joh. 15.22 judgement for such shall bee beaten with many stripes 4 Others brag of their knowledge they read the Bible at least Davids Psalmes and they know as much as any Preacher can tell them But stay the Devil reads the Psalter as well as thou and can quote Davids Psalms more readily than thou hee can read the Bible hee knows as much yea more than any Preacher can tell him what sayest thou more of thy self than the Devil can do of himself and more truely And what hast thou gained by all this challenge but thine own conviction of great sin without excuse but not without witnesse Is not thine own mouth thy judge who professeth so much knowledge and so little grace love practice To sin wilfully and presumptuously against the light is an extraordinary conformity with Satan Rules of reading and hearing the word religiously 1 Consider the excellency of the Word above all pretious things and how dangerous it is to take Gods name in vain which is then when the word is frustrate of his right end 2 They are called holy Scriptures not only in regard of that holy truth contained in them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but because they are instruments by which the Elect are sanctified and made holy John 17.17 and therefore are never to bee used without holy affection nor without indeavour to grow up in holiness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3 They are the Word of faith therefore wee must mingle the Word with faith and lay up the precepts and promises thereof to beleeve it 4 The Scriptures being the rule of life wee must submit our whole man to the obedience and practice of it with all sincerity and constancy Hereby we shall go beyond the knowledge of the Word in Devils and ungodly men NOw for the place it self wee must consider it two waies 1 As abused by Satan in his allegation 2 As wee find it holily set down by the Spirit of God In Satans abuse of this Scripture wee may see many particulars 1 Hee wrongs
True it is That our Saviour said I receive not testimony from man that is I need no mans testimony for John gave witness to Christ no more doth the Scripture in it self For Christ was the light whether John witnessed to it or no so is the Scripture the Word of God whether the Church bee witness or no. But wee admit the Church to give witness but not authority see it in a familiar example A man owes mee money I have a bond and witnesses hee denies it I produce the bond and the witnesses that clear the matter and affirm the bond to bee his act and lawful do these now make the bond true or the debt good or onely clear it so to bee for if they should not witness the debt and bond were true Even such is the witnesse of the Church to the Scripture 2 The voice of the Spouse is inferiour to the voice of the bridegroom and howsoever a man may bee moved by the Church to hear the Scripture if hee bee unconverted as Augustine being a Maniche yet a man indued with Gods Spirit and the gift of faith esteems the Scripture for it self above all the words of all men as Christ himself at length was of far more authority than the woman of Samaria when the men thereof said to her Now wee beleeve not for thy word but because our selves have heard him So as when wee have the Papist asking us as every one of them doth when the Word hath put them to their shifts But how do you know Scripture to bee Scripture but by the Church wee must answer by the Scripture taking with us the help of the Church and especially by the Spirit of God revealing the truth unto us for the sheep of Christ hear his voice and follow him And when wee aske the Papists how they know the Church to bee the Church or where it is some say it is here some there some hold us off with one mark some with another but at last they come to know the Church by Scripture and that is the Church which the Scripture saith is the Church so in all other questions that must bee the determination which the Scripture determines 3 The Church cannot bee judge because it must bee judged by Christs voice and not bee a Law unto it Common-wealths must receive Laws from the Prince and not the Prince from his people and as it is in bodies politick so in the mystical body of Christ And as in the natural body the head ruleth the members not contrarily so is it here 4 How absurd is it to affirm that that which is subject to error must bee judge and superiour to that which is free from it But the Church may erre even the true Catholike Church on Earth may erre and doth when it departeth never so little from the Scripture although it cannot depart from the foundation nor incorrigibly erre for every man may erre and therefore that which consists of every man even the Apostle was compassed with infirmity Besides the main difference between the Church militant and triumphant is that one may erre the other is quite freed from error II. The second judge and decider of controversies appointed by the Church of Rome are the Doctors and Fathers but how corruptly for 1 They consent not among themselves and seldome agree in the same sense 2 They borrow all the light and truth they have from the Scripture as the stars from the Sun 3 All their doctrin must bee judged of by Scripture and only so far received as they agree with it 4 They all present their writings to bee examined by Scripture and so many things in them are truely judged erroneous even in the best of them If I speak let none hear me but if God speak woe to him that hears not It must not go for current This saith Augustine Aug. Epi●● 48. ad Vincent Donatistam or that saith Donate but This saith the Lord. 5 The Interpreter of Scripture must bee divine and infallible as it self is and certain but the Interpretation of Fathers is humane infirm sometime according to passion or contention so as often even by Bellarmines often confession they speak minus caut● the best of them wrote Retractations and other things being old than they did being young Seeing therefore there is no stability in Doctors let Christ bee acknowledged of us the chief Doctor of his Church Matth. 23.8 One is your Doctor even Christ III. Their third judge and decider of controversies are Councils which say they is the Church representative but these are as unfit to be Judges of the Scripture as the former For 1 Even the general Councils disagree among themselves in interpreting Scripture as might bee seen in a number of places 2 The Popes Canon Law it self affirmeth that all the Councils except the four general namely the Nicen Anno 332. Ephesius Anno 450. of Chalcedon Greg. lib. 2. Ep●st 210. Anno 456. and of Constantinople Anno 386. may erre and although it blasphemously equal the four Councils to the four Evangelists yet wee know that even these have erred For that Nicene general Council determined there should be at any case but one Bishop in one City which is against the Scripture Act. 20.28 Philip. 1.1 The twelfth Canon of that Council condemned all kinde of war among Christians The thirteenth Canon holds the necessity of the Eucharist as the necessary viaticum or provision of a Christian at his departure Also it erred in the matter of Ministers marriage stayed by Paphnutius And the Constantinopolitan Council gave all equal honour and authority to the Bishop of Constantinople with the Bishop of Rome which the Papists themselves generally hold to be a great error and yet perhaps was none Aug. lib 2 de baptism contra Donatist c. 3. And the consent of Ancient Fathers is that Plenaria Concilia universal and Oecumenical councills may err be mended by later Councils 3 There was a true sense and interpretation of Scripture in the Church before any of these general Councils The first general Council was the Nicene wherein were three hundred and eighteen Bishops gathered by Constantine the Great against Arrius but this was not till the three hundred twenty eighth year after Christ and was there not all that while the gift of interpreting and judging of Scripture that now we must seek a new means erected so many hundred years after the Apostles 4 The Councils themselves determined by the Scriptures of the Scriptures as the first Nicene general Council where Constantine enjoyned and accordingly they determined all according to Scripture It seems in those daies the Scriptures were above Councils and since Councils and Decrees of men got wings to fly above the Scriptures it was never well as one of themselves speaketh Well may we now say with Nazianzen who therefore avoyded all meetings of Bishops quod nunquam ullius Concilii bonum foelicem exitum vidisset yet he
4 Your loving respect of me and mine hath been as a continual shadow and refreshing Phil. 2.2 unto mee who may and must truely say with the Apostle I have found no man in these Parts Like-Minded And out of my answerable respect I would set by you for your refreshing a little vessel of comfortable water drawn out of the Scriptures Isa 12.3 the wells of consolation by which you may allay and cool the heat of that fire which every sprig of the bush shall be scorched withall and which perhaps you have not altogether or shall not escape I would also express my desire to put into your hands a weapon against the like fiery assaults of Satan who spareth neither head nor members which while you buckle fast unto you as you have your honourable Fathers name and resemble him in other vertues so herein also you shall imitate his wisdome and prudence of whom I have heard that living in the Court to a great age and usually wearing his weapon about him one asked why he being so weak burdened himself with his weapon his Noble answer was Hee would not lay off his weapon so long as he knew one Papist in the Court A resolute answer of a grave and noble Counsellor This will be also your wisdome so long to buckle your weapon unto you as you know one enemy left to tempt and assault you And now in leaving you let mee leave with you a medicine or receipt against the sting of that fiery Serpent Rabi folia superjecta serpenti interimunt eum Amb. Hexam lib. cap. 9 of power to drive him away For as Ambrose speaks of the leaves of the bramble bush that being cast upon one kinde of Serpent they kill him so much more true it is that the leaves of Gods word which properly belong to the bush of the Church and opposed to Satans poysoned temptations overcome and Master them Deut. 33.16 And thus as Moses requested that the blessing of him that dwelt in the bush might come upon the head of Joseph even so the good will of him that dwelt in the bush come upon your head upon the head of your vertuous Lady upon the heads of your children to the sweetning and crowning of your age vers 13. And blessed of the Lord bee your portion vers 23 for the sweetness of Heaven and for the sweetness of the earth till you be satisfied with favour and filled with the blessing of the Lord. Amen Reading Octob. 28. 1618. Your worships in the Lord to bee commanded THO. TAYLOR A Threefold Alphabet of Rules concerning CRISTIAN PRACTICE The First Precept of every Letter concerning Duty towards God The Second towards our Neighbours The Third towards our Selves Gathered at a Friends request in this order for the helping of the Memory First AWake with God in the morning and before all things give him your first fruits and calves of your lips in 1 Confession of sin 2 Petition of necessaries for body and soul 3 Thankfulness for mercies received especially your late preservation rest and protection of you and yours Josh 24.15 Psa 101.2 Gen. 14.14 18.19 Esth 4.15 2 Account it not enough that your self serve God unless that you see all in your charge do the same 3 Arm your self against whatsoever the day may bring forth and upon all occasions think on your happy redemption with much thankfulness for so happy conjunction of Justice and mercy B 1 Beware of occasions of sin and wisely inure your self in subduing the least that at length the greater may be foiled 2 Beleeve all that God speaketh unto you out of his word but not all that man telleth you 1 Sam. 10.16 Eccl. 3.7 nor tell to any other all that you hear but only the truth and that neither all nor always 3 Before you take in hand any thing Luk. 2.19 2 Sam. 2.1 1 Sam. 30.8 counsel with Gods word if it be lawful and then perform it with prayer that it may bee as successful as lawful C 1 Carefully set your self in Gods presence all the day long that setting him at your right hand you may not fall 2 Carry your self unto all as the weak may be won 1 Cor. 1● 32. Col. 4.5 the strong comforted and the wicked ashamed 3 Consider the dignity of your soul how beautiful it is to God and his Angels so long as you keep it unspotted Mat. 15.18 Eph. 4. ●3 31. Col. 3.5 ● that so you may cleanse your heart from the first motions of sinful thoughts as lust anger envy pride ambition covetousness fullenness and the rather because the least sin deserveth death D 1 Daily morning and evening at least solemnly on your knees make confession and requests with thanksgiving first preparing your heart to seek the Lord in the morning think that that day may bee your last day and when you go to bed you know not whether you shall rise unless it be to judgement It is safest therefore to use prayer as a key to open the morning and as a bar or lock to shut in the evening 2 Delight to do all the good you can to Gods Children Gal. 6.10 and to receive all the good you can from them 3 Distrust not Gods providence in any matter 2 Chr. 16.3.9.12 2 Cor. 3.5 1 Cor. 3.7 Rom. 1.25 although you see the means wanting neither when you have them let them bee relyed on more than God himself but let him be prayed unto for the prosperous use of them E 1 Exercise your mind in meditating often on the works of God Jer. 12.2 H●b 1.13 Mat. 15.31 as his creating and governing of the world his prospering and punishing the wicked his blessing and correcting his children his preparing of unspeakable Joy for the one and unutterable torment for the other Exod. 10.8 But especially on the Sabbath add to these meditations the holy exercises of prayer Preaching Sacraments holy conference and such like 2 Esteem of every one better than your self Rom. 12.16 and the more you excel another be so much the more humbled Phil 2.3 Rom. 14.23 Prov. 6.14 Zac 8.17 Psa 49.3 3 Examine your thoughts well whether they tend before you fulfil your own desires if you find them unprofitable curious vain or such as you cannot yeild a sufficient reason to God or man for kill them in the shel let them not live or breathe longer in you F Eccl. 12.13 Prov. 5.8 6.27 28 1 Fear God and keep his Commandements for this is the whole duty of man 2 Fly and avoid places and persons infectious wanton idle unthrifty and bad company which are to the soul as poysoned and infected air to the body Eccl. 1.13 Gen. 3.19 2 Thes 3.6 3 Follow with faithfulness and diligence your own business in the lawful and particular calling wherein God hath placed you only be careful in your earthly business to carry an heavenly mind
2 if they had what warrant word No use of dead bodies or bones in scripture but to be buried Satan flye not the living body of the Son of God and much lesse the dead bones of a sinful man or calling have they for the use of them what is the use of dead bodies or bones in Scripture but to bee buried yea if it bee Christs himself so long as hee is dead 3 What vertue had any body bone apparel or any relique of any Saint above Christs blessed body and yet the Devil feared not that If he feared not the vertue of Christs living body certainly hee fears not the rottennesse of a dead bone of whatsoever sinful man But this is also another trick of the mystery of Antichrist plainly discovered by our present Doctrine The Jesuites teach at this day that the Apostles appointed the manner of hallowing water and that being hallowed it hath power to pardon sins to drive away Devils and diseases and by it they have wrought many miracles But I prove the contrary De invent ●er lib 5 cap. 8. Six reasons against Popish hallowing of water 1 Their own Polidore Virgil affirmes that Alexander the first a Pope instituted it and therefore not the Apostles 2 If the blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth from all sin 1 John 1.7 then hallowed water cleanseth not venial sin as they term it 3 If the weapons of our warfare bee not carnal but spiritual 2 Cor. 10.4 then hallowed water cannot drive away Devils Faith is our shield prayer is our buckler and the Word of God our Sword where is their holy water 4 Their miracles are either false relations or collusions or magical of no other use but whereby wee may know and discern as by sure notes the false Prophets and Champions of Antichrist of whom the Spirit hath prophesyed Mat. 24. and 2 Thess 2.5 The use of water is 1 natural and external 2 By institution sacramental and significative the Scripture acknowledgeth no other If their holy water bee hallowed then it is hallowed by the word and pray●● Let them shew this for their practice if they can 6 In this use of it it is one of the strange gods of spiritual Egypt or mystical Babylon and there is a vain confidence in the creature which is due to the Creator Object Elisha took salt and healed the waters 2 King 2.21 Answ 1 That was common salt not hallowed 2 That effect was extraordinary for that occasion onely never since that time produced by any When wee have a pleasant City infested with naughty and deadly water So said the blessed Martyr Tho. Haukes and a Papist will come and heal it with his hallowed Salt wee will beleeve their doctrin and hearken to their exorcismes not before Vse 4 Lastly This doctrin yeeldeth us comfort in our temptations in that our Lord Jesus hath begun to us He was the best beloved yet hee must not lead his life in delicacy and softnesse but was in continual molestation so as his whole life was a continual monument of the Cross that we should not think much of the same condition which our Head underwent and besides that wee should in all our temptations cast our eyes upon him who was tempted that hee might have compassion on them that are tempted Heb. 2.18 The third particular in the preparation is the guide which Christ had in this combate with Satan hee was led by the Spirit Here consider 1 the name of the guide the Spirit 2 the manner of his guidance hee was led by him 1 By the Spirit indefinitely set down what is meant Three sorts of created spirits in this Text. Answ A spirit is either created or uncreated Of the former wee read of three sorts in this History 1 Diabolical tempting us to sin for the Devil is a spirit that being unchangeably turned from God is called a spirit that ruleth in the Children of disobedience Eph. 2.2 a lying spirit 1 King 22. an unclean spirit Luke 11.24 such spirits are all the wicked Angels 2 Angelical comforting Christ and these are the good Angels which now unchangeably cleave unto God called Ministring spirits Heb. 1.14 3 Humane hungring the soul of Christ which as other souls of men are was a spirit as Father into thy hands I commend my spirit and the humane and reasonable spirit of man returneth to God that gave it Eccles 12.7 None of these are here meant but the Divine and uncreated Spirit even the third person in Trinity The holy Spirit of God here meant for three reasons even that Spirit which had now descended upon Christ like a Dove and that holy Spirit whereof Luke saith hee was full Chap. 4.1 And this 1 the opposition of the Leader and of the Tempter proveth for it were harsh to say that Jesus was led of the devil to bee tempted of the devil but hee was led of the good Spirit to bee tempted of the evil 2 The same phrase is used Luke 2.27 Simeon came in the Spirit into the Temple i. e. In that holy Spirit of which mention was made in the former vers 3 The Chalde and Syriak expresseth it led by the holy Spirit II. The manner hee was led not by any local transportation from Jordan to the wildernesse as Elias from earth to heaven or carried through the air as the spirit carried Philip from the Eunuch Act. 8.39 but as one led by the hand so hee was by a strong instinct of the Spirit forced to go thither And for the strength of the motion S. Mark saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the spirit driveth him out and St. Luke useth another word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hee was led out not that any thing befel Christ being forced to it or unwilling for all his obedience was a free-will offering but hee is driven or drawn as the faithful are drawn by the Father Joh. 6.44 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys None can come to 〈◊〉 unless my Father draw him namely by the effectual and forcible working of his Spirit in their hearts not as stocks and stones without wills nor as enforceing them against their wills but sweetly inclining their wills and working effectually in them both the will and the deed according to his good pleasure Object But Christ sends the third person he● then doth the third ●●●son lead him Answ Christ as God and as the second person in Divine unity sendeth the Holy Ghost into the hearts of his Elect but consider him in the form of a Servant and so hee is subject unto providence and led by the Spirit this way and that And this is because the humanity of Christ is the Organ or instrument of his divinity and in all the actions and Offices of it is moved and guided by the Holy Ghost All Satans temptations are appointed and limitted by God Doct. All Satans temptations are appointed and limitted by God It is the Spirit of God that here leadeth
quantity as base in quality and yet have by this word an extraordinary blessing as the coarse fare of Daniel II. Without means Gods word causeth man to live as Moses Elias II. Without all means and Christ himself who had immediately before seen the word of God preserving him already forty daies and nights and could further if hee pleased III. Against means as the Disciples sent out III. Against all means were promised if they drank any deadly poyson it should not hurt them so fire burnt not the three children though cast into it when it burnt their enemies and their own bands All this is meant by that our Saviour saith every word and thus most aptly hee returneth the temptation Man lives not onely by bread that is the ordinary means but by extraordinary also even above and beyond means yea without and against means And therefore where thou sayest I must have means Gods word saith there is no absolute necessity of them my Fathers word can still sustain mee without bread as hee hath done these forty daies already 1 The word of God is it Reasons which gave being and beginning to all things when they were not and much more doth it continue the being of them now when they are Psal 104.30 If thou send forth thy spirit they are created By Spirit here is not meant the essence of God but a power and secret vertue proceeding from God all one with this word of God by which things were not onely created at the first but are still renewed and that daily and yearly as it were again created Joh. 1.3 In that word was life that is not onely inherent in the Son of God himself but as an efficient to communicate life to all living things 2 The Word of God is as it were the prop and stay of the world without which all things would fall into confusion Every man knows by nature that God maintains and preserves all things that it is he that stretcheth out the heavens like a curtain that hee sends forth the winds out of his treasure and raiseth the waves of the Sea like mountaines which are great things but nature teacheth not how God doth these things by what means only the Scriptures teach that hee doth all this by his word that as in the creation God said Let there bee light and there was light and so of all other things Gods word was his work so in upholding and preserving it hee doth it by his word as Heb. 1.2 who upholdeth all things by his mighty word which word when God calls in the Creature falls to nothing Act. 17.28 In him we live and move and have our being 3 The same word of God which gives vertue and force to the Creatures in themselves doth also sanctifie them unto us every creature is sanctified by the Word and Prayer 1 Tim. 4.6 the word shews how to get them how to use them and prayer obtains of God a right tenure and a pure use which indeed is the blessing or sanctification of them 4 The same word carries them beyond the strength of their nature to doe us good Bread and VVine in their own nature can but nourish and feed the body but Gods VVord in the institution of the Sacrament makes them feed the soul to eternal life Quest But how may we conceive of this Word whereby God doth govern and preserve the creatures Ans By Gods VVord we must not only conceive his decree and will but a powerful Commandement and effectual to which all his Creatures yeeld free and willing obedience This commanding word was put forth in the Creation Psal 148.5 He commanded and they were all created Men when they attempt and perform any great matter because their power is small must use great labour and many instruments and helps But by the word of the Lord the heavens were made Psal 33.9 He said the word and all things were done This commanding word is put forth in the daily government of God Psal 147.15 He sends out his Commandement upon the earth his word runneth very swiftly that is nothing can withstand and hinder the power of his word here the VVord and Commandement are all one The senslesseness and deadness of the Creatures their vastness and fierceness hinder not his word but without delay yea with marvellous celerity and swiftness they execute his word Psal 148.8 If God speak to the Heavens they shall hear and cover themselves with darknesse at noon day as in Christs passion If hee command the Sun it shall hear his word and goe back or stand still If hee command the VVinds or Sea to be still they shall be still and presently there shall be a great calm If he send forth his VVord the Mountains of Ice shall melt Psa 147.18 If he command the VVhale he shall set Jonah on dry land cap. 2. ver 10. If he command the solid and sensless earth it shall hear and rend to swallow up Corah Dathan and Ab●ram If hee command the fire not to burn it shall hear and not burn the three Children If he command dead men they shall hear and come out of their Graves as Lazarus c. and all men at the general judgement But as God can see without eyes and reach without hands so also doth he speak without a tongue as the Light the Firmament the Heavens and other his VVorks can hear his voyce without ears neither wanteth he a means to make his mind known and his pleasure manifest to the most sensless creatures Use 1. This should teach us to depend upon this Word of God for our lives and means of maintaining them for so our Lord Jesus did in this barren wilderness he would not sustain himself but by Gods Word Doest thou want means of living and maintenance Consider that man lives not by bread alone The word of God made the 〈◊〉 light without the Sun and the earth fruitful without the rain This word can make the Air light without and before either Sun Moon or Star Gen. 1.3 This word can make the earth fruitful before the rain had ever fallen upon it Gen. 2.5 Wantest thou bread God hath not locked up thy life in bread it may be hee hath another word which if thou hearest with Moses and Elias thou shalt live without bread Asa when hee was in a great straight 2 Chrp. 14.11 for he was with five hundred and fourscore thousand to encounter with an Army of ten hundred thousand and three hundred Chariots hee looked up to this word of God and said that the Lord could save by many or few or by none Hast thou means of living yet depend on this word thy life stands not in bread or in abundance if God with-draw his word neither restorative Quails nor heavenly Manna if thou hadst them shall preserve thy life How often doth God blow upon the second means to bring us to this word Vse 2. The faith of this truth doth fence the heart
in searching till that age were all wasted none of which should come into the Land except Caleb and Joshua vers 40. then they up betimes in the morning and they were ready against the Word of God to goe Moses forbids them tells them God was not with them yet forty four presumed obstinately to goe and were pitifully consumed 2 King 14.10 Amaziah King of Judah having gotten a notable Victory against Edom presuming of Gods hand and help with him but not asking God counsel would also make warre against Israel but unhappily as such attempts prove for he was overcome and Jehoash King of Israel took Amaziah and broke down Jerusalems wall and spoyled the house of the Lord and the Kings house of all the Treasure there Josiah a good King presuming of Gods assistance without his word undertook an unwarrantable warre against the King of Aegypt hee might have thought God would help him who sought the Lord with all his heart against an open Idolater but not seeking the Lord in this he was mortally wounded and left his Kingdom in great trouble and confusion 2 King 23. Reasons Now Satan is most usual in temptations to presumption for these reasons 1 He hath experience how easily we are foyled with this kind of temptation how soon hee foyled our first Parents in the state of innocency how good David was overthrown presuming of his own strength when he forced Joab to number his people And those whom hee could never shake with distrust he hath quite overthrown with presumption 2 Satan knows that of all temptations this is most agreeable to our corrupt nature It is pleasing to us to conceive of Gods mercy and power towards us in any course our selves affect whereas temptations to despair are irksome and grievous to the flesh and have not ordinarily so much help from the flesh to set them forward as this hath and therefore the Devil is sometimes but not half so often in them Again hee knows it goeth with our nature and stream to presume of our own goodness strength and vertue Peter and the rest of the Disciples presumed they should not be offended at Christ nor forsake or deny him but yet not long after even they who professed they would dye with him rather than deny him lest him and fled away Matth. 26.33 c. 3 He knows that presumption is an extream of faith and hope and doth no less extinguish faith than despair nay more often doth foyl it seeing a man in despair is more fearful more watchful but a presumptuous man is fearless careless and will easily thrust himself upon any adventure as fearing no sin 4 Satan knows that presumptions are great sins prevailing sins Psal 19.13 a tempting of the Lord as the answer of our Saviour implies when wee leave his way and means and will try our own a sin which doth much provoke God to displeasure we see it in Peter who fell fearfully above all the Disciples Ubi dixisti sufficio ibi desecisti ubi tibi placuisti ibi periisti Aug. because hee was most presumptuous of all of whom Augustine saith When thou beginnest to say I have enough thou beginnest to fayl when thou hast an over-weening opinion of thy self thou art undone Quest What may we think of Jonathans action who himself alone with one man his Armour-bearer went out against a whole army of the Philistims Was it not a strange tempting of God and a great disorder in time of pitched battel 1 Sam. 14. Ans It may seem so at first but indeed it was not temerity in him for 1 He was guided by a secret and strong instinct of Gods Spirit 2 He had a general promise that so long as his people feared God one should bee able to chase a thousand and two ten thousand and therefore took no more with him than one being fully assured that God would goe out with him and fight for him against Gods and his enemies 3 Hee set God before him with whom he said it was not hard to save with many or with few ver 6. Besides he knew they were Gods enemies saying Let us goe to the uncircumcised 4 The event was a singular deliverance of God in that needful time for God sent a fear among the enemies and an earth-quake c. and armed Jonathan with such a spirit and power that the enemies fell before him for fear even at the sight of him Object But the instinct of the Spirit is strong and not doubtful as this was vers 6. It may be the Lord will be with us Ans The first instinct drew him to the place where hee was to receive a sign of confirmation from God as vers 9 10. If they say Come up wee will goe a sign they were lazie If they say Tarry till we come we will not that was a sign of their courage And this was a certain sign which strongly assured him vers 10 12. Quest Is it lawful now for any so to doo Ans No it was a singular fact not to be drawn into example unless a man can alleadge a new promise seeing all the ordinary promises of Scripture joyn the means and end together Use 1. We must conceive all this doctrin of Christs temptations above an ordinary History not only relating a thing done but belonging also to us to make our use of it as of other Scripture And hence let us learn to beware of these temptations to presumption which are many ways darted against us both in things spiritual and temporal I. In spiritual things 1 When men cast aside the known Word of God they dare swear and curse and blaspheme they dare adventure to break the Sabbath dare lye and be unjust against their conscience they dare doe any thing against the Justice of God though they know his will to bee contrary and all because they presume of Gods mercy which in their conceit hath eaten up all his justice But in Job 19.11 Christ inlargeth the sin of the Jews and Judas because it was against their conscience He that delivered me hath the greater sin he was warned he heard my Doctrin saw my Miracles and so did you And thou that knowest thy Lords pleasure and darest goe against it shalt know how fearful a thing it is to fall into his hands It thy Conscience condemn thee God is greater than thy conscience 2 Others are perswaded that Christ dyed for all and therefore they may be the bolder in their sins grace hath abounded what though sin abound much more Christ hath bloud enough and merit enough what need they fear But here is presumption without warrant For in Christs death before it can be fruitful to us there must be two things 1 An actual accomplishment 2 An effectual application to the soul in particular Physick though never so soveraign if it be in the pocket unapplied doth the Patient no good And if the death of Christ be applied to thee it worketh the death of thy sin
in accusing thee but still it by casting out the core of sin that makes it so restless and painful 2 Quench not the motions of Gods Spirit for this grieves him and makes him goe away in displeasure and then all thy sound comfort is gone with him II. In temporal things sin not against the means He must eat that must live he must work that will eat sow to reap he that would avoyd a strange woman must love his own wife all the Souldiers and people in the Ship must come safe to land but then must they not cast them into the sea but abide in the ship Isa 37.33 the Prophet in the Lords name tells Hezekiah that Sennacherib shall not enter into the City but if hereupon Hezekiah should have bid them set the gates open would not the Prophet have told him he had betrayed the City For a rich man to be an Usurer or an oppressor is a greater sin than it is taken for because it is against the means yet who are Usurers else who oppressors else who grinde the faces of the poor who detain the wages of poor Servants but they For a man to break the Sabbath for gain is a great sin as appeareth in the poor man that went out to gather sticks but how great then is it in rich men who need not having much means beyond the present necessity and yet they or their Servants and Workmen must be gathering sticks to burn themselves withall in Hell Who sees not the malice of the Devil here who will have the Lords day worldly and wickedly spent wherein God hath set up the special means to draw men from it For it is written HAving spoken both of the ground of this assault and also of the scope and matter of it wee come to the third consideration in it namely The enforcing or urging of it by a testimony of Scripture Satan had perswaded the Son of God to a most foolish practice would any mad man or fool cast himself down from an high place and pash himself all to peeces at any mans perswasions and cannot now the Son of God the wisdome of his Father discern danger in this motion Satan is too black here and lales his snare in vain before the eye of that which hath wing But to hide his blacknesse hee draws a fair glove over a soul hand and assaies to make the case without all danger or absurdity Hee hath that to say which the Son of God cannot refuse Hee hath Scripture to perswade him for no reason is comparable to this to assure the Son of God who must hear the word of his Father that there is neither danger nor unreasonableness in this motion nay there is much good in it 1 Hee shall shew himself to bee the Son of God 2 Hee shall shew his affiance in his Fathers word which hath fully assured him of his Fathers protection as if hee should say Thou being the Son of God mayest without danger cast thy self down hence but do not take it on my word which perhaps thou mayest suspect but take it on thy Fathers word If that hath any truth in it there is no danger in my motion And because thou shalt not think that I speak without book It is written in thy Fathers Book If I had a Psalter here I could shew it thee that hee hath given his Angels charge over thee to keep thee that thou dash not thy foot against a stone and though thou cast thy self down they shall bear thee up and save thee harmless And if they should fail of their duty thou being the Sonne of God canst sustain thy self by thine own proper power and vertue Here consider two things 1 The general consideration of the allegation It is written 2 The special matter of it Hee will give his Angels charge over thee c. Doct. The Devil can and doth alleadge Scripture to further his wicked purposes as here In his tempting of Eve hee made the ground of his temptation Gods word Hath God indeed said yee shall not dye In the deluding of Saul be took the help of Samuels prophecy 1 Sam. 28.17 The Lord hath done even as hee spake by mine hand So his instruments the false Prophets pretend the word of the Lord as Hanani Jer. 28.2 Reasons The Reasons why Satan alledgeth Scripture are these 1 To hide his person and to transform himself into an Angel of Light here hee counterfeits Davids voice nay the voice of the Spirit of God speaking in the written word He would fain perswade Christ that hee is a lover of the Truth and under a testimony of Scripture would hide his horns Regula cred●ndorum age●dorum 2 As hereby himself dissembles holiness so hee would colour the matter to which hee tempts us to bee just and lawful for is not that lawful which the word allows seeing it is the rule of faith and manners 3 Hee frames himself according to the disposition of parties with whom hee is to deal Christ stood much upon Scripture and would do nothing without Scripture and if hee cannot draw him by Scripture hee shall prevail nothing and thus hee deals daily with tender consciences hee can bring them to any thing by a Scripture of his own mis-shaping 4 This comes to pass by reason of his malice 1 Against the Scripture which hee seeks to abuse to a contrary end seeing the Scriptures are written that wee might not sin 1 Joh 2.1 2 Against the godly to overcome them with no other than their own weapons Christ had made the written word his shield his sword hee will therefore assay with his own weapon to wound him and so he deals with his members 5 Here is not onely Gods permission but his over-ruling power for hereby the father of lies against his heart and nature giveth witnesse to the truth and strongly argues it to bee the strongest weapon that hath strongest power over the conscience Quest How doth Satan alledge Scripture Answ Hee is Gods Ape and as God alledgeth Scripture three waies 1 by his Spirit and inward motion as to Abimelech in a Dream Gen. 20.3 2 By his Ministers and Servants Angels or men 3 By his own lively voice as to Adam So can Satan 1 By suggestion 2 By his Ministers who transform themselves as if they were the Ministers and Apostles of Christ 2 Cor. 11.13 14 15. not onely delivering the word but also truely 3 By voice in some assumed body as undoubtedly hee did to the first Adam and here to the second Use 1. Seeing then this wicked Spirit can and doth alledge Scripture against us it behooves us to try the spirits whether they bee of God or no 1 John 4.1 not to beleeve every one that can alledge Scripture for so wee might beleeve the Devil himself 1 Thess 5.22 our commandement is to prove all things and hold only that which is good Our president is in Act. 17.11 the Bereans when they heard the Apostles
reprove and convert sinners yet by ordinary office hee was no Prophet neither did he prophecy But what is this to those mental reservations Are you a Priest Garnet No saith hee meaning not a Priest of Apollo or Jupiter Were not you in England at such a time No not as the Sun in the firmament or as a King in a Kingdome A strange madness that men professing knowledge and zeal should so dally with lies and oaths which tricks of theirs were they justifiable and sound wee should have little use of Magistracy or tribunals especiall where matters are determined by mens oathes hee were a very block that would suffer any thing to bee fastened upon him The murderer might swear hee never slew man namely with the jaw-bone of an Ass as Sampson did The Drunkard might swear hee drunk never a drop if hee can inwardly conceive of water or aqua coelestis or the Poets nectar or what hee can feign The Adultress might swear shee was never toucht if shee can inwardly conceive of any creature as of a Bull or a Swan as the Poets feign of Pas●ph●● and Lada And were it lawful to dally with God and mens Consciences after this manner wee could pay them home in their own kinde for suppose a man were in their Inquision and were asked if the Pope were Supream over all Kings if a man were disposed to equivocate hee might say and swear yea reserving his secret meaning not by right but onely in his own proud and ambitious desire and thus delude them II. In matters of practice you shall have no sinner but he hath a Scripture reached to him to lye safe under in the holding of his sin but robbed and turned out of the right sense The Atheist that cares for no Scripture yet hath one text for himself Eccl. 7.18 Bee not just overmuch nor overwise and so hee hath enough to cast off all care of knowledge and conscience The Image-munget hath a Text to let nothing bee lost hee hath a good use for his Images if they cannot serve to worship they may serve for ornament The Swearer hath a Text in Jeremy Thou shalt swear in truth righteousnesse and judgement therefore hee will swear so long as hee sweareth nothing but that which is true The Sabbath-breaker hath his Text The Sabbath was made for man and not man for the Sabbath The Murderer and Adulterer think themselves safe seeing they finde David in both these sins and yet commended of God The Drunkard hath his lesson Drink no longer water but a little wine for thy stomack and often infirmities sake The Covetous person knows that hee that provides not for his family is worse than an Infidel which through many mens wickednesse is a ground of much covetousnesse The lazy Protestant hath his Text Wee are saved by grace and justified by the blood of Christ freely what can his works do what need they The idle person hath his Text Care not for to morrow let to morrow care for it self The Usurer hath his plain place Matth. 25.27 That I might have received mine own with Usury The Theef hath the Theef on the Cross repenting at the last The carnal Gospeller cares not what sin he venture on because where sin hath abounded there grace hath abounded much more The careless Libertine is predestinated to life or death do what hee can and do what hee list hee cannot change Gods Decree and so he will do what hee list The obdurate and hardned sinner saith At what time soever a sinner repents God will put all his sins out of his remembrance and therefore hee will not repent till hee bee dying Lastly the unjust person hee hath his rule in the unjust Steward who was commended by Christ who was indeed commended for his providence not for his injustice In all these thou mayest hold this for a good rule It is the Devils divinity to confirm thy self in any sin by whatsoever thou hearest or readest in Gods book all which in Gods meaning is direct and the only preservative against all sin NOw wee are to consider this comfortable Scripture in the holy use of it not as wee have it wrested and mangled by Satan but as wee find it set down by the Holy Ghost Psalm 91.11 For hee shall give his Angels charge over thee to keep thee in all thy waies They shall bear thee in their hands that thou hurt not thy foot against a stone In which words the godly are secured and assured of safety in danger not onely because the Lord himself is become their refuge and protection as in the words going before but in that to his own fatherly care and providence hee hath added a guard of Angels to whose care also hee hath committed the Godly Wherein for explication wee will note these particulars 1 What is the ministery of the Angels namely to bee the godly mans keepers 2 Who sealeth their Commission He hath given them charge 3 The limitation of it In all thy waies 4 The manner They shall bear thee up in their hands 5 The end lest thou dash thy foot against a stone Which is a borrowed speech taken from Mothers or Nurses who lead or carry their tender children in their hands that they stumble and fall not to hurt or endanger themselves The word Angel is a name not of nature for so they bee spirits but of office ministring spirits to God to Jesus Christ and to Gods Elect His Angels that is the good and Elect Angels called his 1 By Creation for they had not being of themselves 2 By more immediate ministery they assist him and stand before his face whereas the wicked Angels are cast down from Heaven from enjoying his presence 3 By grace of perseverance for they fell not from their estate as the wicked Angels did and are now confirmed by Christ that they cannot fall and hence is Christ called the Head of men and Angels in whom all things in heaven and earth consist Coloss 1. v. 17. that is are preserved sustained and governed whether visible or invisible and consequently a mediator of the Angels in respect of special grace of confirmation by which they inseparably adhere to God although in respect of that mediation which is restrained to redemption the Angels have no need of it Charge This charge is not a general Commandement over the Church in general but a special charge over every godly man over thee And the charge is directed to many Angels to keep one man for the word affords us more comfort than that Popish and ungrounded conceit of every mans having his particular Angel Quest Why doth God give this charge to the Angels or why doth he use their Ministery Answ Not for any necessity for hee by his word and beck doth sustain Heaven and Earth and without them can keep his own but out of his good will to us hee declares his love and care of us who hath so abundantly provided for our safety and
special for thus long the charge of the Angels stands in force 3 Pray not to Angels but to the God of Heaven to send his Angel before thee to direct and assist thee in thy duties and ways For what God hath promised we must pray for Gen. 24.7 Abraham tells his Servant that God will send his Angel before him to take a wife for his son and this Angel prospered his Journey vers 40. And that this was the practice of the Church in Aegypt appears by Moses his message to the King of Edom Numb 20.16 being ill entreated in Aegypt we prayed to the Lord and he sent an Angel and brought us out of Aegypt I doubt not but this duty were it more faithfully practised would bring home much more success and comfort than many men find in their labour who scarce know whence or how their prosperity cometh unto them Obj. If God should send his Angels in humane form and as familiarly to converse with us as anciently they did with the Patriarks we should beleeve this doctrine but now there is certainly no such thing Ans 1. Christ is now in Heaven where our conversation ought to bee by faith rather than by the visible apparition of Angels 2 The beginnings of the Church needed such heavenly confirmation but now the Word is sufficiently confirmed by the Son himself from Heaven 3 The Scriptures are perfect and fully and plainly reveal unto us Gods will in every particular as if the Angels should come and teach us daily 4 The blessed Spirit is more abundantly given in our hearts and supplieth their absence in bodily shape and apparition 5 We must labour to get the eyes of our souls open and then we shall with Eloshaes servant see their comfortable presence notwithstanding they take no bodies to appear in Vers 7. Jesus said unto him It is written again Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God NOw followeth the repulse of our Saviour to this second temptation wherein are two things 1 His resistance 2 His reason drawn from a testimony of Scripture Jam. 4.5 I. Christ resisteth and yeeldeth not albeit hee heareth Scripture alleadged Why If yee were of God saith Christ yee would hear his word neither doth Scripture speak any thing in vain But the reason is 1 Because our Lord perceived that the Word was wrested and abused by Satan and 2 That Scripture abused binds not to obedience 3 That Scripture turned out of his right sense is not Gods Word but carries something in it besides Scripture and then if an Angel from Heaven should bring it wee must bee so farre from receiving it as to hold him accursed 4 For our example that wee should not take all allegations hand over head but as Christ here try whither they tend if to cast us down refuse them II. Christ resisteth but not without reason but by Scripture and opposeth Scripture to Scripture not as repugnant one to another but by way of collation and conferring one with another that the right use of one may overthrow the abuse of the other not in way of contrariety but of commentary Quest But why did not our Saviour shut his mouth by telling him how wickedly he had abused the text he had alleadged by adding detracting and wresting it to a contrary end and meaning Ans This might indeed have confounded him sufficiently but our Saviour his Combate is not only victorious for us but exemplary and therefore we are herein trained in our fight and encounter 1 To hold close to the Scripture in answering the Devil It is written again which word of our Saviour noteth how he buckled the Scripture to him both as a Buckler to defend him and as a Sword to foyl and wound his enemy and so must wee who are not so able to dispute with Satan about the true meaning of a place as our Lord was 2 To inform us that the best and only way to discover the abuse of Scripture is Scripture it being the only rule and judge of it self and all the controversies rising out of it And therefore the Devil no sooner heard this testimony but his mouth was shut as well knowing how the wisdom of the Father had discovered his subtilty The best Commentary of Scripture is Scripture every man is the best interpreter of himself and so the Author of the Scriptures is the best interpreter of them 3 To let us see that although Satan had abused the Scripture yet he nor wee must overcome by no other weapon and that the abuse of a thing takes not away the right use of it nor good things to be rejected because they are abused by them that can use them aright If Christ had been of the Papists mind he would have condemned and shut up the Scriptures from common men because the Devil had abused them for so doe they because Hereticks his instruments doe abuse them the Laiety may not meddle with them But it is plain that in things necessary no abuse in one takes away the right use in another As for example A murderer useth a sword to kill a man may not another use a sword or that sword in his own defence And are not the Scriptures the sword of the Spirit more necessary A Drunkard a Glutton a proud person abuse meat and drink and apparel to surfeiting drunkenness ryot and excess shall wee therefore cast away meat drink apparel and refuse the necessary use of it And is not the Word a more necessary food Because a Wolf comes in sheeps cloathing must the sheep cast away their fleece No the Prophets did not refuse the Word of the Lord because the false Prophets did say The Word of the Lord as well as they Obj. Then it is no good argument that we must reject such and such things because the Papists have abused them Ans If they be good and necessary it is not as are the Word Prayer Sacraments Churches and whatsoever stands by Gods Ordinance in Divine or Civil use But in things unnecessary that wee might bee as well or better without their use it is a good consequence Idolaters have abused them therefore we must forbear them as Bishop Jewel speaketh Doct. The infallible Judge and speaking-decider of all Controversies in the Church are the holy Scriptures in the true sense of them Our Lord here gives the true meaning of one Scripture by another in this his Controversie with the Devil Deut. 17.9 10. In any matter of difference the people must come to the Priest or Levite and they must judge and determine all differences according to the Law and all the people upon pain of death must stand to that judgement Now this Priest was a type not of the Pope but of Christ on whose mouth all must depend for the decision of all Controversies Josh 1.7 the Book of the Law was given to Joshua to decide all matters among the Jews from which he must not depart to the right hand or left hand
had seen some which the Papists stand unto And we also seeing the gross errours of Councils as that ancient Council of Carthage under Cyprian appointing rebaptization to such as were baptized by Hereticks the second Ephesin Council in which were more than three hundred Bishops is called by Leo himself living in Theodosius his time Conciliabulum latrouuns a den of Theeves the second Nicene Council appointed Images made by mans hand to be worshipped a most gross error and Idolatry The Romane Council under Pope Stephanus condemned Pope Formosus and all his Decrees and the Council of Ravenua condemned Stephanus and restored Formosus One of them must needs erre The Council of Constance appointed a number of gross errors as that the Cup should bee taken from Laickes that faith given to Protestants under the Emperours promise and seal is not to be kept c. and it condemned a number of John Hus his Articles which were orthodox and consonant to Scripture The Council of Trent was a sink of all Antichristian errours now we I say seeing such gross errors of Councils may not or ought not we with the ancient Fathers appeal from Councils to the holy Scripture Jerome on Galath 2. saith The doctrine of the Holy Ghost is that which is delivered in Scripture contra quam si quid statnant concilia nefas duco If Councels determine any thing contrary thereunto I account it abhominable Aug. l. 2. de bapt cont Don. c. 3. And Augustine being pressed by the authority of the African Council at which Cyprian was present appealed from it to the Scripture with this reason We may not saith he doubt of the Scripture of all other we may doubt Nay Panormitan the great Popish Canonist and Lawyer saith plainly Plus credendum est simplici la●co Scripturam proferenti quam toti simul Concilio We must more beleeve one poor simple Lay-man that bringeth Scripture than a whole Council I will adde nothing of the Romish trick of falsifying the Books of Councils and corrupting changing adding and detracting from the Canons which makes them yet more uncertain and insufficient to rule the Scriptures by this might be instanced in the Nicene and Milevitan Council and others but the further dispute hereof belongs to the Schools IV. The fourth Judge to decide all Controversies is the POPE himself for they have but fumbled all this while and now they deal plainly for when they pretend the Catholick Church Doctors Councils they mean all Romish for with the Rhemists the Catholick and Roman faith is all one Rhem in Rom. cap. 1. vers 8 Gregory de Valentla saith By the Church wee mean her head the Roman Bishop Bellarmine hath these words The Pope himself without any Council De Christo lib. 2. cap. 2● may decree matters of faith And the Canon Law saith that all his rescripts and decrees are Canonical Scripture and that he may dispense 1 Against Gods Law 2 Against the Law of Nature 3 Against an Apostle 4 Against the New Testament Now that the Pope cannot have authority at his pleasure to judge the Scripture is plain 1 Because a Council is above the Pope Gerson A●neas Sylv. as the most and ancientest of Papists beleeve and two general Councils of Constance and Basil decree and that the Council hath power to restrain yea and depose him and so hath done And yet a Council as wee have seen wanteth this authority over the Scriptures Bellarmine would not beleeve or approve it but for the observation of the Church and common opinion Now the Sorbonists of Paris deny it 2 Because we know the Pope can erre in his Chair in matters of faith and interpretation of Scripture As for example Rom. 8.8 They that are in the flesh cannot please God Pope Sirycius thus interpreted it To bee in the flesh is to be married therefore the Priests must not marry John 6.53 Except yee eat the flesh of the Son of man and drink his blood ye have no life in you Pope Innocent 1. thence determined the absolute necessity of the Eucharist to salvation and therefore it must bee given to Infants Luke 22.38 Behold two swords here Pope Boniface 8. interprets it of the temporal and spiritual sword delivered to the Pope Nay they have not onely erred many of them but been gross and wicked Hereticks Liberius Pope about the year 350. was an Arrian and subscribed to the unjust condemnation of Athanasius and afterwards as a obstinate Heretick was deposed Honorius the first Anno 626. was an Monothelite held that Christ had but one will and so but one nature and for this Heresy was condemned in three general Councils In the year one thousand four hundred and eight at a Council held at Pisa consisting of a thousand Divines and Lawyers two Popes were deposed at once to wit Gregory the twelfth and Benet the thirteenth the tenor of whose deprivation calls them notorious Schismaticks Hereticks departed from the Faith scandalizing the whole Church unworthy the Papacy cut off from the Church What must wee obey in error scandal and Heresy or can the Pope alter the nature of that which is false and make it true 3 When there were two or three Popes at once and none knew which was the right Pope or the chief Pastor whither should men go for their determination of controversies in Religion or when themselves disagree in interpreting Scripture how can wee know which of them to lean unto See an example Matth. 16.18 Thou art Peter and upon this Rock will I build my Church Some Popes understand it of Peters person some of Peters Chair which they say is at Rome some of Peters Confession Wee have all unerring Popes maintaining these several interpretations how shall wee chuse the best what upon a Popes word every one of them hath that Therefore there must bee a superiour Interpreter and more infallible namely the Spirit of God in the Scriptures 4 How know we he hath any authority over any other Bishop seeing the Scripture gives him none How may wee know hee is not carried by affection seeing hee is a party in the Churches controversies and by Canon cast our from being a Judge How know wee no appeals lye from him seeing the Fathers have appealed from Councils which are above him How can wee know that hee sits in Peters Chair upon earth Cathedram in coelo habet qui intu● docet corda Aug. seeing the Father hath taught us That hee sitteth in Heaven who inwardly teacheth mens hearts Therefore wee renounce all such corrupt Judges and lean to the uncorrupt Scripture Vse 2. Secondly seeing the Scriptures are the best Commentaries of themselves and the Judge and decider of all Doctrines and Controversies Ministers that would stablish truth of Doctrin must bee careful to prove and justify all their collections of Doctrin out of Scripture for thereby they settle the faith of their people upon a sure ground of faith and manners all other
over them but his Vicar neither love they the truth in the Canonical Scripture further than it will stand with their Popish Canon Law Or if a man come to read out of custom and coldly without fervency and love experience will tell him though thus he read much his profit shall bee but small 3 With repentance and faith and a good heart 2 Cor. 3.14 when the heart of Israel shall be converted to the Lord the veil shall be taken away this veil is natural ignorance and infidelity VVhere the former is no marvel if the word read and known be not understood as a blind man cannot see the Sun shining in his strength VVhere faith is absent and is not mingled with the word it must needs become unprofitable Impossible it is that the wisdom of God can dwell in a wicked heart no man puts precious liquor into a fusty cask This is the cause that men of great learning want sound understanding because they want sound conscience Hos 14.10 The ways of God are right but the wicked fall in them 4 With a purpose not only to know but to practise Joh. 7.17 If any man will doe my will he shall know whether my doctrine be from heaven The scope of the Scripture is not only to beleeve in the Son of God but to walk in the obedience of faith Now if men read over all the Bible an hundred times either for knowledge only or for vain-glory or to advance themselves into preferments or to oppose the truth as Hereticks and Papists doe no marvel if they never attain the true sense of them 5 With prayer for the Spirit to lead us into all truth because the Scriptures were inspired by Gods Spirit at first and the same Spirit is only able to acquaint us with his own meaning If any man want wisdom he must ask it of God Jam. 1.5 so did David Psal 119.18 Open mine eyes that I may see the wonderful things of thy law Is it any marvel that they who flie the judgement of Gods Spirit and stand to the Church Pope Councils and only swallow that sense which they give and never look after Gods Spirit should miss of the true meaning of the Holy Ghost and fall into and tumble in a number of errors and heresies To these might bee added meditation diligence keeping of order and time special application and the like These things let them be brought to the reading of Gods Word and no man shall lose his labour hee shall bee taught of God who hath promised to reveal his secret to them that fear him So much of the qualification of the person II. Now follow some rules which a person thus qualified must learn and keep by him to try when a Scripture is wrested or no. Rule 1 The first is that in our text conference of Scripture there the Spirit of God by plain places expoundeth those which are more difficult Thus Nehem. 8.8 Ezra opened the Scripture by comparing it with it self and so made the people to understand as Junius noteth out of the original So the Bereans having heard the doctrine of the Apostles searched the Scriptures that is compared their doctrine with the doctrine of the Old Testament Thus the Apostles themselves teaching Christs resurrection Acts 2.16 prove it out of the Old Testament viz. Psal 16.10 Thou wilt not suffer thine holy one to see corruption And to prove that those words cannot be meant of David himself he appeals to another testimony in 1 King 2. where it is said that David slept with his fathers and lay buried in his Sepulchre and so saw corruption This is a special way whereby the Scripture giveth wisdom to the simple Psal 19.7 And for this purpose the Lord hath in great wisdom tempered the Scripture with some hard places to exercise mens senses and try their diligence in comparing of Scripture whereof there were no need if there were no hard places How comes it that many pervert the Scripture to their own destruction but because they conferre not one part with another which would lead them into the right sense How come the Arrians when they hear Christ say The Father is greater than I and other such sayings to hold to the death that Christ is not true God co-essential and co-equal with his Father but that they doe not compare this with other places as Job 1.1 That word was God Philip. 2.6 He thought it no robbery to be equal with God Rom. 9. which is God blessed for ever And consequently that the former place speaks of his Human nature the latter of his Divine nature How could the Papists suffer shipwrack of faith and Heretically erre in the foundation of Religion teaching justification by the works of the Law out of Jam. 2.21 Was not Abraham our father justified by works but that they conferre not other places to help them into the right sense as Rom. 4.2 and 3.20 We are justified by faith without the works of the law and Tit. 3.5 Not by the works of righteousness which we had done but according to his grace he saved us Which places being compared shew that one speaks of justification before God as Paul the other of justification before men as James the former of justifying the person the latter of justifying the faith of the person When they read such places as these Awake thou that sleepest and Turn you turn you O house of Israel hence they conclude man hath free-will in his own conversion Whereas would they compare these with other places as Gen. 6.5 The whole imagination of mans heart is only evil continually and it is God that works both the will and the deed c. the reconciling of such places would force them to see that till God work us wee are meer patients and after that acts agimus being moved we move for his grace must not bee idle in us The lewd and disordered Libertine when he reads that wee are justified by faith without works casts off all care of his conversation What can his works doe what need they But he could not thus pervert the Scripture to his destruction if he compared it with such Scriptures as say that faith without works is dead and that faith works by love The reconciling whereof would teach them that although works be excluded from justification yet not from faith they must bee in the person justified though not in the justification of his person This conference of Scripture is either in places parallel and like or in such as seem to be opposed and unlike The conferring of like places bringeth great light to the reader As for example 1 Cor. 7.19 Circumcision is nothing and uncircumcision is nothing If we would understand what is meant by this nothing compare we it with Gal. 5.6 In Christ Jesus neither uncircumcision availeth any thing nor circumcision where nothing is to avail nothing and is not referred to Circumcision or uncircumcision it self but to the person it is
nothing to his salvation So Psal 110.1 Sit at my right hand till I make thy enemies thy foot-stool If wee would know whom this is meant of compare it with 1 Cor. 15.25 For Christ must reign till he have put all his enemies under his feet Psal 2.7 Thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee this place is explained by the like Heb. 1.5 For to whi●h of the Angels said he at any time Thou art my son c. Psal 97.7 Worship him all yee Gods What is meant by Gods and whom must the Gods worship see Heb. 1.6 When he brought his first born into the world hee said Let all the Angels of God adore him Concerning unlike places we have this rule That they speak not either of the same thing or manner or time and by wary observation of the circumstances this will easily appear in examples 1 Joh. 16.13 The Apostles after the gift of the Spirit were led into all truth and freed from error Yet Peter greatly erred after that Gal. 2.11 Answ The Apostles were led into all truth of doctrine and erred not but were not free from all error in life and conversation now Peters error was not directly in doctrine but in conversation with the Gentiles So as the opposition is not in the same thing 2 Isa 59.21 My word shall not depart from thee nor from thy seeds seed for ever saith the Lord yet Matth. 21.43 the Kingdom shall bee taken from you Answ The Prophet speaketh of the whole true Church of God which shall be perpetual upon earth our Saviour of the Nation of the Jews So as the seeming opposition is not in the same 3 Luk. 17.19 Thy faith hath made thee whole here Faith is greater than Charity but in 1 Cor. 13.13 Charity is greater than faith Ans They speak not of the same faith the former place speaks of justifying faith considered with his object Christ which not absolutely as a quality but relatively as apprehending Christ is greater than Charity the latter of miraculous faith which is less 4 Rom. 7.22 Paul delights in the Law of God yet vers 23. Paul resisteth the Law of God Ans This is indeed an opposition in the same person but not in the same part Paul stands of spirit and flesh according to the former part he delights in the Law according to the later he rebelleth against it 5 Luk. 10.28 Life is promised to the worker This doe and live Rom. 4.3 Not to him that worketh but to him that beleeveth is faith imputed to righteousness Ans Both speak of the word but not of the same part of the word which standeth of two parts the Law and this promiseth life to the worker and the Gospel which promiseth life to the beleever 6 Joh. 5.31 If I give testimony to my self my testimony is not true Joh. 8.14 If I testify of my self my testimony is true Ans Consider Christs testimony two ways 1 As the testimony of a singular man and thus considering himself as a meer man he yeelds to the Jewes that his testimony were unfit and not sufficient in his own cause because by the Law out of the mouth of two or three witnesses every word must stand but 2 Consider him as a Divine person coming from Heaven and having his Father giving witness with him thus his testimony is infallible not subject to passion or delusion And of this later the place speaketh 7 Matth. 10.8 Freely yee have received freely give Luke 10.7 The workman is worthy of his wages Ans The places speak of the same persons but not of the same works the former of miraculous works which are not to bee bought and sold for money the use of them being only to forward their ministery the later of the Function of Preaching and labour in building the Church equity requires that he that laboureth in the Ministry should receive recompence for his labour Gal. 6.6 8 Hos 13.9 God is not the author of evil Amos 3.6 There is no evil in the City which the Lord hath not done Ans It is not the same evil but that the evil of fault this the evil of punishment 9 Prov. 20.9 Who can say my heart is clean Matth. 5.8 Blessed are the pure in heart Ans 1. A man absolutely considered in himself is all impure so the former place speaketh but relatively considered in Christ he is pure so the later 2 No man is pure in respect of the presence of corruption but the godly are in respect of the efficacy and rule of it 10 Mark ●● 15 The Apostles must goe out into all the world Matth. 10.5 They must not goe into the way of the Gentiles Ans Distinguish times and the Scripture will bee consonant enough the former place is meant of preaching after Christs time the latter w●i●e hee was living on earth Both are true because the times are diverse 11 Joh. 3.17 God sent not the Son to judge the world Joh. 5.27 The Father hath given all judgement to the Son Ans The time of his abasement at his first coming when hee came not to judge but to be judged must bee distinguished from his second coming in Glory and Majesty to judge the quick and the dead of this the later 12 Exod. 20.15 Thou shalt not steal Chap. 11.2 Robbe or spoyl Aegypt Ans A special Commandement of God never opposeth a general but is only an exception from it So of Abrahams mental slaying of his son If a man of himself should steal or kill it is sin but if God bid it is not 13 Malac. 3.6 I am the Lord I change not yet it seems he is changeable Jer. 18.7 Ans The Scripture speaks not in the same respect God changeth not in himself but in respect of us he is changed as the Schools speak non affectivè sed effectivè in respect of his work not of his affection for so there is no variableness or shadow of change in him 14 Psal 18.20 Judge mee according to my righteousness Psal 143.2 Enter not into judgement with thy servant Answ There is a twofold Righteousnesse one of the cause another of the person by this later hee will not bee justified by himself but in the other hee desires to bee justified his cause was good there was no such thing as they laid to his charge If Job would dispute with God his own cloathes would make him unclean but when he dealeth with his calumnious friends hee saith I will never let go mine innocency till I dye 15 Luk. 1.33 Of his Kingdome there shall bee no end 1 Cor. 15.24 Hee shall deliver up the Kingdome to his Father Answ Luke speaketh of Christs Kingdome in respect of it self the Apostle in respect of the administration of it In the former respect it shall never bee abolished Christ shall alwaies have a people to rule alwaies a Lordship and Headship but hee shall give up his Kingdome in respect of the manner and means of administring
by Zachary chap. 11.13 and not by Jeremy Many learned men trouble themselves more than needs in reconciling this place 1 Some say that Saint Matthew joynes together both one place in Jeremy chap. 18.1 2 3. of the potter and this of Zachary 11.13 But there is little or no agreement between them 2 Some say that it is not in Jeremies writings that are Canonical but in some Apocryphal writings of Jeremy which the Jewes had and which Chrysostome confesseth he saw wherein these words were But it is not likely that the holy Evangelist would leave a Canonical text and cite an Apocryphal or give such credit to that or seek to build our faith upon it And by our rule that Book should be Canonical 3 Some say that Matthew forgat and for Zaehary put down Jeremy but with more forgetfulness that holy men writ as they were moved by Gods Spirit This error Erasmus takes hold of from Augustine who in his third Book concerning the consent of the Evangelists Chap. 7. defendeth and excuseth this error 4 Some think it the error of heedless Writers who might easily so erre but all the oldest Copies and the most ancient Fathers have the name of Jeremy 5 Some say that Zachariah being instructed and trained up with Jeremy did deliver it by tradition from Jeremy and so Jeremy spoke it by Zachariah which might be true because it is said in the text As was spoken by Jeremy not written But 6 The most compendious and likely way of reconciling is this that Zachary and Jeremy was the same man having two names which was very usual among the Jews as Gedeon was called Jerubaal and Jerub●sheth Salomon was called Jedidiah Jethro was called Hobab and Revel Jehoiacim Ieconias and Coniah Hester was called Edissa Simon Peter Cephas and Bar-Jona Matthew was called Lev● Jerusalem Jebus and Salem c. 4 These are such rules as not only the Learned who besides these have the benefit of Arts and Tongues the knowledge of Phrases the benefit of Disputation and the like but even the simplest may make good use of 1 To understand the Scripture aright and so discover the subtilty of Satan and seducers 2 To convince error and let others see their errours and so gently lead them back into their way again 3 They be great means to justifie the truth and glorifie God 4 Practisers of them have comfort in themselves that they are lovers of the truth and desire to find it even with much labour and industry 5 The want of this diligence and study of Scripture is the very cause that so many stagger and doubt of our religion and are so indifferent that they cannot tell whether to leane to Papists or Protestants and so hold doubtful to their death Yea and many goe away and fall off from us and depart to Antichrist which is a just judgement of God upon them because they were so farre from receiving the truth in the love of it as they would never take pains to search into the Scripture which witnesse of the truth VVE are now come to speak of the allegation it self and the force of the reason taken out of Deut. 6.16 where the Israelites are forbidden to tempt the Lord as in Massah How they tempted him in Massah is set down in Exod. 17.7 being in want of water and distress they contended with Moses and said Is the Lord amongst us 1 They doubted of his power and so would try whether he could give them water in this their want for the word nasah properly signifies to make trial as David is said to have tried and proved before to goe in armour 1 Sam. 17.39 where the same word is used 2 They doubted of the truth of his promise not beleeving him to be amongst them as he had promised unless he would shew them in all haste some sign of his presence in present supply of their necessity and therefore they say I● God amongst us Now mark how aptly and wisely our Lord and Saviour applieth this place I. In his choyse he is now on the pinacle and in a dangerous place and well knows that this prohibition was a fitter place to study and meditate on than those large promises in that most comfortable Psalm For howsoever all Scripture is profitable and Divine yet some Scriptures fit some persons and some occasions better than other It is a true and comfortable promise Isa 1.18 Come let us reason together though your sins were as red as scarlet c. But for a man not truely humbled the threats of the Law are fitter to meditate on neither doth the Lord so invite the Jewes till they be humbled It is true God hears not sinners but such a place is not so fit to bee meditated on and applied by such as are seriously beaten down already in the sight and sense of sin He that provideth not for his family is worse than an Infidel a true and holy speech but if a covetous man apply it it hurteth him hee hath other places to study on as Beware of covetousness and covetousness which is Idolatry is one of the sins which shuts out of heaven The holy heart of Christ could equally meditate and apply all Scripture but by this his choise hee would teach us to make choise according to occasions II. In direct meeting the Devils drift which was to move Christ to vain confidence and make trial whether he was the Son of God or God his Father by throwing himself down Comparing this place with the former he shewes him that it gives him no leave to cast down himself for this were not to trust God but to tempt God as the Jewes did in Massah but I doubt not of my Fathers power and therefore I need not try it I distrust not the truth of his promise and presence with me what need I make trial of it I have a Commandement which I must not separate from the promise as thou doest Thou pretendest a promise but no promise extends to the breach of any Commandement but hath his ground and dependance upon some Commandement or other Thou wouldest have me cast my self down and promisest help but no promise can secure him that attempteth that wherein he tempteth God as this action would In the words are 1 The person that must not tempt Thou 2 The person that must not be tempted The Lord thy God 3 The action of tempting not tempt I. The person Thou Some think that the pronoun Thou is to bee referred to Satan and the Lord thy God to Christ himself as though Christ had said Thou shalt not tempt me But 1 It was never written that Satan should not tempt Christ if it had it had been false 2 It is a negative Commandement of God directed to his people which bindes all persons at all times in all places and not to bee restrained to this occasion 3 Satan was irrecoverably fallen from the Covenant of grace and so although Christ was his Lord
with grace than Eves in her innocency And yet when as Satan let upon her senses he sent in by them such poyson as wrought death unto all her posterity Rules for the ordering of our senses aright 1 Beware of the life of sense which is a brutish life 2 Pet. 2.12 the Apostle speaketh of men led by sensuality even as the brute beasts who follow sense and appetite without all restraint Thus did the Gentiles who were therefore given up to a reprobate sense Rom. 1.24 And the danger of this estate Salomon noteth Eccles 11.9 when hee bids the young man walk in the sight of his own eyes and after the lusts of his heart but withall Remember that for all this he must come to judgement Let such think hereon that think it is free to give up their senses to feed themselves upon every object themselves please 2 Consider that God made the senses to minister to a right ordered heart and not the heart to follow the senses and therefore the heart must be watched that it walk not after the eye which is to invert Gods order And what a deluge of sin over-floweth the soul when the understanding is buried in the senses and the heart drowned in sinful appetites David gives his eye leave to wander and look lustfully after Bathsheba and what wayes of misery one overtaking another did he bring into his soul And what marvel then if natural men neglecting their duty in taking off their eyes from unchaste objects never rest till they come to have e●es full of adultery 2 Pet. 2.14 not ceasing to sin according to our Saviours speech Matth. 6.23 If the eye be evil all the body is dark yea and the soul too 3 Keep the parts of Christian armour upon thy senses that thou lye not open there A valiant Captain knowing that the enemy is easier kept out than beaten out of a City hath great care to plant his Garrison about the gates and walls there he sets his most ●aithful watch and ward there he plants his chief munition and ordnance Had David kept his armour on his eye he had not been so foyled by Bathsheba If on his ear he had not been so injurious to Mephibosheth by means of slandring Zaba 2 Sam. 16.3 4. Salomon wisheth us Not to look upon the colour of the wine in the cup that is with too much pleasure to stirre up desire He would have us keep our sence upon our ears not to give ear to a flatterer or whisperer but brow-beat him and drive him away with an angry countenance The Apostle Paul would have our ears shut against evil and corrupt words which corrupt good manners Daniel desires not to taste of the Kings dainties nor will pollute himself with them chap. 1. vers 8. And so we must fence our whole man as we may not touch any unclean thing and yeeld nothing to the course of waters 4 Feed thy senses with warrantable objects 1 God 2 His Word 3 The Creatures 4 Thy Brethren 5 Thy self First our eyes are made to see God himself here below as wee can in his back-parts hereafter as wee would face to face And therefore a base thing it were to fixe them upon the vain pleasures and profits of this life This is fitter for brute beasts that have no higher object Again what fairer or fitter object can we chuse for our senses than himself that made them with all their faculties and gives us so much comfort by them Prov. 20.12 The hearing ear and seeing eye God made them both and both of them as all things else he made for himself Further where can we better place ou● senses than upon him from whom all our help cometh How ought our eyes to be continually lifted up in holy and servent prayers and praises considering both our continual necessities and supplies So David I lift up mine eyes unto the hills from whence my salvation cometh Psal 121.1 and As the eye of the Hand-maid is lifted up to the hand of her Mistris so are our eyes unto thee Psal 123.1 Lastly how can we place our senses better than upon him who is the most pleasant and durable object To see God in Christ reconciled to hear and know him become our Father is so ravishing a sight as the Saints have runne through fire and water to apprehend it And for the continuance it will feed the senses everlastingly yea when the senses themselves decay and wax dull this object shall feed them and be never the less sweet And therefore as Salomon adviseth Eccles 12.1 while thou hast thy senses fix them upon this object Remember thy Creator in the dayes of thy youth before they be dark that look out at the windows c. If a man set his senses and feed them upon any outward object wealth honour pleasure buildings and the like wee may justly say to him as our Saviour to his Disciples when they gazed upon the beautiful workmanship of the Temple Are these the things your eyes gaze upon verily the time comes when one stone shall not bee left upon another undemolished The like may bee said of all earthly objects whatsoever Only this object shall grow more and more glorious and desirable Secondly God made our senses to be exercised in his holy Word which leads us to himself Heb. 5.14 the Apostle requires that Christians should have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 senses exercised in the word Prov. 2.2 Let thine ear hear wisdom 1 Hence comes faith which is by hearing 2 Hence we draw the comforts of the Scriptures which are the consolations of God in our trouble 3 Hence are we admonished directed and wholsomly corrected Prov. 15.31 The ear that heareth the rebuke of life shall dwell among wise men 4 The danger of neglect is great 1 He that turns his car from hearing the law his prayer is abominable 2 Uncircumcised cars resist the Holy Ghost Acts 7.51 3 Itching ears that turn from the truth doe by Gods just judgement turn unto ●ables 2 Tim. 4.3 5 It is a sign of a man that hath given his heart unto God for he that gives his heart will give his senses too knowing that God requires both Prov. 23.26 My son give me thy heart and let thine eyes that is thy senses delight in my wayes And our Saviour saith He that hath an ear to hear let him hear Seeing therefore that this is so notable a means of guiding our senses let us more carefully give up and take up our eyes and ears with the sight and sound of Gods Word upon all occasions in the hearing and reading of the Scripture I would ask the most carnal man that is whether this in sound judgement bee not a better object for our senses than Bowls or Tables and fitter for all times especially for the Sabbath Thirdly God made our senses to profit our selves by his Creatures that by them we might glorifie him their Creator and not by them corrupt or insnare our selves
of words and sharp reproaches unless there bee added also a direct answer and satisfaction to the matter in hand he therefore most fully answereth by the Scriptures even the Devil himself not contenting himself by his power to repel him which Satan now beginneth to feel unless also by the power of the Word hee convince him and thereby award the dart and break the temptation into pieces Which must bee our rule in dealing with vain and jangling adversaries not to answer them according to their foolish disposition or provocation not to bee like them in frowardness or stifnesse in heat and perversnesse but to answer them with words of Wisdome with sound matter and moderation both to convince them and beat down self-conceit in them which is the meaning of those two Precepts Prov. 26.4 5. which seem contrary but are easily reconciled by the due respect of persons places times and other circumstances Ever remember one rule that no adversary suppose the Devil himself is to bee answered by affection or passion but by judgement and sound reason Yea if wee have no hope to win our adversary or do him much good as Christ had none of the Devil yet wee must testify to God and his truth for the confirmation of our selves and others The testimony alledged is out of Deut. 10.20 Thou shalt fear the Lord thy God thou shall serve him and Deut. 6.13 An universal and affirmative precept by which every creature is bound to his Creator and him alone to perform Divine worship unto him And it is aptly applyed by Christ to this dart of Satan For it implyeth 1 That hee himself as now standing in this conflict with Satan is a creature of God as hee is man though otherwise as God hee hee equal to his Father As man hee is subject to the Law and to this precept among the rest 2 That Satan is not God as hee pretendeth by his unjust claimes nor any way equal to God 3 That therefore neither must hee being a creature give the least divine worship from God nor hee that thus claimes it can by any means bee capable of it 4 That the Scriptures of God reserve unto God his due worship and forbid that any creature shall share with him Christ stands not to dispute whether the sight presented were a shadow or substance nor whether hee would give it him or no but holds him to the Scripture which upholds his Fathers right Quest But why doth our Saviour change and adde to the text of Scripture as not regarding that terrible woe denounced against such as adde or take away from the word and contrary to that in Deut. 12.32 Here our Saviour 1 Changeth Moses saith Thou shalt fear Christ saith Thou shalt worship 2 Addeth for Moses hath not the word only which is of Christs putting to that text Answ 1 Here is some difference indeed in words but not in sense and therefore it is no corruption of the Text nor letting out the life of it which stands not in the words but in the true sense 2 Our Lord both in great wisdome changeth the word fear into Worship and just cause for 1 Moses useth fear which is a general word in which is contained all such Divine duties as godly men ought to perform unto God and our Saviour mentions one special which is included in that general which thing Moses speaks as well as he in the general as he that commands a whole commands every part inward and outward 2 Hereby our Saviour aptly meets with Satans temptation If thou wilt worship me he useth the same word not tying himself to Moses his words but keeping the sense but to Satans word and 3 He noteth the nearness and undividedness of Gods fear and his worship as where the cause is there will bee the effect so true fear and worship goe together where one is there will be the other and for this cause one is put for the other not here only but elsewhere as Isa 29.13 Their fear toward me was taught by the precept of men Christ alleadging it Mat. 15.9 saith You worship me in vain As for the word only added which is not in the Law it no way addeth any contrary or diverse sense to Moses but only expoundeth or giveth a fit commentary to the text and speaketh that plainly in one word which Moses doth in more as Deut. 2.13 Thou shalt fear the Lord thy God and serve him and walk after no other gods which is all one with our Saviours Thou shalt serve him only As he that saith The King is the supream Governour and none but hee saith in effect The King is the only supream Governour 3 Christ and his Apostles had a priviledge in alleadging Scriptures without error and were in●a●●ble expounders as well as alleadgers 4 This alteration of words is made by Christ to warrant us that Scriptures alleadged by teachers according to their right sense although with alterations and additions are to be taken as true expositions and allegations we being not tied so strictly to words as to sense For otherwise all our Sermons and Expositions which serve to beat out the true sense of Scriptures and apply it to several uses might be condemned as idle additions to Scripture which is blasphemous 5 To warrant us that Principles of Religion expounded by warrant of Scripture are truly interpreted though the Scriptures in so many formal words express them not As for example In the Doctrin of Justification by faith we say we are justified by faith only before God here the Papists exclaim on us as accursed Hereticks because we read not the word only in all the Scripture But we read it in effect and in true sense Rom. 3.28 and Ephes 2.8 By faith without works which exclusive is all one as to say only by faith as our Saviour interprets the exclusion of other gods by the word only As if I should say I did such a thing without help is it not all one as to say I only did it If Christs interpretation be true and warrantable so must ours in the point of justification And if the Devil himself had not yeelded to Christs allegation he might have said Thou thrustest in the word only and addest to Gods Word and therefore art not the Son of God But the Papists deal more impudently with us than the Devil did with Christ who said no such thing but yeelded to evidence of truth which they will not In the precept it self are three things 1 The person 2 The matter 3 The object 1 The peson thou the whole man and person which consisteth of a body and soul thou any reasonable Creature that challengest God to be thy God 2 The matter shalt worship and serve Worship is two-fold Civil or Divine I. Civil is a prostrating or bowing of the body or any outward testification of an high and reverent respect of man And this is due to men two ways 1 Of duty when men are to bee
as 1 To serve God is to reign and to be a King over the world fleshly lusts c. and to suit with Saints and Angels 2 God hereby becomes our protector maintainer and revenge● a David often prayeth Lord save thy servant teach thy servant revenge the cause of thy servant c. 3 Servants of unrighteousness meet with the wages of unrighteousness 4 All our comfort in crosses and afflictions stands in our service of God and a good Conscience or else we have none 5 To fear and keep his Commandements is the whole duty of a man and that which makes him f●lly happy Notes of a good servant of God 1 Labour to know the will of the Lord which hee hath revealed in his Word as David prayed Psal 119.125 For in the Scripture hee hath laid but our work for us and let us expect our calling to every business there let us be ready to hear not lightly absent nor present for custom but conscience 2 Let us serve him in affection and be glad to doe any thing to please him and grieve when we fail either in doing that wee should not or in not doing that we ought or not in that manner that may please the Lord. 3 Be ever imployed in his work How know I a mans servant but by his labouring in his Masters business Yee are his servant to whom yee obey Rom. 6.16 and Joh. 15. Yee are my Disciples if yee doe whatsoever I command you If I see a man spend his time in the service of sin of lusts of games pleasure the world c. I know whose servant he is certainly he is not in the service of God hee is not in Gods work 4 Intend thy Lords profit and glory A good servant knows his time and strength is his Masters and hee must bee profitable to him and seek his credit It will be with every servant of Christ as with Onesimus Phileus 11. being converted howsoever before grace he were so unprofitable and pilfering as he was unfit for any honest mans house and much more the house of God yet now he profits the Lord and credits him and takes not his meat and drink and wages for nothing 5 A good servant sets forward his Masters work in others hee will provoke his fellow-servants and not smite and hinder them as the evil servant did he will defend his Lord he will venture his life for him he will stand also for his fellow-servants while they are in their Masters business he will be a law to himself if there were no Law no Discipline he will not idle out his time his eye is upon the eye of his Master his mind upon his account his endeavour to please him in all things Vers 11. Then the Devil left him and behold the Angels came and ministred unto him HAving by the assistance of God now finished the two former general parts of this whole History which stood in the 1 Preparation and 2 The combate it self we proceed to the third and last which is the issue and event of all which affordeth us the sweet fruit and comfort of all our Saviours former sufferings from Satan and of our labours and endeavours in opening the same In this issue two parts are to bee considered 1 Christs victory 2 His triumph His victory and conquest in that the Devil left him His triumph in that the Angels came and ministred unto him In both which shine out notably the marks of his Divine power which even in all his lowest abasements did discover it self to such eyes as could see it and gave shew of a person far above all that his outward presence seemed to promise as for example His conception was by the Holy Ghost His birth as mean and base as might be but graced with a Star and the testimony of Angels and his Circumcision with Simeons His Baptism performed by John in Jordan but graced by his Fathers testimony and the Spirits descent in a visible shape of a Dove His civil obedience causeth him to pay tribute but hee sends for it to a Fish His person was called Beelzebub but Beelzebub confesseth him to be the Son of God At his Passion what greater infamy than to be hanged between two Theeves What greater glory than to convert and save one of them At his apprehension they that took him fell backward to the ground Joh. 18.6 In death he trod upon Deaths neck and being shut up in the Grave he opened it So here he is carried and recarried in the hands of the Devil but as one weary of his burden hee is forced to leave him on the plain field and to give up the bucklers because a stronger than hee is come This is the great mystery of God manifest in the flesh 1 Timothy 3.16 In the victory of Christ consider three things 1 The time when the Devil left him Then 2 The manner hee departed from him 3 How long hee left him and that is in Luke for a season Then This particle may have reference to three things 1 When the temptations were ended saith Luke namely all those which his Father had appointed him to indure at this time in the Wilderness For as the Son of God knew how much to suffer so Satan would not give over till hee had spent all his powder and had exercised all his malice in these most hellish Temptations wherein hee used all his skill strength and malice if he might possibly in this seed of the woman overthrow all the Sons of men and in the Head kill all the members Whence wee may Doct. Observe The obedience of the Son of God who stood out resolutely and departed not the field at all nor expected any rest till all the Temptations for this time were ended Christ could have confounded Satan in the beginning of the temptations and so have freed himself from further molestation but he continues and abides all the trial to the end And why Reason 1 His love to his Father made him submit himself to the lowest abasement even to the death of the Cross and refuse no difficult service for which his Father sent him into the World of which this was a principal The speech of David was most proper to this Son of David Behold here am I let the Lord do with mee even as hee will In his greatest agony hee said Not my will but thy will be done For he that loveth God his Commandements are not grievous to him 2 His love to his Church made him stand out the uttermost peril in this dangerous combate Eph. 5.25 Christ loved his Church 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and exposed himself for it and made himself liable to all wrongs and dangers for it as a loving Husband steps between his Wife and danger 3 Hee persisted in the Combate to teach us to hold out after his example in temptation and to expect freedome from temptation when wee have indured all but not before It is absurd to expect the
against all their vows promises and resolutions to admit them into firmer favour and league than ever before and being of neer kindred with Satan will then go away when they can stay no longer The most hard-hearted Pharaoh can do all this to get out of Gods hands but hee must not so carry it at length Vse 5. Lastly let us comfort our selves in our trouble for this also is changeable our Lord knows wee have need of a refreshing and wee shall bee refreshed The rod of the wicked yea of the wicked one shall not alwaies rest on the lot of the righteous lest they put forth their hand to vanity And although it may seem hard that Satan goes but for a season yet is not this without much comfort For although it were a great mercy for Satan not to come unto us yet to come and go away foiled is a far greater as hee doth from all the members of Christ who in expectation of this joyful and seasonable event may encourage themselves to hold out with patience unto the end And behold the Angels came and ministred to him In these words is laid the triumph of our Lord Jesus Christ after his victory which is set down not without a star or note of special observation Behold being held over this point following for special purpose For this particle noteth 1 Sometimes a strange thing as Behold a virgin shall conceive and bear a son 2 A long-desired thing and much expected as Behold oh Sion thy King commeth c. 3 An excellent thing now set before the eye and present as Joh. 1.29 Behold the Lamb of God that taketh away the sins of the world and so it is a note of admiration 4 A true and certain thing so it is set before many promises and threats 5 It is ever a note of attention and argues intention and weight in that matter where Gods Spirit hath prefixed it It hath all these uses in this place noting a strange triumph such as never was met withall in all the monuments in all the world besides It was but shadowed in that strange triumph sung to David 1 Sam. 18.7 when David had returned from the slaughter of the Philistim the women came out and sang by course Saul hath slain his thousand but David his ten thousand why hee slew but one man True but in that one enemy hee did as much as if hee had slain ten thousand others But here in one enemy this Son of David hath slain his legions and millions not ol men but of Devils not Philistims but hellish powers which had defied the Host of Israel This note also calls us to behold as expetible certain and excellent a triumph as all the notes of attention which are in the Scripture all the Selahs in the world are too little to gain sufficient attention or set out the greatnesse of this Divine mystery It calleth us as the parenthesis of our Saviour Matth. 24.15 speaking of the certain strange signes of Jerusalems overthrow Let him that readeth consider so Let him that reads behold that is consider meditate remember prize this great and most glorious work of the Son of God And it checketh and rebuketh our heaviness dulness and want of affection in the beholding and due regard of so material and comfortable a point of heavenly doctrin so neerly concerning out selves But what must we behold Two things 1 the comming of the Angels unto Christ 2 their ministring unto him In the comming of the Angels note 1 when they came 2 to whom 3 the manner of their comming I. When in the first word namely when the Devil had left him and not before For 1 The good Angels have little joy to bee where wicked Angels and Devils are especially whiles their Commission stands in force to molest the Children of God 2 They were ready enough to attend upon their Lord but Christ permitted them not for the time of temptation 1 Lest their presence should have driven Satan away before the temptations had been ended 2 Hee had no assistance of man or Angel but alone in the wilderness sustains all the brunt of the temptation hee must tread the wi●e-press alone as none must share with him in his conquest and victory 3 Satans mouth must bee stopt who would have said hee had overcome by their aid if they had been present 4 The Text saith not the Angels came in to help him in the time of temptation but when the Devil had left him they came to minister to him II. The person to whom they came to him now plainly manifest to bee God and man man tempted by the Devil like us in all things except sin God who had overcome the Devil and now riding in a Chariot of glorious triumph man in the hands of Satan carried and recarried at his pleasure God to whom the Angels as Ministers and the Squires of his holy body do homage and attendance III. The manner of their comming 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they now came in unto him standing before a far off as in war when the enemies are scattered the friends come in with joy for so it was when David had foyled and slain Goliah the men of Israel and Judah arose and shouted and applauded that noble victory Quest But how did they come in Answ 1 By moving themselves from the place were they were to that place were Christ was and they were not before for the same Angel cannot bee in two places at once because 1 His essence is finite and therefore limited 2 They are definitively in place although not repletively for the Angel is in a place onely by applying his vertue to the place by which vertue hee rather contains the place than the place him as it doth bodies But when a Legion of wicked Angels are said to bee in one man it is necessary that spirits defined to bee in one place cannot at the same time bee without that place till they bee moved thence into another Good Angels are not in heaven and earth at once much less every 〈◊〉 Now whereas they are truly in place and truely moved in place both without bodies as also in assumed bodies it would make much for the clearing of the Angels manner of comming to Christ to know whether they came in a bodily shape or without bodies at this time I answer I doubt not and yet I will not contend about it but that they came in bodily shapes Quest Have Angels bodily shapes to appear in Answ No not proper to their nature being meer spiritual substances without corporal matter or physical composition But yet they have bodily shapes 1 ascribed to them by way of description for our capacity 2 assumed by way of dispensation for our consolation I. For our comprehension Isa 6.2 the Angels with two wings cover their face and feet this signifieth that their nature is hid and removed from the knowledge of man And with twain their bodies are covered Ezek.
of peace wee are by this Doctrin directed to the best and onely means to come by it namely to make our peace first with God through Jesus Christ and then if the Conscience sting or accuse and terrify look upon this brazen Serpent and that wound shall bee cured Some being wounded in spirit use means to forget their grief now the musick merry company with sundry sports must bee called in all which enlarge the wound but are far from working any cure the only Physician in this case is Jesus Christ he calleth Come to mee all that are heavy laden and I will ease you onely in him canst thou finde refreshing for thy weary soul Doest thou perceive God frowning against thy sin there is no way f●r thee but to get him to behold thee in the face of his annointed Psal 84.9 no merits no works no good intentions no gifts can clear his countenance to make it shine upon thee onely hee is well pleased in his Christ and with such as ●e b●holdeth in him and no other If men bee at oddes with thee the next way to bee at one with them is not by raging and storming against them to drive thy self further from God but to draw neer unto him in Christ ●y whom reconcile thy self unto him and then as thine own minde shall bee more composed unto peace and love so will hee also make thine enemies thy friends if hee see it good at the least restrain them so as they shall not hurt thee For if hee pitch a Covenant for us with the brute beasts of the field that they shall not hurt us much more will hee shelter us from the malice of men bee they never so brutish and unreasonable So much of this peace by Jesus Christ Now in the second place Christ was preached to Israel two waies wee are to consider the Preaching of it to the children of Israel Where two things are to bee explained 1 How Christ was preached unto the Israelites 2 Why hee was so preached unto them Concerning the former Christ was Preached to Israel two waies 1 by the word or promise 2 by deed or type For the first the main promise of all concerning this truth was that which after it was by Gods own mouth once delivered unto Adam in Paradise The seed of the woman shall bruise c. was so often repeated to Abraham Isaac and Jacob In thy seed shall all the Nations of the Earth be blessed Gen. 12.3 The same promise in substance Moses maketh to the whole people of the Jews Deut. 18.15 Also all the Prophets saith Peter from Samuel and thenceforth so many as have spoken have likewise foretold the same thing Act. 3.24 and in this regard the Jews are called the Children of the Prophets and of the Covenant which God made to the Fathers where the very same Promise made to Abraham is repeated vers 25. And the Apostle Paul is as express Gal. 3.8 The Scripture foreseeing that God would justify the Gentiles through faith preached before the Gospel to Abraham saying in thee that is in thy seed shall all the Gentiles be blessed Again Christ was by deed or type preached our peace in the whole Levitical Priesthood for all that Ceremonial Worship all their Sacrifices Oblations Altars yea their Temple Ark and Propitiatory resembled and pointed at Christ our peace and yet further their very Kings and Kingdome their Priests and Prophets all of them not obscurely resembled Jesus Christ and preached him our peace who as a King delivered his subjects from all the former bondage of forein power and by his merit and triumph wrought out their peace As a Priest sacrificed himself and offered unto his Father a sweet smelling sacrifice of peace for them and as a Prophet fully delivered from his Father the whole Doctrin of peace and reconciliation Both these waies was Christ preached to the Israelites whereof for brevities sake we will for the present forbear further discourse The Second thing to bee explained is Christ was preached 〈◊〉 Israel 1 b● why was Christ preached our peace to the Children of Israel first and why was that Doctrin renewed to them from time to time by the hand and ministery of the Prophets Answ For three reasons 1 Because they were that seed and certain family of whom the Messiah should descend and arise for which cause they were to observe an accurate distinction of the tribes according to that Ordinance and Government which God had established amongst them that they might not bee deceived in his person when hee should in fulness of time appear 2 Because God had chosen them to bee a peculiar people hee set them up above all nations not onely in many other prerogatives but in this which was the chief of all had they seen it that the Oracles of God were committed unto them Rom. 3.2 Hee gave his Laws to Jacob his Covenants to Israel hee dealt not so with every Nation Psal 147.30 The Apostle Paul when hee had reckoned a number of the Jews advancements above the Gentiles such as were their Adoption Covenant Promises Fathers hee shutteth up all with the chief of all in these words of whom concerning the flesh Christ came Rom. 9.5 Now as that was the first that hee came of them so this is the next that hee came unto them alone first in the promises and types then in his person and appearance then in his Doctrin and miracles performed in his own person adde hereto that hee came to them in his life and death and lastly hee came first and alone to them in the Ministry and Miracles of his Holy Apostles who must not go into the way of the Gentiles nor turn themselves to other Nations till the Jews by despising that Grace offered had made themselves unworthy of life everlasting the lost sheep of the house of Israel must first bee sought up and therefore as Paul said it was necessary that the word of God should first bee spoken unto them Act. 13.46 3 That both Jew and Gentile might know that Christ came not by hap or chance or on the suddain so as his comming might not bee observed but that hee came for the time and for the manner according to the Promises and predictions of old of which our Apostle is willing in these words to imply the accomplishment Divinity of Scripture proved Observ 1. Whence wee may note 1 The Divinity of Scripture which foretelleth beforehand things which are to come to pass many hundreths yea some thousands of years after The thing that foretelleth things properly to come which have no existence in any cause or sign must needs bee of God Satan indeed can guess at some events but which have some grounds in nature or experience or can foretell a thing to come which God hath revealed to him or himself is made an executioner of as in Saul but to foretell a thing or event meerly to come is proper to God Whence it
wickedness with tears pray for pardon promise amendment beg prayers of others as Pharaoh one would think them very penitent themselves think they are so also but the Moon changeth not so often as these spiritual lunaticks who hence may know that the evil spirit hath taken possession of them because they are never long in a good minde These few notes instead of many I thought good to set down to help men that are desirous to see how secretly Satan worketh in their souls and how hee can cunningly most forceably keep possession when hee seemeth most to disclaim it that thus they comming to perceive the disease may run out of themselves to seek for remedy Which what it is wee are now in the next point to declare The third point in the words to bee considered is The mighty power of Jesus Christ who onely could heal those that were thus oppressed and enthralled by the Devil and here consider 1 The ground 2 The proof or manifestation of it The ground was because God was with him How God was with his Son and how with his Servants It will bee objected that God is said to have been with many of his servants who yet had not this power as with Joseph Joshuah Moses and others Answ God was indeed with them onely by manifesting his presence in some powerful or loving effect which hee wrought in by or for them But never was God present with any of his Saints as hee was with his Son who had not the vertue onely and power of the God-head effectually and energetically working with him which was all they had but the god-head it self was after a sort bodily with him yea the fulnesse of the God-head was not only with him but in him bodily Col. 2.9 as elsewhere God is said not onely to bee with Christ but in Christ reconciling the world unto himself 2 Cor. 5.19 So as hee of himself performed the works which proceeded from him which they did not and his actions as from himself were divine Quest Why then doth not the Apostle more shortly and plainly say that Christ was God as that God was with him Answ Hee might indeed have so said as truely but for the time spareth the weakness of his hearers contenting himself to deliver Doctrin as they were able to receive it in great wisdome by little and little instilling into their minds the knowledge of Christ and by degrees laying such grounds and foundations as whereby themselves might more easily rise to that high point of Divinity which the Apostle calleth a great mystery namely God manifested in the flesh 1 Tim. 3.26 Secondly For the proof or manifestation of this Divine power of Christ Christ powerfully treadeth Satan under his feet ●n overthrowing the power of Satan and treading him under his feet is evident in the Scripture The first promise that ever was made to man fallen is That this seed of the woman should bruise the Serpents head According to which prophecy hee not onely put Satan to flight in his own person Mat. 4. but took also his strongest holds where hee had strongly fortified himself in the persons of others as every where the History of the Gospel recordeth Hee rebuked the unclean spirits and made them cry for grief and anger Mark 9.25 Hee forced them to silence and would not suffer them to confess him Mar. 1.25 By his very word hee chained and bound them whom no bolts could hold nor any other means subdue such was his power and glory though men saw little of it that the Devils could neither fly from him nor yet abide his presence A whole legion of them ran to meet him a far off and worshipped him Mar. 5.6 most submisly intreated him that hee would not torment them and earnestly sued unto him that seeing they could no longer inhabit the man they might have power over the swine By all which examples and many more that might bee added appeareth what command Jesus Christ hath over the Devils and that by his onely word hee healed all those that were oppressed by them Quest It is true that Christ hath this power and glory in himself How the power of Christ foyleth Satan for us because God is with him but how commeth this power to bee so saving and soveraign unto miserable creatures who are held under the power of the Devil and that most justly Ans In healing all our diseases Mat. 8.16.17 among which this cute is numbred wee must knit and combine those two things which in Christ were inseparable namely his glory and his grace the latter of which makeeth the former soveraign unto us and appeareth in two actions in removing from us the next causes of all our diseases namely our sins For as the Physician in working a cure first removeth the distempered humours of his patient which are the matter of the disease so doth our heavenly Physician imply that this is the beginning of his cure and therefore often his first word is Thy sins are forgiven thee and his last word is goe and sin no more lest a worse thing befall thee 2 By taking our diseases upon himself which 〈◊〉 Physician doth or can do but this Lamb of God taketh away the sins of the world by taking them upon himself for he bare our infirmities Col. 2.22 and carried our sorrows and sins in the body of his flesh even to the cross where they were fastned with him buried them in his grave yea cast them into Hell and there left them by which most glorious triumph of his the snares and letters wherewith wee were chained to death and the Devil are broken and our souls as a bird are escaped Christ onely by his P●opes power casteth out Devils Hence note 1 That no man can cast a Devil out of a possessed party or ever did as a principal efficient cause but as an instrument and that onely by this power of the Lord Jesus to whom all power in heaven and earth is given and to whom all the honour of this power must bee ascribed for what power can countermand Satans but onely Gods I grant Satan may give place to beelzabub and depart his habitation for his greater advantage and forsake a body to get faster hold upon the soul or to delude many beholders but such hostile conquest over Satan argueth a mighty power of God which all the Devils in hell cannot resist Secondly That whosoever finde themselves any way molested of Satan must hasten themselves to Jesus Christ who onely can batter down the holds of the Devil In all thy spiritual captivity repair unto Christ and work their deliverance Feelest thou thy self held under any spiritual captivity or bondage doth the Law of evil present with thee toyl thee with heaviness and unchearfulness to any thing that is good seest thou in any measure Satans secret trains working against thy salvation Oh come unto Christ not faintly as the Father of the possessed child Mark
apart to their several offices by laying on of mens hands upon them even so God laid his hands on these that is Christ immediately by his own voyce called these to be witnesses unto him which was one of the priviledges of the Apostles 2 The Apostle in the words expresseth himself by limiting them to themselves to us namely Apostles who ate and drunk with him not only who before his death lived as it were at bed and board with him but after hee rose from the dead that we might not be deceived in our witnesse of him 3 To us whom be commanded to preach and testifie namely to the whole world these things together with his coming again to judgement Now for the further clearing of this publick witnesse of the Apostles wee will consider three things 1 That these twelve were appointed by Christ himself to this witnesse which the Apostle Peter plainly concludeth Act. 1.22 where speaking of one to be elected into Judas his room he saith he must be chosen of one of them which have companied w●th us all the time that the Lord Jesus was conversant among us beginning at the Baptism of John unto the day that he was taken up implying that whosoever was not thus qualified he was not fit to be made such a publick witnesse with them of his resurrection because to the making of an Apostle was necessary either an ordinary converse with Christ upon earth or else an extraordinary sight of him in Heaven by which latter Paul who made an honourable accesse to that number proved himself an Apostle T●e second thing is how they were furnished to this witnesse By what means the Apostles were furnished to their witness and this was su●●y ways 1 By their senses they ate and drunk with him that is were in a familiar sort conversant with him after he rose again 2 By word of mouth he gave them charge and commandement to doe it of both which wee are to speak in the text 3 By a Sacrament or sign of breathing upon them he confirmed them to their vocation saying As my Father sent me so I send you 4 By adding thereunto the thing signified for he opened their understandings and made th●m able to conceive the Scriptures and unfold all the Mysteries therein so farre as was behoveful for the Church 5 By bestowing sundry other great gifts upon them sending the Holy Ghost upon them in the likeness of fiery Tongues whereby they received the gift of Tongues he gift of Miracles of casting out Devils of healing the Sick by imposition of hands of preserving from poyson and deadly things of the Apostolical rod whereby death it self was at the command of their word either to take place as in Ananias and Saphira both struck dead with the word of the Apostle or to give place as in Dorcas who by a word of the Apostle was raised to life being dead By these means the Lord put into the hands of the Apostles great power to give witnesse of the resurrection of Christ Act. 4.33 The third thing is By what means they witnessed or gave testimony to Christ Ans Because they were to bee authentical and faithful witnesses to all the world and that both in the age wherein they lived as also in all the succeeding ages to the end of the world therefore was it necessary that they should give witnesse two wayes 1 By zealous and painful preaching by voyce while they lived 2 Even after their death by the holy Doctrin left behind them in their Works and Writings and thus doe they still remain publick witnesses to us on whom the ends of the world are come Doct. Hence observe that the office of the Apostles was to give testimony unto Christ after a peculiar manner Acts 1.8 When the Holy Ghost shall come upon you yee shall be witnesses unto me both in Jerusalem Judea Samaria and to the uttermost parts of the earth I say they were to bee witnesses after a peculiar manner for these reasons The Apostles were to bee peculiar witnesses to Christ and why 1 To distinguish their witness from ours who are ordinary Ministers for every Minister is called of God to give witness to Christ but properly to speak they are rather Preachers and Publishers of things witnessed than witnesses or if witnesses yet herein they differ from the Apostles that they are not oculate or ear-witnesses nor such sensible witnesses as they were for this is an Apostolical speech and manner of preaching not derived to ordinary Pastors and Teachers to say That which wee have heard and seen and our hands have handled that we testify unto you 1 Joh. 1.1 2 They were all faithful witnesses and faithful men endued with faith and full beleef of the things they wrote and testified as all ordinary Ministers are not Whence the Evangelist John professeth of them all that they knew the testimony to bee true Joh. 21.24 True for the matter for they delivered the whole Counsel of God and kept nothing back that was fit to be known and true for the manner they all speaking as they were moved by the Spirit of God 2 Pet. 1.21 and therefore exempted from all error in their witness as we are not 3 And hence followeth that their witness is to bee beleeved as infallible being the witness of such as with their eyes saw his Ma●esty vers 16. who did not at any time deliver any thing which they either heard not of Christ or saw him not doing or suffering but all other ordinary Ministers are so far to bee beleeved as they consent with these and so far as they testify no other thing than what these oculate witnesses have left in writing Object But Christ needeth not the witness of any man hee hath a greater witnesse than John or than any Apostle therefore there is no use of the Apostles witness Answ Christ hath indeed three greater witnesses than the witness of his Apostles namely 1 His Father that sent him beareth witnesse of him 2 The Scriptures if they bee searched testify of him 3 His works that hee did bear witnesse of him Joh. 8.18 5.39 5.36 but yet howsoever in regard of himself hee need no other testimony of man that wee might beleeve and bee saved hee useth the witness of men 〈◊〉 John and the Apostles and of this Divine Testimony in the mouth of the Apostles may bee said as Christ did of the voice from heaven Joh. 12.30 This voice came not because of mee but for your sakes In divine things we must lean upon a sure word Vse 1. From this Doctrin wee learn how necessary a thing it is in causes of Faith to lean upon true and certain things and not upon tottring traditions or unwritten verities which are the main pillars of Popish Doctrin Oh how good hath our God been to this Church and Land of ours in giving us a surer word of the Prophets and Apostles to become a light unto us in
a dark place and a sure ground whereon wee may build the truth and certainty of our Faith and religion that wee need not bee carried about with every winde of corrupt Doctrin These witnesses being sensible faithful and so extraordinarily assisted neither would not could deceive us yea and writing in such a time and the same age in which the things were done if they had written any false or corrupted thing all that lived at that time could easily have confuted them And therefore as Moses when hee had written the Book of the Law Exod. 24.7 called all the people to bee a witness of the truth of it even so the Apostles writing the books of the Gospel and finishing them appealed to the men of that age for the truth of them as John the last of them all in the last end of his book saith wee know that is all this age knoweth that this witnesse is true 2 This Doctrin giveth us direction how to carry our selves to the present Ministry for some man may say as the Devil once did Paul I know and Cephas I know but who are you Surely even wee are sent by Christ as well as the Apostles Eph. 4.11 Hee gave some to bee Apostles some Prophets some Pastors some Teachers Where it is evident that he that giveth the Apostle giveth the Pastor also Wee being then called by Christ to teach this doctrin in the Church Ordinary Ministers must be received as Apostles while they teach things hea●d seen by the Apostles whatsoever our own unworthiness bee yet to contemn us shall be the contempt of Christ himself yet wee being men subject to error as they were not must hold us to our rule which is Apostolical Doctrin for as the Apostles have faithfully performed their parts so our part and duty is faithfully to depend upon them and then not to depend upon or depart from us is to depart from Christ and his Ordinance Wee that are Teachers reserve to every Christian his priviledge which is not to receive every thing from us hand over head nor any thing at all on our bare words but to try our spirits to search the Scriptures as the B●reans They have ●r ought to have their Bibles we wish them to look and enquire there whether our Doctrin be true or no and by this note shall they know it what it is according as wee shall bee able to shew the Apostles the ear or eye-witnesses of it for else are they not bound to beleeve it Let any man come with a conje●tural or probable truth or any traditionary doctrin and cannot shew which of the Apostles heard or saw it in Christ no man is bound to beleeve it as necessary to his salvation But if any come and can back his Doctrin thus from the Apostles it is all one as if the Apostles did utter it Let every Minister if hee would bee beleeved tread in the steps of the holy Apostles and see hee bee able to clear that all he speaketh bee spoken in their Language bee seen with their eyes or heard with their eares which hee is sure so to bee if it bee contained in their writings Hereof the Evangelist John giveth a notable president The Word saith hee was made flesh Joh. 1.14 here was a great mystery and a main principle of Salvation but how knoweth hee it is hee sure of it yea that he is and therefore addeth we saw the glory of it Again it were to bee wished that hearers would take up their duty which is in reverent manner to come to their teachers in things doubtfully delivered and ask the question I beseech you tell me which of the Apostles heard or saw this from Christ which you have taught us that I may beleeve it for they delivered nothing else To which rule would Ministers and people frame themselves it would bring the Scriptures into request which for most part are least set by in many Sermons it would make men more careful of their Doctrin and thrust out an infinite deal of trash and foolish conceits of froathy brains which make it a chief part of their reputation to see with any eies save the Apostles and speak with any tongues save theirs by which means it commeth to pass that Gods own voice is least heard in Gods house in Gods business and among Gods people 3 Hence note also The Lord Jesus chose mean and weak men for his witnesses Why. What mean and weak men did the Lord choose to bee his witnesses to all the world not great Rabbies not Rich not Worldly-wise who are not so expedite and ready neither to preach nor receive the Gospel but poor simple and mean men For these reasons 1 That the conversion of men might not bee ascribed to eloquence arts power or wisdome of the world but this treasure is put in earthen vessels that all the power and glory of the work may redound to God who commonly in weak and foolish things putteth forth his admirable strength and wisdome 2 That there may bee held a difference between Civil and Ecclesiastical power the one is outwardly glorious and stately the other mean and lowly the Ministry which ever brought most men to God was least pompous and which came the nearest to the simplicity of Christ and his Apostles and on which the Sun of the World for most part as little shineth as it did on Christ himself and his Apostles 3 It made more for the glory of Christ and his Apostles of Christ in that hee chooseth illiterate and unlearned persons and presently maketh them wise learned and intelligent able by the wisdome of God to put t● silence the most Learned and exercised Adversaries they can meet withall Earthly Kings and Princes not being able to give such gifts are forced to advance such as are wise and experienced already and set over their business the wisest most learned and most noble that they can finde Christ need choose none such but honoureth himself in choosing foolish and ignoble things to make them wise and noble and every way fitted to his work Again herein hee honoureth also his instruments who being in themselves mean and contemptible yet upon their calling received such a portion of the Spirit as that they drove the wisest and most learned into admiration and daunted the greatest and most powerful when they saw that no power or glory of this world could draw or hinder them from the Execution of that Office to which they were deputed Hence was it that the wise and mighty Act. 4. seeing the freedome and wisdome of Peter and John in speaking knowing them to bee unlearned men they wondred and knew they had been with Jesus and seeing the man standing with them which had been healed they had nothing to say against them How great glory won Christ hereby to himself and his servants 4 By this choise of his hee putteth a plain difference between his Kingdome and the Kingdome of Antichrist His
savour Christ needed not to have ascended to send men without gifts hee sendeth no Messenger without a message no Steward without his provision no Captain without weapons no Watchmen without eyes this were a folly which the wisdome and weakness of man cannot brook but hee sendeth an interpreter the Learned tongue the prompt Scribe in the Law of the Lord such as are mighty in the Scriptures and are stored with things new and old Let us not implead the wisdome of the Son of God and say where shall wee have such store of Preachers for our several Parishes If wee want them the fault is our own and not Gods who hath given means men and maintenance enough if all these were wisely and thankfully disposed to his glory and the service of the Church 3 This Doctrin must bee applyed also to the more ignorant sort of men who never as yet came to see the absolute necessity of this Ordinance of Preaching as witn●ss 1 Their formal comming hereunto as forced by Law ●ow men see this necessity of preaching or constrained by custome and thence departing again without any fruit of Faith or increase either of knowledge of obedience or of comfort 2 The inbred corruption yea and malice of their hearts against it which bewrayeth it self in a number of frivolous Objections which they shame not to bolt out among their mates As that this preaching of the Gospel is but foolishness they see other have lived honestly and well without it before them and so have themselves done for many years and yet they live as well as those that are the forwardest to run after Sermons Alas poor souls how hath Satan over-reached them in a matter of such moment as is their whole estate and freehold of Heaven who if ever they come to see their lost estate and what a woful condition they stand in for the present they will tell us another tale with shame in their faces for that they have said they will profess the Ministry of Reconciliation to bee as necessary as their attonement and friendship with God which is better and sweeter than life it self Others conceive and complain as the Israelites Many pl●●● against it that there is too much Preaching and too much of this Mannah and some of better place but no better hearts avouch that it is so common that it grows into contempt Now would I ask of these was it the abundance of Mannah the Angels food that was the fault or their wicked loathing of it even so is it the commonness of the word that maketh the wicked contemn it for the hungry soul of the godly would never dispise it if it were ten times more common or rather because they see not the worth nor taste the sweetness of it des●●s● wee the Sun because it riseth daily and shineth all the day long upo● 〈◊〉 or the air which wee breath in every moment or doth the ordinary and common use of the bread upon our Tables bring bread out of request with us No wee see the necessity that without the Sun and without our daily bread and without the air wee cannot live And did wee see also as clearly that where vision faileth people perish wee should change with our minds our note and highly bless God for the commonness of it as we do in the other and sure I am that either the Apostle Paul did not fear this inconvenience or else hee oversaw it when he enjoyned the Ministers to Preach instantly both in season and out of season Others say the world was better when there was lesse Preaching and thence conclude that it is far worse now because there is more which though it bee a rude fallacy scarce worthy answer as putting that to bee a cause of mens wickedness which is not yet something must bee said unto it and fools must bee answered in their folly lest they bee wise in their own conceit Let these men bethink themselves and then tell us whether the Holy Gospel being the power and arm of God to save every beleever the glad tydings of salvation and word of life can make the World worse than it is For if that bee the use of it our blessed Saviour was far overseen to leave his glory of Heaven to take our flesh and in it to submit himself to the obedience of the whole Law and to the suffering of the whole curse of it for our disobedience if by all this hee leave the World or make the World worse than he found it How shall it bee true that is written of him that the Son of Man came not to destroy but to seek and save that which was lost if the Preaching of him make the World worse than it was wee will easily grant that the Gospel being a great sight it daily discovereth that corruption and darkness which before lay hid as the Sun rising manifesteth all those things which were wrapped up in the darkness of the night But to say that sin is the more because it is more seen by the light of the Gospel is a fancy or if sin it self in these daies of the Gospel by the multiplication of people bee multiplyed shall wee say the Gospel is the cause or rather the malice of men who pervert it to their own destruction taking occasion by it to turn the grace of God into wantonness Let not ●s therefore bee as the old Idolaters in Jeremies time who told him plainly that they would not hear the Word that hee spake in the name of the Lord for while they served the Queen of Heaven they had plenty of victuals and were well and felt none evil but since they left to burn incense unto her it was never well with them they had scarceness of all things and were consumed by the Sword and by Famine Jer. 44.17 18. and therefore they were resolved to do as their Fathers did But let us with thankfulness cast our eies upon the Grace of God that hath appeared and learn as it teacheth to deny ungodliness and worldly lusts and to live soberly righteously and godly in this present world Many other allegations of simple people against this ordinance I might alleadge but they are well met withall by some others and my self have elsewhere answered many of them Beauties of Bethel and therefore referring the Reader thither I content my self with these few for the present and conclude this point with this exhortation to these poor seduced people that considering the straight charge and Commandement that lyeth upon us to Preach in season and out of season they would bee willing to pick out their duty therein implyed which is to bee diligent yea swift to hear to attend as earnest suters at the gates of Wisdome for their own good to lay up instruction as they would treasure gold and to call after the wisdome of God revealed in this ordinance without which never was any made wise to salvation And let them further know that
in prison and at length they see there was no heavenly husbandry in all this Thirdly In confessing our sin and pleading guilty Prov. 20.13 this is the covenant that whereas he that hideth his sin shall not prosper he that confesseth shall finde mercy Psal 32.4 I said I will confesse mine iniquity and thou forgavest me the punishment of my sin Job 31.33 It is too neer joyned to our natures to hide our sin with Adam and conceal it in our bosome or else to sum up all in a word without special grief for any special sin and herein they think they have peace which is but unfeelingnesse But those that belong to God he bringeth them to found humiliation he maketh them sick in smiting them and setteth their sins in order before them like a bill of parcels to the breaking of their hearts and the utter acknowledgement of themselves to be miserable bankcrupts For this purpose he maketh their own Consciences also to be judges of their actions pronouncing sentence of guiltinesse and death against themselves As David Against thee against thee have I sinned and again I am the man and again I have done very foolishly but these s●eep what have they d●ne The penitent Thief thus judgeth himself we are righteously here To conclude this point he was never truly humbled nor ●ver aright judged himself that is more ashamed to confesse than to commit sin Fourthly After pleading guilty in pleading for pardon as for life and death and as the poor Malefactor condemned to dye c●ys for mercy and all his hope and longing is for a pardon even so this is noted to bee the practi●e of the Church Hos 14.2 3. Oh Israel return unto the Lord thy God for thou hast fallen by thine iniquity Take unto you words and turn to the Lord and say unto him Take away all iniquity and receive us graciously And which of the Saints have not placed all their happinesse in the pardon of sin or have not preferred the shining of Gods countenan●e upon them above all the outward happinesse that the earth affordeth Now in the seeking and suing for pardon because God will not hear him that regardeth wickednesse in his heart for wicked Esau shall finde no repentance nor favour with tears therefore thou must forth-with cease to doe evil as being ashamed of it and learn to doe well lay Laws upon thy self be more severe against thy self in the things wherein thou hast displeased thy God watch diligently over those corruptions which have most foyled thee this is the way both to make and preserve thy peace Bring thy self then with fear and trembling before Gods righteous Judgement accuse thy self and bewayl thy sins bee not ashamed to confesse but to commit them again be so farre from purposing any wickednesse in thy heart as rather thou bee strongly armed with full purp●se against it And thus remembring thy sins God will forget them thus wi●●ing them deep in thine own books God will blot them out of his Thus if thou hide them not but cast them out of thy heart and life he will hide them for ever and cast them utterly out of his sight so that if thou canst thus judge thy self afore-hand thou shalt never be judged of the Lord. Vers 43. To him give all the Prophets witnesse that through his name all that beleeve in him shall receive remission of sins THe Apostle Peter although he hath sufficiently proved whatsoever he hath form●rly delivered concerning the Doctrin and Miracles Life and Death Resurrection and Ascension and the coming of Christ again unto Judgement yet as though no proof could be too much or as if he could not satisfie himself in enforcing this holy doctrin and binding it upon the consciences of his Hearers he shutteth up his Sermon in this verse with another assured testim●ny above all exception drawn from all the Prophets who all consent and conspire with the Apostles in all their doctrin concerning him the sum and main end of all which is that through beleeving in his name the elect should receive remission of sins which is the sum and effect of this verse Where first may be asked Why the Apostle inferreth so many testimonies concerning Christ Reasons why doth the Apostle induce so many testimonies one in the ne●k of another In the answer whereof we shall see that none of them are needlesse or superfluous For 1 All the points of Christian religion are above and against corrupt nature as appeareth in the Heathen wh● still esteemed the preaching of Christ foolishnesse 2 Corin. 2.23 and in the Athenians who when they heard Paul preaching of the Judgement Day and Christs Resurrection from the dead they mocked him Acts 17.32 The hardened Jews at this day on whom the Wrath of God is 〈◊〉 me to the uttermost doe the like and well it were for many if professed Christians in the midst of such a light made more reckoning of our painful preaching of Christ who teach the same points than some of the former which were they so slight matters as most account them what need they be so enforced We are therefore hence fitly enformed both to make more high account of such great Mysteries which the Spirit of God is so careful t● commend unto us as also to bewayl the infidelity of our hearts that need so much working upon them to entertain such necessary truths as these be 2 Because although he was an Apostle yet would he shew his care that in all his Sermon he taught nothing of his own which the Prophets had not formerly taught Which teacheth all Ministers much more to beware lest in any of their Sermons they broach such doctrin or bring in such stuff of which they cannot prove the Prophets and Apostles to bee Patrons and Publishers For this was the commandement of the Apostles that wee teach no other doctrin 1 Tim. 1.3 neither contrary nor diverse from it no private opinions which are the causes of Schisms and Heresies nor vain conceits or jangling which breed questions but no godly edifying 3 It was not only their precept but practise also as Act. 26.22 Paul spake no other things than those which the Prophets and Moses did say should come to wit that Christ should suffer and that he should bee the first that should rise from the dead Nay the Lord of the holy Apostles Jesus Christ himself preached no other Doctrin of whom it is said Luk. 24.27 that be began at Moses and all the Prophets and interpreted unto them in all the Scriptures the things which were written of him shall the Son of God who might have made every word hee spake Scripture tye himself to the Scriptures and make them the ground of all his Sermons and shall not weak men who cannot without error depart an hair breadth from them be careful to contain all their doctrin within the limits of them especially seeing nothing else bindeth the conscience of the hearer 3 The Apostle knew
Christ who 361 Comfort of the godly who meet with strange entertainment in the world where they are strangers 293 Comfort that Christ is stronger than all 327 Common Protestant beleeveth not the Article of free remission of sins 414 Communication in sin sundry waies but all to be avoided 330 Companions of remission of sins 412 Consent of the Church to any Doctrin to be required and received with five several cautions 389 Conditions of reconciliation two 347 Consideration of the last Judgement a ground of the godlies patience 379 Consolations from Christs Resurrection 348 Co●solation of Gods children that their Saviour shall be their Judge 376 Consolation issuing from pardon of sinne 409 Cros● of Chri●t an honourable chariot of our triumph 334 Crosses some more smart and durable why 357 D DAnger of sin 406 Davids sin and punishment both forgiven though the child must dye 404 Death of Christ after a special manner infamous 332 Death of Christ hath more power in it than all the lives of Men and Angels 334 Death of Christ a destroyer of death and all destroyers 342 Death though it remain after sin is pardoned both the fault and punishment 〈◊〉 notwithstanding removed 333 Degrees of blessedness 415 Devil not cast out but by Christs power 324 Differences between Christian and worldly peace 265 Differences between Christs annointing and all other 308 Differences between Christs miracles and miracles of the Prophets and Apostles 313 Difference between the miracles of the Prophets and Apostles and those wonders wrought by Satan in three things 314 Difference between the life of the natural and regenerate man in matters both civil and religious 349 Difference between Civil and Ecclesiastical power 363 Difference between the kingdome of Christ and Antichrist 364 Divinity of Scripture proved 298 E ENemies even spiritual not only foyled by Christ but made after a sort friendly 345 Essential properties of Faith three 395 Evangelists all large in the Article of Christ his resurrection Why. 339 Every thing must bee esteemed in the measure and degree of the goodness of it 410 Examination of heavenly life 352 F FAith what it is 391 Faith is not of all reas 391 Faith never lost reas four 392 Faith commendeth every thing 394 Faith of most not rightly qualified 399 Faith seateth it self in an humbled soul 395 Faith in the resurrection an hard point 366 Faithful are seasonably remembred of God at least on the third day 357 Fame of Christ begun in Galilee why 303 And why after Johns preaching 305 Fear of God what and wherein it consisteth 288 Fearers of God must bee accepted of us 293 Few men see the necessity of preaching why 372 Five deadly enemies foyled by Christ 1 Sin 2 Death 3 Hell 4 The Devil 5 The World 344 Five excellent fruits of saving faith 393 Five sorts of men all boast of faith and yet all of them want it 399 Freedom by Christ 302 Fruits of faith four 397 Fruits of Christs death reduced to two heads 335 Force of consent in doctrin wherein it standeth 390 G. GAlilee of the Gentiles why so called 304 Glory of the last Judgement described 378 Glory of God in his children turned into shame 416 God no accepter of persons why 284 Gods providence over-ruleth every special event with the special circumstances 306 God was with Christ how and how with his servants 322 Gods wisdome and power most seen in chusing the most weak things 364 God only properly forgiveth sins why 402 God forgiveth sins not only properly but perfectly that is both the guilt and punishment 4●7 Godly must enquire of the truth of Doctrin delivered by the Scriptures 363 Godly enter not into the judgement how 377 Godly must lift up their heads in expectation of the day of their redemption 383 Godly who have all hard sentences passe against them shall have justice at the last day 379 Godly must addresse themselves to the Judgement Day two ways 384 Godly life must not bee shunned for the crosses that attend it 411 Graces in the soul of Christ after his resurrection were incomprehensible by all Creatures but in respect of God finite as the soul it self is 343 Guilt of sin is wholly abolished in beleevers although not the whole corruption of it 344 H. HAppinesse how it standeth in remission of sins 415 Hearers how to know they have heard aright 374 Heavenly life discerned by the notes of it 349 Helps to attain the grace of remission of sins 411 Hope is Faiths hand-ma●d 396 How the Lord of life could be subdued of death 328 How God can be just in punishing Christ an innocent and letting the guilty go free ibid. ●ow an infinite Justice could bee satisfied by so short a death ibid. How the jews are said to put Christ to death seeing they had no power to doe it 329 How Christs crucifying crucifieth the lusts of Christians 335 How Christ can bee said to rise ag●●n seeing neither his Deity nor the soul of his Humanity did 337 How Christ is said to rise seeing God the Father and the Holy Ghost are said also to raise him 339 How Christ hath slain our sin which yet is so stirring in the best 344 How beleevers may know they are risen with Christ 349 How the Apostles were furnished to their witnesse 361 How Christ could eat and drink after he rose again seeing he rose not to natural life 365 How preaching could bee Christs ordinance being so long before his incarnation 367 How Christ is ordained Judge seeing the Father and the Holy Ghost judge as well as he 375 How Christ shall deliver up the Kingdom to his Father 375 Humiliation of Christ must humble Christians and h●w 334 I IEsus of Nazaret why so called 306 In Gods udgement wee must stand naked 288 In all spiritual captivity hasten to Christ 324 In cases of sor●ery what to do ibid. In all divine things wee must lean on a sure ground 302 In reading the Prophets wee must still be led to Christ. 390 Ingratitude of the Jews most extream 330 Joshua in many things a singular type of Christ. 333 Judging of our selves standeth in four things 385 L LAw of perfect righteousnesse is the charter of heaven 351 Life of Faith wherein 393 Lets which hinder men from seeking the remission of their sins 409 Love of God expressed in three things 397 Love of men wherein chiefly descerned ibid Love and thankfulnesse to God attendeth the remission of sins 413 Lowest degrees of murther condemned as murther 329 M MAgistrates must not accept of persons 286 Mallice of the wicked against the godly never wanteth matter to w●rk upon 331 Many men bodily possessed by the Devil in Christs time above all other times before or since why 308 Manner of Christs resurrection in three things 34● Map of humane frai ty in Peter 283 Means by which quick and dead shall bee presented before the last judgement 377 Means to increase the stock of Faith 398 Men
not gotten with greatness but with goodness the former cannot force or compel affections the latter sweetly draws and allures them the former may procure flattery and applause the latter only yeeldeth true honour and sound comfort Might I adde but one grain to your godly care by this little direction with which I offer my most inward affections I have my expectation I know well your Honours sufficiency even in this kinde above many of my profession to furnish your self with Divine directions if your leisure or weighty affairs would permit you to set them down yet I assure my self your Honour will not refuse the help of such as are at more leisure to gather them and humbly offer them unto your hand I was also more presumptuous to offer these lines unto your view because I conceived that the rules of Christian prudence and circumspection could not bee more fitly directed nor bee better welcome than to so prudent and circumspect a personage In which assurance I rest commending your Honours further happiness and prosperity to him who is an exceeding great reward abundantly able to fill your heart with grace to crown your daies with blessing and finish them with comfort life and immortality 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Your Honours to be commanded THO. TAYLOR Circumspect Walking EPHES. 5.15 Take heed therefore that ye walk Circumspectly not as fools but as wise CHAP. I. The ground of the ensuing Treatise THe Apostle in the former words had under a comparison of Light and Darkness excited the Ephesians to holy conversation and to hate such obscene and filthy courses as were found with the Workers of darkness Now he speaks in plain terms that which before be infolded in comparisons Seeing ye are light and in the light wherein all things are manifest see ye walk circumspectly c. In which words are First A duty propounded Circumspect walking which in the first word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is straightly charged upon every Christian Secondly The expounding of that duty not as fools but as wise And the words run as if the holy Apostle had in other terms said thus You that are beleevers sons of the light ought as by your light to check and controle yea and discover other mens sins and corruptions so also to be as unblameable yea and lightsome in your selves as possibly may be and therefore take heed of your own walking and see it be circumspect Briefly thus Every Christian man must walk warily and circumspectly or Strict and accurate walking not warranted onely but necessarily inforced in the scriptures the course of Christianity must be a circumspect walking For so the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies an accurate and a strickt walking or an exquisite course So it is used Luke 1.3 It seemed good to me when I had accurately searched all things And Mat. 2.8 Herod charged the wise men thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 search exquisitively and most diligently for the Babe And Act. 22. v. 3. Paul professeth he was brought up 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to the exact manner of the Law CHAP. II. What Circumspect Walking is and wherein it consisteth OUt of which so substantial a ground it shall be worth our labour to inquire what this Circumspect Walking is for we may not conceive it as any carnal craft and policy by which a man is wary to save his goods outward estate as many crafty heads and worldlings cast about and continually contrive with all wariness to save themselves and their profits and he must rise early that can get the better of them in any bargain Neither is this Circumspection any such policy and wariness in matters of Religion as relinguisheth any good duty to which it hath calling or any practice of holiness for outward profits and commodity or to preserve outward peace and pleasures as many crafty and deceitful Protestants that are so circumspect as they will profess a Religion which shall cost them nothing Neither is this Circumspection in any thing contrary or cross to that dove-like simplicity and Christian innocency What it is which is the ornament of holy profession But is a carefull and exact proceeding in the ways of God according to the rules of God even as a work-man most exactly fitteth his work by the level and rule and departs not from it And in what Now to this Circumspection are four things required To circumspect walking four things required 1. A knowledge of the right way which is as the light guiding him to set every foot safely For let a man be never so circumspect and wary if he be in the night without a light and without a guide he can never walk securely and safe The Word is the Lanthorn and the Commandement is the light And when wisdom enters into the heart and knowledge delighteth the soul then shall counsel preserve thee and understanding shall keep thee and deliver thee from the evil way Prov. 2.11 12. 2. A diligent watch and care to keep from all extremities to turn neither to the right hand nor to the left For it is hard to keep a mean we being very propense to extreams Satan cares not so he can conquer us whether it be by curiosity or by carelesness whether he can keep us out of the Church or cast us out by our own conceits whether he can keep us so cold as no good thing greatly affects us or whether he can make us boil over with unbridled zeal that because we cannot have all the good we would we will refuse a great deal of good we might have A Circumspect Christian will distinguish good from evil and not refuse good for evil for that is an extremity 3 An holy jealousie and suspicion lest the heart be deceived through the deceitfulness of sin The most simple-hearted Christian is a most wary man that is of his own hearts slipperiness suspecting himself in all thing● fearing in all things lest hee should offend God He knoweth sin lies in ambush and suspects the insinuations of it As he that is very circumspect for the World is most suspicious of others lest they over-reach and beguile him So one that is most circumspect for heaven doth more suspect himself than any other 4 A Provident Walking by which a man is able to foresee future danger and evils to prevent them and provide for such things as may best bestead him in the way Thus Solomon speaks of the circumspect and prudent Christian that he forsees the Plague and hides himself and learns of the Emmet to provide in Summer for Winter This property of Circumspection we see in the wise Virgins that prepared Oyl in time All these are inseparable properties of a provident and circumspect walking Which is injoyned us in sundry other places of scripture as Prov. 4.26 Ponder the path of thy feet and let all thy ways be ordered aright Matth. 10.16 Be wise as Serpents This Serpentine wisdom is nothing else but