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A09434 A godlie and learned exposition upon the whole epistle of Iude, containing threescore and sixe sermons preached in Cambridge by that reverend and faithfull man of God, Master William Perkins, and now at the request of his executors, published by Thomas Taylor, preacher of Gods word ; whereunto is prefixed a large analysis, containing the summe and order of the whole booke, according to the authors owne method, to which are further added, foure briefe tables to direct the reader ... Perkins, William, 1558-1602.; Taylor, Thomas. 1606 (1606) STC 19724.3; ESTC S100865 274,393 200

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of God which if we want we must labour for thē and if wee haue them be thankfull vnto God for them 2. Vse Learne the dutie laid downe by the Apostle Ephes. 4.1 that we should walke worthie of our calling To doe which first we must looke that we frame our liues holily being holy in our whole conuersation as he that hath called vs is holie Secondly there must be the same end of our liues which is of Gods calling that is to bring vs to heauen The end of our being in the world is to be called out of the world and as Abraham to obey God as looking for a citie in heauen not made with hands Now we proceede to the second step of life eternall which is sanctification this name is taken from the Latins and by it is vnderstood Regeneration renouation new creation and to be sanctified is to be made holie and be borne anew That wee the better know this grace consider sundrie points First what sanctification is It is an inward change of a man iustified whereby the image of God is restored in him For the opening of which description marke that first I call it a change of a man to put a difference betweene it and ciuill conuersation which is a gift of God likewise as this is but farre different from it because this onely restraineth the corruption of the heart whereas sanctification reneweth the heart and thus the gifts of God are of two sorts first restraining which doe keepe in the wickednes of the heart such as are all ciuill vertues Secondly renuing or altering the minde which not only represseth but abolisheth corruption of this kinde is sanctification Secondly I call it an inward change namely in the minde will affections as working vpon the inward corruptions and lusts of the heart to distinguish it from outward sanctification which a wicked man may haue whereby he reformeth his outward man and cariage by the ministerie of the word such are they whom the Apostle speakes of Heb. 10.27 which tread vnder their feet● the blood of Christ whereby they were sanctified namely externally this is of another kinde working the inward change of the heart Thirdly I adde of a man iustified for two causes first to shew that iustification and sanctification are two diuers gifts of God and their difference may appeare in three things first in that iustification is out of a man sanctification is within him Secondly iustification absolues a sinner and makes him stand righteous at the barre of Gods iudgement sanctification cannot doe this Thirdly iustification brings peace of conscience so doth not sanctification but followeth that peace Thus the Apostle hath them distinct 1. Cor. 6.11 Ye are washed ye are iustified and sanctified as also 1. Cor. 1.30 Christ is made to vs righteousnes and sanctification Secondly because iustification goes with sanctification though iustification be before in nature yet they are wrought at the same time For when God accepts a mans person then is hee made iust who is also sanctified Fourthly I say the image of God is hereby restored the which that we may know wherein it consisteth consider the three-folde estate of man the first of innocencie the second after the fall and the third vnder Christ. First in innocencie man had three things first substance of bodie soule secondly the faculties of soule as reason and vnderstanding thirdly the image of God standing in the conformitie of the whole man to the will of God Secondly in the state after the fall man hath two of these first substance of bodie and soule secondly faculties as before But the third is wanting standing in righteousnesse and holinesse and in stead of it is found in euery man original sinne which distempereth and disordereth the whole man his minde will and affections and carrieth him against the will of God In the third condition vnder Christ wee haue three things first substance of bodie and soule secondly faculties of the reasonable soule thirdly a new created holines and righteousnesse before lost but now restored by grace aboue nature and this is a renewed conformitie to the will of God and the image of God againe restored Where note that sanctification is such a gift of God as changeth the man not the substance of the bodie or the faculties of the soule but the corruption disorder and sinfulnes of man it rectifieth but abolisheth not affections if a man be of sad disposition it neither increaseth nor taketh away but moderates his sorrow and keepes it in order so if a man bee of a merrie disposition it depriues him not of his mirth but corrects it that it exceede not so in Choler and other complexions Then those that feare to labour in their sanctification because then they must be solitarie sad and cannot be merrie and those that thus obiect against those who endeuour ouer their owne reformation may see themselues deceiued seeing it onely tempereth the affections to such moderation as becommeth holines The second point is Whence haue we our sanctification whether from our parents or from what originall No it cannot flow from the parents no although they be holy Iob. 1.13 the new birth is not of blood nor the will of flesh nor of man for parents must bee considered two waies first as they are men children of Adam Thus they bring their children and conuey no more to their children than Adam did which is nature together with the corruption of it Holy parents haue no sinne for it is mortified in them therefore they cannot deriue it to their children Notwithstanding their sanctification they conuey the nature and sinne of Adam which comes thus to passe God in the beginning gaue this law that whatsoeuer Adam receiued he should receiue it for himselfe and his posteritie and whatsoeuer he lost he should lose from himselfe and all his posteritie by vertue of which law parents sanctified bring foorth children vnsanctified which may appeare by this cōparison Take wheate make it as cleane as you can sow it and it will come vp not as it was sowen but in stalke blade and eare and it brings vp as much chaffe as euer it did though none were sowen with it what is the reason hereof but onely the order set in nature by God at the first So parents let them be neuer so holie by vertue of the former lawe bring foorth vnholie children Secondly parents must be considered as holy men sonnes of the second Adam by a second birth and thus they produce not their children nor deriue their holines into them although their holinesse may be a meanes to bring them within the Couenant Whence note that the soule of the child is not deriued frō the soule of the father as the body is frō his body for then shuld they haue the same properties with the soule of the parents so euery regenerate man should deriue a regenerate soule vnto the infant which is false
nature but not Adams sinne Againe Christ came of Adam but from him as a beginning and not by him as by a father whereas all other men are both from Adam and by him This is a maine ground of our religion without which there could bee no redemption Aduersaries hereof are First our common people who say they euer kept Gods law and loued him with al their heart and their neighbours as themselues and thinke hence all is well but were it so as they dreame they had neuer fallen in Adam and so Adams sin had not gone ouer all men Secondly the Popish Church first in teaching that the Virgin Mary who came of Adam by ordinary generation was conceiued without sinne notwithstanding she was saued not by her bearing of Christ in her wombe but by beleeuing on him with her heart Secondly in that they teach that men are not wholy dead in sinne but in part or halfe dead yea that being a little holpen they can keepe the law as though by sinne men had not been wholy depriued of the glorie of God The 11. ground is that the Law and Gospell are two parts of the word of God and are diuers kindes of doctrine By the law I vnderstand that part of Gods word which promiseth life to the obeyer By the Gospell that part which promiseth it to the beleeuer These I say are diuers kindes of doctrine to the cleering of which consider first their consent and agreement Secondly their dissent and difference First the Law and Gospell consent first in the Author of both which is God Secondly in their generall matter for both require iustice and righteousnesse to saluation Thirdly in their end namely the glorie of God Secondly they dissent in sixe things First the Morall law is written in nature by creation yea and since the fall we haue some remainder of it in vs. Rom. 2.15 The Gentiles shew the effect of the law written in their hearts but the Gospell is not in nature but aboue the reach of nature created much more corrupted The ground of the law is the image of God but the ground of the Gospell is Iesus Christ. Secondly the Law will haue vs doe something that we may be saued by it and that is to fulfill it The Gospel requireth no doing of vs but onely beleeuing in Christ. Ob. But beleeuing is a worke to be done Ans. The Gospell requireth it not as a worke but as it is an instrument and the hand of the soule to lay hold vpon Christ Rom. 4.5 and 3.21 and 10.5 Hence is it that the Law requireth righteousnes inherent but the Gospell imputed Thirdly the Law is propounded to the vnrepentant sinner to bring him to faith but the Gospell to the beleeuer to the begetting and increase of faith Fourthly the Law sheweth sinne accuseth and reuealeth iustice without mercie but the Gospell couereth sinne and is a qualification of the rigour of the Law The Law saith Cursed is euery one c. The Gospell qualifieth that and saith Except he beleeue and repent euery man is accursed Thus the Law which onely manifesteth iustice is moderated by the Gospell which mingleth mercie and iustice together iustice vpon Christ mercie vnto vs. Fiftly the law telleth vs what good workes must bee done the Gospell how they must bee done the former declareth the matter of our obedience the latter directeth vs in the manner of obeying the former is pleased with nothing but the deede the latter signifieth that God is pleased to accept the will and vnfained endeuor for the deede it selfe Sixtly the Law is no worker of grace and saluation no not instrumentally for it is the ministerie of death the Gospell preached worketh grace onely though the Law may be a hammer to breake the heart and prepare the way to faith and repentance Aduersaries hereof are The Papists who hold that they are one doctrine only but herein differing that the Law is more darke the Gospell more plaine the former more hard to fulfill the latter more easie that is as the roote of a tree this as the bodie branches by which premises they would conclude Christ to be no Sauiour but an instrumēt rather for vs to saue our selues by he giuing vs grace to keepe the Law for a sinner must needes bee saued by works if there be no difference between the Law and the Gospell and if the Law which requireth workes were not moderated by the Gospel which requireth not workes but faith The 12. ground is The word was made flesh Ioh. 1.14 This is a maine ground as in 1. Ioh. 4.3 Euery spirit that doth not confesse that Christ is come in the flesh that is euery doctrine in which Christ is denied to be come in the flesh is not of God but of Antichrist Now by word I vnderstand the eternall sonne of God the second person in Trinitie the very substantiall word of the Father It is added was made not as though the sonne of God was turned into flesh and ceased to bee Gods sonne but as Heb. 2.16 in that he tooke not the seede of Angels but of Abraham The meaning then is that the Sonne of God abiding still the word tooke that is receiued into his person our nature Phil. 2.7 He tooke vpon him the forme of a seruant The word flesh signifieth first mans nature which Christ tooke vnto him namely a true nature of man not phantasticall or apparant onely Secondly the whole nature of man consisting of true and perfect soule and bodie with all things that belong to the entire nature of man for if he had taken mans nature only in part he had redeemed it but in part Thirdly the properties of man in soule minde will affections in body breadth length circumscription c. Fourthly the infirmities and frailties of mans nature without sin where must be noted that Christ tooke not all infirmities of mans nature as sin and corruption neither euery personall infirmitie of euery person as blindnes Gowte or this and that particular disease Here by the way it may be asked whether Christ had obliuion in his agonie as some haue thought To which may be answered That euen whē he vttered those words Father if it be thy will let this cup c. it is not fit to attribute obliuion vnto him which properly is a forgetfulnes of those things which we are bound to remember for thus wee should draw sinne vpon him but rather to ascribe it to suspending of the memorie which is when a man neither forgetteth nor remembreth For as in the will be three things 1. willing 2. nilling 3. suspending of the will which is neither of the former so also is it in memorie which remembreth forgetteth and suspendeth memorie for a time Now the summe of the whole ground is That the Sonne of God the second person and so abiding tooke vnto him the perfect nature of man in all things being like vnto vs sinne onely
excepted for the further cleering of which consider these foure conclusions first The Sonne of God made man is not two persons distinct but one alone Quest. How can this be for as he is the Sonne of God he is a person and as he is a man he is a particular person as euery seuerall man is and therefore hee is two persons Ans. Euery particular man is a person because he subsisteth of himselfe but the manhood of Christ subsisteth not in it selfe but in the second person onely so that Christ God and man is but one person for euen as body and soule make one man so Godhead and Manhood make but one Christ. Secondly this one person consisteth of two distinct natures the Godhead and the Manhood standing of bodie and soule Thirdly these two natures are vnited and ioyned into one person for the Godhead doth take the Manhood and support it Fourthly these two natures after coniunction remaine distinct the Godhead is not the Manhood neither on the contrary but still distinguished first in regard of themselues Secondly of their properties for the properties of the one are not the properties of the other Thirdly of their actions for the actions of the Godhead are not communicated to the Manhood neither is the worke of one nature the worke of another Aduersaries hereof are First Heretikes innumerable which are not knowne to all but knowne enemies are first Jewes who denie Christ to come in the flesh Secondly some Jewish Arrians compounded heretikes who haue withstood Christs incarnation some of which haue suffered amongst vs. Thirdly the Papists the substance of whose doctrine robbeth Christ of his humane nature though they confesse him incarnate for since his death they teach his bodie is become inuisible and in innumerable places at once so they abolish the Manhood of Christ and turne it into the Godhead seeing it is become infinite and vncircumscribed Ob. They alleage God can make it to be in many places at once Ans. We may not dispute what God can doe but what he will doe so farre as he hath reuealed Secondly it stands not with the power of God to doe some things as those which imploy contradictions to be true at the same time Of which nature this is to make a true bodie to be in many places at once yea to be in heauen and also euery where on earth But his bodie is glorified and therefore may be in many places at once Ans. The words this is my bodie were spoken before his glorification Secondly glorification taketh away the corruption but not the true properties of his bodie as length breadth thicknes and circumscription Ob. But things ioyned together must be in the same place and cannot be seuered and therefore his Manhood being ioyned to his Godhead must needes be euery where Ans. The antecedent is false for things ioyned together may bee the one in one place the other in another as the bodie of the Sunne is ioyned with his beames and light and yet the bodie of the Sunne is in heauen but the beames and light in the earth also The 13. ground is that Iesus is Christ. 1. Ioh 2.22 Who is a lier but he that denieth that Iesus is Christ the same is the Antichrist From which place wee may gather two thinges First That Iesus is Christ. Secondly That it is a ground susteyning our whole saluation For whosoeuer denieth it is Antichrist see 1. Cor. 3.10 The meaning of the ground by Christ I vnderstand the annointed Sauiour and Redeemer who is a King Priest and Prophet First as he is a king his power manifesteth it selfe in three thinges First in sauing and destroying not the body onely as other kinges but the soule also Secondly in pardoning sinnes or reteyning them Thirdly in making lawes to bind consciences Secondly his Priestly office standeth in two thinges First in a power to offer sacrifice propitiatorie for the sinnes of whole mankind Secondly in making intercession to God for mankind Thirdly his Propheticall office consisteth in three thinges First in reuealing to man the will of his father Secondly in enlightining of the mind to vnderstand that will reuealed Thirdly in framing of the harte to performe obedience vnto it together with the setling of it in the truth Thus he is the Christ that is the annoynted of God But we must yet here goe further and vnderstand by Christ a perfect Christ a perfect Redeemer without any partner fellow or deputy for if hee haue a partner he is but halfe a redeemer and if he haue a fellow or deputie how is he omnipotent or omnipresent This is plaine by testimonie of Scripture There is none other name Actes 4.12 therefore there is no fellow or partner There is one Mediatour that is but one 1. Tim. 2.3 yea by himselfe he purged our sinnes Heb. 1.3 without fellow or deputy whose Priesthood is such as cannot passe from himselfe to another Heb. 7.24 Obiect But Ministers haue power to remit and retaine sinne hauing the keyes giuen them Answ. The keyes are not giuen to Ministers to pardon men properly but Ministerially to pronounce and declare that God in heauen doth pardon them Ob. The Saints shall iudge the world and therfore not Christ onely Answ. They shall not iudge by pronouncing a soueraigne sentence of absolution or condemnation which is proper to Christ the Iudge but by assisting him as Iustices vpon the bench both by witnessing and assenting vnto that righteous iudgement Obiect Psal. 45.7 He is annoynted with oyle of gladnes aboue his fellowes therefore hee hath fellowes Answ. All that beleeue in Christ are the fellowes of Christ but in his annoynting that is in grace though not in office Obiect But Ministers are Christs deputies An. Ministers are properly no deputies but instruments to declare the will of God and can go no further then to teach the eare for it is Christ himselfe that enlighteneth the mind But it will bee said that Kinges are Christs deputies on earth Answ. They are his deputies as hee is God equall to his father not as hee is Mediatour Aduersaries of this maine ground are The Romish Church who rob Christ of all these three offices For first his kingly office they giue part of it to the Pope in making him to remit sinnes properly to make lawes to bind conscience properly as Gods lawes do which is a power equall to Christs so they make him check-mate with Christ. Secondly his Priestly office is giuen to the Masse-priest who by their doctrine hath power to offer a propitiatorie sacrifice for the sinnes of the quicke and dead ye● euery Papist hath a peece of it because euery one of them may satisfie the iustice of God for hi● sins by his owne merit And for his intercession the secōd work of his Priesthood that is dealt among the Saints among whom the Virgin Mary hath the
reformed resisteth plainly saying I will not haue this man to rue ouer me I desire none of his waies This loue then comes from grace 1. Ioh. 4.7 Loue commeth from God 1. Tim. 1.5 it hath his beginning from a pure heart true faith and good conscience Which must bee maintained against the Papists who say that nature affoordeth the inclination but grace the practise whereas indeed grace giueth both Thirdly consider the vse of loue It is the instrument and companion of true faith which worketh by loue Galath 5.6 The proper worke of faith is to lay hold on Christ this faith as a hand can of it selfe doe but when it commeth to the practise of morall duties it can no more worke without the grace of loue then a hand which can lay hold alone and of it selfe receiue and retaine can cut any thing without an instrument Whence it appeareth that faith in iustification is alone but in the life of man it worketh by loue and whereas it hath bin taught for many hundred yeeres that loue is the life of faith that is vn●rue for it only testifieth that faith hath life It is alleaged that as the bodie without the spirit is dead euen so faith without workes is dead therfore workes are the soule and giue life to faith But this consequence from this comparison is not good because the soule is not properly the soule of the bodie but of the man and so it proueth not that loue is the soule of faith Again the word Spirit there betokeneth the breath without which the body is dead and thus is the comparison to be returned that as breath maketh not a man liuing but sheweth him to be aliue so loue maketh not faith liuing but testifieth it so to be yea indeed is the fruite and effect of faith as breath is of life More particularly this grace of loue is two-fold first that whereby man loueth God secondly that whereby man loueth man In the former note two points first what it is namely a motion of the heart whereby it is affected to God causing it to be well pleased in God and his workes for himselfe as also to seeke fellowship with God so much as it can Secondly note the measure of this loue which in Scripture is double first that which the law requireth and that is the full measure of loue loue in the highest degree when man loueth God with all his soule with all his strength and all the powers of the whole man so as in man no loue can be aboue it vnto this all men are bound yet no man since the fall can attaine Secondly that which the Gospell describeth standing in an vnfained will and true endeuour to loue God with all the heart all the strength and all the powers which is a smaller measure than the former yea and a qualification and moderation of it yet to none but those that are in Christ. Wherby we come to the right vnderstanding of diuers places of scripture as 2. King 23.25 of Iosiah 2. Chron. 15.15 all Iudah sought the Lord with their whole hart These and such other places must be vnderstood as they are qualified by the Gospell in that they willed and endeuoured by all good meanes to seeke God yea this text also must be vnderstood of this second measure seeing the former being in the highest degree cannot be multiplied no not if men were glorified The second kinde of this loue is that whereby man loueth his neighbour which is a certaine diuine and spirituall motion causing the heart as the former both to be wel pleased in man for God that is because he is Gods image and his owne flesh as also to powre out it selfe and communicate goodnes to his neighbour in wishing speaking and hoping the best of him Wherein by the way obserue a plaine difference betweene faith and loue faith is a hand but to pull Christ to our selues loue is a hand also but opening it selfe and giuing foorth vnto others In this loue of the neighbour consider these three things first the order of it The order that hath been taught for many hundred yeeres is that first wee must loue our selues and then others from this ground Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe for the rule say they must goe before the thing ruled But this is not found seeing worthie then haue been commended in Scriptures for louing others as well yea and better than their owne selues so Dauid loued Ionathan 1. Sam. 20.17 Christ loued his enemies better than himselfe these began not with themselues yea indeed the right beginning of loue is in God and then as a man is a more principall instrument of Gods glorie hee must be for God preferred in our loue aboue our selues Thus euery man is bound to loue and preferre the life of his Prince aboue his owne see the perfect rule of direction herein Ioh. 13.34 Secondly note the manner of it set downe in that precept Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe that is as wee are cheerfull and free to practise the dutie of loue to our selues so must we doe it to others for this precept aimeth at the manner rather than the rule of our loue to man for that is as Christ hath loued vs. Thirdly the kindes of it it is two-fold first single when men loue others but are not repaid with loue againe yea when a man loues his enemie but is not loued again The second is mutuall loue that is when loue is requited with loue called in Scripture brotherly loue see Philip. 2.2 1. Cor. 1.10 when men are of one iudgement like minded speak● one thing and one soule is as it were in many bodies The second point is the multiplication of loue which the Apostle prayeth for vpon good ground because it ioyneth man to God and man to man and so becommeth as it is called the bond of perfection the bond of the Church Common-wealth of al societies 1. Cor. 13. Loue ed●fieth that is it helpeth to build the kingdome of God yea it constraineth men to all good duties in their particular callings Qu. But how shall this loue be multiplied Ans. By certaine meditations and practises The meditations are many first on Gods cōmandement Be seruants one to another in loue Gal. 5.13 Secondly of Gods image which al men should beare in loue 1. Ioh. 3.16 Thirdly of the fellowship of the faithfull hauing all one father one brother one saluation all linked by one spirit Ephes. 4.4 Fourthly of the loue of God Ioh. 13.35 which hereby we shall be assured of 1. Ioh. 3.14 The practises also are diuers first wee must labour to be assured of Gods loue to vs and encreased vpon vs Ephes. 5.2 Secondly the law of nature must teach vs to doe as we would be done vnto Thirdly our care must be more to loue than be loued for to loue is a vertue in our selues to be loued i● the vertue of another Fourthly pray daily for
corruption of nature Rom. 8.10 This is as it were the soule of a soule renewed Secondly that a man may come to this estate there must be some root and beginning whence this change may arise and that is no other than Christ crucified the Redeemer and Mediatour of whose bodie beleeuers are members of his flesh and of his bones Ephes. 5.30 for looke as Eue was made of the side of Adam so is euery beleeuer of the blood of Christ and as euery man so farre as he is a sinfull man springeth from the first Adam so doth euery man so farre as he is renewed spring from the second Adam Christ Iesus Now that a man may spring out of Christ he must first being taken out of the wilde Oliue the old Adam Rom 6.5 be set and ingrafted into the second Adam as a new stocke and that by faith wrought in the heart by the spirit of God by which incision hee receiueth from Christ two things first in regard of his soule holines secondly in regard of bodie incorruption seeing that the whole man is vnited vnto Christ and so both soule and body receiue immortalitie and glorie Thirdly in this new birth there must be a new life by which if any liue not he is not borne again for the distinct knowledge of which life wee must distinguish of life life is vncreated and created vncreated life is the life of God yea God himselfe of which kind this is not Created life is either naturall or spirituall Naturall is that which we liue by naturall meanes as meate drinke sleepe physicke c. of which kind this new life is not but this is that spirituall life whereby a man in this life is ruled by the spirit of God according to the word and it standeth in two thinges First when the spirit dwelleth in the heart Secondly when the spirit ruleth the hart or more plainely this life hath two degrees First when a man beginneth to sauour affect and will spirituall things loueth them and chiefely affecteth them Rom. 8.5 when they haue some sauour and rellish vnto him Secondly when a man in all estates liueth by a iustifying faith and ordereth his life thereby The iust man saith Abacuke liueth by faith and this is as it is truly called life eternall the beginning and first degree of which euerie beleeuer hath possession of euen in this life The second point in this ground is the weight of it for which obserue the necessitie of the new birth in the former words where it is said that without it a man shall neuer see the kingdome of God much lesse enter into it No man is in Christ and so consequently out of state of saluation who is not a new creature 2. Cor. 5.17 No outward prerogatiue can bring a man in request with God vnlesse hee be a new creature Gal. 6.15 It is a constant truth of Christ Ioh. 13.8 If I wash thee not thou hast no part in me The third point is The Aduersaries who are first euery man by nature the wisedome of whom herein is enmitie with God For euery one naturally is willing to yeeld vnto God some externall seruice and ceremoniall worship as in the Church to draw neere to God with their lippes but when they should come to their renewing and the mortifying of their lusts O then they storme and swell and cast off this yoke because they say it abridgeth them of their ease libertie and pleasure and they cannot bee their owne men for it Secondly the Romane religion which for many hundred yeres hath stood in ceremoniall and bodily actions rites gestures apparrell and most of all in outwarde penance borrowed partly of the Iewes and partly of the Heathens but all this doctrine of the new birth of mortifying hidden lusts and deniall of a mans selfe is dead and buried among them little hereof is spoken or written in the great volumes of their greatest Clerks But the doctrine which is from God is spirituall as God himselfe is and most concerneth the inner man Secondly they are great aduersaries hereof in teaching that man though captiue to sinne hath a power in his nature whereby if the holy Ghost free him he can of himselfe will and doe that which is good which if it were so then he is but in part new and so is no new man Secondly a regenerate man must be a new creature now creation is a framing of something out of nothing not of something into somthing Thirdly thus a man should be but halfe dead and so could not be borne againe but onely strengthened euen as a man in a swoune of whom wee cannot say properly he is reuiued because hee was not dead but recouered The 17. ground is out of Galath 5.1 Stand fast in the libertie wherewith Christ hath made you free For the meaning of which we must know that Christian libertie which wee are exhorted to maintaine standeth in a double freedome First from the Morall law secondly from the Ceremoniall From the Morall law two waies first from the curse of the law Rom. 8.1 There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ. Secondly from the rigour of it which requireth personall and perfect obedience this rigour is moderated by Christ whence followeth a freedome also from iustification by workes Rom. 5.1 Galath 5.4 The second freedome is from the Ceremoniall law which hauing an end put to it by Christ bindeth no man but our libertie is procured to vs in meates drinkes and all things indifferent with good conscience seeing to the pure all things are pure Tit. 1.25 Where we are commaunded to stand fast wee see the weight of it to be such as it may not be departed from nor forsaken for then we become debters againe to the whole law and so are fallen from Christ. Aduersaries hereof are first the Libertines as the Family of loue who being as they say deified are so carried by the holie Ghost that they cannot sinne no though they should commit fornication but no man is freed from obedience to the law by Christ although hee be from the curse and rigour of it Secondly all that take libertie to sinne because they say God in Christ is mercifull but Christ freed from sinne not vnto it Thirdly the Romane Church holding that the Pope hath power to make lawes binding conscience properly prescribing such things to be done the obseruing of which is the worship of God and meritorious as on the Popish fasting daies yea and Wednesdaies and Fridaies not to eate flesh euen this law bindeth the conscience of a Papist and such abstinence they say is a worke of merit and a worship of God But it will be said that Princes and Magistrates make such lawes of meates drinkes apparell and must be obeyed Ans. These lawes bind not conscience but the outward man Secondly they do not abrogate our libertie but moderate the ouer common vse for the common good but Popish
Baptisme yea in it the very action of the Minister is a worship of God and doth confer grace ex opere operat● this was their old doctrine which now they colour with this addition If the partie be well and rightly disposed but besides the vse yea the lawfull and common vse there is by this ground required an holy vse of any thing to make it acceptable to God or rightly profitable to the doer himselfe Secondly their hallowing of Water Bels Palmes Ashes Spettle is a meere mockerie of God seeing they haue neither word nor promise from God that these creatures should thus be hallowed to preserue from euill bodie or soule Thirdly they erre in the foundation of religion diuer● waies euery which such error is blasphemie Fourthly that religion oppugneth the sanctification of Gods name in the vse of a lawfull oath teaching first that the Pope hath power to dispense with an oath Secondly that men may sweare by the Masse and so doing make it a God Thirdly euen the learned among them with one consent hold that a man may sweare ambiguously euen when he knoweth the thing to be otherwise The seuenth ground is Galath 5.14 The whole law is fulfilled in this one word Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe The meaning is not that we should loue our neighbour equally with our selues and with no lesse affection or degree of loue but that with the same cheerefulnes willingnes and truth of heart that we perform duties of loue to our selues ought wee also to reach them out vnto others The weight of this ground appeareth in that not onely Christ saith It is like the great Commandement but also in that it is the summe of the whole law for the first table must be practised in the second and the loue of God testified in loue to men The Aduersaries of this ground bee the Popish Church who thus expound it First loue thy self and then thy neighbour making the loue of our selues the foundation of the loue of others but sometime wee may loue our neighbour aboue our selues as Ionathan loued Dauid more than his own soule and Christ loued his enemies more than his owne life Secondly it teacheth that a man must not loue particularly his particular enemie nor salute him in particular but generally as if hee salute a whole companie together his enemie being there The eighth ground Exod. 20.12 Honour thy father and thy mother c. In the words two things are to be considered first an ordinance of God secondly the meanes to preserue it The ordinance is that all men must not be equall in degree but there must bee orders of men of whom some are to be in higher degree as superiours some in lower condition as inferiours the former are aboue others in regarde of power to command and to punish the latter are in subiection vnder others by whose discretion and will they are to be gouerned This ordinance is described Rom. 13.1 Let euery soule be subiect to the superiour power that is be content to be vnder others which are above him in power so here some must bee as fathers and mothers some must bee subiected vnto them The meanes to preserue this ordinance is the yeelding of honour vnto whom it belongeth which standeth in three things first in reuerence towards the persons of superiours Secondly in obedience to their iust commandements Thirdly in thankefulnes for their paines in gouerning thus is that golden sentence to be expounded Matth. 22. Giue vnto C●sar the things that are Caesars that is giue him reuerence obedience thankfulnes according to that Rom. 13.7 Giue feare vnto whom feare belongeth honour to whom honour tribute to whom tribute The weight of this ground is plaine because without it can be no practise of true religion for first by it stand the three things the Familie the Church and Common-wealth all which are maintained by gouernment and subiection wherefore the Lord set this Commandement the first of the second Table as whereupon he would found all humane societies Secondly gouernour● in any of these societies are the keepers of both Tables without whose helpe and authoritie Gods kingdome could haue no abiding on the earth Aduersaries of this Commandement are the Papists who weaken the authoritie of the Magistrate in exempting their Clergie from all Ciuill power of Magistracie in causes both iudiciall that is matters controuersall and criminall that is matters of trespasse although the Apostle saith Let euery soule be subiect Secondly that Church hath set vp a power to bring into order and subiection all the Kings vpon earth namely the power of the Pope who challengeth to himselfe to ouerrule yea and to depose at his pleasure Kings and Queenes who in their dominions are aboue al and only vnder God Thirdly that religion lesseneth the power of parents for in the Councel of Trent they establish first Mariages and Contracts made by children without consent of parents Secondly Vowes also made by children vnder age and without consent of parents are held lawful and not to be broken The ninth ground is Micha 6.8 He hath shewed thee O man what is good and what the Lord requireth of thee surely to do iustly to loue mercie to humble thy selfe and to walke with thy God The meaning Three vertues are here required first Iust d●aling secondly Mercie thirdly Humilitie Touching the first wee are commanded to do● iustly and this execution of iustice between man and man hath fiue substantiall parts First to giue honor to whom honor is due Secondly by thought word and deed to preserue the body and soule of our neighbour that is his life spirituall and temporall Thirdly his chastitie which is the honor of bodie and soule in single life and Matrimonie Fourthly his worldly estate Fiftly his good name This is the scope of all the Commandements of the second Table Now because the due execution of iustice must bee tempered with mercie therefore is mercie required of man in the second place which is a readinesse to relieue the miserie of the distressed And thirdly because iustice and mercie without godlinesse are but ciuil vertues we are in the last place commaunded to walke in humilitie with our God which containeth the summe of the first table and standeth in three things first wee must acknowledge our sinnes secondly intreate for pardon thirdly purpose not to offend God any more but endeuour to preuent sinne to come Concerning y● weight of this ground it appeareth in Micha 6.7 where the Lord testifieth himselfe to be more delighted with the practise of loue and mercie than with oblations of thousands of Rammes and tenne thousand riuers of oyle and elsewhere I will haue mercie and not sacrifice Yea Titus 2.12 This is made the end of the appearing of the grace of God that we should liue soberly in regard of our selues iustly in regard of others and godly in regard of God These vertues are so respected of God
two things first who is a naturall man secondly that it is a sinne to be a naturall man for it is noted as a maine sinne in these seducers Touching the former a naturall man is he who liuing a naturall life is endued with a reasonable soule and is gouerned by nature reason and sense onely without grace or the spirit of God which may appeare first by the word naturall which signifieth such a man as in whom the best thing is nature and in whom there is nothing more excellent than his reasonable soule though corrupted Secondly by the exposition or rather opposition in the words wherein it is opposed vnto the spirit who is wanting vnto such a one to leade him in the way of a heauenly life Further that yet wee may know this matter the better there be three things to be found in a naturall man 1. He hath a bodie and soule vnited together in one person 2. In his soule he hath excellent powers and faculties as will vnderstanding affections 3. Hee hath all the ornaments of man yet so as without grace such as are strength of bodie and minde memorie knowledge of Arts and Sciences ciuill policie and vertues as Iustice Prudence Temperance discretion to discerne what is meete to bee done what not these are ornaments incident to corrupt nature seruing not to abolish but to restraine and bridle corruption and containe men in order for the preseruation of humane societie Now he that hath these three and nothing else is but a meere naturall man The second point is that it is a sin to be a naturall man Here it may bee asked how it commeth to passe that a naturall man because he is a naturall man offendeth God Ans. There bee two things in euery naturall man to bee distinguished first there is nature secondly the corruption of nature the former is from God the latter from mans fall which two may be indeede distinguished but cannot now be separated the one is not the other but the one is not without the other this corruption is that sinne which presseth vs down and hangeth so fast on Heb. 12.1 which hath corrupted the whole mā so as the whole frame of man that is his whole disposition and inclination is corrupted and euill from his youth Genes 8.21 his wisedome is enmitie to God that is euen the best thing that is or can be in the flesh is hateful to God Rom. 8.5 himselfe is dead in sinnes and trespasses Ephes. 2.1 hauing no more abilitie to mooue to any thing truly good than hath a dead man to bestirre himself in and about the actions of life For the cleerer beholding of this corruption of mans nature marke that there bee two degrees of it the former whereof is a want of that goodnes and righteousnes which at first was and now ought to be found in our nature The latter is a pronenesse and disposition vnto all euill which carrieth the heart on euery occasion thereunto this corruption must bee conceiued as an ocean sea sending out into euery channell and veine of the soule and whole man streames and floods of wickednes for looke into the principall powers of the soule ye shall neede to goe no further for the finding of this truth For first in the minde is such an impotencie as whereby it is vnable to thinke or approoue of any thing that is truly good 2. Corin. 3.5 Wee are not sufficient of our selues to thinke of any good but all our sufficiencie is of God 1. Cor. 2.15 The naturall mā perceiueth not the things of God which is most manifest thus first hee knoweth not God himselfe aright for although hee may know God as an infinite and eternall being or in some other attribute yet he cannot know him as a father to himselfe Secondly hee knoweth not neither conceiueth the corruption of his owne nature nor his sinnes originall and actuall in the staine and danger of them Thirdly he conceiueth not of the remedie of sinne the death of Christ but accounteth it foolishnes that life should be brought out of death Secondly as his mind is blind so a naturall mans will is rebellious and is not subiect vnto the will of God neither indeed can be Ioh. 6.44 No man can come to Christ vnlesse the Father draw him insinuating our withdrawing of our selues and resistance of his call vntill he turne vs make our wils of vnwilling willing wils to will that which is truly good whēce the Apostle saith that to will namely that which is truly good is not of our selues it is the gift of God Now hence wee may resolue that question why it is a sinne to bee a naturall man not because a man hath nature in him but because his whole nature is tainted with originall sinne Ob. The naturall man may pleade that he cannot helpe it hee was borne sinfull why then should he be blamed Ans. Rom. 5.12 In Adam we all sinned for when he eat the forbidden fruit we euen eat it in him are no lesse blame-worthie than he was Ob. But it will be said it is no reason that we should bee said to sin in him seeing then we were not Ans. Adam was a publike person representing all mankinde and euery particular person descēding from him and therefore what he did all and euery man did in him Euen as a Burgesse in the Parliament giuing his voyce and assent all the countrie or shire is said to giue their voices though they be absent and not present otherwise than in his person God then giuing a prohibition vnto Adam hee gaue it vnto all vs in him and threatning him he threatned vs and all mankinde this onely is the difference that hee being the roote or flocke and wee the branches arising from him hee sinned actually and we by relation and imputation If then the naturall man still pleade hee was no cause but was borne so the answere is cleere that himselfe is a cause although not in himselfe yet in Adam before he was borne he procured that he should be borne a naturall man Secondly it may be pleaded againe If I be a naturall man I am Gods creature as I am why then should I be blamed Ans. The former distinction betweene nature and corruption of nature must be here retained for by the former the naturall man is Gods creature and not in respect of the corruption of nature for this he created not as the other but suffred it to passe by generation from man to man for the execution of the punishment of the first sinne Quest. Why did not God stay this corruption in Adams person Ans. God could haue done it why he did it not the reason is neither knowne nor to be enquired a secret it is but yet a iust iudgement of God silently to bee with reuerence rested in and not with curiositie to be searched out Vse First some may hence gather if a man be iustly blamed for being only a naturall man and
Matth. 25. Depart ye cursed I was hungrie ye fed me not to auoide this curse we must embrace the Apostles counsell to walke in loue The fourth is to consider that the loue of man to man is a grace of God which leadeth a man by the hand to the first degree of happines 1. Ioh. 4.16 He that dwelleth in loue dwelleth in God and God in him that is hee hath entred the first degree of happines for hee hath fellowship with God and verse 12. If wee loue one another Gods loue is perfect in vs. Now as nature it selfe can tell vs a happines is to be sought for so let this grace leade vs to the degrees and beginnings of it The second sort of means stād in practise and the rules of practise be sixe The first is the practise of the law of nature being the summe of the Law and the Prophets by Christs own testimonie Whatsoeuer ye would that men should doe vnto you doe you the same vnto them The meaning of which golden rule is this Looke what we would haue other men to think speake and do to vs that must we thinke speake and doe vnto them and no worse and on the contrarie consider what we would not that men should thinke speake or doe vnto vs that wee must abstaine to speake or thinke or doe vnto them The practise whereof would cut off many wrongs contentions fraudes and iniuries both in word and deed The second rule of practise is in Gal. 5 13. Doe seruice one to another by loue that is let euery man in his place and calling become seruant to another and so preserue loue by the duties of loue The reason hereof is because God although he might if he had pleased preserued man without man would haue man preserued by man and that euery man should be his instrument for euery mans good in regard both of bodie and soule For which end he hath furnished men with seuerall artes sciences trades and callings that one man might stand in need of the help of another Secondly we are placed in the world that here we might serue God indeed not in speculation onely but also in our whole practise in our standings and callings he will be serued of vs in our seruing of man for these two must goe together and as it were hand in hand the seruice of God and the seruice of man Whosoeuer therefore imploy their callings principally for the purchasing of their profits pleasures honours and not for the good of men they abuse their callings prophane their liues and mistake the proper end of them as though they were borne onely to liue vnto themselues and serue themselues and neither God nor man besides from which too common a practise hath that diuellish speech sprung and by Satan put into the mouthes of many men Euery man for himselfe and God for vs all A speech well beseeming those who are at open enmitie with the duties of true loue The third rule is in Phil. 4.5 Let your moderate minde bee knowne vnto all men Wherein is commended that meeknes of minde whereby wee can with moderation and equitie beare with men for the preseruation of loue see Phil. 2.3 This moderation standeth in foure actions first in bearing with defects and infirmities of nature as hastines frowardnes desire of praise slownes and such weakenesses it is the part and propertie of an equall minde not to be seuere or hastie against these but rather to passe by them as Salomon saith It is the glorie of a man to passe by an infirmitie Secondly in couering many yea a multitude of sinnes yea and if a man be called to reueale and discouer them by way of testimonie it causeth a man not to aggrauate the crime but equally to speake euen as the thing i● Thirdly in construing mens meanings words and actions if it be possible in the better part euen so farre as the word of God giueth vs libertie for it is a fruite of malice to misconster men to make an offence where it is not giuen or not to bee taken and that i● so long as the wickednesse is not apparant Fourthly in restoring him that is fallen into a fault by the spirit of meeknes curtesie and humanitie euen as a Surgeon dealeth with a broken arme or legge not with roughnes or anger but with mildnes yea and pitie towards the offender so setting him as it were in ioynt againe The fourth rule is in Rom. 12.10 Be affectioned one towards another with brotherly loue How may that bee done Answ. In the next words in giuing honour goe one before another not in taking honour as our nature is but in preferring others before our selues and here wee must not conceiue of this honor as a meere ceremonie standing in some outward gesture but it is a reuerent opinion conceiued inwardly in the heart whereby euery man thinketh better of another than of himselfe and accordingly yeelds him more honour But some will say here this is hard to doe to esteeme of euery man better than our selues and how may we attaine vnto it Ans. Whosoeuer iudgeth this so hard a lesson let him enter into the serious examination of his owne heart without partialitie let him looke narrowly into himselfe and hee shall espie such a bodie of sinne for measure and manner as he cannot finde in any man besides so as in the true sense of his estate he can neuer abase any man so farre as he can himselfe whereby he shall come to iudge euery man worthie to bee preferred and honoured before himselfe The fifth rule is in Ephes. 4.26 Let not the Sunne set vpon your wrath A very necessarie rule for seeing we be but men we cannot be without many sinfull motions and especially of reuenge vpon occasion but here we are counselled forthwith to stay and represse them yea and to break them vtterly off that although anger wrath and reuengefull thoughts will arise vp in our hearts yet we must extinguish them and not suffer them to continue with vs no not for the space of a day The same Christ himselfe hath taught Mar. 11.25 When ye stand to pray forgiue if ye haue any thing against any man So often then as we are to pray which is at the least daily so often are we to forgiue iniuries offered to vs for we pray to be forgiuen as our selues doe forgiue others men content themselues to carry their wrath a whole yeere together and if they forgiue once a yeere at Easter or at the receiuing of the Sacrament once a quarter it is as much they thinke as they neede to doe but they forget that the Sunne must not goe downe vpon their wrath The sixth rule Rom. 15.2 Let euery man please his neighbour Some will say how can this be for some will neuer be pleased if wee condiscend not to their corrupt and wicked desires Ans. The next words expound the Apostles meaning for good What is that Ans. For his
who hold an absolute God out of the persons Thirdly our common people who pray to such a God in their owne names out of the Sonne and holie Ghost Fourthly the Popish Church which denieth by their doctrine the three persons for hee that denieth the Sonne denieth the Father and holy Ghost 1. Ioh. 2.23 Now they denie the Sonne both in his natures abolishing his Manhood in their doctrine of the Sacrament as also his offices of King Priest and Prophet for which we must vtterly separate from them The sixth ground is That nothing commeth to passe without the special decree will and prouidence of God Matth. 10.23 A sparrow falleth not to the ground without his will Ob. Sinne is against Gods will and therefore commeth to passe without his will Ans. That which is against the will of God is not without his will Quest. How can this be Ans. No sinne commeth to passe but God decreeth the permitting and being of it now to permit sinne and the being of it is neither the causing of sinne nor the doing of it but the not hindring of it to which he is not bound This ground being denied chance will be brought in and God himselfe denied The seuenth ground is That God hath chosen some men before the world was to be partakers of the riches of his mercies and passed by others because it was his will Roman 9.18 He will haue mercie on whom he will Ephes. 1.4 1. Pet. 2.9 Some are a chosen generation and therfore some are not chosen Againe whom he will he hardeneth he hideth the mysteries of the kingdome from some why because his pleasure was such Matth. 11.25 And of this there is good reason for in nature the first cause ordereth the second causes and not the second the first Now Gods will is cause of all causes which therefore must rule all as the supreme and not be ruled by any other That this is a ground appeareth 2. Tim. 2.19 The foundation of God remaineth sure the Lord knoweth who are his and indeede none other can bee the ground of grace and happines vnto vs than the counsaile of God in electing vs called therefore of the Apostle a foundation Aduersaries hereof First our common people that thus abuse this doctrine If I be chosen to saluation I shall be saued therefore I may liue as I list They might as well reason thus The tearme of my life is stinted none can lengthen or shorten it I will therefore neither eate nor drink nor vse Physicke nor other meanes of prolonging my daies which what were it else but to murther the bodie So these from the same ground become murtherers of their soules whereas men chosen to the end will prease after the meanes and conclude otherwise and say I will vse meanes that I may come to life Secondly others more learned are aduersaries to this ground who teach that God for his part hath chosen all men to life and for his part would haue all saued and that Christ for his part hath redeemed all and the holy Ghost giueth or offereth grace to all If wee aske why then are not all saued They answere because God foresawe those who would beleeue whom hee appointed to saluation he foresaw also others who would not beleeue and adiudged them to damnation But by this doctrine shall Gods will hang on the will of man and bee ruled by it seeing hee would haue men saued but man will not and so this ground is in part rased The eighth ground is That God made the heauens and the earth and all things that haue being in them Col. 1.16 By him were created all things which are in heauen and in earth This is a principle for if creatures had no beginning then are they become Gods which would ouerthrow the Godhead But all things were not made besides God For the highest heauen the Throne of God is eternall as God himselfe is Ans. The Throne of God is a creature as well as the rest Heb. 11.10 He looked for a citie hauing a foundation whose builder and maker is God In the world are many euils which could not be from God the foundation of all goodnesse Ans. Euill is of three sorts first naturall which commeth by nature corrupted as sicknes diseases plagues and death it selfe Secondly materiall euils as hurtfull beasts poisons in trees plants beasts these are created and the very poison of them is a creature Thirdly morali euils which be trāsgressions against the Morall law and Commandement of God Of the two former God is the author and cause Esai 45.7 I create euill that is naturall and materiall but of the third that is morall euils which be sinne God is no cause Ob. But God is the cause of all things and sinne is some thing Ans. Sin is no creature but the destruction of Gods image which is a creature effected by the creature for though the creature cannot make a creature yet it can destroy a creature The aduersarie to this ground is the Atheist who holdeth the creatures to haue been from euerlasting and so by denying one God hee maketh manie thousands The 9. ground is that God made man according to his owne image Gen. 1.27 For by creation man had three things first the substance of bodie and soule Secondly in them the powers and faculties of minde will affections c. Thirdly an excellent conformitie of all these to the will of God This is the image of God called in the Scripture righteousnes and holinesse This is a ground for the image of God is the substance and body of the law hee therefore that denieth this denieth the law the fall from it and restoring vnto it by Christ. The 10. ground is that by Adam sinne and death entred into the world and in him all meere men sinned Rom. 5.12 To the conceauing of which wee must know that the first sinne of Adam was eating the forbidden fruite the next was the putting out of Gods image in stead of which corruption of heart tooke place so farre as the seede of all sinne being within him he was prone and readie to euery sinne Now Adam being a publike person and hauing receiued whatsoeuer hee had for himselfe and his posteritie either to hold for or lose from both hence is it that both those sinnes are become the two first sinnes in our conception he sinning wee sinned and with him haue the seeds of all sin within vs by nature no sinne excepted no not the sinne against the holy Ghost Yea no otherwise is it with vs than with a noble man practising treason whose whole blood is therby stained Ob. But Christ came of Adam therefore he in Adam sinned Ans. God made this law with Adam that all who came of him by ordinarie generation should be guiltie of his sinne but Christ was extraordinarily conceiued by the holy Ghost and took of Mary Adams
groūd Heb. 6.1 Thirdly this ground being the most maine promise of the Gospell whosoeuer ouerthroweth it hee depriueth men of all comfort of religion The aduersaries of this ground are first the common people who for the most part professe that they are not certaine of the pardon of their sinnes they hope well because God is merciful but to be certaine they thinke it impossible as though there can bee hope and confidence where is no assurance but speciall hope alwaies presupposeth speciall faith Secondly the Papists for they condemne speciall faith for these reasons First where is no word there say they can be no particular faith but there is no word that saith thou Cornelius Peter Iohn c. shalt be saued Ans. It is true indeede there is no particular faith where there is no particular word or which is proportionall but the Minister truly applying the generall promise to this that particular man it is as much as if a mans name were registred in the scripture Secondly wee haue in substance a particular word in that God who hath giuen the promise hath giuen also a commandement to euery beleeuer to applie the same vnto himselfe 1. Ioh. 2.23 This is his commandement that we beleeue in the name of his sonne Iesus Christ which is equiualent to a particular word As a King giues a pardon to a thousand men but nameth neuer one of them yet euery of them trulie applying the pardon according to the Kings intention haue the benefit of it as surely as if all their names had bin set therein II. Obiect Many that applie the generall promise to themselues are deceiued and faile yea euery wicked man saith he beleeueth in the sonne of God wherein he is deceiued Ans. Many indeede faile in their speciall application but it is onely vnbeleeuers but they must proue that none truly can applie the promise speciallie which all true beleeuers doe III. Obiect They say In regard of God wee must beleeue but in regard of our selues we must doubt Ans. Yea in regard of our selues wee must not onely doubt but despaire yet beleeuers being found not in themselues but in Christ may proue themselues whether they are in the faith or no 2. Cor. 13.5 For whosoeuer repenteth knoweth that he doth repent We know we are of God 1. Ioh. 5.19 Ob. But all men in the world are full of doubting and how can doubting stand with certaintie of saluation Ans. Consider faith first as it is in it selfe so it is certaine Secondly as it is in vs so it is mingled with much doubting which is not of the nature of faith but contrary vnto it and yet these may and must stand together in the beleeuer for doubtings may disturbe but not destroy true faith for the Lord notwithstanding them accepteth our weak faith as perfect and our will to beleeue for beleefe it selfe where he seeth griefe conceiued for doubtings strife against them and endeuour to haue our faith increased Ob. But to beleeue pardon of our sinnes is to enter into Gods counsell Ans. That is false because pardon of our sinnes is reueiled Ob. But your Church say they abhorreth reuelation Answ. Neither the scripture nor our Church condemneth Reuelations contained in the scripture but those that are without beside or against scripture Ephes 1.7 The spirit is called the spirit of Reuelation see also 1. Cor. 2.12 As for this reuelation of pardon of sinne to the beleeuer it is contained in the scripture and is no more a prying into Gods counsell than it is for a Traytour to beleeue that he is pardoned when certaine newes of his pardon is brought vnto him from the King of whom none can say he entreth into the Kings counsell Hence we conclude that seeing the doctrine of the Papists ouerthrow this maine ground wee must take heede of ioyning our selues vnto them The 15. ground is That a sinner is iustified by faith without the workes of the Law Rom. 3.28 Wherein consider first the meaning secondlie the weight thirdly the aduersaries For the meaning three things must bee knowne First what it is to be iustified Secondly what it is to bee iustified by faith Thirdly what workes are to bee excluded from iustification Concerning the first In iustification there be three distinct actions of God first the freeing of a sinner from his sins for the merits of Christ Act. 13.39 From all things from which they could not be iustified by the law of Moses by him euery one that beleeueth is iustified that is acquited from them Paul opposeth it thus to condemnation Rom. 8.33 which is nothing else but a binding of a man to iust punishment The second action is the reputing and the accepting of a sinner as iust for the merit of Christ. Esay 5.23 Woe vnto him that iustifieth a wicked man that is not to make but accept him iust and in the Gospell Wisedome is iustified of her children that is approoued and acknowledged The third is the acceptation of a sinner to life euerlasting in Christ. For after that God hath absolued a sinner and reputed him as iust there must follow this acceptation to life which is therfore called the iustificatiō of life with the reason rendred in the same place for that like as Adams sinne is imputed vnto all by which death entred so Christs obedience imputed to beleeuers bringeth life and iustification Out of which three actions wee may gather a true description of iustification to wit It is an action of God the Father absoluing a sinner from all his sinnes for the merit of Christ accounting him as iust and accepting him to life euerlasting II. Point What it is to be iustified by faith For the cleer vnderstanding of this waighty point we must answere 2. questions First what is the very thing for which a sinner is iustified Ans. It is the obedience of Christ the Redeemer and Mediatour passiue and actiue the former standing in suffering the death of his bodie and the paines of the second death in his soule the latter in fulfilling the law The truth of this answer appeareth thus Since our fall we owe to God a double debt we breake the law and are bound to make satisfaction Secondly being creatures wee must fulfill the rigour of the law and performe what it requireth neither parcell of which debt seeing we being bankcrupts are able to pay wee flie to our suertie who must pay both for vs the former hee doth by his death being made a curse for vs and so redeemed vs from the curse Galath 3.13 the latter by perfect obedience vnto the law that so in him wee doing these things might liue in them vers 12. The second question is Seeing the obedience of Christ is the matter of our iustification and is out of our selues how commeth it to bee made ours Ans. To make it ours first God must giue it vs secondly wee must
receiue it First God giueth it vnto vs when he giueth vs Christ himselfe for it is giuen with him and it is made ours when God in mercie esteemeth iudgeth and accounteth it to be ours for it is ours by imputation which appeareth by these two reasons First as Christ is made out sinne so are we made his righteousnes 2. Cor. 5.21 but hee is made our sinne by imputation and therefore his iustice being inherēt in him is made ours by imputation Secondly as the first Adams disobedience is made ours so Christs the second Adams obedience is ours Rom. 5.17.18 but that is ours by imputation and therefore Christs obedience also Secondly to make this obedience ours we must receiue it and that can be onely by faith which is the hand of the soule receiuing into it the things that are giuen vs of God where note by the way that a sinner is not iustified by the dignitie of his faith but as it is an instrument whereby Christs obedience is applied vnto the soule III. Point What workes are excluded from iustification Ans. The workes of Morall and Ceremoniall law workes of nature and grace That euen workes of grace are excluded appeareth by these reasons First a sinner must so bee iustified that all cause of boasting may be cut off Rom. 3.27 But if a man were iustified by workes of grace he might boast still yea though hee acknowledge the workes to be of God see the Pharisies example Luk. 18. Secondly if a man were iustified by the workes of the law then our iustification should stand by the law but that it doth not Rom. 4.14 for then the promise were made voide yea the tenour of that whole Chapter prooueth that Abraham hauing store of good workes was yet iustified by faith without the works of the law the which thing also that obiection in chap. 6.1 witnesseth What then shall we continue in sinne drawne out of the fiue former chapters thus If a man may be iustified by faith without workes we may continue in sinne which obiection were no obiection if that had not been the intent of the Apostle to prooue iustification by faith onely without the workes of the law Thirdly Paul was not iustified by any workes 1. Cor. 4.3 I know nothing by my selfe yet am I not therby iustified where he noteth two things of himselfe first that hee had a good conscience within him secondly that he was not thereby iustified where hee debarreth all works of grace Fourthly we are saued by grace without workes these workes excluded are workes of grace for they are all such as God hath prepared to walke in Ephes. 2.8 Fiftly a man must first be iustified before he can doe a good worke and therfore works follow iustification and cannot cause it Yea and as all workes are excluded so al vertues also excepting faith are here reiected For as in a man that standeth to receiue a gift no part doth any thing to receiue it but the hand yet hauing receiued it all other parts testifie thankfulnes the tongue the feete and all the bodie euen so wee receiue the matter of our iustification by faith alone not by hope or loue but after the receiuing of Christ these with the other graces work and shew themselues The second point in this ground is the weight of it appearing herein that he that ouerthroweth it ouerturneth the faith Rom. 4.14 If they of the law be he●res of life faith is made voide and the promise of none effect And Galath 2.21 If we be iustified by workes Christ died in vaine Aduersaries hereof First the home-aduersarie is the common sort of ignorant people and all naturall men who with the young man say What shall I doe to be saued They say they will be saued by faith in Christ but when it commeth to the point they will be doing somewhat and stand much vpon their good meaning and righteous dealing Secondly the forreine enemie is the Popish doctrine Romish religion which teacheth that there be two iustifications First when a man of an euil man is made a good man this is by grace of the holy Ghost put into the heart the latter is whereby a man is made of good better which is by good workes But what Church soeuer holdeth this is fallen from grace This is a peremptorie sentence will some say and no generall Councell hath so determined Ans. The more is the pitie But Gods word hath peremptorily determined it Galat. 5.4 They are abolished from Christ and fallen from grace whosoeuer will be iustified by the law as the Romane Church at this day They say our doctrine maintaineth loosenes of life by excluding all workes from iustification Ans. Though we exclude the best works from iustification yet we debarre them not from Christian conuersation but therein require them as fruits of the spirit plentifully Ob. But it is absurd say they that one man may be iustified by the righteousnes of another Ans. Adams sinne is made ours and they marueile not at it what greater absurditie is it that the second Adams obedience answering to the first Adams sinne should bee ours in like manner The 16. ground is this Except a man be borne anew of water and of the hol●e Ghost he cannot enter into the kingdome of God Ioh. 3.5 In which obserue first the meaning secondly the weight thirdly the aduersaries In the first consider two points first what it is to be borne againe secondly of what necessitie it is For the former wee must know that there must bee in him that is borne againe three things first a reall change from one estate to another Secondly there must be a roote from whence this change may arise Thirdly a new life First the chaunge is when a man of a meere naturall man is made a new man not in regard of his bodie or soule or powers of them all which a man retaineth the same after his regeneration but in regard of Gods image restored and renewed by Christ Ephes. 4.24 This is the restoring of that new qualitie of righteousnes and holines lost in Adam for so the Apostle describeth this new birth in the place alleaged This change is attributed to water and the holy Ghost wherein by water our Sauiour alludeth to some speeches of the old Testament as Ezech. 36.25 where the Prophet speaketh of the clensing of the Church by powring cleane water vpon it that is infusing new graces into the heart which take place of the old corruption And by the holy Ghost he sheweth that this clensing of vs is by the inward working of the holy Ghost Obiect But it will be said if a man bee a new man hee must haue a new soule Ans. This new qualitie of righteousnes and holines is as it were a new soule for in a regenerate man there is a bodie soule and besides the spirit which is the grace of sanctification opposed to flesh and
request to God only in the alone mediation of Christ. The second maine poin● of Religion out of this ground is this That religious worship is due to God alone for wee may not giue apparance of religious worship to creatures Cornelius is reprooued for giuing to Peter excesse euen of ciuill worship Acts 10.25 for he knew Peter to bee a man and not God and so seemed to mingle a kinde of religious worship with ciuill This is a maine ground also which whosoeuer denieth he holdeth no● the head Christ Col. 2.18.19 The Aduersaries of this ground also are the professed Papists who worship Saint● and Angels not onely by kneeling before them but praying also vnto them which cannot be denied to bee a religious worship seeing it attributeth vnto them to heare the prayers of all men 〈◊〉 all times in all places ye● and to know the hearts of men vpon earth Secondly they maintaine religious worship of Images they goe on pilgrimage vnto them offer Incense creepe vnto them and kneele before them Yea they worship the Crucifixe with the same worshippe whereby they would adore Christ if hee were liuing vpon earth as also the reliques of Saints Out of all which wee see what to thinke of that Church which onely hath the name of a Church she holdeth not the head Christ seeing for so many hundred yeeres she hath displaied her fornication in worshipping Saints Angels Images and the Virgin Mary so as her Bill of diuorcement is iustly giuen her 2. Thess. 2.10 Reuel 13.8 from whom we must separate if we would not partake with her in her plagues The sixth ground of practise is Esai 8.13 Sanctifie the Lord of hostes which words contain the substance of the third Commaundement in which consider first the meaning secondly the weight thirdly the Aduersaries For the meaning A thing is said to bee sanctified two waies either when it is made holy or when it is acknowledged to bee holie Now this latter must bee heere vnderstood for Gods name cannot be made holie which is holinesse it selfe and the first cause of all holinesse but it is sanctified of vs when wee acknowledge it holie and this our sanctification of God either respecteth God himselfe or the gifts of God Our sanctification of God himselfe the thing intended in this ground is done two waies first when in our mind we acknowledge and praise him in his attributes of wisedome mercie louing kindnes power prouidence and such like 1. Pet. 3.15 Sanctifie the Lord God in your hearts that is acknowledge him in his wisedome power and other his attributes Look as good subiects speaking of and mentioning their Prince will put off their hats in reuerent opinion of him so we religiously should thinke and speake of these Iob fearing only and but suspecting that his sonnes in their feastings had dishonoured this name of God sanctified them When Hez●k●●h heard the blasphemies of Rabshak●h against God be humbled himself rent his cloathes and put on sackcloath 2. King 19.1 Yea wicked Ahab hauing heard though falsely that Nab●●● had blasphemed God he rent his cloathes and proclaimed a fast which sheweth whatsoeuer his fact was the vse and manner of holy men in his time when Gods name was dishonoured and blasphemed Secondly wee sanctifie God himselfe when wee with reuerence acknowledge his titles as God Lord Iehoua Father Christ Iesus Holy Ghost and not without religious and obedient affection speaking or thinking of them Our sanctification of Gods gifts which are many as the Word preached Prayer Sacraments Meate Drinke and all things seruing for the good of bodie or soule is not by giuing or adding any holines vnto them which in themselues are all holie but when we acknowledge them holie by preparing our selues to a holie vse of them and vse them accordingly with good conscience for euery creature of God hath a double vse first a lawfull vse when God permits a general vse of his creatures thus all may vse meate drinke apparell c. Secondly a holy vse when a creature in his lawfull vse is vsed in a holy manner for this includeth the former though that may be without this For example all the Iewes kept the Passeouer lawfully but onely those celebrated it holily who prepared themselues according to the commandement which holy vse is obtained by the word and prayer 1. Tim. 4. The word directeth vs to vse these gifts of God in obedience and prayer obtaineth grace to vse them according to the worde vnto which holy vse of Gods creatures we are to be mooued by these reasons first we must distinguish our selues from the bruite beasts the swine in the forrest ●●teth vp the maste but looketh not vp to heauen no not to the tree whence it falleth Secondly because we haue lost our title to all the creatures in Adam which onely is in this vse restored Thirdly because they are the gifts of God we must thus acknowledge them to be his and in him learne to vse them Fourthly that vice may auoide the common abuse of them whereby hee is prouoked to displeasure The second point is the weight of this ground which may appeare in the con●●●rie seeing the blasphemer doth what hee can to ouerthrow the Godhead it selfe whence euery such one is called by such a name as signifieth a 〈◊〉 of God or one that thrusteth God thorough and therefore the sanctification of God is a ground of moment Secondly the first petition of the Lords Prayer is sanctified be thy name wherein wee are taught to preferre and pray for the hallowing of Gods name before our own saluation Thirdly the scope of the third Commandemēt is the same which whosoeuer obserueth not reuerseth both the former And lastly the Lord is so iealous of his glorie that he will bee sanctified of all them that come neere him else hee will sanctifie himselfe in their confusion Leuit. 10.3 Thirdly The Aduersaries of this ground are first though by Gods mercie the religion of the Church of England is no aduersary vnto it yet the liues of the most fight against it for although when we mention earthly Princes wee can vse all reuerence yet Gods name is most fearfully abused and tossed in wicked mens mouthes by oathes and cursed speakings besides that many abuse the same to Charmes and Spels in their sorceries and men thinke all is well because herein they vse good words but the truth is the better the words be the greater is the sinne yea it is noted to be a signe of a low and base spirit not to sweare and blaspheme vpon any occasion many souldiers thinke they cannot be couragious enough vnlesse they pierce God rent Christ by detestable oathes such as would cause wicked Ahab himselfe to rend his cloathes at the hearing Secondly the great aduersarie is the Papist and that diuers waies first in that they teach that the very doing of some worke is a sanctification of God as the outward worke of
wherein wee were inthralled to sin and Satan seeing it were a madnes to returne to such bondage againe If Christ be dead for vs let that grace moue vs to die to sinne if hee being risen againe sit at Gods right hand that wee might sit there with him let that grace mooue vs to walk as those that are risen with him and haue our conuersation in heauen seeking euen while wee are below the things that are aboue and so of the rest Further the Apostle to make those seducers more odious saith not simplie they turne the grace of God but of our God into wantonnes which noteth the indignitie of their fact in which consider three things first by what meanes God becomes our God and that is not by any merit of ours but by meanes of the gratious couenant propounded in the Gospell promising pardon and remission of sin in and by Christ. Iere. 31.31 This is called the new couenant which the Lord contracteth with his people where writing his law in their inward parts he becommeth their God and they his people Secondly what must wee doe to say truly and in assurance that God is our God Ans. Wee must for our parts make a couenant with him vnto which is required a consent on either partie first on Gods part that he will be our God which we shall finde not in any reuelation besides the Scriptures but generally in the word and more specially in the ministerie of the Gospell and administration of the Sacraments annexed as seales vnto the Couenant in which God doth as surely couenant with vs as if hee should from heauen speake vnto vs. Secondly on our part is required consent of which there be two degrees first when we make an outward profession of faith heare the word receiue the Sacraments Baptisme and the Lords Supper which serue to distinguish vs from Iewes Turkes c. this is somewhat but not sufficient to make God our God seeing it is common to the very hypocrites themselues Secondly seeing hee is not a Iew which is one outwardly but which is a Iew within there is required in our consent a further degree which standeth in an inward consent of the heart whereby a man taketh God for his God which is then begun when first a man acknowledgeth and bewaileth his sinnes Secondly when he endeuoureth to bee reconciled to God Thirdly when he purposeth neuer to sin againe when this couenant is thus concluded by consent of both parties a man may safely and truly say that God is his God Now seeing wee know these things our dutie is to labour to be setled and assured in our conscience that God is our God for first in this assurance is the foundation of all true comfort all the promises of God are hereupon grounded and herein accomplished that God is our God see Isai. 41.10 Be not afraid I am thy God yea Christ being vpon the Crosse hauing the pangs of hel vpon him herein staied himselfe My God my God so Dauid Psalm 22.1 and being readie to be stoned to death comfort●d himselfe in the Lord his God 1. Sam. 30.6 And not onely is it the foundation of all our comfort in this life but of our happines after death it selfe being the ground of those two maine Articles of our faith the resurrection of the bodie and the immortalitie of the soule for by vertue of this Couenant alone shall wee rise againe after death to life glorie and immortalitie as Christ himselfe disputing against the Sadduces from hence prooueth the resurrection in that God is the God of Abraham Isaac and Iacob Secondly it is the ground of al obedience Psal. 95.7 the Prophet exhorting men thereunto vseth this as a reason For he is the Lord our God and wee are the people of his hands the preface of the Morall law enforcing obedience laieth the same ground For I am the Lord thy God which brought thee out of the land of Egypt see also Psal. 50.71 and whosoeuer is truly perswaded that God is his God cannot but obey him The fift propertie of these seducers is That they deny God the onely Lord and our Lord Iesus Christ. Thus are they described by their manners The Translators of this Epistle were as it seemeth of opinion that these words are properly spoken of God the Father and of God the Sonne also but by the tenour of the words in the originall it seemeth that they are all to bee vnderstood of Christ and not of the Father and are thus to be read Which denie that onely Ruler who is God and our Lord Iesus Christ. Again the tenour of the words being borrowed from the Epistle of Peter may thence be rightly expounded now Peter speaking of the same sinne of these seducers applieth it only to be a denial of Christ 2. Pet. 2.1 They denie the Lord that bought them In the words then consider two things first the sinne here condemned namely to denie Iesus Christ. Secondly a description of Christ. For the first To denie Iesus Christ is to renounce and forsake Christ and so much as in a man lieth to make his death voyd and of none effect Now because this deniall presupposeth a redemption as Peter mentioneth they denying the Lord that bought them this question is to be cleered how these men being reprobates can be said to bee redeemed by Christ Answ. Wee must not thinke that they were in Gods decree euer redeemed for then had they been saued he doing whatsoeuer he willeth Psal. 115.3 but it is to be meant in regard of themselues and other men for both in their owne conceit iudgement they were redeemed as also in the iudgement of others who are to bee led by the rule of charitie in passing their iudgement vpon men and to account of them as redeemed leauing all secret iudgements to God Secondly the description of Christ by three things first that he is a Ruler yea an only ruler a Lord and ruler ouer all things in generall in heauen earth and hell and more specially a Lord ouer his elect onely and in that he is said to be an onely ruler it must not bee meant as excluding the Father and holie Ghost but all false gods and false Christs as Ioh. 17.3 the Father is called the onely God for all outward actions of the Trinitie are common to all the persons Secondly that hee is God which is a notable place against all Arrians to prooue the Godhead of Christ. Thirdly he is said to be our Lord Ours in two respects especially first of the free donation of his Father who gaue to him a people to be Lord and King ouer before all worlds Secondly in regard of his worke of redemption which hee wrought for them who were of the Father giuen vnto him Out of that which hath bin here said we may note these two points first how these seducers denie Christ namely not openly and plainly for then the Church should haue espied them neither in word nor
couenant sacrifices worshippe of whom Christ came according to the fles● Rom. 3.2 and 9.4 notwithstanding all which prerogatiues the Lord destroyed them If it had been a Heathen people against whom this destruction had preuailed it had been worthie obseruation but much more when it is against Gods owne people Here then we learne that no outward priuiledge can auaile vs nor any o●●ward meanes of saluation bee effectuall or fruitful to our good out of their right vse in faith and repentance Rom. 2.25 Circumcision is nothing vnlesse thou keepe the law Gal. 6. Neither Circumcision auaileth nor vncircumcision but a new creature Iudas had many great priuiledges and yet perished This made Paul though he had many priuiledges to account them all as dung in regard of the knowledge of Christ Phil. 3.8 We must not then content our selues with the meanes of saluation in the Word and Sacraments but vse them aright in faith and repentance otherwise they being out of their holy vse enioyed shall turne to our destruction and greater condemnation as they did to this people who notwithstanding them were destroied The second thing in the example is the time when the Israelites were destroyed that is after their deliuerance out of Egypt God had diuersly testified his loue to this people hauing chosen them out of all the people of the earth he called himselfe their God and hee gaue them many pledges of his loue but especially in that their great deliuerance out of the bondage of Egypt by such an outstretched arme yet for all this not long after they sinning against him hee destroyed them Whence learne that after many great blessings men not walking worthie of them but prouoking the Lord by their sins commeth a great vengeance The whole booke of the Iudges is a worthie proofe of this truth where wee shall see the people still forgetting their deliuerance and are forthwith left to Tyrants to bee afflicted for tenne twentie fourtie yeeres together The same appeareth in the Common-wealth of Israel vnder the Kings In the daies of Salomon the state was most florishing and glorious enioying a most happie peace but Salomon once forgetting the Lord and his Commandements and falling to the Idolatrie of his outlandish wiues there followed most fearefull accidents as the diuision and rent of the tenne Tribes from Iudah a long dissention and hot warre between Reh●boam and Ieroboam whose Idolatries brought much euill vpon their seuerall lands and at last vtter desolation the tenne Tribes being carried into Syria captiues and there ended their daies the other two Tribes into Babylon and there remained 70. yeeres which iudgements ouertook them about 400. yeeres after Iacob when hee went ouer Iordan made a vow to the Lord that if God would blesse him and giue him but food and raiment he would in way of thankfulnes returne to the Lord the tenth part of his goods Gen. 28.22 God blesseth him so farre as hee became a mightie man hauing the substance of a Prince in this abundance he forgat his vow or neglected it but what followed of it was there not horrible confusion in his familie Dina● was deflowred Ruben ascended to his fathers bed Hamor was slaine and the Lord is glad to call to minde hi● vow Gen. 35.1 Vse This doctrine concerneth vs neerely in this land who by Gods mercie haue enioyed many of his best blessings in this our long peace hauing bin deliuered from the Egypt of Rome and haue 〈◊〉 vnder the Lords protection all the day long but as ou● blessings haue been and are many and great so haue been and are our rebellions raging amongst vs especially that sinne of falling from our first loue so as l●sse loue of God and religion is to bee found amongst vs than heretofore besides that our peace causeth men to make their heauen here vpon earth and to embrace and affect things below these sins vnrepented of will bring vpon vs daies of affliction wee hauing no more priuiledge than this people had who after their deliuerance were destroyed The third point in this destruction is the cause of it namely because they beleeued not here first obserue what kind of vnbeleefe this was To the answere of which we must know that first God had promised to Abraham that after 430. yeeres hee would giue to his posteritie the land of Canaan for their inheritance this promise they all knew well inough Secondly it was often repeated renued and namely to Moses vnto whom the Lord promised that he should be their guide yea and that himselfe would pro●ect them in their iournie and safely conduct them thither Thirdly God sealed this promise by many and sundrie signes and miracles both in Egypt at the red sea and in the wildernesse yet for all this they beleeued not that God would accomplish these promises vnto them to bring them to that good land and further seeing the land of Canaan was a type of that heauenlie Canaan they beleeued not that God would bring them to heauen and giue them inheritance in that eternall rest by meanes of the Messias This vnbeleefe then of the promises of God was the cause of their destruction Secondly why are they destroyed for vnbeleefe rather then for their murmuring fornication and diuerse other sinnes which we● reade of to haue been rise among them Ans. Although they murmured blasphemed tempted God reuiled their guides c. yet this sinne of vnbeleefe was the foundation and ground of them all the which doth the more displease God in that it was the first sinne that euer was in the world and the mother of all transgression Secondly this sinne in a more speciall manner dishonoreth God in making him a lyer and so toucheth his honour more neerely Thirdly what was this destruction An. It was the destruction of their soules and bodies for their carcasses were left in the wildernesse where they fell and their soules haue their portion in the lake prepared for vnbeleeuers Reuel 21. For the fur●her hatred of this sinne see 2. Kings 7.19 the Prince who would not beleeue the word of the Lord was troden to death and Moses not waiting but failing in his faith was barred the land of Canaan and onely saw it a farre off Vse Seeing destruction followeth vnbeleefe we must labour to see our vnbele●fe and take out that exhortation Heb. 3.12 Take heede least there be in any of vs an euill heart of vnbeleefe to depart away from the liuing God which place well considered sheweth what are the degrees of falling away which are studiously to bee declined as first when a man is deceiued by sin and giueth himselfe libertie thereunto Secondly when the heart is hardened and made an euill heart Thirdly when infideliti● taketh possession of the hart to rule it and cause it to call in question Gods promises and prouidence Fourthly then followeth apostasie and departure from God now wee must beware of the least and lowest of these degrees of this
defection and departure from God Secondly if they were destroyed for vnbeleefe wee must on the contrarie exercise our faith daily and inure it in the daily apprehension of Gods prouidence power protection iustice and mercie and thus walking vndismaid we which haue thu● beleeued shall enter into the rest prepared for the people of God when as many shall not enter for vnbeleefes sake Heb. 4.3 and 6. Euen as Caleb and Iosua only entred into that good land because they beleeued that God could and would bring his people thither Thirdly this must teach vs obedience for vpon this ground that they were destroyed for vnbeleefe Dauid inferreth this cōsequent Psal. 95. To day therefore if y● heare his voyce harden not your hearts which Moses also maketh the ground of his exhortation to the people ●o feare the Lord because 〈…〉 destroyed for vn●eleefe Deut. 1. ●● c. Fou●●hly in that destruction of bodie and soule followes of vnbeleefe let such persons as when iudgements are vpon themselues wiues or children runne to Witches and Wizards for ease as though they were bewitched and make that the ground of their harmes bee enformed that their owne wretched hearts haue bewitched them which being full of vnbeleefe bring plagues of al kinds not onely vpon their bodies but their soules also Art thou strangely diseased the witch that hath brought it vpon thee is thy owne wicked heart which knoweth not to relie it selfe on Gods promises and protection Fiftly were they destroyed because of their vnbeleefe let not vs iudge of our sinnes by the crooked rule of our owne reason but by the law of God wee can iudge murther theft and adulterie great sins but wee neuer espie the mother sin of all which is our infidelitie the maine sinne of the first Table and the nurcerie of other sins we neuer bewaile it we account lightly of it and therefore the Lord taketh the reuenge of this sin into his owne hands and punisheth it with destruction both of soule and bodie so odious it is in his eyes and ought therefore to bee as hainous in ours also The fourth thing in the example is the manner of the speech which at the first seemeth to bee generall as though all they had been destroyed which beleeued not whereas indeed it is special for all that beleeued not were not destroyed seeing that all vnder twentie yeeres were exempted and saued Num. 14.29 who were reserued that God might still haue his Church among thē and that there might be of them a people left to possesse the good land according to the promise where note that to bee true which Habacu●ke ascribeth to God that in his iustice he remembr●th mercie by which mercie the younger so●● are here spared which warranteth vs to pray in common iudgements that the Lord powre not ou● his whole wrath vpon vs neither in our temptations vtterly forsake vs and giue vs ouer to Satans malice seeing hee hath manifested such goodnes towards his Church that in iudgements he h●th remembred his m●rcie But here it may bee asked 〈◊〉 this can stand with equitie that e●en th●se men should bee destroyed for it seemeth that they repented of this sin Numb 14.40 yea they confessed it and mourned for it and offered to passe into Canaan yea and were very readie to hasten into the land Ans. They repented indeed but fainedly it was farre from true and sincere repentance and sorrow for euen in the very same place it appeareth that they disobeyed God for when he had passed sentence against their sin commanding that they should returne into the wildernes of Arabia vers 25. and there abide fourtie yeeres and die there they would not submit themselues to that sentence but in all haste they would goe forward to Canaan according to the promise although against a particular commandement yea Moses himselfe could not stay them but that brought on their neckes a more speedie destruction as appeareth in the end of the Chapter Whence note the wicked nature of the deceitfull heart of man which in distresse when Gods hand is stretched out against it can faine a false repentance and counterfeite humiliation which causeth many a man in sicknes to vow amendement of life if euer God raise him againe and yet as soone as the scourge is ouerpassed he forgetteth the hand of God his owne vowes and promises and falleth backe into the same bad courses againe which consideration may mooue vs to watch ouer our hearts and suspect them of this deceit whereby they can frame and faine a false repentance when indeede there is nothing lesse then soundnes in it The fifth point in this iudgement is the generall vse of it namely that wee should frame our selues to repentance for this particular sin of vnbeliefe vpon which we behold such a fearefull destruction in Gods owne people To the practise and performance of which we must doe foure things first laying aside the common perswasion of the fulnes of perfection of our faith we must come to the discerning of this sin in our selues which is the first step to repent of it and the rather because it is our mother sin Now because this sinne is so inward and secret and so hardly to be discerned for our helpe herein some directions may be giuen for the especiall of it in some signes and fruites thereof which euery man shall find in himselfe lesse or more For first we beleeue not as we ought the particular presence of God in all places and times towards vs for we are ashamed to doe and speake many things in the presence of men which in the presence of God men not being by wee make no bones of either to speake or doe so as mans presence keepeth vs in some awe which Gods presence cannot doe Secondly wee beleeue not the particular prouidence of God watching ouer vs but either not regard it at all or not as wee ought which appeareth by these three things first if wee haue health wealth friends fauour means we are well contented we can think our selues very well and can then relie our selues on God but if God take these away oh th●n wee are troubled much disquieted and discontented the reason whereof is because the heart is not setled in the perswasion of Gods special prouidence which if it haue a pledge of God can trust him otherwise not at all but as the Vsurer trusteth not the man but his pawne so men relying themselues on these pledges trust neither God himselfe nor for himselfe Secondly in any distresse let our friend promise vs helpe wee are well cheered but let God in his word promise supply of all good and ease in our troubles we reape little or no comfort from thence this is a manifest fruite of inbred vnbeleefe Thirdly in sicknes or any iudgement any meanes is vsed for case and freedome yea there is too common running and riding to Witches Charmers Cunning men and women for men waite not on
God nor expect the same hand in healing them which hath smitten them He that beleeueth maketh not haste saith the Prophet which if it be true then this hastines to be disburdened of the hand of God is a token of distrustfulnes of God and want of faith Nay this practise argueth not only want of a true faith but a presence of a false and Satanicall faith for if there bee no faith in the Charme it will not worke Thirdly wee beleeue not the Lord to be the Lord of bodie and soule as one hauing soueraigne Lordship and power to saue and destroy for let any ciuill man be pressed by temptation vnto sin he will bee easily brought to make no bones of very dangerous sinnes what other is the reason hereof but that hee esteemeth not the Lord to be his Lord and accounteth of his commandements but as dreames not serious or giuen in earnest whereas if Gods Lordship were rightly acknowledged sinne would not be so ripe and rife as it is Fourthly wee beleeue not the mercie of God in the pardon of our sinne as we ought for howsoeuer in our peace wee thinke our faith strong enough for any encounter yet let a temptatiō assaile vs then we begin to doubt whether we be the children of God or no and are full of impatiencie Example hereof we haue euen in Iob himself who before his triall thought himselfe safe in his nest but when Gods hand was heauy vpon him then he brake foorth in speeches full of impatiencie as that God was his enemie and did write bitter things against him wherein he bewraied his want of faith and his crooked and cankered incredulitie and the same weakenes may the dearest strongest of Gods childrē one time or other espie in themselues Fiftly wee know not as we should the agonie and passion of Christ he suffered the first death and the paines of the second death for our sinnes they were the speares that pearced his heart but we carrie vp our heads and can take delight in them as though there were no danger in them whereas the remembrance of them should make our hearts to bleede and faith in the heart should cause vs die to sinne seeing those who are Christs are crucified with him but because men wil not depart from their sins which are not killed but liue and are strong in them and no man saith what haue I done it is a plaine euidence that the life of faith is not to be found in the liues of most men Sixthly wee beleeue not that wee did rise with Christ and ascended with him into heauen because in this our long peace our thoughts are set vpon the world and we mind earthly things still whereas if we were risen with Christ we would seeke the things that be aboue Coloss 3.1 Seuenthly we doe not beleeue as we ought the last iudgement because wee are not smitten with feare and reuerence in speaking and meditating of it Paul speaking of it calleth it the terrors of the Lord 2. Cor. 5.11 and this made him so forward in al good duties yea this same consideration of the last iudgemēt made him endeuour to keepe a good conscience before God and all men but men make no conscience of their waies Eightly wee beleeue not aright our owne death and resurrection in the last day for men commonly deferre their repentance and amendement of life till the last day of their daies and then they crie and call on the bed of their sorrowes which argues a counterfeit faith for if a man did beleeue his death it would driue him to the daily amendement of his life By these notes we may easily discerne this secret sinne of vnbeleefe within our selues Secondly when wee haue thus found out this sinne wee must bewaile it an● mourne for our vnbeleefe as being the mother of all our sinnes confesse it before God and craue increase of faith as the man in the Gospell Lord I beleeue helpe my vnbeleefe and with the Disciples Lord increase our faith Thirdly we must set before our eyes and acquaint our selues with the promises of the pardon of sinne and life euerlasting by Christ as also all other dependant promises whereof some concerne our prosperous successe in our waies and Gods protection in our labours and callings and others concerne afflictions promising happie issue and deliuerance therefrom with strength in temptation to the which all promises may be referred which we must alwaies haue in our eye that our faith may ground it selfe vpon them Fourthly we must truly relie and rest our selues in these promises settle and content our hearts in them that looke as the earth hangeth without proppe or pillar in the middest of the world onely by the word of God so must our hearts be staied in the same word and promise of God yea if wee should see nothing but destruction before our eies our faith must then be our subsistence and when our vnbeleefe would vnloosen our hold and make vs giue backe let our faith in these promises make resistance as Dauid Psal. 42.5 My soule why art thou so disquieted within me trust still in God especially seeing wee haue promises which assure vs in our troubles either of their mitigation or remouall after all these followeth the subiection of faith when the heart and life are conformed to the obedience of all the Commandements of God And thus we purging our harts of vnbeleefe shall escape such fearefull iudgements as this first example hath put vs in minde of Vers. 6. The Angels also which kept not their first estate but left their owne habitation hee hath reserued in euerlasting chaines vnder darknes vnto the iudgement of the great day THese words comprehend the second example whereby the first part of the former reason is confirmed namely that whosoeuer giue themselues libertie to sinne shall be destroyed here prooued by this example of the Angels themselues In which consider three points first the persons that sinned The Angels Secondly the sinne or fall of the Angels which kept not their first estate but left their owne habitation Thirdly their punishment he hath reserued in euerlasting chaines In the persons sinning wee haue sundrie considerations as first that it pleaseth the spirit of God to chuse this example of the Angels to prooue his purpose and that most fitly because they are the excellencie of all creatures for so the Scriptures euery where speake of them as when the highest praise that belongeth to inferiour creatures is attributed vnto them in Scripture the speech is drawne from the glorie of Angels Gen. 3 3. Iacob commending the fauourable countenance of Esa● being reconciled vnto him saith he saw his face as the face of an Angell So Manna is called Angels foode that is a most excellent foode that if those excellent creatures should neede foode they could wish no better 1. Cor. 13.1 Though I should speake with the tongue of men and Angels Signifying that if Angels had tongues they
ne●●ssarie● yet is the Scripture a iudge sufficie●tly able to resol●e thy spirituall minded man in any case concerning conscience● or in any matter concerning saluation all which it is the sole and proper determiner of now as for the particular sin of Angels it is not necessarie to saluation to know it but seeing the Scripture concealeth it it is a safe and learned ignorance to be rested in without further desire to know that which the Lord hath hid in secret with himselfe Fourthly wee are hence taught to seeke to enter into our habitation and true resting place which is not the earthly Paradise for that was our dwelling place before the fall but Heauen it selfe which since the fall is assigned and prepared to be a rest for the people of God this was the citie which Abraham looked for Heb. 11. so the Saints departed are said to be at home with the Lord being in heauen Christ telles his Disciples he goeth to prepare them these dwellings in heauen Ioh. 14. which elsewhere he calleth euerlasting habitations Make you friends of vnrighteous ma●man c. Now for our better practise hereof this must be marked that howsoeuer this our habitation be in heauen yet the suburbes and the gate of it is here in earth for all the assemblies of the people of God are the 〈◊〉 and gates of heauen it selfe ye● the ●ery entry into it Iacob when he saw the testimonies and tokens of Gods presence and fauour built a● Altar in the place for his worship and called it B●thel and said it was the very gate of heauen Gen. 28.17 and therefore we must while we li●e here seeke to enter if we would be ad●i●ted within that glorie hereafter Qu. But what 〈◊〉 may wee vse to help vs forward herein Ans. These fiue First wee must alwaies endeuour to be found readie to enter into that heauenly habitation for which purpose our hate● must be at this our ho●e y●● our whole conuersation must be in heauen w●●lest our 〈…〉 are vpon earth our walking must bee in the path of life euerlasting ●●ll containing ourselues in the waies of repentance obedience and daily mortification whereby wee denie our selues take vp our crosse and follow Christ. Secondly 〈…〉 loue 〈◊〉 assemblie of Gods people and ●oy●e our selues vnto th●● i● th● holy vse of the Word and sacraments whereby wee draw neere vnto heauen it selfe yea and keepe at the gates of this Citie and with Dauid thinke it a speciall priuiledge to be a doore-keeper in the house of God Psal. 84. Moses chose rather to suffer with the people of God great affliction than to enioy the treasures and honors of Pharaohs Court yea euen wicked Cain himselfe thought of this as the greatest part of his punishment and which he most complained of that hee was cast out from the face of God that is out of Adams familie where Gods face was to be seene in his worship Thirdly we must weine our affections from our earthly inheritances which are but Tents that they may be fixed vpon this sure habitation in heauen without the assurance of which all earthly reuenews and treasures can adde but little comfort to the heart Cain built a Citie hee had besides great lands and faire possessions but yet euen then the holy Ghost brands him with the name of a Vagabond because he was cut off from Gods people and cared not to ioyne himselfe vnto them againe by repentance Fourthly we must euery day addresse and prepare our selues to our death seeing our death is a meanes to bring vs home to this habitation euery new day must occasion vs to renew this our preparation and this will cause vs neither to feare our owne nor excessiuely to sorrow at the departure of our faithfull friendes seeing they haue passed these first things and are onely gone before to their longed-for habitation Fiftly if God call vs hereunto wee must bee contented to leaue and forsake goods friends natiue countrie and all for assurance of inheritance in this our countrie and if we cannot finde the doores hereof in our owne countrie wee must seeke them elsewhere where we may enioy them making light reckoning of all things for this one thing of highest account The last vse of this doctrine is to teach vs from this sinne of the Angels our contrarie dutie they by their office were to doe homage vnto God and performe all dutie as children to their father for so Iob calleth them the sonnes of God but this office they departed from we now being by adoption the sonnes and daughters of God being called vnto holinesse are to take heede of this sinne of forsaking our calling yea on the contrarie to walke worthie thereof as the sonnes of God approouing our faithfulnes vnto him And it standeth vs in hand so to do seeing the contrarie hath such iust vengeance attending vpon it as now in this example we are in the next place to behold The third point in this example is the punishment of the Angels which hath two degrees first their custodie in these words He hath reserued them namely in durance Secondly their full punishment vnto the iudgement of the great day The former is set foorth in two things first in that they are reserued in chaines Secondly vnder darkenes By these chaines are signified first that mightie power of God which bridleth and restraineth the might and malice of the Diuels themselues as Reu. 20. the old Dragon was bound for a thousand yeeres the power of God was the chaine that curbed and ouermastred him and this is one part of his present punishment Secondly the chaines signifie also that guiltines of the Angels which by the tenour of Gods iustice bindeth them ouer to destruction these bonds be vpon the consciences of the wicked Angels they know they are adiudged to damnation for their sinne so a● let them be where they will in the earth or ayre or wheresoeuer these chaines of guiltie consciences binde them ouer to iudgement where we are taught two things first to beware of guiltie and accusing consciences for these are Gods chaines binding bodie and soule vnto euerlasting vengeance and therefore for time past if thy conscience accuse thee seek in due time to be loosed and freed by Christ that thou maist be able to say with Paul I knowe nothing by my selfe and for time to come beware of sinne euen small sinnes as well as great for so many sinnes as thou committest are so many chaines binding thee ouer to iust damnation Secondly hence wee also learne that the seruice of God is a most happie and sweete libertie any libertie else is straite bondage men thinke that to be tied to the daily seruice of God is a yoke and bondage intolerable and they must need● haue libertie to sinne but they deceiue themselues for while they seeke for libertie by this meanes they plunge themselues into captiuitie and lay chaines vpon themselues yea bolts which hold them in
hast iustified thy Sisters namely Samaria and Sodom in all their abominations So these last times iustifie Sodome in her abominations which I prooue thus First the Church of Rome is that Sodome wherein the two Prophets were slaine Reuel 11.8 It is there so called because it matcheth Sodom in her sinnes in that it teacheth the sins of Sodom in making lawes to inhibite lawfull mariage in sundry sorts of men to tole●ate fornication and such filthinesse yea not onely by the Scriptures but in many other sundrie ancient and some of their owne recordes it is manifest that Rome is a Sodome Whence wee see not onely the dutie of euery Lot and righteous person namely to hasten out of her but also the end and destruction that abideth her to be euerlasting 〈◊〉 Secondly againe in these times i● must bee verified and is also which was applied by Christ vnto them of his age Luk. ●7 28 It is in these latter times as it was in the daies of Lot men eate and drinke buy and sell marrie and giue in marriage and thinke of nothing and 〈◊〉 the wonderfull 〈◊〉 of many 〈…〉 that many 〈◊〉 in the midst of the Church herein may match if not exceede euen Sodom Gomorrha themselues Thirdly whoso●uer saith Christ shall not beleeue and obey the doctrine of the Gospell it shall be easier for Sodome and Gomorrha in the day of iudgement than for them Which sentence might moue most men to tremble who whilest they take themselues freed from Sodomes sins fornication and following strange flesh they nourish a sinne within them which maketh them as farre off their saluation as Sodom it selfe is and that is the not receiuing of the Gospell as they ought most men content themselues to liue ciuilly and out of danger of humane lawes but as for the doctrine of religion and yet much more the power and life of it it lieth horribly neglected But Sodom it selfe shall bee saued before such men Doct. 2. In that fornication and following strange flesh are the sinnes of Sodom wee are taught to auoide this sinne of fornication and al sinnes of vncleannes For first the heauie curse of God is passed not only against Sodom and Gomorrha for th●se sinnes but wh●●esoeuer they be found they be sins that burne to destruction Iob. 3● 22 they set families on fire and deuoure them vtterly waste and consume them Againe no fornicators adulterers wantons b●gga●ers shall euen be admitted into the kingdome of heauen and in verse 13. the same Apostle propoundeth sixe reasons why we should flie fornication first our bodies are the Lords and must be seruiceable vnto him Secondly wee looke they should be raised to glorie in the last day and therefore wee must in the meane time keepe them honorable Thirdly they are the mēbers of Christ we may not th●n make them the member● of an 〈◊〉 Fourthly whereas all other sinnes are without the body this directly is against the body Fifthly the body is the 〈◊〉 of the holy Ghost and th●se sinnes make it the Diuels 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 Sixthly our bodies are bought with a price and it is sacriledge 〈…〉 glorifie God in the body as well 〈…〉 soule 〈◊〉 both are alike his Now if any man 〈◊〉 solicited by temptation vnto 〈◊〉 and would know how 〈◊〉 might ouermaster them hee must begin with his heart and obteine and reteine within it the feare of God which onely is able to ouerrule him This grace alone preserued Ioseph being daily inticed by Po●iphars wife How should I doe this wickednes and sin against God Gen. 39.9 The third point in this example is the punishment it selfe in which three things may bee noted first the matter of it they suffered the punishment of eternall fire by fire we must not vnderstand our fire no● such materiall and bodily fire as ours is but an eternall fire that is the endlesse and comfortlesse apprehension of Gods wrath for sinne eternally burning that is alwaies terribly tormenting the sinner called fire because as burning of fire is the most horrible and sensible torment vnto nature so much more terrible is this torment which elsewhere is called by other names as the worme that neuer dieth c. Where in the fearefulnes of the punishment marke the grieuousnes of this sinne it were therefore to bee wished that whoredome might bee punished with death The theefe doth not more if so much harme against families and Common-wealths as sinners of this kinde and qualitie The second thing is the 〈◊〉 of their punishment 〈◊〉 when they gaue themselues wholie to fornication were come to the height in their sins Where note that though the Lord be slow to wrath yet hee recompenseth that slownes with the heauines of it when hee commeth seeing he commeth not till he must needs and that is not till sin bee at the height and most of necessitie bee taken downe as appeareth in those foure hundred yeres allotted for the filling vp of the Amorites sinnes Let vs then beware of abusing Gods patience by adding to our sinnes for then he is adding vnto and heaping his iudgements and wee shall finde that though he come slowly yet he will strike surely if we giue not 〈◊〉 a stroke to our sinnes by repentance as in 〈…〉 his iudgements may bee preuerned The third thing noted here is the vse of this punishment namely 〈…〉 they 〈…〉 an example to the whole world Which 〈…〉 that 〈…〉 so 〈…〉 all 〈…〉 of the son 〈…〉 for God teacheth not ●nely 〈◊〉 by his word 〈…〉 of it but really also by his workes in the execution of his iudgements Iob saith that God speaketh to men once or twice therein teaching that corrections are the speeches of God in mens 〈◊〉 so as no person or people can go cleere away with that plea that they wanted all meanes of instruction seeing the whole earth is filled with the iudgements of God Vers. 8. Likewise notwithstanding these dreamers also defile the flesh and despise gouernment and speake euill of them that are in authoritie NOw the Apostle commeth to the proofe of the second part of the former reason namely that these seducers are they which take libertie to 〈◊〉 and therefore they shall be destroyed This is prooued in this and some verses following by a particular rehearsall of certaine sinnes apparant in these men In this verse three things are offered to be considered of vs first the 〈◊〉 downe of two vices vnto which these men were addicted first they 〈…〉 flesh secondly they despise gouernment Secondly the fountaine of these and other their sins in this word 〈◊〉 Thirdly the manner of their sinnes in these two words Likewise notwithstanding namely in two things first as Sodome and Gomorrha sinned so ●●ned these likewise no otherwise than they Secondly they did not only sinne as they of Sodome did but notwithstanding they knew what had befallen Sodom and Gomorrha they not being afraide of these iudgements rush into these
sinnes and hereby they are conuinced to bee dreamers seeing they sleepe securely in the middest of such iudgements In handling the words wee will first speak of the fountain because it is first in nature and then secondly of their sinnes flowing from thence The origin●ll of these sinnes is that they are dreamers which worde leadeth vs to a double cause of them first that they are sleepers made 〈◊〉 with sleepe and secondly in this sleepe of theirs they are deluded with dreames We are then to vnderstand first what th●● sleepe is and in the next p●●ce what bee the dreame● which in 〈◊〉 sleepe 〈◊〉 them This sleepe is not that naturall sleepe which oppresseth the bodie but a spirituall sleepe like vnto that in diuers things going ouer the soule binding vp the faculties of the same and bringing a heauines or deadnes rather into all the powers of man so far forth as they ought to be mouing in spiritual actions and affaires It causeth the mind neuer to thinke seriously of God or a mans owne estate the conscience neuer or seldom to accuse for sinne committed the will neuer or seldome to will that which is truly good the affections neuer or seldome to be mooued at Gods word or workes Thus it goeth ouer the whole soule and casteth it in a dead sleepe so as it is altogether vnfit to goe about the actions of an heauenly life Example hereof we haue in the old world they eat and dranke c. and knew nothing till the flood came they dreamed continually of many other things but neuer of their owne destruction Diues also was cast on such a sleepe he f●red deliciously euery day hee neuer thought of heauen for he was neuer to come there nor of hell fire till he felt the flame This spirituall sleep is three-fold● first the naturall sleepe of heart by which euery one is ouertaken so as by nature no man can so much as moue himselfe to the least good till God awake him and say to him Awake thou that sleepest and stand vp from the dead The second sleepe is a slumber and indeed the remainders of this naturall sleepe in the children of God being awakened out of their dead sleepe for euen they are ouertaken often with a spirituall slumber by reason of remainders of sin in them So the spouse acknowledgeth Cant. 5.2 I sleep but my heart waketh The third sleepe is the increase of that naturall sleepe and deadnes of heart by the custome of sinne when as the heart is made past feeling and altogether senselesse through continuance in sinne Ephes. 4.19 This last kind is that which is attributed here to these deceiuers for so the word notwithstanding importeth for although they knew the iudgements of God against sinne yet they are senselesse and carelesse in the middest of them Now in the next place let vs see what these dreames are here spoken of and they bee nothing else but wicked carnall and vaine imaginations arising from an impure heart and conceiued in a corrupted mind which in the end deceiue and delude men no otherwise than a dreame which while a man sleepeth seemeth to haue some truth in it but as soone as one awaketh it vanisheth away and indeed hath in it nothing lesse An example whereof wee haue in the rich man Luk. 12.19 who in his fulnes and encrease of riches dreamed of an happinesse and a continuance in it many yeeres when that night his soule was taken away The Angell of the Church of Laodices dreamed that hee was rich encreased with wealth and stood in need of nothing whereas hee knew not that hee was blinde poore miserable and naked Reue. 3.17 So the Pharisee dreamed that he was another manner of man than the poore sinfull Publicane but it was but a meere dreame for the other departed away iustified Doct. Hence we may note the cause why so few entertaine the doctrine of the Gospell so few forsake their sinnes and turne vnto God and that is because men are dreamers being cast and lulled asleepe in their sinnes and therein deluded with many false imaginations which draw them from God As first some pleade that they were neuer booke learned they could neuer write nor reade therefore they must be excused in their ignorance as not being bound to know the word of God they need not frequent so many sermons or if they doe they are not greatly to care to carrie them away Secondly others dreame that because they haue liued thus long and yet had neuer any such crosse as they see befall others therfore they are most happie men and God loueth them they finde the blessing of God vpon them in euery thing and therefore they serue God well enough or so much as serueth their turne Thirdly others haue learning and knowledge and begin to dreame that therefore they want nothing they blesse themselues in their naked knowledge and neuer haue care in their hearts to receiue Christ. Fourthly others are prophane and dreame that the Master will not come yet God will not yet call them they shall haue time enough to repent in for they craue but one houre on their death-beds and that shal they haue in the meane time they giue themselues ouer to riot and excesse neuer regarding though all the world crie shame vpon them vntill their Master take them vnawares Lastly it is a common dreame amongst men that the promise of life eternal is but a dreame and so many make but a dreame of the whole word of God and all religion that looke as Sarah did not so much regard the promise as she ought to haue done because she tooke it for a dreame and made a matter of laughter of it Gen. 18.12 and as those who were reduced from the captiuity of Babylon entertained the promise of their returne but as a dreame by their own confession Psal. 126. and Peter whē he was deliuered by the Angel out of prison could not bee perswaded that it was so but that he had seene a vision or dreamed a dreame Act. 12.9 Euen so men hold the doctrine of the Gospell but as a dreame seeing they can hold it in opinion but neuer endeuour to reforme their liues by it but such dreames disappoint men commonly of saluation which while men bring to the hearing of the word it is no marueile if we haue such iust cause of complaint for want of profiting vnder it as appeareth euery where at this day The most powerfull Ministrie shall little preuaile so long as men come with their hearts ful fraught with their carnall imaginations and with such heauines of spirit Secondly in that these dreames are made the causes of all sinnes we are taught to learne the lesson of the Apostle Ephes. 5.14 Awake thou that sleepest and stand vp from the dead And 1. Thess. 5.6 Let vs not sleepe as others doe which that wee may doe consider first the reasons and meanes which may bee effectuall to
three things first the Magistracie hath a power in it selfe whereby the Ciuill Magistrate may commaund in his own name The Ministrie hath power onely to pronounce what God commandeth and that in his name Secondly the authoritie of the Ciuill Magistrate is in himselfe the authoritie of the Minister not in himselfe but in Christ so as the Ciuill Magistrate may command obedience to himselfe but the Minister commandeth it to God Thirdly the Ciuill gouernment hath an absolute power to compell and enforce the outward man but the Ministrie hath power only to counsell perswade exhort Secondly this power of the Sword is added to distinguish it from all priuate power as in Schooles families which haue a power of commanding but not of the Sword Lastly I adde for the common good of mankind Rom. 13.4 The Magistrate is the minister of God for thy wealth that is procuring the welfare of soule and body which standeth in two things first true Religion secondly ciuill iustice both which are by Magistracie maintained It may be here demanded 〈…〉 Church appeareth in that the 〈…〉 preparation and performance of the same 2. Chron. 35. and 〈…〉 here two differences in this authoritie must be marked First that ciuill 〈◊〉 doth not after the same 〈◊〉 order causes ecclesiasticall as 〈…〉 in ciuill causes is ord●●th all and 〈◊〉 all likewise but in ecclesiasticall it hath power to order all but not 〈◊〉 execute them The Magistrate indeed ordereth and prescribeth in all but the Minister is ●e that executeth in ecclesiasticall causes Secondly that ciuill authoritie hath power ouer all the things of men but not ouer the things of 〈◊〉 as the Wo●d and Sacrament● faith conscience the graces of God in 〈◊〉 Ci●ill power hath no rule ouer these concerning which Christ comm●nded to giue vnto God the things of God and vnto Caesar Caesars Secondly this authoritie extendeth it selfe to all persons as well Ecclesiasticall as Ciuill but so as it stretcheth onely vnto the 〈◊〉 man to the bodie life 〈◊〉 and outward things but not to the soule and conscience of which God is the onely Lord and gouernour 〈…〉 asked what are the kinds of this power I answere it is of three sort● first in one person man or woman which is a Monarchie secondly in moe when the gouernment is in a few states and 〈◊〉 thirdly in the bodie of the people which is a popular gouernment by one of these three is euery Common-wealth gouerned These are the Gouernment● despised by these seducers The second point followeth 〈◊〉 vpon what grounds they despised gouernment Ans. Their grounds may be knowne by the Heretikes of th●● time the Anabaptists who are giuen vp to the same 〈◊〉 and they 〈◊〉 be 〈◊〉 to these foure heads First subiection say they came in with sinne and therefore Christ hauing taken away sinne hath taken away subiection also The former part they prooue out of Gen. 1.26 Man in innocencie was to rule ouer the fish of the sea the fowles of heauen ouer the beasts the earth and all creeping things but not ouer man but after the fall Eue is put vnder subiection to Adam Genes 3. Ans. There bee two kindes of subiection the first Seruile the second Ciuill The former is the subiection of a slaue or vassall who is onely to seeke the proper good of his Lord and Master The latter whereby one man is subiect to another for the common good The former came in by sinne the latter was before sinne in innocencie Eue was subiect to Adam in innocencie thus the Apostle reasoneth 1. Tim. 2.12 Let the woman be subiect to the man for she was taken out of the man Againe in innocencie it was said Increase and multiplie and therefore in the light of nature is a plaine distinction betweene the father and sonne and an inequalitie The first place is misalleaged Genes ● 26 because it was spoken not of man alone but of all mankinde euen women as well as men who haue also dominion giuen ouer the vnreasonable creatures As for the second place Gen. 3.15 He shall rule and thou shalt be subiect It is not spoken because the ordinance of God simply considered in it selfe was not before the fall but because now the subiection was ioyned with feare griefe and sorrow which it wanted in innocencie for then it was a pleasure and this makes subiection a curse in some respect but is not so no not since the fall in it selfe considered Secondly they reason thus Euery beleeuer is in the kingdom of heauen euen in this life Now in heauen there is no King but God and therefore no beleeuer is to bee subiect to any but God and Christ. Ans. There bee two kindes of gouernments vpon earth one is spirituall and inward this is the kingdome of heauen and of Christ within man standing in peace of conscience and ioy in the holy Ghost in regard of which regiment of Christ there is no distinction of persons no difference of bond or free Master seruant father sonne but all are one in Christ. The other is a ciuill regiment wherein orders and distinctions of men must be maintained as some must bee Princes some subiects some fathers some children some Masters some seruants Whence it is that euery man susteines vpon him two persons and is to be considered first as a beleeuer and as a member of the kingdome of Christ thus is he equall to any beleeuer and any beleeuer equall to him Secondly as a member of the Common-wealth wherein he liueth thus he is either a superiour or inferiour Their reason were somewhat if euery beleeuer were onely in the kingdome of heauen but euery of them liuing here in earth is also a member of some Common-wealth Thirdly Ciuill gouernment is full of crueltie which hauing the power of the sword destroyeth the bodies and soules of offenders in not giuing them time of repentance and therefore is intolerable among Christians Ans. Moses and the Leuites by Gods commandement flew 3000. of the Israelites for worshipping their golden Calfe and neuer gaue them space to repent Secondly the malefactor that is not moued to repentance at the sentence of present death there is little hope that euer hee would repent after if hee had longer time Thirdly Gods wisedome and commaundement must take place of mans reason he commaundeth that the Malefactor should die and thereby that the euill be taken away better it is that one should bee destroied than an vnitie better that one bee remoued than a multitude by the contagion of his example infected Fourthly they plead liberty by some places and testimonies of Scripture Gal. 5.1 Stand fast in the libertie wherein Christ hath set you free Ans. The libertie which Christ hath procured vs is libertie of conscience freedome from the power of sin Satan death hell and condemnation and therefore spirituall but not from temporall and ciuill subiection Ob. Rom. 13.8 Owe nothing to any man but
is the plaine word of God euery way absolutely directing in all points of faith and loue 2. Tim. ● 5 Paul wisheth Timothy to keepe the true patterne of wholesome words in faith and loue which is nothing else but the testimonie of Scripture in points of faith and loue comprised in the Decalogue and Apostles Creede The rule of faith therefore in expounding Scripture is Scripture it selfe The second thing necessarie by their doctrine to be beleeued not contained in Scripture is that the Canonical Scripture is Gods word which truth is absolutely necessarie to saluation to be beleeued but cannot otherwise bee knowne or beleeued but onely by the tradition of the Church Ans. As euery other Arte and Science hath certaine principles of truth to proue all other precepts by but themselues are to bee prooued by none so also hath Diuinity the chiefe of al other Sciences of which kinde this is one principle that Canonicall Scripture is Gods word which not granted inferreth a destruction of all other diuine rules this is a truth therefore confirmed not a thing testified from some other but as a ground of it selfe Secondly in diuine matters saith goeth before knowledge which in humane things is cleane contrarie for if a man would know whether fire bee hot let him put his hand vnto it he shall haue experience of it and then he shall beleeue it but in diuine things first a man giueth credit and yeeldeth consent to the word and then hath experimentall knowledge for although faith hath his knowledge yet experimentall knowledge followeth faith Abraham beleeued aboue hope here faith went before knowledge Ioh. 7.27 If ye do the will of my Father yee shall know whether the doctrine bee of God nor no. Thus then we may conceiue it the tenour of the word of God is this Thus saith the Lord. If the question now be whether the Lord said thus or no I answere to beleeue the Church herein before God is sacriledge but herein we are first to yeeld assent vnto God and then after this experimentall knowledge will follow that Canonicall Scripture is the word of God Thirdly wee know that Scripture is Gods word by Scripture and not by the Church out of which being in humilitie taught and acquainted with the excellent matter of it and manner of writing the end the glorie of God and our owne saluation wee cannot but haue sufficient perswasion of the author of it and that it can proceede from none other but God himselfe Thus notwithstanding the allegations of the aduersaries the written word retaineth that perfection which needeth no tradition to strengthen or further it in that end to which it is appointed Now to the reason it selfe amplifying this sinne in this verse which containeth three points to be considered First the person that durst not raile Secondly the goodnes of his cause which was very iust and yet he durst not raile vpon the Diuell himselfe Thirdly the manner of his speech The Lord rebuke thee The person that durst not raile was Michael the Archangell whom some affirme to bee Christ himselfe others that he is some chiefe arch and principall Angel which opinion is more probable For first the Apostle speaketh of him as one in subiection and standing in awe not daring to breake the law of God for he durst not reuile the Diuell Secondly in 1. Thess. 4.16 The Lord Christ shall come to iudgement with the sound of a Trumpet and the voyce of an Archangell where is a plaine distinction betweene Christ who should come in the clowdes and the Archangell Thirdly Peter explaineth it speaking the same thing and saith The Angels giue not railing iudgement against them 2. Pet. 2.11 It is more probable then that by Michael was meant a principall Angell rather than Christ. Doctr. First from the person wee learne that there be distinctions and degrees of Angels there bee Angels and an Archangell Quest. Is there but one Archangell Ans. The Scripture speaking of Archangels vseth alwaies the singular number neuer mentioning more than one and where the Scripture resolueth not we are not to determine yet I condemne not those who haue probably held that there are more than one Secondly wee haue here an example of Angelicall meeknes and modestie Tit. 3.1 Put them in remembrance that they bee subiect to principalitie and speake euill of no man but shew all meeknes vnto all 〈◊〉 the contrarie practise of railing slandering and obtrecting is a propertie of the Diuell whence he hath his name Reu. 12.10 the Accuser of the brethren and the Aduersarie 2. Pet. 5 8. who is euer readie with one accusation or other to stand vp against euery man the malitious man whose malice caused him to stand vp against Iob and falsely accuse him of hypocrisie vnto Gods own face Let slanderers and backbiters of their brethren see hence whom they imitate and most liuely resemble Secondly consider the goodnesse of Michaels cause which was this It was the wil of God that Moses body should be buried in a secret place vnknown to any man to preuent and auoid al occasion of superstition and Idolatrie amōg the Iewes The Diuell on the contrarie would discouer it that so the Israelites might fall to Idolatrie before it herein the Archangell resisted him and stroue with him for the performance of the will of God and the maintenance of his true worship and yet in this good cause Michael durst not reuile the Diuel himselfe In this cause consider two things First the fight and contention betweene Michael and the Diuell Secondly the cause and occasion of it about Moses bodie In the former wee may obserue that there is a sharp and serious contention betweene good and bad Angels in which the good Angels labour to defend all that are in Christ against the rage and furie of the Diuell and his angels As Psal. 34.8 The Angels of the Lord pitch their tents round about those that feare him And on the contrarie the Diuell and wicked spirits cast about how to destroy the bodies and soules of men 1. Pet. 5. Our aduersarie the Diuell goeth about continually seeking whom he can deuoure This combat concerneth and is conuersant about either first the persons or secondly the societies of men The fight about the persons concerneth either infants or men of yeres First for infants the Diuell seeketh how to spoyle and destroy them especially those of elect and faithfull parents in regard of their weaknes and tendernes both of minde and bodie but the Angels of the Lord haue charge giuen thē to defend them against this malice of Satan As Psal. 91.12 They shall beare thee vp in their armes that is they shall bee as nurces to beare them in their armes preseruing them from danger Mat. 18.10 Despise not one of these little ones for their Angels alwaies behold the face of my father which is in heauen Secondly concerning men of yeeres the diuell and his angels striue to driue them out
of their waies and callings and to leade them into crooked paths as he would haue had Christ to haue leapt frō off the top of the pinacle although he had an ordinarie way to go downe and haue made stones bread but the good Angels on the other side are giuen vs to keep vs in all our waies Psal. 91. and so vnder the protection of the Almightie The second strife namely about societies concerneth either first families secondly Churches or thirdly Common wealths all which the Diuell striueth to ouerturne as the good Angels to preserue and maintaine them First the Diuels endeuour is vtterly to ouerthrow all families of Christian men especially he robbed Iob of all his substance slew his seruants and children but the good Angels guard and defend them Iacob had the Angels of God defending him and his familie from the furie of Esau Gen. 31.1 Psal. 91.10 when the plague and pestilence preuaileth against the vngodly the good Angels keepe it off from comming neere the tabernacles of the righteous Secondly in Churches and congregations the wicked Angels striue to corrupt the word Sacraments and all the Ministerie or to make it fruitlesse euery way to their power hindring the good successe thereof The Diuell offereth himselfe to bee a lying spirit in the mouth of all Ahabs Prophets Zach. 3.1 He standeth at Iehoshuah his right hand to withstand him in his office He seweth tares in the field where the good seede of the word is sowne Mat. 13. Hence are those false doctrines of forbidding meates and marriages called the doctrine of diuels 1. Tim. 4.1 He hindred Paul once or twice from his iourney to the Thessal to confirme them 1. Thess. 2.18 He raiseth persecution against the Church for hee is said to cast some of the Church at Smir●a into prison Reu. 2.10 The good Angels on the contrarie fight against them for the good of the Church the furtherance of the Gospell and preseruation of the true worship of God The Law was giuen by their ministrie Galat. 3. The tidings of saluation and the doctrine of the Gospell was first preached by Angels Luk. 2.9 The Angell brought Philip to instruct the Eunuch Act. 8.26 as also to baptise him vers 38. deliuered Peter out of prison Act. 12.11 Thirdly the wicked Angels seeke to supplant Common-wealths and kingdomes Satan moued Dauid to number the people by which sinne he wasted 70000. of his people The good Angels fight in their defence The Angell told Daniel that hee fought against the Prince of the kingdom of Persia for the Iewes Dan. 10.13 The Angell smote of Zenacheribs armie in one night an hundred fourescore and fiue thousand who were enemies to the Church 2. King 19. Ob. How can the Diuell thus furiously fight against persons and societies seeing he was neuer seene neither can this fight be perceiued of vs Ans. As he is a spirit so his fight is spirituall not easily discerned by the eye of flesh for we fight not against flesh and blood but against principalities and spirituall wickednesses Againe he fighteth not onely in his owne person 〈◊〉 by his instruments and complices whom hee daily raiseth vp against the persons of men and all humane societies and this fight we may in part perceiue Vse First note hence the dignitie of euery beleeuer who haue the Angels yea and as here the Archangels to put themselues in garrison for their defence for from Christ it is Secondly we are with all thankfulnes to acknowledge Gods prouidence and protectiō especially in this land whose peace and prosperitie hath bin so long established vnto our persons and societies our families Church and Common-wealth wheras if Satā had might to his malice no● one of these should stand a moment Thirdly in all dangers our comfort must hence bee raised that though Satans crueltie bee neuer so great yet we haue the guard and defence of the good Angels to keep vs in al our waies and these are too many and too strong for him and all the power hee can raise against vs. Thus was Elis●●●s seruant comforted There be more with vs than against vs the good Angels are more powerfull for our good than the wicked are to harme and hurt vs. Fourthly ●●nce learne to make conscience of euery sinne in thought word and deed for admitting and commi●ing any sin wee trecherously turne against those that fight for our defence and do what we can to grieue and driue them away from vs and so put our selues in the power of Satan to bee led at his pleasure into sinne as also into the dangers of it The second point in this cause of contention is the occasion of it namely it was about Moses his bodie Michael would not suffer the Diuell to reueile where Moses bodie was laid so to sow the seedes of Idolatrie whereby Gods true worship might be ouerturned for hee cared not for the bodie of Moses but to bring in Idolatrie by meanes of it Hence note that the wicked Angels fight not so much against the bodies of m● as against their soules nor contend so much to ouerthrow them in their outward es●ate or to depriue them of their goods 〈◊〉 drink c. as in their inward to ●●est from them their spirituall things namely Gods true worship and the things and meanes which 〈◊〉 to the maintaining and 〈…〉 We haue to fight 〈…〉 in high places Ephes. 6. ●2 But 〈◊〉 may as well 〈…〉 in spirituall things for therein bend they their principall forces The 〈◊〉 of the diuell is to blinde the mindes of Infidels that the light of the glorious Gospell of Christ should not shine vnto them 2. Cor. 4.4 This same Serpent that be guiled Eue thorough his subtiltie seeketh how to corrupt mens minde● from that simplicitie which is in Christ 2. Cor. 11.3 Vse First we must keepe that which is committed vnto vs. 1. Tim. 6.20 The treasure which God hath put into our hands is his true worship sound doctrine right vse of Sacraments al which seeing Satan most desireth to breake off or corrupt wee ought accordingly to striue how wee may preserue them to our selues and haue them continued in their puritie to our posteritie Secondly in that Satan seeketh to depriue the soule of spiritual things we must 〈◊〉 our graces and become more vigilant in maintaining and adding also vnto our knowledge faith loue hope and other our graces seeing Satan will si●t v● to make vs ●●chaffe we must watch and pray that our faith faile not Thirdly marke who is the author of Idolatrie namely the diuell himselfe and of that especiall part of it which then he could not effect but hath now obtained in that Idolatrous Church of Rome namely in worshipping of Images stocks and stones relikes of Saints and of the woodden Crosse yea armes legges hands feet and fingers of Martyrs whence is al this but from the diuell himselfe who for the same purpose would haue reueiled where Moses bodie was buried
men in the right vse of them namely when it worketh this perswasion in their hearts that til their persons please God they can neuer vse them well and then onely hee is pleased in their vse of these when as their persons first please him Qu. What is the thing then condemned in these seducers Ans. The very sin condemned is that in the vse of the creatures of God they are not guided by reasonable much lesse this spirituall knowledge but onely by nature sense and appetite as the beast is and no otherwise which is the cause of all intemperance Hence note the proper cause of the abuse of all Gods blessings vnto couetousnes pride surfetting drunkennes and other sinnes of that kinde namely because though men haue by nature the vse of reason yet in the vse of these things they lay it aside and follow their own sense and appetite so farre are they from being guided by that higher knowledge which is wrought by the spirit of God Secondly from the reprehension we are taught to labor for spirituall knowledge whereby we may be led into the right vse of these temporall things for then and not before shall we vse them as pledges of Gods mercie in Christ vnto vs as the beasts cannot and shall hardly be drawne to their abuse in riot and intemperance as these seducers were Thirdly in that they are said to bee guided only as the beast which is without reason that is by nature sense and appetite note the practise of the Diuel which is to keep men if he can in their naturall knowledge and will not suffer them to attaine to that which is spirituall yea and which is more hee corrupteth also that naturall knowledge which men haue A notable experience hereof we haue in the Church of Rome which of a famous Church is become hereticall and schismaticall the reason of it is because the Diuell hath turned all their religion and doctrine into a natural doctrine religion the maine points whereof are grounded vpon naturall reason and the learning and Philosophie of the Heathen and Gentiles As iustification by workes merits Purgatorie with the rest Others not a few amongst our selues also are deluded by this subtilty of Satan who suffereth many men to liue ciuilly and honestly among their neighbours but will not brooke that they rise any higher they must content themselues to liue by naturall knowledge Hence many men plead they know enough namely to loue God aboue all and their neighbour as themselues and that God is mercifull c. which is nothing but a sleight of the Diuell still to hold them in their naturall knowledge and so within his owne power The second point is the sinne it selfe and propertie of it In those things they corrupt themselues This sin of intemperance causeth men in the abuse of meate drinke and apparell to corrupt themselues here then are two things to be spoken of wherein the whole nature of intemperancie is sufficientlie comprised First of the abuse of the creatures secondly of his corruption that thus abuseth them Concerning the former the abuse of the creatures is foure waies first in excesse whē men vse them beyond their calling habilitie or that which nature requireth this maketh the heart heauie forbidden by Christ Luk. 21.34 Secondly in curiositie when men are not content with ordinarie meate drink apparell but deuise new fashions of apparell and new kindes of waies of stirring vp and whetting of appetite Thirdly in affection when men so addict themselues to meates and drinks as they cannot bee without them The Minister must not be one that loueth to sit at the wine nor giuen to wine The affection is here condemned when he cannot sit without the pot at his elbow for else it is indifferent for his health sake he may drinke a little wine Paul willeth that the ioy in the creature bee as no ioy Those also are reproued that drinke not for strength but for drinke sake for although they neither are drunke nor surfet yet this very affection is a sinne Fourthly in time when these good creatures are vsed vnseasonably Eccles. 10.16 Wee be to the land whose Princes rise early to eate A woe is also denounced against those that rise early to drinke wine Isai. 5.11 that is out of season The rich man for that he was clad in purple and fared deliciously euery day is branded with a note of intemperance in not obseruing this distinction of times These bee the waies whereby the creatures are abused The second point is how intemperate persons in these things corrupt thēselues namely foure waies first in regard of their bodies vpon which by their sin of intemperance they call sundrie sicknesses diseases yea and hasten their death Secondly they deface Gods image making themselues worse than the beasts themselues Thirdly they destroy their soules for no drunkard or riotous person shal inherit heauen 1. Cor. 3. Fourthly they ouerthrow their families in wasting th●ir substance to the maintaining of their intemperance and so bring ruine to the places where they liue Vse In these seducers we haue a glasse wherein to behold the state of our daies and times in which intemperance hath taken place not only in prophane houses but euē in religious places where reformation is professed A common practise it is to drink with glasses without feete which must neuer rest also by the bell the die the douzen the yard and other measures then vse Tabacco or other meanes to sharpen appetite still an horrible sin exceeding this sin of these seducers themselues Secondly seeing intemperance bringeth iust corruption and in the end destructiō vpon the offenders we must make conscience of sobrietie and temperance this is the end of Gods grace which hath appeared to teach vs to liue soberly Tit. 2.12 And whosoeuer cannot obtaine thus much of himselfe to deny the abuse of creatures will neuer attaine to the deniall of himselfe for Christ his sake and is as yet a man of no religion But for the defending of this murthering sinne some things are alleaged 1. Ob. Gen. 43. vlt. Ioseph and his brethren did eate drink and were drunke together Hagge 1.6 The people are threatned to drinke but not to drunkennes wherfore drunkennes is not vnlawfull yea it is a curse to drinke and not to be drunke Ans. These places may indeed be thus translated but then drunkennes is taken two waies first for excesse in drinking of which the places alleaged speake not Secondly for liberall or plentifull drinking and this may bee done in a holie manner So Ioseph with his brethren eat and dranke liberally and plentifully but not excessiuely so the people were threatned in Hagge to drinke but not to sa●ietie and plentifulnes 2. Ob. Ioh. 2. It is said the guests had well drunke yet Christ turned water into wine still and commaunded the Ministers to draw forth Ans. This only sheweth what we may doe namely vse the creatures of
God in plentifull and liberall manner vpon such occasions as this but iustifieth not intemperance or excesse in the vse of them 3. Ob. It is an ancient rule that in some olde and lingering diseases it is good to be drunke therefore it is lawfull vpon some occasion to be drunke Ans. This cannot be done in good conscience being an vnlawfull meanes to cure any disease though old and vsed 4. Ob. But some say they can drinke and neuer be drunke they can beare more away than two or three Ans. W●e vnto them that are strong to drinke wine and strong drinke there is a curse of God against them who vse needlesse drinking though they neuer surfet nor be drunke Q● For what ends may we vse the creatures and in what manner Ans. The lawful end of their vse is two-fold first for necessitie to preserue life and health secondly for our lawful and honest delight Psal. 104.14 God giueth bread to strengthen the heart and oyle also to make his countenance glad Christ suffered a woman to powre a boxe of pretious oyntment vpon his head himself was at a feast in Galeley and forbad not the liberal vse of wine Secondly for the manner and measure we must knowe that one man cannot herein be a rule to another one mans stomack and health craueth more another lesse But euery man must obserue this rule of sobrietie that he haue alwaies an eye to spirituall exercises as praier hearing of the word meditation as also to the workes and duties of his speciall calling and so much as fitteth a man vnto these is his measure and when a man by the creatures maketh himselfe heauie and vnfit for these he hath exceeded his measure Vers. 11. W●e vnto them for they haue followed the way of Caine and are cast away by the deceit of Balams wages and perish in the gainsaying of Core IN the former words of the verse W●e vnto them is laid downe the conclusion of the principall argument of the Epistle namely that these seducers shall be destroyed hauing taken vnto themselues libertie of sinning which he hath alreadie prooued by a particular enumeration of the sinnes vnto which they were addicted and further amplifieth that second part of the reason by the reckoning vp of diuers other sinnes both in this verse and in the rest vnto the twentith First of the conclusion W●e vnto them Here first it may bee demaunded why or how the Apostle dare pronounce such a peremptorie sentence against them and that of euerlasting condemnation seeing the Archangell durst not passe iudgement no not against the Diuell himselfe Ans. There be two grounds of this practise first God giueth to all Prophets Apostles and Ministers the power of the keyes whereby they retaine and binde vp some mens sinnes to destruction as also to remit and loose the sins of some others in both which they pronounce iudgement generally Secondly God gaue yet a further power vnto Prophets and Apostles which is denied now to ordinarie Ministers whereby reuealing vnto them his speciall iudgements against particular persons hee made them his instruments to pronounce these his iudgements against men euen in particular Thus Dauid Psal. 109. cursed particular persons Paul curseth Alexander the Coppersmith 2. Tim. 4. and Gal. 5.12 Would to God they were euen cut off that trouble you and by the same spirit of reuelation the Apostle discerned this woe most certainly to befall these seducers Vse Hence the Papists conclude that Prophets and Apostles and cōsequently the Popes may make laws to binde the conscience because they haue power ouer it it being lawfull for them to curse bodie and soule Answ. A creature may bee cursed two waies first by imposing a curse and inflicting it vpon the bodie soule or conscience this is the peculiar curse of God resting in his power alone and is not committed to Prophets Apostles or Ministers for it argueth such a power ouer the soule as may saue or destroy it Secondly by foretelling and pronouncing a curse to come which God will inflict and this is that which belongeth to Prophets Apostles and Ministers but this argueth no power at al ouer the conscience Secondly some hence may conceiue that they haue warrant to curse other creatures man or beast seeing the Apostle vseth it Ans. This practise of the Apostle hauing an extraordinary spirit of reuelation is no rule for any man no not for the Minister ordinarily called Our rule left vs by Christ is to blesse and not curse Mat. 5.44 Rom. 12.14 which must be vnderstood of particular persons for otherwise the Minister hath authoritie to accurse impenitent sinners in generall but not this or that particular person no not in Gods cause for he knowes not what shall be the future estate of this or that man in particular much lesse may priuate men in priuate causes vse cursings or imprecations against others which condemneth their wicked practise who in their anger and impatience breake out into cursing of their childrē seruants friends yea or enemies our contrary duty must be to blesse as we are called vnto blessing Thirdly marke the Apostles disposition they were themselues most meek in dealing with men who called others vnto meeknes their own patient minds were knowne vnto all men in all the matters of men but when Gods glorie was called into question and the saluation of men likely to be hindred they lay aside their meekenes and put on seueritie and roughnes their zeale in Gods matters would not admit such lenitie and patience as towards men in mens matters they were willing to exercise They had an Apostolicall r●d which in such cases they vsed against offenders Moses the meekest man vpon the earth when he saw the Israelites worship the golden Calfe was so incensed with wrath that hee brake the Tables which were in his hands and tooke his sword and together with the Leuites slew three thousand of them the same day Exod. 32.27 Christ himselfe though hee would not breake a brused reede yet dealing with the Scribes and Pharisies who had corrupted the whole lawe laded them with woes and curses Matth. 23. Paul who otherwise was all things to all men yet when Gods glory was impared by Elymas his withstanding of him he strook him blinde and cursed Alexander out of a rightly ordered and holie zeale all which examples teach vs the like religious affection that when Gods honor is in hazard our zeale should be inflamed when mans saluation is likely to be hindred our meeknes must be for the time set aside that the zeale of Gods house may euen consume vs Psalm 69.9 as it did Christ himselfe when he saw his Fathers house dishonoured and of a house of prayer made a denne of theeues vnto whom we are daily to be conformed They haue followed the way of Caine. In these words the Apostle returneth to the former part of the reason whereby he hath alreadie by three forenamed sinnes proued that these seducers are
make account of that daye of generall iudgement yet may we well reckon vpon the day of our particular iudgement and the day of our owne death that so wee may be fitted thereto For as this shall leaue vs so that shall finde vs. A necessarie doctrine and dutie to be enforced in these drowsie daies wherein euery man almost putteth off the euill day and maketh league and couenants with death and hell the young man presumeth of length of daies the olde man dreameth he may liue one yeere longer both of them deferre hereupon their repentance in that they both are of one minde namely that their Master will yet deferre his comming Thirdly we must not only carrie within vs a conceit and opinion of this day but also must be inwardly affected with it that we may walke in awe and reuerence before God in regard of it 2. Cor. 5.11 Knowing therefore the terrors of the Lord we perswade men c. Now in the latter part of this verse the attendants of the Lord in his comming are mentioned in these words With thousands of his Saints which must be vnderstood not only of Angels but men also 1. Thess. 3.13 at the comming of the Lord Iesus Christ with all his Saints Qu. How can this be and how shall the Saints come with him Ans. All men shall rise with their owne bodies good bad at the sound of the Trumpet then shall the Saints be taken vp into the clowdes to meete Christ and shall be made a part of his attendance but the wicked shal stand vpō the earth wishing the mountaines and hils to fall vpon them and hide them from the presence of the Iudge Which affoordeth a most speciall comfort vnto all them who know themselues to be the members of Christ they shall not need to be dismaied at that day nor feare the face of the wicked seeing they shall be receiued in the clowdes into fellowship with Christ before the iudgement begin which manner of proceeding the Apostle hauing described concludeth with the same Wherefore comfort your selues one another with these wordes vers 18. Here also may bee noted the power maiestie and omnipotencie of Christ in his second comming although his first comming was base and in the forme of a seruant now he shall come with many millions of Angels and Saints whom all creatures cannot resist let no wicked man thinke then either to absent himselfe or escape his fearefull wrath the only way to auoide it is in thy life time to meete him by repentance Vers. 15. To giue iudgement against all men and to rebuke all the vngodly among them of all their wicked deedes which they haue vngodlily committed and of all their cruell speakings which wicked sinners haue spoken against him THe second point in the testimonie is the iudgement of the Lorde which together with the cause is in this verse described Concerning the iudgement wee must knowe that it is either generall or speciall both of them here mentioned the former in these wordes To giue iudgement against all men the latter in these words following And to rebuke all the vngodly among them In the generall iudgement it may be asked how Christ can bee said to giue iudgement against all men seeing the Saints shall come with him and hee will passe no sentence against them Ans. The meaning is he will giue iudgement vpon all men for the godly shall receiue and heare a sentence but of absolution and amongst all men he will rebuke the vngodly all persons shall come vnto iudgement without exception of what age sexe or state soeuer they be This vniuersall iudgement teacheth vs first to redresse before this day come whatsoeuer within vs would when it commeth confound vs for euery man must appeare in his owne person no Procter shall be allowed to speake or solicite for any man the secrets of all hearts must bee disclosed and euery man shall receiue accordingly to that he hath done It standeth men therefore in hand to reforme things amisse before hand for they shall appeare nakedly euen as they are Quest. How shall this bee done Ans. 1. Cor. 11.21 Iudge thy selfe before hand and thou shalt not bee iudged of the Lord arraigne examine cast and condemne thy selfe sue for pardon as for life and death and thou shalt escape that fearefull iudgement For hee that confesseth his sinnes and forsaketh them shall finde mercie Prou. 28.13 Thus doe and mercie belongeth vnto thee Vpon the same ground Paul raiseth the same dutie admonishing all men euery where to repent because he hath appointed a day in which hee will iudge the worlde in righteousnes Act. 17.30.31 Secondly seeing there is a day of vniuersall iudgment seeke in the meane time to stop the mouth of thy conscience that it may then stand with thee to excuse and acquite thee and neuer dare to offend againe and wound it for it is a deputie Iudge vnder God which if it condemne thee much more shall God the great Iudge being greater than thy conscience Thirdly hence in all actions our care should be to approoue our hearts vnto God especially in hearing and speaking the word prayer vse of the Sacraments yea and all our endeuours should be to please and obey him who one day will giue an vpright sentence vpon them all Thus the consideration of the iudgement to come made the Apostle Paul endeuour to approoue all the actions of his life vnto God 2. Cor. 5.11 So Peter 2. Epist. 3.11 seeing all these things shall be dissolued what manner of men ought we to be in holy conuersation and godlines looking for the hasting vnto the comming of the day of the Lord The speciall iudgement is laid down in the next words and they containe two things first the persons who shall be iudged All the vngodly among them Secondly the manner of their iudgement in the word rebuke or conuince The persons are set out by their propertie of vngodlinesse which is a sinne directly against God and the vngodly man is he who denieth God the honour due vnto him of whom that we might the better know him the Scripture hath giuen fiue notes or properties as first that he knoweth not or acknowledgeth not the true God aright according to his word Psal. 10.4 All their thoughts be that there is no God that is they acknowledge him not in his presence prouidence iustice or mercie Secondly he subiecteth not his body soule and conscience to the laws of God in al things but taketh libertie to liue as hee list Iob. 21.14 They say to the Almightie Depart from vs we will none of thy waies Psalm 50.16 They hate to be reformed Thirdly in heart and life he dependeth not himselfe vpon the will power prouidence and good pleasure of God but on something out of God in himself or some other creature Abac. 2.4 whereas the iust man liueth by faith the wicked man exalteth himselfe and is puffed vp as bearing himself vpon
God or no. Vse First whereas all men good and bad haue innumerable lusts in them we are to take notice of the vilenes and vncleannes of our nature which is common to the good and bad betweene whom there is no difference but by grace our endeuour must bee to see more and more these lusts stirring and moouing themselues against God and man Secondly to mourne and bewaile them Thirdly to pray that God would burie them all in the death and graue of his Sonne that they stand not vp in iudgement against vs being euery of them sufficient to procure our eternall destruction Secondly we must not suffer sinne to raigne in vs for this is the part of an vngodly person true it is that lusts will be in the heart whilest a man is in the flesh but they must bee resisted that they may not raigne and rule the heart Quest. How shall we keepe vnder the lusts of the heart from raigning ouer vs Ans. Seeing sinne raigneth in the minde by euill thoughts our thoughts on the contrarie must bee framed according to the word and ordered by the counsell thereof according to the Apostles aduice Phil. 4.8 If any thing be honest vertuous of good report we must thinke of these things Coloss. 3.16 Let the word of God dwell plentiously in you Again lust raigneth in the memorie by remembring vanities wrongs and wicked speeches and actions wee must therfore remember our sinnes the number and greatnes of them the curse of the law against them the day of our owne death and the generall iudgement the remembrance of which shall be able to keepe out or at least to keepe vnder these vngodly lusts Further seeing it raigneth in the affections of pride reuenge hatred c. wee must learne the exhortation Phil. 2.5 Let the same minde be in you that was in Iesus Christ that looke as Christ was most milde meeke humble patient full of loue towards God and man so ought our vnruly affections to bee conformed vnto his And lastly seeing it raigneth in the bodie by idlenes ease sleepe in excesse which make the bodie an instrument of sinne wee must alwaies diligently inure our selues to the duties of our callings vsing fasting watching and prayer by which meanes well obserued the lusts in the heart may still trouble and molest vs but they shall not rule and raigne ouer vs. Vse 3. If it be the propertie of a wicked man to follow after vngodly lusts wee ought to purge our selues from all the lusts of the flesh and spirit 2. Cor. 7.1 lest these defile our bodies and soules in the powers and parts of them to doe which the better remember that blessed are the pure in heart secondly to inure our selues vnto the feare of God seeing the feare of God is cleane Psal. 19. that is it clenseth the heart and breaketh the necke of all noysome lusts Vers. 19. These are makers of sects fleshly not hauing the spirit THis verse containeth the application of the former testimonie vnto the particular persons whom it concerneth setting downe who they be that are scorners and followers of their lusts namely scorners are they that make sects separating themselues from the people of God and followers of their lusts be those who are fleshly and without the spirit which words being applied to these seducers fasten two sinnes more vpon them The first whereof is that they are makers of sects The second that they haue not the spirit For the former the word signifieth a singling and separating of themselues from the Church and people of God and consequently the making of sects to themselues neither may this seeme strange that there should be such persons that make such separation seeing it is the nature of euery sinner to flie from the presence of God as Adam did and Peter when he had seene a part of the glorie of Christ bad him depart from him for he was a sinner The prodigal sonne must haue his portion apart and will not be perswaded to liue with his father and euery vngodly man withdraweth himselfe vnto perdition Heb. 10.38 Doct. First it is a great sinne for a man to separate himselfe from the assemblies of Gods people because first it is a flying from God and his presence whose face euery one is commanded to seeke seeing he presenteth himselfe in the Word and Sacraments and wheresoeuer two or three are assembled in his name c. Secondly it is a contempt of Gods ordinance which whosoeuer despiseth despiseth God himselfe Thirdly out of the Catholike Church is no saluation the saying is true Whosoeuer will not haue the Church for his Mother shall not haue God for his Father Fourthly the congregations of Gods people on earth are the suburbes and gates of the kingdome of heauen whosoeuer therefore shutteth the gates of this kingdome of grace against himselfe here shall neuer enter into the gates of the kingdome of glorie hereafter Vse Our dutie hence is to ioyne our selues to the assemblies of the faithfull not forsaking the fellowship that we haue among our selues Heb. 10.25 but keeping the vnitie of the spirit in the bond of peace Ephes. 4.3 being like minded one towards another Rom. 15.5 speaking one thing as those that are knit together in one minde and one iudgement 1. Cor. 1.10 And if we would separate our selues then let vs depart from the Atheists and Papists in their corrupt doctrines and wicked conuersation Secondly such are iustly reprehended who seldome come to heare the word receiue the Sacraments and to call vpon God in the congregation for so much as they can they cut themselues from the kingdome of God in reiecting the meanes of their saluation Ob. They alleage for themselues that if they should come they should heare but a weake man like themselues speak vnto them and if Christ himselfe or some Angell should preach vnto them they would heare willingly Ans. Lay aside all disputing and yeeld vnto the wisedome of God whose ordinance it is that men should be taught by men and not otherwise Ob. They say further that they haue the Bible and the sermons of the Prophets and Apostles at home and none can make better sermons than they and againe that they can get knowledge enough to saluation by themselues and some say they haue knowledge sufficient and neede no more Ans. First Gods ordinance must be acknowledged and reuerenced in the publike Ministerie and in the middest of the assemblies and priuate duties must giue place to publike Secondly the word is not only to be knowne but affected now although knowledge may bee gained priuately yet the affections must bee wrought and mooued in the publike Ministerie Thirdly those that know the most know but in part and the Ministerie is instituted not onely to initiate and begin men but to confirme them in grace and leade them to perfection for which end the Lord hath giuen Pastors and Doctors of the Church to teach men vntill they come vnto a
not hauing the spirit of God then euery one hath power to receiue the spirit of God Ans. This is no good reason but is all one as if because a bankrout is blamed for not discharging his debts to his creditors another man should conclude that surely he is therefore able to pay them But these wicked men were blamed here first because they professed Christ but yet had not his spirit secondly because that in Adam they were the causes that they were borne without the spirit of God and so made themselues vnfit to receiue him Secondly if naturall men bee iustly condemned much more those that are worse than they as Atheists prophane persons those which contemne the assemblies and neglect the meanes of their saluation and yet looke for saluation as wel as others The Gentiles who were without the law doe the things of the law by nature Rom. 2.24 and yet many that professe the name of Christ and liue vnder the Gospell goe not so farre as those naturall men in doing the things of the law so as euen those Heathens and naturall men shall rise vp in iudgement and condemne many a professor of Christ of whom euen many come short of the Diuell himselfe who beleeueth and trembleth and yet not a few professors neither know what the Diuell beleeues neither through h●rdnes of heart can tremble at the iudgements of God as he can doe Thirdly those come farre short that think themselues in state good enough because they liue ciuilly and deale iustly and neighbourly as they say for the naturall man can doe this and yet shall be condemned no plea shall stand at the great day of the Lord but that which assureth of the pardon of sinne sealed vp with the blood of Christ. Let a mans outward and ciuill righteousnes be neuer so great yea if it could be equall to the righteousnes of the Scribes and Pharisies which for outward appearance was without all exception yet if hee bring not a righteousnes exceeding that he can neuer be saued Fourthly in that the naturall man is blamed for being a naturall man this ouerthroweth all merits of congruitie which the Papists boast of because a mans person not being accepted before God all his works are sinnes the worke neuer pleaseth God till the worker first please him Fifthly euery professor of Christ must strip the naturall man and become a spirituall person that is such as the spirit of God dwelleth in for first as the Father worketh our saluation by giuing Christ and his merits so must the holie Ghost by applying the same vnto vs else can we looke for no saluation Secondly as the soule giueth life to the bodie which else were dead so the spirit of God is the soule of our soules and quickneth them with new life being dead in sinne Thirdly wee can neuer know that wee are in Christ or belong vnto him but by the presence of the spirit in our hearts 1. Ioh. 3.24 Hereby we know that he abideth in vs euen by the spirit that he hath giuen vs. Quest. But how shall a man know whether hee hath the spirit or no Ans. Let him examine himselfe first whether he inwardly loue and feare God in his word of promise and threatning secondly whether he subiect his heart and life vnto him thirdly whether his heart be continually lift vp in inuocation and thanksgiuing All these are the workes of the spirit of God and they which 〈◊〉 of the spirit thus sauour and ●ffect the things of the spirit Rom. 8. Quest. But I feare I haue not the spirit how shall I obtaine it Ans. By vsing the meanes of reading the Word meditation and prayer especially Luk. 11.13 Your heauenly father giueth the holy Ghost to th●● that desire him Psal. 143.5.6 I meditate in all thy workes and stretch foorth my hands vnto thee Vers. 20. But ye beloued edifie your selues in your most holie faith praying in the holy Ghost IN this verse vnto the end of the 23. are set downe some meanes whereby all beleeuers may be fitted to the maintenance of the faith and true religion vnto the which the Apostle hath in the former part of the Epistle perswaded These meanes are contained in fiue rules here prescribed first concerning Faith secondly Loue thirdly Hope fourthly Meekenes fifthly Christian seueritie the first of which is contained in this twentith verse which is that they should build themselues vpon their faith which is not barely propounded but inforced and vrged first by a motiue in this word most holy faith secondly by the meanes of it which is prayer praying in the holy Ghost In the rule note two things first that faith is a foundation secondly that the dutie of beleeuers is to build vp themselues vpon this foundation Concerning the former first is may be demanded what is here meant by faith Ans. Here by faith is not so much meant the gift of faith as the matter of it namely the doctrine of faith and religion comprised in the writings of the Prophets and Apostles in which sense it is said that the Ephesians were built vpon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles that is vpon their doctrine Ephes. 2. The same was the rocke confessed by Peter vpon which Christ promised to build his Church and yet in the second place we must not exclude the gift it selfe for although the doctrine be a foundation in it selfe yet it is not so to vs vnlesse we beleeue it and applie it to our selues by this gift If any man aske what doctrine is this I answer the summe of it may be reduced to three heads the first whereof concerneth mans miserie by his sinne originall and actuall as also the dangerous fruits thereof The second the redemption of man from this miserie and his freedome by Christ. The third the thankefulnes which man oweth for this deliuerance and ought to testifie and expresse in newnes of life Hence learne first what is the infallible marke of the true Church whereby it may be discerned from the false and Apostaticall Church and that is the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles for this being the very foundation of the Church where it is there the Church must needes bee and this note of it selfe is sufficient to point out the true Church wheresoeuer Secondly seeing faith is the foundation of the Church and not the Church the foundation of faith beware hence of a damnable doctrine of the Popish Church which teacheth that there can be no certainty of the points of religion no nor of the Scriptures themselues but onely by the iudgement of the present Church of Rome and that Church must giue what sense soeuer she pleaseth to the Scriptures else hath it none wherein they play the part of preposterous builders laying the foundation in the top of the building Thirdly it may be demaunded how any doctrine becommeth a foundation vnto the saluation of men Answ. Properly to speake God and Christ is our foundation and
Luk. 7.47 Many sinnes are forgiuen her for she loued much where it seemeth that loue is the cause of forgiuenes of sinnes Ans. I answere this word for doth not signifie here a cause but a reason drawne from the signe as it is also elsewhere vsed this then is the sense many sinnes are forgiuen her and hereby ye shall know it because or in that she loued much Note hence first that doctrine of the Church of Rome to bee false whereby they teach that before iustificatiō there must be a disposition and aptitude in a man thereunto standing in a feare of hell loue of God c. for by this doctrine the loue of God in man should go before iustification which is a fruit and follower thereof Secondly that is as false that loue is the soule and life of faith for though in time they be both together yet in the order of nature loue followeth after faith therfore cannot be the forme and soule thereof Thirdly it hath bin the opinion of some that faith apprehendeth Christ by loue and not by it self but this is also erroneous for loue in order followeth apprehen●●on of Christ and therefore Christ is not apprehended by loue First we beleeue and being knit vnto Christ by faith then our hearts are knit vnto God by loue The third point is what is the measure of loue whereby we must loue God and man Ans. According to the two distinct parts of the word of God are prescribed two distinct measures of loue The measure of the law is to loue God without measure for it requireth that wee loue God with all the powers of our bodies and soules and with all the strength of all these powers Luk. 10.27 This measure is not now in our power to performe no not although wee bee borne anew for being still flesh in part some of the powers of our strength are withdrawne from the loue of God The Gospell is a qualification of the law and moderateth the rigour thereof it freeth a man not frō louing God but exacteth not this loue in the highest measure and degree but accepteth such a measure as standeth in 3. things first in beginning truly to loue God secondly in the daily increase in this loue thirdly in being constant in the same vnto the end this measure the Lord accepteth for perfect loue in those that bee in Christ in whom the imperfection is couered Deut. 30.6 The Lord thy God will circumcise thine heart that thou maist loue the Lord thy God with all thine heart and all thy soule that is as if the Lord had said I will ingraft the true loue of my selfe in your hearts which you shall increase in and constantly proceede in the same and then I will account and accept of it for the full measure of loue that my law requireth which distinction is the rather to bee considered because the Papists teach that the loue which the Lord requireth of Christians is the same for substance and measure which the law prescribeth and for the perfection of our loue they say a man may doe more than the law bindeth him vnto as if he gaue all his goods to the poore it is more than euer God in his law hath commanded and if wee loue God aboue all creatures which they say a man may doe though imperfectly it is the loue which the law prescribeth But all this is most false and so the Apostle Galath 3.10 concludeth it as many ●s are vnder the workes of the law are accursed If all men bee condemned by the law then is no man able to performe the loue and duties which it requireth but he taketh the former for granted for else his argument could not hold and therefore that none can performe the loue which the law enioyneth is true Secondly the common opinion of men is that they euer loued God with all their heart and it i● pitie hee should liue that doth not so but it is a m●●re delusion for if it were so what needed any qualification or moderation of the law by the Gospell The fourth point is wherein standeth the loue of God Ans. 1. Epist. Ioh. 5.3 This is the loue of God that ye keepe his Commandements Ioh. 14.13 He that keepeth my Commandements is he that loueth me the reason whereof is this he that loueth God loueth his word and he that loueth his word wil bewray his loue in yeelding answerable obedience thereunto and in one word this keeping of the Commandements standeth in these three things first in faith for it must bee the worke of a true beleeuer secondly in conuersion vnto God thirdly in new obedience which sheweth many a man how miserably he hath been heretofore deluded by Satan for euery m●n professeth and pretendeth the keeping of the Commandements and yet the most are so farre from doing them that they know them not neither care to know them The fifth point is how a man should preserue in him the loue of God and of m●n Ans. First the meanes whereby man may preserue himselfe in the loue of God is two-fold first euery one must labour daily to haue his heart setled in the sense of Gods loue towards himselfe for the more he shall feele Gods loue confirmed vnto him the more shall his loue bee inflamed and increased towards God againe euen as the more wee feele the heate of the Sunne the warmer wee are Secondly wee must keepe a daily obseruation of Gods blessings spirituall and temporall which is a speciall meanes not onely to confirme and augment our loue but preserue it constant to the end Psalm 18.1 I will loue thee dearely O Lord. Why what made Dauid thus resolue himselfe the reason is rendred in the next words The Lorde is my rocke my fortresse my strength and hee that deliuereth mee Secondly men must vse the meanes whereby they may preserue their loue to men and these are of two sorts for some stand in meditation others in practise The meditations are foure The first is the consideration of the spirituall and neere coniunction of all those that are true beleeuers of which number wee professe our selues all to be who haue all one Father God one Mother the heauenly Ierusalem the Catholike Church all begotten of the immortall seede the word of God all liue by one faith in Christ and all are heires of eternall life and glorie This was Pauls motiue perswading him hereto Ephes. 4.3.4 There is one Lord one faith one baptisme one God and Father of all see Phil. 2.1.2 The second meditation is that the duties of loue which man sheweth to man especially the faithfull God accepteth as done to himselfe so saith the Wiseman He that giueth to the poore l●ndeth vnto the Lord. And Matth. 25. When I was hungrie ye fed me c. namely in my members vpon earth The third meditation is the consideration of that curse which is due to them that neglect duties of loue to man when occasion is offered
prouoke vnto loue and good workes Secondly for the making of this difference betweene offenders we ought to haue in vs a christian wisedome whereby wee may discerne aright of persons and things and not to iudge of al alike Our head Christ was a notable president vnto vs herein for though many professed him and beleeued in him yet would hee not commit himselfe vnto them because he knew what was in man Ioh. 2.24 Loue indeed must hope all things beleeue all things suffer all things 1. Cor. 8.7 but yet this Christian loue must be ordered by Christian wisedome The second point concerneth the manner of restoring offenders standing in two rules first of compassion secondly of seueritie In the former consider two things first on whom compassion is to bee shewed the Apostle saith on some that is on those that erre of ignorance or infirmitie on those also who are caried away with the violence of some sudden passion if they repent yea or giue any hope of amendement all such must be restored with the spirit of meeknes Galath 6.1 Secondly the manner of shewing the compassion which is not by winking at or soothing men in their sinnes but by admonitions and exhortations seasoned with compassion Matth. 18.15 If thy brother trespasse against thee goe and tell him his fault betweene thee and him if he heare thee not take yet with thee one or two This is the meanes first to conuince the offenders and then to bring them to repentance with all mercie and meeknes and confirme them therein Thus God himselfe dealt with Adam first conuinced him and then in much mercie made that gratious promise that the seede of the woman should bruise the Serpents head Thus Christ looked on Peter and mercifully restored him Thus Paul restored the Galathians being fallē from the faith by mercifull admonitions Ob. But if we admonish men before witnes according to the rule of Christ wee may draw our selues into danger for they may take such admonitions for slanders and vse them as witness●● thereof against vs. Ans. If therefore the fault bee secret we must onely admonish our brother alone and if that will not serue to reclaime him leaue him to God to turne him and if it be priuate that is known to some few it is Christian wisedome to admonish him before some two of those that can testifie of this sinne that so the partie admonished may be conuinced and the admonisher cleered from all shew and apparance of slaunder Vse 1. By this rule is condemned the rigour and austeritie of many in too seuere censuring offenders and offences This was a fault and blemish in the ancient Church which sometime for no faults would enioyne penance as if a man had married the second time yea for small and light offences were wont to enioyne a penance of two fiue yea and sometimes of tenne yeeres This is the sinne also of those that are departed from our Church condemning vs for some wants vtterly as no Church nor people of God refusing to heare the word of God to pray and to ioyne in other religious duties with vs. It is also the sin of many of the Lutherans who because wee dissent from them in some opinions condemne vs and our Churches to hell and speake and write that we are limmes of the diuel Which were too great seueritie if wee held not the truth against them in the things wherein we differ Vse 2. Wee ought on the contrarie to put on the bowels of compassion towards offenders if there bee any hope of amendement following herein the footsteps of Christ himselfe who was very tender ouer Ierusalem so as hee wept ouer it Moses when the Israelites had sinned in making their golden Calfe he mourned for them fasted fourtie daies and fourtie nights for them and would not depart from God till he was intreated of him in their behalfe Men cannot but be compassionate towards sicke and dangerously diseased or wounded bodies but a rare thing it is to be so tender ouer the sicke soules of our brethren But blessed is hee that iudgeth wisely of the poore whether afflicted in bodie or minde The second rule of restoring offenders concerneth Christian seueritie and it is the last of the fiue laid down in the verse 23. In it the Apostle laieth downe three things first the rule it selfe to saue with feare Secondly the reason of the rule or manner of it pulling them out of the fire Thirdly a caueat for the better obseruing it And hate euen the garment spotted by the flesh In the rule it selfe consider two things first who are to be saued by feare namely those who otherwise are incurable which is manifest in the opposition of these words with the former some are to bee cured with mercie and compassion as those which sinne of ignorance and infirmitie but those who are hardly curable must be terrified affrighted and so saued by terror and feare Secondly what this feare is namely not a bodily feare as neither the meanes causing it are but a spirituall feare and that of euerlasting destruction The meanes of feare are either ciuill or spirituall The former is the power and authoritie of the Magistrate who carrieth not the sword in vaine against offenders but that those that doe euill might feare Rom. 13.4 but neither is this feare nor the meanes of it meant The second meanes are spirituall directly respecting the soule not the bodie and they be reduced to three kindes or heads first admonition with denunciation of Gods iudgements against the party not repenting Secondly suspension whereby offenders are debarred from the Lords Table Thirdly excommunication whereby men are deliuered vp to Satan and cast out of the societie of Gods people Of these three this last is here most properly meant Ob. But some will say Excommunication is of no force it is lightly regarded and therefore can bee no great meanes of feare to offenders Ans. This censure vsed according to the word of God cannot but be full of horror and terror and the most forcible as the last meanes of this feare Matth. 18.17 If he heare not the Church let him be to thee as an heathen What will mooue a man if this will not that the whole Church should account of him as a Pagan or Heathen The incestuous person 1. Corinth 5.5 thus censured is giuen vp to Sathan and deliuered into the diuels power then which what can bee more fearefull Both these places the enemies of this censure seek to elude that they might make it lesse forcible for that in Matth. 18. they interpret of seeking ciuill remedie against ciuil harme or wrong as though the sense were thus If thy brother iniurie thee admonish him first priuately and if hee refuse to heare thee bring him before the Magistrate thou maist goe to law with him and vse him as an heathen man in calling him before the heathen Magistrate But this exposition cannot stand for to shew that it is no
which they deeme no other then as of a peccant humor necessarily to be purged out euery fewe yeares either by murther if it preuaile in the head or by massacre if in the body of any countrie and rather then it should not they will not sticke with Blas●●s at the commandement of their great Gracch●● to set on fire or to blow vp euen the Capitol it selfe although nature and Gentilisme condemne such gracelesse deuotednes The late most diabolicall and furious attēpt against his Maiesty the whole state that euer was inuented the like wherof both in the contriuing and whole carriage could neuer be shewed no I thinke if there were Annals and Chronicles kept in hell it selfe cryeth out against them long ere this time in all the corners of Christendome God Almighty still deliuer his Highnes and Royall race from them and by his Maiesties meanes vs and our Land from them For how much better had it bin that his Maiesty had been moued to haue banished these vipers out of his Realmes then those who professe the same Lord Iesus and labour though with acknowledgement of too much weakenes wants to be found faithfull before the Lord and their Soueraigne But not to depart from our purpose These bee the waies wherein the Popish Baalamits would mee●e vs and with vs if the Lord should not meete with thē comming against them in euery corner While then they walke in these waies of Caine what booteth it vs to speake of a peace with them for while wee speake of peace they are bent to warre But bee it some peaceable consent and agreement were on their part promised yet that one consideration of the treacherie in their compactes would keepe any iudicious man from setling his conceite and affection vpon any ingenious conclusions with them which treacherie is not only practised by the persons of faithlesse Papists but is prescribed as a maine precept of that most infidell doctrine of theirs nay which euen infidels themselues would blush at in this behalfe for doth not their doctrine make it lawful for them to vse any Aequiuocatiōs o● reseruatiōs as they terme them with their aduersaries almost vpon any aduantage yea and that lest they should not come to the height of impiety in giuing answere not only on their words but vpon oath before the lawfull Magistrate though not their liues but their least liberties only be touched Which doctrine till it bee reuersed how dare wee take their words or any assumpsit from them in any thing werein we would not be ouer-reached But suppose again such peaceable conclusions were not promised only but purchased what yet were we better thē before what billes or bonds would or could they lay in sure inough for our security so long as their doctrine standeth in force published in word writing that fides haereticis non est seruanda that Leagues with them are more honorable in breaking then in making how long can we conceiue would the continuance of our peace last longer then by it they could with aduantage vndermine vs But because I must shut vp many matters in few words let vs see the preiudice which would ensue vpon such pretended mediation in matter of Religion and first seeing they are a seed of the wicked corrupt children hauing forsaken the Lord in whom from the sole of the foot to the crowne of the head there is nothing but wounds and swellings and sores full of corruption and seeing themselues are become open Idolaters their Cities cages of Idolatrie their seruices all Idolatrous hauing thus forsakē the couenant of their youth seeing filthines appeareth on their skirts finally seeing by seeking their iustification by the workes of the law they are abolished from Christ and fallen from grace the which particulars haue been clearely proued by many our vnanswered and vnanswerable bookes to communicate with them by accepting yea not absteining from the least appearance of any of these euils were no other but to expose and lay our selues open and naked to all manner of danger of infectiō of our soules defection from our God in the end of destruction both of body and soule It was a dangerous disease which Israel brought out of Aegypt hauing through their long continuance there by reason of those marishes and the Riuer Nilus to which Lucretius in a distich appropriateth this disease contracted the same vpon them for the prouing and purging wherof the Lord instituted so many ceremonies and separations but farre more fearefull was that inward leprosie euen that abhominable Idolatry which they brought forth with them and which cost them so deare both in the wildernes and in the land of Canaan yea so habituall and inbred was the infection that although the Lord vsed most wise preuentions euery way yet presently vpon their deliuery out of the sea will it burst forth and become in the end their vtter ouerthrow It cannot be but the strangers which come with Israel out of Aegypt being accustomed to the Aegyptian fashion diet wil still be harping on their cucumbers leekes onyons and garlicke and draw the Israelites to the same lustings though with the loathing of Manna it selfe but such an exceeding plague shall proceed from the Lord that in perpetuall memorie thereof the place shall bee called the graues of lusting and if the daughters of Moab may haue free accesse to Israel in Sitti●● Israel will easilie be ioyned to Baal Peor till the wrath of the Lord bee kindled there fall in one day three twentie thousand The certeine perill and ineuitable danger wherof the Lord wel perceiuing did not only charge his people to haue nothing to doe at all with the Heathen lest by any meanes they should bee snared but also that they should be so opposite vnto them that they should in all appearances and circumstances and yet none will say the Lord herein was too seuere and straite be vnlike vnto them both in Religious and Ciuill exercises for if they looke towards the East in their Tēples in the honor of the Sun his people shall in his Sanctuary and Temple contrarily look to the West and in the West shall the Sanctum Sanctorum be set If they offer sacrifices vnto Oxen Sheepe Doues Goates c. as vnto Gods the Lord in detestation hereof will haue his people to consume and burne these creatures before him in sacrifice and hence was it that euery shepherd was an abhomination to the Aegyptians with whom they might not eate and conuerse because they did kill eate and sacrifice those beasts whom the other worshipped as Gods If they vse to eate almost none but Swines flesh and yet neither that before they haue sacrificed of the kind to the Moone or Bacchus the Lord especially prohibiteth this meate of all other to his people they shal not meddle with it it shall be abhominatiō vnto them If their Priests make their