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

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verse 7 this effect is both propounded and amplified propounded in those words The tryall of your faith amplified 1. by comparison with go●d tri●d in the f●rnace 2. by the event it will be found to praise and honor and glory at the appearing of Iesus Christ. The second objection might be made thus Wee know not whether the former comforts belong to us to which the Apostle answers by giving three signes by which men may try themselves 1. The love of Christ whom they have not seene 2. Beleeving 3. The unspeakable and glorious joyes of the Holy Ghost verse 8. The end of all which is the salvation of their soules verse 9. Thus of the Prolepsis the testimonie of holy men fo●●owes where consider five things 1. Wh●●e s●●i fie In generall Prophets In speciall those Prophets which were app●●●●ed to testifie of the grace that should come unto us Christians 2. 〈…〉 prec●●●nes to furnish themselves for the knowledg of the things they testified They searched inquired diligently 3. The question they studied or unto which they testifie In generall 〈…〉 of salvation verse 10. In speciall it was of the manner and time of the grace foretold 4. The 〈…〉 them to this earnest desire after this knowledge and that was the inspiration of the Holy Ghost driving them to foretell of the passion of Christ and glories that should follow 5. The successe and that is that they were answered of God where observe two things 1. The manner of the giving the answer it was by revelation Unto whom it was revealed 2. The matter of the answer which concernes both Persons and Things The persons are considered negatively and so they were resolved that they themselves were not the men to whom those glories did belong and affirmatively that they did minister those things unto us Christians Now the things promised are not onely propounded but commended and that two wayes 1. By the glory of their efficient causes which were lesse principall the Apostles and more principall the Holy Ghost sent downe from heaven 2. By the adjunct respect of the Angels which things the Angels desire to looke into Hitherto of the consolation The exhortation followes from ver 13. to the end where observe 1. The things unto which they are exhorted verse 13. 2. The reasons by which the exhortation is inforced The things to which he doth exhort are three 1. The first concernes the renovation of the mind Girde up the loynes of your minde 2. The second concernes the moderation of life be sober 3. The third concernes the confirmation of their hope Trust perfectly upon the grace to be brought c. ver 13. The reasons follow and they are 6. in number taken from the consideration 1. Of the Image of God verses 14 15 16. 2. Of the judgement of God verse 17. 3. Of the redemption in Christ verses 18 19 20 21. 4. Of the relation to the godly verse 22. 5. Of the immortality of the soule verse 23. 6. And sixtly of the mortality of the body verses 24 25. The first reason taken from the Image of God is both propounded and expounded propounded in these words as obedient children expounded two waies 1. by description 2. by testimonie By description 1. negatively shewing what they should sh●nne Not fashioning your selves to the lusts of your former ignorance ver 14. 2. He sets it out affirmatively both by shewing the patterne to be imitated viz the holinesse of him that called them and also the manner of imitation viz to be holy in all manner of conversation ver 15. In the testimonie two things are to bee noted 1. Whence the proofe was fetched in these words As it is written and 2. what was alledged viz Be yee holy as I am holy ver 16. The second reason is taken from the judgement of God where note 1. The proposition of the reason viz Hee that yee call upon as Father c. 2. The inference or use of the same viz Passe the time of your sojourning in feare In the proposition consider 1. Who shall be judge viz he that was called upon as a Father 2. How he shall judge viz without respect of persons 3. Whom he shall judge viz every man 4. For what they shall be judged viz according to their workes verse 17. The third reason is taken from the consideration of our redemption and this reason should move the more 1. Because all the precious things in the world could not redeeme man verse 18. 2. Because the deliverance from our vaine conversation was one of the maine ends of our redemption verse 18. 3. Because our redemption was effected by a matchlesse price viz the passion of Christ which is increased 1. In that it was a suffering even to the effusion of blood 2. that it was a suffering of one that was so infinitely pure without spot or blemish verse 19. 4. Because our redemption was ordained in Gods counsell ver 20. 5. Because the honor of manifesting Christ in the cleare preaching of the Gospell is done now to us Christians and not to the Fathers of old verse 20. 6. Because our redemption was ratified by God the Father and that two waies 1. By raising Christ from the dead 2. By giving him glory verse 21. 7. Because all this was done that our faith and hope might be in God verse 21. The fourth reason is taken from our relation to the godly ver 22. In which reason observe 1. A proposition of doctrine 2. An exhortation by way of use The proposition in it selfe properly concernes sanctification which is described 1. By the nature of it imported in the m●ta●horicall terme purified 2. The subject of it your soules 3. the forme of it in obeying the truth 4. The cause of it the spirit 5. The end of it which was brotherly love amplified by the property of it unfained The exhortation is therefore to love one another with a pure heart fervently The first reason is taken from the immortalitie of the soule which is considered two wayes 1. In respect of the fountaine of it which is the new birth 2. In respect of the meanes of it which is set downe 1. negatively not of corruptible seede 2. affirmatively where consider what the meanes is and by what it is What it is viz incorruptible seede By what it is the word which is praised for three things 1. It is of God 2 ●t liveth 3. It abideth for ever ver 23. The sixt reason is taken from the mortality of the body compared with the eternity of the word of God ver 24 25. Of the vanity of man ver 24 which is ●●th propounded and repeated propounded as it concernes either the person of man All flesh is grasse or the condition of man All the glory thereof is as the flower of grasse The rep●tition ●s it concerns both is in these words the grasse withereth and the flower falleth away The eternity of the word of God is propounded in
Christians thrive not and who also is it whose case some one of these seaven is not Let us every one examine our selves for a thousand to one we are kept back by some one of these It were singular wisdome to note which it is and to strive to amend that we may not be such starvelings in godlinesse still The point then is cleare that most Christians are but as new borne babes Now what use should we make of it First It may serve to humble many of us that have had time enough and abundance of meane● and helps to have beene like teachers and yet have even now need to be taught the principles again To us belongs justly that reproofe in the fift to the Hebrewes 13. Secondly many d●ties must be vrged upon us if we grant our selves to be but as new borne babes For 1. We must therefore be teachable and tractable obeying them that have the oversight of us bearing their words of admonition and loving them with a singular love 2. We must therefore be the more willing to beare the chastizements of God that father of our spirits For if we have had the fathers of our flesh which in our young yeares have corrected and that often for our profit to subdue the faults in us which that age did breed and sometimes when they corrected for their owne pleasures more than for our profit How much more should we subject our selves to the corrections of God that finde in us being but babes so much perversenesse so much negligence such head strong passions such frequent disohebience and the rather because he never corrects us for his pleasure only but for our profit that he might make us more holy and more fruitfull and more meeke as the Apostle shewes Hebrewes 12. 3. We must therefore sticke more affectionately and constantly to the word and suffer our soules to be daily fedde with this sincere milk of the word without which it is no more possible for us to grow in grace then a weake child can doe in nature without milk and food 4. Yea the consideration of our estate that we are but children should beget in us a desire to expresse those praises spiritually which that infant estate in nature doth resemble For 1. Children in nature are without malice they may fall out one with another but they carry no malice they are quickly friends againe so should we much more 1. Cor. 14.20 2. Children live without care they are never troubled for what they shall eate or what they shall put on for the time to come so should wee doe as our Saviour Christ shewes Matth. 6. 3. Children are not lifted up with pride for the great things they are borne unto nor doth the childe of a Prince scorne the fellowship of the childe of a begger but can play with him and make himselfe equall to him so should it be with us we should bee void of great thoughts of heart and not be lifted up in our selves or despise others but make our selves equall to them of the lower sort especially seeing there is no difference in our birth They are borne againe by the same immortall seed that we are which our Saviour Christ is peremptory in Matth. 18.3 Thus much of the third point 4. A fourth thing may be here noted and that concernes the priviledge of weake Christians viz. that they are esteemed of God and not deprived of his favour and care for them because they are weake 1. Parents love their little children as well as their elder children so doth God 2. Parents provide meanes to bring up their little children so doth God they shall have sincere milk to make them grow 3. Parents provide such as shall tend their children and litt●e ones so doth God he hath committed them to the charge of Christ so as the least grace in them shall be preserved though it were but like a bruised reede or the smoaking weeke of a candle Matth. 11. 4. Parents beare with the naturall weaknesse of their children without lessning their fondnesse to them so doth God with infinite indulgence Psalme 103. 5. Parents will not endure it to let them be wronged or hurt and much more wo shall be unto them that offend one of Gods little ones Mat. 18. 6. Parents provide portions and inheritances for their little children so doth God acknowledge them for his heires yea heires with Christ his eldest sonne Rom. 8. 17. A fift point that may be noted from hence is that only converted christians can desire the sincere milke of the word with true affection wicked men can no more affectionately desire the word than a dead childe or no child can doe the breast Quest. But have wicked men no desire after the word Answ. They may have but onely it is for the most part in two cases First when they desire to hear the word onely for mens wits or eloquence or the like carnall ends and so they desire not the sincere milk of the word Secondly in the case of a temporary faith where the delight and desire after the word is not constant like the appetite of a child to the breast for they will fall away in the time of temptation and all their desires prove but as the morning dew Desire the sincere milke of the word Hitherto of the first reason taken from the consideration of their present estate and neede of the word The second reason is taken from the consideration of the nature of the word which they should desire It is sincere pure there is no deceit no mixture in it And it is milk it is wonderfull apt for nourishment There are two things then here said of the word in praise of it First that it is milk secondly that it is sincere Milk This is a metaphor Sometimes by milk is meant a man that is godly cast into affliction by which God straines all the moats of corruption from him while his heart is poured out like milk with griefe and feare Thus Iob saith of himselfe God had strained him out like milk Iob 10. ve● 10. Sometimes by milk is meant the rudiments of religion the principles and grounds of Catechisme and so it differeth from strong meat so it is taken Heb. 5.12 1. Cor. 3.2 Sometimes it signifieth the word of God in generall which is given to the Church for nourishment of their soules to eternall life and so it is taken here as in Esay 55.1 the word is called both milk and wine and water and in other places hony It is hony for the sweetnesse of it It is wine for the power it hath to revive and refresh the spirit of man and make his heart glad It is water for cooling and quenching of his spirituall thirst and it is milk for nourishment It doth more for nursing up mans soule than the milke of the breast can for the bodies of infants The consideration whereof should work in us the desire to which the
suspect it Lastly this joy in the holy Ghost in some is an habituall gladnesse of heart which constantly after assurance is found in them though they feele not the passions of joy but in others there is felt at sometimes the vehement passions of joy but not the constant gladnesse Now eyther may be the true joy of the holy Ghost if it agree to the former signes But what should wee doe to get the joyes of God 1 Thou must be in the generall Gods servant and devote thy selfe to holinesse else thou canst never feele them Esay 65.13 2 Thou must voluntarily seeke godly sorrow for thy sins for these joyes are promised to and most felt by such as mourne for sin Psal. 126.2 3 5 6. Esay 61.3 Prov. 14.10 Mat. 5.5 3. Thou must labour after the affections of godlinesse till thou come to love Christ and the Word and holy exercises thou canst not get the joy in the holy Ghost if we did once love to be Gods servants the Lord would refresh us with the joyes of his presence Esay 56.6 7. But what should we doe to preserve the joyes of God that'wee might more constantly rejoyce in the holy Ghost Observe these rules 1. Thou must get a meeke spirit For passion and pride hinder the refreshings of God wonderfully Esay 29.19 2. Preserve uprightnesse the upright shall have an harvest of joy But if thou nourish the love of any sinne it is impossible to keep the joyes of God Psal. 96.11 Prov. 29.6 12.20 3. Lose not Gods presence but set him in thy sight and walk before him There is fulnesse of joy at his right hand Psal 16.11 4. Be much in well-doing For that will make our joy abound Col. 1. 9 10 11. 5. Hang upon the brests of the Churches consolation and sincerity Esay 66.11 6. Take heed of much carnall or outward reioycing For the immoderate liking of earthly things hardens the heart in the things of God Hence wee may briefly note the causes why many professors have no more ioy 1. Some neglect the meanes 2. Others are mastered by strong affections as Envy or Passions c. 3. Others have neglected mortification 4. In many their very unprofitablenesse is the cause 5. In some the love of some secret sinne blasts all grace and joy Thus of the 8. verse Verse 9. Receiving the end of your faith the salvation of your soules THis Verse is a ratification of the former in which the Apostle labours to assure salvation to all such as have the former signes 1. The matter assured is the salvation of our soules 2. The certainty of the assurance is in the word receiving which imports it is as sure as if we had received it already 3. The instrumentall cause is faith for salvation is the end of faith Receiving If this word be marked in it selfe and the coherence foure things arise to be observed 1. First that wee should receive the graces and blessings of God with much joy and love of Christ who is the foundation of the merit of all This I note from the coherence with the former Verse 2. Secondly we are seldome glad at heart longer then we are receiving some blessing or promises from God Note that he joyns this word to the joyes of the holy Ghost in the end of the former Verse 3. Thirdly that salvation is received even in this life received I say 1. In the promises of it 2. In the graces which begin eternall life in this life 3. In the certainty of the assurance of it 4. The word in the Originall signifies to carry back againe or to fetch out of the field which imports we cannot get salvation nor any promises or graces that concerne it but we must fight for it there will be some bicketing before it can be carried away out of the field Of your faith Faith is here expresly made the instrument of our salvation This is a principle and should be unmoveable in the heart of every Christian that without faith our religion is to no end For wee cannot be saved without it which should teach us both to seek this faith and to account of it as most precious and to this end to make sure that our faith be right wee cannot be too oft urged hereunto I will instance but in foure signes of a true perswasion For I take it for granted that the most of us say we are perswaded God loves us and Christ died for us Now wee may try whether this perswasion be right foure waies 1. First if it will endure the tryall of manifold tentations as the coherence shews a true perswasion will If it will support us in adversity of all sorts in some measure especially if it will fence us against the scornes and oppositions of the world this will prove it to be a true perswasion 2. Secondly if it be such a faith as will beleeve all that is written Act. 24.14 so far as it sees it to be the will of God though it be against reason or affection or profit or the opinion of any other 3. Thirdly if it have the seale of the spirit For hee that truely beleeveth hath a witnesse in himselfe even the witnesse of the spirit of adoption testifying by unspeakable joyes the assurance of Gods love Eph. 1.14 1 Ioh. 5.10 4. Fourthly if it be accompanied with a sincere life and love of all that truely feare God for the image of God in them True faith will shew it selfe by this love Gal. 5.6 The end of your faith The word here rendred the end doth further signifie a reward or wages which is given at the end and so these things may be observed 1. First that in the end the Lord will take account of the use of all gifts or graces in men 2. Secondly that unlesse we hold out to the end we can never have reward 3. Thirdly that true faith will hold out to the end if it be true it will abide 4. Fourthly Faith it selfe will once have an end and therein love excels faith because that will never end 5. But the last and chiefest point is that it will be a glorious time when the end comes that God disposeth the rewards of beleeving which may serve for foure uses 1. First it may comfort Gods afflicted servants For the expectation of the poore shall not perish for ever Psal. 9.18 and God will certainly give an end and expectation Ier. 29.11 And have we not seene the end of the Lord in many things in our temporall troubles and can we doubt him for our last end why should any feare death Is it not the time of receiving wages No hireling is afraid of the time of receiving his wages 2. Secondly it should teach us therefore to wait upon God and possesse our soules with patience holding fast our confidence of assurance For the end shall come and it will not be long before it shall be 3. Thirdly for information we
may hence note one excellent pledge of Gods love and goodnesse he is not bound to give us any wages till the end yet see his mercy he doth recompence us every day 4. Fourthly woe unto wicked men their end is shame and confusion even the fruit of all their evill waies or as the Apostle saith their end is damnation Phil. 3.18 The salvation of your soules The soule is a spirituall substance within us by which we resemble God it can subsist of it selfe it hath neither matter nor end it was created of God of nothing and united to the body that God might be rightly knowne and worshipped The soule is a kind of picture of God within us that can live though the body were not when I say it is void of matter I meane it is not made of any other thing as our bodies be there is no metall as I may say of which it may consist and it is such a divine creature as it cannot die as the body doth and it was of purpose put into the body that so amongst the visible creatures God might be known and worshipped For if we had not a soule within us we could never attaine to any knowledge of God more than the bruit beasts For God cannot be knowne by bodily senses Now for the union how the body and soule are knit one to another I cannot expresse it Salvation notes especially that estate of excellency and glory which the faithfull have in another world though properly the word notes but onely what we are delivered and saved from in heaven This salvation excludes all misery and includes all happinesse All misery may be referred to foure heads 1. Sinne. 2. Infirmities 3. Adversaries And 4. Death none of these shall be in heaven All happinesse likewise may be referred to foure heads 1. Perfection of nature 2. Communion with the blessed viz. God Christ Angels and just men 3. And a glorious inheritance in the heaven of the blessed And 4. Immortality all these shall be enjoyed in that other world Now though the soule be taken synecdochically for the soule and body yet the salvation of the soule is principall and more glorious The use may be threefold 1. For information 2. For instruction 3. For reproofe 1. There are three things we may be informed in from the consideration of the salvation of the soules of the faithfull 1. First that godly men are in a wonderfull happy case whatsoever their outward estate be because their soules shall be saved there are springs of joy in the very hope of this immortall happinesse this salvation is so great a mercy as we may truely say his reward is with him 2. Secondly that there is a matchlesse love in God to man not onely in that he provides such an estate but first that he doth it freely without all respects of merit Tit. 3.4 and secondly because he sends up and downe the world to offer this salvation From hence ariseth the Phrase my salvation is gone forth 3. Thirdly that faith is wonderfull precious that brings us such a salvation 2. Further for the second there are divers instructions may be deduced from this doctrine as 1. First it should teach us to deny ungodlinesse and worldly lusts Tit. 2.12 the very thought of going to heaven should extinguish the desire of sinning 2. Secondly we would make God all our trust and our expectation Psal. 62.5 We should resolve to rest upon God For none else either will or can doe so much for us as he can Hee is well said to be the hope of Israel none have so great hopes as the faithfull 3. Thirdly we should labour for the assurance of salvation and lay hold upon it striving to get evidence for it Heaven should suffer violence seeing it may be had we should never be quiet till we can get it 4. Fourthly and lastly such as have attained some assurance of their salvation should looke to foure things 1. First they should strive for large affections to expresse the sense of so great salvation It is such an incomparable benefit as wee should be alwaies praising c. 2. Secondly it should quicken them to good works the remembrance that we shall be saved should be like a fire within us to inflame us to all possible care to please God and to be fruitfull in all well-doing Salvation should be as a burning lamp within us a Christian should never be without fire in his heart in respe●t of his care to maintaine good works 3. Thirdly shall wee not be content with any condition in this world seeing wee are so well-provided for in a better what should trouble us if we can remember that after a short time our soules must be saved 4. Fourthly shall we be so glorious in heaven why then our conversation should be in heaven we should be alwaies thinking of heaven our mindes should run upon it 3. Now as this doctrine may informe and teach so it may reprove whole troops of carnall Christians that never labour after this glorious estate that scarce ever aske what they should doe to be saved but sleepe it out in a Lethargie and never aske after nor remember their latter end Thus of the 9. Verse and so of the confirmation by prolepsis or the answer of their objections Verse 10. Of which salvation the Prophets searched and inquired diligently which prophesied of the grace that should come unto you THe consolation propounded verses 3 4 5. is confirmed first by Prolepsis or the answering of Objections verses 6 7 8 9. secondly by testimony of worthy and holy men verses 10 11 12. So that these words make good the consolation of Christians by setting before us what witnesse holy men of old have given of our happinesse that live now under the Gospell In the words five things are particularly to be noted 1. First who testifie or who are Gods witnesses and these are described 1. first more generally and so they were Prophets 2. secondly more specially and so they were those Prophets that were appointed of God to prophesie of the gracious priviledges should come unto us Christians 2. Secondly their adjunct paines and endeavors to furnish themselves in the knowledge of those things that concerne us They searched and inquired diligently 3. Thirdly the question they studied or unto which they testifie In generall it was of salvation ver 10. In speciall it was of the manner and time of the grace foretold 4. Fourthly the occasion that fiered them to this earnest desire after this knowledge and that was the inspiration of the holy Ghost driving them to foretell of the passion of Christ and glories that should follow Now they rightly conjectured that this glory did import some excellent estate of the Church then and that they would faine have knowne 5. Fiftly the successe and that was they were answered by revelation which answer is set downe verse 12. Prophets God hath revealed his will three waies 1. First
a spirit without guile a heart without hypocrisie But of this puritie he intreats not here The purity of heart that concernes men hath three things in it or there are three things required in our affections towards others whom we ought to love and with whom we converse in which we should shew the purity of our hearts 1. The first is the respect of holinesse In our love one to another wee should chiefly aime at holinesse and the furtherance one of another in the best things Our fellowship should be in the Gospell Phil. 1.5 and we should exhort one another to good works Heb. 10.25 we should cleave to that which is good and abhorre evill Rom. 12.10 2. The second is the respect of chastity we should take heed of worldly lusts and all impurity of heart or life that way we must mortifie inordinate affections and the evill concupiscence Col. 3.5 and avoid all those works of darknesse such as are chambring and wantonnesse c. Rom. 13.13 avoiding both the matter and appearance of evill 1 Thes. 5.22 1 Pet. 2.12 3. The third is the respect of truth and plainnesse of heart the heart is pure when it is without dissembling so we must love one another indeed as well as in shew 1 Iohn 3.18 and for right ends For Gods glory and the grace of God in them and for their good and not serve our owne turnes onely We may know that our hearts and affections are pure 1. If wee rejoyce not in iniquity but in the truth 1 Cor. 13. 2. If we make conscience of lesser sins and the very appearance of evill to avoid them 3. If wee love purity in others and admire commend and defend it in them 4. If daily we seeke a pure heart of God in secret judging our selves for what drosse wee finde in our natures 5. If we seeke not our owne things Phil. 2.4 6. If we cannot beare sinne in any 7. If our conversing with them make us grow more in holinesse and grace 1 Thes. 3.12 13. c. And therefore we should both try our selves and strive daily more and more after this uprightnesse and purity of our hearts that God requires of us and to this end we should 1. Pray daily to God to create cleane hearts in us 2. We should avoid society with impure persons 3. We should take heed of idlenes and fruitlesse mispending of the time For the heart gathers impurity with very emptinesse 4. We should often think of that rule Doe as thou wouldest have others doe to thee 5. Converse much with the pure For with the pure thou wilt be pure and with the froward thou wilt learne frowardnesse 6. Acknowledge your sins one to another This wonderfully fenceth the heart against impurity in conversation and excites a pure love one to another with much honor and delight This greatly convinceth and reproveth such as have taken upon them a profession of love to others but it is for corrupt ends their hearts are not pure nor are they stirred up with desire after the godly further then lust or their owne carnall ends give hope to their projects Fervently God in the second place requires a fervent love hee stands much upon it and therefore he requires else-where that above all things we should put on ferv●●● love God is not contented with it that we doe not hate one another but we must love one another nor is he contented with a cold love but would have it fervent a burning ardent inflamed affection Quest. But how may the ferventnesse of our love be discerned if it be aright Answ. If thy love be a fervent love 1. Thou dost account it the greatest felicity on earth to enjoy Gods favour and the delightfull fellowship of the Saints Psal 16. ● 2. Thou mayest discerne it by the longings and inf●amed desires after the godly such as were in Paul 3. Thou canst cover a multitude of sinnes thou levest as God loves 1 Pet 4.8 4. It is diligent thou shewest it by the paines and labour of love 5. It is speedy it seekes no delaies it fa●●h not goe and come againe to ●●●row 6. Thou dost greatly lament thy absence from the godly as a bitter crosse 7. Thou dost as Paul did in some measure thou dost daily and heartily pray for them and give thanks without 〈◊〉 as he shews in the most of his Epist●es standing before God often the heart doth take fire from thence which war●es the heart afterwards Quest. What is the cause this fervent love is so rarely found amongst men Answ. There are divers causes in divers sorts of men As 1. Unregeneracy Wee must know that no man can love his brother with this love but he that is borne of God 1 Ioh. 4.7 without repentance and the true love of God this love is never had 2. Prejudice in others The names of the godly are so buried under the disgrace of the world that this keeps off many from declaring their love to them though sometimes they have motions of good affections 3. The love of wicked persons 4. In others the cause is hatred of the good malice like Cain 1 Ioh. 3. 11. they can love any but the Saints 5. Security in prosperity Many when they be sick acknowledge the way of God and send for the Ministers and good people but when they are well they start back like a bow 6. Conceitednesse and a high opinion of themselves 7. Neglect of society with the godly 8. Worldlinesse 9. Suspitiousnesse Quest. But what must be done that wee might be abundant in love one towards another and that it might be more generall in the places where wee live Answ. First let the wicked turne from his wickednesse wee may not returne to them they must returne to us what peace or love while their whoredomes drunkennesse c. testifie to their faces Wee may love them with a generall love as Gods creatures but with a fervent love we may not nor may we converse freely with them as multitudes of places of Scripture shew Secondly to nourish affection amongst the godly wee must remember these rules 1. Remember much and often Gods love to us in Christ 1 Ioh. 4.9 10 11. Eph. 5.1 2. 2. Thinke much of the commandment of God and his acceptation Eph. 5.1 2. 3. Meditate often of our dwelling together in heaven Iam. 2.5 1 Pet. 4.8 else pu●blind 2 Pet. 1.7 4. Converse much together have fellowship in the Gospell 5. Consider the promises made hereunto Eph. 4.15 16. 2 Pet. 1.9 10 11. Phil. 2.1 Esay 19. Verse 23. Being borne anew not of mortall seed but of immortall by the word of God which liveth and endureth for ever IN these words the Apostle intreats of the immortality of the soule of man Now there is a double immortality of the soule For sometimes immortality signifieth an everlasting continuance of man without ending dying or ceasing to be and so the soules of the wicked
then when we are dejected in the true feeling o● our owne unworthiness God will give grace to the humble And further wee must get an appetite or affection to the word For the full stomacke loatheth an hony-combe but to the hungry soule every little thing is sweet Proverbs 27.7 and lastly we must take heed that wee marre not our tastes before we come as they doe that have sweetned their mouthes with wickedness and spoyled their rellish with the pleasures of beloved sinnes Iob 20.12 Such as live in the delight of secret corruptions even th●y that account stoln waters sweet may be the guests of Hell but Gods guests they are not onely they that overcome eate of the hidden Manna Rev. 2. Secondly when we have found hony let us eate it Prov. 20.13 That is if the Lord be gracious unto us in his word let us with all care receive it into our hearts and with all affection make use of it Lose not thy precious oportunitie Thirdly it should teach us in all our griefes and bitterness to make our recourse to the word to comfort and sweeten our hearts against our feares and sorrowes For at this feast God wipes away all teares from our eyes Esay 35.6 8. Fourthly the sweetnes of the word when we feele it should satisfie us yea satisfie us abundantly Wee should give so much glory to Gods goodnesse as to make it the abundant satisfaction of our hearts Psal. 36.6 Fiftly Yea further we should labour to shew this sweet savour of the word in our conversations by mercy to the distressed by gracious communication by our contentation and by all well-doing that the perfume of Gods grace in us may allure and affect others that the very places where wee come may savour of our goodnesse even after wee are gone Sixtly we should bee alwaies praising of God for the good things of his Sanctuary acknowledging all to come from his free grace without our deserts Psal. 84.4 entertaining his presence with all possible admiration saying with the Psalmist O Lord how excellent is thy goodnesse Psal. 36.9 Seventhly wee should pray God to continue his goodnesse to them that know him and to vouchsafe us the favour to dwell for ever in his house Psalm 36.11 Eighthly and constantly the experience hereof should set us a longing our soules should long for the courts of Gods house and our hearts cry for the daily bread in Sion and we should constantly walke from strength to strength till we appear● before God in Sion Psalm 84 and the rather because besides the sweetnesse there is a plentifull reward in keeping Gods word Psalm 19.20 Secondly from hence we may be informed in two especiall things 1. Concerning the happinesse of the godly in this life notwithstanding all their afflictions and sorrowes Thou seest their distresses but thou seest not their comforts The stranger doth not meddle with their joyes Oh how great is the goodnesse of God in giving his people to drink out of the rivers of the pleasures in his house when he makes their eies to see the light in his light Psal. 36.8 9. Psal. 65.4 2. Concerning the office of Gods Ministers They are the perfumers of the world the Church is the perfuming-pan and preaching is the fire that heats it and the Scriptures are the sweet-waters Or the Church is the mortar preaching the pestle and the promises of God in Christ are the sweet spices which being beaten yeeld a heavenly and supernaturall smell in the soules of the godly hearers 2 Cor. 2.14 15. But then Ministers must take heed they corrupt not Gods VVord and see to it that their preaching be in sincerity and as of God and in the sight of God in Christ and with demonstration of the truth to mens consciences 2 Cor. 2.17 else any Preacher will not serve the turne And in both these respects Ministers have reason to cry out with the Apostle Oh! who is sufficient for these things If every Sermon must leave so sweet a savour behind it in the hearts of the hearers and in the nostrils of God too who can bee without the speciall assistance of God fit for these things Lastly this may serve for singular reproofe and terror to the wicked and that in divers respects First for such as are mockers and call sweet sowre that is speake evill of the good word of God Secondly for the miserable neglect of that they should account the life of their life Alas whither shall we goe or what is this miserable and wretched life if we want the sweet comforts of the word To dwell without the word is to dwell in the parched places of the wildernesse and this Ministery is the more dangerous in such or to such as are daily invited and have all things ready made and yet will not inwardly obey Gods calling nor profit by the meanes but find excuses to shift off the invitation of God How justly may that curse be inflicted upon them these men shall never taste of my supper Luke 14.17 c. 24. Thus much of the second doctrine Doct. 3. The third doctrine out of these words may be this that such as find a true taste of the sweetness of God in his VVord may conceive hopefully that their soules doe and shall prosper and growe There is no doubt to be made of our growth if once we come to feele the sweetnesse of the VVord For the clearer understanding of this doctrine I must answer two questions Quest. First what this true taste is Secondly whether this taste may not be in wicked men Answ. For the first A true taste of the sweetnesse of the VVord and Gods graciousnesse in it may bee knowne both by the cause and by the effects The cause of this taste is faith for by faith onely doth the soule taste Or that thing that raiseth so sweet a rellish in our hearts is a perswasion in particular of the graciousnesse of God to us even of that graciousnes which the VVord doth discover The effects of this taste are three For first it revives the heart and raiseth it from the dead and frames it to bee a new creature working an unsained change in the heart of man from the world and sinne to the care of Gods glory and salvation of their owne soules and thus it is called A savour of life unto life 2 Cor. 2.15 Secondly it sesleth in the heart an estimation of the VVord and spirituall things and the assurance of Gods favour of all earthly things in the world Phil. 3.9 Psal. 84.10 Thirdly this taste workes a heavenly kind of contentment in the heart so as the godly when they have found this are abundantly satisfied they have enough Psal. 36.10 and 95.4 For the second question concerning wicked men and their rellishing of the sweetnesse of the VVord I say two things First that the most wicked men are without spirituall senses and finde no more taste in God or his VVord than in the VVhite of
God and mans salvation and so it is an argument taken from the hat●●ulnesse of the flesh and her working in us The lusts and desires of the flesh ought to be hatefull and we should suspect and abstaine from the projects of the flesh if we consider 1 That the flesh savoureth not the things of God Rom. 8. 2 That she opposeth all good wayes partly by objecting against them and partly by making evill present when we should performe them 3 That her wisdome is against God her fairest reasons are pleaded for things that are hatefull to God such also are her excuses and extenuations and promises 4 That if shee be followed she will lead us by degrees into all abominations as whoredomes murders debates heresies c. these are her fruits Gal. 5. 5 She will betray us to Sathan that he may by himselfe set up strong fortifications in our soules and her treason is the more dangerous because shee is a domesticall enemy and by his working in secret our hearts may become a very cage or stie of uncleane spirits 6 She hath already spoiled the Image of God in us and made us looke most deformedly 7 If shee once get power shee is most tyrannicall no respect of credit profit no nor salvation it selfe can stirre shee will be served whatsoever come of it 8 We should abhorre her for the very mischiefe she doth to our posterity we cannot looke upon our children but wee may see what wofull hurt shee hath done by the infection they received in their propagation Uses The use may be First for reproofe of such as lay the blame of their faults upon their evill lucke or evill counsell or the divell whereas they ought to lay the fault upon their o●ne fles● even their owne ill nature The divell no● the world could never hurt us if the flesh did not betray us by defect or consent or evill action Secondly for information We may see what we should mortifie and abstain from Religion doth not binde men to mortifie the substance of the flesh but the lusts of the flesh we are not to destroy any faculty of the soule or in the soule or part of the body but the inordinate appetite and desires of either we are not to abstaine from the necessary meanes of life as house lands diet apparell company c. but the evill concupiscence about these Thirdly for instruction It should teach us therefore to restraine the flesh as much as we can and therefore we shall with the same labour restraine the lusts of the flesh and to this end 1 Wee must with all feare and jealousie watch our owne natures as mistrusting 2 We must silence the flesh and not suffer it to plead for sinne 3 Wee must by a daily course of mortification judge the flesh that so wee may be as it were condemned in the flesh 4 We must keepe from it what may pamper it as idlenesse excesse of diet apparell recreation c. Which warre against the soule These words may bee considered either in their coherence or in themselves in their coherence and so they are the third reason taken from the evill effects of those lusts In themselves there are two things to be opened both what the soule is and what this warre in the soule is The point is cleare that fleshly lusts do much hurt the soules of men and so both the soules of wicked men and of godly men First of wicked men These lusts hurt their soules 1 Because they provoke the wrath of God upon them The Israelites were not estranged from their lusts and therefore the wrath of God came upon them Psal. 78.29 30 31. 2 Because they make us resemble the divell Ioh. 8.44 3 Because they hinder the power of the Word from them they will never come to the knowledge of the truth 2 Tim. 3.6 4 Because it brings the soule in bondage so as all the conversation of the soule is in a manner about those lusts of the flesh Eph. 2.2 5 Because they make all their prayers abominable Iam. 4. 6 Because sometimes they are scou●ged with a reprobate mind being given up to their lusts Rom. 1. 7 Because they may drowne the soule inperdition 1 Tim. 6.9 If godly men entertaine these inward evills in their thoughts and affections many evills will follow 1 They hinder the Word 2 They grieve the good Spirit by which they are sealed to the day of redemption 3 They harden the heart and blind the understanding 4 They hinder good cuties Gal. 5.17 5 They wound the soule 6 They make the mind soule and lothsome they defile 7 They may bring outward judgements upon thee or inward terrours of conscience Use. The use may bee partly to declare the misery of such Christians as are fallen away from the acknowledgement of the truth by intertaining these lothsome lusts of whose fearfull estate at large 2 Pet. 2.18 to the end Partly it should worke in all the godly obedience to the Counsell of the Apostle here in abstaining from these lusts as grievous hurts to the soule or their soules they shou●d put on the Lord Jesus in sincerity and never more take care to fulfill these lusts of the flesh Rom. 13.13 Thus of these words in the coherence The sense will be more full if wee consider more at large two things in the words First what the soule is Secondly what this warre in the soule is Two things have made the inquirie about the soule exceeding difficult The first is the nature of the soule For it is a spirituall essence and therefore wonderfullhard to be conceived of There be three things cannot fully be conceived of or defined by man first God secondly an Angel and thirdly the soule of man Now besides this transcendencie as I may call it of the soule the fall of man and custome in sinne and the remainders of corruption in the best have made this doctrine so hard that wicked men scarce discerne that they have a soule and godly men are very ignorant and impotent in conceiving the condition of the soule This word Soule is diversly accepted in Scripture for it signifies sometimes The life of man as Matt. 6.25 Be not carefull for your soules what yee shall eate c. Christ because looke what the soule is to the body that is Christ to the whole man so Psal. 16.10 Thou wilt not leave my soule in hell that is Christ Act. 2.25 29 c. and 13.35 36. The dead bodies Levit. 19.28 The whole man to Gen. 46.26 by a Synecdoche But here it signifies that part of man which is called his spirit By the soule then we understand that part of man which is invisible and invisibly placed within the body of man Now the things which are fit for us to inquire into and know concerning the nature and excellency of the soule may be comprised briefly in this description of the soule The soule of man is a substance incorporeall invisible
and immortall created of God and united to the body and indued with the admirable faculties of vegetation sense and reason to this end principally that God might be of man truly acknowledged and duly worshipped Every branch of this description containes an excellent commendation of the soule and should much affect us with admiration of Gods workmanship and his love to us in making us such excellent creatures and withall it should breed in us the care which the Apostle here cals for of avoiding all things that might defile our precious soules The soule is the abridgement of the invisible world as the body is the abridgement of the visible world man is rightly said to be a little world God made man last and in man made an Epitome of all the former workes For all things meet in man who consists of a substance partly corporeall and partly spirituall For all things which God created besides man are either such creatures as are discerned by sense being bodily or such creatures as are removed from sense being spirituall as the Angels Now I say man may resemble both sorts of creatures the visible in his body and the invisible in his soule Now the former description of the soule of man doth commend the soule for seven things First that it is a substance Secondly that it is incorporeall Thirdly that it is immortall and cannot die Fourthly that it is created of God immediately Fifthly that it is joyned to the body after a wonderfull manner Sixthly that it hath these excellent faculties Seventhly that hereby man hath honour to know God and his workes which all other creatures in this visible world want The first thing then to be enquired after is what the soule is in respect of the being of it And this I must answer first by removing from the consideration of it what it is not First the soule is not the harmony or right temper of the harmonies of the body as Galen that great Physician is said to affirme which appeares evidently by these reasons 1 That then every body in which the harmonies or foure elements are tempered should have a soule in it and so stones should have soules yea such as man hath indued with reason c. And therefore simply the soule cannot be the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or temperature of the elements or humors 2 It is apparent that the soule governes the excesses which arise from the humours of the body as a man that by temper is apt to be angry or heated yet hath something within him which bridles this anger notwithstanding the heat of his body 3 If the soule were nothing else but the temperament of the humors then it were but a meere accident in that it can bee present or absent as the corruption of the body but wee see that cannot bee For remove the soule from the body and it ceaseth to be a living body 4 By Scripture it is evident that when the body was formed the soule as a thing distinct from it was infused into it by God himselfe Gen. 2.7 Secondly the soule is not a power force or facultie infused into the body by which it is able to live or move or worke For then removing the body from it it cannot subsist whereas wee shall prove afterwards that the soule will subsist without the body and therefore cannot be an accident in the body or a power onely of the body Besides the soule is the subject of vertues and vices of sciences and arts Now no accident can be so Thirdly the soule is not the life of man that is apparent in Scripture when a difference is put betweene the soule and life as what soule shall be blessed in life So 2 Sam. 11.11 By thy life and the life of thy soule The soule then is a substance of it selfe put within us by God distinct from the body this may be evidently proved First God after he had made the body is said to breath into it the breath of life to note that his soule was a substance distinct of it selfe Secondly because it can subsist without the body as is apparent in the soule of Abraham Lazarus and Dives Luk. 16. And of the soule of the theefe on the crosse it is said This day thou shalt be with mee in Paradise Thirdly God is said to have formed the Spirit in the midst of man so it is a substance of it selfe Note he saith in him not of him Fourthly those words of David and Christ prove it Into thy hands I commit my spirit the body being committed to the earth there remained a substance delivered to God Fifthly that place of Ecclesiast Chap. 12. is most plaine The body returnes to dust and the Spirit to God that gave it therefore there is in man a Spirit which returnes to God Sixtly Paul desires to be desolved and to bee with Christ so there was a substance which should enjoy the presence of Christ Phil. 1.23 The second thing to be proved is that the soule is incorporeall It is joyned to the body but it is no body it informeth the matter of man which is his body but it is without matter it selfe it is immateriall it is wholly a spirituall substance It is not a bodily substance no not a most subtile or pure body but altogether incorporeall This is a high doctrine and shewes the soule to be an admirable kind of sustance Now that the soule is void of matter and is no bodily substance may be plainly proved though not easily explicated First it is expresly said to be a Spirit now spirits are not flesh and bones or any like bodily substance Psal. 31.6 Eccles. 12.7 and Zach. 12.1 It is reckoned one of the wonders of Gods creation that he made in man a spirit Secondly the soule is after the Image of God and hath imprinted upon it the similitude of the goodnesse wisdome and holinesse of God Now it were not like God if it were a body nor were it capeable of such habits which can be stamped upon meere naturall or bodily things Thirdly the soule performeth those actions which depend not upon the body and are done without bodily instruments for it understandeth and willeth Fourthly if the soule were a body then it must be corpus animatum or inanimatum but to say it is without life is sense-lesse because it enlives and animates the body and to say it is animatum enlived it selfe it must then be so by some other body All which the same questions might be asked and so run into an infinite The third thing is that the soule is invisible This shewes the transcendencie of the nature of it and experience in all men proves this for who ever saw a soule Obj. The soule of Dives in hell saw the soule of Abraham and Lazarus and Iohn saw the soules of those that suffered for the testimony of Jesus Revel 20.4 Sol. These soules were seene by the eyes of understanding not
their latter end What can be concluded from an example when Gods promise cannot bee shewed If any object that they have a promise for the Scripture saith that At what time soever a sinner repents himselfe from the bottome of his heart God will forgive him I answer that this sentence doth containe no such promise for it onely promiseth forgivenesse to them that repent at any time but it doth not promise that men may repent at any time when they will Besides the words in the Prophet Ezekiel are onely In the day that he turneth which import nothing to prove that a man may repent in any part of his life when he will Fourthly the conversion of the theese was without meanes miraculously by the divinity of Christ and is recorded among the workes of wonder such as were The raising of the dead the trembling of the earth the darkning of the Sunne and the like and if men dare not be so foolish as to expect that at their pleasures these other wonders should be done then neither may they in that of so late conversion without meanes If others say that men were hired into the vineyard at the eleventh houre and were allowed and rewarded as well as they that went in at the third houre I answer that the drift of the parable is onely to shew that men that had the meanes later than other men may yet be saved it cannot be stretched to so large a sense Besides being a Parable it may illustate but cannot prove without some other Scripture to which it serves as an illustration But my speciall answer is this that those men were never hired before the eleventh houre they went in so soone as any came to hire them And so it is true that if men have lived till extreame old age and never had the meanes till then they may have as much hope as they that had the meanes in their youth but that will not warrant the presumption of such as being called the third houre will not goe in till the eleventh houre Use 2. And therefore the second use should be for instruction to perswade all that minde their owne good to walke and worke while they have the light while it is yet to day before the shadowes of the evening be stretched out as our Saviour exhorts in the Gospel We should bestirre our selves to make all the profit we can of the present meanes God affordeth us for the night may many waies come upon us ere we be aware For first who knowes how soone the night of death may come upon any of us and then if we have no oyle in our lampes it will be too late to goe to seeke Secondly the night of restraint may come upon us the meanes may be taken away wee are not sure how long the Candlesticke may continue before it be removed God may take away good shepheards and suffer idle shepheards to succeed in the room of them Besides a mighty storme of cruell persecution may surprise us Thirdly the night of temptation may come and so for the time frustrate the life of the meanes for either God may hide himselfe from us and then the Sunne will be set to us even at noone day or God may hide the power of the Word from us even when it is of power to others as David imports Psal. 119. when he saith Lord hide not thy Commandements from mee or the Lord may restraine the spirits of his servants that speake unto us for the hearts of the Apostles themselves were not alwaies enlarged in the like manner towards the people as is imported 2 Cor. 6.11 Thus of the fourth doctrine Doct. 5. We may further hence note concerning the time of this visitation that not onely there is a season but withall that it is but a short time in comparison therefore here called The day of visitation Now a day is one of the least measures of time and this ariseth not onely from the brevity of mans life and the infinite mutations that befall the outward conditions of men and the extreame malice the divell and the world beare to the Gospel but also from the will of God who will offer his grace in so speciall a manner but for a short season Neither is the Lord bound to give account to us of his so doing since wee have more reason to admire his mercy that will offer us his grace at all than to murmure because it is not offred alwaies yet this shortnesse of the season doth the more magnifie Gods power that can so quickly conquer and set up the Kingdome of Christ and gather his elect And some cause may be taken from the rebellion of wicked men who when they despise holy things and use them vile the Lord to shew the account hee makes of those treasures removes them from them Thus the Jewes lost their glory Act. 13. When a people growe obstinate and will not be wrought upon that God that commands us not to give holy things to dogges doth himselfe also many times remove his Word for the unprofitablenesse and unworthinesse of the people Use. The use should be so much the more strongly to inforce the care of speedie profiting by the meanes while it is yet called Today as the Apostle urgeth it at large in the third and fourth chapters to the Hebrewes And withall it should teach us to bewaile the stupidity and carelesnesse of the multitude that in these times of peace and spirituall plenty have no care to make any provision for their soules over whom we may lament as Christ did over Jerusalem Luk. 19.42 c. And the shortnesse of the time should teach Ministers to labour more diligently they that are the stewards of the manifold graces of God should be instant in season and out of season and with all authority beseech rebuke and correct knowing that their time is short and uncertaine Doct. 6. We may here note that the day when God visits a man with his grace is a glorious day The Apostle speakes of it as of the most happie time of the life of man and so was it ever accounted by the godly Esa. 24.22 23. And it must needs appear to be a day of singular happinesse if we consider what that day brings forth instantly unto the man or woman visited of God For First in that day God reveales in some measure his love to the visited which is the more admirable a benefit because Gods love is a free love and it is everlasting and is also immense Secondly in that day he gives that particular person unto Christ and gives Christ unto him with all his merits Ioh. 10. and 17. Thirdly in that he justifies him both forgiving him all his sinnes and clothing him with the righteousnesse of Christ. Fourthly in that day he adopts him to bee his owne child that was before the child of wrath Rom. 8.16 Fifthly in that day hee gives him a new nature and creates and
that Every soule must bee subject and therefore if Church-men have soules they must bee subject to the higher Powers Thirdly because Princes have executed their authority over C●urch-men whereof wee have manifest examples in the Word as David appointed the orders and offices of the Levites Salomon put downe Abiathar from the Priest-hood Iosiah burned the very bones of the Priests upon their Altars and also purged the Temple and restored the Passeover Christ himselfe was subject to the authority of Princes hee gave tribute and appeared at their Tribunall Paul was subject and appeared before the Magistrates and used their power when hee appeal'd to Caesar 3. Thes. 2. Fourthly there is manifest reason for it for if Church-men bee citizens or members of the Common-wealth then they must bee subject to the Rulers and Lawes of the Common-wealth Fiftly the doctrine of the purest times since the Apostles is agreeable hereunto for Chrysostome upon the thirteenth to the Romans avouches it that Priests and Monkes yea Apostles Evangelists and Prophets must be subject to secular Powers And Bernard reasons out of that place th●s If every soule must bee subject then yours also that are Church-men who hath ex●epted you from this All If any man goe about to except you hee goes about to deceive you And Pope Gregory acknowledgeth the Emperour Maurice as Lord of him and the Clergy They object that the ecclesiasticall government is greater than the secular jure divino and therefore Church-men ought not to be subject because the Superiour ought not to be subject to the Inferiour Ans. The ecclesiasticall government is superiour to the secular government and it is inferiour to it it is superiour in respect of the rule over themselves in the things of the kingdome of heaven by means appointed of Christ viz. the Word and Sacraments c. but it is inferiour in respect of civill subjection in the obedience or submission that concernes body and goods The Prince must bee subject to the Church in matters of faith and godlinesse and the Church subject to the Prince in matters of this life and civill subjection How farre Princes have power in cases ecclesiasticall will bee shewed afterwards They object that divers Councels doe except the Clergie from the Barre and Tribunall of Princes and divers Popes have discharged the Clergy of such subjection Answ. Councels and Popes cannot decree against the Word of God besides they judge and determine in their own case for what were the Popes or Councels but Clergy-men Moreover the Popes assumed a power to themselves which was never given them for they were so farre off from having power to free their Clergy that they had no power to free themselves 2. Thes. 2.7 They object againe and say that it is absurd the sheep should rule and judge the shepheard Princes are but sheepe and Priests are the shepheards Answ. Magistrates are not sheep in all things but in spirituall things in matters of faith and so Ministers are shepheards to feed their soules but in civill things the Magistrate is the shepheard and the Clergy-men sheepe because citizens or subjects But they say that Clergy-men are freed by priviledge from the Emperors and by the Lawes of the Empire Ans. If that be so then their priviledge is Iure humano not divixo Secondly they plead a false priviledge for in things in question they were never priviledged that is in matter of obedience to the Law or in matter of punishment in things criminall Thirdly if it were so then they are subject to Princes for hee that grants a priviledge is greater than hee to whom it is granted But the last and best answer is that Princes can grant no such priviledge Can a father free his sonne that hee shall not honour him or a husband free his wife that shee shall not bee subject to him No more can a Prince free his subjects from obedience or subjection because the subject is tyed by the Law of nature and by Gods Law which Princes cannot undoe Thus of the third point Fourthly when hee saith Submit your selves he doth not require them to submit those things to the pleasure of the Magistrate which are not theirs Every godly Christian hath some things which are not his owne but Gods and those he must not subject to the will of Princes as his Religion his Faith the Word of God the Sacraments his prayers for those are none of Caesars and therefore must not be given to Caesar. Thus of who or what must be submitted To every ordinance of man There are two senses given of these words some understand them of Magistrates themselves some of the Lawes of Magistrates It is not easie to tell how to restraine the text to either of these for both are true and the former included in the latter and the latter implyed in the former and therefore I purpose to handle the words according to the sense in both respects First then wee must be subject to every ordinance of man that is to all sorts of Magistrates And the Apostle seemeth to expound it when hee saith Whether it bee to the King or to the governours as importing that they were the ordinances he spake of before Now concerning Magistrates as they are here intreated of these things are to be noted First that Magistrates are an ordinance of men and so they are in divers respects because magistracy is a thing proper to men Secondly in respect of the end because it is ordained for the good of men Thirdly because the choise of the kinde of Magistrates hath beene for the most part left unto men for God hath not tyed all nations to a kinde of government but left them for the most part free and therefore some governed by Kings some by Emperors some by Consuls some by Dukes some by Princes or Earles or the like Fourthly because in the New Testament Christ did not at all imploy himselfe in settling any order for the corporall government of his Church in this world it being specially his intent for the raising of his spirituall kingdome and the ordering of the government that concerned the soules of men and their full subjection Onely we must take heed of one sinne here and that is that we conceive not the Magistrates are mans ordinance as if man appointed or ordained or invented them for that is contrary to expresse Scripture that calls all those earthly powers Gods ordinance they are by divine institution Rom. 13.1 2 3. Pro. 8.15 2 Chron. 19.6 Dan. 4.14 22. Ob. Hos. 8.4 it is said They made them a King but not by mee Sol. God disclaimes not the ordinance for hee himselfe had appointed Ieroboam to be King of whom the Prophet speaketh but he disclaimes the manner or the choise of him as it was done by the Prophet which chose him in a mutiny and without respect to Gods will Ob. Nimrod was the first that brought in Magistracy and he is taxed for it in Gen. 10.9 Ans.
the Inhabitants that the common priviledges might be maintained that courses for raising of riches and trades might be held Each man did looke to his owne wealth but the King was to looke to the Common-wealth And thus much of the Originall of Kings Their excellencie above other men followes Secondly it must needs appeare that Kings are of all men most excellent in respect of their outward condition and calling 1. Because God himselfe was a King and is delighted to ranke himselfe among men of that degree 2. Because their creation is from God they are a speciall sort of men raised in a peculiar manner to their places by God who pleads it as his glory that Kings raigne by him Prov. 8. Rom. 13. 3. Because God hath communicated to Kings the image of his owne Majestie and printed in the natures of men a naturall forme of Kings as the Vice-gerents to God himselfe 4. Because a divine sentence is in the mouth of the King as Salomon faith their judgement is God's judgement and God would have the people to beleeve that what they say in judgement God himselfe saith it 5. Because they have a power above all other men of which when I come to treat of the word Superiour 6. Because they take accounts of all other men but give accounts onely to God 7. Because they have the treasure of honour they give all the honour which is possessed by any of their subjects and so doe they all offices of honour and government in their Dominions 8. Because they are the Basis or the foundation or stay of all their subjects who are maintained in Religion Justice and Peace by their meanes And thus of their excellencie Thirdly it is to be noted that the word is set downe indefinitely and so it shewes that this honour belongeth to all Kings in the substance of it whether he be a King of one City or many whether he be a Jew or Gentile a Christian or Pagan Hereticall or Orthodoxall Caesar or Herod young or old vertuous or vitious Use. Fourthly the use should bee therefore from hence to inforce upon our hearts an increase of care and conscience in acknowledging the honour and right of Kings and in loyall and sincere observance and obedience to their Lawes It should not seeme grievous to men to bee held under the yoke of obedience and to bee subject to others that are but men as well as themselves There are many things may encourage the hearts of subjects without grievance to beare the superiority of Princes and not to be discontented for First Kings have nothing but what they have received Secondly if Kings doe wrong they must give account to God for all the wrongs that they have done Thirdly God hath charged Princes to bee carefull of their subjects hee hath given them lawes though they bee Kings Fourthly Princes subjects are first bound to God and therefore they are not tied to Princes in any thing contrary to Gods Word Fifthly though the outward man be subjected to the power of Princes yet their consciences are free in spirit they are subject onely to the God of spirits Sixthly the hearts of Kings are in the hands of the Lord and he turneth them as he pleaseth Prov. 21. Seventhly though God hath set up Kings yet he hath not put downe himselfe but he ruleth in all these things he is King of heaven Dan. 4.34 and he is King of all the earth Psal. 47.8 He is a King immortall 1 Tim. 1.12 Eighthly whereas thousands of subjects cannot attaine to the sight of the King nor obtaine any particular suit from him nor can the King provide for them in particular yet may they goe to God and Jesus Christ who is King of righteousnesse and peace they may get great suits in heaven and shall bee provided for in all needfull things Psal. 23.1 and 5.3 and 48.15 and 74.12 and 80.2 Esay 49.10 Mat. 2.6 Revel 7.17 Lastly though they be subjects now in respect of earthly Princes yet in respect of God they are anointed to be Kings themselves and shall receive a Kingdome better than all the kingdomes of the earth The Princes of this world are but mortall Kings but every godly man is a King immortall hee partakes the title of God himselfe God is a King immortall by nature and he is a King immortall by adoption and grace and besides the poorest subject that is a true Christian entertaineth the King of glory every day Psal. 24 7 9. As superiour 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word signifieth one that hath above the havings of other men and so the King hath more than all his subjects not onely in matter of maintenance but also in matter of authoritie and supremacie this his having in supremacie is here meant That the King is supreme is so manifest by this text as it needs no proofe Princes are called therefore in the Old Testament Heads of the Tribes or of the people to signifie that they were not onely higher in place but had soveraigne and supreme authoritie over all the people This supremacie of Kings gives them authoritie in all causes both ecclesia●ticall and civill and over all persons Church-men as well as Lay-men as hath beene proved at large before in the former parts of this verse The use is therefore to coufute the damnable pleadings of the Popes of Rome and their adherents that claime to have the right of supremacie above the Kings and Princes of the world There are divers manifest arguments to overthrow the supremacie of the Pope First this expresse text that acknowledgeth the Kings to be superiour this was the Doctrine in the Apostles times Secondly● it is more to bee noted that Peter himselfe who by the opinion of the Papists had the height of place in the Church that even Peter I say is so far from claiming this to himselfe that hee directs Christians to acknowledge supremacie onely as the right of Kings yea and flatly forbids dominion in the Clergie 1 Pet. 5.5 Thirdly our Saviour Christ at large beats downe this primacie or supremacie in his Apostles and all Church-men shewing that they had not authoritie as the Kings of the earth had it must not bee so with them and much lesse had they authoritie over the Kings of the earth Matth. 20.25 Luke 22.25 Fourthly every soule must bee subject to the higher powers If every soule then Church-men if they have soules must be subject and therefore may not rule Rom. 13.1 Fifthly Christ and the Apostles never claimed any such supremacie but shewed the contrary by their doctrine and practice Sixthly it is made the expresse marke of that man of sinne that hee lifts up himselfe above all that is called God that is above Magistrates 2 Thess. 2. This hath beene the constant Doctrine of the ancient Fathers Origen Homil. 7. in Isai. faith Hee that is called to a Bishoprick is not called to principality but to the service of the Church Tertullian lib. ad
Secondly the persons that need returning Thirdly the time when men must returne Fourthly the false wayes men must avoyd in returning Fiftly what a number of lost sheep doe usually returne Sixtly the aggravations against certaine persons for not returning Sevently the means of returning Eightly the manner how we must returne or the rules to be observed in returning Ninthly the signes of a lost sheepe returned Lastly the lets of returning For the first I meane not to insist upon all sorts of motives but to follow the word Returne as it is used in Scripture and take a few of the fittest motives as it is used in this place And so divers things should make a man to returne as First the consideration of Gods marvellous goodnesse and amiablenesse of nature to all such as turne unto him he is wonderfull gracious to them and mercifull and will repent him of the evill Ioel 2.12 13. Ier. 3● 19 20. The parable of the lost sheepe shewes this fully Secondly the great danger that men are in if they returne not God is angry with the wicked every day Psal. 7.12 And his fury may breaks forth suddenly upon them like fire Ier. 4.4 For the words of his servants will certainly take hold upon them Zech. 1.4 6. And iniquity will be their ruine Ezech. 18. verse 30. Except they repent they must perish Luke 13.5 And therefore if we warme men of their sinnes and they will not return we are delivered and their blood will be upon themselves Ezech. 3.19 Thirdly if a man consider but the happinesse of such as doe returne God will forgive them all their sinnes he will aboundantly provide for them Esay 55.7 If they return they shall live and not die Ezech. 18.23 and 32.11 And everlasting joy shall bee upon their heads and sorrow and mourning shall flee away Esay 51.11 And in this verse the Apostle shewes their happinesse For they shall alwayes live under Jesus Christ as the Shepheard and Bishop of their soules For these and many other reasons it is the only wise course to returne Luke 1.16 And there is not one wise man amongst all them that returne not Iob 17. And thus of the motives The second point is the persons that need returning It is certaine that those that live out of the visible Church or in false Churches need returning As Pagans Turks Jewes Papists Schi●maticks and all Hereticks Yea Juda and Jerusalem need repentance Ier. 4.4 and 26.2 3. Men that live in the visible Church and are baptized need to returne or else they will perish Luke 13.5 Iohn 3.3 The third point is the time of returning and in short the best time to returne is the present time while it is called to day while we have the means of returning when God calls upon us by the ministry of his servants especially when he knockes at the doore of our hearts and layes the axe to the root of the tree It is wonderfull dangerous to defer repentance for even the longer thou livest in sin the more hard will thy heart be Heb. 3.13 and the meanes of grace even the Kingdome of God may be taken away or God may cut thee downe even by sudden death or may cast thee into a reprobate sense and give thee up to a heart that cannot repent Rom. 2.4 5. The fourth point is the false wayes to be avoyded in returning and these are first to returne with despaire or to goe backe without the guide faith in in Gods mercy or to goe the way that despaire leades In this way Cain and Iudas perished Secondly to returne fainedly and not with a mans whole heart to make a shew of returning when men doe not returne indeed Ier. 3.10 Thirdly to returne but part of the way and to repent by halfes as Ahab and Herod did Fourthly to returne when it is too late even when the doore is shut to repent when it is too late Iob 27.9 The fift point is the aggravations that lye against divers persons about their not returning For if it be evill in it selfe for any not to returne then how fearefull is their case first that are proud of their skill in going out of the way that are wise to doe evill Ier. 4.22 Secondly that are deeply revoiced that is that are such as live in horrible and fearefull sins Esay 31.6 Thirdly that will not returne though their transgressions be upon them and they pine away in them Ezek. 33.10 They will not give over though they have no peace and are daily buffered for their evill-doing and their consciences beare the shame and trouble of their offending Fourthly that will not returne though the servants of God openly testifie against them Neb. 9.29 2 Kings 17.13 14. Fiftly that will not returne though the hand of God he upon them even to consume them Ier. 5.3 Sixtly that are turned backe by a perpetuall backsliding Ier. 8.4 that hold fast their sins and refuse to returne Ier. 8.5 The sixt point may be this viz. what number of lost sheep doe usually returne Not all that goe astray our Saviour tels us of a parable of one lost sheep returning and the Prophet Ieremie tels us of one of a Tribe and two of a Tribe Ier. 3.14 Multitudes of men perish and never returne The seventh point is the meanes or cause of our returning and these are either Principall or Instrumentall The principall causes are God and Christ that good Shepheard It is God that turneth backe the captivity of his people Psal. 14. ult and three times in one Psalme the people pray God to turne them againe Psal. 80.3 7 19. This is Ephraims suite Turne thou me O Lord and I shall be turned Ier. 21.18 So the Church faith Lam. 5.21 And Christ is that good Shepheard that seekes that which is lost yea layeth downe his life for his sheep Iohn 10. The instrumentall causes of returning are either externall or internall The externall meanes of returning is the Word preached and so both the reproofes of Gods servants testifying against the wicked to make them turne from their sins Nehem. 9.26 29. as also the promises of the Gospell by which the sinner in the name of Christ is as it were wooed and intreated to returne with assurance of salvation The internall meanes is Faith for that is it which turnes a man cleane about and causeth him to set his face upon God and Jesus Christ and to leave all his old courses and by-wayes Acts 15.9 The eight point is the manner how we must returne and so we shall find in Scripture divers things urged upon us First that we in returning make a thorow search and triall of our wayes to finde out distinctly in what particulars we have gone astray Lam. 3.40 They must remember and be thinke themselves and turne Psal. 23.28 Secondly we must with true sorrow bewaile our former wandrings and judge our selves for them going and rejoycing we must goe with
here rendred a Bishop was a tearme given to watch-men and spies and over-seers of works and sometimes to any sort of Rulers In the Apostles time it seemes the tearme was impropriated and given onely to Ministers that had charge of soules For the Apostles appointing certaine men to looke to the bodies of Christians which they tearmed Deacons they appointed other eminent men to looke to the soules of Christians whom they termed Bishops as appeares Phil. 1.1 Acts 20.28 In the time of the Apostles the terme suffered yet a more strict impropriation and was given to some especiall Ministers that had charge not onely of the people but also of the Clergy and in time in some Churches unto these choice men of the Ministery were added the titles of Barons jurisdiction and power of censures sole power of ordination and the like In this place the Apostle gives the terme of Bishop to Christ as the first and principall Overseer of our soules to whom the charge of their originall doth belong Secondly we must note that Christ is not said to be a Bishop of our soules but the Bishop of our soules which imports that he is such a Bishop as there is no other like unto him That charge that Christ hath of our soules he hath it alone There is no Bishop like to Christ our Bishop for 1. There is no good Bishop but he for he died for the soules he hath charge of and so doe not other Bishops And whereas other Bishops may bee unrebukeable in respect of men sometimes he is unrebukeable in respect of God and men too never any Bishop lived so well or did so much good or loved good men and promoted Gods cause so much as hee 2. No other Bishop can instruct the flocke as he doth For hee can make his people profit because he teacheth inwardly whereas they can teach onely outwardly and hee instructs all his flocke and makes them all to know God from the greatest to the lowest of them which no other Bishop can doe 3. He is the onely Bishop because all other Bishops m● give accounts to him 1. Pet. 5.3 4. Hee is the universall Bishop of all soules other Bishops ●●ve their particular charges or Churches but he hath the charge of all the flockes under heaven all Parishes are within his charge 5. All other Bishops have their ordination from him they have no authority but what they receive from him Acts 20.28 6. Because no other Bishop can take the absolute charge of our soules they are not able to keepe us our soules have many diseases which they cannot cure and are assaulted with many adversaries which they cannot resist 7. Because hee is a heavenly Bishop they are but earthly and divers parts of his office he executes in heaven whereas other Bishops can doe nothing for us but on earth 8. Because hee is the onely Law-maker the onely Law-giver to our soules other Bishops can make no Lawes but by his authority Iam. 4.11 9. Because the other Bishops may require goodnesse in their flocks but cannot make them good he can make all his people righteous he is the Lord and their very righteousnesse Ier. 23.6 10. Other Bishops die and leave their flockes unprovided but hee lives ever and never forsakes his Church but is with them to the end of the world Mat. 28. ult Thirdly who are the charge of Christ Not all that are found in the charges of other Bishops he will not stand to our division of Parishes he counts by Election and righteousnesse all that the Father hath given him are his charge and none else The coherence shews they are onely penitent sinners Fourthly the happinesse of such as are under his charge which must needs be great O! It is a great comfort to a poore sinner to know that Christ hath a charge of his soule for he shall be sure that Christ will feed his soule and nourish it up by his Ordinances and will keep him to eternall life and use him with all tendernesse and compassion A bruised Reed he will not breake and the smoaking Flaxe he will not quench The particulars are metaphorically handled before in the consideration of the benefits we receive from Christ as a Shepheard Uses The Uses follow and so First for information and so first we may here take occasion to thinke of the preciousnesse of our soules for as they' are made of better stuffe than all this visible world being spirits and were redeemed with a greater price than would have beene laid downe to redeeme this whole world so it here appeareth because God sets his owne Son to tend our soules which should make us make more reckoning of them and not be so carelesse of them It were an ill bargaine to win the whole world and lose our owne soules Secondly in that he takes charge of our soules it imports that his Kingdome is not of this world and that he leaveth our bodies and outward estates to the charge of the Kings and Rulers of the earth he claimes himselfe chiefly the charge of our soules Thirdly in spirituall things it is imported that we are to be subjected to such as have the over-sight of us onely so far forth as they command us in the Lord and not otherwise Other Bishops have their power subordinate to Christ and must in all things see to it that they doe nothing against Christ. We are subject first and originally to Christ the charge of our soules properly belongs unto him Fourthly we may here see what need our soules have of looking to if they were not in great danger and subject to many diseases and necessities Christ had never taken such a peculiar charge of them Fiftly it imports the abject estate of all grosse offenders for if Christ be the Bishop of soules they cannot belong to his charge For wise and godly men as much as lieth in them cast out notorious offenders and protest against them and therefore will Christ much more cast off and refuse all such servants of the Divell and the World and Antichrist as will not beare his yoke Sixtly it imports that all Bishops must have ordination from him and therefore such as cannot shew their calling from Jesus Christ are plants which he will root out Use 2. Secondly for consolation to all the godly All that have committed their soules to him may rest upon it that he is able to keepe them till the day of his comming 1 Tim. 1.2 They shall never be lost none can take them out of his hand Iohn 10.29 It is the will of God that none of them should be lacking Iohn 6. And therefore they may comfort themselves with those words of the Apostle Nothing shall ever be able to separate us from the love of God Rom. 8. ult Use 3. Thirdly for instruction and so it should teach us to take chiefe care of our soules For from his office we may learne that he accounts our soules to be the chiefe
other eternall the one is true riches and gaine and serves for the best uses the other is but in shew and serves for the meaner uses of a corporall and temporall life the one doth alwaies doe us good the other doth often doe men hurt and therefore is called filthie lucre And in the manner of getting or holding these gaines there is difference we may covet the best gifts and long after them and love them and joy in them but we are forbidden the coveting or loving of wordly things But in this place the Apostle speakes of the winning of soules about which the Etymologie affordeth matter of profitable consideration The originall word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies gaine and withall the joy and delight of the heart in gaining this gaine being called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is it pleaseth and delighteth the heart And it signifieth craft or policie and therefore in that language a Foxe is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He hath his name from this word which may teach three things 1. To win a soule is a great gaine which must needs be so because to win a soule is more than to gaine the whole world for what shall it profit a man to winne the whole world and lose his owne soule saith our Saviour 2. It is a marvellous joy to the heart of man to win soules to God no man that understandeth the worth of the gaine can be pleased with any thing more than with that The people never comfort the hearts of their godly Teachers more than when they are won by them to sound obedience to the Word of Christ nor can grieve them more than by their wilfull resisting of the meanes 3. It requires a great deale of the spirituall policie and skill to winne soules a Minister that would doe it must sometimes be like a Foxe It is written of the Foxe that when he is very hungry after prey and can finde none he lieth downe and feigneth himselfe to be a dead carcas●e and so the Fowles fall upon him and then he catcheth them Even so a Minister that hungreth after the winning of his hearers must sometimes be driven to make a very carcasse of himself by denying himself turning himself into all forms that his hearers may be inticed to flocke to his doctrine Paul is faine to deny his maintenance and to become all things to all men even to be a servant unto all that he might win some 1 Cor. 9.19 20 21 22. Yea sometimes a man to intice his people must deny his owne profit and make himselfe like a dead carcasse in respect of profits that so he may the better allure them to fall upon him in his ministry Some people will never be caught if the Minister be bussling amongst them for the utmost of his Rights but if a man will endure to be stript of his Rights sometimes they will goe to heare such a man and so may be catched And thus from the Etymologie of the Word The matter it selfe imports divers things done upon the person so gained as also it notes something in the disposition of the party that is to win and withall something in the estate to which he is won For the first when a man is said to be won it imports first that he is brought to see that he is lost in his former estate secondly that he is brought to confesse his misery and sin and withall to yeeld himselfe with humilitie of minde to bee disposed of by the supreme Conquerour and withall that hee giveth over all opposing of the way of godlinesse Which may serve for triall to all such as account themselves gained to godlinesse for such as oppose sincerity or see not they are lost or yeeld not themselves to be disposed of by Jesus Christ are not indeed wonne whatsoever they professe For the second it notes That such as are truely godly shew their affection to such as they are linked to in the bonds of nature by their earnest desire after the salvation of the soules of such as they are tied to in those bonds Thus Paul desired the salvation of the very Nation he was of thus parents shew their love to their children by bringing them up in the nurture and instruction of the Lord and thus here godly wives shew their love to their husbands in endeavouring to win them to godlinesse and the obedience to the Word Which serves also to trie the affections men professe they beare to their kindred or neighbours or any they are linked to in nature or affinity Parents love not their children that endeavour not to get grace for them as well as riches and so neighbours should shew their love by admonishing instructing and edifying one another 1 Thes. 5.14 For the third in that he saith evidently Won not mentioning to what it imports that such as are won to true godlinesse are likewise won to all happinesse even to Gods Kingdome in respect of their right to it especially if they be effectually converted He is won to glory that is won to g●ace Which also may serve for triall for if thou canst find that thy heart is wonne to sound sanctification thou maist from thence assure thy selfe of thy salvation as certainely to be had as it is certaine thou hast sanctification They also This Also imports two things First that the Word of God never wins so many but there are still more to be wonne though thousands were converted among the Gentiles yet still there was hope of winning more In the spirituall husbandrie all times are not times of harvest and in the harvest all the spirituall graine is not ripe at once The Jewes were first to be gotten in and then the Gentiles were ripe for the harvest Iohn 4. and when the fulnesse of the Gentiles is come in by that time the Jewes will be ripe againe and so it is in particular Countries Cities Parishes Families And as in winnowing though it be done with never so good a winde or skill yet some graine will still be in the chaffe so it is in places where the most good hath beene done by the meanes And herein God is better than the naturall husbandman for the naturall husbandman will never winnow the chaffe over againe for a few graines of corne nor will he thresh over his straw againe if but a few cornes of wheate or barley bee in the straw but God will winnow a great heape if it were but at length to find one graine of spirituall corne It may bee often observed that in some places God sets his servants to thresh or winnow in great assemblies of chaffe and yet after divers yeeres labour it may bee they get but one graine of corne that is convert after much toile perhaps but one or two soules Now if any aske why all that belong to God are not converted all at once I answer that it were sufficient to satisfie us
the Apostle Peter who fell shamefully when he shooke off this feare and grew bold and confident of his owne strength and therefore they that stand are charged to fear● lest they fall Rom. 11. 3. Because of the many and fearefull adversaries our soules and religion have in this world Wee bee to wrestle with principalities and powers and spirituall wickednesses Eph. 6.10 2 Cor. 11.3 and our taske is to overcome the world and the flesh which hath many difficulties in it considering the multitudes of evill examples and scandals are in the world and the great treachery of our owne flesh 4. Because of the lamentable reproach of the Heathen and such as are without God and Christ of all sorts and in all places which would be powred out if wee should misse it in our conversation if our foot should but slip Neh. 5.9 5. Because of the dreadfull relation in which wee stand unto God who hath authority over us and is our Master and Father Mal. 1.6 and is able to kill both body and soule Mat. 10.28 and is the Lord God Almighty and the Kings of Saints and hee is onely holy and of most pure eyes and hath power over all Nations Revel 15.3 4. and doth wondrous things Hee hath placed the sand for the bounds of the sea by a perpetuall decree that it cannot passe it though the waves thereof tosse themselves and roare yet they cannot prevaile Ier. 5.22 Hee is the true God he is the living God and an everlasting King at his wrath the earth shall trembl● and the Nations shall not bee able to abide his indignation Ier. 10.7 10. so Iob 31.23 David said his flesh trembled for feare of God Psalm 119 vers 120. 6. Because of the fearefull falling away and rejecting of many Churches and particular persons that yet have befor● flourished for a time in the professing of true religion Ier. 3.8 Rom. 11.20.21 7. Because of the many precious things and spirituall treasures may bee lost in deed or in shew if wee doe not attend diligently and with great eare and feare Heb. 2.1 4.1 Quest. But how must wee shew this feare in our conversation Answ. It must be shewed many waies both in the ordering of our lives towards God and in the disposing of our conversation towards men Towards God we expresse this feare 1. By the sobriety of our minds resting in his revealed will and not daring to meddle with his secrets Rom. 12.3 2. By receiving his messengers with feare and trembling 2 Cor. 7.15 not daring to contest with them or stand upon our private conceits and opinions but rather to make haste to beseech God and to repent when they reprove us or threaten us Ier. 29.19 Exod. 14.31 Ezra 9.4 10.1 2 3. at the best mistrusting our selves and our owne wisdome and conceits and shewing our selves carefull to come to the light that it may be manifest our deeds are wrought in God Iob 37. ult Pro. 3.7 3. By shewing all awefull care and devotion in Gods service and worship expressing all reverence Psal. 2.11 5.7 and striving to make glorious conceptions of God in our hearts Rev. 15.4 14.7 not daring to omit any time or opportunity of serving God Acts 10.2 and avoiding all rashnesse and vaine behaviour in words or vowes or carriage Eccles. 5.2 to the eighth verse not mentioning the very names or titles of God without great reverence Deut. 28.58 and remembring Gods presence especially at the times and in the places of his worship Mal. 2.5 Eccles 8.12 13. 4. By shewing respect to all Gods Commandements endeavouring to keepe not one or some few but all the statutes of our God Deut. 6.2 31.12 When our consciences are affraid even for the respect we beare to God to bawke one of the least Commandements or to be corrupted with any filthinesse either in flesh or spirit or to come short of any goodnesse is required of us 2 Cor. 7.1 being afraid to commit those sins are committed without feare either by persons neere to us or by the most men of all sorts Ezek. 18.14 Mal. 3.16 And for the manner of our obedience to Gods will this feare expresseth it self● notably in two things first that it doth not onely make us avoide or leave evill which in some cases wicked men may doe but it makes us loathe and hate evill Pro. 8.13 16.6 causing us to eschew it as we would any thing we account poisonfull or deadly Psal. 34. Secondly it makes us not onely doe good duties but it makes us worke hard at them afraid to omit any thing injoyned us or to have our taske undone when God should call us to a reckoning Acts 10. 35. Phil. 2.12 Towards men we expresse this feare of God also divers waies as 1. By a continuall care of innocency avoiding all courses of injurie though they might be committed with any colour of right as oppression Levit. 25.17 usury Lev. 25.36 2. By pity and mercy to Gods creatures indistresse so Cornelius is said to be a man fearing God because he gave much almes Acts 10.12 Iob 6.14 3. By reverence to Gods image in his creatures even in the lowest kinde as by rising up before the hoare head and honouring the face of the old man Levit. 19.32 not daring to curse the deafe or put a stumbling blocke before the blind Lev. 19.14 4. By all possible care of the faithfull discharge of the particular callings they are set in for the good of others as is required in servants Col. 3.22 especially Eph. 6.5 and Magistrates 2 Sam 23.3 2 Cor. 19.6 7. 5. By a tender and compassionate care to recover such as are spiritually fallen and to preserve such as are in danger to fall from the simplicity that is in Christ Jesus 2 Cor. 11.3 Iude 23. 6. By an awefull endeavour to give no offence neither to them that are without nor to any of the godly 1 Cor. 10.3 avoiding all waies of provocation or contention even in civill life Psal. 34.12 Now it must be remembred that of all those wayes by which feare should be shewed in our conversation in this Text those only can be intended which are subject to the observation of others The Uses may be first to shew how miserably the lives of all sorts of men are faulty in the want of this feare for hereby it is apparent that these sorts of men following have not this feare of God in their conversations as 1. Such as be masters of opinions and dare boldly and securely obtrude their erroneous conceits and new opinions upon the Church of God straining their wits for applause to goe beyond Gods revealed will Rom. 12.3 2. Such as are usually well pleased with themselves and their doings and are not troubled at their owne insufficiency and infirmities God cannot abide such as are wise in their owne eyes Iob 37. ult 3. Such as live securely in knowne sins and blesse themselves in their hearts when their
or contempt of others or hath the appearance of such evill in the judgement of others Esay 3. 1 Thes. 5. 8. When it becommeth not good workes or hindereth them 1 Tim. 2.9 as when men restraine mercie to the poore or oppresse their Tenants or defraud other men onely to mainetaine themselves or theirs in outward pompe and gallantnesse of apparell This is the horrible sin of the Gentry in many places of this kingdome 9. When it is condemned and reproved by godly Ministers that are both wise and learned for their testimony ought to be received 2 Thess. 1.10 and it is a vile sinne to vexe them and grieve them by our obstinacie yea though they were not able to make so full demonstration yet when they reprove such things out of a spirituall jealousie and feare they corrupt their hearers they ought to be heard Heb. 13.18 1 Cor. 11.2.3 10. When the time that might be profitably spent is consumed by the tedious curiositie of dressing Ephes. 5.16 as it is with those that have not time for God● worship in private or cannot come time enough to the Church or neglect their calling by being so long in dressing 11. When it dishonours the body of a man Col. 2. ult as when it is slovenly or sluttish or is taken up of meere singularitie and affectation of the praise of mortification and tends to restraine Christian libertie in others For no pretence may uncomely apparell be used for 1 Tim. 2.9 it is required that the apparell of women be comely for so the originall word signifies But especially uncomely apparell is then most vile when it is worne with a purpose to deceive as the Prophet complained of such as weare a ro●gh garment to deceive 12. The puritie of a Christian life should avoide all dressings or fashions which had their originall from infamous persons such as are the fashions of Whores or debauched creatures and such a beginning it is said commonly Yellow starch had What fellowship betweene light and darknesse righteousnesse and unrighteousnesse Christ and Belial If we would have God to love us we must separate and come out from amongst them and touch no uncleane thing 13. When such apparell is worne as is contrary to the wholesome lawes of men for we are bound to submit our selves to every ordinance of man for Gods sake 1 Pet. 2.13 14. Lastly when the partie that useth such apparell or dressing is condemned in himselfe and hath his owne conscience accusing or disliking it or is no● fully assured that he doth not sin Whatsoever is not of Faith in those things is sin Rom. 14. Verse 4. But let it be the hidden man of the heart c. HItherto of that adorning they should not be curious or costly in Now in this verse he shewes in the affirmative what apparell or dressing they s●ould be carefull of and that is the adorning of their soules and the apparelling of the inward man In the words three things may be noted 1. What must be apparelled viz. the hidden man of the heart 2. With what it must be adorned which he shewes both in generall and in particular in generall it must be with incorruptible things in particular it must be with a meeke and quiet spirit 3. The reason viz. because such apparell is very rich in Gods account The fir●● thing then is what must be apparelled viz. the man of the heart The man of the heart This is a kind of speaking not used in any place of Scriptu●e but this onely this Apostle onely useth this kinde of expressing himselfe Now concerning the man of the heart I would consider of sixe things 1. What he is 2. Whence he is or his originall 3. In what he excels the outward man 4. What condition he is in by nature 5. H●w he may be mended or made better 6. How we may know when the man of the heart is right ●or the first by the man of the heart hee meanes the same the Apostle Paul●oth ●oth by the inward man 2 Cor. 4.16 and the inward man is the soule or he●rt of man Thus ●e speakes of a Jew that is outward and a Jew that is in●ar● Rom. 2.28 29. Now the heart is and may well be called the man for divers reasons 1. In respect of definition For the definition of a man agrees to the heart of man though there were no body for God was the God of Abraham and Abraham was and was a living man many hundred yeeres after his body was in the grave Mat. 22. And hence it is that unto the soule or heart of man in Scriptures is attributed all things that the outward man can doe as life Psal. 22.27 language Eccles. 9.1 Psal. 14.1 36.1 praying to God Psal. 37.4 receiving messages from God as when the Prophet is bidden to speake to the heart of Jerusalem Esay 40. serving of God c. 2. In respect of dominion The heart is the man because it disposeth the way of man Pro. 16.9 and ruleth the outward man for out of the aboundance of the heart the mouth speaketh And therefore Solomon saith that from the heart comes life Pro. 4.23 3. In respect of acceptation The heart is that which God especially respects in man it is the heart he lookes upon 1 Sam. 17.7 He tries the heart and as Solomon saith He weighes the hearts of the children of men Pro. 21.2 and he will be served with our hearts Iosh. 24.14 and in all holy duties it is with us in Gods account according as he seeth the heart 1 Kings 8.39 so he requires the heart in repenting 1 Sam. 7.3 in praying 2 Tim. 2.22 Hos. 7.14 in hearing the Word Luke 8. and so in every good duty Thus of the first point For the second The man of the heart hath his originall from God himselfe He is the Father of Spirits Heb. 12.8 and it was his especiall glory to forme and fashion the heart in man as divers Scriptures shew Zech. 12.1 Psal. 33.15 and is therefore called the God of the heart Psal. 37. For the third The man of the heart excells the outward man exceedingly and that both in substance and in priviledges As for substance in the outward man we agree with beasts but in the inward man we agree with Angels in as much as the man of the heart consists of a spirituall and immateriall essence as well as the Angels And as in substance so in properties there is great difference for first the man of the heart is hidden it can be and doe all his worke and yet be invisible God himselfe hath variety of conversation with the man of the heart that no creature else knowes Secondly he is free and subject only to the God of his heart properly No man can come at or governe or command the heart of man Thirdly he is properly the seat of Gods image Wee are not properly like God in our bodies because God hath no body but in
unto reformation if they will carefully observe these rules following 1. They must study to be quiet 1 Thes. 4.12 They must not trust their owne conceits of things but with good conscience study how to prevent occasions of unquietnesse and how to carry themselves discreetly and with meeknesse It doth require much study to live quietly 2. They must be sure they meddle with their owne businesse as it is further added in the same place They must be sure to place their greatest care in learning how to discharge their owne duties to others and not allow themselves liberty to suspect or censure the waies of others with whom they converse Such wives as are so diligent to studie their husbands duties and to finde fault with them in their callings seldome or never live quietly with their husbands whereas the Apostle here would have such wives as have ill husbands to lay the ground of a quiet life in the care of sound discharge of their owne duties to their husbands 3. They must heartily repent for their faults of unquietnesse and frowardnesse past and not only humble their soules in secret before God for such sins but also shew their repentance to those with whom they converse by an humble acknowledgement of their vile nature and froward behaviour even in the particulars of it Repentance for knowne trespasses can never be sound if it be secret and not made knowne to the parties grieved 4. It will wonderfully help them if they pray constantly to the Lord Jesus that left such a patterne of meeknesse and to entreat him by influence of his grace to quiet and sweeten their natures Beseech the Lord Jesus even by his meeknesse to make us meek and able to expresse his vertue in a quiet conversation 5. They must not give place to wrath but if they perceive their hearts rising and inclined to passion and provoking and censorious words they must presently lay necessity of silence upon themselves till they be able to speake quietly and without frowardnesse This one rule constantly for a while observed would breed a great alteration in their dispositions quickly and in time weare out the force of the disease Unquietnesse is much enlarged by the words are uttered after the offence is taken And thus of a meek and quiet spirit only we may note from the indefinite requiring of meeknesse That Christians and in particular Christian wives must exercise meeknesse and quietnesse towards all persons and at all times and in all places In all places I say and so both at home and abroad towards all persons and so they must carry themselves quietly not only towards their husbands but towards their servants and their neighbours whether they be poore or rich and at all times they must not be young Saints and old Divells as the Proverb is that is of a soft and gentle behaviour at first and then grow froward afterwards Age and infirmities are not sufficient excuses for vicious anger and unquietnesse Besides in that the Apostle resembles meeknesse to apparell it imports That by nature we are borne without it our soules being as naked in respect of meeknesse as our bodies be in respect of cloathes and withall that it should be our every-daies care to put on meeknesse and fit our selves for quietnesse as wee would put on our cloathes And further as it is not enough to put on our cloathes but we must tie them and fit them handsomely so must we use discretion in the putting on of meeknesse and quietnesse fitting the vertue to the reasons and occasions of the day Thus of the second part of this verse The third and last is the reason why women should be so carefull of this kind of dressing and apparell and that is because it is a thing of great price in the sight of God Which in the sight of God is of great price Divers things may be hence observed 1. That God doth highly esteeme of the vertues and true grace and good behaviour of his servants and therefore in this place their vertues are said to be very rich in Gods sight and in the Scriptures he gives the terme of riches to their gifts 1 Cor. 1.5 and grace is called glory Esay 4.5 and God is described as if he were in love with his people when they carry themselves graciously Iohn 14.21 And this serves greatly to exalt the praise of Gods good nature and tender affection to man and the more because all good things in us are his owne gift Iames 1.17 and because our best gifts have many imperfections in them and our best workes are defiled with sinne Esay 64. and besides because he greatly esteemes them even the least beginnings of goodnesse in his servants as their desires to be good and their very preparations of their hearts to goodnesse Esay 55.1 2. Psal. 10.17 2 Christians are bound in all their behaviour to carry themselves so as that God may accept of them and esteeme what they doe and this is required of them in every state of life They are tyed to this not only in what they doe in Gods house but in what they doe in their owne house This all are charged Heb. 12.28 and so wives here and so servants Eph. 6. 5 6 7. The praise and acceptation of God should be ever before their eyes the reasons are because the formes and rules of all behaviour are given by God his Word is the light to our feet and the lanthorne to our paths Psal. 119. and is only able to make the man of God perfect in every good word and worke 2 Tim. 3. ult and besides if we doe well we are sure never to faile of the praise of God whereas if we seeke the praise of men wee may be deceived For either they may praise us for that which is abominable in the sight of God Luke 16.15 or they may dispraise us when wee doe well or at best their praise is mutable And further it is God that must reward our good conversation Eph. 6.8 and therefore reason that hee bee looked after in what wee doe Lastly this is a signe of difference betweene the godly and the wicked in doing good duties a godly man is knowne by this signe that his praise is of God and not of men Rom. 2.29 Mat. 6. The Use should be to teach us therefore in all our waies to labour to please God and above all things to seeke his acceptation Now if wee would have God pleased with what we doe we must looke to divers rules 1. Wee must bee sure that wee are not in the flesh for they that are in the flesh cannot please God Rom 8.8 Wee must be sure we are new creatures Gal. 6.15 2. Wee must set God alwaies before us and remember his holy presence Gen 17.2 Psal. 16.8 God cannot abide to be forgotten 3. Wee must come to the light that it may bee manifest that our workes are wrought in God Iohn 3.22 Wee must walke by
Men must be subject because God hath taken mens consciences bound to subjection Rom. 13. 3 Because Kings are heads of the people and therefore as members it is agreeable that they should submit and bee ruled and guided 4 In respect of the benefit men receive by Magistrates both in outward things and in matters of Religion For outward things men enjoy publike peace and quietnesse and protection by the help of the power of the Magistrate And for matters of Religion earthly Common-wealths are as it were Innes to lodge the Church in and Princes power affords protection so as Christians may more safely follow their calling and if they be godly Kings they are the very nurses of Religion And thus of the reasons For the second this Submission hath in it sixe things the first is obedience to their lawes and commandements Tit. 3.1 The second is honour Rom. 13.7 for they are principalities and powers as the Angels shine in heaven so doe Princes on earth Yea they are called gods and so in two respects first as they are Gods Deputies and Viceroyes God executes a part of his Kingdome by Kings Secondly as they beare the image of God and his authority and soveraignty Now wee must performe this honour by reverence and by feare of them and by judging the best of them and their actions without conceiving suspitions of them or receiving evill reports against them or daring to speake evill of those dignities and Rulers of the people and by all thankefulnesse for the good wee receive by them acknowledging to the full all their praises The third is loyalty by which wee resolve and endevour to the uttermost of our powers to maintaine and preserve the persons rights prerogatives crownes and dignities of Princes If wee must lay downe our lives one for another then much more for our King and Country The fourth is piety we must pray for them with all manner of prayer wee must make supplications for Gods blessing upon them and deprecations for the removing evils from them and if they should sinne and God bee wroth with them wee should stand up in the gap and make intercession for them and we should give thanks for all the mercies the Lord shewes unto them 2 Tim. 2.1 The fift is maintenance tribute must bee paid Rom. 13.7 Christ himselfe submitted herein The last is subjection to their punishments Rom. 13.4 yea to their injuries as David Christ and the Apostles did submit themselves to the injurious dealing of Saul Pilate and the Tyrants when perhaps they could have made resistance Use 1. The use may be first for terror to the seditious great hath beene the vengeance of God upon Traytors the earth swallowed up Corah Dathan and Abiram for their rebellion Absolon was hanged up by the haire between heaven and earth as unworthy both of heaven and earth The words of our Saviour Christ are in an high degree true in this case Hee that taketh ●up the sword shall perish by the sword And S. Paul saith They shall be damned that resist the power Secondly it should much humble the better sort of men for divers 〈◊〉 that are too common such as are the receiving of evill reports and speaking evill with too frequent intemperancy grudging at the payment of tribute and taxations evill surmises of the actions of Princes and the aptnesse ●o f●vour themselves in the liberty of doubting concerning obedience to them in things indifferent Thirdly all good Christians should be perswaded to make conscience of this submission and to that end they should bee at the paines to study this Doctrine and withall pray to God to direct them and keepe them in his feare and obedience herein and besides they should be sure that they meddle not with the changers or with the seditious Pro. 24.22 Your selves These words may note either the manner of our submission or the matter the manner thus Submit your selves that is yeeld obedience uncompelled doe it of your selves stay not till you be forced to doe it and so the Apostle should thereby import that our submission even to men should bee performed willingly and so wee should willingly and cheerefully obey their lawes honour and defend their persons pray for them to God yeeld them tribute yea wee should without murmuring submit our selves to their punishments yea cheerefully beare their injuries and so it removes grudging and force from our submission But I rather understand the words to note the matter to bee submitted and that is our selves not our goods onely for tribute or custome but our persons also must bee at the Princes service our very bodies must be submitted both to doe the labour tha● belongs to the beating of any office for the publike good and to the enduring of any punishment by the lawes to be inflicted upon the body and to the imploying of the body and life in defence of the true Religion and of the King● person law and desire in warre or otherwise This is manifest by the frequent wars in the Old Testament both required and performed nor may any say that Christians in the New Testament are not charged in the businesse of warre for First It was Christ's maine intendment to forme a spirituall Kingdome to God he left the state of earthly Kingdomes to the condition they were in before Secondly when the Apostles doe in the generall require the submission of Christians to their Magistrates without exception of their obedience in warre or otherwise it is manifest that they leave them to the lawes of nature and the lawes of God before Thirdly even in the New Testament this is implyed by Baptist's answer to the souldiers Luk. 3.14 and the praises of those worthy warriours Heb. 11.33 34 In which place also is a manifest proofe for subjection even in our bodies to the sentences of Magistrates whether just or unjust And the Magistrate's sword Rom. 13.4 is not onely a sword of justice upon malefactors in his owne land but of revenge on the enemies of God or the Church or Common-wealth abroad And for that saying of our Saviour to Peter He that taketh the sword shall perish with the sword Mat. 26.52 it is spoken of him to whom of the Lord it is not delivered that is of him that hath not authority from God as Magistrates have to command others to take the sword and it was spoken to Peter a Pastour of soules Put up again thy sword into his place That materiall sword was not for him to use Thirdly note that it is indefinitely propounded Your selves that is all of all sorts no man can bee exempted from subjection to Princes Christians must obey as well as Pagans strangers as well as home-borne while they are within their gates All the doubt is whether Church-men are to bee subject to secular Princes The Papists deny it but wee affirme it and have reason so to doe First because the precept is generall without exception Secondly because the Apostle saith Rom. 13.1