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A13530 Christs combate and conquest: or, The lyon of the tribe of Iudah vanquishing the roaring lyon, assaulting him in three most fierce and hellish temptations. Expounded, and now (at the request of sundry persons) published for the common good, by Tho. Taylor, preacher of the word of God, at Reeding in Barkeshire; Christs combate and conquest. Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1618 (1618) STC 23822; ESTC S105331 393,043 443

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Scripture but vnderstand not but because they giue not vp their reason and humane wisedome which is enmity to God and scorne to be children deliuered to be taught and formed by our heauenly Master 2. With desire and loue of Christ and his truth the scope of all the Scripture is Christ and thou must desire to know and aduance nothing but Christ crucified Pro. 4.13 Loue wisedome and shee shall keep thee When men come prepossessed with opinions to set vp mens deuises and traditions and wicked opinions according to which they must interprete Scripture and not examine them by the Scripture or if they bring a purpose to magnifie the Pope and aduance his religion in stead of Christs no maruell if like the images they haue eyes and see not read and vnderstand not They loue not Christ nor will haue him to rule ouer them but his Vicar neither loue they the truth in the Canonicall Scripture further then it will stand with their Popish Canon law Or if a man come to read out of custome and coldly without feruencie and loue experience will tell him though thus he read much his profite shall be but small 3. With repentance and faith and a good heart 2. Cor. 3.14 when the heart of Israel shall be conuerted to the Lord the vaile shall be taken away this vaile is naturall ignorance and infidelity Where the former is no maruell if the word read and knowne be not vnderstood as a blinde man cannot see the sunne shining in his strength Where faith is absent and is not mingled with the word it must needs become vnprofitable Impossible it is that the wisedome of God can dwell in a wicked heart no man puts precious licour into a fustie caske This is the cause that men of great learning want sound vnderstanding because they want sound conscience Hos. 14.10 The wayes of God are right but the wicked fall in them 4. With a purpose not onely to know but to practise Ioh. 7.17 If any man will doe my will he shall know whether my doctrine bee from heauen The scope of the Scripture is not onely to beleeue in the Sonne of God but to walke in the obedience of faith Now if men read ouer all the Bible an hundred times either for knowledge onely or for vaineglory or to aduance themselues into preferments or to oppose the truth as heretikes and Papists doe no maruell if they neuer attaine the true sense of them 5. With prayer for the Spirit to lead vs into all truth because the Scriptures were inspired by Gods Spirit at first and the same Spirit is onely able to acquaint vs with his owne meaning If any man want wisedome he must aske it of God Iam. 1.5 so did Dauid Psal. 119.18 Open mine eyes that I may see the wonderfull things of thy law Is it any maruell that they who flie the iudgement of Gods Spirit and stand to the Church Pope Councells and only swallow that sense which they giue and neuer looke after Gods Spirit should misse of the true meaning of the holy Ghost and fall into and tumble in a number of errours and heresies To these might be added meditation diligence keeping of order and time speciall application and the like These things let them be brought to the reading of Gods word and no man shall loose his labour he shall be taught of God who hath promised to reueale his secret to them that feare him So much of the qualification of the person Now follow some rules which a person thus qualified must learne and keepe by him to trie when a Scripture is wrested or no. The first is that in our text conference of Scripture there the Spirit of God by plaine places expoundeth those which are more difficult Thus Nehem. 8.8 Ezra opened the Scripture by comparing it with it selfe and so made the people to vnderstand as Iunius noteth out of the originall So the Bereans hauing heard the doctrine of the Apostles searched the Scriptures that is compared their doctrine with the doctrine of the old Testament Thus the Apostles themselues teaching Christs resurrection Act. 2.16 prooue it out of the old Testament viz. Psal. 16.10 Thou wilt not suffer thy holy one to see corruption And to prooue that those words cannot be meant of Dauid himselfe he appeales to another testimony in 1. King 2. where it is said that Dauid slept with his fathers and lay buried in his sepulchre and so saw corruption This is a speciall way whereby the Scripture giueth wisedome to the simple Psal. 19.7 And for this purpose the Lord hath in great wisedome tempered the Scripture with some hard places to exercise mens senses and trie their diligence in comparing of Scripture whereof there were no need if there were no hard places How comes it that many peruert the Scripture to their owne destruction but because they conferre not one part with another which would lead them into the right sense How come the Arrians when they heare Christ say The Father is greater then I and other such sayings to hold to the death that Christ is not true God coessentiall and coequall with his Father but that they doe not compare this with other places as Ioh. 1.1 That word was God Philip. 2.6 He thought it no robbery to be equall with God Rom. 9. which is God blessed for euer And consequently that the former place speakes of his humane nature the latter of his diuine nature How could the Papists suffer shipwracke of faith and heretically erre in the foundation of religion teaching iustification by the workes of the law out of Iam. 2.21 Was not Abraham our father iustified by workes but that they conferre not other places to help them into the right sense as Rom. 4.2 and 3.20 Wee are iustified by faith without the workes of the law and Tit. 3.5 Not by the workes of righteousnes which we had done but according to his grace he saued vs. Which places beeing compared shewe that one speakes of iustification before God as Paul the other of iustification before men as Iames the former of iustifying the person the latter of iustifying the faith of the person When they read such places as these Awake thou that sleepest and Turne you turne you O house of Israel hence they conclude man hath free-will in his owne conuersion Whereas would they compare these with other places as Gen. 6.5 The whole imagination of mans heart is onely euill continually and it is God that workes both the will and the deed c. the reconciling of such places would force them to see that till God worke vs we are meere patients and after that acti agimus beeing mooued we mooue for his grace must not be idle in vs. The lewd and disordered Libertine when he reads that we are iustified by faith without workes casts off all care of his conuersation What can his workes doe what need they But he could not thus peruert the Scripture to his
things shall be neat and conuenient at home no care how Gods house lies When base trifles are preferred before Gods word and the good setling of it as stage-playes and enterludes When Gods Sabbaths and time must giue place to our callings or recreations or are passed away in Gods worship more heauily then holy-daies or worke-daies Here is a man affected more with his owne sinn then the highest causes of Gods glorie III. The reason of our Sauiours deniall For it is written Thou shalt worshippe the Lord thy God and him onely shalt thou serue Our Sauiour had sharply reprooued Satans impudence in his bold on set this third time but yet because it is not sufficient to thrust off an aduersarie with heat of words and sharpe reproaches vnlesse there be added also a direct answer and satisfaction to the matter in hand he therefore most fully answereth by the Scriptures euen the deuill himselfe not contenting himselfe by his power to repell him which Satan now beginneth to feele vnles also by the power of the word he conuince him and thereby award the dart and breake the temptation into peices Which must be our rule in dealing with vaine and iangling aduersaries not to answer them according to their foolish disposition or prouocation nor to be like them in frowardnes or stifnes in heat and peruersnes but to answer them with words of wisdom with sound matter and moderation both to conuince them and beat downe selfe-conceit in them which is the meaning of those two precepts Prou. 26.4.5 which seeme contrarie but are easily reconciled by the due respect of persons places times and other circumstances Euer remember one rule that no aduersarie suppose the deuill himselfe is to be answered by affection or passion but by iudgement and sound reason Yea if we haue no hope to winne our aduersarie or doe him much good as Christ had none of the deuill yet we must testifie to God and his truth for the confirmation of our selues and others The testimonie alleadged is out of Deut. 10.20 Thou shalt feare the Lord thy God thou shalt serue him and Deu. 6.13 An vniuersall and affirmatiue precept by which euery creature is bound to his Creator and him alone to performe diuine worship vnto him And it is aptly applyed by Christ to this dart of Sathan For it implyeth 1. That he himselfe as now standing in this conflict with Sathan is a creature of God as he is man though otherwise as God he be equall to his Father As man he is subiect to the law and to this precept among the rest 2. That Satan is not God as he pretendeth by his vniust claimes nor any way equall to God 3. That therefore neither must he beeing a creature giue the least diuine worship from God nor he that thus claimes it can by any meanes be capable of it 4. That the Scriptures of God reserue vnto God his due worship and forbid that any creature shall share with him Christ stands not to dispute whether the sight presented were a shadow or substance nor whether he would giue it him or no but holds him to the Scripture which vpholds his Fathers right Quest. But why doth our Sauiour change and adde to the text of Scripture as not regarding that terrible woe denounced against such as adde or take away from the word and contrary to that in Deut. 12.32 Here our Sauiour 1. changeth Moses saith Thou shalt feare Christ saith Thou shalt worship 2. addeth for Moses hath not the word onely which is of Christs putting to that text Answ. 1. Here is some difference indeed in words but not in sense and therefore it is no corruption of the text nor letting out the life of it which stands not in the words but in the true sense 2. Our Lord both in great wisedome changeth the word feare into worship and iust cause for 1. Moses vseth feare which is a generall word in which is contained all such diuine duties as godly men ought to performe vnto God and our Sauiour mentions one speciall which is included in that generall which thing Moses speakes as well as hee in the generall as he that commaunds a whole commands euery part inward and outward 2. Hereby our Sauiour aptly meetes with Satans temptation If thou wilt worship me he vseth the same word not tying himselfe to Moses his words but keeping the sense but to Satans word and 3. He noteth the nearenesse and vndiuidednes of Gods feare and his worship as where the cause is there will be the effect so true feare and worship goe together where one is there will be the other and for this cause one is put for the other not here onely but elsewhere as Esa. 29.13 their feare toward mee was taught by the precept of men Christ alleadging it Matth. 15.9 saith You worship me in vaine As for the word onely added which is not in the law it no way addeth any contrary or diuerse sense to Moses but onely expoundeth or giueth a fit commentarie to the text and speaketh that plainely in one word which Moses doth in more as Deut. 2.13 Thou shalt feare the Lord thy God and serue him and walke after no other gods which is all one with our Sauiours Thou shalt serue him onely As he that saith The King is the supreame gouernour and none but hee saith in effect The King is the onely supreame gouernour 3. Christ and his Apostles had a priuiledge in alleadging Scriptures without errour and were infallible expounders as well as alleadgers 4. This alteration of words is made by Christ to warrant vs that Scriptures alleadged by teachers according to their right sense although with alterations and additions are to be taken as true expositions and allegations we beeing not tyed so strictly to words as to sense For otherwise all our sermons and expositions which serue to beat out the true sense of Scriptures and apply it to seuerall vses might be condemned as idle additions to Scripture which is blasphemous 5. To warrant vs that principles of religion expounded by warrant of Scripture are truely interpreted though the Scriptures in so many formall words expresse them not As for example In the doctrine of iustification by faith we say we are iustified by faith onely before God here the Papists exclaime on vs as accursed heretikes because we read not the word onely in all the Scripture But we read it in effect and in true sense Rom. 3.28 and Eph. 2.8 by faith without workes which exclusiue is all one as to say onely by faith as our Sauiour interprets the exclusion of other gods by the word onely As if I should say I did such a thing without help is it not all one to say I onely did it If Christs interpretation be true and warrantable so must ours in the point of iustification And if the deuill himselfe had not yeelded to Christs allegation he might haue said Thou thrustest in the word onely and addest to
the godly to ouercome them with no other then their owne weapons Christ had made the written word his shield his sword he will therefore assay with his owne weapon to wound him and so he deales with his members 5. Here is not onely Gods permission but his ouerruling power for hereby the father of lies against his heart and nature giueth witnesse to the truth and strongly argues it to be the strongest weapon that hath strongest power ouer the conscience Quest. How doth Satan alleadge Scripture Answ. Hee is Gods ape and as God alleadgeth Scripture three wayes 1. by his Spirit and inward motion as to Abimelech in a dreame Gen. 20.3 2. by his Ministers and seruants Angels or men 3. by his owne liuely voice as to Adam So can Satan 1. by suggestion 2. by his Ministers who transforme themselues as if they were the Ministers and Apostles of Christ. 2. Cor. 11.13.14.15 not onely deliuering the word but also truely 3. by voice in some assumed body as vndoubtedly he did to the first Adam and here to the second Seeing then this wicked spirit can and doth alleadge Scripture against vs it behooues vs to trie the spirits whether they be of God or no 1. Ioh. 4.1 not to beleeue euery one that can alleadge Scripture for so we might beleeue the deuill himselfe 1. Thess. 5.22 our commaundement is to prooue all things and hold onely that which is good Our president is in Act. 17.11 the Bereans when they heard the Apostles searched whether the things spoken were so We take no coine without due tryall Quest. How shall I trie the spirit that brings a sentence of Scripture Answ. 1. By diligent study and reading of Scripture diligently searching out the truth for the determination of euery truth must be by Scripture and though Scripture seeme to be opposed to Scripture we must not with Papists draw determination of matters from Scripture so saith the Apostle in Eph. 4.14 Let vs not be carried about as children with euery winde of doctrine how should we doe other but follow the truth in loue Examine the places circumstances antecedents and consequents conferre with other Scriptures to all which it must agree 2. Follow and frequent the ministery as not content with the knowledge of the Scriptures without the true vnderstanding of them for they consist not in the bare letters but in the pithie sense said the Father And this true vnderstanding will help vs to lay it to the analogie of faith whereunto it must be agreeable and will make our senses exercised in the word 3. Adde hereunto prayer which procureth the Spirit to lead vs into all necessary truth Dauid neuer ceased to pray to be taught as we may see through the whole 119. Psalme 4. Consider the end scope of the Scripture alleadged If it lead thee into an action condemned by the law of nature or against other direct Scriptures or principles of religion it is of the deuill the father of lies for Gods Spirit neuer alleadgeth Scripture but to lead vs into the knowledge and practise of some truth This is Moses his rule Deut. 13.1 If a false Prophet rise vp see what he aimeth at if it be to draw thee from the Lord his worship or word take heed of him so if Satan by any instrument of his shall bring the word and pretend great zeale if the end be to draw thee to superstition idolatry or Popery beware of him his scope discouers him If a doctrine or Scripture be alleadged to nourish any fleshly delight or to hold men in sinne though the words be Gods the allegation is the deuills as At what time soeuer a sinner repenteth c. and the theefe was saued at the last houre and therefore if thou canst say two or three good words at thy death all shall be well here is the deuill saying It is written for all Scripture truely cited by Gods Spirit aimes at mortification and the furtherance of repentance If a Scripture be alleadged and vrged to threaten and discourage such as feare God and shew forwardnes in good wayes or to animate the sinner promising him peace and life it is Satans allegation for if Gods spirit alleadge Scripture that word is good and comfortable to him that walkes vprightly and the threats of the law are fit prouision for impenitent persons This teacheth vs not to content our selues to know the Scripture and be able to speake of it or to alleadge it for the deuill knowes the word and can alleadge it readily yea he is expert in it Many men deceiue themselues in their estate and thinke themselues sure of saluation if they can get a little knowledge of the Scripture aboue others as though Satan could not alleadge it or as though the wicked could not preach it as Iudas did or vngodly men professe it who take the w●rd into their mouth and hate to be reformed Psal. 50.16.17 But let vs take heed we come not behinde the deuill himselfe while we thus highly cōceit our selues for 1. Are there not a number of ignorant men almost as ignorant as if the Scriptures had neuer beene written and shall not the deuill condemne these who hath gained so much knowledge in the word which containeth not one word of comfort for him but iudgement that makes him tremble Yet these whom they would make wise to saluation and to whom they offer the ioyes and comfort of life eternall are vtterly ignorant of them 2. Many read the Scripture but as Satan not to informe or reforme themselues nor to make themselues better but both themselues and others farre worse as not onely heretikes and learned Papists who bend all their knowledge to suppresse and hide the truth but all such as by the Scripture seeke to maintaine their owne errors and sinnes which they will not part with And these are no better then the deuill 3. Others will reade Scripture and heare and know it but without all speciall application and grace in the heart wherein they should differ from the deuill and wicked men who know the word but affect it not doe it not nay cannot abide the speciall application of it to do them good and this doth nothing but increase sinne and iudgement sinne Iam. 4.17 to him that knoweth to doe well and doth it not it is sinne a great sinne without excuse or cloake Ioh. 15.22 iudgement for such shall be beaten with many stripes 4. Others bragge of their knowledge they read the Bible at least Dauids Psalmes and they know as much as any Preacher can tell them But stay the deuill reades the Psalter as well as thou and can quote Dauids Psalmes more readily then thou he can read the Bible he knowes as much yea more then any Preacher can tell him what sayest thou more of thy selfe then the deuill can do of himselfe and more truely And what hast thou gained by all this challenge but thine owne conuiction of great sinne
beware of wronging the children of God euen because they haue the protection of the Angels To rise vp against any of them is to rise vp against the Angels their keepers Offend none of these little ones for their Angels behold the face of their heauenly Father and thou prouokest the Angels against thee If the Sodomites rise vp against Lot the Angels will saue him and destroy them If Balaam will goe to curse Gods people he shall haue an Angell against him with a sword drawne readie to kill him 4. Learne wee to giue God the honour of our saluation and safety when we haue auoided any danger publike or priuate It is not by chance nor by our prouidence and policie but Gods charging his Angels to saue and keepe vs. Daniel did rightly ascribe his deliuerance to God by the ministery of the Angell chap. 6.22 My God saith hee sent his Angell and shut the lyons mouth 5. To be partaker of all this comfort these meanes are to be vsed 1. Become a godly man Psal. 34.9 The Angell of the Lord pitcheth his tent round about them that feare the Lord Hebr. 1.14 They are ministring Spirits to the heyres of saluation 2. Hold on in a godly course keepe thee in thy wayes in the duties of thy calling generall and speciall for thus long the charge of the Angels stands in force 3. Pray not to Angels but to the God of heauen to send his Angell before thee to direct and assist thee in thy duties and waies For what God hath promised we must pray for Gen. 24.7 Abraham tells his seruant that God will send his Angell before him to take a wife for his sonne and this Angell prospered his iourney v. 40. And that this was the practise of the Church of Egypt appeares by Moses his message to the King of Edom Numb 20.16 Beeing ill intreated in Egypt we prayed to the Lord and he sent an Angell and brought vs out of Egypt I doubt not but this dutie were it more faithfully practised would bring home much more successe and comfort then many men finde in their labour who scarce knowe whence or how their prosperitie commeth vnto them Obiect If God should send his Angels in humane forme and as familiarly to conuerse with vs as aunciently they did with the Patriarkes we should beleeue this doctrine but now there is certainly no such thing Ans. 1. Christ is now in heauen where our conuersation ought to be by faith rather then by the visible apparition of Angels 2. The beginnings of the Church needed such heauenly confirmation but now the word is sufficiently confirmed by the Sonne himselfe from heauen 3. The Scriptures are perfect and fully and plainly reueale vnto vs Gods will in euerie particular as if the Angels should come and teach vs daily 4. The blessed Spirit is more abundantly giuen in our hearts and supplyeth their absence in bodily shape and apparition 5. We must labour to get the eyes of our soules open and then we shall with Elishaes seruant see their comfortable presence notwithstanding they take no bodies to appeare in VERS 7. Iesus said vnto him It is written againe Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God NOW followeth the repulse of our Sauiour to this second temptation wherein are two things 1. his resistance 2. his reason drawne from a testimony of Scripture I. Christ resisteth and yeeldeth not albeit he heareth Scripture alleadged Why If yee were of God saith Christ yee would heare his word neither doth Scripture speake any thing in vaine But the reason is 1. because our Lord perceiued that the word was wrested and abused by Sathan● and 2. that Scripture abused binds not to obedience 3. that Scripture turned out of his right sense is not Gods word but carries something in it besides Scripture and then if an Angel from heauen should bring it we must be so farre from receiuing it as to hold him accursed 4. for our example that wee should not take all allegations hand ouer head but as Christ here trie whither they tend if to cast vs downe refuse them II. Christ resisteth but not without reason but by Scripture and opposeth Scripture to Scripture not as repugnant one to another but by way of collation and conferring one with another that the right vse of one may ouerthrowe the abuse of the other not in way of contrarietie but of commentarie Quest. But why did not our Sauiour shut his mouth by telling him how wickedly he had abused the text he had alleadged by adding detracting and wresting it to a contrarie ende and meaning Answ. This might indeed haue confounded him sufficiently but our Sauiour his combate is not only victorious for vs but exemplarie and therefore we are herein trained in our fight and encounter 1. To hold close to the Scripture in answering the deuill It is written againe which word of our Sauiour noteth how he buckled the Scripture to him both as a buckler to defend him and as a sword to foyle and wound his enemie and so must we who are not so able to dispute with Satan about the true meaning of a place as our Lord was 2. To informe vs that the best and onely way to discouer the abuse of Scripture is Scripture it being the onely rule and iudge of it selfe and all the controuersies rising out of it And therefore the deuill no sooner heard this testimony but his mouth was shut as well knowing how the wisdom of his Father had discouered his subtiltie The best commentarie of Scripture is Scripture euery man is the best interpreter of himselfe and so the Author of the Scriptures is the best interpreter of them 3. To let vs see that although Satan had abused the Scripture yet he nor we must ouercome by no other weapon and that the abuse of a thing takes not away the right vse of it nor good things to be reiected because they are abused by them that can vse them aright If Christ had been of the Papists minde he would haue condemned and shut vp the Scriptures from common men because the deuill had abused them for so doe they because heretiques his instruments doe abuse them the Laitie may not meddle with them But it is plaine that in things necessarie no abuse in one takes away the right vse in another As for example A murderer vseth a sword to kill a man may not another vse a sword or that sword in his owne defence And are not the Scriptures the sword of the Spirit more necessarie A drunkard a glutton a proud person abuse meat and drinke and apparell to surfeting drunkennesse riot and excesse shall we therefore cast away meat drinke apparell and refuse the necessarie vse of it And is not the word a more necessary food Because a wolfe comes in sheeps cloathing must the sheepe cast away their fleece No the Prophets did not refuse the word of the Lord because the false Prophets did say The word of the
not carried by affection seeing he is a partie in the Churches Controuersies and by Canon cast out from beeing a Iudge How know we no appeales lie from him seeing the Fathers haue appealed from Councels which are aboue him How can we know that he sits in Peters chaire vpon earth seeing the Father hath taught vs That hee sitteth in heauen who inwardly teacheth mens hearts Therfore we renounce all such corrupt Iudges and leane to the vncorrupt Scripture Secondly seeing the Scriptures are the best Commentaries of themselues and the Iudge and decider of all doctrines and controuersies Ministers that would stablish truth of doctrine must be carefull to prooue and iustifie all their collections of doctrine out of Scripture for thereby they setle the faith of their people vpon a sure ground of faith and manners all other foundations are sandy all other proofes liable to exceptions Why then should Protestant-Preachers who defend against Papists the sufficiencie of Scripture to make Gods people perfect and hold it the rule and square of all doctrine crosse their iudgement by their practise for euery place of Scripture alleadging a dozen or twentie testimonies of Doctors Fathers Councels nay profane Poets and heathens all which are darkenes it selfe and without light further then they borrow from the Sunne in the Scripture I am not so nice as that I thinke not there may be a sparing and sober vse of humane testimonies in Sermons sometimes in cases of Grammar sometimes in matters of great controuersie to shew the consent of the auncient Church especially dealing with an aduersarie that will claime all antiquitie for him sometime by way of conuiction to shame Christians by the heathen as the Lord did the Iewes by Chittim and Kedar and the sluggard by the pismire Neither am I an enemie to learning but would haue a man well seene in naturall Philosophy in humane literature in the writing● of Fathers and Schoolemen and be as a good housholder stored with things new and olde But needlesly and for ostentation to giue tongues vnto dead men and in the message of God to put to silence the voice of God speaking in the Scripture to set vp Hagar the handmaid aboue Sarah her mistresse is a feareful sinne against God and his word and a crying sinne of these dayes wherein for a man to tie himselfe close to the Scripture without such flourishes and to scorne to send a rich Iewell to the painter is to bring a blot on himselfe that he is a man of no learning For what meaneth else that common crie that no man is against this manner of preaching but they that cannot vse it Well hath he learned his art that can most hide it here that God may haue all the glory for he is not commended here whom men praise but whom God alloweth The Apostolicall teaching of Christ was not in words which mans wisedome teacheth but Gods he is the best scholler that can teach Christ plainlyest and for my part if I would set my selfe to be idle I would chuse that kind of Preaching which is counted so laborious The same I say for disputations and controuersies in the Church and Schooles neuer can we looke for an ende of them till we tie the determination of them to the Scripture alone the right Iudge A stratageme of Satan for Antichrist to flie the Scripture which should soone end controuersies and hide his poyson in the infinite windings of Fathers Councells traditions c. Well I know that God hath a secret worke in punishing the vnbeleeuing world by the continuance of the man of sinne till his time come but hauing well thought of the props on which he standeth yet in the dayes of such light there is none that doth him more seruice then this hiding of his mysterie in such a thicket of vncertainties wherein it is impossible to come to any end or issue We may follow the fox frō one burrrow to another and from hole to hole because we are forced But whosoeuer lookes to come to an ende of controuersies by following him from Father to Father from Councell to Councell from one Decree to another from one Tradition to another with infinite labour examining and scanning the words and syllables of auncient and later times hee shall fall short of his expectation For all this while the determiner of the controuersie is not present but set aside And what other reason can be giuen that wheras the chase and pursuit of that beast of Rome hath been continued with extraordinarie speed and strength for aboue these hundred yeares last past and he hath been followed into euerie hole wherein he hid himselfe yet the controuersies so beaten and canuased are in mans eie as farre from composition or determination as at first not one of them yeelded vp on either hand I say no other better reason can be giuen but that we are not agreed of the Iudge of the cause and so long as they can hold them off the Scriptures they wil not be set downe by any other authoritie Thirdly this doctrine must prouoke vs to the diligent reading and study of the Scriptures for hereby we shall come to be stablished in the truth and able to discerne the abuse of Scriptures by conferring them with themselues this is the best way to keepe vs from errors and sects and to finde out the true sense of Scripture Obiect But doe not our aduersaries read the Scriptures as diligently as we and are not they as skilfull to compare Scriptures and yet abide in error and heresie Answ. Here we must consider 1. the person that must read 2. the rules to be obserued in reading The person must be a religious and rightly affected person that must read the word with vnderstanding Obiect So the Papists say that onely religious persons ought to read the Scriptures Answ. Euery Christian ought to haue the booke of the law with him as the Iewes had before their eyes and in their hands continually Deut. 6.10 euery Christian ought to haue the word of Christ dwell plenteously in him Coloss. 3.16 euery one ought to be ready to giue a reason of the faith he professeth to euery one that will aske 1. Pet. 3.15 euery one ought to attend to the sure words of the Prophets and Apostles as a light shining in a darke place for so the Apostle Peter writeth to all Christians and not onely the Clergie Yet no Christian ought to read vnprepared neither can euery one read to profite but such as are qualified 1. With humility in the sense of our owne simplicity and infancie in heauenly things becomming fooles in our selues that we may subscribe to Gods wisedome in the Scripture and captiuating all our own thoughts to the obedience of Christ. Psal. 25.9 God teacheth the humble Matth. 11.25 Thou hast hid these things from the wise and reuealed them to babes And what is the reason that heretikes Sophisters and Papists of great learning read the
be iustified by himselfe but in the other he desires to be iustified his cause was good there was no such thing as they laid to his charge If Iob would dispute with God his owne cloathes would make him vncleane but when he dealeth with his calumnious friends he saith I will neuer let goe mine innocencie till I die Luk. 1.33 of his Kingdome there shall be no ende 1. Cor. 15.24 He shall deliuer vp the Kingdome to his Father Ans. Luke speaketh of Christs Kingdome in respect of it selfe the Apostle in respect of the administration of it In the former respect it shall neuer be abolished Christ shall alwaies haue a people to rule alwaies a Lordship and Headship but he shall giue vp his Kingdome in respect of the manner and meanes of administring it he shall not rule as now he doth by Magistrates Ministers the Word Sacraments and other ordinances Isa. 64.6 All our righteousnesse is as filthy ragges Ephes. 5.27 The Church is called glorious not hauing spot or wrinkle or any such thing but holy and without blemish Both are true the Prophet speakes of the Church militant the Apostle of the Church triumphant Act. 15.10 Circumcision and such like rites are called heauy yoakes which neither the Apostles nor their Fathers were able to beare 1. Ioh. 5.3 To them that loue God his commaundements are not greiuous and his yoake is an easie yoake Matth. 11.30 Answ. They were intolerable in respect of the rigor wherein Moses propounded them to be fulfilled but not in respect of imputation of Christs righteousnesse inchoation of inherent righteousnes and acceptation God accepting the will and faith for the deed Christ stood between those heauy burdens and vs and carried away the curse of the law Act. 15.27 Circumcision is abrogated yet Paul circumcised Timothie chap. 16. v. 3. Answ. True it was taken away as a Sacrament but it was not yet honourably buried and therefore it remained onely as a ceremoni e. Matth. 9.6 The Sonne of man hath power to forgiue sinnes Luk. 23.34 Father forgiue them they know not what they doe why prayes he thus to his Father if himselfe might forgiue them Answ. Though all the Persons in Trinitie forgiue sinnes yet not in the same manner the Father bestowes the Sonne merits the holy Ghost sealeth vp and applyeth remission of sinnes Ioh. 10.29 None of my sheep no elect shall perish none shall plucke them out of my hands Iudas was elected Matth. 10.4 and yet perished was the Sonne of perdition Ioh. 17.12 Ans. Election is twofold either to life eternall whereof Iohn speaketh chap. 10.29 and so Iudas was not elected or to the office of Apostleship and from this he fell Ioh. 1.8 He was not that light Ioh. 5.35 He was a burning and a shining light Answ. It speakes not of the same light Iohn Baptist was not the Sunne of righteousnesse the Messias that light that brought light in the world but he was a light and gaue a notable testimonie to that light Mic. 5.2 Bethlehem was little among the thousands of Iudah Math. 2.6 Thou art not the least Answ. The Prophet speakes of it as it was in his time in it selfe as it was of a little circuit and compasse but the Euangelist as it brought forth Christ the Sonne of God the Messiah in this respect it was great which in it selfe was but of small estimate Gen. 2.18 God said It is not good for man to be alone Paul saith It is good for a man not to touch a woman 1. Cor. 7.1 Answ. God speaketh so 1. ratione medij because of propagation 2. remedij to auoid fornication and wandring lusts 3. mysterij because marriage should be a type of the vnion between Christ and the Church 4. adiutorij because man wanted a fit helper But the Apostle speakes not simply but comparatiuely it is not so good as not to touch a woman or it is good that is commodious in these times of persecution when all the world raged against Christians not to touch a woman it is not fit to haue the burthen of a family in such times Againe he speakes of such as himselfe is such as haue the gift of continencie Ioh. 10.27 Reach hither thy finger and thy hand and thrust it into my side yet ver 17. he saith to Marie Touch me not Why so Answ. Because Thomas must beleeue and haue his faith helped who professed he would not beleeue vnlesse he might touch him but Marie beleeued and did not neede this indulgence shee would hold him with her and haue the comfort of his bodily presence Rom. 14.9 that hee might bee the Lord of the dead and liuing Matth. 22.32 God is not the God of the dead but of the liuing Can God bee the God of the dead and not the God of the dead Ans. Christ speakes not simply as the Apostle doth but in the sense of the Sadduces and by an hypothesis of their surmise as if he should say God is not the God of such dead as you surmise shall neuer rise againe but because they are indeede to rise againe God is their God Another rule to be obserued in reading to get the true sense of Scripture is this If any place seeme to vphold sinne directly it must be expounded by a figure as 1. King 18.27 Cry aloud for hee is a God either asleepe or in a iourney or pursuing his enemies Here is a manifest Ironie Matth. 26.45 when Christ tooke his Disciples asleepe the second time after he had commaunded them to watch he saith Sleepe on which was a sharpe reprehension of their dulnesse The like may be said of these places Iudg. 10.14 1. King 22.15 Eccles. 11.9 Mark 7.9 In all doubtfull places let vs euer receiue that exposition which is according to the analogie of faith Rom. 12.6 If any man prophesie that is haue a gift of interpreting let him interpret according to the analogie of faith so that if the letter of a Scripture crosse the analogie of faith that is agree not with the summe of the doctrine of faith contained in the Decalogue Creed and Lords prayer it must be vnderstood by a figure As for example Where the text saith This is my body seeing the literall sense fighteth with the Article of faith by which we beleeue that Christ is ascended into heauen and sitteth at the right hand of God till he returne to iudge the quicke and the dead it must be vnderstood in the figure vsuall to Sacraments by which the thing signified is put for the signe and contrariwise So Luke 7.47 Many sinnes were forgiuen her for shee loued much to gather hence merit of remission for our workes of charity with the Papists is against the ground of faith by which we beleeue remission of sinnes which is directly opposite to merit Great diligence must be vsed to discerne the right scope of the place doubted of which beeing neglected makes way to manifold errours See an instance The
the senses laid together were well safe-guarded Can the heart or market-place of a towne or citie be safe frō the siege of the enemie if the gates be cast open or the walls demolished or the ramparts bared of their fence and munition Why did Iob make such couenants with his eyes but that he knew that without such a fence euery obiect would be as a snare to entrappe his soule Iob. 31.1 Nay let an heart neuer so seasoned with grace suffer the senses to leake the soule is in danger of shipwracke Was there euer heart of ordinary man or woman more innocent or more filled with grace then Eues in her innocencie And yet when as Sathan set vpon her senses hee sent in by them such poyson as wrought death vnto all her posterity Rules for the ordering of our senses aright 1. Beware of the life of sense which is a bruitish life 2. Pet. 2.12 the Apostle speaketh of men lead by sensualitie euen as the bruit beasts who follow sense and appetite without all restraint Thus did the Gentiles who were therefore giuen vp to a reprobate sense Rom. 1.24 And the danger of this estate Salomon noteth Eccles. 11.9 when he bids the young man walke in the sight of his owne eies and after the lusts of his heart but withall Remember that for all this he must come to iudgement Let such thinke hereon that thinke it is free to giue vp their senses to feed themselues vpon euery obiect themselues please 2. Consider that God made the senses to minister to a right ordered heart and not the heart to follow the senses and therefore the heart must be watched that it walke not after the eie which is to inuert Gods order And what a deluge of sinne ouerfloweth the soule when the vnderstanding is buried in the senses and the heart drowned in sinfull appetites Dauid giues his eye leaue to wander and looke lustfully after Bathsheba and what waues of miserie one ouertaking another did he bring into his soule And what maruel then if naturall men neglecting their dutie in taking off their eyes from vnchast obiects neuer rest till they come to haue eies full of adulterie 2. Pet. 2.14 not ceasing to sinne according to our Sauiours speach Matth. 6.23 If the eie be euill all the bodie is darke yea and the soule too 3. Keepe the parts of Christian armour vpon thy senses that thou lie not open there A valiant captaine knowing that the enemy is easier kept out then beaten out of a citie hath great care to plant his garrison about the gates and walls there he sets his most faithfull watch and ward there he plants his cheife munition and ordnance Had Dauid kept his armour on his eie he had not been so foyled by Bathsheba If on his eare he had not been so iniurious to Mephibosheth by meanes of slandring Ziba 2. Sam. 16.3 4. Salomon wisheth vs Not to looke vpon the colour of the wine in the cuppe that is with too much pleasure to stirre vp desire Hee would haue vs keep our fence vpon our eares not to giue eare to a flatterer or whisperer but brow-beat him and driue him away with an angry countenance The Apostle Paul would haue our eares shut against euill and corrupt words which corrupt good manners Daniel desires not to tast of the Kings dainties nor will pollute himselfe with them chap. 1. v. 8. And so we must fence our whole man as we may not touch any vncleane thing and yeeld nothing to the course of waters 4. Feed thy senses with warrantable obiects 1. God 2. His word 3. The creatures 4. Thy brethren 5. Thy selfe First our eies are made to see God himselfe here below as we can in his backe-parts hereafter as we would face to face And therefore a base thing it were to fixe them vpon the vain pleasures and profits of this life This is fitter for bruit beasts that haue no higher obiect Againe what fairer or fitter obiect can we choose for our senses then himselfe that made them with all their faculties and giues vs so much comfort by them Pro. 20.12 The hearing eare and seeing eie God made them both and both of them as all things else ●e made for himselfe Further where can we better place our senses then vpon him from whom all our help commeth how ought our eies to be continually lifted vp in holy and feruent prayers and praises considering both our continuall necessities and supplyes So Dauid I lift vp mine eies vnto the hills from whence my saluation commeth Psal. 121.1 and As the eie of the handmaid is lifted vp to the hand of her Mistresse so are our eies vnto thee Psalm 123.1 Lastly how can we place our senses better then vpon him who is the most pleasant and durable obiect To see God in Christ reconciled to heare and know him become our father is so rauishing a sight as the Saints haue runne through fire and water to apprehend it And for the continuance it will feed the senses euerlastingly yea when the senses themselues decay and waxe dull this obiect shall feed them and be neuer the lesse sweet And therefore as Salomon aduiseth Eccles. 12.1 while thou hast thy senses fixe them vpon this obiect Remember thy Creator in the dayes of thy youth before they be darke that looke out at the windowes c. If a man set his senses and feed them vpon any outward obiect wealth honour pleasure buildings and the like we may iustly say to him as our Sauiour to his disciples when they gazed vpon the beautifull workemanship of the Temple Are these the things your eies gaze vpon verily the time comes when one stone shall not be left vpon another vndemolished The like may be said of all earthly obiects whatsoeuer Onely this obiect shall grow more and more glorious and desireable Secondly God made our senses to be exercised in his holy word which leades vs to himselfe Heb. 5.14 the Apostle requires that Christians should haue 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 senses exercised in the word Pro. 2.2 let thine eare heare wisedome 1. Hence comes faith which is by hearing 2. Hence we draw the comforts of the Scriptures which are the consolations of God in our trouble 3. Hence are we admonished directed and wholesomly corrected Pro. 15.31 The eare that heareth the rebuke of life shall dwell among wise men 4. The danger of neglect is great 1. he that turnes his eare from hearing the law his prayer is abhominable 2. vncircumcised eares resist the holy Ghost Act. 7.51 3. itching eares that turne from the truth doe by Gods iust iudgement turne vnto fables 2. Tim. 4.3 5. It is a signe of a man that hath giuen his heart vnto God for he that giues his heart will giue his senses too knowing that God requires both Pro. 23.26 My sonne giue me thy heart and let thine eyes that is thy senses delight in my wayes And our Sauiour saith Hee that hath an
eare to heare let him heare Seeing therefore that this is so notable a meanes of guiding our senses let vs more carefully giue vp and take vp our eyes and eares with the sight and sound of Gods word vpon all occasions in the hearing and reading of the Scripture I would aske the most carnall man that is whether this in sound iudgment be not a better obiect for our senses then bowles or tables and fitter for all times especially for the Sabbath Thirdly God made our senses to profit our selues by his creatures that by them we might glorifie him their Creator and not by them corrupt or insnare our selues Isa. 40.26 Lift vp your eyes aloft and behold who created all these things This vse Dauid maketh Psal. 8. when I see the heauens the earth and the workes of thy hands then said I Lord what is man that thou art so mindfull of him and concludes the Psalme thus How excellent is thy name through all the world And why 1. The inuisible things of God his power and diuinity and eternity were made visible to the very Gentiles by things created Rom. 1.20 And shall we either not looke on them or so looke vpon them as they to make vs inexcusable shall wee onely enioy the naturall vse and no spirituall or diuine vse from them 2. Consider that God for this purpose hath made the countenance of man not as the beasts groueling on the earth but erected vnto heauen and he hath made the eye of man not as the beasts but as Anatomists obserue hath giuen it one muscle which they want whereby he can turne his eye directly vpwards with admirable quicknes that it should not so fix it selfe vpon any thing below as the couetous eye doth but by occasion of things below turne it selfe vpward to their Creator Yea he hath compassed our eyes with browes and lids and fences from dust and earth that though we looke sometimes on the earth yet the least dust or earth should not get into them 3. Let vs labour to vse our senses in beholding Gods workes as they in Ioh. 2.23 that saw the workes of Christ of whom it is said Many beleeued in the name of Christ seeing the workes that he did So let the works which we see God hath done be at least inducements to beleeue him so much the more Fourthly God made our senses in respect of our brethren both to benefit them and our selues by them 1. Our eyes to behold their miserie to pitie them to releeue them Turne not thine eyes from thine owne flesh Herein the vnmercifull Priest and L'euit were condemned by the pitifull Samaritan Our eares to heare the crie of the poore Prou. 21.13 he that turnes his eare from the crie of the poore himselfe shall crie and not be heard Numbers neuer make this vse of their eares but God hath a deafe eare for them 2. Our eyes to see the good example of our brethren to imitate them to glorifie God for them Our eares to heare their godly counsells admonitions reproofes and so be bettered by them 3. Our eyes to see and consider their danger to pull them out of their infirmities the fire and to cast out the mote of their eyes Our eares to heare what is fit to bee spoken of them to defend their good names if they be traduced For God hath giuen vs two eares not rashly to receiue euery information but to reserue one for the partie least he be condemned vnheard vnconuinced Fiftly and lastly God made our senses in respect of our selues not onely to be faithfull keepers of the body but diligent factors and agents for our owne soules as 1. That our eyes should euer bee looking homewards and to the end of our way as quicke and expedite trauellers and not fix themselues vpon euery thing we see here below This is done by heauenly conuersation 2. Our eares should be bored to the perpetuall seruice and obedience of our God as our Lord himselfe was Psal. 40.7 Thou hast bored mine eare alluding to that ceremony in the law Exod. 21.6 If a seruant would not part from his Master his eare must be bored and nailed to the post of the house and thus he became a perpetuall seruant he was nailed and fixed to that house and seruice So wee must yeelde an obedient eare as Salomon calls it vnto the counsells will and commaundement of our Lord and Master Iesus Christ. 3. Our eyes were made to be conduits of teares for our owne sinne and miserie and for the sinne and wretchednes of other men Psal. 119.136 Dauids eyes gushed out with riuers of teares because men keepe not the word how wept he then for his owne sinnes that wept so for others Good Lot his righteous soule was vexed in hearing and seeing the vncleane conuersation of the Sodomites Thus should our senses be so farre from conceiuing pleasure in sinnefull obiects as these must be the continuall greefe of our soules And can we indeed looke vpon our selues and not see something which is a brand of our sin or can we behold any creature and not see some expresse prints and markes of our sinne and vanity vpon it Surely this one meditation would be effectuall to keep vs from casting our eyes vpon vnlawfull obiects and so from making our selues a prey to the deuill This serues to reprooue such as faile in this watch of the senses for who doth not yet some farre more dangerously Such as haue in their houses Popish pictures and images which are alluring harlots corrupters of the heart which is an opening of the doore to the deuill a signe of a man willing to be seduced Experience shewes that when a man is in loue with such images he easily falls out with Gods image in himselfe and Gods children 2. Such as delight in lasciuious pictures and filthy portraytures of naked men or women in whole or such parts as may stirre the corruption of the heart which should be beaten downe by all meanes We need bring no oile to this flame Yet the deuill hath gotten such pictures in request in this wanton age wherein euery thing is almost proportionall 3. Such are farre from this watch of their senses as so attire and disguise themselues or lay open their nakednes to insnare the senses of others Let them not say they thinke no hurt in it vnlesse they can be sure that no other thinke hurt by it 4. Such as like the images haue eares and heare not eyes and see not care not to heare the word or read it neuer tast Gods goodnes in it neither doth the breath of heauenly life euer passe through their noses 5. Such as frequent wicked company and delight in the vngracious actions and speaches that they heare and see or can digest them without reproofe or dislike manifested The deuill hath a through-fare among such companies who are conspired against God and goodnes Adde vnto these such as read or haue in their houses lasciuious
be filled namely aboue the ordinary measure But neuer was any Saint so filled but that he had great emptines and much roome for Satan to frame and forge his temptations in When God doth bring his children into the wildernesse that is into temptation he armeth them with sufficient power to withstand it 2. Cor. 12.8 when Paul was vexed with an extraordinarie temptation he prayed thrice or often and answer was giuen My grace is sufficient for thee where by grace is not meant the free fauour of God as in many places but the power and strength of the Holy Spirit which was a gift of grace enabling him to stand vnder it And this is that which Gods children may expect not to be exempted from temptation nor from much molestation nor from many knocks and foiles which bring them much sorrow but yet at length God whose hand is vnder them brings them through all For so it is in 1. Cor. 10.13 God is faithfull and will not suffer you to be tempted aboue that ye are able but with euery temptation will giue an issue In which place the Apostle distinguisheth of temptations Some are so deadly and diabolicall as a man is drowned and neuer swimmes out of them these we must pray against Lead vs not into temptation Others rise of humane imbecillity and are such as men can beare by which God tryeth the graces of his and manifesteth their infirmity and out of which his grace giueth euasion and deliuerance seeme they neuer so dangerous as for example what a great temptation was that of Israel in the red sea yet God brought them out of it So for euill of sinne What strong temptations were they that seased on Peter Dauid Salomon wherein they seemed vtterly lost Yet the Lord held vnder his hand and left them sufficient grace to raise them againe Gods faithfulnes was such to Dauid and Salomon and Christs prayer that Peters faith did not vtterly faile 1. We are the Lords souldiers and seruants and therefore he will helpe vs Dauid thought this a good argument Psal. 86.2 O thou my God saue thy seruant that trusteth in thee And this is Gods manner of dealing When he hath a great worke or triall for his children he armes them with boldnes constancie and courage as Sampson when he was to encounter many Philistims what a measure of strength was he endued withal When the Prophets were to be sent to rebellious and stubborne people the Lord made their faces as brasen walls Ierem. 1.18 and as adamants Ezek. 3.9 The Apostles beeing called to the great function of calling in the whole world the Holy Ghost fell first vpon them furnished them with singular gifts fit for that calling How boldly Peter preached and professed Christ at Ierusalem to the beards of those that had put him to death euen the Rulers and Elders appeares in Act. 4.8 but the cause of this was that hee was full of the Holy Ghost The like we may obserue in Elias his reforming of Gods worship and in the restoring of religion by Luther who was wonderfully gifted 1. with vndaunted courage as appeares in his burning the Popes decrees and his disputation at Wormes 2. with feruent prayer 3. with admirable and heauenly preaching So the faithfull witnesses and Martyrs that are called to a hote brunt are first armed with a singular spirit as that Protomartyr Steuen Act. 6.8.10 who was full of the Holy Ghost full of faith and power full of wisedome and grace that they were not able to resist the wisedome and spirit by which he spake And was it not so in Q Maries daies that poore creatures were lifted vp with such excellent spirits as that all the learning and wisedome of the Doctors or all the power of authoritie could not daunt them but onely those vnmercifull arguments of fire and faggot could put them to silence 2. The battell and cause is Gods the question between Satan and vs is Gods glory and our saluation This was Moses his argument why the Lord should spare his murmuring people see Num. 14.15.16 Now if the deuill preuaile against vs God shall loose his honour which is deare vnto him But he will not suffer himselfe to be so disgraced as to let vs be ouercome by his enemie neither shall the saluation of his be preiudiced for this were against the truth of God whom Satan accuseth to be a lyar 3. He hath armed vs with his owne armour and furnished vs with his owne strength and will not haue his weapons bee thought so weake and insufficient as to be foiled in it the sword of the Spirit is not so blunt the sheild of faith is not so dull the breast-plate of righteousnesse is not so thinne as to receiue euery bullet that comes to hurt vs. 4. Christ hath made vs members of his owne body and when the head can with patience suffer the members which it is able to defend to be pulled off from the body then shall the sound members of Christ be pulled away by temptation from him which they must needes be if they were not continually supported by his strength Obiect 2. Cor. 1.8 We were pressed out of measure passing strength insomuch that we despaired euen of life Answ. 1. The Apostle speakes of humane strength which could neuer haue passed through those trialls but the power and strength of God shewed them an issue 2. The Apostle speakes according to the sence of his flesh and what they were in their owne feeling as it is plaine in the reason of his deliuerance in the next words That we should not trust in our selues but in God that raiseth the dead 3. The very scope of the place is to shew not the vnmeasurablenesse of affliction but a great measure of them thereby to amplifie Gods mercy Vse We should not be discouraged though our trialls be very great for we shall not want sufficient strength to carrie vs through them Yea let vs checke our weaknes while we torment our selues with needles feares that God takes little or no knowledge of our trialls or will withdraw his grace and absent himselfe for euer No he tenders the weakenes of his chosen on whom although the Spirit fall not so visibly as vpon Christ yet by vertue hereof they haue the secret distilling and sensible yea forcible working of the Spirit in their hearts such graces of faith hope patience and boldnes in case they keepe their watch as whereby they may as surely perswade themselues of victory as if they had receiued the Holy Ghost visibly as Christ did Adde hereunto these considerations 1. That it is impossible to be exalted to Christs kingdome if thou be not assalted first with temptation thou canst not be victorious vnlesse thou fight nor obteine the crowne vnlesse thou be victorious Reu. 3.21 2. That if thou beest in great perplexity yet thinke not the Lord hath forsaken thee For 1. not to be chastised of God
vpon Gods vnchangeable loue as also 3. because he hath commaunded thee to beleeue Obiect Oh but would you haue me beleeue when I feele nothing but corruption in myselfe and correction and displeasure in God Answ. Yes for faith must be where is no feeling and may bee one thing is the beeing of a thing another the discerning of it Doth not the sunne shine though a cloud or some other thing be betweene our sight and it Nay then when sense and feeling cease faith beginnes her chiefe and most glorious worke Was it not Abrahams commendation that he beleeued against beleefe and hoped against hope when all nature and sense was set against him he held the word of promise against sense and nature Nay our blessed Sauiour in whom was no grudgings of infidelity but assured faith in his father yet in respect of his present sense and feeling cryed out My God my God why hast thou forsaken mee Dauid beleeued in the word of God and not his eyes and so must thou that thou hearest God speake and not that thou seest Thomas when he would beleeue no more then that he saw and felt our Sauiour said to him Be not so faithlesse but faithfull In the strongest encounter waite still till Christ come to ease thee he is not farre off and commit thy selfe in weldoing into his hands as into the hands of a faithfull Creator say with Hester I will goe to the King if I perish I perish it may be he will reach out his scepter graciously and I shall liue but if I must needs perish I will perish vnder the wing of my Lord and Husband So much of Satans second drift in the first temptation In the third place he seeketh to make Christ doubt of his Diuinity and call in question whether he was the Sonne of God or no from his present necessity as if he had said Seest thou not in what famine and need thou art thou hast fasted here these 40. dayes of my knowledge What is become of thy father and of his prouidence whose Sonne thou art proclaimed Is this the care thy father hath of thee Doth he thinke thou canst liue of aire or feed of winde or digest stones Art thou weake creature and staruen he that must preuaile against the gates of hell Art thou the Messiah that hast not a morsell of bread to put in thy mouth No if thou wert the Sonne of God he would care a little more for thee no naturall father that had a drop of affection would leaue his child so destitute Whence we may learne that Satan seeketh to make the members of Christ as well as the Head call in question their adoption and saluation for present aduersitie and want A notable instance hereof we haue in Iob whom when the deuill by Gods permission to bring him to blaspheme God had robbed him of his goods had slaine his children had afflicted his body with most painefull and loathsome botches then he sets vpon him and sets all his friends vpon him to make him beleeue that God also is his enemie hath brought his sinne vpon his head And this he taught his instruments the wicked rulers or rather raylers Matth. 27.41 when Christ was in most extreame torments and terrours of body and soule hanging on the crosse they said in scorne If he be the Sonne of God let him come downe from the crosse and we will beleeue on him Hee trusted in God let him now deliuer him if he will haue him for hee said he was the Sonne of God As if they had said Is not this a notable deceiuer to say he was Gods Sonne and now is in extreame danger ready to perish shamefully and no hope of any deliuerance If hee were the Sonne of God would he suffer him to perish So it is his ordinarie temptation to any beleeuer Doest thou not see thy selfe poore and despised in want and sorrow Seest thou any one signe of Gods fauour Art thou not depriued almost of all the pleasures of the world Seest thou not that God cares for beasts and foules which he feedeth in due season but thou art neglected 1. This comes to passe because of Satans malice towards God himselfe he would not onely falsifie his word who hath said that No man knoweth loue or hatred by all the things afore him Eccles. 9.1 but also impeach his prouidence and care ouer his children who whatsoeuer their outward estate seeme to be are still as deare vnto him as the apple of his eie and when they be as most vnknown yet are they knowne 2. Because of Satans malice to pietie and religion which by this meanes he seekes to chase out of the earth for the world keeps it vnder and commonly it riseth to no great matters Now if God respect it not neither who would be godly what profit were it to serue the Lord 3. Satan herein hath much strength from our owne corruptions and ploweth often with our owne heifers for we desire rather to walke by sense then by faith we hardly beleeue without pawnes and pledges euery man trusts his owne eyes and thinks wisedome good with an inheritance Hence his temptation finds the easier entrance and better entertainment 4. Satan euer in these temptations hath a further reach then he shewes namely that he may hence perswade men to some vnlawfull meanes to releeue themselues and better their estate no longer to depend vpon God who hath cast off the care of them but to shift for themselues and as hee mooued Christ himselfe to make stones bread 5. Sathan hath gotten no small aduantage against Gods deere children by this kind of temptation brought them to take their owne wayes as if God had quite forgotten them Abraham thought God had left him to the cruelty of the Egyptians and that there was no way to helpe him but by lying and teaching his wife so to doe also Lot was so enuironed by the Sodomites as to auoid their fury he saw no way but to offer his daughters to their abuse and filthinesse Dauid was so hunted by Saul as he must shift for himselfe by faining himselfe madde An heart now cleaning vnto God and resting in his assured loue and prouidence would haue waited till God had come vnto it and not turned it selfe to carnall counsels This condemnes their follie who iudge themselues and others by outward things which fall alike to all who may see by this what spirit it is that suggesteth them It is a delusion of Sathan and generall in the world to make men deeme themselues and others happy and in Gods fauour because they prosper in the world and Gods people infortunate because the world crosseth them for the most part For 1. By this conclusion Christ himselfe the Sonne of God who had all his fathers loue powred vpon him should haue been most hated of his father and a most vnhappy creature He was in want of house of mony
without excuse but not without witnesse Is not thy owne mouth thy iudge who professest so much knowledge and so little grace loue practise To sinne wilfully and presumptuously against the light is an extraordinarie conformity with Satan Rules of reading and hearing the word religiously 1. Consider the excellencie of the word aboue all precious things and how dangerous it is to take Gods name in vaine which is then when the word is frustrate of his right end 2. They are called holy Scriptures not onely in regard of that holy truth contained in them but because they are instruments by which the elect are sanctified and made holy Ioh. 17.17 and therefore are neuer to be vsed without holy affection nor without endeauour to grow vp in holines 3. They are the word of faith therefore we must mingle the word with faith and lay vp the precepts and promises thereof to beleeue it 4. The Scriptures being the rule of life we must submit our whole man to the obedience practise of it with all sinceritie and constancie Hereby we shall goe beyond the knowledge of the word in deuills and vngodly men NOW for the place it selfe we must consider it two wayes 1. As abused by Satan in his allegation 2. As we find it holily set downe by the Spirit of God In Satans abuse of this Scripture we may see many particulars 1. He wrongs the words of God when he vrgeth them spoyled of the right sense of the holy Ghost 2. He peruerteth the right order of Gods spirit in his allegation for whereas Gods spirit first suggests the word and then frames the heart to obedience of it for the propertie of the sheepe of Christ is first to heare the voice and then to follow Ioh. 10.27 Satan first will haue men to conceiue opinions or attempt practises pleasing to him and themselues and then afterwards seeke out some Scripture to iustifie them Thus Iohanan and the captaines were resolued to goe into Egypt but sent for Ieremy to see if they might haue the word of God to goe with them Ier. 42.3 compared with verse 20.3 He wrests the right end for whereas all Scripture is written that wee might not sinne 1. Ioh. 2.1 he abuseth this part of it to draw Christ to sinne ●nd whereas all the precious promises of God should hold vs in the awe and feare of God this promise must occasion Christ to pr●sume vpon an vnlawfull action 4. He willingly mistakes the persons for whereas that Psalme and the great promises of it hold true in Christ our Head yet notwithstanding it w●s principally written for the godly members of Christ and the adopted sonnes of God neither can euery thing in that Psalme be so fitly referred to Christ in himselfe as in his afflicted members Besides that the Angels minister otherwise to Christ himselfe then to his members Christ by his owne power bea●es vp himselfe and Angels and all things Hebr. 1.3 5. He falsifies the text by adding partly to the words partly to the sense To the words he addes least at any time which addes no small strength to the temptation including euen that time wherein he should bee iumping betweene the pinacle and the pauement To the sense thrusting his dart into the sense of the place as if that place said so much in effect to him Cast thy selfe downe which Chrysostome hath well obserued saying Cast thy selfe d●wne was not written but was the poyson of the serpent cunningly mingled with the sweet comfort of the Scripture 6. He puts out and conceales that which most makes for Christ and against himselfe namely those words in all thy waies which most warreth against this headlong casting downe of himselfe for it is not the way of a man to cast himselfe from such an height but to seeke the staires o● the ordinarie way And these words were not vnawares omitted but maliciously and purposely for if Christ shall heare him speake of his wayes and consider that this casting downe of himselfe pertained not to his way one peice of his owne argument had ouerthrowne the whole 7. In th● allegation he commits the fallacie of diuision intending Christs ouerthrow by disioyning the things which God hath coupled together for whereas the words of that text in the right sense consists of two parts namely 1. a promise of protection and preseruation 2. the condition of keeping a mans selfe in his wayes without which condition no promise of God belongs vnto vs for godlinesse hath the promise of this life and the life to come Satan reiects the condition wholly and diuorceth it from the promise This is Mr. Iunius his obseruation 8. From euery part and word of a most excellent text he can vrge his most hellish temptation and make all faire weather when he intends nothing lesse as if he should say If thou be the Sonne of God cast downe thy selfe I do assure thee nay the written word assures thee of protection and safety for in such a Psalme namely the 91. verse 11. thou hast the word of thy Fathers promise yea in one promise a number of promises for 1. If thou wilt knowe the parties that shall support thee they bee Angels creatures swift mighty and powerfull 2. If thou doubtest of their will they must doe it they can neither will nor chuse it is their charge they are commaunded so to doe 3. If thou aske the manner how they must beare thee vp that if thou wouldst thou canst not fall 4. If thou doubtest of their chearefulnesse or willingnes or diligence there is no feare for they must doe it as mothers or nourses as the word signifies who out of their tender loue beare and carie or lead the infant with great watch and circumspection that it fall not and so come to hurt 5. If thou thinkest there is any limitation of their commission there is none for they must beare thee vp at all times 6. To take away all suspition of feare from thee they must saue thee not onely from great danger as breaking thy bones or necke but from the least danger thy foote the lowest and basest part shall not stumble or be hurt much lesse thy head thy selfe Thus subtilly intending to hold with the hound and run with the hare Satan hath prickt out a place which seemeth forcible enough to perswade any reasonable man to his purpose Hence note that A principall wile of Satan is to assay if he can by no meanes else to ouerthrow men by the ouerthrow of Scriptures Gen. 3.1 Hath God indeed said ye shall not eate of euery tree of the garden It were strange and maruellous he should say so seeing he knows it would better your estate In this his first temptation of all other he chuseth to make Gods word a meanes of their and our ouerthrow thinking it not an easie thing to destroy Gods image in the soule vnlesse he could first destroy the word of God out of their
time how long this sight lasted in a moment 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In accurate consideration a moment is the fortieth part of an houre for a point of time is a quarter of an houre and a moment of time is the tenth part of a point of time But I thinke we are not to take the word so strictly which here noteth a very short time much shorter then the fortieth part of an houre and with Chemnitius I thinke it to be the same with that in 1. Cor. 15.52 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in a moment and explained in the next words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the twinkling of an eye which is indeed no time but the beginning rather of time seeing there is no distinction betweene time past and time to come Howsoeuer we must take it for a very short space of time and that the sight was gone before Christ could well consider of it For so the like phrase is vsed concerning Sodome that it was destroyed in a moment for the sunne rose very faire and before euer they could consider of such a storme the Lord showred downe fire and brimstone Now the reason why the deuill vsed such a speedy and quicke representation was to rauish Christ suddenly and stirre vp his affections by the absence of it to desire to see it againe dealing with Christ as we with our little children when we would make them earnestly desire a thing we let them see it and hide it againe giue it them into their hands and suddenly take it away againe So did Satan Secondly Satan might haue another tricke in it to disturbe the minde of our Sauiour for as a sudden flash or light doth dazle the eyes of the body so doth a sudden flash or sight of this or that obiect easily dazle the eyes of the minde and in stead of pleasure with it at least it brings some trouble and perturbation Howeuer he thought it would fit and bring on his temptation Thirdly shadowes will abide no looking on no examining and therefore the deuill is so quicke in taking them in It is an old practise of the deuil to let death into the soule by the window of the senses and especially by the sight for here he would ouercome Christ by the sight of the world and the glory of it Thus he had gained Eue to sinne by the sight of the apple which was beautifull to the eye by hearing that she should be as God if she did tast it by touching tasting and pleasing all her senses with it The sons of God saw the daughters of men that they were faire and tooke them to them for wiues which was the cause of the deluge Ahab saw the vineyard of Naboth lie so conueniently to his demeanes as he must needes compasse it by murther 1. The senses are the neare seruants of the soule if Satan can make them vntrustie he knowes he can by them easily robbe the soule yea and slay it For senses worke affections and affections blind iudgement Dauid sees Bathsheba presently affects her his violent affection blinds his iudgement he must haue her companie though it cost Vriahs life I saw said Achan among the spoile a goodly Babylonish garment and two hundred shekels of siluer and a wedge of gold of fiftie shekels and I coueted them and tooke them Iosh. 7.21 How was Adam otherwise deceiued by Eue but first in his affection and then in his iudgement 2. As Satan layes his baits in all the senses to steale the heart so especially in the eies dealing as the chapman that would vent his wares he layes it forth on the stall that men may see it and oftentimes the very fight of it without further offer drawes on the buyer to a bargaine He knowes he looseth not all if he gaine but an vnlawfull looke because there is sinne begunne though not perfected 3. The sense is to the soule as a doore to the house A man that would come in or send any thing into an house must goe in and send it in by the doore Euen so although the deuill by his spirituall nature can and doth apply himselfe to our spirits without our senses yet other tempters cannot reach the soule so immediately Eue could not worke Adams heart directly but by the outward senses of hearing and seeing especially sent in the temptation Poisons cannot reach the heart vnlesse by the senses they be drawne in So wicked mates cannot conuey their corruption one into an other but by the outward senses hearing their wicked and incentiue speaches and seeing their gracelesse and infecting actions But besides this so full of malice is our spirituall aduersarie that he would not onely immediately take vp our hearts but fill vp all our senses and by them continually sendeth in burning lusts and by the same doore couetous desires and by the same ambitious aspiring thoughts and by the same reuengefull intentions and such like till the house be full of wickednes 4. Satan knowes that God hath appointed the senses for the good and comfort both of body and soule especially the sight and hearing to be the senses of discipline to furnish the minde with knowledge of God with faith which is by hearing with hope of his gracious promises with heauenly meditations and contemplation of his great workes which our eyes behold Now Sathan would crosse all this gracious constitution of God and make the lights of the body be meanes to blinde the minde he would fill vp the senses and take them vp with such obiects as shall not only corrupt the heart but keepe out those meanes of grace which the Lord would by them conuey into the heart so that the soule should be further poysoned by the same meanes which the Lord hath prepared as an antidote by which naturall poyson and corruption should be expelled This doctrine enioyneth a diligent custodie of the senses A good housholder suspecting theeues and robbers will be sure to keep his doores and windowes fast And we knowing that our senses are the doores and windowes of our soules must looke to these doores locke them barre them bolt them fast that the deuill enter not this way True it is that the inside must first bee made cleane for out of the heart proceeds an euill eye Mark 7.22 But whosoeuer is resolued to keep his heart in any rightnes must thinke it his next care to shut out and keep out whatsoeuer might be let in to decline it and turne it from God againe What made the holy Prophet Psal. 119.37 pray so earnestly that God would turne his eyes from beholding vanity but that he knew that euen a good heart such as his was could neuer hold out vnles the outward senses especially the eyes which by a Synechdoche are there put for the rest both because they are special factors of the soule and because of the multitude of their obiects and in regard of the quickenesse of sight aboue all the rest of
by Satan for 1. possession 2. disposition 4. reas 310 God some wayes an actor in euill no wayes an author 14 God tempteth man two waies 30 Godly men shall want no accusation in the world why 29 The more God graceth a man the more Satan seeketh to disgrace him 3. reas 3. and 9. Sixe graces Satan would faine robbe vs of 283 H POpish hallowing of water wicked sixe reasons 11 Headship of the Pope falsly grounded 231 Little or no help in iniustice 3. reas 147 Christ full of the holy Ghost how 39 Holines sweetneth our callings three waies 151 To hold out in trialls without hast-making 4. reas 365 No signe of Gods hatred to be vexed with the deuill but of the deuills 4. reas 193 Christ able to feede others miraculously was hungrie himselfe 59 I SAtan can make grosse Idolatrie seeme a small moate 316 Ierusalem called holy City 5. reas 160 Ierusalem full of corruptions yet called holy why 165 Importunitie of Satan against Christ and his members to drawe them to sinne 4. reas 279 Infirmities which Christ tooke vpon him which in three propositions 59 Why Christ took our infirmities 5. reas 60 Infirmities of Christ differ from ours in 6. things 61 Induction to prooue all things subiected to Christs word 377 Infallible Iudge of controuersies the holy Scriptures 4 reas 244 Incompetent iudges of controuersies obtruded by the Church of Rome 4. 246 Instance of Satan to draw vs to euill must make vs more instant in good 283 Instances of Sathans false conclusions in matter of faith 3. of practise 9. 102. Instances in 4. kinds of temptations how to vse the word against Satan 126 Instances of many men whose obedience is no better then that of deuills 387 L TO know a man lead by the spirit three rules 18 Christ commeth lead of the spirit Sathan commeth of himselfe 75 Liberties of religion are better prized in their absence then in their presence 181 The more light of grace the Lord bestoweth on his children the more doth the darkenes of the world fight against it 157 Life of a Christian a continual entercourse of peace and trouble 4. reas 391 Loue of the world easily maketh a man a prey and spoile of Satan 5. reas 299 To pul our hearts from the loue of the world fiue meanes 303 Foure other considerations to the same purpose 301 Lying is the deuills mother-tongue 100 A looking glasse for lyers 314 Lying a hatefull sinne for three reasons ibid. M MAgistrates gouernours not of men onely but of Christians 335 Man tempteth God 2. waies 31. Man tempteth man 3. wayes ibid. Man tempteth himselfe 2. waies ibid. Manner of Christs temptation externall 4. reas 74 Not to be present at Masse with pretence of keeping the heart to God 5. reas 351 Meane estate best 3. reasons 7 Meanes of f●rtifying faith 4. 87 Meanes to confirme to a mans selfe his owne adoption 3. 93 To vse vnlawfull meanes to help our selues diabolicall 3. reas 95 Meanes to fence vs against Satans wicked inferences 3. 104 Meanes not sufficient to sustaine the life of man in sixe instances and 5. reas 135 Means not to be set aboue their place 137 Meanes not to be neglected where they are 3. reas 138 Better to want meanes then to enioy such as proceed not out of the mouth of God 153 Means to raise our selues being cast down fowre 212 To sinne against meanes fearefull in things 1. spirituall 2. temporall 222 Means to partake of the Angels ministery three 241 Meanes of nourishing confidence in God foure 277 Meekenesse of Christ to Satan himselfe 5. reas 111 Ministers must be verie watchfull ouer their people because of the tempter 71 Wicked Ministers hinder some comfort but not all efficacy from the Sacrament 167 To conceiue of dumbe Ministers fiue grounds 168 Modestie in speaking of our selues commended in Christs example 115 Motiues to auoid slaundering 5. 27 Motiues to out-stand temptations 3. 42 Motiues to stirre vp one another to good fowre 72 Mountaines about Ierusalem 7. 289 Mountaine chosen for the third temptation 3. reas 285 No mountaines to be wished but Gods holy mountaine 289 N DIfference of names or numbers must not make vs suspect error in the Scripture but our owne ignorance 265 O OBiections for Vsury answered 148 Obiections for Sabath breaking 149 Cheife Obiections of the separation answered 167 Obiections to prooue Christ on the pinacle onely in vision answered 189 Obiects of senses 5. warrantable 294 In opposition of good men and good things consider 5. things 158 Ordinances of God not to bee medled with without due respect and reuerence as 1. word 2. oath 3. lots 175 Conditions of sound Obedience 4. 385 Cheerefull Obedience 4. things 386 Outward things make neither happy nor vnhappie 4. reasons 91 P PInacle of the Temple chosen for the second temptation by satan 4. reasons 182 No place in the world free from temptation 20 Places of Gods worship to be reuerently esteemed and vsed 174 No place longer holy then God and his worship are present 176 Satan vsually fitteth his temptation to the place or the place to his temptation 3. reasons 182 Places of probable perrill and danger to bee auoided especially of 4. sorts 184 Men in highest places are in greatest danger of falling 3. reasons 286 The higher the Pinacle a man stands on the more busie satan is to cast him down 207 Satan helpeth men vp to the Pinacle onely to cast them downe againe 210 The Pope puts downe the deuill in boasting 315 Power of Christ vnresistable by all the deuills in hell 4. reasons 375 Power of Christ is of his Office and Essence 375 They differ in 3. things ibid. Popes haue erred in matters of faith 25● 8. Markes of the mighty power of Christ in vs. 380 Power of Christ frustrateth satans greatest aduantages 193 Power of satan ouer the bodies of men great God permitting him 193 Prayers to be made for gouernours especially why 288 Presence of God in his word and worshippe maketh places holy 3. reasons 164 Satan ordinarily tempteth to presumption 4. reasons 200 Most dangerous presumption is in spirituall things as in 6 instances 203 Presumption in things temporall to bee auoided in 4. instances 205 Priuiledge of Gods children because of the Angells 240 A singular priuiledge of the Church to haue so perfect a direction as the Scripture 134 Priuiledge of the godly to find God sweet to your soules in trialls or after them 4. reasons 406 Properties of such as to whom Christ will reueale himselfe 3. 119 All promises and threats in Scripture conditionall although the condition bee not euer expressed 263 All promises of satan are miserable foule and deceitfull 5. reasons 304 Promises of God differ from the deuill how 305 Proffers of Satan all vpon some wicked condition or other 316 Miserable men that accept of satans profers 4. instances 320 Publike persons must especially watch against 2. things 6 Publike persons