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A17389 An exposition vpon the Epistle to the Colossians Wherein, not onely the text is methodically analysed, and the sence of the words, by the help of vvriters, both ancient and moderne is explayned: but also, by doctrine and vse, the intent of the holy Ghost is in euery place more fully vnfolded and vrged. ... Being, the substance of neare seauen yeeres vveeke-dayes sermons, of N. Byfield, late one of the preachers for the citie of Chester. Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. 1615 (1615) STC 4216; ESTC S120678 703,664 509

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wrought which was the Gospell preached Of the Gospell Doct. The Gospell is the ordinary meanes to breed hope in a mans heart and therefore it is called the Gospell of the Kingdome and the Gospell of Saluation And the Gospell breedes hope as it shewes vs the Doctrine of our reconciliation with God and as it containes the promises of the Couenant of Grace and as it shewes our deliuerance from the rigour and curse of the Law and lastly as it shewes Christ crucified with all his merits Of which yee haue heard Doct. The Gospell is then most effectuall when it is preached and more particularly what efficacie is in preaching may appeare by these Scriptures following Psal. 51.8 Esa. 55.4 Luke 4.18 Rom. 10.14 1 Cor. 1.21 c. Acts 10.36.42 15.21 2 Cor. 1.19.20 Gal. 3.1 1 Tim. 3.16 Tit. 1.3 Againe in that the Apostle alleadgeth the efficacie of the Doctrine they heard to proue that they ought not to be moued away from it wee may note that that Doctrine which conuerts soules to God is true and men ought to continue in it The Apostle 2 Cor. 3.2 proues his Doctrine to be true by this seale of it and this must comfort faithfull Teachers against all the scornes of men if they gather soules to GOD and breed hope in Gods people And the people must hence confirme themselues in their resolution to sticke to their Teachers when God hath giuen this Testimony to their ministeries Thus of the Exhortation The Reasons follow 1 From consent of the Elect Vers. 23. 2 From the testimony of Paul Vers. 23.24 3 From the testimony of God Vers. 25. 4 From the excellency of the Doctrine of the Gospell Vers. 26. 5 From the excellency of the subiect of the Gospell Vers. 27. 6 From the end or profitable effect of the Gospell Vers. 28. 7 From the endeauour of Paul Vers. 29. Which was preached vnto euery Creature vnder Heauen These words containe the first reason and it stands thus In as much as the doctrine taught you is the same Doctrine that hath beene taught to and receiued by all the Elect therefore yee ought to continue in it and neuer be moued from the Grace wrought by it Quest. But was the Gospell preached to euery Creature vnder heauen Ans. Some vnderstand the meaning to be this that the Apostle intends to note by the preaching of the Gospell to euery Creature onely thus much That it was now no more confined in Iudea but was published to Gentiles as well as Iewes and so it was preached to euery Creature in as much as all mankinde had as much interest as the Iewish Nation Others thinke the speech imports no more but that the fame of the Gospell was spread by the Merchants and other that lay at Rome Ierusalem and other great Cities vnto all knowne Countries of the world Others thinke it is no more then if hee had said it was published farre and wide as in Iohn they say the whole world goeth after him but they meane a great multitude an vsuall Hyperbolicall speech Lastly others thinke that when he saith it was preached he meaneth it should be preached to euery creature the time past being put for the time to come to import that it shall as certainely be done as if it had beene done already But I take it is meant of the preaching of the Gospell by the Apostles and Euangelists in the conuersion of so many Nations to the Faith of Christ. There may be seauen Obseruations gathered out of this speech of the Apostle First that Doctrine onely is true which is agreeable to the Doctrine of the Apostles by which the world was conuerted to God Secondly we may see that no power is like the power of the Word of GOD here it conuerts a world in a short time And our eyes haue beheld that it hath almost in as short time restored a world of men from the power of Antichrist Thirdly we may by this phrase be informed that the words all and euery one are not alwaies in Scripture to be vnderstood vniuersally of all the singular persons in the world as the vniuersalists conceiue Fourthly they were but a few Fisher-men that did this great worke and they were much opposed and persecuted and in some lesse matters they iarred sometime among themselues Whence wee may obserue that Doctrine may be exceeding effectuall though 1. but few teach it 2. though they be but of meane estate and condition 3. though it be opposed by crosse and contrary teaching 4. though it be persecuted 5. though the people be indisposed and m●zled in sinne and superstition as these Gentiles were 6. though the Preacher be often restrayned 7. though there be some dissention in lesse matters The fift thing that may be gathered hence is that in the conuersion of sinners God is no respecter of persons men of any age nation sexe condition life or qualitie may be conuerted by the Gospell And sixtly it is plaine here that preaching is the ordinary meanes to conuert euery creature so as ordinarily there is none conuerted but by preaching Lastly if any one aske what shall become of those nations or particular persons that neuer yet heard of the Gospell I answere the way of God in diuers things is not reuealed and his Iudgements are like a great deepe It belongs to vs to looke to our selues to whom the Gospell is come Thus of the first Reason The second Reason is taken from the testimony of Paul and hee giues a double testimonie 1. By his Ministery 2. By his Sufferings Whereof I Paul am a minister Out of these words many things may be noted First in that the Apostle notwithstanding all the disgraces and troubles that befell him for the Gospell doth yet lift vp the mention of his Ministerie therein as an inducement to the Ephesians It may teach vs that the glory of Gods truth is such as no man neede to be ashamed to teach or professe it nay there can be no man or woman to whom it may not be their chiefest glory whatsoeuer carnall Worldlings or timerous Nicodemites conceiue of it Secondly in that so great an Apostle doth not disdayne to yeeld his testimonie of purpose to shew that Epaphras their Preacher had taught nothing but what hee had likewise taught it sheweth that it is the property of faithfull and humble Ministers to strengthen the harts and hands of their Brethren though they be their inferiours and then it will follow that they are proud and enuious and malicious persons that by crosse teaching labour to increase their bonds whom God hath honoured with successe in their labours in the Gospell such are they that in many places striue to pull downe as fast as others build making hauocke in the Church and bending their whole might in their ministery to hinder the sinceritie of the Gospell and the conuersion of sinners Thirdly in that the Apostle vrgeth his owne testimonie I Paul it sheweth
we respect the manner of preaching 3. if we respect the suffering that followes preaching 4. if we respect the efficacie of preaching For the first Paul may be said to fulfill the word in that he doth preach as he was by his commission appointed he was charged by God to preach and in obedience to Gods word or will hee did preach it It is not enough for Ministers to receiue commission to preach but they must fulfill it and therefore woe to those Loyterers and Non-residents that care more to fill their barnes then to fulfill their ministration For the second Ministers are said to fulfill the word when they execute their Commission in a due manner and this they doe first when they preach with all diligence secondly when they hold out to the end not taking paines for a Sermon or two or a yeere or two till they can get preferment but with all constancie perseuering in the labour and worke of their Ministry till their course be ended and the fight finished thirdly when they reueale all the counsell of God that is needfull for their hearers thus Paul fulfilled the word Acts 20.18 Thirdly Ministers fulfill the Word by afflictions for thereby they confirme the hearts of their hearers as also thereby is fulfilled vpon them that which is in Scripture so oft fore-told should befall the faithfull dispensers of the word Quest. Can all Ministers shew their bonds for the Gospell Ans. Nay some can shew the liuings they haue lewdly gotten their ease their dignities their resisting of the word faithfully taught by others the disgraces they haue cast vpon their Brethren but alas their paynes or sufferings may easily be reckoned But woe vnto them for for all the euill they haue done they haue brought euill vpon their owne soules the Lord Iesus shall consume them with the breath of his comming Lastly in respect of the efficacie of the word it is fulfilled by them for many great things threatned or promised in the word were to be accomplished by them some extraordinary some ordinary The extraordinary were bound to certaine times such as were heretofore the calling of the Gentiles and the induration or obstinacie of the Iewes and such as are now in doing or to be done as the reclayming of the world by the euerlasting Gospell the downefall of Antichrist and the gathering of the Iewes These things haue beene promised in the word and haue are and shall be wonderfully fulfilled by the ministry of preachers The Ordinary are fulfilled in the Church at all times and thus the Word is fulfilled in the elect and in the reprobate In the elect Ministers fulfill the Word 1. In conuerting those by the word which were fore-ordained of God 2. In conueying Christ to their soules so as the word is not a bare history of the merit and grace of Christ but is fulfilled in the application of Christ Rom. 8.4 3. By diuiding the word amongst them as the food of their soules to preserue them 4. The application of the Promises which are effectually in the Minister fulfilled in the hearts of the hearers Lastly in causing the Elect to fulfill the word both in obeying the Word and in perseuering in the doctrine to the end In the Reprobate they fulfill the word 1. In hardening them 2 Cor. 2.15 2. By making them inexcusable by illumination 3. In occasioning many sinnes through their owne wilfull corruption Rom. 7.8 4. In slaying them or by sentence cutting them off Esay 11.3 Mat. 16.16 2 Cor. 10.6 The Vse of all this is 1. To shew the necessitie of continuall preaching seeing by it the word must be fulfilled many are still to be conuerted and all to be com●orted directed strengthened reproued c. 2. To iustifie the continuall trauaile of faithfull Ministers that will neuer giue ouer to exhort reproue conuince c. They are enioyned to see the word of God fulfilled and therefore no wonder though they will not let men rest in their sinne and securitie 3. To teach vs in all temptations or afflictions to run to the word preached for thereby God will certainly performe all needfull consolation or direction or humiliation 4. To informe Ministers that they must adde indefatigable paines since so much is to be fulfilled by them 5. To admonish stubborne sinners to take heed of prouoking God for if the word may not be fulfilled in their saluation it shall be fulfilled in their induration Verse 26. Which is the Mystery hid since the world began and from all ages but now is made manifest to his Saints THese words are the fourth generall Reason taken from the excellency of the Gospell which is here described in foure things 1. By the nature of it a Mistery 2. By the antiquitie of it since the world began or from ages and generations 3. By the time of the full reuelation of it viz. Now in the new world by Christ 4. By the persons to whom it is reuealed viz. the Saints The Mistery The Gospell is a great Mysterie a hidden Mysterie hidden in God because it was a secret in the purpose and grace of the Father before the world beganne Hidden in Christ because he was that store-house in which the Father laid vp all his treasures that concerne mans life and immortalitie and because he was the meritorious cause of all our happines Hidden in the Word because the Scriptures of the Prophets and Apostles are the sacred fountaines of knowledge and originals from the bowels of which flow the comforts of the Gospell to the Church Hidden also in the darke shadows of the Ceremoniall Law Hidden from Adam himselfe in Paradise so long as hee acknowledged his happines by the Couenant of works Hidden from the Gentiles many hundred yeares while they serued dumbe Idols and had not the Sunne of righteousnesse shining among them Hidden from the Iewes in part and comparatiuely because in a manner all the Iewes were ignorant of the manner of Christs Kingdome and of the calling of the Gentiles and such like comparatiuely in respect of vs they had the light of a Candle but wee haue the light of the Sunne and therefore Iohn is said to be least in the Kingdome of God Hidden from the naturall man still who cannot perceiue the spirituall things of God no though otherwise hee abound with wit and learning Hidden also from the very faithfull comparatiuely in respect of what they shall know in the kingdome of glory and in respect of the differences of degrees among themselues now Quest. But why is the doctrine of mans happinesse so obscure to many euen in the Church in these dayes Ans. Man is by nature couered with the vaile of originall blindnesse and besides hee is bewitched with the deceitfulnesse of his actuall sinnes the God of this world with his wiles and subtilties his deepenesse and his methodes blindeth many thousands to their destruction that he
is the principall meanes not onely to make vs religious and holie in our behauiour towards God but also to make vs righteous iust and amiable in our carriage towards men It is the Word that makes vs 1. New creatures 2. Humble 3. Meeke Psalm 45.4 where it is called the word of meekenesse not because it requires it and containeth discourse of the praises of it but by effect because it makes men so 4. Patient and long suffering Reuel 3.10 The word of my patience It begets patience yea such patience as Christ will owne yea such as by influence comes from Christ by meanes of the word 5. Clement able to for beare and forgiue 6. Louing able to expresse in carriage the affections and duties of loue 7. Peaceable Esai 2. 2.4 The word shall iudge all strife so as men shall not onely lay aside the effects and meanes of contention and hostility but become by the power of the worde willing to serue one another in loue yea to abide the labour of loue noted by mattockes and sithes No worke so base or laborious but godly men perswaded by the word will vndertake them for the good and peace of the Church and their brethren I might instance in the rest of the vertues but these shall suffice This should informe vs concerning the causes of the viciousnesse of the liues of the most it is because they so stubornly rebel against the Word either refusing to heare it or hardning their heart against the working of it And secondly if wee finde our corruptions in our selues to get head and make vs not onely a burthen to our selues but an offence to our brethren wee should come to the word and to Christs Ministers for there wee may finde helpe if we will be aduised and if our seruant and children in their carriage be disordered we should bring them to Gods house that there they may bee framed to a greater care of their behauiour in our house Thus of the Coherence This verse in it selfe containes an exhortation concerning the word of God and thus he exhorts to the right vse First of the word in generall Secondly of one part of the word which is the Psalmes Concerning the word in generall heere is to be considered First the Author of it Word of Christ. Secondly the manner of entertainement of the word Let it dwell in you plenteously in all wisdome Thirdly the end or vse of it should bee put too First to teach in what we know not Secondly to admonish in what we doe not Word of Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Word is taken sometimes for Christ himselfe Iohn 1.1 And so it is true that we should labour that the word Christ should dwell in vs. Sometimes for Preaching Act. 20.7 and so it is true that wee should grow so carefull and skilfull in remembring the Sermons wee heare that our hearts should be stored with riches of that kinde Sometimes for memorable sayings Act. 2.22 20.35 1 Tim. 4.9 2 Tim. 2.11 1 Titus 3.6 Heb. 7.28 Rom. 13.9 And so it is true that a Christian should be so familiarlie acquainted with Scriptures that all the memorable sayings in them should be ready in their memories But to come neerer by the word of Christ some vnderstand the counsels and exhortations of Christ concerning the contemning of the world to the intent to deuote our selues to the contemplation of heauenly things Some vnderstand the promises in Scripture concerning Christ or to be had in him Some vnderstand that part of the Scripture which Chist by his owne mouth vttered It is true that in euery of these a Christian should bee exceeding rich But I take it that all these senses are too straite and narrow for this place By the word of Chirst therfore I vnderstand the whole word of God contained in both the old and new Testament And this is said to be the word of Christ foure waies First as Christ is the subiect of it the summe of the word is Christ. Secondly as it is the proper inheritance and riches of the body of Christ the dowrie he hath bestowed vpon his Church Thirdly as he is the conseruing cause of it Fourthly as he is the Author of it and so I take it heere principally to be meant Christ is the Author of the word First in respect of inspiration Secondly in respect of Commission to his Ambassadors he doth not onely indite the Ambassage but giues Commission to the Ambassadors Thirdly in respect of confirmation externally by the signes that follow it and internallie by the seale of the spirit Fourthly in respect of personall promulgation of it in that in the old Testament in humane shape hee appeared to declare it to Adam Abraham Iacob and the Patriarkes and also by visions to the Prophets and in the new Testament by incarnation taking truely our nature did by liuely voice in his owne person preach the Gospell to men Fifthly in respect of energie or the power and efficacie of the word which wholly depends vpon Christ and is shewed by the growing of the word notwithstanding all oppositions and that it cannot be bound though the Ministers of it suffer and in the difference of power betweene Christs Ministers and hirelings yea hence it is so liuely and mighty in operation that it discernes and discouers the verie secrets of men and telles tales of the hearers The vse is either more generall or more speciall more generall either for information to satisfie vs concerning the hard sayings in Scripture and the experience of the truth of that Iohn 8.43 viz. that wicked men cannot heare the words of Christ. It comes from the soueraigne maiestie and secret excellencie of the word and the spirituall nature of it as the word of Christ remoued from the sense of the carnall reason and fleshly affections of vnregenerate men And also this serues for instruction and that either negatiuely or affirmatiuely Negatiuely the vse is therefore take heede of sinning against the word of Christ and as men sinne against the Word many waies so principally sixe waies First by contemning of it Secondly by betraying it to Satan letting him steale it out of our hearts Thirdly by choaking it with cares and lusts Fourthly by making it of none effect by Traditions Fiftly by a proud challenging of the knowledge of it to our selues Sixtly by being ashamed of our obedience or profession of the words of Christ when we are amongst sinfull and wicked men Affirmatiuely it may teach vs foure things 1 To receiue the word of God with all humility and meekenesse 2 To receiue it with faith 3 To glorifie the word of God which we doe First when we ascribe the praise not to men but to Christ. Secondly when we esteeme it more then the wordes of the greatest men 4 To be carefull of our carriage and practise that
with our kinde of life seeing we are thus set and placed by Gods will Thus farre of the Apostle The Euangelist is described first by his name TIMOTHY secondly by his adiunct estate a Brother Three things briefely may be obserued here first that consent in doctrine is a great meanes and effectuall to perswade both to incorruption in Faith and integritie in liuing This made Paul to ioyne Tymothy with him and the consideration of this as it should teach all faithfull Ministers to make themselues glorious by a brotherly harmonie in matters of opinion so it doth giue occasion to bewaile that great sinne of wilfull opposition and crosse-teaching which doth in many places too much abound a course that is taken vp by some of purpose to hinder the growth of knowledge and sincerity some of these instruments of the Diuell hauing for the most part no life or hart eyther in studie or preaching but when enuy and malice and a desire to be contrary doth instigate and pricke them forward These are like them of whom the Apostle complayned that were contrary to all men and forbid vs to preach to the Chruches that they might be saued and fulfill the measure of their sins alwayes God they please not and the wrath of God is come on them to the vttermost Secondly here wee may learne that spirituall aliance is the best aliance for it is a greater honour to Timothy to be a brother then to be an Euangelist for hee might haue beene an Euangelist and yet haue gone to Hell when hee had done as Iudas an Apostle did And this cannot but be exceeding comfortable seeing there is not the meanest childe of God but he may attaine to that which was Timothies greatest title Thirdly the Apostle doth intimate by the taking in of Timothies assent that the most glorious doctrine of God doth need the witnesse of men such a vanitie and secret sinfulnesse doth lodge in mens hearts Which should teach Ministers with all good conscience and heedfulnesse to weigh well and consider throughly of their doctrine before they deliuer it because there is a weaknesse too commonly found in the very deare children of God namely to receiue doctrine vpon the trust and credit of the Messenger without searching the scriptures as they ought to doe Thus farre of the persons saluting the persons saluted are described both by the place of their habitation at Colosse and by their spirituall estate in which hee describes them by foure things they are Saints they are faithfull they are Brethren and they are in Christ. Before I come to the particular handling of each of these I consider foure things in the generall First here wee see the power of the Gospell But a little before if Colosse had beene searched with lights as Ierusalem was there would not haue beene found one Saint nor one faithfull man or woman in the whole Citie and now behold by the preaching of the Word here are many Saints and faithfull Brethren to be found in her Secondly wee see here who be the true members of the Church The Apostle acknowledgeth none but such as are Saints faithfull and in Christ. Thirdly wee see here that a Church may remaine a true Church notwithstanding grosse corruptions remaine in it vnreformed as here these titles are giuen to a Church much poysoned with humane traditions and vile corruptions in worship Lastly it is to be obserued that the Apostle ioynes all these together to note that one cannot be without the other one cannot be a Saint vnlesse hee be faithfull and in Christ and so of the rest The last clause cuts off the Iewes apparantly from being Saints or true beleeuers seeing they receiue not Christ and the first clause cuts off the carnall Protestant so as hee cannot be a beleeuer or in Christ seeing hee cares no more for sanctitie and the two middle-most cut off the Papists and all Heretikes and Schismatickes seeing they haue with insolent pride made a rent and Apostasie from the true Apostolicall Churches by aduancing themselues with their Man of sinne aboue their brethren nay aboue all that is called God Thus farre in generall the first thing particularly giuen them is that they are Saints Saints This Word is diuersely accepted in Scripture Sometimes it is giuen to the Angels and so they are called Saints Deut. 33.2 Iob 15.15 Secondly men are said to be holy by a certaine Legall or Ceremoniall sanctitie Leuit. 11.44 And in this sence the superstitious are holy This is the holinesse and sanctitie of Papists and Popish persons which place all their holinesse in the obseruation of Rites and Traditions and superstitious Customes Thirdly all that stand members of the Church by the rule of Charitie or in respect of outward visibilitie and profession are called Saints and so all that couenant with God by offering Sacrifice are called Saints Lastly and properly it is a tearme giuen to men effectually called the children of God truely conuerted are called Saints not because they are perfectly holy without all sinne but in foure respects First in respect of Seperation because they are elected and gathered out of the world and ioyned vnto Gods people and dedicated to holy seruices and vses and thus the word is often taken Secondly in respect of vocation and therefore the Apostle 1 Cor. 1.2 When he had said they were sanctified he said by way of explication they were Saints by calling Thirdly in respect of regeneration because they are now new creatures And lastly in respect of iustification or imputation because the holinesse and sanctitie of Christ is imputed to them The sence being thus giuen the doctrine is plaine that men may be Saints in this life there are Saints in Earth as well as in Heauen This is apparant also in other Scriptures as Psalme 16.3 To the Saints that are in earth And Psal. 37.28 Hee forsaketh not his Saints And Psal. 132.9.16 Let thy Saints reioyce So in the Epistle to the Ephesians ch 2.20 Citizens with the Saints c. chap. 3.8 Paul calleth himselfe the least of all Saints c. chap. 4.12 For the gathering together of the Saints with many other places The vse of this serues first to confute the grosse folly of the Papists that acknowledge no Saints till three things come to them first they must be Canonized by the Pope secondly they must be dead first thirdly it must be an hundred yeeres after their death This last prouiso was well added lest their treasons and most vile practises should be remembred Secondly this serues for the seuere reproofe of numbers in our owne Church that liue as if there were no sanctitie to be looked after till they come to heauen Thirdly the Scripture is not without singular comfort to the poore despised Saints I will take them in order as they lye Deut.
lessons and directions and encouragements to holy life and neuer did he conceiue a greater hatred against his sinne then when his reynes taught him secondly hee shewes that hee had them in the night that is when hee was alone and with-drawne from companie and the things of the world and worldly occasions Fourthly his last signe is that hee did set the Lord alwayes before him hee could be content to walke euer in Gods presence and to haue him the witnesse of his actions hee was not carefull onely to approue himselfe to men as wicked men may doe but his chiefe care was to walke in all good conscience before God Lastly in the four●● of Esay the Prophet fore-tels of men that vnder the Gospell should be called holy or Saints and these hee describes by their happinesse they shall be written among the liuing in Ierusalem and by their holines which will discouer it selfe by these signes first they are not acquainted with the damnable and hatefull extenuations and qualifications of sinnes they are not heard to say it is a little sinne a small fault no their sinnes in their eyes are filthinesse and bloud Secondly they are men that haue felt the power of God in the practise of mortification they are new creatures they are washed and purged Thirdly the Spirit of God in them hath beene a Spirit of Iudgement and a Spirit of burning a Spirit of Iudgement not onely in respect of knowledge and illumination but also because it hath kept an Assize in the soule of the sinner hee hath beene arraigned indicted and hath pleaded guiltie and beene condemned a Spirit of burning both in respect of the inward purifying of the heart from the drosse that cleaues vnto it as also in respect of zeale and order for the glory of God And thus farre of the first thing giuen vnto the people of God they are Saints Now followeth the second Faithfull This word is diuersly attributed in Scripture It is giuen to God and God is said to be faithfull in the accomplishment of his promises It is giuen to Christ and he is called faithfull and true It is giuen to the Sunne in the Firmament because it keepeth his certaine course It is giuen to the Word of God so as whatsoeuer it promiseth or threatneth men may certainely binde vpon it for heauen and earth may fayle but one iot of it shall not fayle Lastly it is giuen to Men especially and most ordinarily to such men as are true beleeuers and walke in all good conscience both before God and Men and as it is thus taken the words of the holy Ghost Prou. 20.6 may be taken vp Many men will boast euery one of his owne goodnes but who can finde a faithfull man These are they that Dauid so earnestly searcheth for and hauing found them doth so stedfastly set his eyes vpon them and entertayneth them into his Court Psal. 101.6 The names of these we doe for the most part take vpon our selues but the signes of these are but sparingly found amongst vs. That wee may examine our selues I will consider what is required of vs that wee may shew our selues faithfull The Christian mans faithfulnesse ought to shew it selfe first in spirituall things secondly in temporall things vnto faithfulnesse in spirituall things fiue things are requisite First faith in Christ to get sound reasons from the Word and Spirit of God and a sure euidence for the particular perswasion of the heart that God in Christ is graciously reconciled with the sinner He cannot be a faithfull man that hath not a iustifying Faith all that time of a mans life onely receiueth hee this honour to be accounted faithfull when aboue all things hee trauels after the sense of Gods fauour in the forgiuenes of his sinnes Secondly faithfulnesse stands in the performance of all those Promises Purposes and Vowes which men in their distresse inward or outward doe make vnto God And therefore the Israelites are charged not to be faithfull because when the wrath of God turned vpon them and the strongest of them were slaine and their chosen men were smitten and that their dayes did consume in vanitie and their yeeres hastily then they cry vnto him and seeke him in their distresse they returne and seeke him earely they acknowledge that God is their strength and the most high their Redeemer but when the Lord had beene mercifull vnto them forgiuen their iniquities so as hee destroyed them not and called backe his anger then they retu●●ed and prouoked the Lord againe they flattered him with their tongue they tempted God and sinned still and therefore they are censured thus Their heart was not vpright neyther were they faithfull in Gods Couenant Thirdly it shewes it selfe in constant sinceritie in Gods worship when men will worship God according to the rules of his reuealed will without mixture of mens inuentions or the customary sinnes of prophanenesse and hypocrisie And thus Iudah is said to be faithfull with Gods Saints because as yet the worship of God was preserued amongst them in the auncient puritie in which the old Patriarkes and Saints did sincerely worship the God of their Fathers hee is a faithfull man that will worship God no otherwise then the Saints haue done that is precisely according to his will reuealed in his Word Fourthly faithfulnesse is exercised in the conscionable imployment of the Gifts Graces and Talents receiued in our generall calling to Gods glory the increase of our gifts and the inriching of our soules with true spirituall gaine And thus hee is said to be a good Seruant and faithfull that hauing receiued fiue Talents hath gained with them fiue moe or two Talents and doth gaine two moe and this we doe when hauing receiued Knowledge Faith Loue Hope Patience Spirit of Prayer c. wee doe by a constant and daily practise bring them out into exercise for our selues and for others Thus doing two commodities wee shall reape first it is a signe of our faithfulnesse secondly the gifts will increase and to him that hath such gifts to vse them shall be more giuen Lastly faithfulnesse shewes it selfe in mens sinceritie diligence constancie and care to promote and further the causes of God and the Church with the conscionable discharge of all such duties as belong vnto such seruice Thus Timothy is praysed to be faithfull in the Lord 1 Cor. 4 17. And thus the Apostle and Apostolicall men were faithfull when they could doe nothing against the truth but for the truth and thus men are faithfull that can patiently beare and willingly take vp the Crosse of Christ and that daily so as they may further the building vp and edification of Gods people Those then are not faithfull that doe the worke of the Lord negligently that set their hands to the plough and looke backe that minde their owne things honours pleasures profits and
a daily set course of prayer be not included Thirdly the Saints prayed euery day an auncient practise some thousand of yeeres agoe Dauid prayed seauen times a day and Daniell three times a day Let wicked and prophane people say what needes all this prayer but let vs be assured that as holinesse and grace growes in any so are they more abundant in this worship of prayer the holiest men haue euer prayed most for though they haue not most neede yet they haue alwayes most sence of their owne needes and others to Fourthly if our foode must be euery day sanctified by the exercise of the Word and Prayer then much more haue wee neede to sanctifie our selues our housholds our callings and our labours by daily Prayer Lastly Prayer is called Incense and Sacrifice Now the Iewes held it an abhomination of desolation if the morning and euening Sacrifice were wanting neyther doe wee lesse need to seeke daily the benefits of the attonement made by the sacrifice of Christ and his intercession then did the Iewes and wee are euery way as much bound as often to professe our faith in CHRIST slaine as they did in Christ to be slaine And thus of the demonstratiue and vndeniable signes of the Apostles loue to the Colossians as they are generally set downe in this Verse Verse 4. Since we heard of your faith in Christ Iesus and your loue towards all Saints Verse 5. For the hopes sake which is laid vp for you in Heauen IN these words and the rest that follow to the 12. Verse hee doth particularly explicate the two signes of affection first he sets downe his Thankesgiuing to Verse 9. secondly he prayes Verse 9. to 12. In the Thankesgiuing hee giues thankes for their Graces in these words secondly for the meanes of grace in the rest of the words to the 9. Verse Their Graces are three Faith Loue and Hope Of Faith In the handling of the Doctrine of Faith I consider it First in the coherence as it stands in the Text Secondly as it is in it selfe apart from that which went before or comes after From the generall consideration of the Coherence I obserue First that we can neuer be reconciled to God or attaine the chiefe good without Faith Without Faith it is vnpossible to please God Therefore it is good for vs to proue our selues whether we be in the Faith and to know whether Christ be in vs except wee be reprobates Secondly this Faith is not naturall wee are not borne beleeuers we are all concluded vnder sinne and kept vnder the Law and shut vp to Faith afterwards to be reuealed It is the worke of God yea of the power of God It is the gift of God All men haue not Faith It must be gotten with much striuing As not by nature so not by naturall meanes and therefore wee must seeke for better grounds then I haue beene alwayes thus neyther will it auaile thee to shew thy education ciuilitie morall vertues outward holinesse c. Thirdly whatsoeuer we gaine by the word of God if we gaine not Faith and Loue all is vaine Knowledge is vaine Zeale is vaine c. therefore it behooueth vs to gather in our thoughts and to minde that one thing that is necessarie Lastly though Nature deny strength to beare or power to giue this grace yet there is power in the word of God preached to beget euen Faith as well as other Graces Faith commeth by hearing c. Rom. 10.17 and Gal. 3.2.5 he saith They receiued the Spirit by the hearing of Faith preached c. Heare and your soule shall liue Esay 55.4 Thus much of the Doctrines from the Coherence That the nature of this grace may appeare the seuerall acceptations of the word the sorts obiects parts and degrees of it must be considered Faith is in Scriptures diuersly taken sometimes it is giuen to GOD and signifieth his faithfulnesse in his promises as Rom. 3.3 Shall their vnbeliefe make the faith of God of none effect And when it is giuen to man it is taken First for Fidelitie as it is a vertue in the second Table Mat. 23.23 Secondly sometimes it is taken for the Doctrine of Faith Rom. 12.6 according to the Analogie of Faith Thirdly sometimes for Profession of Religion thus Elimas is charged to haue laboured to turne the Deputie from the Faith Acts 13.8 Fourthly sometimes for Christ himselfe by a Metonimie who is both the obiect and cause of Faith Gal. 3.25 Fiftly for Knowledge onely thus the Diuels are said to beleeue Iames 2. Sixtly for the gift of working Miracles If I had all Faith so as I could remoue mountaines c. 1 Cor. 13.3 Lastly for that grace by which felicitie and the chiefe good is applyed and thus it is called the faith of Gods Elect Tit. 1.2 and by Diuines iustifying Faith Secondly there are diuers sorts of Faith I will not speake of Faith generall or speciall infused or acquired formed and vnformed but leaue them to the troublesome Schoole-men onely I rest in the vsuall distribution which hath ground in Scripture thus Faith is Historicall Temporary of Miracles and iustifying First Historicall Faith is to beleeue the doctrine of the word of GOD to be true and therein is supernaturall and differeth from all humane knowledge whatsoeuer neyther is it in the power of Nature alone to perswade men that the Scriptures are Gods Word further then the remnants of Gods former Image doe giue a glimpse of it and is cleared by the spirit of generall illumination This Historicall Faith doth both vnderstand the Doctrine and giue assent that it is true yet doth not iustifie and therefore their case is so much the more fearefull that haue not so much as their ignorance any way redressed nor gotten so much as any knowledge by the Word of God Secondly Temporarie Faith goeth yet further for such as haue that Faith doe not onely get knowledge and yeeld assent to the truth but also professe the truth with some earnestnesse not sticking at it to giue their names in some more speciall manner then others to a respect of Religion yea they reioyce inwardly in the doctrine of the Word and lastly bring forth some kinde of fruit and amend some faults onely because the Word of GOD would haue them so to doe Therefore is this Faith vnprofitable because they neuer had the particular assurance of Gods fauour in forgiuenesse of sinnes nor will be brought to dislike much lesse to humble their soules for those speciall sinnes wherein they haue transgressed but nourish some one particular presumptuous sinne or sinnes which raigning in them doth wholy engrosse and take vp that inward worship which is due to God onely And this is the Faith of our better sort of people Thirdly Faith of Miracles was that Faith by which many in the Primitiue Church were able to worke Miracles and was of two
these 3. things Faith Loue and Patience requires most an end Experience and a daily acquainting our selues with the things of the Kingdome of Christ. When we are driuen by often crosses to seeke comfort in Gods children and by much obseruation doe find the worth of the comforts that arise from holy Society with them Many are the incredible weakenesses that discouer themselues in the hearts of yonger and weaker Christians but it is a shame for the elder men if they be not sound in loue Tit. 2.2 Seuenthly we must by all holy means strengthen and encourage and set our selues vpon perseuerance in the profession of our hope for if once wee giue ouer profession it will be easie to see loue vanish a wauering profession is vnconstant in Loue. Lastly if we would neuer forsake the fellowship we haue one with another as the manner of some wicked hypocrites and damnable Apostataes is then we must with all Christian care Consider one anothers weakenesses and wants and be continually prouoking inciting and incouraging one another to loue and to good workes Thus of the helps In the last place I propounded to be considered the defects that are found in the loue that is abroad in the world with which the common Protestant pleaseth himselfe I will not here complaine that loue is turned into lust and that that damnable infection hath stained heauen earth and polluted our houses brought a curse vpon our Assemblies debased our gentrie dishonoured our Nobles corrupted our youth and made heauy our elder Age or shew how it hath brought vpon vs famine and pestilence but to let this passe I will speake of the honester loue and wherein thinke you standeth it First in the ciuiller sort in complements neuer more complements and lesse loue Secondly in freedome from suites a Law and quarrelling they are in charity with all the world if they can shew that they neuer were quarrelsome or that they are friends againe Thirdly in the baser sort it is meere Ale-house friendship their loue stands wholy in going to the Ale-house together these are the onely fellowes and good neighbours and commonly here is set vp the Diuels bench and Proclamation made of free pardon for filthy Ribauldry for drunken spewings and Viper-like slanders belched out against good men Fourthly many out of their ignorance know none other loue then of themselues or for themselues of others But yet more plainely the defectiuenesse of the common Protestants loue appeares diuersly First by the vsuall sinnes which are rife amongst them euen such as batter the fortresse of Loue. How can they please themselues in their charitie if we consider how Malice Reuenge Anger Slandering Backe-biting and all sorts of prouocations to anger are euery-where abounding What more vsuall then Selfe-loue what more common then Enuy Shall I instance The Trades-man while hee is rising is so fleshed with successe and stuffed with the greedy desire of profit that hee cares not whom hee wrongs nor how much hee becomes preiudiciall to other mens trade But this man is not so filled with Selfe-loue but the declining Trades-man that hath ouerliued his prime is euery way as well filled with Enuy. And thus men are not in cha●itie neyther full nor fasting Secondly it appeares to be defectiue in the Obiects of Loue in a chiefe Companion of Loue in the Parts of Loue and in the Manner of louing For the first the onely men that are chiefely to be loued and our affection to be spent vpon are the Saints that is such religious persons as make conscience of all their wayes but are these the men the common Protestant loues Oh times oh manners what men finde worse entertainment in the world then these Is not the least endeauour after holinesse chased and pursued with open hates dislikes slanders Can a man refraine himselfe from euill and not be made a prey Doth there any liue godly and they persecute him not Away false wretch saist thou thou art in charitie with all men and yet canst not beare the Image of God in a childe of God For the second all true Loue ought to be accompanied with Faith yea it ought to be founded vpon Faith and therefore herein is the common loue of the world defectiue that a communion with men is not first sanctified by vnion with God These men that boast so much of their charitie neuer made conscience of seeking the assurance of Gods fauour in Christ neyther euer trauailed vnder the burthen of their sinnes so as to seeke forgiuenesse as the true blessednesse Thirdly the common Protestant is exceedingly to blame in the very maine duties of Loue no tendernesse of heart no true Hospitalitie and for mercy to the poore the old complaints may be taken vp There is no mercy in the Land Mercifull men are taken away Wee may now adayes wayte for some Samaritane to come and proue himselfe a neighbour and for societie and fellowship in the Gospell with Gods people it will neuer sincke into the vnderstanding of these carnall men that that is any way expedient and finally in all the branches of Clemencie before expressed where is the man that makes conscience of them And for the last it is easily auouched that the Loue that is found in the most men is neyther brotherly nor without grosse fayning and hypocrisie nor proceedeth it from a heart in any measure purified and lastly it is so farre from being feruent that it is stone colde Thus of Loue. Verse 5. For the Hopes sake which is laid vp for you in Heauen IN these words is mentioned the third Grace for which the Apostle giues thankes and that is Hope Hope is here taken both for the thing hoped for viz. the glory of heauen as also the Grace by which it is apprehended but especially the latter Heauen is diuersly accepted in Scripture sometimes it signifieth the Ayre sometimes it signifieth the whole vpper world that compasseth the earth sometimes for the Kingdome of Grace and the meanes thereof but most vsually for the place of the blessed and the glory thereof and so it is taken here Hope as it is here considered by the Apostle lookes two wayes first by relation to and coherence with Faith and Loue for the Hopes sake secondly by a full aspect vpon the obiect of it which is intimated in the Metaphor laid vp and expressed in the word Heauens First of Hope as it is to be considered in the Coherence There is an admirable Wisedome and Mercy of God in the very manner of dispensing of his Graces for hee makes one Grace crowne another and become a recompence and reward to another as here for Hopes sake Gods Children breake through the difficulties of Faith and the impediments and discouragements of Loue. When God sees how many wayes the heart of man is beset in the spirituall combat about the getting and exercise of those two Graces hee is pleased by his Word and Spirit
should looke vpon Grace and Holinesse with a dull and feeble eye yea it is good euen for Gods children to heare of it before they haue it both to support them in their crosses and discouragements as also to plucke vp their mindes to holy contemplation and to weane them from the loue of base things yea to inflame them to a greater desire to magnifie and glorifie the singular grace and mercie of God in these dayes of their pilgrimage Ye haue heard No man can get eternall graces or an enduring contentment arising from the hope of a better life without the hearing of the word of GOD Quest. But tell vs distinctly what good shall men get by hearing of Sermons Answ. Many are the singular benefits come to men thereby First the holy Ghost is here giuen Acts 10.44 Secondly mens hearts are here opened Acts 16.14 Thirdly the feare of God doth here fall vpon men Acts 13.16 Fourthly the proud and stony-hart of man is here tamed melted and made to tremble Esa. 66.2 Fiftly the faith of Gods Elect is here begotten Rom. 10.14 Sixtly Men are here sealed by the holy Spirit of promise Ephes. 1.13 Seauenthly here the Spirit speaketh to the Churches Reuel 2. Eyghtly Christ here comes to suppe with men Let men tell of their experience whether euer their hearts tasted of the refreshing of CHRIST till they deuoted themselues to the hearing of the Word Ninthly The painefull distresse of the afflicted Conscience is here or no where cured by hearing the bones that God hath broken receiue ioy and gladnesse Psal 51.8 Tenthly what shall I say but as the Euangelicall Prophet saith If you can doe nothing else yet heare and your soules shall liue Esa. 55.4 Liue I say the life of Grace yea and the life of Glory for Saluation is brought vnto vs by hearing Act. 28.18 and 4.16 The vse of this point is First for instruction Let him that heareth heare yea let all reioyce in the mercies of their God that haue tasted of this bountie of the Lord blessed are your eares in as much as you haue heard Many Prophets and righteous men haue desired to heare the things that you heare and haue not heard them Secondly for humiliation vnder the consideration of the lamentable estate of such people as haue not the Word preached vnto them How doe the thousands euen in Israell perish through the failing or wanting of Vision Is there not almost millions of Men and Women that haue scarce heard by preaching whether there be any holy Ghost Oh the cruell torments that abide those soule-murtherers Shall I name them I wish their repentance that so they might haue a new name but because lamentable experience shewes that the vnsauory Salt seldome findes wherewith it may be salted therefore it is the dutie of all Gods people to bowe the knees of their hearts to God beseeching him to inflame the hearts of those that are in authoritie with such bowels of compassion that they would in due time purge the Church of them that so their names may no more be heard amongst vs. Whiles men lye sicke of the spirituall Lethargy in their owne hearts they are little troubled with the distresse of others but if men would euen in Gods sight duly waigh without shifting and preiudice these propositions viz that the hearing of the Word is the ordinary meanes to conuert mens soules to God Rom. 10.14 1 Pet. 1.23 c. And that except men be borne againe they can not enter into the kingdome of God Iohn 3.3 if I say these things be weighed how should our bowels turne within vs to consider the case of some hundreds of Parishes in this famous Kingdome that in the middest of this great Light in this respect yet sit in darkenesse Thirdly for the reproofe of the disorders and vitious dispositions of men in the hearing of the Word Many are the sorts of euill hearers exceeding many are the wicked humours of men by which they sinne against the Word heard the Scripture hath noted and taxed diuers corruptions in men in hearing and fearefully threatened them For the better explication of this vse I consider two things First the sorts of euill hearers Secondly their state in respect of it The sorts of euill hearers may be distinguished into two kindes some are openly impious and audacious some more ciuill and restrained Of the first kinde First some are so wayward nothing can please them eyther the Preacher is too terrible or he is too comfortable If Iohn fast he hath a Deuill if Christ eate he is a glutton Secondly Some heare and are scandalized Men are so wedded to their owne conceits and stuffed with preiudice that they many times wilfully study and striue to frame scandale and offence out of the words of the Teacher Thirdly Some heare and are filled with wrath and enuie and that sometimes so as they cannot restraine the signes of their rage and fretting no not in the Sermon-time They gnash with their teeth and their harts are ready to burst for anger And this comes many times because men cannot abide wholesome Doctrine but are giuen to fables Fourthly Some heare and their mouthes make iests while their hearts goe after their lusts they heare and mocke Fiftly Some make the Auditory of Christians the study of all manner of base filthinesse thither comes the Adulterer the Couetous the deceiuer the accuser of the Brethren c. and there they damnably frame their dogged and swinish imaginations Sixtly Some heare and if they finde any power in the Doctrine of the Preacher they enquire whether hee be not a Puritane for they haue heard so much euill of that Sect euery where that that one colour may serue to make them cautelous and better aduised then to be much troubled with his Doctrine Seuenthly Some will heare if he speake of this world He is an excellent Preacher that in their vnderstanding giues them libertie and sowe pillowes vnder their fleshly and worldly elbowes Eyghtly Some heare fearfully as loath to be drawne to the Sermon of any that rebukes sinne as the people of Israel were to come nere the Mount Ninthly like the chiefe Priests and Pharises when they perceiue that the Preacher rebukes their sinnes seeke to lay hands vpon him and as farre as the feare of the people restraineth them not they practise to remoue him The ciuiller sorts of hearers are diuersly sinfull in their seuerall humors First some heare but it is to be rid of their diseases that is to see whether by heering Sermons and comming to Church they can asswage the trouble of their minds and dull the stinging cares of their hearts Secondly some are like the young man for they goe from the Sermon sorry that the word requireth such things as they are not willing to doe Thirdly Some heare and say God forbid It is pitty it
should be so as the Preacher sayes Fourthly Some heare because a great report goeth of the Teacher Fiftly But aboue all others they are straying hearers that are mentioned Mat. 22.22 they heare and admire and yet leaue and forsake for any reformation or practise of what they heare Vnder this rancke I may referre the three sorts of hearers Matth. 13. The first sort suffer the Diuell presently to take away the Word The second sort choake it with cares and lusts The third forsakes the profession and hearing and liking of it in the time of temptation or persecution Thus of their sorts The state of men transgressing against the Word by refusing to heare it aright is exceeding fearefull if they could see their miserie they would doe as the Prophets require they would cut their haire and cast it away vnder the sence of the horror of Gods indignation The dust of the feet of Gods messengers will rise in iudgement against such hearers It shall be easier for Niniueh and Tyrus and Sidon and Sodom and Gomorrah then for such hearers Yea all their suites for mercy are abhomination in Gods sight A heauie eare is noted for a singular iudgement Matth. 13.13.14 c. Esa. 30.8.9 Yea because men will not heare the Word they must heare the rod Mich. 6.9 and their eares if they belong to God must be forced open by corrections Iob 3.3 To conclude if all this can not affect men then I say as the Lord sayd to the Prophet of such persons He that leaueth off to heare let him leaue off Ezek. 3. vlt. Thus of the first part of the description viz. the ordinance in which it is most effectuall viz. Hearing The second part is the propertie of the Word which is most eminent in the working of it viz. Truth Word of Truth Hee meaneth not the personall Word which is Christ but the enunciatiue Word made knowne eyther singularly by Reuelation Oracles Visions Dreames or commonly by tradition of Doctrine from hand to hand for 2000. yeeres or by a more excellent manner afterwards by Scripture the Word of holy Scripture is here meant There are many properties of the Word of God wherein it doth excell First it is diuine The testimonie of Gods mouth Wonderfull 1 Thes. 2.13 Psal. 119.18.88.129 Secondly It is eternall and incorruptible a liuing Word or the Word of Life Psal. 119.89.144.152 Phil. 2.16 1 Pet. 1.22 Thirdly It is swift Psal. 147.15.18 Fourthly It is powerfull and terrible Hebr. 4.12 The sword of the Spirit Hos. 6.5 Esa. 11.2 Hebr. 4.12 Ephes. 6. Fiftly It is nourishing and healing it hath a propertie to nourish and heale Psal. 107.20 Sixtly It sanctifieth both our persons and the vse of the creatures Seauenthly It is comfortable ioyfull sweet Psal. 119.14.111.143 162. Eightly It is apt for generation it hath a quickening power Psal. 119. 25.28 1 Pet. 1.22 Ninthly It is preseruatiue both from sinne Psal. 119.11 and from shame Psal. 119.22 So will not gold and siluer Tenthly it is wise and exceeding large Psal. 119.96.98.99.100.104 Eleauenthly It is light and pure and iust Psal. 119.105.130.140.128.138 But heere the Word is commended for the Truth of it and that as a most eminent propertie in mens conuersions Truth is taken diuersly for a vertue in speech in the second Table for Truth of Doctrine Iohn 5.33 for the substance of a type Iohn 1.17 for vprightnesse and sinceritie Iohn 3.21 for the true forme of a thing Rom. 1.28 Here the word of God is sayd to be the word of Truth in regard of the vse of the word in the conuersion of a sinner and that first as it is apprehended to be in itselfe secondly as it is by effect in the hearer For the first before a man can haue experience of the power of the Word in the gathering of his soule he must know it to be a word of Truth foure wayes First that it is the very word of God and therefore true considering the admirable antiquitie of the Storie before all other Histories the dreadfull miracles by which it was confirmed the certaine euent of the vaticinies or prophesies the immutable and euery way sufficient frame of pietie righteousnesse and diuine worship contained in it the durablenesse of the wisedome thereof which no punishments could euer extort out of the hearts of the professors thereof and lastly the dreadfull iudgements vpon the enemies of it Secondly that it is true whatsoeuer Doctrine it reuealeth though it make neuer so much against our profits or pleasures or lusts till a man be brought to this the Word neuer worketh soundly Thirdly that there is an especiall glory of Truth in the promises both in the promise it selfe and the condition Fourthly that we acknowledge Truth in the performance of what God hath promised and so giue glory to his faithfulnesse and thus of the word as it is apprehended in it selfe In the second place the word is the Word of Truth by effect because it worketh truth in vs and imprinteth it selfe in vs and fits vs for godlinesse Tit. 1.2 and thus it worketh Truth in vs sixe wayes First In that it worketh knowledge and so Truth in the vnderstanding Secondly In that it worketh in the Truth of worship Iohn 14.23.24 Thirdly In that it worketh in vs plainenesse and vprightnesse in the exercise of Grace and Holinesse and so it is opposed to hypocrisie Ephes. 4.24 Fourthly In that it worketh Truth of Constancie that is an euerlasting resolution to heare and keepe the Word of Truth Iohn 8.37 1 Iohn 4.6 Fiftly In that it begets in vs the sinceritie and Truth that becomes our callings and behauiour in the world as we are free from lying calumnies perfidiousnes slandering boasting flattery c. 1 Cor. 5.8 Sixtly In that it makes all our conuersation vertuous so guids vs to do the truth Ioh. 3.22 Iam. 3.17 Vse is both for Instruction and for Reproofe For Instruction therefore wee should labour that the Word may be a Word of Truth to vs and to this end First we should pray God to giue vs the spirit of Truth Iohn 16 13. Secondly we must repent that we may come to the knowledge of the Truth 2 Tim. 2.25 Thirdly we may not test in the forme of Truth Rom. 2.20 Iohn 3.22 For Reproofe of foure sorts of men First such as will not receiue the loue of the Truth With these gaine is godlines 1 Tim. 6.5 2 Thes. 2.10.12 Secondly such as strangle the light of the Truth eyther of Nature conscience or the Word and with-hold it in vnrighteousnes that striue against the light of the truth in their hearts that they might sinne the more freely Rom. 1.18 Thirdly such as will not obey the Truth which yet they admire commend affect c. Gal. 3.1 5.7 Fourthly such as by their wicked liues cause the way of Truth to be blasphemed which Truth they both heare and professe to obey Thus of the
to get holinesse into our hearts for if grace be within duties will be without if corruption be mortified in the Soule which is the fountaine it will haue no great sinne in the life which is the streame which flowes from the heart first we should guide our hearts into the way for thereout commeth life 6 Wee must submit our selues to Gods corrections learne obedience by the things we suffer obey the checkes of our conscience and be contented to eate the bread of affliction beare the words of rebuke and admonition for he that refuseth correction will certainely goe out of the way of life Lastly we should commit our way to God and by constant and daily prayer beseech him that hee would shew vs the way and lead vs forth and then that hee would stay our steps in his pathes that our feete doe not slide and to this end that he would remoue out of our way all impediments and euery lying way and that he would daily quicken vs in the way against the sluggishnesse of our owne Natures and bend our hearts to his holy feare but especially euery morning we should beseech God so to assist vs and guide and strengthen vs to doe the duties of the day and that he would see to and defend the thing of the day in his day by the vertue of Christs intercession and his words which are neare vnto God day and night Fourthly thus doing and endeauouring our selues to know and doe Gods will 1 The Lord would know vs by name and take notice of our wayes euen with the knowledge of approbation 2 Our liues would be full of Ioy and chearfulnesse yea they that haue tasted of the ioyes of a Crowne shall leaue the Throne and Pallace to seeke the sweet delights of the faithfull and to sing their songs 3 God would walke in the middest of vs 4 Yea hee would keepe his Couenant and Mercy with vs 5 Wee should be protected against all hurtfull troubles being eyther preserued from them or in them if wee walke in the day we shall not stumble yea though we went through fire and water yet Gods holy presence and strong arme would be with vs yea wee might dwell with euerlasting burnings that is within the knowledge of Gods terrible presence and sight of his great iudgements when the hypocrites of the world would be afraid 6 Or if there were sorrowes and griefes vpon vs in this world yet heauen shall come and wee shall rest in the beds of eternall ease whatsoeuer betides vs wee shall not lye downe in sorrow 7 Thus to liue is to rule with God and to be faithfull with his Saints 8 Thus shall wee scape the vigor of the Law and the flames of Hell Lastly if we continue faithfull to the death there is laid vp for vs a crowne of life Thus of walking or holy conuersation in the generall now in particular that wee might walke in an holy eminencie three things as is before noted are here vrged First that wee should walke worthy of the Lord. That is so to know and consider the singular mercies of God in Christ as to endeauour to expresse our thankefulnesse in the obedience of our liues in such a measure as might become the mercies of God Before I open the words further I consider in the generall two things 1 That the obedience of the faithfull is raysed by the contemplation of the mercies of God which should teach vs as we desire more to abound in good fruits so to be more in the assurance and often meditation of Gods loue to vs more knowledge of this kinde would worke more obedience and a confused knowledge of Gods mercy is vsually accompanied with an vnconstant obedience Besides this reproues the dangerous and sinfull abuse of Gods mercies in the common people that vse to pleade their safetie notwithstanding their sinnes by the alledging of the mercy of God to sinners whereas it is most certaine that the right knowledge of Gods mercy would make men afraid to sinne There is mercy with thee that thou maist be feared saith the Psalmist and it is the infallible signe of a true conuert that hee doth feare God and his goodnesse euery man can feare God and his Iustice especially in some kindes of iudgements but a childe of God doth neuer more tenderly feare God then when he hath greatest taste of Gods mercies 2 The Papists would finde merit of workes in this Verse both because holinesse of life is so much vrged as also because here is the word worthy vsed as if the Apostle should grant that they might be worthy of and merit the blessings of God My answere is First that merit cannot be founded vpon Scripture and secondly it cannot be founded vpon this Scripture For the first we cannot merit for many reasons in Scripture first we are not our owne men we are so tyed vnto God that gaue vs beeing in Nature and Grace that when wee haue done all wee can doe our owne mouthes must say wee are but vnprofitable Seruants Secondly all our sufficiencie to doe any good is of God not from our selues Thirdly God gaines nothing by vs If thou be righteous what giuest thou to him or what receiueth he at thy hands Fourthly men talke of their well-doing but what shall become of their sinnes If the Papists will first goe to hell for their sinnes and stay all that eternitie there then afterwards if God create another eternitie they may haue hearing to relate what good they haue done the curse of the Law will be first serued the punishment of Adams one sinne barred the plea for any reward for former righteousnesse Fiftly what comparison can there be betweene the glory of heauen and our workes on earth Sixtly it is worthy to be obserued that it is mercy in God to set his loue vpon them that keepe his Commandements Ezod 20. Command 2. Seauenthly we are so farre from meriting that wee are taught to pray God to giue vs our daily bread we haue not a bit of bread of our owne earning Eightly the Sanctification of the most righteous is but begunne in this life Lastly vnto all these Reasons adde the further Testimonie of these Scriptures Dan. 9 9. Rom. 4.5 and 11.9 1 Cor. 4.4 Phil. 3.8.9 Secondly this place hath no colour for merit for to passe ouer that reason that the Scripture requireth good workes therefore our workes merit as a most false and absurd argument the words worthy of the Lord cannot be applyed to merit by any meanes for in as much as the Lord had bestowed many of his fauours already vpon them and giuing his hand and writing and seale for the rest they cannot by any workes afterwards be said in any colour to merit what is past They are vrged Mat. 3. to bring forth fruits worthy
the Martyrs haue borne wee haue not yet resisted vnto bloud by suffering wee may reape the comfort that we are Sonnes and not Bastards besides the profit of our sufferings which God euer intends to the patient viz. the holinesse of the heart and fruitfulnesse of the life That wee may be patient first wee must get Wisedome and if we want it aske it of God It is Ignorance makes men passionate a great vnderstanding is slow to wrath Secondly wee must get Faith to beleeue our owne reconciliation with God our hearts neede not be troubled if we beleeue in God the Father in Iesus Christ When the heart is possessed with peace in the assurance of Iustification by Faith then it is easie to be patient in tribulation yea to reioyce in affliction Thirdly we must be much in the meditation of the comforts of another life Fourthly wee must be often and constant in prayer Fiftly the hearing of the word faithfully and conscionably breedes a patient minde and therefore is the Word called a Word of patience the Comforts of the Scripture beget both Patience and Hope Sixtly wee must be temperate in the desires after and vse of outward things therefore are men vnquiet vnder the losse absence want or desire of earthly things about their bodies or estates because they haue not sobrietie and temperance in their hearts and carriage Seauenthly if wee would haue patience we must be carefull by godly Sorrow and Confession to cast off the sinne that hangeth on so fast it is our wretched corruption of Nature that makes vs so vnquiet it is nothing without vs Lastly we must be diligent in our callings and trust vpon God and cast all our care on him Idlenesse and vnbeleefe are the great nurses of impaciencie Thirdly wee must exercise Patience in seauen things 1. In bearing the common crosses that accompany our mortall estate of life and therein to put on as neare as wee can Iobs minde and in all losses or wants to giue glory to God acknowledging that hee hath as much right to take away as reason to giue 2. In bearing with the infirmities of such as are about vs with whom we conuerse that shew themselues to be so out of weakenesse Rom. 15.1.3.4 3. In enduring persecution of all kindes for the truths sake 2 Tim. 3.12 2 Thes. 1.5 Reu. 2.8 1 Pet. 4.12 c. 4. In tentations there is vse of Patience both in wayting vpon God for succour and issue and in keeping the soule at as much rest and quietnesse as may be it is the Diuels desire to set vs on a hurry hee knowes his tentations will then worke best Iames 1.4 5. In the expectation of the performance of Gods promises and our spirituall happinesse in Christ Heb. 6.12 and 10.35.36.37.38 6. In the troubles of the minde and conscience beleeuing Gods truth and wayting for the appearing of his face and the healing of the soule 7. In perseuerance in well doing vnto the end Mat. 24.13 Rom. 2.7 Reu. 2.2 Gal. 5.9 1 Iohn 3.2 Long-suffering This vertue in case of wrongs must order vs aright in our selues and towards others in our selues it must restraine Anger and desire of reuenge and great reason for God himselfe suffers wrong and that long too and it is Gods commandement wee should suffer long besides iniuries befals vs by Gods prouidence and reuenge is Gods right Moreouer these raging and reuengefull affections are great hinderances both to Prayer and to the profit of the World And lastly anger lets the Diuell into a mans heart Quest. 1. But how should I preuent it being wronged Ans. First carry some of thine owne sinnes alwayes in thy minde that being prouoked thou maist turne the course of thine anger thither Secondly auoyd the occasions which are both contentions and contentious persons Thirdly be daily iealous ouer thine affections and keepe them downe by prayer Quest. 2. What if passion doe sodainely surprise me Ans. 1. Conceale it 2. Depart from them with whom thou art angry 3. Appoynt at the least that bound vnto thine anger that the Sunne goe not downe vpon thy wrath Towards others we must shew the practise of this vertue thus In things that might displease vs but not hur vs endure them without any notice at all and in things that doe hurt if they be lesser iniuries see them and forgiue them and in the greater wrongs thou must seeke the helpes of the Magistrate and the Law after thou hast sought all priuate meanes by intreatie offers of peace desire of Arbitration c. follow the Law with loue to thy aduersary without passion or rage and in the issues be moderate without shewing extremitie Ioyfulnesse A Christian estate is a ioyfull and comfortable estate Sauing Knowledge makes a man liue ioyfully and comfortably true ioy is one of the fruits Gods Spirit beareth in the heart of a Christian yea it is a chiefe part of that kingdome that God bestoweth on his people on earth None haue cause of ioy but the Children of Sion and none of them but haue great reason to shout for ioy to reioyce and be glad with all their hearts Zeph. 3.14 Is it not a great Mercy to haue all the iudgements due vnto vs for sinne taken away and the great enemie of our soules cast out Is it not a great honour that Iehouah the King of Israell should be in the middest of vs and that our eyes should not see euill any more What sweeter encouragement then that the Lord should cause it to be said vnto vs feare not and againe Let not your hands be slacke If wee haue great crosses enemies dangers wants temptations c. wee haue a mightie God if there be none to helpe vs hee will saue yea hee will reioyce to doe vs good yea he will reioyce ouer vs with ioy yea hee so loues vs that he will rest in his loue and seeke no further Shall man be sorrowfull when God reioyceth Shall the Lord reioyce in vs and shall not wee reioyce in God c. And if these reasons of ioy be contayned in one place of Scripture how great would the number of reasons grow if all the Booke of God were searched such a ioy and contentment is the ioy of Christians that crosses cannot hinder Life is not deare to a childe of God so that hee may finish his course with ioy They suffer the spoyling of their goods with ioy knowing that in heauen they haue a more enduring substance Yea in many crosses they account it all ioy to fall into tentation They seeme as sorrowfull when indeede they are alwayes reioycing Quest. What might wee doe to get this constant ioyfulnesse and vnmoueable firmenesse and contentment of heart Ans. In generall thou must be sure to be Gods Seruant a
therefore be sure thou be a Saint be sure thou be more then flesh and bloud be sure thou lye in none of the sinnes God hath threatned with the losse of this inheritance be sure of the imputation of the righteousnesse of Christ be sure thou haue in thee the spirit of the Sonne be sure to commit thy selfe to the word of grace In light The Christians inheritance is said to be held in light in sixe respects First because hee now obtaynes it in the times of the Gospell which times in comparison with the times of the old Testament are called times of light the light of the Iewes being spread abroad among the Gentiles and exceedingly enlarged by the rising of the Sunne of righteousnesse Secondly because this inheritance can neuer be assured without the light of knowledge In the vnderstanding of man there is a three-fold light of knowledge Naturall Euangelicall and Celestiall the Naturall light is the light of Reason the Euangelicall light is the light of Faith and the Celestiall light is the light of Heauen Before wee can see our inheritance in the light of Heauen wee must first see it in the light of Faith and as for the light of Reason it will doe no good for any euidence in this tenure Thirdly because this inheritance is held with true ioy on earth and perfect ioy in heauen and Ioy is expressed by the word light in many places in Scripture Fourthly in respect of the admirable communion that a Christian hath with God and Christ who is light of light that true light Iohn 8.12 Fiftly because of the certainetie of this inheritance it is said to be held in light It is worthy the noting that Catharinus a Papist writing vpon this place thus vnderstands the meaning of Light and is much offended vvith those that pleade for vncertayntie of assurance Sixtly in light that is in Heauen and the light of Heauen is an excellent light both for the perfection of it and the continuance of it It is a perfect light for there shall be on Gods part a cleare reuelation and on mans part a cleare vision and for continuance that light shall neuer be ouercome of darkenesse nay it shall neuer admit any mixture of obscuritie in as much as Heauen is a Citie that needes not the Sunne nor Moone to shine in it for the glory of God doth lighten it and the Lambe is the light thereof Reuel 21.23 In the meane while till God translate vs to this light of heauen let vs labour to settle our hearts in the light of Faith and certainetie and glad our hearts with the light of the Spirit and ioy choosing rather to dye then to forsake the face and presence of God the fountaine of all true light both in earth and heauen Verse 13. Who hath deliuered vs from the power of Darkenesse and translated vs into the Kingdome of his deare Sonne IN this Verse our redemption is considered more particularly for as it is by inchoation in this life it stands of two parts the first is our deliuerance from the power of Darkenesse and the second is our translating into the Kingdome of Christ. Darkenesse This Darkenesse imports the miserie of vnregenerate men from which the Children of God in the dayes of Redemption are deliuered and it notes not onely the darkenesse of Gentilisme proper to the Pagans of that time but also the darkenesse of Sinne of Ignorance of Infidelitie of Aduersitie of Death and of Hell for euery vnregenerate man is couered with a sixe-fold darkenesse First the darkenesse of Sinne Secondly the darkenesse of ignorance which as a vayle couers all flesh Thirdly the darkenesse of Infidelitie for as there is the light of Faith in the regenerate so there is a darkenesse of vnbeliefe that possesseth euery vnregenerate man All men haue not Faith it is the gift of God both the Prophets and Apostles haue complayned Who hath beleeued our report Fourthly the darkenesse of Aduersitie miseries of all sorts breaking in vpon the soule body state and names of men Fiftly the darkenesse of Death for Death is the house of darkenesse and this is the wages of Sinne Lastly the wicked man is in danger of vtter darkenesse euen of the darkenesse of hell out of all this wee may see the extreame misery of all carnall persons vpon whom the Kingdome of darkenesse breakes in and preuayles so many wayes and therefore accursed is their misery that can liue in this estate without sense or remorse or feare If Securitie as a wretched Lethargy had not ouergrowne mens hearts how could they eate drinke sleepe marry giue in marriage c. when they finde themselues in the power of such fearefull and horrible darkenesse Power This darkenesse gets power and preuayles ouer the world by the vnwearied labour of the Prince of darkenesse who as hee seduced our first Parents to extinguish the fayre light in which they were created whence flowed an vniuersall darkenesse vpon all mankinde so doth hee still as God of the vnregenerate world worke effectually in binding mens mindes more and more that the light of the Gospell might not shine in their hearts both by hindering by all the wayes hee can the meanes of light and by leading man on from sinne to sinne till custome haue worne out sense and bred a very liking of darkenesse more then the light And thus poore man runnes from darkenesse to darkenesse and from dungeon to dungeon till hee fall vnto the euerlasting dungeon of vtter darkenesse and this would be the end of all flesh were it not that God of his infinite mercy hath prouided a meanes in Iesus Christ to deliuer the Elect from the power of this Darkenesse Deliuered Euery man hath great reason to thinke of this deliuerance out of the Kingdome of darkenesse wherein naturally hee is for while he so continueth he knoweth not whither he goeth he hath no fellowship with God his deedes are all euill his ignorance will not excuse him yea it will be his condemnation his feete treade not in the way of peace Who hath deliuered vs. Here are foure things 1. What deliuered 2. Whom vs 3. When hath 4. Who viz. God the Father Deliuered The originall word doth not signifie onely to let out or lead out or buy out but it noteth forcibly to snatch out Man is not gotten so easily out of Sathans hands nor will the World and Flesh let them goe without force or without blowes Quest. What must wee doe that wee may be deliuered from this power of darkenesse Ans. Beleeue in Iesus Christ who is the true light Know that all true light is begunne in the assurance of Gods loue to thee in Iesus Christ seeke this knowledge To this end attend vpon the preaching of the Gospell by which life and immortalitie are brought to light And because this Sonne doth not alwayes shine Walke in the light
a subiection to all the ordinances of CHRIST Thus of Presentation Sanctification followes Holy vnblameable and vnreproueable in his sight At the first sight I should encline to vnderstand these words eyther of Iustification or our consumate holinesse at the day of iudgement but that the sway of interpreters force me to expound them of Sanctification It is greatly to be weighed that a man in this life should be heresaid to be holy vnblameable and vnreproueable or as the other Translation hath it without fault in his sight For the better conceiuing of it wee must compare with these words other Scripture wherein is giuen vnto the godly that they haue cleane hands and a pure heart Psal. 24.4 that they are pure Prou. 21.8 vpright in heart Psal. 97.11 sanctified throughout 1 Thes. 5.23 perfect or vndefiled in their way Psal. 119.1 perfect 2 Cor. 13.11 Phil. 3.15 Matth. 5.48 faultlesse Iud. 24. without spot and blamelesse 1 Pet. 3.14 walking in all Gods wayes 1 King 8.58 and that they keepe Gods couenant Psal. 25.10 78.8.10 132.22 Thus Noah is said to be perfect Gen. 6.9 Ezekiah walked before God with a perfect heart Esa. 38. Dauids heart was perfect 1 King 11.4 Zachariah and Elizabeth were both righteous before God and walking in all the commandements of the Lord blamelesse Luke 1.6 The question is how those sayings should be true and in what sence they are ment And for the clearing of the doubt the way is not simply to reiect the propositions as impious and vntrue and hereticall as some ignorant and malicious persons doe but seeing they are the sacred words of Scripture to consider what it is may be attained and what God requires of vs. To thinke with the Papists or Anabaptists that any mortall man can performe the obedience required in the morall Law perfectly so as neuer to commit sinne against the Law is a most blasphemous detestable and cursed opinion for there is no man that sinneth not the best of the Saints haue had their thousands of sinnes But those places are to be vnderstood of the righteousnesse of the Christian as hee is considered to be vnder the couenant of grace and the Gospell not of legall perfection but of an Euangelicall innocency and vprightnesse Not as their workes are in themselues but comparatiuely eyther with the workes of wicked men or as they are in their desire and endeauour and as they are presented in the intercession of Christ who couers the imperfect●ons that cleaue to the workes of the faithfull Sometimes the faithfull are said to be perfect that is strong men in CHRIST compared with the weake Christian and Infant in grace so that we● see what a Christian in this life may attaine vnto the rigour of the Law being taken away in the couenant of grace and the imperfections of his workes and fra●ltie being couered in Christs intercession Holy This word Holy is the generall and comprehends the other two For holinesse is eyther internall and that is expressed by the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vnblameable or externall and so it is exprest in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vnreproueable Holinesse is giuen to God and so essentially to the spirit of God and so effectiuely because it workes it in others to Christ as hee deriues it by influence to his members To Angels Matth. 25. to sacrifices by way of type to the Couenant of GOD as it promiseth holinesse to the faithfull to the Prophets as Teachers of holinesse to the Scriptures as the rule of holinesse to places for the holinesse of the subiect but heere it is a glorious adiunct conferred vpon the faithfull by Christ. Concerning holinesse of heart and life in generall there are here foure things to be noted 1. The necessitie of it we can neuer be reconciled or glorified without it Tit. 2.12.13 2. The difficultie of it lesse then the power of Christ crucified cannot make men lead a holy life 3. the meritorious cause of it holinesse is merited by Christ as well as saluation 4. The order men must first be reconciled to God before they can get holy grace or lead a holy life Vnblameable Christian perfection hath two things in it First vprightnesse of heart noted by this word Secondly vprightnesse of life noted by the word following Internall perfection or holinesse must haue these things in it First the staine of former sinnes must be washed away with the teares of repentance Secondly the inward worship of God must be set vp in the heart some impressions men haue of an externall worship but of the inward worship men are naturally almost wholy ignorant God is inwardly worshipped by the constant exercise of grace from aboue as Loue Feare Trust Delight Desire c. 3. There must be in vs an assurance of Gods fauor 4. There must be a freedome from preuailing euils in the mind or affections as ignorance wicked thoughts errours in the affections or impatiencie lust seruile feare of men malice c. 5. Hypocrisie must not raigne our desire must be more to be good then to seeme so 6. Our whole heart must be set vpon Gods whole Lawe to haue respect vnto all Gods Commandements God abhorres a diuided heart a double heart 7. The minde must be set vpon heauenly things and conuerse in heauen Where these things are happily attained vnto there the heart is vpright whatsoeuer defects or infirmities be in it these things are different in Christians in the degrees for there is an infancy and weaknesse in sanctification as well as Faith The signes of an vpright heart are these first it desires perfection secondly it will not cease well-doing for crosses thirdly it will serue God though alone fourthly it will not follow the eye it is not sensuall fiftly it reioyceth in the loue of CHRIST aboue all things sixtly It will smite for lesser sinnes as Dauids did 2 Sam. 24. seauenthly it is constant That we may attaine an vpright and vnblameable heart in generall wee must get a new heart in particular 1. wee must by mortification circumcise our hearts 2. we must get Gods Law written in our hearts 3. we must seeke and loue puritie of heart 4. we must keepe our hearts with all diligence lastly wee must walke before God Motiues to inward holinesse First wee shall neuer see the righteousnesse of God imputed till we be vpright in heart Secondly a pure heart is one of the clearest signes of a blessed man Thirdly God searcheth to finde what mens hearts are as well as what their liues are Fourthly the eyes of the Lord behold all the earth to shew himselfe strong with all them that are of a perfect heart Fiftly light is sowen for the righteous and ioy for the vpright in hart Lastly the whole 125. Psalme incites hereunto
Vnreproueable This word notes the externall vprightnesse or Christian perfection of life Externall innocency must haue in it diuers things 1. we must be free from the grose sinnes of euery Commandement 2. we must cease from our owne workes keepe vs from our wickednesse and not turne after the wayes of our owne heart that is wee must be sure to cease from our particular beloued sinnes 3. our families must be well ordered both for peace labour and pietie 4. we must be free from Idolatry from the customary sinnes of the tongue from the raigne of hardnesse of heart from hasting to be rich for he that hasteth to be rich cannot be innocent as the Prouerbe is Lastly we must loue our enemies Matth. 5. vlt. That we may attaine heereunto we must walke in the way of good men Prou. 2.20 wee must set good Lawes euer before vs and let them be our warrant 2 Sam. 22. 23. wee must not be destitute of heauenly gifts 1 Cor. 1.6.8 In his sight These words may be referred eyther to our presentation or to our sanctification And whereas some would thinke that they ouerthrow the former sence of the words and proue that he entreates heere of our holinesse in Gods sight by iustification they are deceiued for they may find these words giuen to sanctification ordinarily in Scripture as Luke 1.6.7 Hebr. 13 21. 1 Iohn 3.22 Reuel 14.5 The words being referred to Sanctification import foure things First that what we are or doe is in his presence so the words vsed Luke 2.18 13.26 Acts 10.33 Secondly that God is a witnesse of all we doe so the words vsed Luke 8.47 2 Cor. 7.12 Gal. 1.20 Thirdly that God accepts of what is truely good in any measure Luke 1.75 Fourthly that God highly priseth all that is good in the good Luke 1.25 2 Tim. 2.3 5.4 As the words there vsed shew Verse 23. If ye continue grounded and stablished in the faith and be not mooued away from the hope of the Gospell whereof yee haue heard THe second part of the Epistle viz. the proposition of Doctrine hath beene handled hitherto from the twelfth verse vnto these words In these words and those that follow to the end of the second Chapter is contained the third part of the Epistle viz. matter of exhortation wherein hee both perswades and disswades The perswasion is contained in this verse and the rest vnto the eight verse of the next Chapter The disswasion is from verse 8. of Chapter 2. to the end of the Chapter In the perswasion the Apostle exhorts them to perseuerance both in Faith and Hope where is to be obserued 1. the exhortation it selfe in the beginning of this verse and the reason to inforce the exhortation in all the verses following The exhortation is two-fold first to perseuerance in Faith in these words if yee continue grounded and stablished in the faith secondly to perseuerance in hope in the next words and be not mooued from the hope of the Gospell whereof yee haue heard From the Coherence and generall words of the Exhortation we must obserue that Gods Children after they haue gotten true grace were comforted in their reconciliation must looke to their Faith and Hope It is not enough once to get Faith Hope but after they are conceiued in vs they must be daily looked to for the iust must liue by his faith It must be to him according to his faith not according to his friends money labour meanes c. By faith hee must draw vertue out of all Gods ordinances by faith hee must purge his heart of his daily sinnes by Faith and Hope he walkes with God and ouercomes the world This may greatly reproue mans carelesnesse men looke to their Grounds Cattell Shops c. but who lookes to their Faith and Hope If you continue grounded and stablished in the faith Heere are two things first the manner of the propounding of the exhortation viz. with an If secondly the exhortation it selfe where note 1. the dutie continue 2. the manner of the dutie grounded and stablished 3. the obiect in Faith If. The Apostle propounds this Exhortation with an If because hee speaketh to a mixt multitude among whom were many that would not continue and thereby shew they were not truely reconciled Yea it was needfull that the godly amongst them should haue it thus doubtfully set downe that so they might be more carefull to settle and establish themselues in the Faith that they might hold out in it As this If lookes vpon the wicked it shewes that in places where the Gospell gathers soules to God many that for a time were forward and greatly affected will afterwards fall away And therefore Gods seruants both Ministers and People should looke for Apostacy and not be ouermuch troubled when they see any fall away It is not amisse to consider by what meanes or motiues men are plucked away from the loue of the truth Some fal away for hard sayings some cannot follow Christ long because of their carnall friends others are corrupted with lewd company others cannot beare the reproofes of their faults and if they be reprooued either they will lift Amos away from Bethel or they get themselues away from hearing Amos. Some heare this Sect euery where so ill spoken of that they will be better aduised ere they settle vpon such courses And the rather because they doe not see the multitude set out with them or great men yeeld any countenance to such strict courses Others are seduced by time-seruing flattering false or corrupt teachers who labouring to hinder the efficacy of the doctrine of paineful Ministers hope to accomplish either the stopping of their mouthes or the increase of their bonds or at least their disgrace with the people Others are insnared with the earthly things and forsake the sinceritie of the truth to embrace this world with Demas Many fall away for the Crosse and all are catcht with the deceitfulnesse of some sinne Quest. But may the faithfull fall away and not continue Answ. The faithfull may loose and fall from 1. some degrees of innocency of life 2. Some degrees of the working and efficacie of Gods Spirit 3. Some degrees of Communion with Christ. Their Communion may be lessened though their vnion can not be dissolued 4. from Faith of which he makes mention heere And thus they may fall in respect of sence in respect of some degree in respect of some acts of faith in respect of some doctrine of faith and lastly in respect of the meanes of the doctrine of faith But there are seauen things from which the Elect can neuer fall first they can not lose eternall life Iohn 10.29 secondly confirming grace in some measure Psal 14.5 thirdly remission of sinnes past Esa. 43.25 fourthly the seed eyther of doctrine or grace 1 Iohn 3.9 Fiftly the spirit of sanctification Sixtly the habite
may hide the Gospell from them Also euill thoughts nursed and fortified as thicke clouds hide the light from diuers to some in iudgement Christ speakes in Parables others shall neuer haue the light was offered because they vsed not the light they had The enuious man in many places sowes the tares of corrupt doctrine And vnto many congregations for want of sincere preaching Immortality and life is not yet brought vnto light besides the transplendencie of the doctrine it selfe is such as exceedes the capacitie of the most Quest. But how comes it that euen the godly themselues in all places attaine to so small a measure of knowledge in the Gospell Ans. There are remnants of naturall blindnesse euen in the best and the sinne that hangs on so fast is not without pollution and an obscuring propertie Faith also that should haue principall vse in conueying this light is not without some mixtures of doubts and other drosse Affections are not without their fumes which beeloud the vnderstanding sometimes they want the meanes sometimes they are negligent in the vse of them and to see perfectly is the onely priuiledge of the new Ierusalem that is aboue The Vses are for Reproofe for Information for Instruction and for Consolation First it reproues the horrible prophanenes of those that so securely contemne the Gospell so sacred a Mysterie and fearefull is the curse with which God doth auenge the quarrell of his word euen this that vnto these men the Scriptures both read and preached are a sealed Booke And is the Gospell a Mysterie then singular is their dotage and madnesse that say they know as much as any of them all can teach them Secondly wee may hereby be informed concerning the necessitie of preaching the greater the Mysterie is the greater neede of laborious and studious men that are thereunto set apart to make manifest those secrets of the Kingdome for this is the appointment of God our Sauiour that by preaching committed to certaine men thereunto sanctified as the Apostle saith the word promised before the world beganne should be manifested in due time Thirdly this should teach vs diuers duties 1. Let euery man account of faithfull Teachers as the Ministers of Christ and such as dispence the Mysteries of God 2. Wee must bring Faith to the Gospell else it will not profit Reason and Sense are no competent Guides or Iudges in these diuine Mysteries And the Lord hath commanded these secrets to be manifested and reuealed by the Scriptures for the triall of his Elect and for the exercise of their obedience in beleeuing as well as in doing 3. As wee should bring a resolution to beleeue Gods word in all things though it be neuer so contrary to sense and to common reason of the world So when the Lord doth reueale his Promises and Statutes to vs wee should hide them in our hearts as great Iewels and worthy Treasures meete to be kept in our secretest remembrance and the very bowels of our Affections 4. This Doctrine vrgeth the necessitie of obseruing the rules of preparation and to this purpose wee may finde fiue things charged vpon vs all drawne from this consideration of the Mystery of the Gospell First wee must be sure wee he turned to the Lord by true repentance for till then the vaile cannot be taken away though the word were neuer so plaine in it selfe yet wee cannot discerne it by reason our vnderstandings are couered with a vaile and no man can looke vpon this bright Sunne till his eyes be annointed with eye-salue Secondly in as much as the Booke is sealed with seauen seales and no man nor Angels is able powerfully to vnfold and open Gods eternall comforts to the conscience of man for his saluation saue onely the Lyon of the Tribe of Iudah which is also the Lambe slaine hauing seauen eyes which are the seauen Spirits of God therefore in acknowledgement of his wisedome and power we must goe vnto him importunately begging this Blessing for his glory that the Booke may be opened euen to enrich vs and that to this end hee would make acceptable the odours of our desires and prayers to God Thirdly we must remoue letts for if it be a mysterie in it selfe wee had not neede to bring hardnesse of heart with vs or worldly cares or troubled affections or a sluggish spirit or preiudicate opinions or inordinate lusts or any such impediments Fourthly wee must bring with vs the loane and aduantage of former doctrine communicated to vs for to him that hath for practise and increase shall be giuen but from him that hath not for imployment and conscionable vse shall be taken away that which hee hath Fiftly wee must bring a pure Conscience as a holy vessell to receiue this mysterie of faith in and the conscience is then pure when it is purified by the bloud of Christ and doth daily excite the desire of puritie of heart and life bearing with the loue and liking of no sinne Ministers also must here learne with all reuerence and painefulnesse to behaue themselues as becommeth those great Mysteries they must not onely be cleane themselues by holinesse of heart and life but must in compassion to the People and the holy feare of the Maiestie of Gods truth and presence teach with power frequencie perspecuitie authoritie and since the Lord hath made them his Stewards of his Mysteries and holy Iewels and Treasures it is required of them that they be faithfull both in applying them to the right owners and in setting them out according to their truth Lastly the meditation hereof may serue for singular comfort to all those that finde mercy from the Lord in the reuelation of his Mysterie blessed are their eyes that see it and their eares that heare it They are more happy then many millions of men besides Hid since the world beganne and from ages 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The first of these words is diuersly accepted sometimes it is translated from Eternitie as Psal. 52.1 The goodnesse of the Lord hath endured from all eternitie as Beza thinkes writing on Luke 1.70 sometimes Since the world beganne as Luke 1.70 Acts 3.21 sometimes it signifieth but of old or a long time agoe as the Hebrew word which is thought to answere it is rendred Psal. 119.52 somtimes it is taken for the space of a mans life as Peter said Thou shalt not wash my feete 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is neuer while I liue and in the 3. Ephes. vlt. there is such a phrase as this Glory to God c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as if it should be rendered vnto or throughout all the generations of the world of worlds that is of the world to come And 2 Pet. 3. vlt. hee saith glory to him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is henceforth to the day of eternity There is vnto man two worlds the one begins
God will doe them Fourthly that the reasons of this dealing may be iust though not exprest vnto vs. Fiftly that Christians are charged to be wise to sobrietie they may not let their thoughts runne as farre as they will but must let God alone with his secret iudgements Sixtly that the things are now strange and obscure shall be more fully reuealed in the day of Christ when all shall be cleered and made manifest Obiect But some Papist may say it is plaine by these words that the Scripture is hard and not fit for the common people seeing it is called a misterie Answ. This place cannot helpe them because it is said that now it is reuealed and so their cauill comes out of season 2 Because it is and was hidden from carnall men not from Gods seruants wee doe not wonder though the Scriptures be as a soaled Booke vnto such carnall wretches as they are Now reuealed God hath reuealed the mistery of his Will diuers wayes first by Dreames by Day-visions by Types and Sacraments by Angels by Prophets and extraordinary Men by CHRIST appearing in our Nature by his Spirit by the Scriptures and by the ordinary Preaching of the Ministers Dreames Visions and Types were peculiar in a manner to the olde Testament the ministery of Christ in his owne person of the Prophets and extraordinary Men and Angels is now ceased so as vnto vs this Mysterie is reuealed by the Spirit in the ministery of Gods Seruants and in the vse of the Scriptures Quest. But was not the Gospell reuealed till now since CHRIST Answ. Yes it was as these places may proue Iohn 8.56 Abraham saw his dayes and Moses wrote of him All the Prophets gaue witnesse vnto Christ Act. 10.43 Rom. 1.2 Christ is the same yesterday and to day and for euer Hebr. 13.8 but the Gospell was hidden in respect of the time of the manifestation of the glory of Christ especially to the Gentiles and diuers things in the manner of Christs kingdome were not reuealed vnto them as also in respect of cleerenesse of reuelation and the more ordinary life and power of the graces of the Messias and the more plentifull efusion of the gifts of the spirit Fiftly that it was not reuealed before viz. as it is now they had before Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is the promise of the Messias to be exhibited and wee haue 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the tidings of the Messias exhibited Two things may be here obserued First That Gods Seruants may know their owne particular blessednesse for he saith it is reuealed to the Saints Secondly that the seasons of the reuelation of the Gospell in the power of it are singular priuiledges and greatly to be heeded and therefore woe is to those soules that neglect such dayes of grace it is double condemnation It is damnable to sit in darkenesse and haue no meanes of life but it is much more the condemnation of these worlds of prophane persons that light is come into the world yea into the Countrie yea euen to their owne Townes and Congregations and yet they will loue darkenesse rather then light And on the other side it should teach men that know the times of such visitation both to beare witnesse to the light by presence countenance maintenance and establishing of it for them and theirs and also to walke as the children of the light euen as a people exceedingly priuiledged and blessed of God To his Saints The word Saint is somtime giuen to Christ somtimes to Angels somtimes to the blessed in heauen somtimes to the faithful on earth The Pope hath his Saints and such are the choyse of the most desperate Traitors as hee ordereth his Canonisations in our dayes And the world hath his Saints to and they are ciuill honest men but here by Saints hee meaneth the Faithfull on Earth and they are Saints that are holy by the righteousnesse of Faith that haue the spirit of Sanctification that are separate from sinners by a holy calling that are reformed from the principall euils of their former conuersation that call vpon the name of the Lord that are consecrate to God in speciall holinesse of life Quest. But if a man liue ciuilly in the world will not that serue the turne Answ. It will not our righteousnesse must exceede the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharisees And it may be profitable oft to recount the defects of the ciuill honest man First he wants sinceritie in the first Table Secondly hee sticks not at the inward corruptions of the second Table Thirdly his praise is of men in his best actions or else some other corrupt ends Fourthly hee is wholy voyd of the inward worship of God and in the outward hee is eyther secure or superstitious Fiftly hee neuer trauelled in the new birth for his honestie Sixtly hee wants the righteousnesse of Faith Seauenthly for the most part his heart is not sound nor vpright in his family especially for matter of Gods worship Verse 27. To whom God would make knowne what is the riches of his glorious misterie among the Gentiles which riches is Christ in you for hope of glory THese words containe the fifth generall reason taken from the excellencie of the subiect the Gospell in the preaching of it propounds vnto men and that is Christ. And in this reuelation of Christ consider 1. to whom viz. to the Saints 2. by whom viz. God 3. what is the cause viz. the Will and good Pleasure of God He would 4. the manner 1. if we respect the vnregenerate world it is in a Mistery 2. if we respect the grace communicated it is a glorious and rich mistery 3. if wee respect the place where Christ as a Sunne of righteousnesse riseth it is in you that is in the heart of man 4. if wee respect the persons hee makes choyce of it is the miserable Gentiles Amongst the Gentiles 5. if we respect future things hee is reuealed as the hope of glory To whom Of the persons to whom I haue spoken in the end of the former verse onely this Doctrine may be added That onely the Saints that is holy men find Treasures Riches in the power of the glorious Gospel of Christ. The Lords secret is onely with them that feare him till faith be reuealed men are shut vp as in a dungeon or prison the Lord speakes peace onely to his people and his Saints The righteousnesse of God is reuealed to the iust man that will liue by faith Flesh and bloud till there be a new birth is not capable of this reuelation men that hate to be reformed haue nothing to doe with Gods Couenant Hence we may see where the fault is when men be so auerse and vnteachable when people haue the meanes and cannot vnderstand to profit and doe good it is onely in their owne hearts lusts
Ephes. 4.13.14 Sixtly he presseth after perfection forgets what 's behinde and lookes to the marke of the high price of his calling labouring to finde out the vertue of Christs death and Resurrection Phil. 3.13.14.15.10 9. Seauenthly hee hath a Plerophory or full assurance of the will of God towards him Col. 4.12 Eightly hee can digest the stronger Doctrines of Religion Heb. 5.14 Ninthly patience hath in him her perfect worke Iames 1.4 Tenthly he sinnes not in word Iames 3.12 Eleuenthly hee keepes the word 1 Iohn 2.5 Twelfthly he is setled in the loue of God and hath not feare but boldnes 1 Ioh. 4.18.17 Euery man Euery true Christian might be made a strong Christian which may serue for great humiliation to such as hauing the meanes haue neglected so great grace or measure of it What knowledge what power of gifts what abundance of faire fruit we might haue had and borne if wee had attended the meanes and seriously laboured to redeeme the time wee might many of vs haue beene Teachers that now need to be Catechised In Iesus Christ. All that supposed perfection that is out of Christ Iesus is not worth seeking after whatsoeuer carnall men propound vnto themselues concerning the worth of their owne proiects yet all in the end will proue vanitie that is not in Christ Iesus And contrariwise all true perfection is in Christ which should so much the more comfort fearefull Christians seeing their perseuerance and the perfecting of grace begunne is in him it is his office to see it performed and it will be accomplished by his power as it is giuen for his merits and it should teach all the faithfull to make much of communion with Christ to keepe their hold and not let goe their confidence to preserue by all meanes tendernesse in an holy intercourse with Christ for if once Christ absent himselfe the worke of grace will stand still Thirdly this shewes how perfection can be attributed to Christians namely as in Christ Iesus the euill of their workes is couered by him and what is good is presented by him to the Father Lastly it should teach vs in all our wants to seeke to Christ in the vse of all meanes appointed by him to giue or confirme grace waiting vpon him with Faith and Prayer Verse 29. Whereunto I also labour and striue according to his working that worketh in me mightily IN this Verse is contayned the seauenth reason to inforce the Exhortation and it is taken from the great paynes and strife of the Apostle and the great successe the Lord was pleased to giue to his paines Whereunto Some reade in whom viz. in which Christ that is by whose assistance and blessing and protection c. But I take it as it is here Whereunto and so it may be referred eyther to the Exhortation in the three and twentieth Verse or to perfection in the Verse before It is sure that the perfection of Ministers labours should be the perfection of their hearers It is not enough to know how to preach Sermons but it must tend not onely to beget men vnto Christ but also to build them vp which is a wonderfull hard worke and few Ministers are well skilled herein and therefore Ministers should much consult with God and the people should pray constantly and earnestly for their Teachers Labour An effectuall Ministery is a painfull Ministery the Lords worke must not be done negligently which may iustifie continuall and daily preaching Quest. But what needes all this preaching Ans. It is exceeding needfull for it is the ordinary meanes to saue mens soules and to beget Faith and in as much as there are daily still to be added to the Church therefore still the meanes is to be vsed besides the secret iudgement of God in the indu●ation of the wicked and leauing them without excuse And as there needes daily food for the body so doth there for the soule and the Lord by his word doth heale the daily infirmities of his people Men thinke it needfull the Exchequer should be open all the yeere that their Law-cases may be determined and more neede it is the Lords spirituall Exchequer should stand open for the daily determining of the Cases of Conscience which arise in the soules of Gods people and we need a daily light for our paths and Lanthorne for our feete What shall I say our very Calling needes direction out of the word and our crosses and temptations cause vs to feele a daily neede of the comforts of the word to be applyed to vs the godly are to be incouraged in well-doing and that continually and wee all neede to be called vpon daily for reformation and preuention of sinne Grace will not hold out without meanes and Knowledge must be encreased and a daily Ministerie is of singular vse to prepare vs for death and weyne vs from the world These and many other be the reasons of daily preaching which should greatly reproue such Ministers as labour not eyther for want of gifts or pluralitie of places or distraction of businesse or for very idlenesse or vnwillingnesse to take paines Woe vnto them for as they prouide euill for peoples soules so they reward euill to their owne soules According to his working that worketh in mee mightily Before I consider particularly of these words I note how feelingly the Apostle speakes of Gods Prouidence and with what affection hee sets out the obseruation he made of it which greatly shames the most of vs that are so excessiuely dull in apprehending and so affectionlesse in the thought of things Now if any would know what should be the reason wee are so dull and the Apostle so tenderly sensible of Gods power and prouidence I may answere that a number of vs are not throughly perswaded of Gods particular prouidence besides hee was excellently acquainted with the word of God and thereby hee saw liuely how euery promise or threatning came into execution there could hardly any thing fall out but hee remembred some Scripture that fore-told or fore-shewed it And no question he knew how vnable the meanes was to worke without Gods blessing he knew what vnfitnesse was in man now wee giue too much to the meanes Further it is certaine that such holy men as hee sought Gods blessing by prayer and therefore now they were affected when they obserued what followed their prayers And besides the Apostle did walke with God in a great measure of sanctitie and holy care in all things to keepe his communion with God whereas wee are estranged by our corruptions and for the most part negligent in a daily walking with GOD. Lastly hee was humble and not conceited of his owne gifts and had consecrated himselfe and deuoted his life to Gods glory and therefore hee was sensible of the glory of God in his working prouidence But the maine particular Doctrine is that in the Ministery of the Gospell there is Gods speciall working for it is Gods worke to
wisdome of God in his word vnfolding the hidden depths of the power of the word of God the very preaching of the Gospell is exceeding effectuall when without affectation men vse their arte to expresse the natiue force and life of the words of the holy Ghost in scripture but the chiefe thing in generall is for vs hence to learne that heresie and error was neuer so vnclothed but it was presented to the world with great colours and probabilities many simple people wonder that Papists or Brownists should be able to say so much for their idolatrie or schisme but we must know that any heretikes that euer were haue brought great probabilities for their heresies as well as they The deuill were wonderfull simple if he should thinke to bewitch men so far as to beleeue with any confidence things that had manifest apparance of falshood that cannot be Thus in generall Now in particular concerning the corrupting or deceiuing of the soules of men wee may consider three things 1. The miserable estate of the soule that is deceiued or beguiled or corrupted 2. How the soule is corrupted 3. The meanes to preuent it For the first looke what the carcase is when it is putrified such is the soule when it is corrupted it is spiritually loath some and wonderfully vnpleasing vnto God and cast out of his sight and the more is the miserie of such soules because to plead that they were deceiued will not serue turne wee may deceiue or be deceiued but God will not be mocked For the second if we aske by whom or how the soule is deceiued or corrupted It is to be answered generally wee must take notice of it to beware the two great deceiuers are the deuill and Antichrist It is true that by the malice of Sathan and frowardnesse of wicked men Gods faithfull seruants are euery where called deceiuers They that most labour to preserue mens soules from corrupting are most charged with seducing but these are so called and are not The most ordinarie deceiuers are 1. carnall friends 2. the profits and pleasures of life 3. euill companie this corrupts like leauen 4. carnall reason 5. sinne 6. but especially corrupt and false teachers Thirdly if we would not be beguilde and deceiued wee must looke to three things 1. we must get a stedfast faith in Iesus Christ plerophorie or full assurance of Gods fauour is a wonderfull preseruatiue against corruption of doctrine or life 2. we must constantly cleaue to the meanes vnto which God hath giuen testimonie by the power of his presence and blessing wee should get vnder the shelter of a powerfull ministerie and this will be a rocke of defence 3. we must preserue vprightnes of life and our care of innocencie in what we know to be required contrariwise so long as we are vnsetled and want assurance especially if we liue not vnder the power of the word we are in continuall danger to be drawne away and so it is with vs too if wee fall vnto the loue of any sinne of knowledge for corruption of life is many times scourged with corruption of doctrine and opinions But if we would haue more abundant caution for our preseruation then I will follow the similitude of beguiling amongst men from whence by comparison we may learne many things for our caution and obseruation Men that would thriue in their estates and would not be beguiled in the world or wronged obserue most an end these rules 1. They will buy such things as are durable not toyes or trifles so should we we should set our hearts vpon eternall things and not minde earthly things which will last but for a short time and when death comes if we trust vpon earthly things wee shall finde our selues deceiued 2. They will know their commodities themselues that they sell or buy so should we both for the sinnes wee would part with and the opinions or duties wee would purchase 3. They will know the persons with whom they deale so should wee try the spirits 4. They will haue all the securitie may be had so should we see all warranted by the scriptures for other securitie we cannot haue put in that is sufficient if the deuill or the world or corrupt teachers tempt and intice vs wee must put them to it to put vs in securitie from the scriptures which because they cannot doe we must wisely reiect them 5. Men that deale for much are glad to seeke the protection of some great men so should we seeke the protection of the great God 6. If men doubt in any thing about their estate they will presently consult with their friends and in difficult cases they will haue opinions of Lawyers too so should we doe if we would haue our states safe wee must propound our doubts one to another especially to our Teachers that they may resolue vs out of the word of God VERS 5. For though I be absent in the flesh yet am I with you in the spirit reioycing and beholding your order and the stedfastnes of your faith in Christ. These words depend vpon the former as the answer of two obiections First they might say How doth he know our estates to which he answers in the first words That though it were true that he were absent in respect of the flesh yet it was also true that he was present in the spirit both in that his affection carried him to a daily thought of them and so to a willingnes vpon all occasions to take notice of their estate and besides as some thinke hee was acquainted with their estate extraordinarily by reuelation of the spirit And thus also he secretly giues them notice to looke to their waies for hee takes notice of all that passed amongst them How carefull should we be in all our courses as well as they For we haue the spirit of God in vs and the people of God round about vs. Heere also Ministers may take notice of their duties their spirits should cleaue to their people and their daily thoughts and cares should runne vpon them they should still obserue them and watch ouer them in the Lord. Ob. 2. But might some one say Is it charitie in the Apostle being thus ab●sent to entertaine surmises and hard thoughts of vs as if wee were falling away c. Now to this he answers that though he wrote this to exhort them and to warne them yet he did greatly reioice to know so much as hee did of their order of life and stedfastnesse of faith Many are so diseased that they thinke if a man reproue them or admonish them that then he hates them altogether and likes nothing in them but the Apostle to preuent that acknowledgeth the praise of their life and faith A holy minde can reioice in the good things of those he warneth or reproueth Your orders Order hath originall in God he is the God of order a all disorder and confusion is of the deuill Order
then when his soule suffers spirituall losses Iobs losses by the Sabaeans was great yet theirs were greater 1. That lost the good seed sowne in their hearts 2. That had those things taken away that sometimes they had in spirituall things 3. That lost their first loue 4. That lost the kingdom of God in losing the meanes of the kingdome 5. That lost what they had wrought 6. That lost the presence of God 7. That lost vprightnes and sinceritie 8. That lost the taste of the powers of the life to come 9. That lost the ioyes of their saluation And lastly much more theirs that lose their crowne 3. We may here see that corrupt opinions may marre all and spoile the soule and make it into a miserable prey to euill men and angels 4. That matters that seeme small things and trifles may spoile the soule bring it into a miserable bondage such as those traditions might seeme to be You This word noteth the persons spoiled and so giues vs occasion to obserue 2. things 1. That we may be in the sheepfold of Christ and yet not be safe You yea you Christians The Diuell can fetch booties euen out of the temple of Christ. 2. When he saith you not yours it shewes that howsoeuer it be true that most an end false teachers seeke their 's not them that is seeke gaine not the soules of the people yet it sometimes fals out that euen the most dangerous and damned seducers may be free from seeking great things for themselues It is not any iustification to the popish Priests nor proofe of the goodnesse of their cause that they can denie their owne preferments and liberty on earth to winne Proselites to their religion There haue alwaies beene some euen in the worst professions of men that haue at least seemed outwardly to care for nothing but the soules of the people Through Philosophy This is the first kinde of corruption heere condemned But is Philosophy naught and heere reiected It is not simply condemned but in some respects namely as it doth not containe it selfe within his bounds or is not to the glory of God or as it is vaine deceit So that vaine deceipt may bee heere added interpretatiuely it explaines the sense But how became philosophy to be vaine deceit It is vaine deceit foure wayes 1. When it propoundeth and teacheth diuellish things as the philosophy of the Pagans did As in their Magickes when they taught the diuers kindes of Southsayings coniurings casting of natiuities and a great part of Iudiciall Astrologie 2. When the placets and opinions of Philosophers that are false are iustified as true As their doctrine of the worlds eternity or the soules mortalitie or the worship of Angels or their Stoicall fate and destinie or their vilde opinions about the chiefe good 3. When the principles of philosophie that in the ordinarie course of nature are in themselues true are abused to denie things propounded in the Gospell aboue nature As those maximes that of nothing nothing is made And that of a priuation to a habit there is no regression and that a Virgin cannot conceiue The first is brought against the creation of God wheras it is true of the second cause only So the second is brought against the resurrection whereas it is true only in the ordinary course of nature 4. When the truest and best things in philosophie are vrged as necessarie to saluation and imposed as meet to beioyned with the Gospell Philosophy may yet be vsed so as shee be content to be a seruant not a mistresse If when Gods word reueales any thing absurd in her that then shee will humble herselfe and acknowledge her blindnesse and bee admonished by diuine light And on the other side men may be corrupted with philosophie and that diuers wayes 1. If men vse any part of philosophy that is diuellish as too many doe 2. If men neglect the study of the Scriptures and spend their time onely in those humane studies 3. When men measure all doctrine by humane reason and philosophicall positions 4. When men depend not vpon God but vpon second causes 5. When men striue to yoake mens consciences with the plausible words of mens wisedome Hence also we may note that false doctrine may be supported with great appearance of wisdome and learning as was the corruption of those false teachers We may not thinke that Papists are fooles and can say nothing for their religion but if the Lord should let vs fall into their hands to trie vs wee must expect from diuers of them great shewes of learning colours of truth Thus of Philosophie After the traditions of men The word Tradition hath been vsed 3. wayes Sometimes to expresse the doctrine of Gods seruants by authority from God deliuered to the Church by liuely voice but afterward committed to Scripture so the doctrine of Christ and the Apostles and of the Patriarches before the Law was first deliuered by tradition Sometimes to signifie such opinions as are in Scripture but not expressed they are there but not spoken therein that is are drawen but by consequence or impliedly Sometimes to expresse such obseruations as were neuer any way written in the word but altogether vnwritten in the Scripture as being deuised meerely by men So it is taken ordinarily and so traditions are to be condemned There is another distinction about traditions and that is this 1. Some things are founded vpon Scripture and did alwaies tend to further godlines and are therefore Apostolicall and to bee obserued as all the doctrines of the word and the publike assemblies of prayer and preaching 2. Some things were founded in Scripture and were sometimes profitable but now are out of all needfull vse and therefore though they be Apostolicall yet they binde not as the tradition of abstaining from things sacrificed to Idols and strangled and bloud 3. Some things haue not foundation in the word yet may further pietie if vsed without superstition and therefore not vnlawfull as the obseruation of the feast of the Natiuitie of Christ and such like 4. Some things haue no foundation in Scripture nor doe at all further piety but are either light or vnnecessarie or repugnant to the word those are simply vnlawfull Traditions were both in the Church of the Iewes and in the Churches of the Gentiles the Iewish traditions were called the traditions of the elders not because they were enioyned them by their Sanadrim or Colledge of Elders but because they were brought in by their fathers after the captiuity the most of them after the rising of the sect of the Pharisies For among them was that distinction of the Law written and the law by word of mouth this Law by word of mouth is the Cabalisticall Theologie a Diuinity so greatly in request amongst the Pharisies but how well our Sauiour Christ liked those traditions may appeare
Matth. 15. The traditions in the Churches of the Gentiles may bee considered two waies 1. As they were in the times of the primitiue Church 2. As they were in the times after vnder Antichrist In the primitiue Church they had by degrees one after another a great number of traditions such as these To stand and pray euery Sabboth from Easter to Whitsontide The Signe of the Crosse to pray towards the East the annointing of the baptized with oyle the canonicall houres Lent and diuers kindes of fasts the mixing of water with wine the addition of diuers orders in the Church as Canons Exorcistes Ostiaries Holy-dayes to sing Halleluiah at Easter but not in Lent and such like Now if any aske what we are to thinke of those and the like traditions then in vse I answer 1. That the Church had power to appoint traditions in indifferent rites so that the rules of the Apostles for indifferent things were obserued as that they were not offensiue nor against order or decency or edification As to appoint the time and place of publike praier to set downe the forme of it to tell how often the Sacraments should bee administred c. 2. We must vnderstand that the word Traditions vsed by the Fathers did not alwaies signifie these and such like things deuised by men but sometimes they did meane thereby such things as were warranted by Scripture though not expressely As the baptizing of Infants the obseruation of the Sabboth c. 3. There were some Traditions in some Churches in the first hundred of yeere that were directly impious as the Inuocation of Saints and Images 4. Someother things were then vsed that were not euery way impious in their owne nature and yet not greatly iustifiable in their vse and such were diuers of the aforenamed obseruations 5. That diuers things at the first brought into the Church with good intents and to good purpose afterwards grew into abuse as for example In the Primitiue order of Mounks 6. The worser traditions were brought in by false teachers and too pertinaciously obserued by the people the Fathers bewailing it and sometimes complaining of it 7. The Fathers themselues in some things shewed leuity and vnconstancy of iudgement sometimes to please the people approouing things and againe sometimes standing vpon the sole perfection of the Scriptures Lastly it cannot well bee denied but that the libertie taken in the primitiue times to bring in traditions opened a doore to Antichrist Now concerning the traditions in Popery vnder Antichrist their doctrine is abhominable for they say that the word of God is either written or vnwritten and they say their vnwritten verities are necessary as well as Scripture yea that they are of equall authority with Scripture And those traditions they would thus exalt are for number many for nature childish vnprofitable impious and idolatrous But that we may be fully settled against their impious doctrine of traditions we may profitably record in our memories these Scriptures Deut. 12.32 Reu. 22.18 Matth. 15. 1. Pet. 1.18 Galat. 1.9 Isay 8.20 2. Tim. 3.16 Ier. 19.5 Col. 1.28 Luke 16.29 1. Cor. 1.5.6.7 Ob. But our Sauiour told his disciples I haue many things to say vnto you but yee cannot beare them now but the spirit when hee is come shall lead you into all truth Ergo it seems there are diuers truths of Christ which were not reuealed in Scripture but by the spirit vttered by tradition after Sol. This may be vnderstood of the gifts of the Apostles and of the effects therof and not of doctrine for of doctrine he had said in the chap. before all things that I haue heard of my father I haue made known vnto you 2. If it were vnderstood of doctrine yet he doth not promise to lead them into any new truths but into the old and those Christ had already opened which should be brought to their minde and they made more fully to vnderstand them For so he saith of the Comforter in the 14. chapter he shall teach you all things and bring all things to your remembrance whatsoeuer I haue sayd vnto you 3. Be it he had not reuealed all as yet what did he therfore neuer reueale it why the very text is against it for hee said I haue yet many things to say vnto you therefore he did say them namely after his resurrection 4. Let it bee noted that he saith ye cannot beare them now the things he had to say they could not then beare why should we thinke that they could not then beare these graue traditions as the Annointing and Christening of bels and such like Lastly let them prooue it to vs that those toies are the things Christ promised to reueale and then they say somewhat Ob. But in the 20. of Iohn he saith there were many things which were not written which Iesus did Answ. He saith that the things which are written are to this end written that we might beleeue and beleeuing might haue eternall life so that what is needefull to faith and eternall life is written 2. Hee saith there were other things not written he saith other things not things differing from these other things in number not in substance or nature much lesse contrary things Ob. But the Thessalonians are charged to hold the traditions they had beene taught Sol. The Scriptures were not then all written 2. The Apostle vnderstands not traditions as the Papists doe For in the same place hee calleth the things written in Scripture Traditions as well as those were not yet written To conclude this discourse concerning traditions we must further vnderstand that the traditions in any Church though they be things indifferent in their owne nature become vnlawfull if they be such as be taxed in these eight rules 1 If they be contrary to the rules of the Apostles concerning such things ecclesiastically indifferent 2. If they bee vrged and vsed with superstition 3. Or as any parts of Gods worship 4. Or with opinion of merit 5. Or as necessary to saluation 6. Or if they bee equalled with the Law of God or the weighty things of the Law neglected and those more vrged 7. If they be light and childish Lastly if by their multitude they darken and obscure the glory of Christ in his ordinances Thus of the second thing The third thing from which hee doth dehort is the Rudiments of the world The Rudiments of the world By the Rudiments of the world hee meaneth the lawes of Moses especially concerning meats washings holidaies garments and such like ceremoniall obseruations Those lawes were called Rudiments or Elements as some thinke because the Iewes and false Apostles held them as needefull as the foure elements of the world or else because in their first Institution they did signifie the most choice and fundamentall principles of the Gospell that were necessary for all to know that would be
point may be more clearely vnderstood I consider of this compleatnesse more exactly both in what it is and what it ought to be for they may be said to be compleat in that they ought to labour after it The faithfull are compleat or impleat rather either comparatiuely or positiuely comparatiuely in this sense because they are in the absolutest estate that any kinde of people are in and farre more happie then all the world beside for the earth is cursed to all other men the felicitie they would desire cannot be had or if it were yet the wrath of God for their sinnes lyeth like fire in the mids of all and who knowes when it will burne how can there be any compleatnesse in their estate seeing the vnregenerate heart cannot be filled and the things they can get serue but for the flesh and bodily life thus they are comparatiuely compleat Now positiuely they are so 4. waies 1. In respect of the fulnes of the body mystical it is a glorious well cōpacted cōpleat bodie and so the Church is the fullnes of Christ. 2. In respect of iustification and that 2. waies for euery child of God hath whole Christ giuen him and his whole righteousnesse imputed and besides he hath forgiuenesse of all sorts of sinnes originall actuall of infirmitie or presumption c. 3. In respect of sanctification 4. In respect of glorification Now for glory we must vnderstand that though they are not yet in heauen yet they haue it in respect of promise and in hope and in the meanes and in the beginning of it and for sanctification and grace it must be considered according to the threefold degrees of it 1. in inchoation 2. in ripe age 3. in perfect consummation in heauen Now for the first euen the weakest babes and infants in grace are compleat 4. waies 1. They haue compleat and perfect promises euen of compleatnes it selfe 2. They are compleat in respect of the meanes of sanctification for first they haue full libertie to vse them as they haue oportunitie and they may make their best profit of them besides the respect of the efficacie of the meanes their God is the holy one of Israel Christ is the head in all fullnes of vertue c. they may pray for what they will and be heard and the word is the arme and power of God to saluation 3. They are compleat in respect of the parts sanctified they haue grace in euery part though not in euery degree 4. They are compleat in their desire and respect to all Gods commandements Thus of weake Christians and their compleatnesse Now the strong Christians compleatnesse may be considered negatiuely and so they are not compleat that are not full of knowledge that cannot beare hard sayings that hath not a plerophorie of assurance that is not filled with contentation that cannot liue by faith or is not filled with the fruits of righteousnesse The last thing is the limitation in him In him Nothing will be had by Christ till we be in Christ 1. Ioh. 5.20 Things are said to be in Christ 1. in respect of creation all things were created in him 2. In respect of preseruation all things consist in him 3. In respect of the mysticall vnion and so the Church only is in him In him we are elected in him the righteousnes of God is reuealed from heauen in him all promises are yea and amen in him we are made rich in him Iewes and Gentiles are made one in him the building is coupled together and growes in him we haue life Now men may know whether they be in Christ if they examine themselues whether they bee new creatures or no and whether they haue the spirit of Christ and whether they loue the appearing of Christ whether the world hate them whether they loue the brethren and whether they walke in the light in all desire of holy conuersation Who is the head of all principalitie and power It is true that Magistrates be in great place on earth and haue principalitie and power and may be so called iustly but that is not meant here These principalities and powers are the Angells and so these words conteine the fourth reason Christ is the head of Angells therefore whatsoeuer they haue they haue it from Christ and therefore what should we doe to goe to Angells to help vs when Christ the head is giuen to be our Mediator The Angells are diuersly called in Scripture they are called spirits to expresse their nature and angells to expresse their office as messengers sent of God they are called sonnes of God they are called Cherubyms from the forme they appeared viz. like youthes they are called Seraphims for their order and fiercenesse in the execution of Gods anger they be called starres of the morning from their brightnes of nature they are called watchmen they are in heauen as a watch-tower and they keep the world they are called flaming fire because God vseth their help to destroy the wicked here they be called principalities and powers which are words of greatest excellencie amongst men and are vsed here to shadow out the glory of those heauenly creatures Angells are most spirituall creatures without bodies they mooue like the winde vnresistably easily without molestation and in an vnperceiuable time and for their number I am not of their fond opinion that thinke they are ment in the parable of the 99. sheep as if they were so infinite beyond the number of mankind yet without question their number is exceeding great and almost incomprehensible and cannot be knowne of vs in this world They wonderfully excell in knowledge and that naturall and supernaturall and experimentall But to speake a little more expresly I consider in the Angels 1. What they are in themselues here called principallities and powers 2. What they are in relation to Christ who is said here to bee their head 3. What they be in reference to the body of Christ. The Angels in themselues are principalities for their excellencie of nature and estate They are called powers for their wonderfull force they haue ouer other creatures at Gods appointment The words do not import any hierarchie among the Angels for howsoeuer we are not to thinke there is any Ataxie among those glorious creatures so it hath been bold presumption in those either Iewes or Scholemen or Papists that haue trauelled in it to describe a fantasticall number of orders amongst them For their excellencie of nature as they are here called principalities so else where they are called starres of the morning sonnes of God yea Gods And for their power it is exceeding great ouer the creatures as when an Angell could destroy all the first borne of Egypt and to ouerthrow so many thousand in Senacharibs armie an Angell set Peter out of prison an Angell caried
with great pompe thus did Christ to the wicked spirits either vpon the crosse or in his resurrection Quest. But might some one say what appearance was there of any victorie when Christ suffred Answ. Great euery way for if wee obserue it in euery branch of the processe there is euident signes of victorie For doe they attach him why first the officers are smitten to the ground with a very word and Iudas the chiefe leader is made to goe and hang himself the eare of Malchus was miraculously cured and they are suffred to do no iote more then will fulfill the scriptures Will they arraigne him in the Consistorie why there sits a high Priest that was made whether he would or no to prophesie of Christs death for the people and Christ casts a spirit of giddinesse vpon the witnesses so as their testimonies could not agree yea he there foretells them of his most glorious and terrible second comming in the clouds of heauen and then miraculous recouers Peter a lapsed sinner Will they arraigne in the common hall why there he ouercomes by patience no indignities could stirre him and the Iudges wife from a dreame giues warning that he was a iust man yea the Iudge himselfe was compelled to pronounce him innocent Will they haue him to the crosse there are wonders of victorie a theefe without meanes saued the vaile of the Temple rent signes in heauen and earth and a title of victorie superscribed by his very aduersaries This is the King of the Iewes besides his incorruption in the graue and glorious resurrection and visible ascension to heauen All this being considered where is the ignominie of the crosse seeing the deuills erected a crosse for themselues when they plotted to crucifie Christ And why should we be afraid of suffrings seeing the crosse is Christs triumph and let vs resolue also to ouercome by suffrings T is an excellent and loftie praise to ouercome by suffring Lastly let vs neuer iudge of Christ or Christians by their outward shew great things may be done in the kingdom of Christ which are not discerned by carnall reason Here we see a great adoe trophies triumphs yet the world tooke no notice of it so is there incomparable glory euen in this world in the soules and liues of Christians which the blinde multitude neuer takes notice of And thus much of the second interpretation The third and last interpretation is of those that limit not the time of this victorie to the crosse but consider it generally and in steed of the words vpon the same crosse read in himselfe and thus doe the most Interpreters new and old read it And so this victorie is vnderstood not so much of what Christ did attaine in his person as what he doth in vs by the conuersion of sinners by the Gospell he daily spoyles principalities and powers and triumphs ouer them c. and so these words are a consequent of the putting out of the hand-writing mentioned in the former verse Foure things are in these words to be considered who whom what and by what meanes For the first it is the second Adam that vndertakes this battel he that is God and man he of whom the prophecies ranne he that by a voice from heauen at his baptisme was acknowledged the only champion t was he that sent the challenge by his fore-runner Iohn Baptist he it is that foyled Sathan in many Monomachies this is he that now comes forth in the Gospell in the seuerall ages of the Church to spoyle these principalities and powers Now for the second the spoyled are called principalities and powers Principalities and Powers These termes are giuen to the good Angells Eph. 3.10 and to great Magistrates and Princes on earth Eph. 1.23 In effect they are giuen to Christ Esay 9.6.7 but vsually they are restrained to euill angells and so they are called either considering them as they were before their fall or as it is vsually conceiued it notes their estate euen since their fall The two words note two things in the euill Angells Excellencie and Abilitie Excellencie so they are principalities Abilitie so they are powers Their excellencie is two waies to be considered 1. in themselues 2. their soueraigntie ouer the world In themselues and their owne nature euer since their horrible fall they are creatures of wonderfull knowledge swiftnes discerning and such like And in respect of the vnregenerate world they haue a principalitie hence called worldly rulers the prince of this world yea and the god of this world We may obserue here in the holy Ghost a wonderfull patterne of candor he praiseth what is praise-worthy euen in his enemies and it may wonderfully comfort Gods children in their acceptation with God for if God can yeeld these titles and acknowledge that is yet good in the very deuills sure then it cannot be he should not like what he findes good in his owne Saints though they haue many wants and sins seeing they sinne not of malicious wickednes as the deuills doe As they are called principalities so for their abilitie and force of working they are called powers The wonderfull power the deuills haue may be considered either in the world or in the Church In the first race of men before the floud how soone had they drawne away Cains race into apostacie and not long after Sethes till they had chased the light of sinceritie within the walles of one house and not all sound there neither After the floud the world is no sooner filled againe but together with the building of Babel a most dreadfull confusion was wrought by the deuills euen the beginning of a generall falling away into gentilisme and idolatrie which will neuer be vtterly recouered againe while the world stands all the families making apostacie in the beginning of the Babilonish Monarchie and such an apostacie as they continued in for many hundred yeeres in the generalitie of them so as there was only a little light left in the race of Sem. Now leauing the whole world lying vnder this powerfull wickednesse come to Abraham a brand taken out of the fire of the Chaldeans in whom the light shined with great glory see the power of these wicked spirits ouer his race the Ismalites went quickly of to gentilisme then the Edomits were easily gained after then in Egypt the light that did remaine was almost put out the bondage of the Isralites being as great in soule as it was in bodie In Moses time the light was diffused in that people all abroad againe and a kingdom of Priests was raised vp to God this light held with various increases and decreases till the captiuitie after which time it waxed dimmer and dimmer till Christ the day-starre arose and filled heauen and earth with the brightnes of his comming After in the very first hundreds of yeares these cursed spirits not only persecuted religion by incredible tyrannie but infected it with
heart with all willingnes as doing therein seruice to GOD and not to men only Knowing infallibly that if men would not reward you for your paines and faithfulnes yet GOD will who will not vse you as seruants but prouide for you as sons and heires to him For in all this labor GOD accounts you as the seruants of Christ and will reward all as if all had bin done to him And contrariwise he that doth wrong be he Master or Seruant shall receiue of the LORD for the wrong that he hath done for GOD is no accepter of persons CERTAINE OF THE choisest and chiefest points handled in the third CHAPTER A Threefold resurrection fol. 2. How a man may know whether he be risen with Christ. 3. T is as easie to reuiue a dead man as perswade a carnall man fol. 4. Eight sorts of things that are aboue fol. 4. A fourefold presence of Christ. 6. Of Christs sitting at the right hand of the Father 6. Three benefits come by tender affections 8. Three sorts of things called things on earth 8. Eight reasons in generall to disswade from affecting earthly things 9. Solomons reasons against the loue of earthly things 10.11 Christs reasons 12. The faithfull are dead three waies 13. The life of Christians is hid in diuers respects 14. Who may say Christ is their life 16. Of the appearing of Christ. 16. Six appearings of Christ. 16. Threefold iudgement 16. Who shall iudge who shall be iudged where the iudgment shall be and when 17. The signes of the second comming of Christ. 18. The forme of the last iudgment the preparation of the Iudge the citation resurrection collection and separation of the iudged the law and euidence by which men shall be iudged and the sentence and the fiue consequents of the iudgment with the vses fol. 19. to 22. What we must doe that we might be assured of the glory of heauen 26. How long we must continue our sorrowes in mortification 29. Why sinnes are called members 30. Reasons against whoredome 31. Seauen kinds of vncleannesse besides whoredome 33. Remedies against vncleannesse 34. The causes and occasions of lust 35. What couetousnes is and the effects of it fol. 36.37 the signes of it 38. remedies against it 39. Gods wrath vpon vncleane persons 41. Iustice in God considered foure waies 42. The fearefulnes of Gods wrath set out 43. The signes of Gods wrath the meanes to pacifie Gods anger and how wee may know that God is pacified 44.45.46 The markes of a child of disobedience 47. Difference between Gods anger towards the godly and the wicked 48. The profit of remembring our naturall miserie 49. A fourefold life fol. 51. How we may know when sinne is aliue and when it is dead 51. A man neuer truly repents till be endeuour to be rid of all sinne and motiues 53. Anger indifferent laudable vitious 54. Degrees of vicious anger reasons and remedies against it 55.56 Malice and the degrees and kindes of it 57. Reasons and remedies against it 57.58 Of blasphemie the kindes of it and reasons against it 59.60 Against filthy speaking 61. Of lying reasons against it and questions answered 61.62 What the old man signifieth and why corruption is called the man and why the old man 63.64 and what the workes of the old man are the old man is put off six waies 64. The necessitie of the new birth 66. Of the renouation of the creature in foure things and of the obedience in three things 66. Rules for attaining of true knowledge 67. Of the image of God in Christ in the Angells and in man 68. with their difference at large 68.69 How Christ is all in all and the comfort of it 72.73 The kindes and signes of election 74. How many waies the elect are holy 75. Fiue properties of Gods loue 76. The kindes of mercie 77. Motiues to mercie Rules how to shew mercie 78. True Christian curtesie 79 What humblenes of minde is negatiuely and affirmatiuely 80. Motiues to humblenes of minde and of diuers sorts of pride 80.81 Of Christian meeknes 81. Of Long-suffering 81.82 Of forbearance the kindes and motiues and rules for the practise of it 82.83 Of forgiuing diuers questions 84. To forgiue as Christ forgiues hath fiue things in it 85. How loue is aboue all virtues 85. The sorts and signes of loue 86. Loue is the bond of perfection three waies 87. Of Peace it is threefold 87. How it is of God and when it rules and what we must doe to get it 88. What is required in performing thankefulnes to men and what in receiuing it 90. The Scripture is the word of Christ in foure respects 92. Men sinne against the word six waies 92. Women must seeke knowledge as well as men 94. The vse of Scripture in our houses 94. Of the wise vse of the word 95. What we must doe that the word may dwell plenteously in vs and how we may know it doth 98. Who may admonish or be admonished 99. Rules to be obserued in admonition 100. What meant by Psalmes hymnes and spirituall songs and rules in singing of Psalms 101. Vnto the goodnes of the action the goodnes of the end is required 102. Things are done in the name of Christ foure waies 103. Sixe reasons why Gods children should be more carefull of their words and deeds then others 104. Of giuing thanks to God 105. Of the gouernment of a familie the authoritie antiquitie and vtilitie of it 107.108 Foure things in a holy liuing together in a familie 108. Sixe things in houshold pietie 108. Fiue things required in the labours of a familie 109. The dutie of Wiues 110.111.112.113 Why subiection is rather named in the Wiues dutie 111. Fiue things in the Wiues subiection 111. Sixe waies Wiues must honor their Husbands 111. Foure waies Wiues shame their Husbands 112. Fine waies Wiues shew faithfulnes 112. Sixe waies Wiues shew feare 112. Sixe rules for Wiues workes 112.113 What Wiues are not bound to 113. What they must doe that they may performe subiection 113. The Wiues comelinesse in three things 114. Husbands shew their loue foure waies 116. Sixe waies Husbands honor their Wiues 116. Seauen reasons why men must loue their Wiues 117. Husbands obiections answered 117. Causes why men loue not their Wiues 117. Of bitter Husbands 118. Foure rules for curing this bitternes 118. The dutie of children 121. Childrens obiections answered 122. Reasons of their obedience 123. The dutie of Parents 124.125 How Parents prouoke their Children 126. Seruants dutie 128 129.130. c Fiue faults in Seruants 128. Foure things in the manner of Seruants obedience 129. Sixe waies to know singlenes of heart 132. Twelue signes of a single hearted man 133. Eight signes of a single hearted Seruant 133. Of the feare of God in seruants 134. What Masters must doe to get the feare of God into their Seruants 134. Eight obiections of Seruants answered 135. CHAPTER III. VERSE I. If ye then be risen with Christ seeke
beare the image of his true humane nature and his very body is present sacramentallie he is present by the imputation of righteousnesse and by mysticall vnion The right hand of God hath diuerse signification in scripture sometimes it signifieth the power and help of God Sometimes the place of eternall rest in heauen Sometimes it notes the maiesty and authority and soueraignty of God To sit signifieth to abide or dwell and to gouerne Here to sit at Gods right hand comprehends three things First an exceeding glory aboue all creatures euen the very Angels Secondly full power of gouernment Thirdly an equality in maiesty and soueraignty euen with God the father in his person Ob. But Stephen saith he saw him standing at Gods right hand Sol. Diuerse gestures for our capacity are attributed for diuerse ends First he stands to shew his watchfull eagernes and readinesse to take notice of wrongs to his members to come to their succors Secondly He sits to note maiesty and soueraignty Ob. But to sit at Gods right hand seems to import the reall communication of diuine attributes to the humane nature so as in his very body he is euery where c. Sol. It doth not Christs human nature is here reckoned vnder the name of things aboue And besides in the Epistle to the Ephesians the Apostle saith expresly he sits at Gods right hand in heauenly places The vse of Christs sitting at Gods right hand follow And first it may be a notable terror to wicked men if they doe but consider that he whom they daily pierce by their sinnes and dispise by contemning his ordinances by which he would rule them is exalted to such glory that he hath all power to subdue his enemies vnder his feet but sure it is if they will not now feare and repent the time shall come when all they that said this man shall not rule ouer vs shall see him sitting at the right hand of the power of God and comming in the clouds to render vengeance on all those his aduersaries that would not obey his Gospell but striue to breake his yoake and cast his cords from them Secondly it may serue for singular comfort to all God seruants For from his session at Gods right hand flow vnto them many singular blessings as the places of Scripture quoted in the margent will shew First the casting out of all accusations of sathan Secondly the filling of the Church with all needfull fulnesse of grace and blessings Thirdly the seruice of Angells ministring to the heires of saluation Fourthly speed in all suits Fiftly the prouiding of a place for vs Sixtly Intercession Seuenthly power to subdue our enemies As the consideration of the seuerall places of scipture alleadged will manifestly shew Yea his exaltation may be our comfort because in a sort we sit together with him not only because this honor is done to our nature in his flesh but also because by our mysticall vnion it is done to our head and moreouer he doth in part communicate this honor to vs for as Christ is at the right hand of the father so is the Church at the right hand of Christ Finally in the second comming of Christ this glory shall be more fully and openly communicated when all the faithull shall be set on his right hand to heare that most gratious sentence Come ye blessed of my father inherit the kingdome prepared for you before the foundations of the world Thirdly the session of Christ at Gods right hand may teach vs first to mind a spirituall worship seeing he hath taken his body out of the way Secondly to goe boldly to the throne of grace to seeke helpe in time of need seeing we haue so sure a friend to procure both audience acceptance and successe thirdly to waite with patience vnder all sorts of wrongs for it is sure that he that shall come will come in his due time and will not tarry and then he will make all his enemies to be his foot stool● Lastly the Apostle here vseth the consideration of this doctrine as a motiue to stir vs vp to mind heauenly things And surely if we doe seriouslie waigh it it should continuallie draw vp our thoughts to thinke of heauen whither so louing and so glorious a Sauiour is gone before Yea it should doe vs good to look vp towards these visible heauens remembring that one day we shall be carried to that blessed place of rest and holy ioyes that is aboue them euen to the heauen of heauens to raigne with Christ for euermore And thus of the proposition Vers. 2. Set your affections on things which are aboue and not on things which are on the earth The exhortation in the former verse propounded is in this verse illustrated and expounded first by repetition secondly by the contrary The repetition is in these words Set your affections on things which are aboue The contrary from which he doth dehort is in these words and not on things which are on earth Repetitions in scripture are not without their vse For thereby the holy ghost vsually imports our slownesse and dulnesse of capacity in conceiuing and backwardnesse in practise and besides thereby inforceth both the necessity and the excellency of the matter so repeated And surely all three may be applied to this repetition For the contemplation and desire after heauenly things is a most gratious ornament to a religious life and without some measure of holy affections it is vnpossible to get rid of the power of sinne or to practise with any successe or acceptation the duty of a renued life and if in any thing we are backward or wanting or decaying or languishing it is in this rule here giuen by the Apostle Set your affections The originall word varieth in signification Sometimes it is rendered to studie and it is out of question our dutie to study and contemplate of heauenly things Sometimes it signifieth to trie by tasting and it is sure that if carnall people had but once tasted of the sweetnesse of godlinesse and religious duties they would not so securely neglect the prouision for eternity but especially they would see that they haue spoken euill of what they knew not Sometimes it is translated to be wise about a thing and certainly a Christian should be wise in the matters of his religion and profession and shew it by forecast and diligence to compasse what may be gotten of this true treasure and by serpentine discretion in the manner and circumstances of weldoing and by staydnesse in a Christian course voyd of passion rash zeale and fickle inconstancie growing more and more skilfull and cunning in the soundnesse of knowledge how with more power and spirituall aduantage to practise euery duty or exercise euery grace Sometimes it signifieth to sauour of a thing and
dote on it with his heart Thirdly the nature of couetousnesse it will neuer be satisfied and how should it for the desire of the couetous is not naturall but against nature Naturall desires are finite but vnnaturall desires find no end And therefore cannot be filled with the finite things of the world Besides earthly things are vaine and empty Now the vessell that is only full of wind is empty still for all that So is the mind of the couetous His heart will be no more filled or satisfied with gold then his body with wind Hereupon it is that a couetous man is alwaies poore and hath not what he hath But hath his wealth as the prisoner hath his fetters viz. to inthrall him Fourthly the nature promise and prouidence of God He is a heauenly father is he a father why then do we doubt of his willingnesse to helpe vs and is he a heauenly father why then doe we question his all sufficiency to prouide what we need besides hath he giuen vs life and and will he not giue vs food to preserue life doth he daily prouide for thousand thousands of foules that are base creatures and will he not prouide for man whom he created after his owne image and made him Lord of all creatures doth he cloath the grasse of the field which is to day and to morrow is cut downe and will he not cloath man oh the weaknesse of our faith Besides is not the Lord engaged by promise neuer to leaue vs nor forsake vs Fiftly the condition of the couetous All his care cannot adde a cubit to his stature And besides the poore and the vsurer meet together in many things One God made them both One sunne lights them both One heauen couers them both and one graue of earth shall hold them both Sixtly the gaine of godlinesse it is bet●er thrist to couet after godlinesse For it hath the promises of this life and the life to come And who can count the gaine of godlinesse seeing God is the godly mans portion and his exceeding great reward The third preseruatiue is the daily practise of piety If we would seeke the kingdome of God first both in the first part of our life and in the first part of euery day of our life as well in our houses as in Gods house these religious duties constantly performed would be a great and continuall helpe against worldly cares they would cleanse our hearts of them and daily prepare our hearts against them But how can it be otherwise with a man then it is they must neeeds liue and die the drudges of the world seeing they haue no more care of holy duties at home or abroad they liue like swine without all care of any thing but rooting in the earth The fourth preseruatiue is the due preparation for Christs second comming For when our sauiour Christ had dehorted men from the cares of this life he adioines this exhortation let your loines be girded about and your lights burning and ye your selues like vnto them that waite for their master when he will returne from the wedding that when he commeth and knocketh they may open vnto him immediately blessed are those seruants whom the Lord when he commeth shall find waking c. One great reason why couetous men doe so securely continue in the immoderate cares for this world is because they do so little think of death and iudgement Whereas on the other side Christians doe with some ease withdraw their hearts from the world when they haue inured themselues to die daily by the constant remembrance of their latter end and by holding fast the euidence of faith and hope waiting when Christ will call for them The fift preseruatiue is to shunne the meanes and occasions of couetousnes And to this end it is good not to conuerse much with couetous persons or to get our selues liberty to conceiue the hope of any long prosperity and rest in the world and generally we should labour to obserue our owne hearts and other mens liues and what we find to be a meanes to kindle or inflame couetous desires that we should auoide and betimes set against it or mortifie it And thus farre of couetousnesse and thus also of the catalogue of sinnes from which he doth disswade The reasons follow Ver. 6. For the which things sake the wrath of God commeth on the the children of disobedience Ver. 7. Wherein ye also walked once when he liued in them These words containe two reasons to enforce the exhortation in the former verse Th one is taken from the euill effects of the former sinnes ver 6. The other is taken from their owne experience while they liued in the estate of corruption ver 7. in laying downe the reason from the effect two things are to be noted First what sinne brings viz. the wrath of God Secondly vpon whom viz. vpon the children of disobedience Before I come to intreat of the wrath of God a part I consider of it as it stands in coherence with the former reason For in these words we are assured that man liuing and continuing in filthinesse and couetousnesse shall not escape Gods wrath For they incurre both his hatred and his plagues both which are signified by the word wrath And if any aske what plagues filthy persons and couetous persons shall feele I answer briefly and distinctly that neither of them shall scape Gods wrath as the Scriptures plentifully shew The filthy person brings vpon himselfe Gods curse temporall corporall spirituall and eternall temporall for whoredome and any kinde of vncleanenesse brings vpon men many temporall plagues in their estate the fire of Gods iudgements consuming many times their whole increase as hath beene shewed before Corporall for God many times meetes with the sinnes of the bodie by iudgements vpon the body so that many filthie persons after they haue consumed their flesh and their body by loathsome diseases which follow this sinne in the end say with the foolish young man Oh how haue I hated instruction and despised correction now I am brought almost into all euill in the middest of the assembly Spirituall for vncleanenesse breeds in many a reprobate sence and finall impenitency Many also for their filthinesse are pursued with secret and fearefull terrours of conscience and sometimes frensie and desperate perturbations Eternall for the adulterer destroyes his owne soule and is shut out of the Kingdome of Heauen As hath beene also before declared Neither let the couetous person thinke he shall speed any better For God hates him wonderfully and therefore the Prophet Ezechiel sayth that the Lord smites his fists at the couetous which is a borrowed phrase to expresse most bitter and sharpe threatnings Now least the people should obiect that those were but great words the Lord would not do so they would deale well enough with the Lord. He preuenteth it and sayth can thy heart endure or can
securly sinne and wallowe in all filthy abhominations they shunne Gods house for the most part and liue without any conscionable subiection to any ministery Such was the prodigall sonne and such are our common swearers drunkards and vncleane persons nay they goe further for they speake euill of their fathers house and slander their owne mothers sons Now the other sort liue in their fathers they come to heare and receiue the sacraments they are there at bed and bord but yet they will doe what they list They will not bee perswaded by the word spirit or seruants of God And so they are children of vnperswadablenesse they will not beleeue their fathers threatnings or promises and so they are children of incredulity they will not conforme themselues to their fathers will and so are called children of disobedience Now the estate of both these sorts of disobedient children is that the fearefull wrath of God is vpon them no father can so plague and cast off a wicked sonne as they are sure to be plagued and cast off of God As they are children of disobedience by their owne stubbornesse so are they children of wrath by Gods iustice And if they continue thus they may proue children of perdition Qu. But how may the children of disobedience be knowen Ans. We may gather signes either from the consideration of these words or from other scriptures From these words two waies first he is a child of disobedience that is led and ruled and hath all his thoughts and affections and his actions as it were framed and begotten and nursed vp by the corruption of his nature arising from the disobedience of the first man or by the temptations of sathan the Prince of all darknesse and disobedience It is one thing to sinne by infirmity to fall by occasion into a sinne and another thing to be led and ruled and to frame ones life and imploiment after the rules and proiects that are hatched by the flesh or sathan To be a child to sinne that is to be ruled and mastred and led by it to be as it were at the command of lust and corruption that is not in a child of God standing in vprightnesse Secondly the word here rendred disobedience imports vnteachablenesse such a disobedience as is wilfull when a man sinnes and will sinne and will not be perswaded either by Gods words or Gods spirit or Gods people that would aduise or admonish him To be of an incurable or inteachable disposition is a ranke signe of a child of disobedience Further if we marke the coherence in the second Chapter of the Epistle to the Ephesians v. 2. compared with the first we may easily discerne that a child of disobedience is dead in trespasses and sinnes His soule can he at rest though he be guilty of neuer so many sinnes Cast a mountaine on a dead man and he will not complaine or aile any thing and sure it is a notable signe of a child of disobedience to be guilty of a multitude of sinnes and yet to be sencelesse vnder them to be able to goe from day to day and week to weeke and month to month and neuer to aile any thing for any sound remorse he finds for his sinne Especially when men are at that passe that the Prophet Ieremie complained of that though God strike them yet they are not grieued yea though the Lord consume them they refuse to receiue correction and make their faces harder then a rocke refusing to returne Qu. But may not the wrath of God come vpon his owne children Is God neuer angry with his owne seruants Ans. God may be angry with his owne people For when the Prophet Dauid saith his anger endureth but a moment he implies that God then will be angry And in the 89. Psalme though the Lord saith he will not take away his goodnesse and his mercie yet if they keep not his law he saith expresly he will visit their transgression with the rod and their iniquitie with stripes And thus he is angry with them sometimes for their couetousnesse sometimes for their carelesse worship sometimes for vnworthy receiuing sometimes for their losse of their first loue but generally euery grosse sinne angers God by whomsoeuer it be committed But yet there is great difference between Gods anger towards his owne children and that wrath that commeth vpon the children of disobedience and that principally in three things First wrath comming vpon the faithfull is not eternall but temporary and in this life only For they are deliuered from the wrath to come for there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Iesus they are already past from death to life But so are not wicked men For God is so angry with them in this life that his anger may continue for euer and not be extinguished in their very death And not only so but Gods anger with his own children euen in this life is not for all their daies but only a very short time of their life For as Dauid saith his anger endureth but a moment weeping may endure for a night but ioy commeth in the morning And in another place he saith he will not alwaies chide neither wil he keepe his anger for euer And the Lord witnesseth by the Prophet Esay that he forsaketh but for a small moment he hideth his face in a little wrath but he hath mercy with euerlasting kindnesse When a child of God falleth he is sure he shall rise but it is not so with the vngodly Secondly as Gods wrath differs in the continuance so it differs in the measure it is milder towards his children then it is towards the children of disobedience Which appeares to be so two waies For first Gods anger as it is manifested in outward iudgements vpon his owne people is euer proportioned to their strength he doth not consider what their sinne deserues but what their spirits are able to sustaine He will not suffer them to be tempted aboue that which they are able but will giue issue with the temptation that they may be able to beare it And the Prophet Esay sheweth that the Lord hath great care least by contending ouer long with his people the spirit should faile and the soule which he hath made And the Prophet Dauid shewes that God deales not with his people after their sins nor rewards them after their iniquities But as a father pittieth his children so the Lord pittieth them that feare him But now with the wicked it is much otherwise For the Lord neuer askes what strength they haue to heare it or how they will take it but what sinne they haue committed and how they haue deserued it Besides the affections of Gods children are sweetned with many mercies for though the Lord be angry for their sinne yet if they will seeke God and work righteousnesse they may hold out to beare
so the word of Christ which we professe be not euill spoken of for the blame of our euill life will bee laide vpon the word they will say this is their gadding to Sermons In speciall seeing the word is the word of Christ it should teach First Ministers foure things 1 To teach it with boldnesse not fearing the face of any man 2 To attend vpon the word onely and not medle with ciuill businesse is it meere to leaue the word of Christ to serue tables 3 To humble themselues to walke with God in so good a function Who is sufficient for these things We speake not our owne words or the words of men for then wit reading learning and direction might perfect vs but we speake the words of Christ and therefore our fitnesse and sufficiency to speake to mens consciences comes of the immediate blessing and assistance of Christ. 4 To deliuer the word with all faithfulnesse studying to approoue themselue as the workemen of God seeing they deliuer the word of God Diuiding the word aright holding fast the faithfull word of doctrine not making Marchandise of the word but as of sincerity and as of God in the sight of God speaking in Christ Casting from them the cloake of shame not walking in craftinesse nor handling the word deceitfully but in declaring the truth approuing themselues to euery mans cons●ience in the sight of God Secondly the People to imbrace the word presse to it neuer be ashamed of it nor giue it ouer but receiue it constantly with ioy though it cost them much paines and many crosses and disgraces For this constant receiuing of and cleaning to the word makes them exceeding deare to Christ as deare as his mother and his brethren This is the chusing of the best part this is a signe that they are the Disciples of Christ that they loue Christ indeede that they be in Christ Shee said well that said of Christ blessed was the wombe that bare thee and the breasts that gaue thee sucke But Christ addes that they are more blessed that heare the word of Christ and keepe it The blessed virgin was more happy in that shee conceiued Christ in her heart then that shee bare him in her wombe Thus of the Author of the word The entertainement of the word followes and heere the Apostle designes First the subiect persons You. Secondly the measure Dwell plenteously Thirdly the manner in all wisdome First I consider of the expositions of all the words which are very full of senses and then make vse of altogether In you These words note vnto vs two things First the persons who must intertaine Secondly the place where in you 3.1 in your hearts First for the persons the Apostle would haue vs know that not onely Cleargy men Epaphras and Archippus but lay men of all sorts are tyed to the study of Scriptures I distribute the sorts First Yong men as well as the gray heires for the word helps them to ouercome the Deuill euen all tentations to lust and vngodlinesse whatsoeuer yea by the blessing of God many times it makes them wiser then the antient Secondly distressed men as well as such as liue at ease and prosperity and abound in leasure I say such as haue many cares and troubles distressed either by crosses or by persecutions or by contempt Thirdly Ignorant men as well as learned men such as are simple in respect of naturall parts or vntaught in respect of education are tied aswell as others they may not say they were not brought vp to learning for many times simple and vnlearned People in the very entrance ineo the word when they bring good and holy desires with them get more light of the wonders of Gods Law in few weeks then many great learned men doe in all their daies for sound sauing knowledge Fourthly Women aswell as men are bound hereunto Prou. 31.26 1.8 Yea such women as are full of businesse and cares not good women or wiues but good huswiues also are tied yea not onely to learne the word but to teach it as the places shew Thus of the Persons Secondly in you Notes the place that the word must bee entertained in In you that is in your mindes for contemplation in your hearts for holy desires and affections in your consciences to guide them to a holy manner of giuing sentence c. This is that which is promised to all the faithfull in the couenant of grace Ierem. 31.33 and noted as the signe of the righteous Psalm 37 21. Dwell A Metaphor borrowed from housholde intertainement and notes 3. things vnto vs. 1 That the word should be familiar to vs and known of vs readily and we so acquainted with it as with our brethren or sisters Say vnto wisdom thou art my sister c. Pro. 7.4 To note that as in nature he is accounted a singular Ideote that knowes not his owne brothers or sisters So in religion in Gods account is extreame simplicity and blindnesse not to be familiarly acquainted with the grounds of behauiour and comfort as they are contained in the word 2 That it should be domesticall we must get it into our houses aswell as our Churches and that three waies First when we come home from Gods house we should keepe the word taught a foot by repetitions of it and by talking of it vpon all occasions that the life of the doctrine be not lost Secondlie there is required a familiar teaching and plaine and familiar instructing of seruants distilling of the principles and profitable precepts of the law as they are able God gaue his testimonies to Israell not that the Clergy men should haue them in the Temple and Synagogue but that Parents should haue them in their seuerall dwellings to instruct their children and their childrens children Thirdly the admonitions rebukes counsels and encouragements vsed in the family should be grounded on the word for conscience onely is the fountaine of all right subiection and obedience● the bonds of nature because he came out of thy loines or the bonds of policy because hee is thy hired seruant are too weake to inforce of themselues a constant and cheerfull and iust subiection The true reason why men speed so ill in their seruants and children is because they nurture them with their owne words but distill not into their consciences the words of Christ. Quest But to what end should their neede all this adoe about the Scriptures in our houses what good comes of it Answ If it be not intimated sufficiently before yet plainely vnderstand that the word is to be exercised in our houses First as a refuge against affliction and domesticall crosses both to direct and comfort vs Psalm 119.143 147.165 Secondly as a meanes of instruction to our ignorant children and seruants Thirdly as a meanes of the sanctification of the creatures and our callings 1.
away from me all ye wicked for I seeke Gods statutes 3. We must striue to take away the lettes of the practise of what we do know this Dauid calls the lifting vp of his hands to Gods law 4. Wee must exercise our selues in the word day and night in reading hearing meditating conference propounding of doubts and comparing of places and all times by all waies turning our selues into all formes to gaine knowledge 5. We should by praier beseech God to doe two things for vs first to giue vs the spirit of reuelation secondly to giue vs larger hearts 6. We must be thankfull for what knowledge we do get by the meanes Quest. 2. But how may we know whether the word doe dwell plenteously in vs Ans. It may bee tried and discouered seuen waies 1. By our growth in true humility and meekenesse 2. By the confirmation of the testimony of Iesus in our hearts 3. By the measure of our growth in the loue of God and his people yea and thus we may try our declining in the vigor of knowledge for knowledge had in aboundance may be blasted and grow singularly dull and feeble for as our affections to the meanes and to Gods children is so is the vigor of our knowledge he must not say he knowes God that hates his brother yea and so will it serue for triall to euery one in the degrees of ascending or declination euen in Gods children 4. By the desires and secret muses of our hearts for then we grow in knowledge and haue store of it when we can say as Dauid doth I haue remembred thy name O Lord in the night And as the Church saith the desires of our soules is to thy name and to the remembrance of thee and our spirits within vs seeke after thee 5. By our confidence in it a man that hath gotten a great deale of wealth mony or lands enlargeth his heart to a great confidence in it So a Christian hath gotten a great deale of sauing knowledge when he is able to make it his portion in all estates whatsoeuer befals him it shews men haue but a little of the word in them when euery crosse can dissolue their rest and confidence 6. By our measure of liberty from the power and bondage of speciall corruptions 7. By our abilitie in admonishing they are full of goodnesse and knowledge that are able to admonish Richly 4. In that the word must dwell in vs richly it may serue 1. for reproofe and that two waies First of mens worldlinesse that thinke any other riches would serue the turne but to be rich in God they neuer desire it but all in vaine as the Parable shews Luke 12. Secondly of mens hypocrisie they say are rich when they are not Reuel 3.18 Secondly for instruction therefore let heauen suffer violence a Christian should be no more a weary of his paines in seeking this riches of the word then carnall men are of their worldly profits yea we should pray God so to quicken vs that we may keep his testimonies as we would keepe treasure Lastly in that he ads in all wisedome it should teach vs first to pray to God with Dauid that he would teach vs good iudgement and knowledge and secondly to make conscience as to get vnderstanding of the word so to vse wisdome and discretion both in the bettering of our knowledge and in practise the same Scripture that binds vs to a plentifull vse of the word binds vs to a wise vse of it Thus of the second thing viz. the intertainment we must giue to the word The end or vse the word should be put to followes Teaching and admonishing your selues or one another viz. your fellow members and partakers with you of the same promises and hope These words may be referred either to the generall exhortation before or to the particular charge concerning Psalmes or Himnes afterwards I principally consider them as referred to the generall exhortation before and so I note that though there be many good effects of the word or many vses it should be put to yet Teaching about things not knowne and admonishing about things known and not practised are chiefe Ob. It seemes this place fauours the opinion of such as hould that Christian neighbours met together vpon the Lords day or at other times when there is no publike exercise may labour to edifie themselues by instructing one another out of the word priuately Ans. It is not vnlawfull so to doe and this place doth approue of it so as they keepe themselues within their bounds viz. that the matter taught bee not against Piety the true peace of Sion and that the manner bee plaine and familiar as family instruction should be by keeping a foote publike doctrine by conference propounding of doubts or instructing of the ignorant out of such places as they doe vndoubtedly vnderstand Concerning teaching we must know that God doth teach by his spirit by his rod and by his word so heere but that which wee are heere to note is that the word is to be vsed by euery Christian euen for instruction this is the end why the Law was giuen a wise man hauing gotten knowledge into his head must by his lippes spread it abroad Qu. But whom must wee teach Ans. Principally our selues so as wee consider our owne waies to turne our feet into Gods testimonies yet also we are to teach one another when we spy our brethren to be ignorant so should not onely ministers doe but maisters of families and euery Christian in conuersing with others Admonishing Man is admonished 1. by the rebukes of the Law 2. by the example of Scripture 3. by the spirit of God 4. by the conscience in wicked men many times 5. men are rebuked by their owne wordes 6. by the words of other men especially as admonition is grounded on the wordes of God So heere Concerning admonition I propound foure things 1. who may admonish 2. who are to be admonished 3. how 4. the vses Quest. 1. Who may admonish Ans. Ministers may Parents may yea men ought ●ot to reiect the admonitions of their wiues nay which is more they may not despise the iudgement of their seruants Quest. 2. Who are to be admonished Ans. I consider it 1. Negatiuely not 1. They that sinne against the holy Ghost 2. Hereticall men after once or twice warning Tit. 3.10 3. Not stubborne wilfull scornefull prophane persons Not dogges and swine Math. 7. Not the scorner Prou. 9.8 4. If it be about wrongs and abuses offered to vs eyther by hypocriticall Friends or open enemies it is a godly mans part at some times and in some places to be deafe and dumbe as if they vnderstood not or as men in whose mouthes are no reproofe Psal. 38.14 2 Affirmatiuely in generall euery man Act. 20.31
In particular I instance onely in some sorts of men we must admonish vnruly professors besides ordinary wicked men that appeare not to bee scorners not onely may but ought to be admonished that the light may manifest their workes that they may become sounder in the faith and though this be not amongst men for the time any whit pleasing yet the blessing of goodnesse shall come vpon them whilest they that flatter men in their sinnes and say to the wicked thou art righteous shall be cursed and hated of the multitude Yea none are so wise and godlie but they may be admonished such as are full of goodnesse and knowledge able to admonish others but it should be our most vsuall and principall labour to admonish our owne soules and reproue our waies in Gods sight for it is a speciall way by which a wise man may bee profitable to himselfe Quest 3 What rules are to be obserued in admonition Answ In admonition we must consider First how to performe it Secondly how to receiue it In performing admonition wee must especially looke to two things First that the ground of admonition be out of the word of God beeing the words of Christ not our owne words to this end we should store our selues and hold fast the faithfull word according to doctrine First wee should bee constantly stored with grounds out of the word both for matters of opinion and against the corruptions of mans life and for performance of holy duties that as we haue occasion we may rebuke c. Secondly we must see that the maner of admonition be right Admomonition is to be performed First with Inocency we must not be faulty our selues or if we haue beene we must plainely acknowledge it before we admonish Secondly with discretion which must be shewed in 3. things First that wee bee sure that they haue offended not led to it by suspition of our owne harts or by hearesay or by outward appearance not iudge by the hearing of our eares and sight of our eies Secondly that if we know it to be an offence wee must consider whether it be not of the number of those offences a wise man must hold his glory to passe by Thirdly that it be done seasonably with loue admonishing as a brother Fourthly with meekenesse Fiftly with secresie Sixthly with plainenesse spare no words to satisfie them Seuenthly with compassion and tendernesse Eighthly with perseuerance we must not be wearie and discouraged but accomplish it Ninthly with all authority that neither our selues nor Gods ordinances be despised In receiuing admonition we must looke to foure things wee must receiue admonition First with loue and holy estimation Secondly with all humilitie readily inclined to suspect our selues knowing that we haue cause to say and thinke of our selues as that worthy man did I am more foolish then any man and haue not the vnderstanding of a man in me c. Thirdly with subiection and direct acknowledgement giuing glorie to God Fourthly with reformation else all is in vaine The vses are first to teach vs therefore to stirre vp our selues to performe this mercy in admonishing for a wise man euen Salomons wise man that is a religious wise man may learne wisdome by it Yea it is as a golden earing to the wise and obedient eare And he that rebuketh shall find more fauour at the length then he that flattereth with his tongue Men are said to be pulled out of the fire by admonition Secondly we must take heede of sinning against admonition Now men sinne against admonition three waies First in not performing it this hath very ill effects such as these not admonishing breedes dwelling suspitions suspitions breed a very habit of misinterpretation misinterpretation begets a loathnes to come vnto the light to shew the reasons of dislike this loathnesse begets a very separation in heart seperation begets a decay of Loue to the meanes decay of respect to the meanes begets a decay of zeale and gifts and from hence there is a high way to internall or externall Apostacie or some great iudgements of God Secondly in not performing it aright as when men make their wrath to fall vpon the fatherlesse or digge pits for their friends or when men respect Gods person and make the pretence of Gods cause glory name c. to be the colour for the venting of their owne particular enuy and dislike or when men neuer haue done but grow impudent and reproach men ten times and are not ashamed To conclude when men faile in the manner before described want innocency discretion meekenesse loue c. Thirdly in not receiuing admonition and thus men faile diuersly when men shift excuse denie extenuate c. and yet in heart bee conuinced or when men fall into passion or grudging or traducing afterwards or when men would faine make the admonisher to sinne in the word and lay snares for him that rebukes But there are some are worse then any of these for they are such as none dares declare their way vnto their face Men dare not they are so passionate and haughty but God will lay them in the slimy valley where are many already like them and innumerable more shall come after them Many are the ill effects of resisting admonition It is a signe of a scorner and that men are out of the way it brings temporall iudgements and shame vpon them men may also come to that horrible condition by resisting admonition that they beeing peruerted shall goe about damned of their owne soules Thus of the generall exhortation The speciall exhortation concernes one part of the word and that is the Psalmes Which are heere to be considered 1 In respect of matter Psalmes Hymnes and Spirituall songs 2 In respect of the manner singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord. The matter is heere three waies to be considered First in the ground foundation or authoritie of the Psalmes we vse viz. they must bee the word of Christ that is contained in the Scriptures Secondly in the kindes of Psalmes there are many sort of Psalmes in Scripture The Psalmes of Moses Dauid Salomon and other Prophets but all are heere referred to three heades they are either Psalmes specially so called or Hymnes or Songs great adoe there is among Interpreters to find a difference in these some would haue Psalmes to be the songs of men and Hymnes of Angels some thinke they differ especially in the manner of Musicke Some are sung by voice some plaid vpon instruments but the plausiblest opinion is not to distinguish them by the persons that vse them or by the kinde of musicke but by the matter and so they say Psalmes containe exhortation to manners or holy life Hymnes containe praises to God in the commemoration of his benefits Songs containe doctrine of the
meete to be noted because some mens either ignorance or wilfulnesse and prophanenesse is such that they thinke Ministers should not meddle to tell them how to liue at home or how to carrie themselues in their shops d 2. From coherence that we may liue comfortably and blessedly in our Families and particular callings wee must labour in the daily and constant vse of the meanes to be sincere in the generall The study of the word to frame men to be good men and women in Gods sight would make men good husbands seruants children wiues c. First get to bee a good man and then thou wilt the easier proue a good husband c. Vse First for reproofe of such as cannot abide to see their children or seruants to heare Sermons studie the Scriptures labour for grace c. whereas nothing would more fit them to all pleasing in their carriage at home Secondly for triall if religion and the profession of it make thee not a better wife husband or seruant Suspect thy selfe that all is not right but that thou art an hypocrite repent and amend Thirdly for instruction if men finde such stubburnesse in their wiues or children or seruants the best way is to giue them more libertie to the meanes and to driue them into Gods house to heare the word to call vpon them to reade the Scriptures and to vse such like holy exercises for if this will not mende them nothing in the world will 3 Before I consider of the particular members of a Familie I must entreat generally of the whole and concerning the gouernment of a Family by the rules of Gods word I consider 4. things 1 The authority of it there is a way how to walke in vprightnesse euen in our houses so as God will come to vs if our families bee rightly ordered There is a wisdome or sauing knowledge how to erect and found a holy Family and how to order and establish it there are many administrations as the administration of a Church of a Citie or Common wealth so likewise the administration of a Family yet but one Lord 1 Cor. 12. Yea the gouerning of a house honestly or in holy comlinesse is manifestly expressed 1. Tim. 3.5 2 The antiquitie of it it is the most ancienst of all gouernments yea out of which all the rest sprang the Church was bred and cherished by this gouernment in Families for many hundreds of yeares in the beginning of the world euen till the People came out of Aegypt 3 The vtilitie of it it is called a perfect way and that in three respects First as opposed to hipocrisie it shewes a mans way is not hipocriticall when a man will not onely looke to his feet when he goes into Gods house but is carefull how to walke vprightly in his owne house Secondly as it is the ground and field of practise knowledge is neuer perfect till it bee practised and the must ordinarie way of practise is at home Thirdly as it perfects vs in blessednesse in that it brings Gods promise into execution besides the Family is the Seminarie both of Church and common wealth for it brings foorth and brings vp a seede it preserues the common wealth and as it frames by education a holy seed it preserues the charge 4 What things are necessary and requisite vnto the blessed being of a Family Answ For the erecting and establishing of a blessed Familie 3. things are principally necessarie First a holy comming together Secondly a holy liuing together Thirdly a speciall fitnesse in the head of the Familie For the first it is greatly materiall to the perpetuall well being of a Familie that all heedefulnesse bee obserued in the first erecting of it for as many order the matter they so prouoke God by the first entring vpon the Familie that the Familie trauels euer after vnder the burden of Gods anger or great inconuenience and cannot prosper and thus men fault Either by ventring without a calling or meanes to liue or by ouerleaping Gods ordinance of Contract or by ventring vpon marriage with persons that haue foule diseases as the Leprosie french poxe c. but especially when First more wiues then one are brought in Secondly there is not sufficient distance in bloud but the marriage is incestuous Thirdly another mans wife is brought in either the betrothed wife or the vniustly diuorced wife of another man Fourthly there is not consent of parties but the marriage is forced Fifthly there is not consent of parents Sixthly an infamous or scandalous person is chosen to be a yoake-fellow Seuenthly there is not equality either for religion but a beleeuer is matched with an vnbeleeuer or age or estate or disposition And a like dangerous disorder there is in taking into the Familie of disordered seruants such as are swearers filthy and scandalous persons against which sinnes there lyeth knowne threatnings of God and so with their sins they bring in Gods curse The second thing that makes a family blessed is a holy liuing together and there are foure things that are requisite especially to the good estate of the house First the constant practise of pietie and priuate worship Secondly the right order of imploiment in the mutuall labours of the family Thirdly houshold discipline or reformation Fourthly hospitality or a right respect of strangers For the first the pietie that is to be practised stands of 6. parts First praier and thankesgiuing to God Men must pray euery where our meats and callings must be sanctified by the word and by praier thus Dauid praied morning and euening and at noone so Daniel Yea it is a brand of prophane and abhominable persons they call not vpon God Yea those families are in great danger of his wrath that call not vpon his names Secondly holy conference betwixt the members of the Family as between husband and wife and betweene father and children Thirdly singing of Psalmes Fourthly repetition of Doctrine publikely taught examining it by the Scriptures alleadged as did the Bereans Fifthly fasting vpon extraordinarie occasion is verie plaine Zach. 12.16 Lastly the parents instruction Psalm 78.2.3.4 Deut. 6.6 Quest But what things may be taught in the Family Answ First the common grounds of Gods seruice and worship this is to teach them to feare God Secondly the meaning of the Sacraments Thirdly the Law that is the common grounds of honesty and vice teaching to loue such and such vertues and hate such and such vices Fourthly the vse and consideration of Gods great iudgements therefore God will tell Abraham of the destruction of Sodome because he will make vse of it in his Familie Fifthly the report of Gods great workes of old Sixthly to hope in God acquainting them with their naturall miseries and training them vp by warning them to take heed of the common presumptions of the wicked and by distilling into them
all husbands they must be subiect to their husbands not the wise only but the foolish not the curteous onely but the froward not the rich onely but the poore also Thus of the laying downe of the duty It is amplified first by a reason it is comely secondly by a limitation in the Lord. As is comely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The originall word is rendred three waies 1 As ye ought vt oportet and so it is a reason from Gods institution yee must doe it God indispensably requires it 2 As is meete vt conuenit it is meet especially two waies 1 God hath giuen power ouer all in the family but one and therefore great reason and equity ye be appointed subiect vnto him and it is not meet ye should rule so many if you will not obey one Againe ye are professours and haue giuen your names to Christ and therefore it is meet that you especiallie striue to be good wiues and better then any others least the word be euill spoken of 3 As is comely vt decet so it is heere translated The wiues comelinesse is not in beautie Prou. 11.22 and 31.30 nor in the gorgeousnesse of apparell 1. Pet. 3.3 But a wiues comelinesse is especially 1 In her wisedome Prou. 14.1 and that to be shewed in two things first in her skill to please her husband neither offending him with chiding words nor sullennesse puling or crying which is found to vexe some men more then words Secondlie in her skill to manage the businesses of the house both seasonablie discreetlie and with prouidence 2 In her meekenes it is exceeding comelie where the hid man of the heart is incorrupt with a meek and quiet spirit this is better then al apparel 1. Pet. 3.3.4 Thirdly Heere it is in her subiection for as it is an vncomely thing to see the body aboue the head so is it to see a wife that will rule and not be subiect to her husband And if the wife labour to adorne her selfe thus shee shall appeare comely to God 1 Pet. 3.4 to men in the gate Prou. 31.23.31 to her husband and children Prou. 31.28 Yea shee is an ornament to sincerity and holines it selfe Tit. 2.3 In the Lord 1. These words are expounded diuersly First in the Lord that is in the feare of God as vnto the Lord in obedience to his ordinance for Gods sake because God requires this at your hands In this sense it may serue for two vses First for terror to wicked wiues they must answer it before God he will auenge their not subiecting of themselues he will certainly account with them if they be whorish contentious idle carelesse or wastefull c. 2. It is a great comfort vnto a godly woman her subiection is in the Lord it is in Gods account euen as a sacrifice to him hee takes it as done to himselfe God honours her obedience in the Family as if it were pietie in the Temple and this may the more support them if their husbands bee vnkinde Secondly in the Lord that is so farre as they command in the Lord they must so loue their husbands as they cease not to loue God and so be subiect to them as they leaue not their subiection to God Their couenant with their husband no way inferres the breach of this couenant with God and thus it is principally heere meant Thus of the Wiues dutie The Husbands dutie followes in the 19. verse Husbands loue your Wiues and be not bitter vnto them Doctr In generall Husbands must be told their duties aswell as Wiues as they would haue them mend so they must mend themselues and as they would haue comfort by liuing with them so they must make conscience to practise their duty to them it is not the hauing of wiues or husbands that breedes contentment but the holy performance of duties mutually The duty of the Husband is propounded heere First by exhortation Husbands loue your Wiues Secondly by dehortation Be not bitter vnto them In the exhortation there is the persons exhorted Husbands the duty loue the persons to whom they owe it your Wiues Husbands This indefinite propounding of it shewes that all sorts of Husbands are bound to shew this dutie poore and rich learned and vnlearned yongue and old Loue Concerning the husbands dutie as it is heere expressed I consider sixe things First that it is indispensably required Secondly why this dutie onely is named Thirdly how he must shew his loue Fourthly Reasons why Fifthly I answer certaine obiections Sixthly the lets of performance of loue First it is required Gen. 2.24 Ephes. 5.25 Tit. 2.2 Secondly the Apostle names this dutie in this one word either because the Lord of purpose would haue them study the whole Scriptures that while they seeke for directions to make them good husbands they may finde also counsell to make them good men Or else in this word is comprehended their dutie that so this being their word they might write it in their hearts and haue it euer in their eies to doe it or else it is because this is most necessarie and as women faile in subiection so doe men in loue For the third viz. how he must shew his loue we must vnderstand that the husband owes the wife First naturall or ciuill loue as a married man Secondly spirituall loue as a Christian married man For the first the loue of the husband is to be shewed 4. waies 1 By cohabitation 1 Pet. 3.7 He must dwell with her not wander from his wife nor depart without calling and consent nor dwell with drunkards whores or gamesters dwell I say in his owne house not in the Alehouse c. 2 By Chastitie and that first by auoiding vnfaithfulnesse to her bed not follow the strange woman This sinne of Whoredome it consumes mens strength wastes mens substance compasseth men with all euill in the middest of the congregation is worse then theft exceeding hatefull in Gods sight and disgracefull amongst men destroies the soule both by making men without vnderstanding and sending them to hell Prouer. 5.19 6.25 9. 17. Iob 31.7.8 c. Secondly by yeelding her due beneuolence not departing from her bed without consent 3 By honouring her 1 Pet. 3.7 The Husband must shew that hee honoureth her First by suffering himselfe to be admonished by her Gen. 21.12 Secondly by vsing her as his companion not lording ouer her as his slaue Thirdly by trusting her with disposing of such things in the Family as she is fit for and faithfull in by giuing her imploiment according to her gifts Fourthly by not disgracing her before others but choosing a fit time in secret to finde fault with her Fifthly by not speaking when shee is in passion but forcing both her and himselfe in all matters of difference to speake when they are both out of passion Sixthly by yeelding a free and iust testimony of her praises Prou. 31.28 4 By cheerishing her Ephes. 5.28 And this he performes
3.1 and all this they haue done with great successe for their reines haue taught them in the night and their soules haue beene full as with marrow But we may iustly complaine and take vp the wordes in Iob 35.10 But none saieth where is God that made me euen the God that giueth songs in the night But it is spirituall watchfulnesse that is here specially required and it is nothing else but a Christian heedfulnesse obseruation and consideration both for preuention of euill and imbracing of the meanes waies and oportunities of good And thus wee must watch first our owne hearts to spie out where any spot of spirituall leprosie in thoughts or affections breakes out to heale it in time Secondly the practises of Sathan that we be not insnared with his spirituall baites and methods Thirdly the waies of God if any mercy appeare or fountaine of grace open to snatch vp our incense and runne presently to Gods Altar and offer with our sacrifice the calues of our lippes or if any threatning arrest vs or iudgement befall vs to make our peace speedily and flie from the anger to come Fourthly the comming of Christ either by death or iudgement specially we should watch vpon whom the ends of the world are come But that which is here principally meant is watching vnto praier and thus wee had neede to watch 1. to the meanes to get abilitie to pray 2. To the opportunitie and occasions of praier 3. To the successe of it to take notice of Gods answere and our speeding waiting vpon God till he giue a blessing or if God hide himselfe to sue out an attonement in Christ. Thus of Watching With thankesgiuing D. 1. When we haue any suites to God for what wee want we must carefully remember to giue thankes for mercies receiued and particularly for all Gods mercies in praier 2. In that the Apostle so often vrgeth the dutie of thankesgiuing it shewes that naturally wee are exceeding vnthankefull for the mercies of God and that few of vs are carefull to yeeld God constantly this sacrifice 3. There are diuers kindes of thankesgiuing or diuers waies of thanking God For men giue thankes 1. By receiuing the Eucharist which is called the cuppe of blessing 2. By obedience of life for he that will truely offer praise vnto God must order his waies aright 3 By opening our lippes to sound forth his praise and thus Gods name is honoured both by the thankes or praise 1. Of celebration when we tell of Gods mercies to others 2. Of inuocation when we speake of Gods praises to God himselfe in praier this is heere specially meant and of this I haue intreated before at seuerall times out of other places of this Epistle Thus much of the manner how we must pray The matter followes and first of the persons for whom we must pray Praying also for vs. In Generall I obserue three things 1. That wee ought to pray one for an other 2. That one great meanes to get a large heart in praier and the perseuerance in the practise of it is to endeauour after tender and affectionate desires to helpe others by praier 3. That Christians should desire the praiers of others as carnall men make vse of their friends to get their helpe for wealth offices c. So should Christians improue their interest in the affections of their friends by seeking prayer of them Also It is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 together and so notes that it is not enough to pray for others but we must pray with others and mutually help one another by faith knowledge and praier For vs Here I obserue 4. things 1. That the greatest in the Church need the praiers of the meanest 2 That in hearing praier God is no accepter of persons he is aswell willing to heare the Colossians praiers for Paul as heare Paul pray for the Collossians 3. It is the dutie of the people to pray for their ministers 4 It is to be obserued That he wisheth them to pray for other Preachers aswell as for himselfe there may be a spirituall pride in desiring the praiers of others he did not enuie that others should haue roome in the hearts of others aswell as hee Thus of the persons for whom The things for which are two waies to be considered 1. As it is briefly laid downe 2. As it is more largely explicated It is laid downe or propounded in these words that God would open to vs a doore of vtterance and is explicated in these words that follow by the subiect reason and end A doore of vtterance There are diuers doores in the Scripture in the metaphoricall acceptation of the word There is the doore 1. Of admission into the functions of the Church Ioh. 10 1. 2. Of life and the doore of life is the wombe of the mother Iob. 3.10 3. Of protection and so to be without doores and barres is to be without defence and protection Ier. 49.31 4. Of grace and regeneration Ioh. 10.7.9 Psal. 24. vlt. Reuel 3.8 5. Of death and iudgement Iob. 38.17 Act. 5 9. Iam. 5.9 6. Of glory Reuel 21.12 Lastly there is a doore of guifts as of knowledge Reuel 4.1 Prou. 8.33 Of faith Act. 14.27 Of vtterance 1. Cor. 16.9 So heere the doore of vtterance comprehends 5. things 1. Libertie and free passage to preach the G●spell 2. Oportunitie 3. Power of preaching 4. Courage and boldnesse with full vent to rebuke mens sinnes and reueale all Gods counsels without feare of any mans face 5. Successe euen such vtterance as will open a doore into the hearts of the hearers so that to pray for the opening of the doore of vtterance is to pray for libertie oportunitie power courage and successe Vse Is first for ministers and then for the people Ministers may see heere what it is that specially makes a happy Pastor not liuing countenance of great men c. but libertie courage power c. And it greatly taxeth foure sorts of Ministers 1. Dumbe Ministers that vtter nothing 2. Fantasticall Ministers that vtter the falshood of their owne braines that speake their owne dreames and from the vanity of their owne hearts and seeke out for the people only pleasing things dawbing with vntempered morter 3. Idle Ministers that vtter not all Gods counsell for matter or for time speake but seldome to the people preach not in season and out of season 4. Cold Ministers that seeke not the power of preaching striue not to approue themselues in the sight of God and to the conscience of men The people also should make conscience of their dutie they may learne from hence what to pray for and should daily with importunity beseech God to giue this wide doore of vtterance to their Teachers Before I passe from the matter he praies for I must note a doctrine lies secretly lodged within the same we may finde in the end of this verse that the Apostle was in prison and yet he doth not
opportunitie delay no worke in haruest Iob. 12.35 3. To walke wisely is to walke vprightly and that for matter in the newnes of life Rom. 6.4 And for manner exactly precisely circumspectly Ephes. 5.15.16 4. To walke wisely is to walke surely and he walkes surely 1 That will liue where he may haue meanes for his soule aswell as his bodie he will not liue in darkenesse but desires to be where he may haue the greatest light 2. That makes the word the rule of his actions and is sure of warrant from the Scripture for what he doth Deut. 4.5.6 this is to walke in the law Psal. 119.1 according to the rule Gal 6.16 3. That will not liue vnder any knowne threatning will not venture to go on with wrath hanging ouer his head he is none of those fooles that will not vnderstand though the foundations of the earth be moued Psal. 82.5 4. That walkes by faith and not by sight 2. Cor. 5.7 trusts not in things that may be seene which are mutable but labours to be clothed with the garments of Christs righteousnesse he walkes not wisely that walkes nakedly Reuel 16 15. And for manner of assurance he that is a wise man when he sees how carefull the men of the world are to make euery thing sure and what stirres there are for certainties in the things of the earth he will not rest in probabilities for his soule or in common hopes or presumptions but will striue by all meanes to make his calling and election sure he will not be led in a fooles paradise and stand to the venture of his soule vpon carnall coniectures Pro. 24.5 5 That walkes in the way of the lest and not of the most he will not be led by the example of the multitude or frame his life according to the commonest opinions c. 2. Cor. 12.15 Phil. 3.16 Thus of wisedome of conuersation in the generall here it is limitted to conuersing with one sort of men viz. Those that are without Towards them that are without Without are first all infidels that liue without the Church of Christ. 2 All Hipocrites that minde nothing but the gailding of the outside 3 All wicked men in generall that liue without God without Christ without hope in the world 1. Cor. 5.12.13 Luk. 13.25 Reuel 22.15 Here are two things I will but briefly touch 1 That a Christian should be more carefull how he behaues himselfe before wicked men then before godly men 2 It is to be noted that he saith not with them but towards them it is one thing to walke with them and an other thing to walke towards them the one notes a voluntary consorting with them this the Apostle allowes not the other notes a behauiour that is well framed when through necessitie and calling we must haue to do with them But the maine thing is what we must do that we may carry our selues iustly towards wicked men That this may be distinctly vnderstood wicked men may be two waies considered first as Spectators of our conuersation Secondly as parties in conuersing As they are Spectators and obserue vs there are 4. things which in godly discretion we should make to shine before them 1 All good faithfulnesse in our calling 1. Thess. 4.11.12 1. Tim. 6.1 2 All humble subiection to those in authoritie shewing all meekenesse to all men Tit. 3.1 2. 3 A mortified course of liuing the Gentiles will say of such they are the seede of the blessed of the Lord Isay. 61.9 4 Concord and holy loue amongst our selues doing all things without reasonings and murmurings Phil. 2.15.19 As they are parties in conuersing they are two waies to be considered 1 As they are euill men but not iniurious and euill to vs. 2 As they are both euill men and iniurious to vs. Towards the first sort our wisedome of conuersation must be shewed 1 In the due obseruation of the circumstances of lawfull things for all lawfull things are not to be done at all times and in all companies and in all manners indiscretion herein doth much harme euery where 2 In the skilfull applying of our selues to winne them making vse of all opportunities and speaking to them with all reuerence deliberation compassion instance c. As may become the maiestie of Gods trueth and ordinances 3 In the shunning of conceitednesse peruersenesse frowardnesse and such like things as doe maruellously prouoke a carnall minde but approue our selues in all meekenesse of wisedome It is a great wisedome in the vse of our knowledge to expresse a constant meeknesse Iam. 3.13 4 In auoiding euill 1. to them 2. to our selues To walke wisely in auoiding euils to them is to be carefull that wee put no stumbling blocke before the blinde but cut off all occasions of reproching or blaspheming In auoiding euill to our selues by them we must looke to three things 1. That we be not infected or defiled by their company either by needlesse presence or by any kinde of consent to or approbation of their euils 2. That we be not beguiled by committing our selues to them and trusting faire pretences Iob. 2.24 3. That wee yeeld not to them to satisfie them in the least sinne for t is not yeelding will draw them but a pure conuersation with feare 1. Pet. 3.12 Towards the second sort of wicked men viz those that are euill and are or are like to be iniurious to vs our wisdome of conuersation lieth in two things 1 In a wise demeaning of our selues when they doe wrong or persecute vs shewing all firmnesse and vndaunted constancie patience reuerence meeknesse clemencie and good conscience 1. Pet. 3.13.14.15.16 2 In a discreet preuention of our owne trouble as neere as we can This wisdome Iacob shewed in his dealing with his brother Esau when hee came out against him with foure hundred men Gen. 32. And Samuel when hee went to anoint Dauid 1. Sam. 16. And Hushai when he saluted Absolon 2. Sam. 26.15 And our Sauiour Christ when he answered the tempting dilemmaes of the malicious Iewes And Paul in his answere to the people about the high Priest Act. 23.4 And when in the mutinie hee cried out hee was a Pharisie Act. 23.6 It is noted as a wisdome in the prudent in euill times to be silent Amos 5.13 T is not good prouoking euill men nor safe to pull a Beare or a madde dogge by the eares T is the true ambition of a Christian to meddle with his owne businesses 1. Thess. 4 11. For conclusion as wee haue seene what it is to walke wisely in the affirmatiue so we must be informed what this wisdome hath not in it It hath not in it a relinquishing of pietie or holinesse in the whole or any part to keepe peace with wicked men Heb. 12.14 It hath not in it a forsaking of fidelitie in the discharge of our duties Amos must not leaue the Court though Amaziah tell him it is his wisest way M●chaiah must not flatter Ahab
for all thy sinnes past and now that God calls for this obedience he will accept thee as righteous by forgiuing thee all former accounts Obiect But if all were forgiuen me yet I cannot do all that God requires of me in his law Answ. Thou art not vnder the law but vnder grace thou art freed from the rigour of the law so that thou extend thy desire and indeauor to all the will of God thy perfection is but vprightnes Obiect But in my best seruices there is much euill Answ. Christ makes request for thee and by the vertue of his intercession the euill of thy good workes is hid and couered Obiect But I am so weake I cannot finde strength almost to do any worke of God much lesse all and to hold out too Answ. As weake as thou haue subiected themselues to all Gods wills of which some now sleepe in the Lord who from small beginnings grew to great abilitie in Gods seruice what may not grace like a graine of mustard seede grow too in short time besides Gods ordinances are mighty through God to fulfill our obedience and God will shew his power in thy weakenes yea it is his couenant not only to require all his will but to giue vs his spirit to cause vs to do them Obiect But if I were set in neuer so good a case and had for the present neuer so good successe yet I feare falling away Answ. God will keepe the feete of his Saints Obiect But I haue tried a great while and I haue great helpes and yet I finde not any such graces or fulnesse or any such likelihood to stand Answ. It is one thing what is and an other thing what thou feelest 2 Consider whether thou hast not desired to do all Gods will and endeauoured it as thou knewest it and that with desire to do all perfectly certainely the will study care desire is accepted with God 3 Consider whether God hath no● let thee see all this while that thou art accepted as full and perfect what sinne hast thou begged pardon for and not obteined it what dutie or grace is it that thou hast praied for constantly and God hath vtterly denied to answere thee if God haue accepted thee why dost thou charge thy selfe falsly Obiect But I know not all Gods wills much lesse can I do them Answ. It shall be to thee according to what thou hast and not according to what thou hast not increase in knowledge that thou maiest increase in grace what shall I say Consider but the recompence of reward God will reward euery worke and should we not then doe all his wills though the taske be hard and labour great yet the pay and gaine is exceeding great if we had so many waies to thriue in our estates we would refuse no labour Oh why should we not seeke the gaine of doing euery will of God Thus of the twelfth Verse Vers. 13 14 For I beare him record that he hath a great zeale for you and them that are in Laodicea and them in Hierapolis 14 Luke the beloued Phisition and Demas greet you In the 13 Verse the zeale of Epaphras which is the fourth thing is described First by the testimony of Paul I beare him record Secondly by the quantitie of it a great zeale Thirdly by the persons for whom for you c. The Apostle vseth all these words to set out his zeale because he was desirous to haue him in great respect with his hearers for hee knew if he were once contemned or suspected his doctrine would be vnfruitfull and his hearers made a prey to false Teachers Besides perhappes he found the people inclyning to grow to haue ynough of him or to suspect him or to lessen their regard of him I beare him Record Note 1 That the witnesse of one Apostle is a sufficient testimony and infallible which should incourage vs to studie their writings seeing we are sure to finde nothing but truth there 2 That the best testimony is not our owne record of our selues let thy neighbour not thine owne mouth praise thee 3 Godly ministers should be readie and forward to preserue the same of their brethren and in particular willing to giue record for them but if wee would haue record from others we must not beidle or ignorant or corrupt or scandalous Oh the miserie of these times how are insufficient or wicked Ministers written for to the Patron to the Bishop to the congregation concerning whom there can be no sufficient testimonie in the day of Christ and happie were it if no Church men had their hands in such records the Lord pardon and purge the sinnes of the sonnes of Leuie Zeale D. Zeale is needfull in a Minister now his zeale is two fold either for God or for Gods people a Minister should shew his zeale for his people by praying for them 2 Painfull preaching to them in season and out of season 3 By protecting them against the reproches and scornes of the world striuing by doctrine not only to comfort them but to wipe away the aspersions cast vpon them 4 By earnest rebukes and admonitions he must crie aloude and not spare not suffering them to sinne 5 By suffering either with them or for them The Vse is to excite zeale in Ministers and to awake them out of that coldnesse or deadnesse especially in teaching it is a wonderfull scourge to the people and a dishonor to the glorious doctrine of God where the teacher is without life or spirit in the enforcing of his doctrine And is zeale good for a Minister then sure it is good for the people too indeed it is of exceeding praise in all sorts of men of what degree soeuer neither will it be a misse heere a little to consider more seriously of zeale seeing there is much neede of it in the world and there is much mistaking about it Now if men will be rightly ordered in their zeale let them looke to these things 1 Let it not be a pretended zeale as in Ioash 2 Nor a superstitious zeale as in Paule 3 Nor a passionate zeale only for a fit as in Iohn at his first entrance 4 Nor a malitious zeale as in persecutors that thinke they doe God good seruice in vexing men wrongfully 5 Nor a wrong intended zeale such as is the zeale of merit-mongers 6 Nor a contentious zeale such as theirs that make needlesse rents in the Church 7 Nor a secure zeale that is a zeale not raised by godly sorrow or that is carried without care or feare of falling away 8 Nor an idle zeale that is all words without workes the word is rendred labour sometimes and it is certaine true zeale is spent about good workes 9 Nor an ouercurious zeale shewed either by sticking too much to the letter of scripture or by prying into or harsh censureing of the lesser faults of others 10 Or a bitter
as they would bee for vsually if in discretion men prooue before they trust they are taxed of pride and haughtinesse yet considering the vile hypocrisie that is in many it is better to be so censured without cause then to be beguiled by men that make their religion but a cloake to their owne ends The third rule is that while they stand and fall not into open sinne thou maiest not traduce them but conceale thy dislikes till God lay them open vnlesse greater danger might ensue by the concealment for the Lord may make him sound and giue him repentance Paul doth not dispraise Demas here as he doth not commend him Thirdly we may in this man note the propertie of many hypocrites they will not be discountenanced they are vsually impudent this man thrusts himselfe into the Apostles company and will be commended to the Churches he will haue a place though it be the last place Verse 15. Salute the brethren which are in Laodicea and Nymphas and the Church which is in his house Hitherto of Salutations signified now the Salutations required follow and these are particular verse 15.16.17 generall v. 18. The particulars concerne either Laodiceans v. 15.16 or the Colossean preacher verse 17. who is not onely saluted but exhorted or rebuked by intimation In the salutation of the Laodiceans obserue two things first the persons who are to be saluted v. 15. 2ly a speciall direction for the open reading of two epistles v. 16. The persons are the brethren in generall and Nymphas in speciall and the houshold of Nymphas Salute the brethren which are at Laodicea 1 Christian curtesie ought to haue in it a holy remembrance of absent friends 2 It is not vanitie or weaknesse but may stand with singular gifts and graces of minde to bee industrious and large hearted in the many remembrances of all sorts of Christians 3 It is profitable that men of great gifts and place should preserue their memory with others though it be but in these lighter complements of salutation for many times it may inflame much affection to godlinesse in such to whom they send their salutations 4 God hath his choice amongst men for here hee takes notice of the brethren in Laodicea onely God doth not driue in whole townes of men into the field of his grace at once for as it was then in turning men from gentilisme so it is now in turning men from profanenesse the Gospell doth not worke vpon all promiscuously And Nymphas This Nymphas was not a woman as Ambrose and Dionisius and Catharinus and the glosse would haue it for it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the end of the verse his house not hir house This Nymphas it seemes was some eminent Christian whom Paul would specially honour before the congregation and so it shewes that a speciall respect should be had of such as did excell in gifts amongst such as professe the sinceritie of the gospell And the Church that is in his ●oms● By the Church hee meanes those in the houshold that feare God whether they were women or children or seruants Now here first I consider of these persons and then of the title the Apostle giues them in calling them a Church In that the Apostle thus with honour remembers the houshold of Nymphas it shewes his singular vprightnesse in that he can respect grace in whomsoeuer hee finde it hee loues a good seruant as well as a good Master and can commend good order in an houshold as well as in a congregation This should teach vs not to haue the grace of Christ in respect of persons and hereby also we may try our loue to Gods children by examining our selues whether we can loue such as can neither profit or pleasure vs nor grace vs in the world And this may be a great incouragement to the yoong and meaner sort in that they may perceiue from hence that if they get true grace they shall be respected both of God and good men Now in that the Apostle calls this houshold a Church we may note that a religious and well ordred familie is as it were a little Church Here in one familie is prescribed what all families should be this familie is called a church because his people were godly and the word of God was read there and prayers made to God and Psalmes sung and the yonger sort were catechized and instructed Now doe we learne from hence that our houses are Churches then these things will follow 1 That Gods worship and pietie must be set vp in them how can they be churches of God if God be not serued in them 2 All must be done there in order and quietnesse and silence for so it is or should be in the Church 3 Euill persons that are incorrigible must not dwell there but must be cast out Psal. 101. 4 The Husband or Master of the familie must dwell there as a man of knowledge and wiues children and seruants must obey as the Church doth Christ. Againe are our families Churches why then religious families are in a happy case for then God himselfe will dwell there So as a stranger comming to such places may say as Iacob did of Bethel surely God is in this place Lastly should our families be Churches Oh then woe vnto the world of profane housholds should a Church be without sacrifice and can their families escape Gods wrath seeing there is neither prayer nor pietie in them but in stead of Gods seruice there is cursing and swearing and lying and chiding and filching and whoring and rayling and fighting and what not The most families are very cages of vncleane spirits where not God or good men but very deuills dwell they are very styes of vncleanesse and vnholinesse Thus of the 15 verse Verse 16. And when this Epistle is read amongst you cause it to be read also in the Church of the Laodiceans and that you likewise read the Epistle from Laodicea These words conteine a direction for reading 1 of this epistle and that both priuately and publikely 2 of an epistle from Laodicea In the generall we may obserue that the Scripture may be read it is mens dutie to doe it t is a flat precept search the Scriptures Ioh. 5.39 and this may euidently reprooue the profane neglect of the most herein in this great light many are so drowned in carelesnesse that they haue not yet so much as a Bible in their houses and others thought for their credit sake they haue gotten them Bibles yet they read them not This Epistle In that this Epistle may not be neglected but must be read it shewes that whatsoeuer is reuealed to the Church to be a part of the word of God it must be read so soone as this Epistle is written it must be read of all Christians which shewes that euery part of Gods word is to be read Now for the persons that must read the Scriptures it is here set downe indefinitely of you meaning
of all sorts of people which is in other parts of the word of God distinctly expressed For 1 Tim. 4.13.15 Ministers must read the Scriptures and Deut. 17.19 it is required also of Kings and Magistrates also none are too good or too great to be imployed herein yoong men must studie in the word Psal. 119 10. so must women also Act. 17.12 Priscilla was ripe in the knowledge of the Scriptures able to instruct others Act. 18.27 what should I say euery good man must read the scriptures Psal. 1.2 The vse may be to stirre vs vp to doe it and to do it constantly for the same word of God that requires it to be done shewes it should be done frequently we must read all the daies of our life Deut. 17.19 and that daily Act. 17.11 day and night Psal. 1.2 they read 4 times a day Nehem. 9.4 And the rather should we be excited to this daily reading of the word considering the profit comes therby it would exceedingly comfort vs Rom. 15.4 It would be a lanterne to our feet and a light vnto our pathes Psal. 119. The word is the sword of the spirit Eph. 6. and how can wee resist tentations with It is written if we read not what is written and without reading we can neuer be expert in the word of righteousnesse thereby we are made acquainted with the mysteries of the kingdome and come to vnderstand all the counsell of God it will teach vs the feare of the Lord and keepe that our hearts bee not lifted vp Deut. 17.19.20 Q. But what should be the reason that many get no more good by reading the word and cannot finde any great profit in their reading I answer diuersly 1 Some men are poysoned with the inclinations of Atheisme and securitie they come to the word to obserue it not to let the word obserue them 2 Many seeke not a blessing by prayer whereas it is certaine the flesh will not of it selfe sauor the things of the spirit 3 Men bring not an humble and meeke spirit whereas vnto the fruitfull meditation of the word a heart quiet and patient and a minde free from pride and passion is requisite Psal. 25.9 4 Men lay not downe their cares and lusts they haue marred their taste before they come they doe not empty their heads and separate themselues to seeke the wisdome of the word care or lust will choake the word 5 Men read not all Gods word nor doe they read constantly they will not waite daily at the gates of wisdome to read seldome or by starts and here and there will doe little good 6 One great cause of not profiting is the not seeking of the law at the Priests mouth that is want of conference and propounding of doubts 7 In many vnprofitablenesse is the scourge of vnthankfulnesse for the good they haue found in reading 8 In reading men doe not minde their owne way for if men did propose vnto themselues what sinne of their owne they might finde rebuked and what directions might bee collected out of that they read for their liues or did note how the word did offer comfort when they need it they could not but finde many excellent experiences of Gods prouidence and power in the word they could not liue in any sinne but either reading or hearing would discouer it nor could they goe long without some word of comfort when they needed it yea they might obserue how God in the word they read did counsell them too when they were in distresse therefore let him that readeth marke and read for himselfe Lastly the cause is in the most that their hearts are not turned to God and so the vaile is not taken away 2 Cor. 3.16 Cause to be read Obserue here 1 That it is not enough to read our selues but wee must cause others to read by exhorting incouraging commanding c. especially Parents and Ministers should see to it so should Magistrates also 2 From the coherence note that wee must cause others to read when wee haue read our selues It is vile hypocrisie for a Minister or Parent to vrge their children or seruants to read the Scriptures when they neglect reading themselues In the Church Here we haue a plaine proofe for reading of the Scriptures publikely in the Church we see it was anciently both required and practised adde for the further confirmation hereof these places Deut. 31.11.12 Neb. 8. Luk 4. Act. 13. And this may assure vs 1 That publike reading is no invention or ordinance of man 2 That the people of God haue found in all ages great need of this helpe and therefore they are miserably transported with humor that so vilifie or neglect this ordinance of God and it may bee iust with God that thou shouldst not profit by reading at home when thou carest not for reading in the Church Thus of the reading of the Epistle to the Colossians Epistle from Laodicea Here is a great adoe among Interpreters to finde out what Epistle this was 1 Theophylact thinkes it was the first epistle to Timothy which was written from Laodicea an other towne of that name not this Laodicea before mentioned 2 Some thinke Paul did write an Epistle to the Laodiceans which was Apocrypha and so Dionisius tells of a third epistle to the Corinthians Iacobus Stapulensis caused such an epistle to be printed but Catharinus could easily a●ouch that it was a bastard and counterfeit 3 Some thinke the Laodiceans wrote to the Apostle and propounded their doubts vnto which the Apostle hath answered in this epistle and therefore required that his answer might be compared with their doubts this is the most publike opinion But in the generall it shewes vs thus much that we must read other good bookes aswell as Scriptures Thus of the 16 verse Verse 17 And I say to Archippus take heed to the Ministry which thou hast receiued in the Lord that thou fulfill it These words concerne the Colossean preacher who is not onely saluted but exhorted This Archippus as it seemes was their Pastor ioyned with Epaphras who was now at Rome with Paul it is likely hee was growne negligent in teaching and carelesse and idle Many times it comes to passe that men that sometimes were painefull in their Ministry doe afterwards grow slacke and negligent 1 Sometimes from very discouragements from their people either because they profit not or because they weary their teachers with indignities and wrongs thus the very Prophets haue been sometimes so tyred that they could haue been almost willing neuer to speake more in the name of the Lord. 2 Sometimes this comes from the corruption of their owne natures they grow soone weary of Gods worke or else hauing taken more worke to do then they are sufficient for they grow to neglect all or else they are drawne away with the loue of the world or else forbeare of purpose to preach often lest they should be thought to be too precise or else to winne
knit together by ioints and bands c. Verse 20. Wherefore if ye be dead with Christ from the ordinances of the world c. Verse 21. As touch not tast not handle not Verse 22. Which all perish with the vsing and are after the commandements doctrines of men Verse 23. Which things haue indeede a shew of wisedome in voluntary religion and humblenesse of minde and in not sparing the body neither haue they it in any estimation to satisfie the flesh The order of the first part of this chapter a 1. Thess. 1.2 b Vers 3.4 c 1. Tim. 1.18 d 1. Tim. 4 7. e 1 Cor. 9 7 12. Enemies to sincere preaching f 1. Cor. 9.27 g 1. Tim. 1.10 h 2. Thess. 2.4 i Reuel 9. k 2. Tim. 3.8 l 2. Tim. 4 14.15 m Eph. 4.14 How many waies faithfull Ministers fight Col. 4.12 Doctrine 1. An vnregene rate heart is a comfortlesse heart Note Doct. 2. The Gospell brings a man the true consolation Vses The solace that comes by the word with the answers to diuers obiections Psal. 19. Causes why many finde no more comfort in the word a Esay 65.5 b Math. 5.4 Esay 61.1.2.3 c Esa. 51.7 d Pro. 29 6. e 1. Pet. 1.8.9 f Ioh. 16.14 g Psal. 7● 3 Seuen inconueniences of an vncomfortable heart Differences of loue The Author Bond Seat Effects Obiects Properties of loue h 1. Thess. 1.3 i Rom. 14.15 Gal. 5.13 k 1. Pet. 4.8 l 2. Cor. 2.7.8 m 1. Ioh. 3.17 2 Cor 8.24 Rules for preseruing loue n Phil. 2.4 o Phil. 2.2.3 p 1. Cor. 13. q 1. Cor. 13. r Phil. 1.9 s 1. Thess. 4.11 The restraint of this loue t 1. Cor. 6. u Psal 26.5.6 Ephes. 5.6 Phil. 3.18 * 1. Cor. 5. x Phil. 3.2 y Reuel 2 9. z 2. Thess. 3.6 a 2. Thess. 3 14.15.16 Foure sorts of disturbers of the Church 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 b Act. 9.22 c Act. 16.10 d 1. Cor. 2.16 e Ephes. 4.16 The Gospell is certaine two waies A twofold fulnesse f Ephes. 5.18 g 1. Thess. 3.12 h Rom. 15.13 2. Cor. 7.4 i Act 9.36 Psal. 1.11 Reuel 3.1 2. Cor. 10.6 Full assurance may be had It must bee sought k Heb. 10.22 l Heb. 6.12 Seuen things of which we should be assured n Heb. 6.12 Seuen signes of full assurance o 1. Thess. 1.6 p Ephes. 4.14 q Heb. 6.11.12 r Heb 10.22.23 s Rom. 4.20 t Esay 11.7.9 u Rom. 15.14 What we must doe to get full assurance Vse Wherein our spirituall ri●hes ●e * Col. 3.16 x Tit. 3.6 y Ephes. 2.4 2 Cor 8.1 9.11 z Rom. 10 11. a 1. Tim 6 18. b 1. Cor 1.5 c Iam. 2.5 Assurance is riches ●n many respects Answer to the vbiquitaries The difference of knowledge in Christ and Angels and men a 1. Cor. 1.30 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What Pithanalogie is Who are deceiuers a 2. Cor. 11.3 2 Thess 2. b 2. Cor. 6. c Heb. 3.13 d Ier. 23.14 Ezech. 13.10 Mich. 3.5 Gal. 5.9 3. 3 Rules to preuent beguiling a 1. Cor. 14.33 Of order in the common wealth b Prou. 8. Rom. 13. Order in the Church Order in the family d Gal. 6.16 e Psal. 50. vlt. f Pro. 4.26 g Psal. 112.5 i Luke 1.79 k Psal. 51. vlt. l Pro. 19.16 Ten helpes of order in conuersation Nine lets of order Rules for bringing our liues into order Vse of catalogues More rules Vses m Psal. 5.8 n Psal. 90. vlt. o Psal. 17.5 That stedfastnesse of faith may be had p 2. Cor. 1.21.22 q 2. Tim. 2.19 Matt. 7.24 r Heb. 6.17.18 s 1. Pet. 5.9 t Iam. 1.6 The properties of the man stedfast in faith u Eph. 3.17.19 * 1. Ioh. 5.4 Gal. 6.14 x Rom. 5.4 Isa. 26.16 y Rom. 4. z 2. Cor. 1.18.19 The causes of vnsettlednesse a 2. Thess. 3.2 The means of stedfastnesse The inconueniences of an vnstedfast faith Vnstedfastnes of faith three wayes How weake faith may be discerned Causes of the vnsetlednes of faith weake Remedies for faith weake Causes of faith weakned Signes of faith weakned Remedies for faith weakned Causes of the losse of stedfastnes Steps in falling away The effects Distinctions about apostasie Remedies for the losse of stedfastnesse Vses Psal. 56.9 116.7 a 2. Pet. 1.9 b 2. Thess 3.6 c 2. Ioh. 4. d Gal. 1.9 1. Cor. 15.1.2 e Gal. 1.12 f 1. Cor. 11.23 g Phil. 4.9 h 2. Ioh. 9. The priuiledges of such as receiue Christ ● Phil. 3.9 k 1. Pet. 8. l Rom. 5.11 3.25 m Reu. 2.17 n 1. Cor. 1.6 4 7. o Rom. 8 9. p 2 Cor. 3.17 q Rom. 8.13 r Zach. 12.12 s Rom 8.15 t Gal. 5.22 u Eph. 1.14 * Ioh 14. x Rom. 8.10 y Rom. 8 26. z Rom 8.11 a Heb. 9.15 b Rom. 8.17 c Gal. 2.20 Rules for perseuerance to bee obserued in our first conuersion d 2. Cor. 13.5 e Psal. 37 8.9 f Ioh. 10.28 Ier. 32.39.40 g 1. Cor. 1.6 1. Tim. 2.6 h Psal. 51.12 What a free spirit is i Ier. 31.33 Psal. 37.31 k Psal. 125.1.24 Signes of a true heart Rules to be looked vnto after our calling Heb. 10 36. Phil. 3. The order of the rest of the chapter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Math. 13. b Math. 13. c Reuel 2. d Math. 21. e 2. Ioh. 10. f Hos. 5. vlt. g Heb. 6. h Psal. 51. i Reuel 3.11 Quest. Answ. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Quest. Answ. How Philosophy becomes vaine deceipt When men are corrupted by philosophy The diuers acceptation of the word Tradition Not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A distinction about tradition Traditions in the Church of the Iewes Cabalisticall Diuinity Traditions in the Churches of the Gentiles Quest. Answ. Traditions in the times of the Fathers in the primitiue Church Traditions in Popery Scriptures against traditions Ob. 1. a Ioh. 16.12.13 Sol. b Ioh. 15.15 c Ioh. 14 26. d Ioh. 16.12 e Act. 1.3 Ob. 2. f Ioh. 21. vlt. 20 30. Sol. Ob. 3. 8 Wayes any tradition growes euill What hee meanes by rudiments Why called rudiments Why of the world The law abrogated 4. wayes How the morall law is abrogated Rom 8.1.2 Rom 6.14 Gal. 5 23. 1. Tim. 1.9 How the Iudiciall Lawes are abrogated a Ephes. 2.12 b Phil. 3.18 c 1. Pet. 2.16 d 1. Pet. 4.1.2 e 2. Cor. 5.20 f Gal 1.7 g Matth. h Rom. 10.3.4 i Mat. 10.33 k H●b 11.26 l Esay 53.1 Rom. 10.16 m Mat 11.29 n Mark 9.42 o 1. Cor 1.12 p 1. Cor. 11.28 q Gal. 2.17.18 19. r 1. Tim 5.11.12 s 2 Ioh 9. t Eph●s 4.30 u 2. Cor. 11.3 * Hebr. 10. x 1. Pet. 1.14 Why our Sauiour was the second person in the Trinitie and no other a Ioh. 1.1 Col. 1 15. b Ioh. 1.12 c Col. 1 15. Heb. 1.3 d Col. 1.13 e Reuel 1 7. f Mat. 28.21 g Reuel 2.23 h Phil. 3.21 i Ierem. 23.6
4.5 f Esay 45 7. g Psalm 33.7 and 8 9. h Rom 8 19. i Romanes 6. Phil. 3. Nothing will auaile without Christ a Gal. 3.28 b Rom. 1.16 c 1. Cor. 12.13 d Act. 10.34 e Rom. 1.10 Vses f Deut. 10.16.17 Acts 10.34 1. Pet. 1.17 g Iohn 34 19. h R●m 2.8.9.10 i Rom. 10.11 k Iam. 2.1.5 l Iob. 32.21.22 m Deut. 1.17 2. Chron 19.6 How Christ is all in all n Eph 2 10. o Dan 9 29 p Col. 1.27 q 1. Cor. 1.30 r 2. Cor. 3.17 s Esay 40.9 t 1. Cor. 3.21 u Gal. 4.6 Vses * 1 Cor 8.6 The Vses Excellent consolation in Christ. x Rom. 3.25 y Rom. 10.4 z Esay 55.6 1. Cor. 1.6 a Gal. 3.22 b 1. Ioh. 1.7 c Zac. 3.1.2.3 Rom. 8.33 d Iohn 3. e Heb. 2.18 f 2. Cor. 12.9 g 1 Iohn 3.7 h Heb. 4.15 i Heb. 5.1 k Esay 42.2.3 l Gal. 1.4 m Rom. 8.28 n 2. Cor. 1.5 o Esay 33.2 p H●s● 13.14 q Heb. 10.19 r Heb. 2.14 s 1. Thes. 1. Ila t 1. Pet. 1.3 u Colos. 1.17 * Iohn 11. x Phil. 1. The diuision of this part of the text Obseruation from coherence Of Election Two kinds of Election a Eph. 1.4.5 Rom. 8.19 Vses b Deut. 26.15.16 c Isa. 41.8.11.12 d Zach. 11.5.12 e Iohn 15.19 f Psa. 106.4 5. g 2 Pet. 1.10 Who may bee sure they are elect h 1 Thes. 5.6 i 2 Pet. 1.4.5.6.7.10 How many waies the elect are holy k Gal. 5.6 l 2. Cor. 1.1 m Deut. 7.6 Isa. 4 4. n 2. Cor. 7.1 Eph. 5.3 Quest Ans. 4 Signes of a holy man 5 Fiue properties of Gods loue o Hosea 14.5 q Ioel 2.13 r Zeph. 3.17 s Mich. 7.18 t Ier. 31.3 u Iohn 13 1. Vses * Psal. 127.2 x Psal. 60.5 Obseru 1. Note Obseru 2 a Esay 11. b Iames. 3.17.19 Tit. 3.3 More sorts of mercy than one Luke 6. Matth 25. Corporal and Spirituall mercie b Hosea 10.12 What is bowels of mercy c Micha 6.8 Rom 22.8 2. Cor. 9.7.25 v. 8.3.4 d Isa. 58.10 Vse Motiues to mercy e Zach 7 6. Hosea 12 10. f Esay 58. g Luke 6.33 Psalm 86. h 2. Cor. 1.3 i Psalm 37.21 k Micha 5.7 l 1 Iohn 3.17 m Iam. 1.27 n Iam 3 17. o Mich. 6.8 Hosea 6.5 p Prou 14 31 19.17 q Prou. 11.17 r Prou. 16.6 s 1 Cor. 15.58 t Prou. 21.21 u Hosea 10.12 Rules in shewing mercy * Prou. 22 9 x Psal. 112.5 y Pro. 3.28 z Esay 6● 8 a Prou. 22.7 b Prou 14 21. and 20.21 c Prou 14 31 d Prou. 21.13 e Esay 5.8 Hosea 6.5 f Prou. 22.23 g Iam. 2.13 h Psal. 112 4. Esay 58.7 c 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 True Christian curtesie i Eph. 4.32 Gal. 5 2● k 2 Cor 6 6. l 1 Pet 5 14. Ruth 2 4. Iud. 6.12 Matth 11 4. m Iam. 3.17 Luke 6 35. Ephes 4 32. n 1 Pet. 2.5 Romanes 2.4 Vse What curtesie hath not in it Matth. 11.29 Rom 12 16 1 Pet. 5 5. What humblenesse of mind is negatiuely and affirmatiuely Esay 5.7 10. q 18.23 s Mich. 6.8 t 2. Sam. 6.22 u Psalm 131.1.2.3 * Phil 2 3. x Rom. 12. Vses y Zeph 2 3. Motiues z Mat 11.29 a Eph 4 1.2 b Isa. 57.15 Psal. 34.18 c Psal. 102.7 d Pro● 11.3 e Esay 57 15.29 f 1. Pet. 5.5.6 The sorts of pride What Christian meekenes hath in it g Esai 11 Iam. 3.17 h Mat. 18 i Mat. 11.30 k 1 Pet. 3.2.3 l 2 Cor. 11.3 Vse m Iam. 1.21.22 Isai. 29.19 Math. 11 29 o Psal. 76.1 to 9. 147.5.6 149.4 p 1 Pet 3.4 q Psal. 25 9 What long suffering hath in it r Heb. 6.12.15 s 2 Tim. 4.25 t 1 Thes. 5.14 u 1 Cor. 13 Motiues * Rom. 9.22 Luk. 18.7 x 1 King 1.17 y Gal. 5.22 z Heb. 6.12 Col. 1.11 1 Tim 4.5 a Act. 18.14 b 1 Cor. 4.12 2 Thes. 1.4 2 Tim. 4.4 Heb 13 22. c 2 Cor. 11.1 d Ephes. 4.1 What it is to forbeare f Gal 6.2 g R●m 15.1.2 Vses Motiues h Psal. 50 20 Gal. 5.9.10.11.12.13.15 i Iam. 5.9 Rules for the practise of forbearance k Gal. 6.1.2.3 l 1 Cor. 2.12 Phil. 1.29 m Luk 7.21 Act. 27.24 Rom. 8.32 Gal. 3.8 Philem. 22. n Act. 3.14 o Act. 15.11.16 Obiecti Sol. Obiect Sol. Quest. Answ. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ques Answ. p Mat. 6.14 18.25 How Christ is said to forgiue What actions in Christ are Imitable To forgiue as Christ forgaue hath 5. things in it How loue is aboue all vertues a 1 Cor. 13.8 b Heb. 10.24 Obiect Sol. b Iohn 5.42 c 1. Iohn 2.15.17 d Iohn 14.27 Signes of the loue of God e 2 Cor. 5.14 f Iohn 14. What it is to loue our enemies g Rom. 12. h 1. Pet. 3.8.9 i Matth. 5. k Rom. 12.19 Exod. 23.4 2. Chron. 28.8.9.13.15 2. Kings 6 22. Loue of brethren l Psal. 38.13 m 2. Tim. 1.7 n Ephes. 1.14 o Gal. 5.6 p Eph 4.17 b Rom. 12 9. 2. Cor. 6.6 r 1. Thes. 1.3 Heb. 6.10 s Rom. 13.10 t Rom. 14.15 u Rom. 12.6.7 * 2 Cor. 2.4 x Phil. 1.7 y 1. Cor. 8.1 z 2. Cor. 8.24 a Phil. 2 3. b 1. Pet. 4.8 Loue is the bond of perfection three waies Vse Threefold peace a Rom. 14.17 b Eph. 4.3 c Esay 57.2 d Za●h 8. vlt. e 1. Cor. 14.31 f Gal. 5.22 g 2. Cor. 13.11 1 Thes. 5.23 Heb. 13.20 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 How peace is of God h Eph. 2.14.17 i Esay 9.6 k 2 Thes. 3.16 l ●say 52.7 m Gal. 5.22 How it rules n Iohn 16.33 Iohn 14.17 Vses o Ier. 23.17.18 p Psalm 14. Rom 3.17 q 1. Thes. 5.3 What we must do to get peace r Psal. 85.8 s Isa. 57.15.19 Psalm 37.11 t R●● 5.1 u Psa. 12 5. vlt. * Isa. 32 17. Rom. 2.10 Gal. 6.16 x Isa. 57.19 〈◊〉 10.6 y Iohn 16.33 z Isa. 57.19 a Rom. 16.20 b Esay 57.2 c Esay 54.10 d Ps. 34.13.14 Rom. 14.18 Heb. 12.14 e Mark 9 50. f Zach. 8.19 Heb. 12.14 Iam. 3.18 What is required in performing thankefulnes What is required in receiuing thankes The word make men not onely more religious but also more iust a 1 Pet. 1.23 Iam. 1.18 b Esai 66.2 c Iam. 3.17 d Phil. 1.9 2.14.16 Vse The Scripture is the word of Christ in 4. respects a 2 Pet. 1. vlt. b Tit. 1.3 c Mar. 16. vlt. d Ephes. 1.13 e 2 Tim. 2.9 f Heb. 4.12.13 Vse Men sinne against the word 6. waies g Ioh. 12 48. Heb. 2.2 h Mat. 13.20 i Math. 13.21 k 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 l 1 Cor. 14.36 m Mar. 8.38 n Act. 13.48 o Iam. 1.21 p Heb. 4.2 q Titus 2.5 r 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 5.31 s Act. 6.2 t 2 Tim. 2.15 u Tit. 1.9 * 2 Cor. 2. vlt. x 2. Cor. 4.2 y 2 Thes. 1.5 a Luk. 10.42
If we would not loose our crowne we must shunne 1. The sinne that hangs on so fast 2. Prophane bablings and opositions of science falslie so called 3. Scandall 4. The profits and pleasures of the world so as our hearts be not set vpon them 5. Selfe-loue and trust in our owne iudgement when we thinke our selues wise inough to order our race without aduice 6. Vncertaine running Now for the second that we may run successefully diuers rules must be obserued 1. We must watchfully stop the beginnings of sinne and when we feele our selues begin to halt wee must seeke an healing least we be turned out of the way 2. We must follow peace with all men so farre as may stand with godlinesse 3. Wee must keepe the faith 4. We must labour for the loue of the appearing of Christ. 5. We must continue and resolue not to giue ouer till we haue finished our course These three rules may be gathered out of 2. Tim. 4.8.9 6. Wee must pray that the Gospell may runne more freely for that like a mightie winde helpes wonderfully in the race 7. We must order riches so as they bee no hinderances 8. We must vse the aduise of the best that can be had for skill or experience 9. We must faithfully discharge the duties of our calling Wee must so resolue vpon the race that we labour to be vndaunted and euery way resolued against all afflictions and trials whatsoeuer that may befall vs accounting it all happinesse to fulfill our course with ioy arming our selues with this minde that we will take vp our crosse and endure any hardship At their pleasures This is added as an aggrauation the word notes they did it not ignorantly or by frailtie but they did wrong the conscience of men with desire willingly wilfully it doth greatly increase the guilt of sinne when men do it willingly and wilfully where men do it because they will do it So some men go to law because they will go to law so some will be great Some will doe the lusts of their father the deuill Thus are men daily doing the wills of the flesh The like way wardnesse may be obserued in the negatiue Men will not be gathered Men will not come to the wedding In some things they willingly knew them not it is charged vpon the idle they will not worke Hence those conditionall speeches if yee will receiue it and if any man will saue his soule The vse may be for terror to stubborne offenders God takes notice of it that they sinne at their pleasures they sinne because they will sinne and therefore let them be assured he will be froward with the froward and therefore he will haue his will vpon them vnresistably Hence these threatnings hee wil● take accounts he will quicken whom he will he will giue to the last as to the first It shall not bee after the wills of the flesh the spirit shall blow where he will the mysterie shall be made knowne to whom he will and he will not haue sacrifice Secondly comfort is here implied for if there be so much infection in a will to sinne then there is hope God will accept a will to be and doe good he will accept of the will in prayer and the will to resist corruption of nature and of the will to liue honestly Hitherto the Apostle hath charged them generally now in the words that follow he inforceth his speech more particularly both for matter pointing out Angell-worship as the doctrine he would conclude against and for manner noting foure things in those that brought in that worship 1. That they brought it in hypocritically pretending humblenes of minde 2. That they did it ignorantly aduancing themselues in things they neuer saw 3. That they did it proudly rashly puffed vp c. 4. That they did it dangerously not holding the head c. Worshipping of Angells The maine matter the Apostle striues to beate downe is the worship of Angells as a philosophicall dreame as a superstition that defrauds men of heauen as an hypocriticall and ignorant worship charging them to be proud and fleshly persons that vse it yea he auoucheth they cannot hold the head which is Christ if they maintaine or practise such a worship All these reasons are in the text and coherence against it Which may serue for confutation of Papists who at this day still maintaine it not onely without commandement or any approued example in scripture but directly against the prohibition of the scriptures as in this place and so Reuel 19. the Angell forbids Iohn to do it The Papists offend in their doctrine about Saints ad Angells three waies 1. In giuing vnto them what may be attributed onely to Christ and to God 2. In adoring them 3. In inuocating and praying to them and all three contrarie to scripture For the first they attribute vnto them 1. Intercession 2. The knowledg of all things that concerne vs they rob Christ of his intercession and God of his omniscience now in all this we haue a sure word of God to trust to For for intercession it is plaine we haue none in heauen with him there is one mediator betwixt God and man the man Christ we offer vp spirituall sacrifices acceptable to God by Iesus Christ Let vs therefore saith the Apostle by him offer the sacrifices of praise alwaies Note the words by him and alwaies And whereas they obiect the Angell Reuel 8. that offred the prayers of the Saints we answer that Angell was Christ who onely hath the golden censer and who onely is meete to bring incense to offer vpon the golden altar the indeauour of Peter for their good after his decease was performed while he liued as is apparant by comparing the 13. verse with the 15. of 2. Pet. 1. And whereas they giue the knowledge of all things vnto them they rob God of his glory who only is the knower of the hearts of men 2. Chron. 6.30 and it is granted Isai 63.16 that Abraham knew them not and Israel was ignorant of them And whereas they obiect that Abraham in the 16. of Luke is said to know that they had Moses and the Prophets bookes we answer that that is spoken parabolically not historically they may as well say that Lazarus had fingers and Diues a tongue c. but were that granted yet it followeth not that because the doctrine of the Church was reuealed vnto him therefore he knew all things The second thing they giue is adoration contrary to the flat prohibition of the Angell himselfe in the Reuelation who chargeth worship me not Reuel 19.10 and without all example in scripture or the least sillable of warrant for it besides we see here Angell-worship in expresse words condemned The third thing
is inuocation praying to them which likewise is contrary to scripture for how shall we call on them on whom we haue not beleeued and we are exhorted to go boldly to the throne of grace with the help of our high Priest to obteine mercie and finde grace to helpe in time of need for Christ is the propitiation for the sinnes of the whole world why then should we giue his glory to any other and inuocation is a part of the forbidden worship of Angells as well as adoration In humblenes of minde It was the practise of Satan and pretence of false Teachers to thrust in this corruption of Angell-worship vnder this colour that it tended to keep men in humilitie and to make men to know their duties to the great maiestie of God and to acknowledge their gratitude to the Angells for their seruice this hath been the deuills wont to hide foule sins vnder faire pretences and vice vnder the colours of vertue This may serue notably for the confutation of the Papists about their Saint and Angell-worship for is not this their smoothest pretence to tell vs by comparison that men will not goe to great Princes directly with their suites but will vse the mediation of some Courtiers and so they say they must doe to God This you see was the old deceit in the primitiue Church and therfore worthily we may say to the people let none of the popish rabble defraud you through humblenes of minde Againe is the deuill ashamed to shew sinne in his owne colours doth he maske it vnder the colour of virtue Then where shall those monsters appeare that declare their sinnes as Sodom and are not ashamed of open villanies and filthinesse Such are they that will constantly to the alehouse and neuer be ashamed of it such are our damned swearers such are those filthy persons that know they are knowne to liue in whoredome and yet neuer blush at it nor learne to repent such are these in this Citie that liue in open contention who care not against apparant right to maintaine continuall suits and wranglings though they know all men detest almost the very sight of them for their wicked profanesse and vniust contentions yea though the hand of God be apparantly vpon them and they know not how soone the Lord may turne them into hell Such also are the open and wilfull Sabbath breakers and many more of all sorts of presumptuous offenders Againe if vice masked in virtues colours can so please and allure men how much should virtue it selfe rauish vs If counterfeit humilitie can be so plausible how should true humilitie winne to the admiration and imitation of it Lastly this may warne men to auoide counterfeit gestures and all pretended insinuating shewes of deuotion such as are open lifting vp of the eyes to heauen sighing and all pretended tricks that are vsed onely to pretend what is not And thus of their hypocrisie their ignorance followes Aduancing themselues in things they neuer saw Two things are here to be noted First Their ignorance in things they neuer saw And secondly vaine-glorious selfe-liking which the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 expresseth For the first there are some things cannot be seene with mortall eyes while we are on earth as the nature of God Angells and what is done in heauen 2. There are some things we ought not to see though we might therefore he prayed Lord turne away mine eyes from seeing vanitie 3. There are some things we may and ought to see as the glory of God in his works 4. There are some things we may and so ought to see as it is a great curse if we see them not as the fauour of God and spirituall things in respect of which to be blinded in heart is a miserable iudgment of the first sort are the things done in heauen There is a contrary waywardnes in the nature of wicked men somtimes men are wilfull and will not be perswaded euen in the things which yet they see sometimes men are stiffe hearted and will not be remoued in opinions about things which they neuer saw and so here Ignorance is of diuers kindes There is a naturall ignorance and that is of two sorts For there is an ignorance of meere negation and so Christ knew not the day of iudgment and so it is no sinne in an Husbandman if he be ignorant of Astronomie or Phisicke c. There is a naturall ignorance which is of corrupt disposition as to be blinde in our iudgments in spirituall things from our birth this is sinfull but not here ment There is a profitable ignorance and that is likewise of two sorts For it is either profitable absolutely and simply or but only in some respects It had been simply profitable and good for the Iewes if they had neuer knowne the fashions of the Gentiles so it had been good for Sampson if he had neuer knowne Dalilah But it had been profitable for the Pharisies but in some respects not to haue seene or to haue had so much knowledge So the Apostle Peter saith it had been good for Apostataes if they had neuer knowne the way of truth c. There is a willing ignorance and that is of two sorts of frailtie or of presumption Of frailtie when men neglect the meanes by which they should know either in part or in some respects Thus men faile that see a wide doore set open for comfort and direction and yet through carelesnes or willing slacknes neglect great riches of knowledge which might haue been attained if they had made vse of oportunities Presumptuous ignorance is when men not wittingly only but wilfully contemne true knowledge They will none of the knowledge of Gods waies Presumptuous ignorance is likewise of two sorts 1. When men refuse to know Gods reuealed will needfull to their saluation 2. When men wilfully imbrace fancies and superstitions in opinion especially in such things as they neither doe nor can vnderstand and such is the ignorance here condemned But the maine doctrine is That it is a great sinne and a hatefull vice to be rash and aduenturous to venture vpon opinions in matters of Religion either that concerne worship or practice where men are not first well informed in iudgment by true grounds of knowledge Hence men are aduised to take heed how they heare and to try the spirits and to be wise to sobrietie and to beware of fables This condemnes the strange coyning of opinions without all warrant of the word in the Papists that so confidently tell vs of the roomes in hell and of the Queene of heauen and how many orders there be of Angells c. And withall it may restraine such as professe the feare of God and reformation of life to be well aduised in their opinions and not pitch resolutely vpon opinions in things the word doth not warrant Blinde zeale hath no more allowance then superstition hath to coyne
zeale that spends it selfe in rayling and fiery reproches railers seldome stand long 11 Or an ignorant bold zeale such as was in the Iewes Or lastly a selfe conceited zeale when men trust too much to themselues and their owne iudgements True zeale hath in it 6 things 1 The affections of worship and spirituall compassion it will not rest in the bare worke done either of pietie to God or spirituall mercy to men it cannot bee cold or lukewarme in praying hearing preaching admonishing c. 2 An ardent loue to such as feare God shewed by desire mourning and seruencie of minde towards them 3 An vtter hatred of the wickednesse and profanenesse of the world with a willingnesse to shew and maintaine according to a mans calling a spirituall oposition against it 4 An affectionate desire after Gods house and the puritie of it thus the zeale of Gods house should eate vs vp 5 A great wrestling within a man against the corruptions of his owne nature expressed by indignation sorrow confession strong cries to God and reuenge vpon the flesh 6 The couetting of all spirituall things as the best things in the world Lastly obserue that he saith much zeale or great zeale which sheweth that men ought to thriue in zeale aswell as in other graces howsoeuer the world iudge of it only let men looke to themselues according to the former rules that they deceiue not themselues nor the world For you and for them of Laodicea and Hierapolis I will not trouble the Reader with the topographie of these townes it is out of question they were neere bordering cities Only obserue here 3 things 1 That the care of faithfull teachers and their desire to do good extends to other Churches also hence they are compared fitly to starres that giue light not only to the orbe in which they are but to places further of and this good Ministers may do by praier example of faithfulnesse and diligence or by counsell or writing or confirmation of doctrine by preaching as there is occasion And this shewes the worth of painfull and sincere Teachers they are a great benefit to the whole countrie where they liue and therefore they should be protected and incouraged by all them that would be accounted louers of their countrie 2 That Ministers owe a speciall loue and care to the neighbour Churches for as neerenesse of habitation increaseth the strength of ciuill bonds so should it much more in spirituall 3 That the care of other Churches should not cause men to neglect the stocke that depends vpon them it is not sufficient that men preach somewhere God calls for an account of their stewardship in their owne charge they must tend their owne heards he were a strange Husbandman that would plow his neighbours field and let his owne lie vntilled it is vile corruption to be intent when we labour for others and remisse when we labour for our owne people Luke the beloued Phisition There is some adoe amongst Interpreters who this Luke should be but I incline to them that thinke it was Luke the Euangelist but whosoeuer it was three things may be heere obserued 1 That the Church of God hath alwaies consisted of men of diuers callings so as no lawfull calling is excluded nor yet any only taken 2 That Phisicke hath beene of ancient honor and vse in the Church wee see it here in the Apostles time and it was long before also for there were Phisitions in Iosephs time 4 Sorts of men may be reproued concerning Phisicke or Phisitions 1 Such as totallie neglect them though they haue neede to vse them yet our Sauiour Christ saith the sicke neede a Phisition o 2 Such as are wayward and will not be cured that is such as through impatiencie will not be ordered by this meanes in the manner they should be 3 Such as put their whole trust in Phisicke as Asa did neglecting to seeke vnto God for helpe yea it is to be noted in Asa that his disease being but ordinarie yet to neglect the Lord in it was a great sinne for though God hath allowed Phisicke as an helpe yet it was neuer his meaning to robbe himselfe of his owne glory 4 Such as will out of pride and nicenesse be tampering with their bodies in phisicke when there is no need contrarie to that of our Sauiour Christ the whole neede not the Phisitian Now in as much as many times it is manifest phisicke doth no good to the diseased we are to vnderstand three things first that this may be the fault of carelesse and ignorant Phisitians 2 That as we grow monsters in the world by sinning ouerpassing the deedes of the wicked so the Lord sometimes by bringing in strong and new diseases doth ouerpasse the skill of the Phisitians 3 God for sinnes or triall may restraine the blessing vpon the meanes which else would be auaileable The third thing I note is that the holy Ghost giues this praise to a godly Phisitian importing that a Phisitian should be a man sound in religion and zealous for the truth and knowne and beloued in the Church for as it is certaine godly and religious Phisitians may do much good in the dangers of their patients so miserable experience shewes that popish and superstitious Phisitians do exceeding much hurt by working vpon those opportunities to seduce and peruert men And Demas This is that Demas that afterward forsooke Paul and imbraced this present world from the consideration of whose estate wee may obserue three things 1 That the vices of men by the profession of the truth may be restrained when they are not cured This mans loue of the world was in him when he was at the best but it was curbed and held downe and so it is with many hypocrites and therefore men should be warned and looke to themselues that they be not deceiued by taking the restraint of the outward practice of some euill for the true mortification of them It is many times a great hand of God vpon vnsound hearted men that at their best they are seene into and not greatly esteemed it seemes it was so with this man for if we marke it the Apostle not only reckons him in the last place but he names him also without any manner of praise as if he would import that hee durst not commend him to the Churches We should here learne what to doe towards such from the example of the Apostle Now if any would know more fully what is to bee done and how they should carry themselues towards such as they iustly doubt and feare not to be right though they make profession there are three rules to be obserued 1 Pitty them pray for them and admonish them 2 Commit not thy selfe vnto them but bee well aduised before thou converse inwardly with them It is true that the practise of this rule is strangely censured when those kinde of people perceiue themselues not to be regarded so much