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A13535 A commentarie vpon the Epistle of S. Paul written to Titus. Preached in Cambridge by Thomas Taylor, and now published for the further vse of the Church of God. With three short tables in the end for the easier finding of 1. doctrines, 2. obseruations, 3. questions contained in the same Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1612 (1612) STC 23825; ESTC S118201 835,950 784

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fountaine not of the Deitie alone but of all diuine actions and good things whatsoeuer and the Son reneweth as the Mediator and meriter of it But it is here ascribed to the holy Ghost because he is the immediate and next applyer of it to the conscience and therfore is more properly said to renew And yet wher I say that in regard of the other persons he doth more immediatly applie this grace it must not be so conceiued but that he ordinarily doth worke it by meanes vnto the which also often the Scriptures ascribe the worke of renewing As 1. the Ministers are his instruments by whome he begetteth men vnto God so Paul I haue begotten you by the Gospel that is ministerially 2. The word and Sacraments are outward meanes which the Spirit vseth to the same purpose And the word is hence called the immortall seede of regeneration and baptisme called the washing of regeneration in the words before because the Spirit in these outward meanes washeth and regenerateth 3. Faith is the inward meanes which the holy Ghost working and exciting in vs vseth by it to bring home to our hearts that which properly reneweth vs Act. 15. by faith he purifieth our hearts Thus we see how both the Father the Sonne the Spirit the ministers the word and Sacraments and our owne faith renew vs and how in their seuerall senses they are to be truly and plainly conceiued Doctr. 1. All the worke of inward grace in or out of baptisme is from the holy Ghost The thing that giueth force vnto washing by water is the renewing of the holy Ghost and this is regeneration indeede 1. Pet. 3.21 Baptisme saveth but not the washing of water but the interrogation of a good conscience that is the answer of a beleeuing heart acknowledging these sacraments to be seales and pledges of the righteousnesse of faith and that inward baptisme which indeede saueth Act. 2.38 Amend your liues and be baptised euery one in the name of Iesus Christ for remission of sinnes but all this will not serue the turne vnlesse the promise following be made good and ye shall receiue the gift of the holy Ghost 1. Cor. 6.11 Such were ye but ye are washed ye are iustified ye are sanctified but by what meanes by the waters of baptisme No they will not serue to iustification or sanctification but by the spirit of our God and if we would see this truth of both the Sacraments in one place we haue it propounded 1. Cor. 12.13 By one spirit we are all baptized into one bodie therefore not the water but the spirit setteth vs into the bodie of Christ by baptisme and wee are all made to drinke into one spirit and therefore the efficacie of the cuppe in the supper is to be ascribed to the spirit of God which spirit when he withdraweth himselfe we may truely say of the water in baptisme as the Apostle speaketh of the blood of bulls and goates that they cannot take away sinne The true materiall cause hereof is the blood of Christ the holy Ghost inwardly applying it vnto the soule and so inwardly indeede baptizing and washing the conscience Vse 1. This doctrine further ouerthroweth that Popish doctrine that the water in baptisme carrieth in it a force and efficacie of washing and sanctifying the soule And as for all those figures which Bellarmine produceth to this purpose we shall in few words see them conclude directly against himselfe Out of Gen. 1. The spirit of God mooued vpon the waters he concludeth that as the waters concurred necessarily to the making of all naturall things so the waters of baptisme necessarily concurreth to the conferring of the grace of regeneration in this second creation But who seeth not that these waters were dead without the spirits moouing and who seeth not that the spirit it is in baptisme which regenerateth and not the element vnlesse a bodily thing could properly worke vpon a spirituall 2. As for that in Gen. 7.17 The waters bare vp the Arke whence he concludeth that as the waters had a proper power to saue Noah and his familie euen so the waters of baptisme properly saue Besides the generall answer that similitudes prooue nothing but illustrate could Bellarmine if he had looked into the text so boldly haue detracted from the glorie of God which saith that Noah found grace in the sight of the Lord Gen. 6.8 with thee will I stablish my couenant verse 18. that the Lord bad him goe into the Arke cap. 7.1 that he shut him in the Arke 16. that he remembred him in the Arke and brought him out of the Ark cap. 8.1.16 all is ascribed vnto the grace couenant commandement hand and remembrance of God and not to the water and if Noah had beene saued by the clemencie of the waters and their power of sauing Noah was mistaken when he built an altar to the Lord vers 20. for hee should haue built his altar to the waters And if we would follow here the Iesuite we might make him wearie of his comparison If we should say 1. that the waters of the flood did for euery person and creature that they saued drowne a million therefore the waters of baptisme for one they saue drowne and damne a number which will not stand with their deuise of opus operatum 2. Noah was found righteous before he entred into the Arke cap. 7.1 and therefore both children and men of yeares may be sanctified before baptisme whence will follow that children of beleeuers dying before baptisme haue right both to the kingdome of heauen and Christian buriall vpon earth 3. It is said Heb. 11.7 By faith Noah prepared the Arke not which saued but to the sauing of himselfe and his houshold and that by faith he was made heire of righteousnesse without which faith neither the waters nor the Arke had done him any good and therefore neither without faith do the waters of baptisme saue or regenerate Lastly a poore reason it is of a Cardinal that because Moses or Noah is saued out of the waters therefore the waters saue him A third instance is in the waters of Iordan which saith he truly healed Naaman and was no seale of the promise and euen so the waters of baptisme truly confer grace But the truth is that water had no such power of healing of and in it selfe but only at that time in that institutiō and from the word of God which appeareth euen in Naamans indignation who neuer knew any more vertue or power in it then in Arbanah or Pharphar Againe Naaman being healed acknowledged not the vertue from the water but from God and therefore professed that he would henceforth neuer worship any other then the God of Israel and if it be lawfull for any Sophister from euery resemblance to conclude what he pleaseth why concludeth he nor for he may aswell that we must be baptised seauen times ouer for Naaman must wash seauen times ere he be cleane In
not is still borne or a dead child and vnder this I comprehend a cheerefulnesse to all the parts of the publike and priuate worshippe of God whereas the Prophet maketh it a note of a wicked man that he calleth not vpon God that is he casteth off the whole worship of God Wouldst thou then finde thy selfe to be a newe creature finde this change that the clouds of darkenes and ignorance are remooued that thou hast an heart of flesh that thou findest an abatement of thy sinnes and lusts that thou hast heauenly motions that thou vsest meanes carefully of thy spirituall life that thou growest by the nourishment of the word Sacraments prayer reading conference and other exercises of godlines and repentance this is the way of life which thou hast happily found thou art now much nearer saluation then when thou first beleeued Vers. 6. Which he shed on vs abundantly through Iesus Christ our Sauiour To come to the right meaning of this verse we must explane fowre things 1. the gift bestowed which that is the spirit as the former words import 2. the person bestowing him he that is God the Father 3. the measure of the gift 1. powred out 2. plentifully or shed on vs abundantly 4. the person meriting this gift that is Iesus Christ described here to be our Sauiour through Iesus Christ our Sauiour First the gift is the spirit or holy Ghost Quest. How can the spirit be bestowed Answ. In the spirit two things must be considered 1. his essence and person 2. his gifts and effects The former cannot be conferred for neither can his essence or person be concluded in the whole frame of heauen and earth and much lesse in the narrow corners of mans heart he beeing an infinite God equall with the father and the sonne But the latter may for so 1. Cor. 12.11 the Apostle speaking of sundrie operations and gifts ●aith all these things worketh the same spirit and this phrase must be vnderstood by an other Act. 2.17 where Peter alleadging the place out of Ioel 1.28 I will powre out my spirit thus explaineth it I will powre out of my spirit that is the sauing gifts and graces of my spirit such as here the renewing of the spirit by iustification and sanctification of which we shall heare m●re in the next ve●se The second thing is the person bestowing the holy Ghost he that is the Father as ver 4. who as he is the fountaine of the deitie so of all good actions and operations Ioh. 14.26 But when the comforter shall come whom the Father shall send Obiect But Christ saith that he will send the spirit from the Father Ans. This maketh no difference in the thing the spirit proceedeth first from the father as the first in the Trinitie and from the Sonne as from the second in order in the Trinitie and he onely expresseth this order when he saith whome I will send from the Father for when the Father sendeth the holy Ghost it is by the Sonne in whom all our good is deriued but not as by an instrument but as from a principall efficient with the Father onely the second in order from the Father Thirdly the measure of the gift is noted 1. In that he is said to shed or powre him out he saith not he gaue or communicated or dropped or showred but powred him out which noteth the liberallitie and plentie of the thing conferred namely of the graces of the spirit called by the name of the Spirit himselfe that we might conceiue of the bountifulnesse of our God who seemeth rather to communicate the verie fountaine it selfe of grace then the streames and riuers of it In which Metaphor note by the way that the graces of the spirit are here compared to waters which most properly are powred out and that not vnfitly For 1. as water washeth the filthinesse of the bodie so these graces as the pure waters of sanctification wash and cleanse the soule from the corruption and sinne of it Ezek. 36.25 I will powre cleane water 2. water hath a naturall qualitie to extinguish heat and quench the thirst of man and beast so onely these waters bring with them refreshing against the hotte wrath of God which otherwise would prooue a consuming fire for he that drinketh of this water shall neuer thirst more that is he shall neuer wish that grace sooner whereof he shall not drinke to sacietie 3. water softeneth the earth and maketh it fruitfull so these graces of the spirit mollifie the heart so fitteth it vnto all good works which are the fruits of the spirit without which we should be as the heath in the wildernes and as a parched land which seeth not when any good commeth But the second word whereby this immeasurable grace bestowed is signified is the aduerb abundantly or if we wil goe nearer the original richly and so when the Apostle writ this Epistle the spirit was indeed abundantly powred out and that in three respects First in regard of the diuerse kinds of gifts then powred out as 1. The common gifts of the spirit which all good and bad partake in were in greater abundāce thē euer before bestowed such as the gifts of illumination outward calling profession of the truth common generall faith 2. The more especiall gifts of sanctification the which our text most aimeth at as of faith regeneration loue hope c. for so the Apostle seemeth to restraine the graces he speaketh of saying on vs who are renewed by the holy ghost As both the prophet Ioel and Peter speaking the same thing seeme to doe the one mentioning my seruants my handmaids the other speaking of such as inuocate and call vpon the name of the lord and to this purpose we might shew what a number were daily conuerted and how in those dayes the kingdome of God was taken by force 3. More extraordinarie and miraculous gifts which were more proper to those times and in great abundance distributed are here included as the gifts of tongues of healing diseases casting out deuils porphesying command of death after a sort to take and leaue mens bodies and sundrie such other very frequent then aboue all times before or since Secōdly these gifts were plentifully powred out in regard of the persons people vpon whom they were conferred not now vpon some few Iews or handfull of people as before Christs ascension but vpon all flesh saith Ioel 2.28 vpon euerie nation vnder heauen saith Peter Now both Iew and Gentile bond and free circumcision vncircumcision all respect and acceptation of persons remooued haue equall part and promise in these graces Thirdly in regard of the meanes in which the spirit now conueled these graces that is the word Sacraments and ministerie of the new Testament which farre exceeded in glorie all that ministerie that euer was before it For in former time they sawe in their ministerie things a farre off in types shadowes clouds but
it selfe and cannot lie it beeing a part of his word who can neither deceiue nor be deceiued 2. because the penmen of it were inspired by the holy Ghost and spake and writ as they were mooued by him who is called the spirit of truth Ioh. 14.17 3. because it is a doctrine of Christ and aymeth at him who is the the truth principally as well as the way of our saluation Whence it is that the Apostles often stile it by the word of truth as Eph. 1.13 After ye heard the word of truth euen the Gospel of your saluation and Coloss. 1.5 For the hopes sake whereof ye haue heard before by the word of truth which is the Gospel True it is that the Lawe is a true word without all error but yet neuer thus called For the morall law will not now affoard such a truth as by which a sinner can be iustified in the sight of God and the ceremoniall law although it doe acknowledge such a truth yet was it a farre off and in types and not in the truth but the Gospel onely is such a truth as whereby we are raised to saluation Vse 1. Ministers must rightly devide this word of truth as such who would be approoued of Christ both the author and subiect of it for the more notable the subiect is the more care must there be in handling it Which the Apostle Peter teacheth If any man speake let him speake as the word of God The word of truth would be truely dealt with purely preached wisely applyed and so faithfully dispensed as that both God and good men and a mans owne conscience may approoue his worke 2. This word so purely handled shall euery soule finde to be truth it selfe so as beleeuers shall not faile of the saluation published in it and vnbeleeuers shall as surely meete with condemnation seeing hereby they are condemned alreadie 3. Not to haue this truth seated in our hearts is a fearefull case for it argueth a man to be giuen vp to error and delusion 2. To doubt of any part of it is to giue a lie to all the rest 3. To seeke for saluation out of it or besides it as the blinded Papist doth is to cleaue to folly and falsehood 4. To despise this truth is to contemne great saluation for if to despise Moses law bringeth death without mercie how much more sorer punishment is he worthy of which treadeth vnder foot the Sonne of God 5. But to fight against this truth is most wofull for it is strongest and will preuaile neuer man lifted against the truth but he found it too heauie for him neuer man spurned against it but to the bruising of himselfe Secondly the knowledge of this truth is the ground of faith for so our Apostle would haue vs conceiue that the faith of the elect is raised vpon knowledge of the truth as the matter of it and in this sence we read that faith is called the faith of truth euen for this reason because it is begotten in the acknowledgement of the truth and Paul in asking that question How shall they beleeue except they heare plainly concludeth that no hearing of the truth no faith in it and how may he that runneth read in the Scriptures that to whomsoeuer faith is giuen they be such as are taught of God such as to whom the holy spirit is become a schoolemaster who openeth their vnderstandings that with much assurance they can see and acknowledge the truth for seeing faith is much more then an vncertaine opinion or wauering fancie it followeth that that knowledge which is the ground of it must be no shaking reede with euery winde but a certaine acknowledgement of the truth approouing of it and assenting vnto it Neither may we thinke that the spirit of truth traineth men in blinde and vngrounded conceits nor leaueth their hearts in vncertainties but that wheresoeuer he worketh such an eminent grace as faith is he maketh men able in some good measure to giue a reason of the hope that is in them And as little reason haue we to conceiue that the worke of the Ministerie is to build castles in the ayre or the castle of faith without a foundation but that Ministers are sent to make the misteries of saluation cleare in the euidence and demonstration of the spirit and so lay men on that foundation to become a spirituall house consisting of liuing stones fit for the honour of the Lord. And to ende the proofe notably doth the Apostle Paul prooue the effectuall faith of the Thessalonians from this ground of it for our Gospel was not vnto you in word only but in power and in the holy Ghost and in much assurance which place must be vnderstood so to be both in the teachers and the hearers as the context declareth Vse 1. If knowledge be the ground of faith then sleight is the faith of the most whatsoeuer men professe Numbers of most silly creatures swarme euery wheare who pretend and presume vpon as strong a faith to God ward as the best preacher of them all and yet liue no better then Atheists euen without God in the world without the knowledge of his waies without his feare in their hearts to loue God aboue all and their neighbours as themselues is but a breath with them to beleeue in Iesus Christ is so naturall as they neuer doubted of it all their liues to bring forth fruits of faith whose propertie is to worke by loue in the obedience of the Commandements of the first and second table this they do they hope as well as God wil giue them leaue or as others of their neighbours do whereas alas euen their speach bewraieth them to be destitute of vnderstanding and consequently vtterly voide of the faith of truth 2. If the ground of faith must be a certaine knowledge of heauenly truth then hereby 1. is ouerturned that fond distinction of the Papists which masketh there more then Egyptian blindnes ioyned with wilfulnes and obstinacie vnder their modest vaile of vnexpressed faith or the faith of lay-men whereby if they can professe themselues Catholikes liue and die in the beleefe of their falsely so termed Catholike Church although they know not what it beleeueth it is sufficient for their saluation And indeed be that professeth that religion which like the apples of Egypt will abide no touch had need leane vpon an implicit faith And so some of them pretending more learning thē is common among them beeing pressed by argument haue thought they haue learnedly enough answeared in saying that their Doctors can answer for them But who seeth not these Pharisies taking away the key of knowledge and incurring that we denounced against such as will neither enter themselues nor suffer others to enter into the kingdome of heauen for surely if little or no knoledge little or no faith of a mans owne were enough how vnwise was Paul so to trouble
other Priests might not marrie diuorced or defiled women but he may not marrie a widowe but a maid onely Neither might he mourne at all no not for his father or mother which was lawfull for the other Priests thereby to pollute himselfe and the holy place All which with a number moe such solemne rites betokened a singular sanctimonie in such as were to be giuen vp and dedicated to the Lords seruice Whence I conclude that if in those that ministred but in a material Temple that serued but in shadows types and obscuritie that in comparison were so farre off from the ministerie of the spirit of grace of libertie of life and so after a sort from God himselfe was required such legall holynesse at the least how much more is the truth of those representations requisite in vs who serue in the spirituall house of God who carie the substance and the bodie and are so much nearer drawne vnto God by how much he beeing a spirit delighteth in spirituall seruice before elementarie In Exod. 19.22 there is a speciall iniunction that the Priests who were to come to heare the law deliuered should be sanctified least the Lord destroy them much more then those that are the mouth of God in the newe testament to deliuer the law and Gospel should be carefull of their sanctification least the Lord sanctifie himselfe in their confusion For else those should not be such sure consequents of the Apostle where he dehorteth Christians from vnholinesse and prophanenes because of their present condition in that they were not vnder the lawe but vnder grace and that they were not come to mount Sinai but mount Sion And if such arguments were strong enough to binde common Christians to followe holinesse without which no man can see God surely farre stronger are they to enforce the dutie vpon the minister whose whole doctrine meditation speaches and actions priuate as well as publike should sauour of the spirit of God and of his blessed regiment in their hearts Vse 1. Profane Ministers are hence admonished o● their danger and vnfitnes how dare they take Gods name in their mouthes when they hate to be reformed How dare they rashly attempt to touch holy things with vnwashen hands when Dauid a most holy Prophet of God would not compasse the Altar nor participate in holy things before he had washed his hands in innocencie are such fit successors of the Prophets and Apostles who were called holy men of God not only in that they were penmen of the Scriptures and immediatly assisted and inspired by the holy spirit of God and freed from error in their doctrine which priuiledge we cannot succed●●hem in but also in regard of their holy and innocent liues wherein also they shined as lights in the world expressing and shewing in life the life of that true and pure religion they taught vnto others 2. Let such as count this holines which is nothing but puritie of heart and life in Minister or people too much puritie and precisenes see their error and repent of it if they shall not see God who are without it much lesse shall such as scoffe at it We serue a God of pure eyes who hath pronounced blessing vpon the pure of heart and threatned that dogges and vncleane persons shall stand without the gate of that holy citie Notwithstanding therefore many a fooles bolt if that be puritanisme which many so esteeme it becōmeth all the people of God much more his Ministers in that way which they so tearme to serue the God of their fathers 3. Note that marriage is no impure or vncleane condition of life nor a breach of chastitie and holynes for ●e that in the words before is permitted to be the husband of one wife is here called also to holynes and chastitie Temperate The Papists to maintaine the former error of single life translate this word continentem but the words of Scripture which for most part are more generall and figuratiuely comprehend many particulars either in commanding or prohibiting may not be restrained to strengthen Popish error For although all the vertues of the seauenth commandement may be here included yet the word is more generall then so seeing he is properly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that hath any thing in his power that is Lord ouer a thing to command it and enioy it and here one who is Lord ouer himselfe his lusts affections appetite who enioyeth these and is not theirs who keepeth the command of these and they haue not him at command requiring that the Minister should be a man that can curbe and bridle himselfe in his will to ouermaster it in his affections of desire reuenge mirth sorrow c. to moderate them that they exceed not the meane and due measure in his appetite of meate drinke sleepe recreation that it be not inordinate yea in all his parts his hands his eyes his tongue c. so order himselfe as that no vnseemely kinde of gesture fashion word or dealing proceede from him which may disgrace his calling but to carie himselfe in such a temper as becommeth the former vertue of holines For euen the word hath affinitie with that which we call a right temperament or constitution whether of humors in the bodie or affections in the soule which is when none is predominant but one of them is equally mixed and qualified by another as strong wine is tempered and allaied with water and implyeth that the Minister by reason wisedome and religion especially either allay or breake off the headines and violence of those troublesome lusts and affections which may otherwise molest him and exceedingly preiudice him in the workes of his calling This vertue then standing in the moderation of our desires in the vse of all the gifts and liberties we enioy as also in laying a law vpon our selues that no inordinate lust beare sway in vs it cannot but be most nenecessarie in a Minister who may not either in his priuate course vnfit himselfe to the performance of his calling by the immoderate affection or vse of any externall libertie as of meate drinke recreation riches much lesse in his publike execution may he administer holy things as the word sacraments prayer according to distempered passion or affection as of anger sorrow lightnes or any such And further as it is a great preseruatiue in him of an equable and constant Christian course so is also a great nourisher of his inward quiet and outward peace and so procureth his freedome vnto ministeriall duties which aboue all other require that a man should be wholly his owne and the Churches for it bringeth downe high thoughts and proportioneth the minde vnto such an estate as becōmeth the simplicity of the gospel it cutteth off al affectation of state pompe sumptuousnes superfluities aboue that which becommeth a Minister of Christ which things make rich men indeed but poore Ministers for the most part Now the meanes to attaine this vertue
adultresse goe and sinne no more so the vse that we should make of his redemption is to cease from euill and depart from iniquitie least a worse thing befall and our ende be worse then our beginning And here is it not to be omitted how the Popish doctrine is in this point an vtter enemie to this redemption purchased by Christ not onely in magnifying their owne merits but in extenuating sinne so as men cannot come to a serious sense and hatred of the same for many sinnes are small and scarce sinnes many are veniall and there is no danger in them originall sinne which is the mother sinne of all is no sinne at all in the regenerate They turne many of the commandements into counsels which men may giue eare vnto for conuenience sake but not of necessitie and in doing these they doe more then the lawe bindeth them vnto By all which dreames of their owne braines as by thicke clouds of darkenes they obscure the brightnesse of this our sunne of righteousnesse and lessen the merit of his sufferings For if so many sinnes are in their owne nature so veniall Christ might haue spared much of his paines and if they were so slight as they make many the Christian might forbeare much of that watchfulnesse against them vnto which we are so often exhorted by the Apostle 4. Hence also is ministred no small consolation to the faithfull for if Christ haue redemed vs from all iniquitie who can lay any thing to our charge seeing Christ hath iustified who can condemne Let Satan now obiect the greatnesse of our debt our owne insufficiencie and weake estate to discharge we may plead that we neede not greatly distract our thoughts to procure any satisfaction besids that which is made on Christs part and accepted on Gods part for vs but all that euer we can make in way of thankefulnesse we acknowledge our selues bound vnto Let the blinded Papist who teacheth that he can satisfie the whole law of God and yet reuerseth it with the same breath when he saith pro hui●● vitae statu worke to satisfie we will to testifie our thankefulnes in that we are freed from so great bondage And purge vs to be a peculiar people vnto himselfe Christ by his death purgeth vs two wayes 1. By obtaining our reremission of sinnes and absoluing vs both from the guilt and punishment of them and this is the iustification of a sinner before God which he effected once and absolutely vpon the crosse of which we haue spoken in the words immediately foregoing the latter way is by freeing vs from the filth and contagion of sinne and this is the sanctification of a sinner and is not done at once but is daily while we liue in this world arising to further perfection and of this purging our Apostle now speaketh the which he affirmeth to be a fruit of the death of Christ as well as the former From the right conceiuing of which those places may not hinder vs where our sanctification may seeme to take an other rise as where the Holy Ghost is called that cleane water whereby we are washed Ezech. 36.25 I will powre cleane water vpon you and yee shall be washed from your filthinesse and from your idols for it is the Lord Iesus who by the power of his eternall spirit offereth his blood as the materiall and meriting cause of our cleansing without which diuine and effectuall power of the holy spirit the flesh had profited nothing 2. Where we meet with such places which ascribe it some●ime to the word as Christ to his disciples ye are all cleane by the word which I haue spoken vnto you sometimes to the Sacraments Act. 22.16 Be baptised and wash away thy sins and sometime to faith Act. 15.9 he purified their hearts by faith all these speaches conspi●e together in this same truth rightly apprehended For Christ is the onely agent in our sanctification in and by all these he giueth faith and sanctifieth by it as by an internall meane and instrument whereby we receiue our cleansing he sendeth Ministers with his word and sanctifieth by it as by an externall meane wherein sanctification is offered and with his Sacraments that by them as an other outward meanes that inward sanctification might be represented and sealed Thus Dauid prayeth Purge me with byssope that is wash away my sinne with the blood of thy Sonne which is shadowed in these legall sprinklings made with byssope and thus are diuerse other Sacramentall speeches to be vnderstood Doctr. Redemption and sanctification are inseparable companions none is redeemed who is not purged the blood of Christ hath this double effect in whomsoeuer it is effectuall to saluation for hee is made to such of God righteousnesse and sanctification In the lawe we reade of lauers as well as of altars yea and of the brasen sea In the Gospel we reade not onely of blood but of water streaming out of the side of Christ and that his sweate in his agonie was water and blood The blood signifiyng the perfect expiation of the sinnes of his Church and the water the daily washing and purging of it from the remainders of her corruption So the Apostle ioyneth these two together Ephe. 5.26 he gaue himselfe for his Church that is his life and blood and purged it with water through the word and it is cleare that the Apostle Iohn expresseth both these benefits obtained by Christ namely perfect satisfaction for sinne and sanctification from sinne when he saith that this is he that came both by water and by blood and as here it is said that Christ gaue himselfe to redeeme and purge so elsewhere in expresse tearmes to sanctifie his Church Eph. 5.27 Vse 1. In that the death of Christ serueth for our continuall cleansing while we liue in this world we are to take notice and acknowledgement of much filthinesse and vncleannes euen in the best it is no slight soyle or staine that hath fouled our natures which will easily be blowne or brusht off for it sticketh neerer vs then our skinnes that the verie power of Christs death it selfe doth not wholly destroy it while we liue but we haue cause to crie ou● with the leper in the lawe I am vncleane I am vncleane nay the godly see what blackamoores they are and how hardly they change their skins and what leopards they are hardly parting with their spots And this made the Apostle take such paines that he might attaine this fruit of Christs death and resurrection after he had beene long able to maintaine his iustification against all challenges and say who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect and what shal separate vs from the loue of God well knewe he how fast this vncleannes cleaueth vnto our natures Heb. 12.1 And this challengeth a number of monsters of men whose hearts beeing gulfes and seas of iniquitie yea the common draines and sinks of all filthinesse
in hand teacheth that there is an assurance a seale an earnest of saluation on which a man may assuredly settle his inward peace and his hopes shall neuer make him ashamed Yea further that this assurance is no blind perswasion nor bold presumption grounded vpon any thing of our owne but founded vpon the worke of God in vs changing vs daily renewing the image of God vpon vs the which good worke wheresoeuer it is begunne shall be perfected vnto the day of Christ. Cold is the comfort which this doctrine can minister to a number of men Christians by profession who neuer knewe this change in themselues the word hath beene too light to lift them vp to a newe life but they rotte away in the same sinnes and corruptions wherein they were borne and haue since confirmed vpon themselues and cannot say truely I am changed or yet am in the state of saluation Vse 3. See hence the blessed condition of men conuerted and begotten to God that we may neuer rest or be in quiet vntill we haue attained this grace of conuersion for they are alreadie possessed of their blessednesse and saluation which standeth in pardon of sinne couering of iniquitie freedome from the curse libertie from the raigne of sinne as also in the purchase of victorie ouer sinne and death of peace of good conscience of ioy in the holy Ghost in the certaine fruition of God himself and all those pleasures which are at his right hand for euermore The worldling seeth no part of this present happinesse and saluation of the Saints and therefore knowing no better he neuer accounteth himselfe so blessed as when he is drowned in carnall delights when his corne and wine and oyle is encreased vpon him when his cup runneth ouer when all men flatter him when his mouth is filled with laughter and yet in the mean time his bones are filled with the sinnes of his youth and age are likely to be laid downe together with him in the dust as Iob speaketh Nay more euen our selues who haue our blessednesse in our hands often see but a smal part of it that it is no meruaile if others can determine against our present happines when our selues are at such demurres in the matter especially when we see the world hating vs the earth expelling vs bonds prisons receiuing vs our countrie scarce acknowledging vs our kinsfolkes not knowing vs our friends forsaking vs our enemies killing vs dangers so assayling vs as we can scarce be safe in any corner nay sometimes our owne holds are taken that we cannot feare more warre abroad then we finde at home not meete with lesse peace without then within But now would it be an high wisedome to espie and know our blessednesse which with this change we firmely hold whatsoeuer our outward condition be or can be If now we suffer for righteousnesse it withstandeth not but maketh to our happinesse If all men speake all manner of euill against vs for Christs sake it hindereth not but furthereth our saluation If earth refuse vs heauen approoueth vs if men condemne God will iustifie if our friends denie vs Christ our husband will confesse vs In any miserie we shall haue assured felicitie in sorrowe and heauinesse matter of true ioy in outward trouble inward peace in temptation assurance of euasion In nothing all things in death and coruption life and immortalitie Thus our happinesse must not be mistaken which is inward spirituall and heauenly not depending on man but God by whose assured word and pledges it is bestowed nourished and perfected in vs. Now if any would trie whether he hath this happinesse in his hands or no let him come to this touchstone 1. Canst thou finde in thy soule a godly sorrow for sin which proceedeth on to repentance causing thee to loath thy sinne and loue righteousnesse constantly and canst thou loue him that dealeth sharpely against thy dearest sinnes 2. Dost thou finde thy heart which was a mansion of the deuill to be nowe a Bethel a temple of the holy Ghost in which thou worshippest God daily in spirit and truth presenting him with thy morning and euening sacrifices as the sweete incense of thy soule 3. Findest thou thy whole conuersation to be now a constant practise of righteousnes and holynes perceiuest thou thy selfe more heauenly minded then euer thou wast earthly and couetous more vpright in dealing with men then before vniust more pure and sober in word deede thoughts lookes then euer thou wast vncleane or intemperate Take all these together with thee and go on as cheerefully as happily thou art a blessed man alreadie and not all the gates of hell can hinder thee of thy saluation A second point to be learned in that it is said that then God saued vs when his bountifulnesse appeared is That before this reuealing of our saluation by Christ this loue and bountifulnesse of God was hid with himselfe and could not be reached vnto by the most peircing vnderstandings or industrie of man or Angel only God could inuent our cure onely God could manifest the same and make it appeare vnto vs. True it is that it was giuen in the wise counsell of God before the world was and shall be consummate and perfected when heauen and earth time shall be no more But if we enquire the proper time and manner of the happie appearing of it to the sonnes of men then we must answer that it was at the reuealing and appearing of our Lord Iesus Christ namely partly more darkly by the preaching of the Prophets vnto the auncient fathers and beleeuers as Abel Noah Abraham Moses Dauid who with the remnant of Israel enioyed the same promises and precious faith with vs and partly more clearely by the incarnation of the sonne of God which was the glorious rising of this Sonne of righteousnesse who both by his owne doctrine and miracles life and death and the doctrine of his Apostles and Pastors hath brightly shined vpon all vs vpon whom the ends of the world are come according to that prophesie of Malac. 4.2 The sunne of righteousnesse shall rise adding also that he bringeth health vnder his wings For before we sought not our health we our selues could make ou● wound wider and grow more desperately ouergrowne in our deadly diseases but could not dreame of a Phisician but now the father putteth forth his loue sendeth forth his beloued Sonne in him setteth liking vpon vs couereth vs with his skirts adorneth vs with his graces fitteth vs to our glorie and so daily by degrees draweth vs nerer him in fellowship then euer we were in the state of our innocencie To this purposeth is it said that Christ brought life to light whereas else Adam and all his posteritie had for euer laid vnder death and darknesse for when Adam little thought of saluation yea when he was running from God and hiding himselfe in his thickets then Christ brought life to light in
grounds or 4. laden with lusts and then the spirit will not sowe among thornes And thus all the meanes of saluation enioyed out of their holy vse are turned to greater condemnation Who art thou then that contentest thy selfe to come to Church to heare to pray to reade keepest the Sabbaths professest the Gospel to haue the countenance of religious persons whereas in the meane time thou wantest the inward master the spirit of supplication the power of the Gospel All is wrong with thee thou hast embraced a shadow for the substance and found a● it were the cloathes of Christ but the bodie is risen and gone Begge at the hands of God therefore in all thy duties publike and priuate the presence of the spirit who alone can worke thy heart wait for Gods teaching for this is the way to become vvise to saluation Doctr. 2. God in sauing vs from our miserie reneweth vs vnto his own image of righteousnes and holines for he saueth vs by giuing vs vnto his sonne and if any be in Christ he must become a new creature which new creature is called the new man which after God is created and which must be renewed on vs in knowledge after the image of him that ereated him Colos. 3.9 The Apostle Peter teacheth vs that great and precious promises namely of life and saluation are made vnto vs. But how come we to ●nioye them the next words shew by beeing made partakers of the diuine nature and flying corruptions which are in the world through lust This diuine nature is nothing else but the renewing of vs vnto the image of God by which beeing freed from the corruption of the world we become of earthly and fleshly heauenly and diuine like vnto our Father practising those heauenly qualities which God by his spirit createth in vs such as are the hatred of sinne loue of pietie the contempt of the world and the breathing after life eternall by all which we seeme and after a sort put on his nature and image The same truth haue we confirmed by Zachariah in his song where he maketh this part of Gods image standing in righteousnes holines a fruit of our redemption and iustification Vse 1. This doctrine letteth vs see the absolute necessitie of our renewing without which there can be no saluation Ioh. 3.5 Except a man be borne againe of water and the spirit he cannot be saued And the reason is because by it as by an inward meane the Lord setteth vs into the state of saluation That washing of the Disciples feete was not only an example of humilitie but a symbole and representation of this washing away of sinnes in this our renewing by the blood of Christ and therefore Christ saith vnto Peter If I wash thee not thou hast no part in mee And indeed who can haue part in Christ that will not part from his foule sinnes that he may be cleane which if it be true how farre doe men delude themselues who thinke they can walke with Christ and haue part in him and yet haue neither hand nor foote head nor heart washed from guile Euery Simon Magus will thinke to haue part in this businesse as well as Simon Peter and yet inwardly nourish a bitter gall of iniquitie But let no man henceforth deceiue himselfe for the sinner that will not be washed hath no part in the kingdome of God and of Christ. 2. It affoardeth a triall whether a man be in the way of saluation or no hee that is a new creature is in the way of life Obiect But this is a secret worke of the spirit and how can we know it Answ. First thou must be borne againe to which is required that God become thy Father in Christ the Church thy mother the word the immortall seed of which thou art begotten there must be a conception wherein Christ must be formed in thee a birth wherein by the helpe of Ministers as midwiues thou must be brought into this spirituall world a desire of the sincere milke of the word drawne out of the two Testaments the brests of the mother and after a desire of stronger meat to grow stronger by Now thou art borne vnto God but what a parable is this to many euen old men Masters and Teachers and Rulers in Israel who know no natiuitie but one of Adam and Eue no progenie of God and his Church know no parents but such as beget earthly children vnto naturall life base borne sonnes of the earth not knowing any heauenly Father neither principall nor ministeriall begetting them to any heauenly life of grace or glorie Secondly after this birth all old things must passe away and euery thing must become new he that is washed is all cleane And therefore there must be 1. a new light in the minde and vnderstanding conceiuing the things of the spirit of God For as the further blinding of men is a note and brand of a reprobate so is it a note of one begotten to God to be renewed in knowledge Col. 3.9 Secondly there must be a newe qualitie in the will readie to heare the voice of Christ in all things and obey it The Scripture noteth it a marke of an vngodly wretch to be further obdurate and hardened but he that is borne of God heareth his words Ioh. 8.47 he carrieth a flexible heart vnto the word and 1. Ioh. 2.29 he that doth righteously is borne of him Thirdly there must be a new conuersation manifesting the workes and fruits of the spirit a life lead in the practise of raigning sinne and making shewe of the works of the flesh is a note of him that is lead by the flesh but he that is borne of God sinneth not 1. Ioh. 3.9 he hath sinne in him but not raigning Rom. 6.4 he doth sinne also but 1. it is not he but the sinne in him 2. it is against his heart and intention 3. he lyeth no● in his sinne but his course is according to the commandement and a walking after the spirit Fourthly There must be new affections as the loue of God hatred of all sinne especially in himselfe loue of good men of pietie of puritie of the light the whole first Epistle of Iohn bea●eth vpon this point for it is a note of one in darkenesse to hate the light to hate the brethren c. men thinke it a sound plea when they ouershoote themselues in affections speaches or actions to say they are flesh and blood and they must hate and speake their minds c. but if thou beest no more then flesh and blood thou shalt neuer come in heauen Christians are of the blood and flesh and bone of Christ and therefore must subiect themselues in all things to be ruled by his spirit Fiftly there must be meanes vsed to preserue all these as namely the spirit of prayer and supplication Zach. 12.10 a child new borne into the world crieth presently and that which doth
vs against the scandal which is common in the world wherein most men beleeue not most men repent not nay scorne them that doe at which we may not stumble seeing that some yea the most are refused there must be in euery corner such as are blinded vnto destruction It is the Fathers good pleasure to reueale the things of the kingdome to ● few babes but to hide them from the most of the wise and prudent of the world A few are giuen vnto the Sonne and brought in due season vnto the faith many more are deliuered vp vnto Satan to haue the eies of their minds further blinded that so they might iustly perish in their infidelitie 3. Hence we must blesse God who hath chosen vs that he might put a difference betweene vs and others whereas he found no such difference in vs who were the children of wrath as well as others he chose vs not when we were but that we might be holy and vnblameable Ephes. 1.4 that from the first to last in our saluation all the glorie might be his yea that our ioy might be more full and our glorying in God more firme and cheerefull he hath made it knowne vnto vs that beeing elected we are sure of our happinesse for nothing shall be able to plucke vs out of his hands The second conclusion is that the elect haue a faith by themselues being here called the faith of Gods elect where by faith is not meant the doctrine of faith as Iude 3. Contend for the faith once giuen and 1. Tim. 1.19 but rather the gift of faith whereby we vnderstand and imbrace that doctrine neither is euery gift of faith here meant For there is 1. an historicall faith standing in an assent and acknowledgement of the truth of things written and taught 2. There is also an hypocriticall faith which passeth the former in two degrees First in that with knowledge and assent is ioyned such a profession of the truth as shall carrie a great shew and forme of godlinesse Secondly a kinde of gladnesse and glorying in that knowledge for it is ascribed to some who in temptation shall fall away to receiue the word with ioy To both which may be ioyned sometimes a gift of prophecie sometimes of working miracles as some in the last day shall say Lord haue we not prophecied and cast out deuills in thy name and yet they shall be vnknowne of Christ. Neither of these is the faith of the elect here mentioned but a third kind called sauing faith the inheritance of which is the proprietie of the elect for the iust man only liueth by this faith which in excellencie passeth both the former in three worthy properties 1. In that here with the act of vnderstanding and assent vnto the truth there goeth such a disposition and affection of the heart as apprehendeth and applieth vnto it the promise of grace vnto saluation causing a man to reioyce in God framing him vnto the feare of God and to the wayting through hope for the accomplishment of the promise of life 2. In that whereas both the former are dead and not raysing vnto a new life in Christ what shewes soeuer be made for the time the sunne of persecution riseth and all such moysture is dried vp This is a liuely and quickning grace reaching into the heart Christ and his merits who is the life of the soule and the moouer of it to all godly actions not suffering the beleeuer to be either idle or vnfruitfull in the worke of the Lord. 3. Whereas both the former are but temporarie this is perpetuall and lasting the other rising vpon temporarie causes and reasons can last only for a time as when men for the pleasure of knowledge or the name of it by industrie attaine a great measure of vnderstanding in diuine things or when for note and glorie or commoditie true or apparent men professe the Gospell let but these grounds faile a little or persecution approch they lay the key vnder the doore giue vp house and bid farewell to all profession Thus many of Christs Disciples who thought they had truly beleeued in him and that many moneths ●hen they heard him speake of the eating of his flesh and drinking his blood went backe and walked with him no more But the matter is here farre otherwise seeing this faith of the elect hath the promise made good to it that the gates of hell shall neuer preuaile against it Vse This conclusion teacheth vs 1. That true faith is an infallible marke of election assuring the beleeuer as certenly of his saluation as if he were alreadie gathered vp to his fathers or as if he had a speciall reuelation For besides that here it is a grace impropriate to the elect the Sonne of God teacheth it Ioh. 6.37 All that the Father giueth mee shall come vnto mee that is all those whom the Father chuseth to saluation he giueth to the Sonne to saue for election is founded in Christ and those who are thus giuen vnto the Sonne by the Father come vnto the Sonne that is beleeue in him for so the 35. verse confoundeth them He that commeth vnto mee shall not hunger and hee that beleeueth in mee shal neuer thirst So as those that beleeue are giuen to the Sonne to saluation The same teacheth the Euangelist Act. 13.48 As many as were ordained to life beleeued and 2. Thess. 2.13 the Apostle maketh sanctification of the spirit and the faith of truth two infallible notes of election All that can be here of moment obiected is that a man cannot know certainly that he hath faith But that is false for Paul 2. Cor. 13.5 willing the Corinthians to examine and prooue themselues whether they were in the faith or no and whether Christ be in them or no taketh it for granted that a man may know that he hath faith and that Christ is in him for else were his exhortation idle Quest. But how may a man knowe that he hath this faith that so the beleeuer may rise vp to the assurance of his election Ans. There be diuerse notes and companions of it more easily discerned then it selfe is as first It purifieth the heart Act. 15.19 and will not suffer it to be taken vp with vncleane thoughts or vnlawfull lusts it ordereth the affections and cu●beth them as with bit and bridle and bendeth them with reuerence to loue desire reioyce in God and his image yea in nothing more or so much yea and by thus ordering the heart it doth also guide the words with wisedome for the good man out of the good treasure of his heart cannot but send out good speaches Secondly from the works of loue a man may conclude he hath faith Gal. 5.6 faith worketh by loue first to God then to man for Gods sake for it hath respect both to him that begate and him that is begotten Thirdly it is plentifull in prayers and
stedfastnesse And this promise is described 1. from the stabilitie of it in that the author of it is God who cannot lie 2. from the antiquitie of it gathered from the circumstance of time before the world began both which considerations most effectually commend this promise of God and also confirme this our hope which leaneth vpon it Quest. What kind of promise is this he●● mentioned Ans. The word signifieth such a promise as is meerely free and most absolute as the learned haue obserued and is opposed vnto all legall promises which are not free but conditionall and made good to the keeper for the keeping of the law for the man that doth the law shall liue by the lawe but euangelicall promises whereof this is the principall are no such compacts or bargaines but free without all antecedent inducement and all condition of doing any thing on our parts As for the condition of faith which some may here alleadge the answer is we receiue nothing for our faith nor the worthines or worke of it but by it as a hand or meanes we receiue the free promise of eternall life Quest. But how could God promise before the world began that is from euerlasting seeing there was none then to promise vnto Answ. By an vsuall figure of speach the thing decreed is put for the decree it selfe and the true sense is this God promised that is decreed to promise before the world began and in due time hath made that promise manifest in the word preached as in the next words The like phrases we finde 2. Tim. 1.9 He hath called vs with an holy calling before the world was Eph. 1.4 we were choosen before the foundation of the world that is God decreed then to choose vs. Neither will this speach seeme strange to him that considereth 1. that with God all times are present none former or latter to him 2. that hereby the Scriptures would note the certaintie and assurance of such a maine promise of such vse and expectation Out of which words we note three lessons 1. That life eternall is ours by free promise 2. That God cannot lie and therefore the promise is infallible 3. The admirable care and loue of God to man tendring his eternall good before he or the world was Doctr. 1. That eternall life is by promise appeareth by that vsuall metonimie in the Scriptures whereby it carrieth the name of the promise it selfe although indeede it be the thing promised Heb. 6.12 be followers of them who through faith and patience attaine the promise that is life promised This truth was liuely typified both in the sonnes of Abraham as also liuely shadowed in that earthly Canaan The sonnes of Abraham were Isaac and Ismael two sonnes but one heire and he the sonne of promise by which title alone he held his prerogatiue whereas Ismael was the first borne Hence was it vsuall with the Apostles to oppose the sonnes according to the flesh to the sonnes of promise And as it was then so now is there a seede of promise euen all faithfull men and women who are raised out of faithfull promises faithfully apprehended called elsewhere not sonnes onely but heires of promise that is not onely such as to whom the promises belong but such as claime their inheritance onely by adoption and promise and not otherwise In like manner the earthly Canaan was called the land of promise not onely because it was long before promised to Abraham and his posteritie many of whom for many generations onely so enioyed it but also because those that were brought to the possession of that good land had it not for their owne worthinesse they were charged to beware of such thoughts for God gaue them this power by stablishing his couenant with them figuring vnto vs no other thing but that this blessed rest prepared for the people of God the truth of that shadow is held in no other tenure but by vertue of the promise neither here nor hereafter adde hereunto that whatsoeuer grace the Lord powreth into the hearts of the elect they all beeing not onely steppes and degrees but pawnes also and pledges of eternall life looke out vnto the promise faith apprehendeth it hope expecteth it loue thankfully entertaineth it yea and all the rest are quickned and strengthened by it Nay in this regard the holy spirit of God from whom these streames of grace doe flowe is called the spirit of promise not onely in that he was promised to beleeuers as Ioel. 2. I will powre out my spirit but also because he sealeth vp vnto their hearts the certentie of this maine promise touching their saluation Obiect But life eternall is called a debt Ans. It is so of his promise not of our desert Herodias craued Iohn Baptists head as her due but not because by dauncing she had deserued it but because of the Kings promise And that these promises are free may appeare in the first and maine giuen to Adam when he was farre from deseruing it in whom was nothing to mooue to the Lord but to the cleane contrarie Vse 1. Whosoeuer pretend any other title to the inheritance besides the promise of God are of the bondwoman and Ismaelites descending of Agar The Apostle sheweth how we receiue the promise of the spirit that is freedome from the law sinne death hell and damnation namely through faith here is no merit but faith taking ●old Which condemneth that arrogant doctrine of the Church of Rome who will haue life eternall repaied to the merit of workes for their condignitie which is all one with the renouncing of the promise of mercie and to flie for releefe vnto the iustice of God Whereas the whole new Testament draweth vs from that legal righteousnesse and suffereth vs not to behold our best workes but God the promiser and Christ the mediator and our birth which brings our inheritance and our selues in the gifts of righteousnesse and remission of sinnes onely receiuers and in the matter of our iustification before God meere patients and no agents at all Vse 2. The strength of our hope standeth not vpon merits but vpon this same promise which confuteth another Popish error that to hope without merit is presumption but Abraham had another prop for his hope it was not merit that made him hope aboue hope but because he knew who had spoken he doubted not the promise through vnbeleefe Obiect 1. Ioh. 3.19 If we loue indeed and in truth we know that we are of the truth And therefore hope of saluation is to be fetched from the workes of loue Ans. The scope of the Apostle is to teach that true faith cannot stand without a good conscience not that the perswasion of it either onely thence ariseth or thereupon only dependeth or cannot be without works but that then we haue more full perswasion of our coniunction with God and soundnes in faith when together with the inward
the God of heauen For either Satan by his suggestion or his instruments or which is more to be feared we shall heare the whisperings and mutterings of our owne flesh saying Where is the God in whom ye trusted let not thy God deceiue thee any longer and with Iehoram Is not this euill from the Lord and shall I waite on him any longer to all which let vs be bold to answer with the Apostle I know whom I haue beleeued euen him whose bare word is aboue all bonds who neuer promised more then he was able to performe and neuer performed lesse then he promised faithfull is he that hath promised and no vnfaithfulnes of man can make him vnfaithfull The like truth and steadfastnesse carie all his denunciations and threats for neither when his messengers threaten wrath against the impenitent shall that be found a lying word but the sentence of the Iudge which cannot faile of execution True it is that the Lyon hath often roared but the beasts of the feild haue not trembled The Lord hath vttered his terrible voice against the vnrighteousnesse of men but his threatnings haue met with mockers who say euery vision is deferred and where is the promise of his comming with swarmes of Atheists who say there is no God but denie heauen hell and immortalitie of the soule in the meane time making leagues and couenants with hell and death with beastly Epicures who liue vnmooueably from their carnall delights and sensuall pleasures with heauie and dead hearted professours with whome they haue beene but as a blast all which sorts of men promise to themselues life although the Lord hath said of them they shall die and is not this to charge God expressely with a lie and as much as to say that he is not God But these shall know that the words the Lord hath spoken shall be done Ezek. 12.28 And as the Lord letteth his children see for the present that it is not in vaine to worship him so he letteth his enemies often feele euen before their death that all his words fall not to the ground when he meeteth them at euery corner with sundrie plagues and iudgements in their soules bodies estate name or freinds all which are the accomplishment of his word which shall not passe away when heauen and earth shall be dissolued Vse 2. Seeing God cannot lie let euery one of vs labour to expresse this vertue of God first and especially the minister in his place seeing he speaketh from God nay God speaketh by him he must therefore deliuer true sayings worthie of all men to be receiued that he may be able to say in his owne heart that which Paul spake of himselfe I speake the truth in Christ I lie not and iustifie that of his doctrine which Paul did of his writings the things which now I write vnto you behold I witnes before God that I lie not Now then is a minister a liar when he either speaketh false things as euery where the false Prophets are charged an example whereof we may see in Hananiah the sonne of Azur and Abab the sonne of Roliah and Zedekiah the sonne of Maaseiah who are said to prophesie lies in the name of the Lord in that when the Lords Prophets were commanded to carrie yokes about their neckes these would breake them and so caused the people to trust in a lie or else true things falsely misapplying that truth which they could not but vtter for this was euer the note of a false Prophet to make their hearts sad who should haue beene cheared and to speak peace to them against whom the Lord had proclaimed open warre so falsifying the word of the great God which iniurie no earthly King would suffer vnreuenged If a king should signe and send out his letters of death and execution against some archtraytor and the officer betrusted with them should serue them vpon some faithfull counseller who is neare and deare to his Prince so as the innocent and well-deseruing shal be put to death and the traytor suffered to liue in honour should not the life of this man so betrusted goe for the life of the other In like sort doth be who in Gods place whetteth his tongue against the righteous of the land and disgraceth the most forward in the wayes of God let him discourse against them in Scripture phrase and speak things in themselues neuer so true yet is he a lowde liar in the false applying of them and wresting them against them vpon whom the eyes of the Lord are for good and with liars shall be kept without the gates of the ●oly citie and that most iustly in that he hath not lied of men but of God himselfe whom so farre as his malice could extend he hath endeauoured to drawe into his sinne in making him a liar also like vnto himselfe 2. Euery priuate man must take vp that exhortation to cast off lying and speake euery man truth vnto his neighbour and that because it is a peece and sparkle of Gods image and a part of the newe man which is to be put on Which reason the Apostle vrgeth sundrie times in the epistles And indeede no man can more liuely resemble the image of his heauenly father then by the practise of truth in which one word is included that whole image of God which standeth in righteousnesse and holines as Ioh. 8.44 the angels stood not in the truth As on the contrarie no man can more liuely resemble the deuil then by lying for he is a lyar from the beginning and the father of lies True it is there be many defences made for sundrie sorts of lies which we shall haue better occasion to scan in the processe of this Epistle but let all such as would haue themselues marked with the stampe of Gods children knowe that they onely can haue assurance of the pardon of sinnes in whose spirit is no guile and those onely shall rest in the holy mountaine that speake the truth from their hearts and they alone shall stand with the lambe on mount Sion and sing the newe song before the throne who haue no guile found in their monthes Doctr. 3. The last generall obseruation out of the former words teacheth what an infinite and free loue the Lord embraceth his elect withall in that be decreeth from euerlasting whatsoeuer he doth for them in the due season of it Hence it is that not onely in this place but thorough the Scriptures we may read that all the stayres whereby we climbe to heauen were laid by God before the world began If we looke at Gods predestination and election the names are written in the book of life from euerlasting Iacob was loued not onely before he had done good but before he was to doe it If to the ende which is the kingdome that is prepared from the foundations of the world If to the meanes which is Christ he is the
not in the change of the minde but know it that no time is thine but the present and it is little better then Poperie to professe free will in this matter it is too much thou hast beene deceiued in the time past deceiue not thy selfe also in time to come Well said one God hath left man time past to repent of and time present to repent in but the time to come he hath reserued in his owne hands Doct. 3. The manifestation of saluation is to be sought for in the preaching of the word Which point is plaine in that the preaching of the word is an ordinance of God 1. to make Christ knowne in whose name alone saluation is to be had 2. to beget and confirme faith in the heart by which alone as by an hand we apprehend and applie him with his merits to our saluation The former the Apostle affirmeth Ephes. 3.8 the vnsearcheable riches of Christ was by preaching made knowen to the Gentiles and Coloss. 1.27 God would make knowne what is the riches which riches is Christ in you whome we preach For the 2. that faith is wrought by the word preached see Rom. 10.14 and 1. Cor. 1.21 By the foolishnesse of preaching it pleaseth God to saue such as beleeue in that herein he both offereth Christ vnto vs and giueth vs faith by which we receiue him 2. This truth appeareth in that wheresoeuer the Lord had a people to call to saluation there he sent his Prophets and Apostles whom he appointed so long there to stay till his worke was finished and then sent them elsewhere when Paul was resisted and blasphemed by the Iewes at Corinth he pronounced them guil●ie of their owne blood and purposed to turne to the Gentiles but the Lord suffered him not but caused him to staie there a yeare and six moneths longer because he had many people in the cittie so Paul and Timothie hauing gone through Phrygia and Galatia were forbidden by the holy Ghost to preach in Asia and by a vision were assured that the Lord called them to preach in Macedonia Which direction of them by the spirit to some places and restrayning them from other argued that they carried with them the meanes of conuerting such as whom the Lord at that time purposed to call In this ordinance is it called the word of faith 1. Tim. 4.6 deliuered by exhortation and doctrine vers 13. in this embassadge is it called the the word of reconciliation and thus preached is called the Gospel of the kingdome of God Mark 1.14 Iohn came preaching the Gospel of the kingdome of God powerfully raysing vp men thereunto and the Gospel of our saluation Ephes. 1.13 Vse 1. The preaching of the word is the greatest blessing that the Lord bestoweth vpon any people and such a one as God in his anger depriues that people of against whom he intendeth a plague the former appeareth in that great care of Christ himselfe who before and after his ascension prouiding for the good of his bodie the Church as the speciall gift and loue-token he could leaue behind him appointed Apostles Euangelists and after them Pastors and teachers to continue to his comming againe The effects also shew the power and price of the blessing which are reconciliation with God sanctification of the spirit mortification of the flesh the life of God all which are brought by the reuealing of Iesus Christ. The latter is euident in Amos 5.13 that when the Lord is about to bring euill times he maketh the prudent to keepe silence Both which shew vnto vs that the Lord hath opened vnto vs in this Church and land his chiefest treasure in that he hath put the barres into the rings of the Arke whereby his glorie is carried throughout our countrie and in that he hath lifted vp his cloud in the sight of all our people to direct vs in all our iourneies he hath not dealt so freely with euery nation neither haue they knowen his lawes Psal. 44. last Vse 2. Those people are bound to much thankfulnes and dutie among whom the Lord hath planted a preaching Ministerie by which men may be directed in the path of saluation It is a blessing we are to wish and pray for to all Gods people and bewaile their want that haue it not The former we are enioyned by the expresse precept of Christ considering the greatnesse of the haruest The latter by his example who mourned to see people as sheepe scattered without a shepheard Obiect But people may doe well inough if they haue the word read publikely and they can read it at home Ans. My purpose is not by establishing preaching to derogate from reading the manifold fruite which accreweth by reading the Scriptures hath otherwise taught mee together with the custome of the Prophets Apostles and Christ himselfe of which I haue elsewhere expressed the principall But the things which God hath ioyned together let no man separate In the old Testament the Levites must read the booke of the law giue the sence and cause the people to vnderstand the reading In the New after the reading of the law there was expounding Christ himselfe after the lecture of the law had a booke giuen him found the prophecie closed the booke sate downe expounded it so did the Apostles Paul and Barnabas Act. 13.15 Thus hath the Lord afforded his Church a further benefit and more full blessing a more ordinarie and principall meanes to beget faith and repentance and to lead men along vnto saluation by a more ful manifestation of the promise of life which is here said to be by preaching that is by explaning and applying things read to the heart and affection This is the labour in word and doctrine commended vnto vs that are the Lords builders and laborers who in raysing the spirituall walls must imitate Nehemiahs builders euery one of whom in repayring the walls of Ierusalem must hold the trowell in one hand and the weapon in the other in like manner should euery Minister exhort with whose some doctrine there is the vse of the trowell and improoue the gainsayer which is the vse of the sword to want which ordinance is to want that which the wisedome of the Lord thought most necessarie for the welfare of his Church who would not haue his people sticke in the outside but pearce into the depth of his wisdom reuealed neither content themselues with a bulk of corne but to get it troden out nor with bread in the lumpe but deuided Whether therefore their estate may be good in such a want or no we are not so much to sit as iudges vpon them as become petitioners for them that their want may be supplied seeing the word hath taught vs that where vision faileth people perish And for priuate reading would God men were better acquainted with it then they are yet although the Iewes had the law priuately at home the
2. More specially by grace of those who are adopted and renewed by grace and thus God is properly our father in heauen and no man is to be called father in earth Secondly when God is personally called father then it is to be taken for the first person and this title is giuen principally to the first person in Trinitie 1. because he is the Father of the second person the word by nature and by eternall generation 2. because he is Father to Christ in respect of his manhood not as to other men by nature or grace of adoption but by personall vnion the humane nature subsisting in the person of the word 3. because from both these followeth that by Adoption he becommeth the father of all the elect beeing members and making vp the bodie of Christ. And this is the respect wherein God is tearmed Father in this place both because it hath relation to the second person here nominated as also because in prayer we must repaire to God the Father in Christ our head and Mediator And our Lord Iesus Christ Christ is Lord in himselfe as God and Lord ouer all blessed for euer both in that he giueth essence and susteining to all things as also possesseth all things and ruleth euen the most powerfull and glorious of all creatures and is called Lord of the Angels much more ouer the Deuils themselues Againe he is our Lord 1. as Mediatour we beeing his inheritance giuen him of his Father 2. as a Redeemer purchasing vs beeing captiues and thralls to Satan 3. as a head of his Church quickning and gouerning the whole bodie of it whether militant or triumphant 4. in regard of his power and dominion for to him all power is committed in heauen and in earth who hath put all things vnder his feete in him we hold all things as in capite and to him we owe all homage and subiection in all obedience both actiue and passiue Quest. But how can Christ be a Lord seeing he is euery where called a seruant Ans. Christ considered in the office of Mediatourship is after a speciall manner a seruant of his Father and so his Father calleth him for my seruant Dauids sake and Behold my seruant because he faithfully serued him in the worke of redemption in that he was made man came into the world fulfilled the law prayed vnto his Father and was made obedient euen to the death yet all the while of his seruice he remained a Lord in himselfe and by his seruice became the Lord of his Church redeemed ones in a speciall manner Our Sauiour There is no other name giuen but this Obiect The Father and the holy Ghost saue also Answ. Although all outward workes of the Trinitie which make for our comfort and saluation are vndeuided as beeing one and coworking yet in performing them we must obserue an order among them the Father is the fountaine from whom the Sonne for whom as a meritorious cause the holy Ghost by whom we communicate of all blessings so all three saue but the Father by sending the Sonne the Sonne by paying the ransome the holy Ghost by applying it so all create redeeme sanctifie yet obseruing this order and manner of working when the workes are more personally attributed vnto them creation is ascribed to the Father not excluding the sonne and holy Ghost redemption to the Sonne and sanctification to the holy Ghost Which order is rather here to be obserued because our Apostle expresseth it in his prayer for these graces when he craueth them both from the Father and the Sonne not excluding the holy Ghost whereby we are taught how to direct our suits also namely that the Father by the Spirit through his Sonne our Lord Iesus Christ would enrich vs with grace and the fruits of it Obiect But there are other sauiours as Ioshua and other Iudges and Kings yea Prophets and Ministers are called sauiours Ans. 1. These all were men and as men saued But of Christ it is said Behold our God he shall saue vs. 2. Some of them as Iudges were typicall sauiours sauing 1. the bodies 2. of one people the Iewes 3. from temporall death and oppression but Christ saueth the bodies and soules of all beleeuing Iewes and Gentiles from hell and condemnation 3. Others as Prophets and Ministers are onely ministeriall and instrumentall sauiours not properly onely for sundrie causes the worke of the efficient is ascribed to the instrument whom the Lord vseth in publishing this saluation but Christ alone saueth by meriting and paying the price and bringing home to the heart this redemption Obiect But we haue yet sinne in vs and therefore are not saued from it Answ. We are saued euen for the present from the wrath and poyson of it in part for euer from the damnation of it so as the strength of it is gone This is the meaning of this salutation which beeing a prayer sheweth vs both of what kinde our salutations ought to be in which we would testifie our loue to whom we write namely to wish them the best blessings as also in what manner not sending formall salutations without feeling abstracting curtesie from conscience but they must proceede from a religious and reuerent affection of the heart for euery prayer ought to come from the heart and as hauing God himselfe a witnes of the truth of the spirit in such wishes as Rom. 1.9 and Phil. 1.8.9 Now the principall lessons in this prayer are two 1. That the free and euerlasting grace of God in Christ is the foundation of all blessings spirituall and temporall 2. Peace is the fruite of the grace and mercie of God Doctr. 1. The grace of God is the whole sufficiencie of his people the first middle and last cause of euery good thing conuaied vnto them or issuing from them not once did the Lord enforce this point vpon his owne people teaching them by things temporall their spirituall estate and condition Deut. 7.7 The Lord set his loue vpon you and chose you not because you were moe in number for you were the fewest but because he loued you cap. 9.4.6 Say not in thine heart because of my righteousnes the Lord hath giuen me this good land for thou art a stiffnecked people and were they not yet further off from meriting and procuring to themselues spirituall blessings and that heauenly Canaan and euerlasting rest prepared for the people of God and if we consider our condition before this grace be reueiled and shine vpon vs are not we in our blood when the Lord first couereth vs with his skirts and no eie but his pitieth vs he calleth vs with Adam out of our thickets when we runne from him and are hiding our selues then finding vs when we would not be found Vse 1. To confute the Popish doctrine which depresseth this grace of God and endureth not that the castle of a mans saluation should be altogether founded without
counsell is he that is able to receiue this let him receiue it But the true meaning is that the minister ought to be content with one wife at once and not defile himselfe by polygamie and this precept was not without ground for among both Iewes and Gentiles the custome of polygamie had so farre preuailed that it was become as naturall to marrie many wiues at once now the Apostle perceiuing that custome had taken away the sense of the sinne and placing Titus to redresse things amisse he beginneth at this great enormitie and prohibiteth him to choose such into office in the Church as had giuen such note of an inordinate life Quest. But was it lawfull for other men to haue more wiues then one at once seeing the precept is giuen onely to ministers Ans. No and yet the minister here onely inhibited directly as whom he dealeth with but the people herein also so farre as his example was propounded to their imitation in the obseruation of the whole law of God For here we may fitly obserue these 2. rules for our directions 1. That all the vertues which are required of common Christians must be much more in the minister as euerie thing in the sanctuarie was double to that which was common as the cubit the shekel of the sanctuarie 2. That all the morall vertues required and expressed in the life of the Minister must be imitated of common Christians who must follow him so farre as he followes Christ and in his generall dutie see their owne both of them hauing but one way to heauen So much of the meaning The doctrines are two 1. The mariage of ministers is a lawfull and holy ordinance of God 2. Polygamie was euer a thing blame-worthie euen in the best Doct. 1. Seeing that we are cast into the last times wherein the spirits of error shall be more rise then euer and 2. that many shall depart and giue heede vnto them and 3. that it is enioyned euerie faithfull teacher to arme his people against them it is no lesse then our dutie to warrant out of this place the mariage of Ministers against all the impious decrees of Papists who that they should not want that note of Antichrist fore prophecied namely the contempt of women vnder a semblance of sanctitie and chastitie as Hierome expoundeth it and least their doctrine should not otherwise appeare to be as it is a doctrine of deuills 1. Tim. 4.1.3 haue prohibited mariage to all orders of their Clergie and admit none into their orders without a vowe of perpetuall single life from which if they euer after depart they depriue them of all dignities cut them off as apostates from the faith and adiudge them if they iustifie that opinion euen to death it selfe Quest. But why should they depriue themselues of their libertie and the comfort of that estate it seemeth to be meere conscience that should lead them to vndergoe such a burden Ans. I hope to make it appeare that it is nothing lesse then conscience enformed by the word by the answer of their chiefe allegations In the meane time among sundrie other obserue three maine beames which beare vp the this Popish roofe 1. grosse hypocrisie causing them to make a shew of greater holinesse and chastitie then all others in which regard we may as well yeeld them the title of Puritans as they challenge the thing it selfe 2. presumptuous pride for by th●ir doctrine hereby they seeke for a further perfection then that which the Law requireth of them 3. the maine of all is humane policie for hereby they keepe their wealth together which 1. maketh them able to maint●ine their royall estate 2. it maketh the world to admire them such is their ●ompe and glorie 3. by their great promotions and dignities they a●●●re and ally vnto them the greatest nobles of the earth by whom they strengthen their estate so as neuer could mans wit deuise a surer way to keepe their wealth which euery eie may see to be the proppe of their greatnesse and which by the marryage of all their orders might quickly be dissipated and dispersed 2. by this policie they haue their vassals and instruments whom they must dispatch with death and deadly things about them into all countreys more free and prompt to the vndertaking and accomplishment of any misc●iefe These I take to be their strongest foundations of their tottering building as for other which they vent out to the world they are but shewes and pre●ences and sandie grounds of foolish builders as now we are to manifest Ob. First out of the old Testament they alledge diuerse things as Leu. 11. Be ye holy for I am holy and ye that carie the holy vessels of the Lord be holy and the Priests and Leuites in ministring their turnes before the Lord must abstaine from their wiues and Abimelech would not giue Dauids young men hallowed bread vnlesse they had abstained from women and they that eate the Passeouer had their loynes girt which is the seate of lust Therefore none in orders may marrie Ans. 1. In such allegations they are long and tedious but of which I may truely say as the Stoiks of diseases if they be long they are light And to beginne with their last symbolicall argument we will lightly passe it as worthy of something else rather then an answer both because symbolicall diuinitie wil beare no argument but also in that they haue not prooued nor can that all they that eate the Passeouer were Priests neither regard they that they were presently to depart out of Egypt and therefore needed to trusse vp their long and loose garments As for that of Abimelech 1. Dauids seruants were souldiers not Priests and therefore is it impertinent 2. they were such as had wiues how can we conclude from them that other men ought to haue none 3. it was a question which the Lord would haue Abimelech aske Dauid and that by oracle as appeareth v. 11. concerning some legall defilement which euen by touching some wo●en might debarre them from touching the holy bread 4. let them ● so conclude that no Israelites might marrie because at the giuing of the law they must abstaine 3. dayes from their wiues In the three former allegations they are not vnlike an inexpert musitian who harpeth altogether vpon some one iarring string and so marres all the musicke for all of them are laid vpon this vnsound and vngodly position which they take for graunted that marriage is an vncleane and vnholy thing for this is the tenour of all their conclusions be holy therfore abstaine from marriage Which heresie of Montanus and the Manichee● Pope Syricius and his successors haue fought manfully to maintaine 〈◊〉 of that place of the Apostle Those that are in the flesh cannot please God as though they had neuer read that God was the institutor of it and not as a remedie but when there was no maladie in the
true it is that rash anger against the teacher neuer accomplisheth the righteousnesse of God but causeth men to cast off the care of that righteousnes which God in the Ministerie enioyneth and vrgeth vpon them Wherefore laying apart all filthines and superfluitie of maliciousnesse let vs receiue with meeknes that is with silence moderation of mind and teacheablenes the ingrafted word for vpon whom else can that holy spirit of God rest but vpon the humble and meeke and none but these doth the Lord teach in his way Vse 3. Let no man minister nor people giue place to this vnruly and troublesome affection of rash anger which must be pleased in euery thing be it neuer so vniust or else the whole man is enflamed with the vnnaturall heate of this raging feuer of the mind The truth of which appeareth in Abner when Ishbosheth King of Israel asked him why he so boldly went in into his Fathers Concubines what faith he am I a doggs head that thou shouldst say thus vnto mee and yet euery man saw the vnrighteousnes of the action besides himselfe Besides that the dangerous fruits of it are daily discouered in suddaine quarrells and barbarous mischeifes Notorious was the effect of it in Theodosius otherwise a good Emperour who vpon occasion of a seditious tumult wherein a few of his officers were slaine called all the citizens of Thessalonica into the theatre as though he had had to shew them some solemnitie and there commanded his souldiers to fall vpon them and slew of them both innocent and guiltie to the number of about seauen thousand for which fact Ambrose excommunicated him and brought him to publike repentance and humiliation How cursed was the rage of Simeon and Levi who most treacherously and barbarously for one offender brought so much innocent blood vpon themselues How fearefully did Dauid forget himselfe in vowing the death not of Nabal only who was churlish towards him but of all his guiltles family who were so well affected towards him Obiect Oh but I am of such a nature that I cannot but be angrie would to God I could bridle mine hastie anger Ans. 1. A Christian must haue more then nature in him grace must teach him when and how and how long to be angrie it breaketh not meeknes for trifling occasions but in causes of importance especially in case of Gods dishonour in our owne great damages of name goods or estate and the iniuries of others especially the Saints of God in all which cases the Scriptures are plentifull in examples Againe grace must moderate anger and suffereth it not vpon any pretext to degenerate into rancour and malice not to wrack it selfe vpon the person but the sinne nor for one person to hate any other as commonly for the weaknes of some one professor all are hated nor to puffe vp but to humble himselfe in the weaknes of another nor to reioyce but sorrow in their falls nor to reuenge but compassionatly to correct considering himselfe And for the time grace suffereth not the heart to giue place to the deuill nor the sunne to set vpon our wrath much lesse to make it our bedfellow 2. The meanes to bridle and staie this rash and vnaduised anger stand partly in meditations partly in practises For the former 1. Meditate on the prouidence of God without which not the least greife or iniurie could befall vs for euen the least is a portion of that cup which Gods hand reacheth vnto vs to drinke of And this would be as water to quench this inflammation as may be seene in Dauid when Shemei railed on him God hath bid him rayle and Iob looked not at the Sabeans and theeues but the Lord hath taken away blessed be his name and Ioseph accused not his brethren but comforted them after their fathers death and said The Lord sent mee into Egypt before you 2. On the patience and lenity of God who with much mercie suffereth vessells ordained vnto destruction How long did he suffer the old world how loath was he to strike if in an hundred and twentie yeares he could haue reclaimed them And adde herunto the meeknes of our Lord Iesus Christ who hath commanded vs to learne it of him his voice was not heard in the streetes a bruised reed he would not breake how long bare he with Iudas beeing no better then a Deuill within his family that euen when he was meditating his sinne he was loath to discouer him plainly to be the man but hee that dippeth with mee and one of you shall betraie me not expressely noting Iudas and when he was acting his sinne Christ refused not to kisse him but called him freind and vttered such words as might haue wrung out not teares but blood out of the most rockie heart of any but the sonne of perdition 3. On the vnbounded measure of Gods mercie whose vertue his child must endeauour to expresse God forgiueth to that man which iniureth thee much more then thou cansts he forgiueth him infinite sinnes and canst not thou passe by one offence and thou hast more reason for thou knowest not his heart nor his intention it may be he meant better vnto thee neither art thou acquainted with the strength of his temptation which perhaps was such as would haue ouerthrowne thy selfe nor the reason why the Lord suffereth him to be ouercome and fall by it And yet if all this cannot bridle the headines of this vile lust apply this mercie of God to thy selfe thou standest in need of a sea of Gods mercie for the washing of so many foule offences and wilt not thou let one drop fall vpon thy brother to forbeare and forgiue in trifling wrongs 4. Vpon the danger of retaining wrath which is an high degree of murther thou praiest to be forgiuen as thou forgiuest the promise is forgiu● 〈…〉 you the threatning is that iudgement mercilesse shall be to him that sheweth not mercie and be sure that what measure thou metest vnto others shall be measured to thee againe and returned into thine own bosome And for the practises 1. In thine anger make some delay before thou speakest or dost any thing which point of wisedome nature hath taught her clients to obserue That of Socrates to his seruant is better knowne then practised I had smitten thee but that I was angrie and memorable is that answer of Athenodorus to Augustus desiring him to leaue him some memorable document and precept aduised him that when he was angrie he should repeat ouer the Greeke Alphabet before he attempted any speach or action But although this be a good meanes yet will it be to no purpose without the heart be purged of disorder 2. Apply to thy heart by faith the death of Christ to the crucifying of this lust of the flesh nothing else can cleanse the heart but the blood of Iesus Christ who as he was crucified so they that are his haue also crucified the flesh and the
head thy sword shall pearce thine owne heart Goliahs owne sword shall sunder his head and bodie Haman shall hansell his owne gallowes the Madianites that little feared to be slaine by the Israelites shall be slaine one by another For it is iust with God saith Paul to render tribulation to those that afflict his Saints that as they secretly hatch mischeife against the godly so the Lord should secretly deuise and prepare righteous iudgement against themselues And surely many a man there is that carrieth secret plagues about him some in his inward estate some in his outward some in his bodie some in his soule some in himselfe some in his with which he strugleth and toyleth and turneth himselfe to many causes and meanes of his harmes and it may be to some sinnes as causes but neuer espie this curse passed from the mouth of God against his mallice toward good men and so toyleth himselfe altogether in vaine Were these things written in the hearts of men how could it be but they should stand in awe and dread with wicked Balaam who otherwise was willing inough to curse where God hath blessed 3. Let vs learne to see our inbred hatred of good men at least our want of loue vnto them and seeing it bewaile it and bewayling it reforme it Let our louing affection cause vs to ioyne our selues to their societie among whom good is to be gotten Obiect Oh but this is a toyle indeed if we goe amongst them they are so precise we may not take the least libertie we must speak of nothing but Scripture matters Ans. If thou hadst the life of Christ working in thee and that delight in God which beseemeth a sonne or daughter of God it would be thy meate and drinke to meditate speake and spend thy thoughts and time in holy things and thinke such times happily gained from thy vanitie yea from thy lawfull calling or if thou didst fauour the things of the spirit as thou doest the things of the flesh that which is indeed the freedome of a Christian would not be such a yoke and burthen the spirit of Christ would make thee willing thus to spend thy time and become in no company neither idle nor vnprofitable and much lesse vaine or licentious and take this withall that gracious words are neuer vnwelcome but to a gracelesse heart Obiect But I see no such good in their meetings Ans. Thou maist want wisedome to draw it out of them or else thou seest it not because thou wantest eyes as the soudiers sought Christ euen in speaking vnto him or else they seeme simple and weake men as the Church is blacke but comely the sunne lookes vpon them and their infirmities falls and afflictions make them outwardly appeare as the tents of Kedar and vpon these thine eyes gaze altogether yet as the Church is glorious within so are the members in respect of sanctitie and ornaments of the soule which weighed in thy ballance are found very light I exhort therefore all those that would encrease in grace that they linke their soules to such as feare God so Dauid made himselfe a companion of all them that feared the Lord and the next words seeme to include the reason and which keepe thy statutes the statutes of the Lord are in their hearts in their mouthes before their eyes and in their hands This will keepe them from entring into the way of the wicked and from beeing so easily plucked away with the error of the wicked But to such as would faine be acquainted with an hellish life before hand let them frequent other companies then this where God is not present nor his spirit nor his loue but the spirit of mischiefe of swearing swilling vncleannes and all hostillitie against God where in stead of men are Deuills incarnate in whose minds a● in a shop Satan is euer framing and forging vnholy and vncleane thoughts and desires and according to the abundance of their hearts their mouthes speake lewd things and their hands act all manner of wickednesse hardly canst thou come neere them but they will infect thee but keepe with them and thou wilt be like them thy bodie is not fitter to receiue the infection of the plague from a person that hath a plague sore running vpon him then thy soule to be deadly poysoned and infected by such societie Wise The Papists out of their vulgar translation abuse this word to improoue the marriage of Ministers and most improperly turne and translate it chast or continent whereas the word properly signifyeth a man of a sound minde that is prudent circumspect one that carrieth a continuall consultation within himselfe for the guiding of his whole course in such moderation as wisedome may appeare in his speeches gestures countenance and whole life Besides that the Apostle requireth the selfe same vertue of married wiues 1. Tim. 3.11 and of all young men of what profession soeuer whom I hope they meane not to debarre of marriage How wise and circumspect a man the Minister need to be will appeare if we consider either the workes of his calling or his person and place it selfe For the former what wisedome is required of him who is to vtter the word of wisedome whereby both himselfe and his people should be made wise to saluation and so to speake this word as becometh him to speake that in nothing he may be blamed what a wise steward must he be that must giue euery seruant within the house of God his owne portion and that in due season how experienced had that man need to be who is as Gods owne mouth to separate betweene the pretious and the vile how circumspect and warie least his people beeing as lambs among wolues should fall into the aduersaries hands and beeing be guiled by words of humane wisedome so peruerted And for the latter their verie persons and places require euen the wisedome of serpents to walke circumspectly as persons watching vnto euery step where they meane to set their foote 1. Because they are lights set vpon hills the eies of the world are vpon them euery thing in them is marked as they are eyes to espie other mens manners so are other mens eies much more vpon them either for imitation or calumniation 2. A sober and circumspect carriage not onely shutteth the mouth of the enemie who seeketh occasion to blaspheme the glorious Gospel and through the sides of the Minister to smite Christ himselfe but remooueth a iust scandale whereby many are contented to abide without the Church namely the dissolute and disordered course of the teachers of religon which maketh euen the religion taught by such stinke and become loathsome to numbers who gladly lay hold of such occasions to be of no religion at all and therefore if women must so walke as that by their honest conuersation others may be wonne ought not men much more and yet most of all Ministers 3. Such a wise and graue carriage getteth reuerence
of iniquitie and therefore depart from me Holy This holinesse respecteth God himselfe his worship his holy things as the word sacraments prayer his sabbaths his sanctuarie in all which the Minister ought to be an example of holinesse and yet not onely in these but in his whole conuersation also The commandement is generall to all Gods people be ye holy for I am holy which requireth both the internall sanctification of the heart and the externall symbolls and profession of the same But more necessarie is it yet for the Minister to be cloathed with these robes of holinesse both that inward which standeth in getting and keeping faith and good conscience and that outward which consisteth in a religious and strict course of life And yet this must not be so taken as that holinesse is so essentiall to a minister as that he cannot be a Minister that wanteth it for Iudas may be a disciple and a deuill too but that it is a dangerous estate vnto himselfe and hurtfull to others for him to be destitute of it How necessarie it is for men to put off their shoes that is their vnsanctified lusts and affectons before they come to stand vpon such holy ground I will take a little paines out of the Scriptures to demonstrate and then make some vse of it To omit the extraordinarie ministerie and Ministers of the old Testament as the Prophets some of whom were sanctified in the wombe and others had their lippes touched with a coale from the altar to remooue their pollution the ordinarie Ministers in the sanctuarie and temple were 1. Leuites 2. Priests 3. the high Priest Many things were required in the setting apart to their service the lowest of these which were after a sort furthest remooued from God whose seat was in the Sanctuarie but many more to the sanctification of the higher and those that approached nearer or next of all As first the Leuites were inferiour to the Priests as whose office was to serue vnder them to helpe to carrie the tabernacle and vtensils of it to keepe watch for the safetie of it together with the holy vessels and instruments to helpe them in killing the beasts for sacrifice although they might not meddle in offering them vnto the Lord yea as inferiours to the superious they paid vnto the Priests the tenth of their tenths And yet what a number of rites and ceremonies did the Lord enioyne to be performed before these could be admitted to these inferiour seruices first in the tabernacle and after in the Temple As first they must be of one peculiar tribe peculiar by Gods owne election for the first borne of all Israel Numb 3.13 2. Whereas the congregation was not numbred but from 20. yeares old and aboue Num. 1.3 for till then they were not apt to goe to warre the Leuites must be numbred euerie male from a moneth old and aboue Num. 3.15 not because they were then fit for seruice but that they must then be brought before the Lord and set apart to his seruice euen from the beginning of their daies 3. They must not be presented before the Lord before the 33. day of their age for till then they were legally impure and vnsanctified Leu. 12.3 but after this time they must growe on to the thirteth yeare which was the first yeare of this seruice Numb 4.43 at which time they must be taken from among the children of Israel and set apart to the Lord Num. 8.6 And further in this separation there were two things more for 1. they must be purged and then consecrated Their purification was 1. by sprinkling purification water vpon them 2. by washing their clothes 3. by shauing the haire of their whole bodies 4. by preparing two bullocks the one for a burnt offring the other for a sinne offering for them see for these Num. 8.8 Their consecration stood likewise in foure things 1. After all this preparation in drawing them neerer to the Lord v. 9. 2. In the imposition of the Israelites hands vpon them freely giuing them from themselues to the Lord and his seruice vers 10. 3. In Aarons receiuing them of the people and shaking them before the Lord v. 11. as such as now being mancipated to his seruice were to goe and come at his becke as also such as who daily were to shake off that corruption which hindred thē in their callings 4. By laying their hands on the heads of the two bullocks prepared acknowledging the expiation of their owne sinnes and in way of thankefulnesse now wholly offring themselues vnto that seruice When all these rites were performed they were admitted to administer and not before Secondly the Priests the sonnes of Aaron whose office was to teach the people the doctrine receiued from God to pray for themselues and the people to blesse them and offer sacrifices for them had yet more state in their consecration for besides many of the former rites as imposition of hands their shaking before the Lord and the sacrifices common with the former 1. In the election of such a one more care was had no deformed man no man wanting or abounding with any member no blind or blemished person might come so neere vnto the Lord. 2. In his consecration he must not haue his garments washed as the other but must haue newe garments put vpon him Exod. 28.41 neither must he be sprinkled as the Leuites with holy water but with holy oyle and blood from the altar and thus must he be consecrated seuen dayes Exo. 29.30 3. In his office he may not lament for the dead of his people no not for the Prince but onely for those that are neerest of blood in his owne house Leuit. 21.3 he may not marrie a whore nor a woman diuorced or one polluted v. 7. the reason of all this is because he must be holy to the Lord. 4. In his failing and offending he must haue more clensing then many other men before he cā be admitted vnto his seruice for his sinne cannot be put away without a whole bullocke Leu. 4.2 and no more was required for the expiating of the sinne of the whole congregation v. 14. and the blood of the bullocke must be sprinkled seuen times before the Lord for the Priest as well as for the whole congregation implying that the Lord requireth as much sanctitie in one Priest as in all the people Thirdly as for the high Priest both in that he was a more eminent type of Christ as also came nearer the Lord then all the other euen into the holy of holies he must haue peculiar garments made by cunning men filled with the spirit of wisedome euen beautifull and glorious Exod. 28.3 in these he must be consecrated in these he must stand before the Lord in one part of which namely the frontlet which was put vpon his forehead must be written holinesse to the Lord that by the Lords appointment that might be most conspicuous Againe
into admiration to see the gifts giuen them knowing them to be vnlearned Act. 4.13 or else they were most fearce and bloodie enemies as Paul whom the Hebrewes could not beleeue that he was become a Preacher of that truth he had persecuted vntill the Lord gaue further testimonie of him Act. 9.26 3. The matter of this word is an euerlasting truth the Law an eternall rule of righteousnesse as ancient as God himselfe the Gospel an euerlasting Gospel Rev. 14.6 containing promises of eternall truth which shall haue their stabillitie after heauen and earth shall be no more besides such assured articles of faith concerning God in the three persons and the Church of God that if an Angel from heauen should come and teach another doctrine he must be accursed Moreouer such diuine prophecies and predictions together with the exact accomplishments although some hundreths yea thousands of yeares passed betweene as by this one part sufficient euidence may be gathered of the faithfulnesse and steadfastnes of the whole 4. The forme of it which is the conformitie of it with God himselfe maketh it appeare that if God be faithfull this his word must needs also be so in that it resembleth him in his omnipotencie for this power and arme of God neuer returneth in vaine but doth all the worke of it In his wisedome giuing most perfect and sure directions resoluing all doubtfull cases and making wise vnto saluation In his puritie and perfection beeing an vndefiled and perfect law In his omniscience it searcheth the heart discouereth the thoughts deuideth betweene the marrowe and bone Heb. 4.12 In his iudgement acquitting beleeuers to whom it is a sweete sauour of life to life condemning Infidels both here and much more at the last day Ioh. 13.48 In his truth and veritie as here and Coloss. 1.5 it is called the word of truth 5. The ends shew the certaintie and faithfulnes of it it beeing the onely meanes of regeneration 1. Pet. 1.21 of begetting faith Rom. 10. and consequently both of freeing men from hell and damnation and of assuring them of that freedome the onely word that can supplie sound and firme consolation yea setled and assured comfort vnto distressed consciences none of which ends could it euer attaine if it selfe were vnsound and vncertaine Now as it carrieth with it all these grounds so are there without it a nūber more wherby we may confirme the same truth as 1. It is the foundatiō of the church Eph. 2.20 against which if hell gates could euer preuaile the Church were vtterly sunke 2. Hereunto hath the Lord tyed his Church as to an infallible direction to the law and to the testimonie without which there is nothing but errour and wandring ye erre not knowing the Scriptures 3. This truth hath beene aboue all other oppugned by Satan Antichrist heretikes tyrants yet neuer a whit of it was euer diminished Salomons bookes may be lost but not these of the true Salomon Iesus Christ. That the Scriptures were burnt in the Temple and that Ezra composed a newe Scripture is to be reiected as a Iewish fable Ezra might put together parcells of Scripture scattered and compose them into bookes But where were Ezechiel Daniel Zacharie Hagge or what were they doing to suffer all the Scriptures to be lost in their times or where was the watchfull eie of God could it winke or nodde or not see or not preuent the perishing of his word vtterly from the Church 4. This word hath beene so certenly sealed in the hearts of the elect of all ages that where it once was harboured in truth it could neuer be shaken out by any kind of most exquisite torture and torment All which confirme the doctrine propounded most plentifully Obiect But some bookes of the canonicall Scriptures are perished Answ. Many indeede are reckoned but they were either not canonicall or the substance of them is still contained in the canonicall Obiect But if God himselfe had written the whole Scripture as he did the law and had deliuered it to men as he did the tables to Moses then had there beene no doubt of the certaintie of it but it was written by men Ans. Yet is it as certaine as if God had immediately writ it with his owne finger for holy men spake and writ as they were mooued by the holy Ghost not as men but Gods instruments guided by extraordinarie immediate and infallible assistance of the spirit Obiect In 1. Cor. 7.12 Paul saith I speake not the Lord. Ans. The plaine sense in one word is I giue counsell in this case of mariage by collection out of the word of which the word hath not deliuered any expresse lawe and no more can be gathered of it Vse This doctrine is of speciall vse both vnto teachers and hearers vnto teachers it affoardeth a twofold instruction 1. if it be so faithfull a word to hold it fast 2. to hold themselues fast vnto it For the former the teacher must looke that he lay such hold on it as he neuer suffer it to be wrested from him no danger no fauour no power no subtiltie may force him to vnfasten his hold much lesse goe backe and recoile from it or play fast and loose with it or so carrie it as one that would swim betweene two waters but carie it and hold it out as faithfully and constantly as becommeth such a faithfull word Ieremie on this ground that he had a sure word after he had beene smitten and stocked he went not into corners nor behinde the wall to speake the will of him that sent him but as one that had laid faster hold on it in tearmes of defiance and personall application to the stoutest and proudest of them he vttereth with much boldnesse and plainnesse what he had in commission The like we read of Amos against Amaziah The like of the Apostles thorough the Acts and their Epistles and all vpon this ground that the Lord sent them with a faithfull word And if reasons will perswade to this dutie we haue not a fewe For 1. what sound comfort can any Minister finde in life or in death but in beeing found faithfull where was Pauls reioycing towards his death but that he had fought a good fight and had kept the faith 2. This faithfull word was not easily purchased vnto vs but by the blood of many a faithfull man both of Pastors and people shed in our owne and other countries and should the preachers of it esteeme lightly of so precious and so dear a purchase 3. If the Pastor depart or be driuē frō the faithfull word how can his people hold it he is guiltie of all their Apostacie from the faith Let the Pastor receiue such a blowe the sheepe cannot but be smitten 4. Looke on the danger and Gods righteous iudgement on such teachers as esteeme of mens words and writings aboue that is meet in the meane time not embracing this word in the loue of their
hearts God giues them ouer to beleeue and broach doctrines besides the word all their learning hindreth not nay rather armeth them to sticke fast to falshood and errors and to defend doctrines of much loosenesse and libertie Especially the iudgement of God is come vpon the Romish Church to the vttermost who because they lay this for a ground of their doctrine that this word is not of it selfe faithfull and certaine vnlesse the Church and Councels and the Pope authorize it to mens consciences and that any other word thrust vpon the Church by the former authoritie is euery whit as faithfull as this hence is their whole religion a mysterie of iniquitie and delusion hence comes in intercession of Saints worship of images prayer to and for the dead pilgrimages here purgatorie hereafter reuelations masses bread-worshippe propitiatorie sacrifices mixture of Moses and Christ which is a doctrine cutting them off from Christ who haue before cut off the authoritie and credit of the Scriptures which are the word of Christ which fearefull iudgement let it mooue euerie Timothie and Titus carefully to keepe the worthie thing which is committed vnto them 2. Euerie Minister is taught hence to hold him vnto this faithfull word for so he shall deliuer not things doubtfull and vncertaine but such as men may leane vnto rest and as we say write vpon And this is insinuated by our Apostle that that is a faithfull ministerie which holdeth it selfe vnto a faithfull word such as is the sure anchor of mens soules against which hell gates cannot preuaile Such was the ministerie of the true Prophets Ieremie saith of a truth the Lord hath sent me and bidden me speake these things of the Apostles who deliuered such things as they receiued of the Lord and commanded vs that if an angel from heauen or a deuill from hell should bring not a contrarie but a diuerse doctrine from that to hold him accursed yea of the Sonne of God himselfe who said my word is not mine but my fathers What horrible blasphemie then is daily practised in the Popish Churches whose teachers calling these faithfull words a nose of waxe send men to dumbe idols the teachers of vanities and lies yea to Apocryphall writers to fathers councels Bishops and Popes as though the Scriptures had lost all their faithfulnesse or as though the canons decrees summes and sentences of men were more stable then that eternall truth that shall out-last heauen and earth Was this a faithfull word in Pauls time and is it not so still doth the sonne of the eternall father pronounce of his fathers word that it is not onely true but truth it selfe and that not one iot of it can passe or faile and is it any other then the voice of Antichrist which shall say that it is no certaine word at least to me vnlesse the Church say so Shall the spirit of God call it a sure word of the Prophets and Apostles and a word of truth and shall we heare a wicked and lying spirit come out of hell and say that this stabilitie and truth dependeth vpon man whereas let God be true and euerie man a lyar and that if those men whom they tearme the Church change their minds or any sense in the Scripture so doth the holy Ghost also Let these owles flie the light of the Scriptures as such as loue to liue in darkenes carnall religion must haue carnall props like lips like lettice we say and such a Church such lawes As for vs let vs as it standeth vs in hand hold vs vnto this faithful word and not in stead of it deliuer the vnfaithfull words of men whether Philosophers or fathers or schoole-men And is it not good reason that we should be tied to this word when euen the Prophets and Apostles were Isai must take a role and write and binde the testimonie and seale the lawe among the disciples the commandement to Ieremie was preach the words that I shall tell thee In the newe Testament they must heare Moses and the Prophets Paul was separated to preach that Gospe● which was promised before by the Prophets and accordingly he witnessed that he spake nothing besides the things foretold by the Prophets Againe what ministeriall worke is it which this word doth not most naturally and happily effect for this is a sure instrument to beget faith Ioh. 17.20 and to confirme it Act. 15.32 to conuert soules Psal. 19.7 and to saue soules Iam. 1.22 Now vnto hearers this doctrine affoardeth also speciall vse of instruction 1. If it be so faithfull a word euerie man must attend vnto it 2. Pet. 1.19 we haue a surer word to which yee doe well that yee attend 2. To lay vp this word surely as beeing the sure euidence of thy saluation and of thy heauenly inheritance among the Saints Men locke vp their euidences or convaiances of land in sure and safe places delight often to read in them suffer no man to cousen them of them whatsoeuer casualtie come these are by all meanes possible safegarded and shall any man carelesly neglect such an euidence as this is without which he hath no assurance of saluation nor the tenure out of his idle conceit of one foote in heauen a lame man if he hold not fast his staffe falleth and whosoeuer looseth his part in the word looseth his part in heauen 3. Here is a ground of thankfulnesse in that the Lord hath not onely vouchsafed vs life and glorie and immortalitie when we were dead and when nothing could be added to our miserie but hath also giuen vs such a constant guid and direction therunto we might either haue groped after him in palbable darknes or haue had such direction as might haue affoarded vs lesse assurance and comfort but now beleeuers knowe assuredly that they were loued of the father before the foundation of the world and out of that loue chosen vnto life that the Sonne was sent to ransome them from sinne and present them iust before his Father that his spirit is sent out to regenerate them and to further and finish their sanctification that by his prouidence they are supplied in all their good that by his power they are protected from all their euills He might haue brought vs to heauen and neuer haue let vs know any of these comforts in earth yet would he not so slenderly leaue his Church but as our Sauiour noteth he hath spoken and written this word that our ioy might be more full which is one generall vse of the whole word of God Now what can we doe lesse then in way of thankfulnes 1. yeeld vp our selues to be directed by this faithfull word 2. Beleeue it in whatsoeuer it commandeth threatneth or promiseth in that it is such a faithfull word and hereby we set also our seale vnto it 3. Constantly cleaue vnto it in life and in death and not to be so foolish as
to be soone remooued to another Gospell nor so fickle as children to be carried about with euery winde of doctrine but hold fast such a stable truth so full of direction in all the life and so full of comfort at the time of death for it is as a fast and faithfull freind tried in time of aduersitie standing closest to a man in his greatest necessitie Obiect There is no feare but we shall hold out whatsoeuer should betide we are grounded and setled Answ. But how many did in the fierie triall in Queene Maries time scarce one in Cambridge both the Vniversitie and Towne or if one poore Townsman held it out in the flames that was all Lastly both Teachers hearers must trie their doctrin by this touchstone if it abide this touch it is gold it is a pure and faithfull word if it be not according to this word there is no light in it Which is according to doctrine Here our Apostle both deliuereth another note and setteth another marke vpon the word as also vseth another argument why the Minister should hold and hold himselfe vnto the word of God deliuered in the Scriptures because it is not onely a faithfull word vnto which the faithfull may cleaue and rest as vpon a sure anchor but also such a word as beareth the bell for the ●itnesse of it to institute instruct and edifie the Church and members thereof as if he had said That word which is most fitted to edification and instruction is to be maintained and held fast that it may be held forth before Gods people but this is such a word and therefore Ministers must hold it fast Doctr. Whence we learne that the word of God is his owne ordinance fitted to instruct the elect in all necessarie truth and doctrine which is the very scope of our Apostle and will otherwise also appeare if we consider 1. The wisedome of God who hath in the bookes of Scripture comprised and deliuered a most perfect rule of doctrine concerning faith and manners to teach as both concerning God our selues and others whatsoeuer is necessarie or profitable to be knowne to saluation To the proofe of which serue all those places where we read that it is able to make a man wise vnto saluation to instruct him to all righteousnesse to furnish him to euery good worke to make him blessed by inchoation here in this life and consummation in the life to come for here through patience and comfort of the Scriptures we haue hope Rom. 15.4 and hereafter life eternall Ioh. 5.39 2. The mercie of God who hath written mysteries aboue the apprehension of the Angels themselues euen to the capacitie of the simplest in things of absolute necessitie whereas if he had but spoken the word it had beene more then he ought vs but he hath written it that we might ponder and meditate of it yea he hath translated it into euery mans language and so fitted it to edifie the more so as fiue words now are better then ten thousand if it were shut vp in it owne fountaine or any other strange tongue besides he hath brought it to vs by an easie price in one portable volume that we might conueniently exercise our selues in it day and night And that we might vnderstand those hard places which for our exercise we shall meete withall in reading and that we might be lead beyond the letter of the Scripture to shew the life of it in the keeping of faith and good conscience he hath appointed a Ministrie in the Church and in all ages hath raised vp men of God whome he hath furnished with the gifts of prophecie and enabled with sundrie gifts of the spirit to see and reueale the truth therein contained For euery manifestation of the spirit is giuen to profit withall and he gaue some to be Apostles some Prophets c. for the edifying of the Church and the gathering of the bodie of Christ. 3. The power of God who conuaieth such a power into this his ordinance as whereby it becōmeth so mightie in operation so able to cast downe strong holds and euery high thing exalted against God yea so strong at the weakest as that by it alone the kingdome of darknes and of the deuill is bartered and subdued and Iesus Christ the Prince of peace set vp in his throne within the hearts of men Vse Would any Minister edifie his people let him hold fast this word would he teach them Christ this word testifieth of him would he beget faith in them this word must doe it Rom. 10. would he destroie sinne in them as Dauid said of Goliahs sword there is none to that so there is no sword of the spirit but this would he raise the afflicted hence may he speake a seasonable and sauorie word to him that is weary in a word if a man will take the most compendious way to bring soules to heauen let him obserue this rule of holding him to this word which is ordained for doctrine But if a man either for idlenes or ease neglect the reading and study of the Scriptures or according to the vanitie of his heart lay by this booke and fall to the studie of Friars or Fathers and seeke to preach matters of more applause or to get a name of learning is in his profundities curiosities and such quainte deuises as he meeteth withall in mens writings this man leaueth the right way of edifying men in the waies of God and is in his conceit wiser then his maker who hath fitted this word for doctrine and no other 2. Hence note that it is Gods will that euery man should be expert in the Scripture seeing he hath so fitted it for the teaching of the simplest Which must force euery man to examine himselfe whether he hath found it such a fit word for doctrine for he whose heart cannot iustifie the word in this propertie is no child of wisedome Many haue heard this word a long time and yet vnderstand it not haue learned little or nothing are ignorant of Christ and what he hath done but in grosse and generall tearmes haue attained no lasting comfort from the same Where now lieth the fault the word is fit to ●each thee the Ministerie stablished and sanctified to the edifying of thee all the gifts of the ●eachers are giuen to profit thee Why then ha●t thou not profited Oh the sinne lyeth at thine own doore in that thy selfe hast refused or resisted instruction It is not the obscuritie of the Scripture but the darknes of thy blind mind that hath hindred thy profiting The word is as fit to teach thee as the choysest seed is to take and grow with encrease but thy soule is vnprepared thy heart is as the stonie or thorny or high way ground no seed can thriue in it all the labour of Gods husbandmen is lost vpon thee Thy sinne hath suffered the word to loose the vertue and power of it in raising
minde is put for all the faculties of it especially the vnderstanding reason and iudgement all which are deluded and deceiued by these vain teachers Quest. How did these false teachers deceiue mens minds Ans. Foure waies 1. by suppressing the truth for by their vaine iangling and speaking liker Poets Philosophers historians then Prophets Apostles or any successors of theirs they made a cleanly conuaiance of the light from the people and withholding the truth and light they led them from Christ from the right knowledge of the Scriptures from sound godlinesse and religion in iudgement and practise and so they remained as darke in their vnderstanding as erronious in their iudgements as froward in their affections and as wicked in their liues as euer before Secondly by flatterie for they would not deale directly against the sinnes of the age as godly Ministers doe but deceitfully that they might not displease herein imitating Satan himselfe who was wont of olde to answer in riddles as he answered Craesus that if he would transport himselfe ouer the riuer Halys he should ouerthrowe a most mightie kingdome namely his owne But Micha will not deceiue nor flatter with Ahab although it stand vpon his life Thirdly by letting men see their estate in false glasses so as they neuer see the truth of it for people taught by fables and nouelties think and are borne in hand that they are in heauens high way their soules are brought on sleepe and comming from such froathie discourses they sit downe and please themselues in that they haue done their task required especially if they can bring home a iest or some wittie sentence when perhaps they scarce heard a word of Christ of their iustification of their mortification or of their glorie 4. By placing religion in bodily exercises not in matters of spirit and truth Colos. 2.20 thus did the Pharisies in their times the Papists in these and whosoeuer more vrge the decrees of men more then the commaundements of God Quest. But whose mindes are deceiued Answ. First their owne and then others for they are blind leaders of the blind deceiuing and beeing deceiued and although here our Apostle expresseth not here who they be that are deceiued yet elsewhere he doth as Rom. 16.18 they deceiue the hearts of the simple and 2. Tim. 3.6 they lead captiue simple women and 2. Pet. 2.14 they beguile vnstable soules whence we see that ignorant inconstant and vnsetled soules which hand ouer head receiue any doctrine without examination or triall whose simplicitie disableth them to iudge betweene truth and falshood and whose leuitie makes them like shaken reeds these are the carkases on which such vultures do seaze Hence 1. note three notable properties of errour 1. it neuer loueth solitarinesse but is a spreading leauen shrowding it selfe in multitudes and compassing sea and land to procure patrons and Proselytes Example we haue in the Iesuites the arch deceiuers of minds and impostors of the world 2. It taketh the highest holds of men euen the mind vnderstanding and iudgement that the eie once beeing put out and the light turned into darknes it might cary men headlong remorslesly to all cursed practises which necessarily resemble as they proceed from the former 3. It ouerturneth all Gods order ordinances for whereas the scope of the teachers calling is to enlighten mens minds perswade their consciences rectifie their hearts so as they might growe vp in the sauing knowledge of God in Christ and the liuely sense of their owne saluation in a word whereas they are to set and containe men in the right way error in their minds causeth them to drawe men out of the right path as this word properly signifieth 2. Note what is the best fence against false teachers and an hedge against seducers namely 1. knowledge 2. loue of the truth The former armeth simple soules by letting them see the difference betweene the right hand and left without the which the minde cannot be good But the latter is the surest pace of truth and that is the loue of it for no matter it is that men know professe and can talke of the truth if their soules cleaue not vnto it for euen vpon those that receiue the truth shall God send strong delusions to beleeue lyes if they receiue it not in the loue of it Quest. But what is this doctrine to vs we all professe the truth and loue it from our hearts and therefore we hope we are fenced from deceiuers or beeing deceiued Answ. But let vs consider 1. That these are the last times which the Apostles prophecied of euen perilous times wherein many deceiuers should creepe into the Church and many should giue heed to the spirits of error 2. That these deceiuers of mindes were such as liued in the bosome of the Church among such as professed Christ and his religion 3. That they lurked secretly and that the Christians of that time could hardly of themselues descrie them and therefore the Apostle is glad to helpe them and wisheth them carefully to preuent them and therefore there may be priuie impostors among vs. 4. That we hauing set doores open for them we shal not want deceiuers for whatsoeuer many men say most men loue not the truth sincerely delt withall nay they desire to be deceiued while they hate with a deadly hatred such Michaes as would let them see their estate and helpe them out And is it not Gods manner of iust proceeding when men desire preachers that will preach of wine and strong drinke to send them such teachers as they desire that he that is ignorant and filthie may be ignorant and filthie still Those then that care not for the truth shall haue teachers which shall be Gods executioners to lead them into error that as by the great Antichrist the Lord reuenged and plagued the contempt of the light in the world so also in particular Churches and places by false teachers and pettie Antichrists If men will not abide wholesome doctrine but haue itching eares they shall haue an heape of teachers after their owne lusts to turne their eares fr●m the truth and delude them with fables Let Ahab once hate Micha the Lord presently consulteth who shall deceiue him and if this question once proceede out of Gods mouth the deuill is present and so forward in the execution of Gods vengeance as he shall preuaile against 400. false Prophets at a clappe before he shall not fall by them This truth is as a finger in the bile and beeing rubbed will perhaps make Zidkiah take his fist from Michaes face and say when went the spirit from me to thee yet ceaseth it not to be the truth of God concerning our selues who so long as we giue heede to the spirit of error cannot want deceiuers Let men therefore professing themselues members of the Church looke vnto themselues and labour to knowe the truth to affect it to stand vnto it if they would be fenced
of their mouthes and sparkles of fire leape out the smoke they send out is like a seething pot or caldron 4. As the spirit of truth is a peaceable and meeke spirit so neuer shall a man finde a bitter spirit conscionably vtter pure truths neither indeed will truth Gods darling dwell with such And what lowder lie then to charge Gods children with damnable heresies Let all antiquitie be searched and we shall finde three things which must concurre to make an heretike 1. The broching of something contrarie to the Articles of faith 2. A departing from the Church vpon it with profession of drawing Disciples 3. After solemne admonition a stiffnesse in such error and faction None of which if they can be found in such as to whome all are imputed Let euery man iudge whether such boldnesse in any man deserue not more open reprehension and censure whereby such might learne at length to spare the credit of such who are so farre beyond the reach of their enuie as that they iustly pittie their weaknesse and solly and not with them attempt any more the discouering of their fathers nakednesse which were a good way to couer their owne Vse 3. Let none looke to be spared in the Ministerie if they will be incorrigible no not great ones If any people might looke to be spared surely they of the circumcision might beeing a people of such prerogatiues But 1. Paul preferres the Churches good aboue their credit 2. As God hath no respect of persons no more hath his word 3. When great ones are more seuerely taxed inferiours will feare the more Doctr. 2. Note further who are to be reputed the chiefe plagues of the Church and the archseducers of the world euen they of the circumcision that is such as ioyne the lawe with the Gospel and works with faith in the act of iustification for they ●each such doctrine as abolisheth from Christ and maketh him profit nothing and that in such manner as men can hardly shift or auoide them for they slily glide into the extraordinarie commendation of that the Scripture also commendeth and attributeth too much vnto that which the Scripture ascribeth somewhat vnto As for example Circumcision in the prime of it was an ordinance to seale the righteousnesse of faith and for a time was worthily in such reputation as that death is iustly threatned against the neglect of it be it in Moses himselfe These seducers taking hence occasion goe one step further and will haue it a meritorious cause of saluation and consequently will not haue it dated when the Lord hath expired it but albeit the bodie hath appeared the shadowe must remaine The Popish teachers at this day are the iust heires of these seducers as appeareth in these particulars the Iewish teachers would professe and teach Christ but not alone for he must be ioyned with Moses and all the former rites and all these with Christs merits must be iumbled to iustification Euen so Popish seducers sit with Antichrist in the Church of God and professe Christ but together with Christ they must merit something themselues and so make themselues debters to the whole law And further they make the works of grace almes prayer fasting contrition yea their owne rites and traditions obserued meritorious causes of saluation for they promise life eternall to masses indulgences auricular confession vowes pilgrimages c. and so tread in the verie steppes of these seducers 2. Againe as the Iewish teachers dealt with circumcision so doe the Papists with our Sacraments which because by diuine institution they are signes and seales of Gods mercie and faithfull couenant they turne them into physicall not conduits but causes not containing onely but conferring grace euen by the worke wrought 3. Further as the Iewish teachers lead their disciples to stand vpon outward shewes and prerogatiues as that they were sonnes of Abraham had receiued the law circumcision in their flesh and were distinguished into diuerse famous sects as Scribes Pharisies Sadduces Essees c. The verie same things in effect doe Popish teachers force men to stand vpon as false antiquitie fained succession dissembled chastitie hypocriticall orders as of Francis Dominicke Benedict and an hundred more according to whose rules whosoeuer walke mercie and peace they pronounce vpon him such cannot faile of life euerlasting but as for beleefe in the Sonne of God seeking life by that means it is the least of their labour Thus doe they with those seducers publish lies and dreames of their owne hearts that Gods people may forget his name that is the grace and mercy of God in Iesus Christ. Vse 1. This point letteth vs see how pernicious and dangerous the Popish doctrine is which whosoeuer holdeth and maintaineth is abolished from Christ and fallen from grace Paul is not more confident in any thing then this that the ioyning of any thing with Christ as the matter of our righteousnesse is the cutting off of a man from Christ Gal. 5.3 Behold I Paul say and testifie that if yee be circumcised that is with opinion of righteousnes by it or confidence in it for else at this time the worke of circumcision hurt him not that kept himselfe from confidence of righteousnesse by it Christ profiteth you nothing so we testifie truely against the Papists that so many of them as will be iustified by the works of the lawe are fallen from Christ. Now because their doctrine teacheth this and he is not an absolute Papist that beleeueth it not we truely conclude that it is a doctrine leading from Christ and the absolute Papist hath no part in Christ. Obiect Doth not Iames make a cooperation of faith and works Ans. Yea but not in the act of our iustification nor in the matter or worke of our saluation but onely in the declaration of the sinceritie of our faith and truth of our conuersion which by fruits of righteousnesse we shew to be voide of hypocrisie so as let faith and works ioyntly concurre in the approbation of our iustification but in case of making vs righteous before God away with the works of the law if thou meanest to haue part in Christ these will neuer stand together here let Moses die and be buried and let no man euer knowe where he was laid to raise him againe This point shall be clearer when we come to those words of our Apostle Wee are not saued by the works of righteousnesse which we had done In the meane time dare Paul affirme of the lawe of Moses Gods owne lawe that he that holds vnto it to be iustified by it is fallen from Christ what would he haue said of their desperate and irrecouerable fall who looke for iustification out of their owne traditions vowes inventions the drosse and chaffe of their owne deuises of all which the Lord will say who required these things at your hands Let vs beware of dogges the propertie of whom is to returne to their vomit
so of such Christians as turne Iews againe beware of the concision and betake vs to the circumcision which worshippeth God in the spirit and haue no confidence in the flesh no confidence in the lawe Get Christ close him by faith in the heart he is the Lord and accomplisher of the lawe vnto righteousnesse and thus hast thou enclosed thy righteousnes as a ring encloseth a Iewel Say with that Martyr onely Christ onely Christ. 2. Seeing Popish doctrine hath not saluation but carrieth men from Christ it ought not to be tolerated where it can be abolished for the scepters of Christian Princes must hold vp the scepter of Christ the Prince of peace and as it is no good religion in Princes to set vp a religion that would abolish Christ so neither is it good policie in regard both of their treacherous positions and practises For as they teach that hereticall for so they call Protestant Kings may be depriued of life much more other royalties and temporalties so is their practise proportionable in deposing kings and Emperours practizing hellish treasons and iustifying the murdering of Princes And therefore howsoeuer we should seek to pull the poore seduced ones of them out of the fire yet if they be incurable themselues haue taught vs how we should deale with them or rather neither make nor meddle with them by the tenour of the oath taken of the old leaguers in France the forme of which was this Si ad haereticorum partes de flexero si amicitiam si foedus si matrimonium cum eis faxo si opem fidemve do si ave si vale dixero illa die fulmine ferito God make vs as wisely resolute to preserue the puritie of the truth amongst vs as they are cautelously circumspect to barre it out from themselues then should they goe farre inough and stay long enough before we should entreat their returne Whose mouthes must be stopped The phrase is metaphoricall and betokeneth such an euident conuiction of errors by weight of reason and euidence of the Scripture as wherby the aduersarie of the truth is struck dumb and hath no more to say then if he had his mouth shut vp Quest. But how should we shut their mouthes for such commonly rage against the truth and ioyne mallice to error and so prostitute themselues in impudencie as that they will euer haue some shew of words at least to pretend against the truth Ans. This precept is first and properly directed to the Minister of God who by all his endeauour must take away all the defence of such errors and then confirme the contrarie truth by such sure grounds and arguments as that all men may see they haue no sound reason much lesse Scripture at least interpreted by Scripture for their defence And thus when the Church shall heare what such persons can say for themselues it will appeare to be but vaine babling and multiplying of words flowing not seldome from such as are euen damned of themselues in their owne conscience And this practise is agreeable to that of Christ himselfe who sometimes by the Scriptures Matth. 22.34 sometimes by reason Luk. 20.25.26 Giue to Caesar sometimes by a like interrogation and question Luk. 20.7 The Baptisme of Iohn sometimes by posing and parling Matth. 22.46 so set vp and silenced the Pharisies Sadduces Herodians and others as none could either answer him or durst aske him any more questions But when men are thus confuted by argument ouerthrowne with the sword of the spirit and confounded by the power of truth and yet still proceed to trouble the peace of the Church and the faith of the Saints then may the Church and must proceed by censure and admonition to enioyne them silence the which if yet they will not heare they ought by the Church to be driuen from the societie of the faithfull if they prooue gangrenes they must be cut off Doctr. The dutie of euery faithfull Minister is when occasion is offered timely to oppose himselfe against seducers and stop the mouths of false teachers wherein also the Church ought to backe and strengthen him For 1. the example of Christ must be our president who most boldly and freely vindicated the law from the corrupt glosses and expositions of the Pharisies and that in his first sermon 2. In regard of the particular members of the Church that they may be preserued in soundnesse from starting away and forsaking of the truth Hence did our Sauiour Christ not seldome vtter holy things before dogges and swine that is the Scribes and Pharisies and malicious Iewes because of those that stood by that they might be confirmed against their corruptions And this is made one ende of the precept the madnesse of the false Apostles must be made manifest that they may preuaile no longer 3. In regard of the false teachers themselues fooles saith Salomon must be answered least they be wise in their owne conceit neither shall the labour be wholly lost vpon them for it shall be a meanes either to conuert them and bring them to the knowledge of the truth or else so to conuince them as they shall be made excuseles And further the Church must strengthen euery Ministers hands in this contending for the faith and so manifest her selfe to be the ground and pillar of truth which is committed to her trust and safekeeping against all gaynesayers Vse 1. This ministeriall dutie requireth a great measure of knowledge and a man furnished with gifts of varietie of reading and soundnesse of iudgement euen a man who hath a storehouse in his brest First he must be well read and skilfull in the Scriptures that by them in the first place he may be able to shut the mouth of the aduersarie partly by the expresse texts of Scripture partly by harmonical parallel and sutable places as by the mouth of many witnesses partly by the analogie of faith arising out of the whole bodie of the Scripture partly by the proprietie of the speach in the fountaine and partly by the apt knitting of the context that there may be full concent with it selfe the antecedents and consequents yea more he must be furnished with varietie of reading euen in the workes and writings of men that he may be able in good sort not onely to apprehend the state of the questions and originall of controuersies but also that he may refute his aduersarie partly by the concent of the Church in all ages and partly by the helpe of things that are granted and confessed on both sides and partly by the contradictions which the patrons of errors cannot but vnawares flip into for it is true of a lyar or a patron of lies that he had need of a good memorie Secondly to all this knowledge is required a sound iudgement that he may be able to inferre good and necessarie consequents vpon the graunting of the truth he standeth for and on the contrarie the absurdities and
bookes hath this hexameter Quest. But why doth Paul call him a Prophet Ans. Some thinke him so called onely by a generall acceptation of the word Prophet which as well signifieth a publike declarer of some truth past or present as of some to come and so he openly taught the truth perswading to vertue and dehorting from vice Others thinke the Apostle calleth him so ironically or in skorne one who was a Prophet fit inough for such a people Others because he was so in the reputation and account of the people who as the other Heathen were wont to ascribe some diuinitie vnto their Southsayers and called them diuiners yea the interpreters and sonnes of the Gods But I take it the truth that he is so called because he was indeed a Prophet and did diuine answer of euents to come some of whose answers and oracles are yet extant and recorded in authors besides that some of the Heathen confesse that he was the cheefe of those who by surie prophecied of things to come Quest. But what kinde of Prophet was he or how was he and the other heathenish prophets distinguished from the true Prophets of God Ans. The Prophets of God were of two sorts First such as were more properly so called who beeing extraordinarily raised and inspired by Gods spirit did reueale some parts of the will of God which he intended to doe in and for his Church for time to come such were Isay Ieremie and many other in the old Testament vntill Christ the cheife Prophet and accomplisher of all prophecies appeared but verie few after The second sort of true Prophets were such as onely did teach and interpret the holy Scriptures and ordinarily had not adioyned the foretelling of things to come but vpon some speciall extraordinarie occasion and of these were many both in the old and new Testament In the old such were the companie of Prophets among whom Saul prophecied and the children and sonnes of the Prophets who as it is like were such as studied expounded and more accuratly explaned the writings of Moses and kept the doctrine deliuered by Moses vncorrupt in the Church although the masters and those which were more eminent had both these gifts such as Eliah Elisha and the sonnes of the Prophets so farre as they were emploied and sent by these as we reade that the young Prophet knew not that Iehu was to be annointed King till Elisha told him In the new Testament the Apostle bringeth all ministeriall and ecclesiasticall duties of ecclesiasticall persons to 1. Prophecie 2. Ministerie Rom. 12.7 the former of which is nothing but the exercise of a gift of teaching in the Church applying sound doctrine out of the word to exhortation edification consolation 1. Cor. 14.13 Both of these are truly called diuine Prophets both of them beeing raised of God gifted by God dealt in the things of God and endeauored to lead men vnto God As for the other such as were the oracles of the Gentiles whether that of Apollo at Delphos or of other groaues caues dennes and woods very frequent amongst them or else the southsayers such as were Bacchis the Sibills and this Epimedes these consent almost in nothing with the former for they differ in all the causes 1. Whereas the former spake by instinct of the holy Ghost and consequently whatsoeuer they spake must needs come to passe in that manner and those circumstances in which it was deliuered the which the Lord maketh a note of a true Prophet These latter spake by instinct of Satan who beeing a lying spirit from the beginning was often a lying spirit in their mouthes but that he couered his errors by speaking in likelihoods and amphobologyes and the things that came to passe seldome came to passe as they were foretold 2. For the meanes whereby the Lord communicated his will it is either more generall or more speciall the former was either vision to those that were awake or dreame to them asleepe the latter was by word of mouth or face to face But the deuill vseth all manner of tooles as meanes to deceiue all elements fire ayre earth water so beasts birds starres lottes herbes windes and words that looke how many kinds of creatures there be so many kinds of diuination there are so infinite is delusion 3. Whereas the matter of the former are the great things of God and of them the maine the foretelling of Christ the Messias and Sauiour of the world the latter commonly dealt in things of men as publike or priuate euents of peace and warre c. in which also the deuill himselfe could but gesse but as for God and Christ he shut their mouthes vnwilling that Christ should euen thus be heard of among the heathen Or if as may be obiected of the Sibyls some of them did vtter some things concerning Christ which Satan had snatched and stollen from the writings of Moses these were so disguised and coloured as the naturall face of that truth could neuer be beheld nay euen themselues vnderstood not the things they vttered and therefore could not vtter them with purpose thereby to make Christ knowne to the world and much lesse to establish the true worship of God in Christ as the true Prophets did What other endes the deuill had in it it were too long here to enquire 4. Whereas the former receiued their reuelations into meeke and wise hearts beeing gratious and prudent and not madde men the latter neuer powred out their oracles but when they were rapt into a trance or madnes and knew not what they said or did Whereby it appeareth that they were meere instruments and organs of Satan by whose tongues he spake the resemblance whereof may be seene at this day in some demoniakes possessed by the deuill If any here obiect that Iohn was rauished in spirit on the Lords day and that the spirit also rushed on Ezechiel on Daniel and so this was no difference betweene them I answer that farre were these holy men from beeing meere passiue instruments or as blocks and stones as the other were they were indeede meere men and such as when Gods greatnes and glorious maiestie was more then ordinarily manifest were verie much affected and almost swallowed vp of it and almost rauished and out of themselues as Paul confessed of himselfe but neither were they madde nor sensles nor foaming nor deformed nor ignorant what befell them but with knowledge faith reuerence wisedome and affection receiued the things of God which they were to deliuer againe afterward to the vse of the Church 5. Whereas the former euer serued the vse of the Church and endeauoured to lead men to God furthering them in faith and obedience the latter onely serued the vanitie and curiositie of men and although they could not well lead men further from God then they were yet they the more detained them from seeking after the true God Thus the difference plainly
of them 2. That therefore the lyer casteth himselfe into the gulfe of Gods displeasure seeing as he hateth all the workes of the deuill so hath he testified speciall hatred against this A lying tongue is one of the sixe things which the Lord hateth and is abhomination vnto him Prou. 12.22 and therefore doth with them as we do with the things we abhorre either remooueth them out of sight by barring them out of heauen or destroyeth them Psal. 5.6 3. That although that be the greatest plague to haue the face of God set against them here and to be cast from out of his face and blessed presence of ioy hereafter yet there are other inferiour euills not to be contemned which wait at the heeles of this sinne As 1. that it maketh the sinners of this suite iustly hatefull euen vnto men as those who are the maine enemies vnto humane societie which is vpheld by truth and faithfulnes 2. Such deceitfull and fraudulent persons are occasions of the multiplication of oathes and periuries among men for which the land mourneth 3. In themselues it argueth the want of Gods spirit in their hearts who beeing the spirit of truth and light cannot abide to dwell in a heart that is pleased and delighted with nothing more then darkenes and falshood 4. They loose iustly their owne voice and credit and are worthie not to beleeued when they speake truth and men must deale with them as with their father the deuill whose workes they accustome themselues vnto suspect euen the truth from them and not receiue any as from them Now if any receiue not this doctrine he is farre behind the heathen who shall rise in iudgement to condemne him if any acknowledge it as true and yet make no bones of this odious sinne besids that he is condemned of himselfe let him knowe that he shall not escape the sentence of him who will take account of euerie idle much more of euerie lying and deceitfull word Euill beasts This is the second imputation in this testimonie Epimenides calleth the Cretians beasts because of their bruitish conditions and beastly practises and euill beasts because they are not like the creatures who by their creation were ordained and serued for the commodious and comfortable vse of man but such as since the fall rebelliously refuse the Lordship of man and will not be brought vnto tamenes and seruice nay rather are either fierce and cruell against man as Lyons wolues c. or els poisonfull direfull and venemous as the serpent crocodile with such venemous beasts both which sortes are truely called euill beasts not that they are not good in their substance or not verie good in their creation but because they carrie on them the cursed markes of mans rebellion against God beeing thereby subiected vnto vanitie so farre as in stead of that primarie vse and comfort from them man hath iust cause incessantly to feare and often receiueth much euill by meanes of them And what doth the Poet herein other then that which the Scriptures are very frequent in for when men degenerate and by sinne put off the nature of man both God and nature strippe them of the name of men as vnworthie of it because they rather resemble the bruit beasts shrowding many brutish qualities vnder the shape of men The Scripture speaketh expressely that man beeing in honour became like the bruit beasts which perish But wherein standeth this resemblance Ans. By looking into the word of God we shall finde it to stand especially in three things 1. In becomming without vnderstanding and in all the things of God by nature which holy Dauid in one case confessed as ignorant as the verie bruit beast so Ierimie 10.14 affirmeth that now euerie man is a beast in his owne knowledge and Prou. 20.24 How can a man vnderstand his owne way Now hereby who seeth not that hereby men loose the verie thing which maketh them men and distinguish them from the bruites without vnderstanding and that is the minde it selfe whereby onely man was enabled both to see and consider of the things he seeth and seeing the mind without vnderstāding is as an eie without sight therfore may he that is destitute of vnderstanding be as truely said to want his minde as hee which lacketh his sight is truely said to haue lost his eyes 2. By giuing vp themselues to be ledde with sensualitie as the bruit beasts and this propertie the Apostle Peter ascribeth to naturall and vngodly men Neither can it be that this should not rise of the former for when men are depriued of vnderstanding iudgement reason as euerie naturall man is in the things of God they must needes be ledde by other guides of lusts appetite sense and sight euen as the beasts are For when the noble part of the minde which should subiect the inferiour powers of the soule vnto it selfe as also guide the motions and actions of men by deliberation counsel iudgement and election is deposed from his regencie the sensitiue appetite which is common to man and beast like a rebellious commons taketh the whole command and carrieth the soule by a blind force vnto any bruitish lust and to whatsoeuer is delectable to the senses Notably doth the Prophet expresse this propertie in the wicked Iewes saying that like fedde horses euerie of them neighed after his neighbours wife 3. By the practise of many beastly and bruitish properties For what properties haue vnregenerate men which are not more beseeming euill and hurtfull beasts then men 1. If we consider the respect betweene God and ●im his heart knoweth no subiection but as was said once of Israel he is as an vnrulie beiffer he knoweth no yoke acknowledgeth no Master lifteth vp his heele against his feeder and careth not for the owner of his fat pasture 2. If we consider naturall men in themselues no beast is so vncleane and foule as they whose filthie hearts are fit for nothing but to be stinking cages and dens for filthie birds and beasts wholly bespotted as the leopards Ier. 13.23 swinish men wallowing in the dirt and mire of sinnefull pleasures and reuolting from euerie good way as dogges to their vomits for so the Apostle tearmed such Iewes as revolted from Christianitie to circumcision Beware of dogges 3. Consider them in respect of their neighbour no euill beast is so cruell and venemous as they in regard of the former the Scriptures ascribe the propertie of the deuill himselfe vnto them calling them ramping and roaring lyons such as Dauid and Christ himselfe had to doe withall Psal. 22.13 such a one was Nero whom Paul had to doe withall 2. Tim. 4.17 God deliuered me out of the mouth of the Lyon And for their savagenes and greedines they are called dogges and wolues Zeph. 3.3 Her Princes are as roaring lyons and her iudges as wolues in the euening which leaue not the bones till the morrowe And for subtiltie and craft
himselfe with sackcloath all his life fast fortie daies if he can or rather neuer eate meate neuer touch mony neuer marrie wife he shall neuer find the kingdome of God in these beeing things which God neuer required at his hands and yet these precepts of mans braine are the rules of all his religion But yet here is a goodly shew of wisedome what is it not profitable to abstaine from flesh euery fryday and all lent that by the one the flesh may be tamed and by the other our Lords sufferings remembred and must not the Minister who is to deliuer the blessed bodie of the Lord be vnlike other men yea farre more holy then they and therefore must not he liue single at home and be seene in hallowed garments abroad But where is the word of the Lord to free these from beeing fables The Lord looketh not to what we are bent or can pretend for our owne deuises but requireth that his will should be our rule Oh that we could acknowledge the truth in accounting our deliuerance from this Popish Egypt and Romish blindnes the next blessing of God to the gift of his Sonne seeing in the body of their religion there can be no soundnes of faith if any faith at all the best of it beeing a disease and rotennes if we may not more truly say it hath a name to liue but indeed is starke dead Doctr. 2. It is a grieuous sinne and iudgement to be turned away from the truth and yet this is the fearefull fruit of humane deuises For the Apostle would here note a iudgement of God vpon such persons as were addicted vnto fables and humane precepts the which iudgement is a wofull and heauie stroake of Gods wrath whether a man estrange himselfe from it before or after he haue receiued it much more For what a plague is it for a man to hate the truth and in it God the author of it who is truth it selfe the light of comfort and direction of it as also the happie fruit of it which is saluation seeing all they are damned that rereceiue not the loue of the truth whereby they might be saued What a wofull delusion were it that a condemned person for high treason going to execution should refuse a pardon offered nay be so farre from accepting it as that he abhorres to heare of it will not turne his eies to behold it yea treadeth it vnder his feete and yet such a spirituall frenzie possesseth all such as turne away from the word of truth and when God calleth them runne another away For seeing if the Sonne set vs not free Ioh. 8.32 we remaine in bondage vnder sinne and damnation and are euery day drawing to execution in the meane time as condemned persons beeing reserued in bolts and chaines till the time of execution Now in these bands of death the Prince of peace our Lord Iesus offreth a gratious pardon the partie offended seeketh to the delinquent entreateth and wooeth him to accept of a pardon procured by his own blood and sealed by his death Now wretched men cannot abide neither the message nor the messengers but in contempt tread vnder their feet that blood wherewith they should be sanctified and scorne the Princes clemency shall not the very consciences of these men in the Lords iudgement accuse themselues as worthy of ten thousand deaths yes surely and shall iustifie the Lords righteousnes when he shall bring vpon them that great condemnation of a great part of the world who the light being come and shining on their faces yet loued darknes rather then light But much more miserable is it after the embracing and knowledge of the truth to turne away from it a great witcherie it is to beginne in the spirit and end in the flesh an vnworthy man is he of Gods kingdome that setting his hand to the plow looketh backe after washing to returne to the filthines of the world and to waxe weary of weldoing is farre worse then neuer to haue known to do well this is properly called a reuolt when men depart from the gratious calling of Christ the relaps we say is farre more dangerous then the first disease and the end of the Apostate is farre worse then his beginning the deuil that hath bin once cast out and entertained againe bringeth seauen spirits worse then himselfe so as better were it for a man neuer to haue knowne the way of truth then after the knowledge of it to depart from the holy commandement Vse If men were perswaded of the greatnes of this sinne it could not be they could be so indifferent in such a maine matter so nearely concerning their finall and euerlasting estate of whom many receiue not the truth at all others turne away and fall from their first loue after they haue once receiued it Did euer the world abound as at this day with Worldlings Libertines Atheists Newters and Epicures and was yet the truth euer more glorious and shining then at this day Was there euer such coldnes loosenes deadnes heauines drowsines and earthlines in professors and if that added to the equitie of Pauls reproofe of the Galatians reuolt that Christ was described plainely and crucified before their eyes Gal. 3.1 may it not much more gall vs among whom notwithstanding the cleare euidence and brightnes of the truth it is yet refused of the most and slenderly entertained of the best The which what argueth it either in one or other but that the former would herein hold their wonte which hath beene generally to change and turne their religion with the times as though the truth to saluation were not the same but variable and alterable as the times are and that the latter haue in no small measure turned themselues from that truth in the which they haue formerly found much more sweetnes then now they do that delusion hath possessed both the one in whole the other in great part Obiect But it is not thus with vs we come to heare the truth and loue it and hope to hold it vnto the end Ans. Yet this detracteth not from that truth laid downe For 1. how many will not grant the Gospel their presence their bodies their eares no man will gainsay but that these are turned away or if any should the pitifull ignorance and the fruits of it would conuince it 2. How many be there which heare and yet in their iudgements intertaine not the truth and these are thus farre worse then the Iewes themselues who could acknowledge that Christ taught the way of God truly Men will not beleeue that the way to heauen is so straite as we out of the word of God describe it nor that God is so rigorously iust as to cast away those that meane well nor so straite laced as to exact the forfeyt of euery offence neither that can be the truth to saluation which so few embrace and so many contemne what doe none know or go the way to
of the soule letteth a simple man see the secrets of his heart laid open bringeth him to the sight of his sinne and to breake out into the acknowledgement and confession of the truth saying God is there indeed Now nothing but the word can tell a man his thoughts nothing else can pronounce sentence according to that which is in the heart and therefore cannot but come out from God whose only priuiledge it is to search the hearts which he hath made Vse 1. Let Ministers gird this sharp sword vpon their thigh and strike downe the high thoughts of men speaking rather to the conscience then to the eares of men for else the word which is spirituall and most directly worketh vpon the heart and spirit looseth in his hand the proper worke and powerfull vse of it This alone is that two edged sword in the mouth of Christ whereby he gets the victorie as Dauid said of Goliahs so more truely may we say of this there is no sword to this Philosophy Poetrie and profane things are too blunt to peirce the spirit too weake to conuert soules too dull to giue sinne and corruption deadly blowes or deaths wounds Whosoeuer would turne men from their wicked way and from the euill of their inuentions must stand in Gods counsell and declare his words to his people And the note of a true Leuite is to haue the law of truth vnder his lips Malac. 2.6 2. Labour in hearing the word to find it thus diuinely and powerfully working in thy heart finde thy soule stricken with the sence of death eternall find it the sacrificing knife to cut the throate of thy sinnes and lustfull affections find it to shake and astonish thy soule for this is the onely way for thee to finde rest in the day of trouble if it slay not thy sinnes it slayeth thy selfe insensibly for it neuer returneth in vaine 3. Be patient to suffer thy hypocrisie vncleannes yea thy most close and inward sinnes to be discouered in the Ministery and when thou seest this light of the Lord searching out all the bowells of thy bellie say of it surely God is in it for although I find not this presence by thunder lightning earthquake as in the mount yet by a still voice the Lord commeth and speaketh to my soule no voice but his can cast downe such strong holds as I see shaken within mee none but he can bind my conscience none but he can summon my thoughts none else but he that made it can worke my flintie heart like waxe The woman at the well conceiued nothing aboue ordinarie of Christ till he came neere her and told her of her secret vncleane course then could she acknowledge him a Prophet then could she aske her neighbours Is not he the Messias that hath told mee all that euer I did euen so is it not the Lord Iesus that in his word telleth thee of all thy waies come thy selfe call thy neighbours with thee to learne where such instruction is to be had When Christ told Nathaniel that he saw him vnder the figge tree where he thought he had not then could he say surely thou art the sonne of God the King of Israel euen so when thou findest the word discouering that in thee which thou thoughtest was hid from euery eye thou maist say truely this is the word of the Sonne of God herein it resembleth him it findeth me out of my figge leaues and calleth mee out of my bushes where I had hid my selfe Thou maist be bold to affirme surely he is a Prophet of the God of Israel that can discouer the secrets of the King of Syria and the words which he speaketh in his priuie chamber and as truely this is a man of God that can tell me the thoughts and counsells which I take in the most priuie chamber of my soule yea in the secret and most retyred closet of my heart Many not acquainted with this lesson storme and rage at the word when it pricketh them and thinke that the Preacher is informed and beginne to suspect some intelligencers the truth is we haue an intellengencer euen a spirit which goeth after Gehezi and stayeth by Ananias and Saphirah till their most secret conveyances be discouered and reuenged to whom day and darknes are alike and for such let them in time beware to spurne against preuailing truth least one day teach them to their cost what it is to despise such a word as this is 4. Iudge of thy selfe and actions as this word doth that is not according to thy shew in the world but according to thy purenes or vncleannes before God to whom a poore man in his vprightnesse is better then a froward person be he neuer so rich yea a poore wise child more accepted then an old foolish King This is the truest touchstone whence thou maist iudge certenly of thy estate and not be deceiued If this word reprooue or approoue any of thy waies or thy whole course thou maist safely pronounce of it Lord if I be deceiued in this thou and thy word hath deceiued me and if by thy word I erre I erre willingly for I know that this is according to Gods iudgement and that is according to truth Rom. 2.2 Doctr. 2. We learne further what is the estate of a man vnregenerate whom the Apostle setteth out thus 1. He is one that is vncleane 2. an vnbeleeuer 3. one to whom nothing is pure 4. his minde 5. his conscience is polluted in all which respects he is a most odious person in whom is nothing but filthinesse of flesh and spirit the which th● pure eyes of the Lord cannot abide All which will more easily appeare if we consider that by our fall we were not only depriued of that grace and goodnes which was set in our nature but there succeeded a foule and monstrous prauitie and euill opposed directly to the former good and that through the whole frame of the soule The minde which as a pure eye was able strongly to behold the brightnesse of God and the things of God is now not only destitute of that light of vnderstanding and reason but is couered and vailed with a black darknes of ignorance that the light of the glorious Gospel of Christ which is the image of God though in it selfe neuer so cleare yet cannot shine out vnto them The will which was most conformable to Gods will is not only spoiled and robbed of the rectitude and freedome it had to good but is become rebellious and resisting the will of God Matth. 23.37 how often would I haue gathered thee but thou wouldest not Ioh. 5.40 yee will not come vnto mee that yee may liue yea and is a seruant of sinne Rom. 7.14 the inferiour parts called the flesh are not onely spoiled of that conformitie which all the affections and appetite had with the law but resist with hostillitie and enmitie against God yea and cannot
that many who now stand not in the last ranks of professors if times should serue would play but an Hazaels part or stand at open defiance of the truth if once the chaffie profession should be blowen away no man euer saw the change and alteration of religion but he saw also this truth verified The third point in the words is the miserable condition of the hypocrite He is an abhominable person Where note that men of corrupt mindes taking vpon them the names of Christians and doing the works of Atheists are worthely abhorred of God and if they could be discerned ought to be an eyesore to men who should not with patience behold them They are abhominable to God which appeareth both 1. in their persons 2. their actions 3. their punishment For their persons they are but halfe Christians neither hote nor cold and therefore the Lord cannot digest them compared to cakes but halfe bakte Hose 7.10 and not turned on the other side below they are hote that is either in their owne superstitions or in smaller trifling matters or else in forme and outward appearance they seeme so zealous as though the zeale of Gods house would consume them but aboue in matter of spirit and truth in the inner man in the soule and heart remaine vnbaked impenitent vnturned the fire of the spirit hath not once touched them and so they remaine a mixt lump still neither hote nor cold Seeing therfore they are such as withdraw their best part from God the soule of God can take no pleasure in them Their actions although neuer so good in themselues neuer so specious vnto others neuer so behoofull to the societie where they liue yet are abhominable vnto God yea in their most deuout seruices they doe nothing but as Ephraim compasse the Lord with lyes and deceit Hose 11.12 Their punishment sheweth them to be euery way abhorred of God for as men deale with things they hate so the Lord 1. casteth them out of his sight Iob. 13.16 The hypocrite shall not come before him the workers of lies shall not enter within the walls of that holy Citie yea sometimes they are cast out of his presence as Caine was euen out of the visible Church as they are euer out of the inuisible to shew that they shall neuer be endured hereafter 2. Destroieth them for their destruction from the Lord sleepeth not but shall surprise them perhaps while they are in the bodie as Ananias and Saphirah but certenly hereafter and the damnation of such is no ordinarie damnation but a more ample and abundant iudgement is reserued for them then others and it is worthy obseruation that when the holy Ghost would rouse vp the slouthfull seruant he threatneth him his portion with hypocrites Matth. 24.51 and for both together it is said Matth. 13.41 that the Angels shall gather out of Christs kingdome all that offend and cast them into a furnace Ioh. 15.6 those that abide not in Christ though they cleaue a long time to the visible Church yet are seperated from the true inuisible Church and cast out like withered branches and men gather them and cast them into the fire how shall then such abhominable persons in Gods eyes avoid the damnation of hell it is almost an impossible thing for such a viperous brood of professed hypocrites euer to be saued And ought not such persons also to be an abhomination to good men in whose eyes euery vile person ought to be contemned yes surely could we discerne them or God discouering them we should be affected towards them as Elisha was towards Iehoram who in his straitnesse could seek to Gods Prophet and otherwise to Baal as the Lord of hostes liueth were it not that I regard the presence of Iehosaphat I would not haue looked towards thee nor seene thee Vse 1. If these be the notes and this the estate of an hypocrite then must it needs be very hard to know who is an hypocrite because it is a lurking sinne and so masked as there is litle yea often no outward difference betweene the sound and vnsound and consequently it cannot but be verie dangerous to lay this imputation vpon any man till the time least we iudge our brethren rashly and condemne the iust which is as odious a sinne as the iustifying of the wicked And this is rather to be noted because it is become so rise a practise to range euery professor vnder this title and marke him with this blacke cole of hypocrisie But as it is true that an hypocrite must be a professor so is it false that euery professor must be an hypocrite And as for all other notes here obserued or elsewhere in Scripture they are such as whereby the owne heart of a man and his owne spirit within himselfe may iudge of himselfe rather then the heart or eye of another man Many are so like vnto the deuill that they make no bones of accusing the godly as Satan did Iob of hypocrisie beeing led by that same spirit which is an accuser of the brethren but not by the spirit of God which is the spirit of loue which thinketh no euill but hopeth all things euen the best of the worst which is not iudging neither dare it enter into the counsell of God nor iudge the person of another mans seruant who standeth or falleth to his owne Lord which is so farre from carping at or misconstruing things well done in appearance as that maketh the best and giueth most fauourable construction of things and actions which are in appearance euill as well knowing that the searching of the heart belongeth to the maker of it and that no man can know with what intention vpon what grounds or causes this or that is done by another And much lesse yet doth that spirit of Christ which vseth not to quench smoaking flaxe but cherisheth euen good shewes as in the young man discourage better proceedings by deeming those who exercise themselues most diligently in the courses prescribed by the word the most worthy to be abhorred of God and man And yet where can a man goe but he shall meete with the spirit that beareth rule in the word which conceiueth not speaketh not so bitterly against whooremongers theeues drunkards c. as against many sound hearted professors of Christ and of his truth thus with the wicked Iewes preferring Barrabas before Christ himselfe Oh that men knew what they did and then would they not thus crucifie the Lord of glorie in his seruants who will fearefully reuenge such indignitie done against them When Dauid sent his seruants to Hanun to visit him and he euill entreated them vsing them as spies and not as visitors sent from a freind how hotly doth Dauid prosecute the reuenge of their wrongs he destroied seauen hundred charrets and slew fortie thousand horsemen beside the forte insomuch as he forced other Kings to make peace with him how much more will the Lord more
commonly is vpheld by bitternes of word writing rayling and reproaches consider here the Popish writers dealing with Protestants putting off euen humanitie it selfe and all but the image of the deuill which standeth in malicious lying and accusing of the brethren The heate also and bitternesse of the Germaine diuines beeing farre aboue that which becommeth brethren maketh not vnto but against the goodnes of their causes Oh that we could all remember that Christs kingdome is peaceable himselfe instructeth with all meekenesse perswadeth intreateth seldome threatneth and neuer was his voice heard in the streets the spirit descending vpon him like a doue sheweth how farre he was from bitternes and contradiction 2. This inseparable qualitie of withstanders sheweth that to speake euill of professors is to withstand the truth so is the boldnesse of such who taxe Ministers discountenancing sinne as too bold to whom sinne may be bold enough before it meete with an angrie countenance from them In a word therefore let vs take vp that vse which Christ raised of this doctrine Let wisedome be iustified of all her children Doct. 3. Euerie godly mans endeauour must be to stoppe the mouthes of such aduersaries and so make them ashamed Obiect But it is an impossible thing they will haue alwaies something to say Answ. Yet so liue thou as thou maist boldly appeale vnto God let thine owne conscience be able to answer for thy vprightnesse and so thou openest not their mouthes if now they open them against thee it is their sinne and not thine and thus this precept is expounded 1. Tim. 5.14 Giue no occasion to the aduersarie to speake euill And is inforced with speciall reason 1. Pet. 2.12.15 This is the will of God by well doing to put to silence the ignorance of foolish men If any shall say why I care not what they say on me they are dogges and wicked men and what are we to regard them the Apostle telleth vs that yet for Gods commandement sake we must not open their mouthes but performe all duties of pietie and humanitie vnto them 2. Because they watch occasions to ●raduce we must watch to cut off such occasions Luk. 6.7 the Scribes and Pharisies watched Christ whether he would heale on the Sabbath to find an accusation against him Christ did the good worke but by his question to them cut off so farre as he could the matter of their malice by clearing the lawfulnes of it So out of their malice we shall draw our owne good and thus it shall be true which the heathen saide that the enemie often hurteth lesse and profiteth more then many friends 3. What a glorie is it for a Christian thus to slaughter enuie it selfe to keepe shut that mouth that would faine open it selfe against him to make him be cloathed with his own shame who sought to bring shame vpon him and his profession when a wretch cannot so put off his forehead as to accuse him whom he abhorreth no more then he can the sunne of darknes when it shineth yea when the Prince of the world commeth to sift such a member of Christ yet he findeth nothing iustly to vpbraide him withall Vse Would God professed Christians were carefull not to open profane mouthes who shall not neede to watch long but they shall meete with matter too much with swearing lying oppressing in some with sabbath breaking and formall seruice in others with pride stomake contentions and vndying almost immortall suits in lawe in a third sort and yet more pitifull that the Papist shall scarse neede to watch a whit but his mouth is presently opened to the slaundring of the Gospel by the dead and carkase faith not of a few Vers. 9. Let seruants be subiect to their masters and please them in all things not answering againe 10. Neither pickers but that they shew all good faithfulnesse that they may adorne the doctrine of God our Sauiour in all things After that our Apostle hath at large described such Christian duties as must be vrged vpon free persons of all sexes and ages Now he commeth to such as are required in those that be in seruile condition and estate And in these two verses propoundeth two points 1. He pointeth them to such vertues as especially befit them 1. He inforceth them with a reason drawne from the end of them namely the adorning of the Gospel The vertues are fowre 1. subiection 2. pleasing of their masters in all things 3. silence propounded in the opposite of it not answering againe 4. faithfulnesse illustrated by the contrarie not pickers The enforcement is in the last words that euen they may become ornaments vnto the Gospel which by a periphrasis is called the doctrine of Christ or God our Sauiour thus must they be not in some or few but all things that is in all their speaches actions and behauiours The whole sence of the verses together is this And now oh Titus hauing applied thy doctrine vnto other estates at length cast downe thine eyes vpon them that are of inferiour condition for they beeing members of the Church aswell as any of the former thou must fit and serue out vnto them also their portion wherein thou must exhort them that they be willingly submitted and subiected vnto the power and vnder the will of their masters yea what euer their masters be let them be vnbeleeuers vnmercifull froward yet let them cast to please them in all things wherin God their Masters master is not displeased And although themselues be religious and called vnto Christ yet let them acknowledge their places and neuer aduance or embolden themselues to returne vndutifull answers vnto their masters or mistresses as the manner of many is Let them not vse any vnfaithfulnesse but all good fidelitie which is the cheefe vertue of a seruant and that in euery thing which requireth the same and especially let then beware of one point of vnfaithfulnesse namely the secret purloyning and filching the least profit of their masters to turne to their owne or other vses without their masters priuitie And if all this while they serue such hard masters as returne them small thanke or other retribution for their faithfull seruice yet this shall they do they shall bewtifie the doctrine of the Gospel which they professe and in commending it they shall get thanks of God who will not dismisse them without a plentifull reward The first and proper dutie of euery seruant is subiection or a stooping vnder the authoritie of his master Which standeth 1. in an inward reuerencing in heart the image of God in his superioritie This reuerent subiection of the heart the Lord in his owne example requireth in all his seruants Mal. 1.6 If I be a master where is my feare and is the first dutie of that commandement honour thy father and mother the Apostle Eph. 6.5 calleth for feare and trembling from seruants toward their masters 2. In the outward testimonie of this inward reuerence both
life vpon no other condition but of workes doe this and liue and these must be such as must be framed according to that perfect light and holinesse of nature in which we were created which wrappeth vs vnder the curse of sinne and infolds vs in the iustice of God without shewing any mercie at all What a yoke is it that is euer galling vs for sinne partly shewing it partly not as a cause indeede but occasionally increasing it it beeing the strength of sinne 1. Cor. 15.56 Now to be vnder grace is to be freed from all this bondage not onely from those elements and rudiments of the world but especially 1. When the yoake of personall obedience to iustification is by grace translated from beleeuers to the person of Christ our suretie so that he doing the lawe we might liue by it 2. When duties are not vrged according to our perfect estate of creation but according to the present measure of grace receiued not according to full and perfect righteousnesse but according to the sinceritie and truth of the heart although from weake and imperfect faith and loue not as meriting any thing but only as testifying the truth of our conuersion in all which the Lord of his grace accepteth the will for the deed done 3. When the most heauie curse of the Law is remooued from our weake shoulders and laid vpon the backe of Iesus Christ euen as his obedience is translated vnto vs and thus there is no condemnation to those that are in him 4. When the strength of the lawe is abated so as beleeuers may send it to Christ for performance for it cannot vexe vs as before the ministerie of grace it could which is an other law namely of faith to which we are bound the which not onely can command as the former but also giue grace and power to obey and performe in some acceptable sort the commandement And this is the doctrine of grace which we are made partakers of Vse 1. Euerie Christian ought to take vp that exhortation 2. Cor. 6.1 We beseech you that you receiue not the grace of God in vaine not that the sauing graces of faith and loue c. may be receiued and lost againe which is the Popish collection from the place which speaketh only of the doctrine of grace and faith which may be receiued in vaine and is of all such hypocrites who neuer knewe what neede they stood of this grace and therefore some receiue it into their eares not into their hearts into their profession not into their practise into their lippes and tongues but neuer into the loue ioy and other affections of their hearts Whereas could they see the glorie of this ministration they would exceede that people in their acclamation and crie grace grace vnto it Quest. But how may a man knowe whether he receiue this grace in vaine or no Answ. By these notes 1. Whosoeuer receiueth this grace in truth he receiueth together with the commandement a power which enableth him in an acceptable performance of it for howsoeuer the law is a dead letter yet the Gospel beleeued is a quickening spirit the words of it are spirit and life in conferring the spirit of life whereby the beleeuing soule is quickened in the wayes of righteousnesse The first thing then to be examined is whether the Gospel be in word or in power for if it beget onely to a forme and outward profession of pietie and religion it is receiued in vaine 2. As he receiueth a power so doth he also a will to obey the precept of the Gospel he is not now constrained so much by the bond of the law to obey God but the Sonne hauing set him free from such compulsion he becommeth a lawe vnto himselfe and of loue and a free heart if there were no law nor curse he seeketh to please God the gracious working of the spirit bendeth his heart to delight in the lawe concerning the inner man and this maketh the yoake easie and the commandement not grieuous The next thing then to be examined is whether thou serue God in the newenes of the spirit or oldnes of the letter that is by vertue of the spirit renewing the soule and so working the will and not by the compulsiue power of the lawe if thou findest not this change and work of grace in thy will which carrieth euer a readinesse with it to obey God in all his commandements thou hast receiued this grace in vaine for Gods people are a willing and free people and bring free will offrings their hearts incourage them and their spirits make them willing euen there where often power and strength faileth them 3. Whosoeuer is not stirred vp to thankfulnesse of heart and life for his free righteousnesse by the only merit of Christ neuer as yet knew what this grace meant in truth for let a man receiue but a small benefit of his freind looke how he is affected vnto it and prizeth it accordingly doth he testifie his thankfulnes to the giuer shall we be thankfull to a mortall man suppose a Prince that sheweth vs a little grace aboue others in some fauourable speach countenance or other benefit and can the Lord power all his grace into an heart which prizing it can possibly be vnthankfull and where this thankfulnesse is it will make a man in his heart to loue God to feare before him to reuerence his name and his ordinances to affect his house his children his houshold seruants and much more his tokens of speciall loue namely his graces in his owne or other mens soules In his life it will make him beware of all sinne which may prouoke so gracious a God to displeasure yea striue in the subduing of all sinne for grace will not stand with the regiment of sinne nor sinne cannot raigne in him that is vnder grace to conclude it maketh him fruitfull in all weldoing which well beseemeth the spirit which he hath receiued for can either such grace as this deserue lesse or can grace which fitteth her owne habitation frame the heart it taketh vp to lesse then the endeauour in all these The further application of these notes I will forbeare and come to the other instructions Vse 2. Is the doctrine of the Gospel a doctrine of grace then vse carefully the meanes to haue thy part in it for hereby only thou art vnyoked from the curse and tyrannie of the law from Gods consuming wrath and iustice and all the feareful fruits of his displeasure hereby only thou commest to see God in Christ accepting thy person and with thy person thy workes sparing thy weaknes euen as a man spares his sonne that serueth him entertaining willingnesse where there wanteth strength and endeauour where there is no power remitting thy own vnrighteousnesse imputing the righteousnesse of his owne sonne and beginning to frame such an image in thy soule as tendeth to a more happy conditiō then euer thou
iudgements vnto Israel he dealt not so with euery nation neither haue they knowne his waies But now in this last age of the world this couenant of grace and life at least for propounding is made common to all people now euery man is inuited vnto repentance the partition wall is broken downe the vaile is rent and the mysterie which was kept secret from the beginning of the world is published to all nations Rom. 16.26 Vse 1. This place thus rightly interpreted yeeldeth no patronage to that deuise of Vniuersall election which they draw from the vniuersall vocation of men to the knowledge of the Gospel But many are called not euery particular man and the greatest part of the world haue alwaies bin out of the couenant besides of them that are called few come so as all to whom this grace is published participate not in it Vse 2. Note the extent of this couenant farre aboue the other whence it is fitly called by Iude the common saluation as in regard of the ends and meanes of it so also in respect of the subiects called vnto it so in the former Chapter vers 4. it is called the common faith not onely in regard of the kind and obiect of it but also of the subiects persons of all kinds beeing called thereunto which consideration should stirre vp our reioysing in that the barren and desolate hath more children then the married wife that the place of the tents of the Church is so enlarged and the courtaines of her habitation spread out as we are exhorted Isa. 54.1 Vse 3. Note that the kingdome of Christ admitteth no distinction of men it is not of this world which accepteth of men for their place countrie calling but all countries and callings are alike vnto God in euery nation and calling he that feareth him is accepted of him he neither accepteth the person of the Prince nor of the poore for they both are the worke of his hands he calleth the Gentile the seruant the poore and these receiue the Gospel Where againe we who are Gentiles and were Lo Ammi and Lo Ruhania may reioyce that we are receiued to pitie and that the wing of Gods mercie is stretched ouer vs who iustifieth the circumcision of faith and the vncircumcision through faith Hence may the poore beleeuer be he a thrall a seruant and base in the world raise his heart to comfort that euen he whom men despise is called and that effectually to see the grace and saluation of God euen he who is perhaps a seruant to some meane man is a free citizen in Gods kingdom euen he that hath neuer a foote in earth is become a purchaser in heauen Here is no complaint that the prodigall sonne is entertained and the seruiceable sonne neglected The Enunch need not say I am a drie tree nor the sonne of the stranger the Lord hath surely separated me from his people but whosoeuer cleaueth vnto the Lord to loue the Lord and serue him them he will giue a name better then of sonnes and daughters euen an euerlasting name that shall not be put out Vse 4. This meeteth also with a wofull delusion among many Protestants to whom when we call for conscionable walking in a Christian course What say they did not Christ die for all men and is not heauen as open for mee as for others would not God haue all men to be saued is he not mercifull will he condemne for such and such things which what is it else but from the abundance of grace to make their sinnes superabound and thus they plainly shew that they were neuer yet effectually called and that although they haue bin called to the supper yet haue they refused to come Hath appeared The Gospel is compared to a great light shining out brightly and gloriously 1. a light in that 1. it dispelleth a manifold darknesse which before occupied the minds of men 2. in regard of direction 3. comfort which it bringeth to the beleeuing soule And 2. a great light wherein is a fourth difference from the old Testament in which all things were more darke and obscure through the vaile of figures and ceremonies so as their light was but like the obscure light of the sunne before the rising not that the substance and scope of their doctrine was not the same with ours but that in the manner of deliuerie it was farre lesse lightsome But now the light is risen vp in glorious sort shining not as before almost to none but Iewes but to the Gentiles also so as according to the Prophets foreshadowing hereof the sunne is not only risen and in our midheauen but the light of it is seauen fold bigger then it was before And the reasons are sundrie 1. Many were the types and predictions of the old Testament which must be knowne to be accomplished in the new which for this cause must as farre excel the other in light and brightnesse as the bodie the shadow or the thing it selfe the figure and picture of it truely to this saith one that the exposition must be more cleare then the text 2. The promises made to the Church of the new Testament were many moe and farre more ample then to the old as that from the least to the greatest all should know the Lord that the mountaine of the Lord should be lifted vp vpon the toppe of the mountaines that all the earth should be filled with the knowledge of God as the waters couer the sea the which if they be fulfilled then this great light hath appeared 3. The generalitie of the doctrine confirmeth the same For all nations were to be called to the embracing of it Gentiles Arabians Barbarians and the rest euen of the most barbarous Heathens much light therefore and perspicuitie was to be required in such a doctrine as should acquaint all nations not only with it selfe but all that doctrine also which was formerly deliuered in all ages to the Church of God and this latter most full and clearely explaned in the former This light in this regard is growne like that cloud from an handbreadth to couer the whole heauens and is indeed that water running vnder the threshold of the sanctuarie which is risen from the ankles to a riuer yea a sea couering the earth 4. The exhibiting of Christ in fulnesse of time who came from his fathers bosome to reueale things there secretly reserued from the beginning of the world and the plentifull powring out of the spirit long before promised and 50. daies after Christs ascension accomplished to the Church of the new Testament doth certainely seale vp this same truth besides those expresse places of Scripture which might be alleadged to this purpose In 2. Cor. 3. Paul affirmeth that the ministration of the spirit is farre more glorious then that of the law which he calleth the ministration of death of which he affirmeth that yet it was so glorious that it made
For how absurd will it seeme to reason with the word to call the hungrie blessed to account the rich vnhappie to esteeme corrections loue the Iulians of the world would scoffe at such paradoxes who as the Prophet speaketh walke by the sparkles of their owne fire but the life of faith is when the heart giueth vp the whole man vnto Gods leading when his wisedome is become thy direction and his word the men of thy counsell And for the latter thou must doe three things First set thy selfe often in his sight and himselfe alwaies at thy right hand let thy heart religiously thinke vpon him and his presence let thy tongue reuerently speake of him and his goodnes Secondly whatsoeuer thou doest whether thou eatest or drinkest and much more performest the duties of thy calling to which these are but seruants doe all to his glorie beeing about any thing aske thy selfe what glorie will redound to God by this speach or by this action Thirdly by euery euent make this vse to gather still into his fellowship by euery blessing gather encrease of faith loue and confidence in him by euery crosse adde vnto thy feare reuerence watchfulnesse by euery speciall prouidence obserue his admirable wisedome truth and goodnesse and thus by euery thing growe vp in him these are worthy fruits of pietie The third rule is to keepe the set times of Gods worship both publicke and priuate for this is the pale and preseruatiue of pietie which whosoeuer hath he will vse Gods meanes to preserue it A godly heart reuerenceth and reioyceth in all holy things the word Sacraments sabbaths and striueth to make his house a little Church and he that makes little or no conscience of the sabbath and family duties let him pretend what he will is an vngodly person without all religion 4. Be carefull to attend the waies of thine owne heart both how it subiecteth it selfe to the will of God written whether it be desirous to receiue the law at his mouth whether it tremble at the word as also how it subiecteth it selfe to the will of God done whether in prosperitie it lift vp it selfe to be something besides or without God and whether in correction it be silent vnto God because he hath done it Attend it how readie or heauie it is to lift it selfe vp in prayer for wants in praise for supplies whether it pray alwaies or in all things giue thankes Watch ouer it in thy seruices that it start not away and leaue thy worship liueles without spirit without truth know that God is a spirit and will be serued of thee if aright as he was of Paul in thy spirit and looke well to this matter for Iudas can follow and reuerence Christ and yet his heart going after couetousnesse be practising to betraie him and Herod can pretend to worship when he intends to kill Watch it further in the motions to sinne whether it be zealous and resolute against it and whether it sticke fast and with full purpose vnto the Lord whether it feare the least offence of God or can swallow smaller sinnes whether it bridle the tongue from idle talke and smaller oathes vaile the eyes from wanton lookes or whether it can easily digest such things which are no small departures from God when occasion is offered and know that such is thine heart as it is found in temptation Lastly watch it in the motions of the spirit how it entertaineth them how stirring it is in the causes of God as when occasion is offered of promoting Gods glorie in his pure worship or in the establishing of a conscionable ministrie how it entertaineth such good motions offered how it entertaineth Gods counsells rebukes and exhortations in the ministerie a cleare case it is that those that neglect such motions and much more resist them are yet in their sinnes and are no better then impious and vngodly persons 5. In the loue of men ioyne the loue of God for charitie abstracted from pietie is a counterfeit and this thou shalt doe when thou louest man in and for God because of Gods image and of his commandement so as if thou seest godlinesse grow in any man thy loue groweth with him and if grace decaie as he estrangeth himselfe from God so thou for his good becommest more strange vnto him For although by vertue of Gods commandement we must loue all and do good vnto all yet we must reserue a speciall loue to the image of God renued and especially affect such as are of the houshold of faith Vse If these be the practises of pietie which cannot be attained but by these rules then shall many a one who take themselues to haue taken out this last lesson be found non-proficients and such as whom grace neuer taught any such thing as godlinesse And to omit to speake of wicked Esaus and Ismaels scoffers of such as walke in these straite waies of God tossers of reproaches against them so farre from that inward and pure worship of the heart in spirit and truth as they are open despisers of the outward ordinances of the word and sacraments who are furthest from repentance and verie seldome reclaimed yea so monstrous and black are these filthie dogges and swine as they are not more condemned of others then of themselues for most part We will leaue to wash such bricks and come first to our common people whose extreame and secure ignorance loads them with such a burthen of impietie as it is impossible for them euer to stand vnder it when Christ shall appeare and yet they thinke to get to heauen nimbly inough For this whole practise of pietie is placed in that which they call a good meaning and a good hope but replie and tell them that grace is not contented with good meaning but teacheth to liue godly and so bringeth pietie into the life they answer that they could neuer make any shewes as many men can but yet they hope they may haue as good hearts as the best to god-ward Wherevnto if you demand how that roote can be so good which sendeth out such sower fruite or that fountaine sweete which sendeth out such bitter water for in these good hearts ignorance raigneth and the goodnes of their hearts openly neglecteth the word Sacraments c. the means of saluation and preseruatiues of pietie they can answer that they keepe their Church and doe as the most doe and if they receiue not the sacrament it is because they are not reconciled to some that haue offended them vnder which pretence they can refuse that comfort for many yeares together and carrie ye● the matter further with them and tell them your good heart sendeth out wicked oathes bitter curses and fearefull imprecations then they sweare either nothing but the truth or by nothing but that which is good or if they did happe to sweare or curse much they were vrged vnto it And for the sabboath adde that whereas a good heart maketh it a
doe streame out nothing but such as Christ speaketh of adulteries murthers thefts couetousnesse deceit vncleannes pride the wicked eye and cursed speaches and yet charge them with such filthinesse they iustifie themselues with the Pharisie they thanke God they serue God as well as the best haue as good hearts as the best they doe as well and liue as well as the best of them all you cannot fasten on them any sence of their foule sinnes they neede no purging nor washing whereas the godly daily groane and grieue in the sence of the presence of that with them which they hate worse then death it selfe Vse 2. Hence may be noted that wheresoeuer sinne is pardoned it is also purged Rom. 8.2 There is no condemnation to them that are in Iesus Christ for the law of the spirit of life freeth them from the law of sinne and of death that is not only from the curse of the law but euen that law and power of sinne it selfe which would still hold vs in the seruice of it He shall die in his sinne that dieth not vnto his sinne not that sinne can be so dead as not remaine but if it lie not bleeding by vertue of that stroake which Christ in his death hath giuen it if the force of it be not abated and thou escaped from the rule of it Christs blood doth thee no good How excellently doth the Lord Iesus himselfe in his speach to Peter approoue this truth If I wash thee not thou hast no part in mee and no part in Christ no pardon of sinne Dare any man then dreame of his reconciliation with God that finds not holinesse daily preuayling against corruption and the endeauour of puritie in heart and life against that foule impuritie that stickes fast and cleaueth vnto both or dare any vnsanctified heart which in that it hath set it selfe vpon a resolued course in sinne is a rebell vnto God laie claime vnto any part of the death and merit of Christ when Christ hath said that vnlesse he wash the soule that partie hath no part in him No no the wedding garment and this our elder brothers garment is wouen of holines as well as righteousnes and there is no admittance to the supper of the Lambe no blessing without either Vse 3. Let both these considerations mooue vs to be euer washing and clensing our selues from our vncleannesse and neuer to be at rest till we finde our selues although not free from blacknesse yet comely as the Church confesseth of her selfe And because this is the cheife vse of this doctrine I will stand a little longer to propound in it two points 1. the meanes and notes which we must vse and by which we must discerne our selues to be washed and purged 2. the reasons or motiues to vse carefully those meanes For the former A man that meaneth to be neate and cleanly 1. hee willingly looketh himselfe in a glasse he is not angrie with the partie that setteth the glasse before him but he calleth for it that he may see what spots are about him and looketh neere that he may discerne them euen so a man that would be purged must often set the glasse of the law before him will not be angrie with him that preacheth and propoundeth the law vnto him whereby he may see his foule spotts and disorders And here is one difference betweene the cleane and vncleane one cannot endure to take notice of his filthinesse his heart will abide no gaging nor sounding the other hath a purpose to be cleanly and would haue the least filth about him discouered that it may be remooued Secondly A man that is in this way to be purged beginneth with the foulest spots first and those which are most conspicuous and commonly first remooueth those in his face Now the foulest and most noted defilement which is most conspicuous and consequently odious vnto God is an vngodly and wicked heart which as the Lord beginneth his washing withall for the first thing he doth in the conuersion of a sinner is to take away the heart of stone so he that would haue euidence of his cleannesse must beginne here and first wash the inside so the holy man Dauid although his sinnes were in the eyes of the world yet to be soundly purged of them he craueth a cleane heart and a renewed spirit And thus as he that meaneth to be cleane beginneth at his head and so washeth all downeward so the pure of heart beginne at the heart and this carrieth all other parts and members they know that of the filthinesse of the flesh and spirit the latter is more filthy and therefore they seeke first to be renewed in the spirit of their mindes and to wash their consciences from dead workes whereas those that meane neuer to be cleane beginne as it were at their feete if they can abstaine from murther adulte●ie drunkennesse and such open sinnes in the act which is apparant to euery eye they thinke all to be cleane and well because they neuer see the hardnes the pride and foulenes of their hearts but euen this conceit that they haue washed their hands in innocencie neglecting their hearts is a brand and marke of their vncleannes and impuritie Thirdly hee that will be cleane proceedeth on to the other parts of his bodie and will see that they be sutable so this grace of sanctification as it beginneth in the minde so it proceedeth to worke in all the members it is carefull that all the vessels be preserued in holinesse and honour A pure heart will not be without pure hands chast eyes an ordered tongue c. Where is to be obserued another maine difference betweene the cleane and vncleane the former endeauour to cleanse themselues from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit and to grow vp vnto full holinesse but the latter can content themselues with a supposed goodnes of their hearts and yet let loose their tongues to all obsene and lewd speaches and open their eyps to all wandring and lustfull spectacles and their hearts thinke no ill but are good inough for all that but halfe an eye can discerne what impure wretches they are both within and without Fourthly such a person will proceed on to his garments and will not endure filth or spots on them euen so that soule whom Christ purgeth hateth euen the garment spotted by the flesh euen all occasions inducements and appearances of euill yea such as he cannot auoid yet he can hate Whereas the carelesse and slouenly Christian runnes into all companies into all courses and thrusts himselfe into all occasions of sinne because he is filthy he careth not to be filthy still yea and to foule and besmeare all that come in his companie Fifthly The sanctified person vseth all good meanes whereby he may become cleane and beeing so he is carefull to preserue himselfe cleane so long as he can For 1. he desireth to be euer sprinkling himselfe with the
of those deare children of God And where should the gunpowder treason haue beene laid if the blowe had beene giuen had not Satan deuised shoulders which had borne a many such malitious imputations before But notwithstanding such bug-beares whereby Satan would scare men from the sincere imbracing of the truth and entertaining of the ordināces of Christ as the greatest enemies of states and kingdoms let vs be wise hearted and bold to giue Satan the lie seeing the sincerest preachers and professors of the Gospel are so far from denial of the right of Princes as that the doctrine which they bring establisheth their power in their hands rather like the workemen of Salomon who built the Temple and built his throne too And let Protestant preachers and professors carrie this garland and tryumph against all Popish spirits that although the enemies of the truth haue narrowly in all ages sifted them to finde iniquitie in them that thereby they might iustly get the ciuill sword drawne against them yet haue they found no such thing in them Vse 3. If Christian religion confirme ciuill authoritie then the way to bring men to become subiect to superiours is to plant the Gospel and take order that it may preuaile amongst them The teaching and practise of true religion is the conseruant cause of commonwealths because it is a principall meanes to bind vnto obedience without which all politike courses fayle and are found by experience too weake It is not power it is not policie that will still subdue and keepe vnder a rebellious people without the power of the word in their consciences for till obedience be willingly yeelded vnto God it can neuer be conscionably and then not constantly yeelded vnto his Leiftenant This may be a ground of our prayer that the Lord would be pleased to put into the hearts of our gouernours that the Gospel may be throughly planted in Ireland for this is the most direct way to subdue the rebels and bring the whole countrie vnder willing and free subiection Doctr. 2. Euerie Christian must yeeld obedience and subiection vnto Magistrates and higher powers To the explaning of which point three things must be opened 1. who must must be subiect 2. wherein 3. wherefore The first of these was touched before where we affirmed that all sorts of men cleargie as well as laietie must be subiect Romish policie that they might become the absolute libertines of the world and carrie their bad matters vnder a cloud that secular eyes should not prie into them hath withdrawne the neckes of the cleargie from vnder ciuil power and will be iudged by none but their compeares which is as if a theife should be tried by a quest of cutpurses and therefore when they meete with that generall conclusion Let euery soule be subiect they beate their wittes as beeing at a stand but seeing something must be bolted out for a shewe one Pope saith that the person of the speaker is excepted in giuing such preceps whereupon it commeth to passe that Paul and Peter and consequently their successors while they call for subiection of others are themselues exempted from it a silly and weake shift as though Christ did not pay tribute for Peter as for himselfe and as though Paul pleaded not before and appealed to a ciuill iudge Act. 25.11 Another procter of theirs by euerie soule will haue meant onely animall men that is secular and worldly but spirituall men and the cleargie are still exempted as though the Popish cleargie were become and all vanished into spirits or as if where Luke saith that there were in the shippe 376. soules it must needes be concluded they were all secular and animall men among whom Paul and Luke were or as if they were all naturall and animall men in the Arke because it is said there were in all eight soules of which Noah was one who was a preacher of righteousnesse much like the poore proofe of that Iesuite who because Paul would not haue the Corinths goe to lawe vnder the vniust but vnder the Saints surely concludeth that this must be vnder the Bishops for is it not likely that that Epistle was written onely to Bishops because it was sent to the Saints yet vpon such grounds as these hath their cleargie cast off the yoake of obedience these many 100. yeares cleane against the expresse word of Scripture and the vniuersall practise of holy men yea the Sonne of God in the Scriptures Aaron the high Priest must obey Moses Ahimelech when wicked Saul sent for him to slay him obeyed him beeing summoned he came and appealed not from the vniust sentence of death so did Christ so did his Apostles and so must and ought their successors vnto the ende yet sometimes as it is seene in all tenures which are not from God men knowe not what to hold to after the Popish cleargie hath challenged their exemption and authoritie by diuine right from the word beeing pressed they forget themselues and claime it iur● humano that is from the priuiledges don●tions and exemptions of Princes and Emperors wherein besides that they should not haue suffered the Princes by departing from their right to breake Gods commandement for Princes haue not power to loose him from obedience whom God hath bound as also by flying to a priuiledge as their best and last refuge is plainly implyed what of due by the lawe of God and nature belongeth vnto Princes from them The second point is wherein and how farre we ought to obey Magistrates Answ. Euery Christian is bound to take heede to the mouth of the king in all things and so farre as he hath power to command Now because the ciuill Magistrate is alwaies bound to command in the Lord and 2. is the father of our bodies after a sort and of all our outward man hence two grounds of great moment are concluded The former is that euerie man must obey all possible commandements which are not against the lawe of nature and the lawe of God for the Magistrate in all his commandements as well as executions must be the Minister of God onely vrging that vpon his subiects which God himselfe whose place he sustaineth would vrge It is said of Cyrus that he must be Gods sheepeheard and he shall performe not his owne but all my desire The iudgement is not mans but Gods and it is the honourable style of Princes to be assistants to the ruler of the whole earth neither is this to denie any supremacie to Princes to tie them to the tables of which God hath made them the keepers but it is to ascribe vnto them such soueraigntie vnder God ouer all causes and persons Ecclesiasticall and Ciuill as that they may not depose the care of Church or Common-wealth as a thing wherein they will not be wearied but must prouide that sincere and vncorrupt doctrine be published in all their Churches that the Sacraments be duely and seasonably administred
the Apostle Peter who combineth all these duties in one short verse but a little inverting the order Feare God honour the King loue brotherly fellowship This precept in hand chargeth vpon euerie Christian these two maine duties First that he must make account with himselfe that everie Christian dutie belongeth vnto him euen euerie good worke to which the Lord giueth him calling and abilitie Secondly that he must keepe himselfe in a fitnesse and readinesse thereunto Doctr. 1. The former is cleared by the testimonie and other obseruations out of the Scripture The lawe curseth him that continueth not in all things the Gospel also in generall requireth the obseruation of all things Teach them to obserue all things which I haue commanded you which precept was giuen when Christ had on the crosse fulfilled all righteousnesse in the persons of his members As for the speciall precepts of the Gospel they are many Philip. 4.8 Whatsoeuer things are true honest iust pure pertaining to loue of good report if there be any vertue or any praise thinke on these things The Apostle was not content that the Corinths should abound in euery grace else and be wanting in one but exhorteth that as they abounded in euerie thing in faith in word in knowledge in diligence in loue so they would striue to abound in this grace also namely of mercifulnesse to the distressed Saints The same Apostle to the Thessalonians knewe what he prayed when he wished that they were stablished to euerie good word and worke 2. This standeth with those special commendations which the Apostles haue giuen of sundry of the Saints to stirre vp others vnto their imitation When Paul would be large in commending the Church of the Romanes he affirmeth they were full of goodnesse so of Dorcas we read that she was full of good workes and almes and mention is made of the coats and garments which shee had made for the Saints 3. As the holy Ghost in Scripture approoueth and commendeth the presence of any true grace for the encouragement of it so also taketh he notice of that which is yet wanting to prouoke to the purchase of it Many of the good kings of Iudah were highly commended yet something or other they fayled in either the high places were not wholly taken downe or some league or othe● was made with the enemies against Gods commandement or some heauines or forgetfulnesse ouertooke them that of fewe of them it could be said they went through-stitch with euerie good worke The spirit likewise in the new Testament speaking to the Churches taketh knowledge of many good things in the Angels of them I knowe thy loue thy faith thy patience thy zeale and thy workes c. but fewe of them escaped without that exception neuerthelesse I haue somewhat or a fewe things against thee either the first loue was fallen from or Balaams doctrine maintained or Iesabels fornications suffered c. but according to the truth of their condition the spirit is plaine with them this thou hast and this thou hast no● implying it to be matter of iust reproofe before God to be wanting in any good worke which hee hath giuen calling and meanes vnto 4. The nature of grace giueth light and euidence vnto this truth the which disposeth the will and powers of the soule equally vnto one good thing as well as vnto an other for regeneration includeth in it the seeds of all vertues and reneweth and changeth the whole nature which hath in it the seede of all sinne and vice and when the Scripture would note the soundnesse of grace hence it doth it that it both hath respect to all the commandements and hateth all the wayes of falshood Vse 1. This doctrine first teacheth vs to learne the rule of euery good worke legall or euangelicall The former are not only such as are commonly knowne and expressed in the words of the decalogue but such also as therein are included and implied these must be sought out for else ignorance of the law excuseth not from fault Content not thy selfe that thou canst say the commandements nor if thou canst say that thou hast kept the whole letter of the law from thy youth but studie the whole Scripture which is an exposition and large commentarie of those tenne words heare it read it diligently meditate vpon it apply it to thy heart and life else knowest thou not how to beginne any good work Learne further the speciall good workes required by the Gospel such as are faith in Christ repentance of sin past amendment of life for time to come And cursed be all that Popish doctrine which would hide this light vnder a bushell whereby alone the Christian can discerne what is a good worke and how himselfe may do it well Vse 2. If euery good worke belong to euery Christian then may not men post ouer the matter to the Minister the common conceit is that the clergie should be holy hospitable and so qualified as we haue heard in the first Chapter but for common men and vnlearned it will be acceptable inough if they be almost Christians that is as good as neuer a whit whereas the Lord bindeth vpon euery Christian of what condition soeuer the practise of euery good worke which is offered him within the compasse of his calling either generall or particular For example If a Christian be called into publike place as of Magistracie he may not conceiue that the building of the Church the discountenancing of sinne the encouragement of the godly belongeth only to the Minister but he must set hand to these workes he must establish and countenance the Ministrie he must be the foreman in all good exercises he must be rich in workes of mercie and of iustice the patron of the poore the sheild of the oppressed but especially a patterne of pietie he must be a man fearing God yea he and his house must serue the Lord. If thou remainest a priuate man the same care lyeth vpon thee in thy proportion thou must procure the wealth of Ierusalem at least by thy prayers for the peace of the Church for able Ministers for the free passage of the Gosspel and if God further enable thee thou must releeue such as stand for the truth of God and puritie of his worship Thou must doe all the good thou canst to others in preseruing life feeding the hungrie clothing the naked visiting the prisoners and so become rich in the works of mercie Thou must also be diligent in duties at home in reforming thy family teaching them praying with them examining how they profit and thriue in grace and walking religiously and conscionably in euery good worke of thy personall calling Here is a course which goeth farre beyond harmelesnsse and good meanings and good words which Iames saw to be the religion of many in his time this is soundnes in christianity when a man can thus turne himselfe as well to one good action
can with new delight thinke and speake of old sinnes for there the selfe same affection and vile lust which brought on that sinne is yet aliue and vnmortified For the latter euery such remembrance should mooue vs to commiseration to our brethren offending Alas why should not I be meeke to others if I had no reason else my owne estate ministreth a multitude I was in times past as bad as any the child of wrath aswell as any other If for the present there be a change by grace I am all that I am and for the time future my selfe may be tempted and am as subiect to fall as any other thus I was and then I would haue bin borne withall that thus I am not it is the Lord that hath seperated me and now I see what hand it is that keepeth me from beeing led and left in tempation Thus if we behold our sinne we may sucke some sweet out of poyson and out of our euill take occasion to grow better all our daies furthering our selues thereby to walke humbly before God and meekly towards our brethren otherwise to behold sin past neither of these prouoked prooueth but an idle beholding of it and becommeth an hurtfull ●earer of the conscience in the end Doct. 2. Whosoeuer are called vnto the faith haue experience of a double estate in themselues one in time past and another for the present the one of nature the other of grace our Apostle affirmeth it of all beleeuers of which there are none but he had his once his time past in regard of which he may now be said to be changed into another man Rom. 7.5 6. The time was when the Romans were in the flesh when sinnefull motions had force in them vnto death and there was an aftertime when they were deliuered from the law and serued God not in the oldnesse of the letter but in the newnesse of spirit Ephes. 2.3 Among whome the Gentiles we beleeuers had our conuersation in time past Colos. 3.7 Wherein ye walked also once but now c. 1. Cor. 6.11 And such were some of you but yee are washed And good reason there is that he that is now beloued should see that once he was not beloued and that he who now is in the state of grace should see that he was once in the state of wrath aswell as others which will cause him to loue much and indeed the elect could not be elect nor iustified nor washed if they were alwaies the children of God and were it not for this once and time past wherein there was no difference betweene them and the reprobate but only in Gods counsell and possibilitie of calling I adde further that the conuerted may and must haue experience of this change for the conuersion of a sinner is a miracle aboue all naturall wonders and therefore except in some Ieremie Iohn Baptist and some few sanctified from the wombe is no such insensible thing as cannot be perceiued It is no such naturall change as is effected by insensible degrees as when he that was a child is now become a man but a supernaturall change by the spirit of grace such as when a man is borne into the world or when a blind man is restored to his sight or rather a dead man vnto life which are things of much note and manifest alteration and that of the whole man Againe faith it is which as an internall instrument purgeth the Augian stable and purifieth the ●oule cage of the heart now this we may know and must examine whether we be in the faith or no know yee not that Christ is in you vnlesse ye be reprobates and 1. Cor. 3.16 Know yee not that yee are the Temple of God and that the spirit of God dwelleth in you and Rom. 6.11 Know yee that yee are dead to sinne but are aliue to God in Iesus Christ our Lord. Vse 1. Labour to find this change in thy selfe and examine whether thou canst put difference betweene time past and time present for otherwise I see not but thou must set thy selfe downe without comfort a● one that hath no sound proofe of thy conuersion Quest. But how shall I come to any distinct knowledge of this change in my selfe Ans. Enquire and make search whether thou canst find the life of grace in thy soule for before this change thou wast dead in trespasses and sinnes Hath then the powerfull voice of Christ called thee out of thy graue hath he breathed the breath of life into the face of thy soule hast thou thy spirituall sences restored thee are thine eyes opened that thou canst say with the blind man One thing I know that whereas I was blind now I am sure I see hath he said Ephata to thine eares that now they are become the other sence of spirituall illumination and vnderstanding dost thou sauour the things of God Is the word sweet to thy tast dost thou feele the prickings of the Law and the lenitives of the Gospel surely if thou hast any true sence of God thou art not altogether destitute of the life of God Againe examine thy motion which is another inseperable companion of life euen in things that want sence namely whether thy cogitations motions speaches actions publike and priuate be changed and haue a new qualitie vpon them whether they are now holy spirituall heauenly fruitfull whereas before thy change thou wast in all these led by the command and instinct of the flesh Canst thou pray in faith and crie in assurance Abba Father this is also a signe of the presence of the spirit which is the earnest pennie of thy adoption whereas before this change thou fledst from the presence of God and tooke him for thine enemie Dost thou loue God for himselfe and thy neighbour for Gods sake this will be as the heate of a stone in summer which argueth the shining of the sunne whereas before this change thou hatedst God and loued thy neighbour either not at all or but in carnall respects Is thy heart estranged from the world the honours profits and pleasures of it this change maketh the woman at the well forget her waterpot whereas before thy heauen was here vpon earth thy treasure here and so thy heart also Doth the Church of God and the number of Gods people acknowledge this chang in thee for this is not to be contemned seeing that hardly can the child liue in the womb and not stirre or stirre but the mother shall perciue it take knowledge therefore what good men conceiue of thee and by these notes examine thy selfe vnpartially thou shalt come to know whether thou art begotten of immortall seed borne into the Church of God and called to the estate both of grace and glorie Obiect Some will here say alas I now feare that I know not what this change meaneth I haue good desires to doe well to loue God to auoid sinne to do good to good men and yet I find
raysing and returne out of Babylon but as a dreame for whose hearts leap within them at the ioyfull message of the pardon of their sinne who leane vnto the promises walking worthy of them for their life very few assent vnto the truth we teach it hardly sinketh with men that God should become man that by the death of one life should be procured to so many that the way to heauen should lie by hell that by afflictions they should be passed to glorie these things be riddles to many professed Christians So when we call people as God did his to walke in the old way that they may find rest to their soules they answer vs with them we will not walke in that way the sound of the thing if not of the voice speaketh for we call men from swearing lying couetousnes which is idolatrie from Saboath breaking intemperance drinkings and vncleannes but mens hearts speake by their liues we will sweare we will drinke to drunkennesse we will by gaming or idlenesse breake the sabboath the waies of God are too straite and vnequall a man had as good be in prison as in these bonds Lastly whereas by the knowledge and comfort of the Scriptures we should come to haue hope which whosoeuer hath hee purgeth himselfe how doe most professed Christians peruert the Scriptures to their own destruction God is mercifull and therefore I may do what I list at what time soeuer a sinner repenteth God will blot out all his sinnes and therefore I will not repent yet The whole law is comprehended in these two thou shalt loue the Lord thy God with all thy heart or aboue all and thy neighbour as thy selfe and therefore I know as much as any Preacher can tell me what need all these sermons The Sabboath was made for man and not man for the Sabboath and therefore what need men be so strait laced and precise in the duties of it Hee that prouideth not for his wife and children is worse then an Infidell therefore I must and will diligently seek the world and set my heart vpon couetousnes By all which instances we may see our selues as in a glasse tainted with this fearefull sin of rising vp and reasoning against that light which shineth out in the word Vse 1. Let all men learne hence to be humbled vnder that vile estate of our nature by which we are not onely laden with simple ignorance but euen oppressed with affected contumacie against it such as our Sauiour chargeth vpon the Iewes Ioh. 8. and such as breaketh out in many of our people who not seldome in hearing vs teach them the truth of God say as the Iewes of Christ who can heare him Alas how farre better were it with vs to haue beene heathen or infidels and neuer haue heard of Iesus Christ that our ignorance had beene simple and inuincible then such Christians as abound not onely with ignorance but such as the Apostle speaketh of Rom. 1.24 Which is caused of the hardnesse of heart which is in them 2. Hence may we cease to wonder why so fewe obey the Gospel why after so much teaching there is so little fruit so little knowledge so little turning to God because the degree of corruption of mind is beyond bare ignorance as to assent to the word is a further degree of grace then bare knowledge The Minister may hale and pull but vnlesse the Father drawe none come to the Sonne such is the contumacie and stubbornenes of mens hearts naturally that no curse can terrifie nor promise affect it and this was it which made Christs own ministerie vnprofitable to the Iewes as we reade Ioh. 8. Let hearers and students of the Scripture labour and pray for the sanctification of mind and the spirit renewing their inner man without which they may heare and study and reade but as the Eunuch without vnderstanding for want of a guide Without this teacher our report shall not be beleeued nor without this finger of God shall the arme of God be reuealed A sound of words may be heard and the report of truth may be so strong as to winne acknowledgment of it selfe but faith shall not be founded nor loue quickned nor hope confirmed nor that change wrought without which thou shalt continue a cauiller still yea froward and an enemie to God and his truth 3. If we be such as are called out of this estate to whom God hath giuen hearts to beleeue assent and obey the truth let vs not depriue God of his glorie but acknowledging his gift giue him the honour due vnto him for here is an exceeding great power of God put forth if it be giuen thee to beleeue the worke of faith is a worke of great power see 2. Thess. 1.11 Deceiued Out of this third degree of corruption of mind we learne That before men be brought vnto Christ they infinitely erre and their whole life is but a wandring from God and his wayes For 1. Christ is the way the truth and the life and therefore to be out of Christ is to be out of the way that tendeth to life 2. Our selues by our sinne are cast into the darke night and haue not the least glimpse of Sun Moone or starre but walking in darkenesse knowe not whether we tende 3. We haue a wandring and vagrant vaine euen after our calling and therefore much more before how haue the Saints of God complained in their owne and in the name of the Church Isa. 53.6 we haue all wandred like lost sheepe The like Dauid confesseth of himselfe and euen after conuersion the Lord must still be seeking vs vp Psal. 119.176 oh seek thy seruant for els we haue no list to returne to the sheepheard of our soules Iesus Christ. Now the reason of all this error is a filthy flatterie of the heart and a guilfull securitie of spirit which holdeth men from seeking happinesse where it is to be had while they mistaking their condition make faire weather with their soules when in the meane time all is amisse and they for truth embrace nothing but dangerous and damnable error We shall not neede trauell farre to seeke instances of such vagrants out of the wayes of God and yet aske any of them what way they trauell all of them hast to heauen and will be there as soone as the best if we may beleeue them I might here saue some labour but that the world swarmeth with such wanderers and that I take it much materiall to our point and purpose to shew how farre many are out of the right way how little acquaintance many Christians haue with Christ of whom some neuer saw his face neuer saluted him others haue thought it their best securitie to stand a loose and follow him a farre off and others after a little acquaintance with him doe as many disciples did fall off from him and walke with him no more But a little further to prosecute the point in particular
carefull inough to preuent and seeke out for helpe against the diseases which threaten the bodily death of their children and seruants take vp some care to remooue that euerlasting death which this euill threatneth and will certainely bring if in due season it be not repressed Teach thy child and traine him in the Scriptures from a child teach thy seruant the trade of Christianitie and godlinesse for thou art no lesse bound to deliuer him the principles of this calling as the particular to which he is bound vse good meanes to get them the light of knowledge opposed against this blindnesse of mind worke vpon their wills to breake them from the follies and vanities of youth opposed to this rebellion of will bring them at least to outward conformitie in their conuersation opposed to this generall deprauation of manners these things they will not forget in their age or if they do the perill is their own thou hast done thy duty one thing remember thy seruants thy children are all poysoned and haue need of some present antidote Verse 4. But when the bountifulnesse and loue of God our Sauiour towards man appeared 5. Not by the workes of righteousnesse which we had done but according to his mercie he saued vs by the washing of the new birth and renewing of the holy Ghost 6. Which hee shed on vs abundantly through Iesus Christ our Sauiour 7. That we beeing iustified c. Our Apostle hauing so largely described the miserable condition of man in his naturalls whose whole temper we haue seene to be such as carieth him to all rough and gracelesse courses he now setteth by it a liuely description of a new condition vnto which those who are good in Gods sight are called and this he doth in these foure verses in this order First by the principall efficient cause of it which is the bountifulnesse and loue of God fitly opposed to that hardnesse and vnmercifulnesse of men which was the ground of feircenes in their speaches and behauiours God was not so feirce against man but when we were in that miserable condition as he is the fountaine of all goodnes in himselfe so his gentlenes and philanthropie streamed out and the glorious beames of his grace shined out vpon vs through his Christ ver 4. Now this principall efficient is illustrated 1. by the time when 2. by remoouing the contrarie things which whatsoeuer they may seeme are so farre from beeing causes as they are rather diametrally opposed namely the workes of righteousnesse which we had done that is the verie best and floure of our workes which indeed had no righteousnesse here was no such thing concurring to the helping of vs into this estate but his meere mercie saued vs which assertion of Gods free mercie is inserted and repeated againe to take downe the arrogancie of some presumptuous spirits in those dayes This he doth in the former part of the 5. verse Secondly by the instrumentall or ministeriall efficient cause which helpeth vs into this change and new condition and this may be conceiued either proper and that is the renewing of the holy Ghost or typicall and sacramentall and that is the lauer of regeneration By which some vnderstand Baptisme in a larger sence including all the gifts necessarie to saluation as it is taken Ioh. 3.5 and 1. Pet. 1.3 because the verse following casteth eye to such places of the old Testament which speake not of the effusion of sacramentall water but of the plentifull powring out of such graces of the spirit as were prophecied to be in abundance conferred to the Church of the new Testament as Ezech. 36. I will powre out cleane waters Ioel. 2. I will powre out of my spirit that is the waters of grace vnto a new life But I will not leaue the high way where I may as I take it more conueniently goe in it I will speak of this lauer of regeneration in the stricter sence taking it for the sacrament of Baptisme for so I shall not confound things which the text seemeth plainely to distinguish the whole former sence beeing expressed in those words and the renewing of the holy Ghost as after in prosecuting them we shall see Thirdly this new condition is amplified by the finall cause of it and this ende is twofold 1. nearer hand namely our present iustification That by his grace we beeing iustified that is accounted righteous 2. more remote and further off but annexed and inseperably tyed vnto the former namely our future glorification when we shall be manifested to be heyres of life eternall which yet is not so farre off vs but that we haue sure hold of it by hope So as the whole carriage and meaning of these 4. verses seemeth to be this Howsoeuer formerly we were in our old estate lost in wandring and vagrant courses yet after that the most free loue and good will of God our Sauiour whose sole mercie alone mooued him in his sonne to embrace vs through the preaching of the Gospel did more clearely shine out then not of any workes of righteousnesse which we had done for what could we then doe but of his meere mercie he saued vs and to this purpose he powred vpon vs his holy spirit to the renewing of vs and the purging of our consciences from all the impuritie of them of which inward purging that lauer of Baptisme is a signe and representation wherein he doth not sparingly and drop by drop besprinkle our consciences with those pure waters but abundantly and with a liberall hand sheddeth them and powreth them ou● vpon our soules through Christ our Sauiour All which our good God hath done for vs that we might obtaine righteousnesse and all spirituall graces attending it and so might be led to the fruition of that glorie which he hath alreadie put in our hands by faith and hope which shall not make vs ashamed In the principall efficient we are to speake of three things in order 1. of this loue and bountifulnesse of God which is the positiue cause of our saluation 2. The time when it appeared vnto vs But when the bountifulnesse and loue of God towards man 3. The remoouall of a supposed cause not by the workes of righteousnesse which we had done but by his mercie he saued vs. In the first we must first distinguish these two words bountifulnesse and loue of God towards man The former noteth rather that natiue nesse which is in or rather which is his owne nature who is goodnesse it selfe and readie to be implied to the good of the creature The latter a communicated and participated goodnesse vnto others as a streame issuing from the former fountaine for it is said to be such a goodnesse as hath appeared And whereas the goodnesse of God shineth out in and to all his creatures not only in creating them all verie good but in the daily ordering and preseruing of them this is not such a generall goodnes but more speciall and
regard meete to be done by the whole 2. Euery one ought to tarrie to helpe the congregation in prayer for the infant and to ioyne in the praise of God for the ingrafting in of another member into the bodie of Christ. 3. Euery one ought to helpe himselfe both in calling to minde his owne baptisme his promise and ingrafting into Christ as also to examine what fruit he reapeth of the death and resurrection of Christ into which he is set and so to be either humbled or thankfull as he findeth his estate 4. Lastly how much so euer vsed yet is it a most vnreuerent part towards this ordinance what an vngodly contempt were it to runne out from hearing the word and why is it not also in running from the Sacrament which is the seale of that couenant as if men were loath to be present where the blessed Trinitie presenteth it selfe to such a gratious purpose as this is namely to seale such benefits to one of that congregation And more it is a disordered thing for the good of the Church requireth that the Congregation should come in together and goe out together wherein the Lord is so strait that the King might not depart till all was ended Ezek. 46.10 He shall goe in when they goe in and when they goe forth they shall goe forth together Let euery man make more conscience of this dutie hereafter and seeing Christ himselfe disdaineth not to come to Iohns baptisme let vs take heede of running from Christs And the renewing of the holy Ghost Now we come to speake of the inward means of our saluation wherby the Lord setteth vs into this new condition here called the renewing of the holy Ghost wherein to vnderstand it better we will consider two points 1. what this renewing is 2. why it is called the renewing of the holy Ghost and so come to the instructions For the former It is a grace of God whereby the corruption of nature in beleeuers is by the power of the holy Ghost daily renewed vnto the image of God I say 1. it is a grace of God 1. Pet. 1.3 Who according to his abundant mercie hath begotten vs to a liuely hope 2. by which the corruption of nature which is the proper obiect of it called in Scripture the flesh the old man not the substance of bodie or soule which were not decaied or perished but the corrupt qualities which by the fall tooke place in them 3. is renewed this is a word of relation and opposed to that olde corruption drawne from the old Adam for so is the new birth by the spirit opposed to that old natiuitie which is of the flesh Ioh. 3. Againe the word importeth a compleat worke vpon the whole subiect for as in the birth of a child not one or moe parts and members but the whole child is borne so in the new birth the whole man must be borne againe the whole man must be a new creature in which is not the framing of something out of something but of something out of nothing For if the Popish doctrine were true that there were some power in nature whereby the holy Ghost a little freeing it it could of it selfe will and performe that which is truly good then were man but in part new and so could not be called a new man a new creature or be said to be borne againe neither raised vp from the death of trespasses sinnes but reuiued and recouered as out of a swoone or some desperate disease nor renewed but a little repaired and mended But because the corruption of nature is gone ouer the whole man as we haue a little before heard so this renewing must be in the whole man and in the same order 1. It must begin in the spirit of the minde Rom. 12.2 the first worke in this new creation also must be to make the light to banish the darknes and blindnes of minde vnder which are comprehended the vnderstanding will and affections 2. It must proceede to the outward man and conuersation that euen the members of the bodie may become the members of Christ and obedient vnto the law of the mind renewed and so the whole may become a liuely reasonable and acceptable sacrifice vnto God In these two standeth the renewing of the whole man required 1. Thess. 5. The God of peace sanctifie you throughout and I pray God your whole soule bodie and spirit be kept blameablesse where is mention of the spirit as the very soule and life of a renewed person and is no other then the grace of sanctification opposed to the corruption of nature which is seated both in soule and bodie 4. I adde In beleeuers because regeneration is the vndeuided and inseparable companion of faith which is called the faith of the elect as we haue heard 2. Thess. 2.13 Chosen you to saluation through the sanctification of the spirit and the faith of truth whence it followeth that as faith is not of all no more is regeneration neither is this grace further tied to the Sacrament then where it meeteth with a faithfull receiuer 5. I say daily for although the beleeuer be renewed in euery part yet all is but in part it is so compleat in the subiect as that it is yet a continued worke and not consummate vntill we all meete in the vnitie of the Sonne of God when that perfect is come for so long as we are here below this righteousnes of God is revealed from faith to faith and we are changed from glorie to glorie and we walke from strength to strength In all things growing vp in him which is the head he that is iust must be iust still and he that is holy must be daily more holy and thus encrease vntill the perfect day 6. I adde vnto the image of God Eph. 4.24 Put on the new man which after God that is after Gods image is created in righteousnes and holines see also 2. Cor. 3.18 We are changed into the same image of God for as Adam was created in the image of God so must euery beleeuer be renewed vnto that blessed condition In a word looke what the image of God was which was giuen vs by our creation vnto the same must we be wrought now by the grace of the second couenant but that stood not in the substance of the soule and naturall faculties of it so much such as vnderstanding free will memorie c. but 1. in the knowledge and illumination of it Colos. 4.10 Put on the new man which is renewed in knowledge 2. in the righteousnes and integritie of the whole man Eph. 4.24 Put on the new man which after God is created in righteousnes and true holines The second point in the meaning is why this is called the renewing of the holy Ghost Answ. Not that it is not wrought as well by the other persons beeing a worke without themselues for the Father reneweth as beeing the foundation and
a word the very scope of this washing in Iordan directly concludeth against that Popish collection of his for why doth the Lord command him to goe and wash in Iordan rather then as he expected that the Prophet should lay his hand vpon him or by a word heale him Surely no stronger reason can be giuen then this that he should not attribute any power or vertue of the cure to the Prophets hand bodie or person but seeing he must doe that in which there is no such power at all but is so vnlikely a meanes of cure as Naaman almost scornefully reiected the whole glorie of the worke might returne to the God of Israel As vnlikely yea more that water should wash the leprosie of sinne from the conscience as the outward leprosie from the bodie of Naaman and indeede the worke in both is from the spirit of the Lord. The like may be said of the poole of Siloam wherein the blind man must wash and for that place in the 5. of Iohn concerning the poole of Bethesda which healed all manner of diseases the text saith plainly that it was the Angels stirring of the water and without it nothing was done and if the power had beene proper and naturall or inseparably tyed to it it would haue healed the second and third that had stepped in as well as the first So we say when the spirit of God mooueth these waters of baptisme there followeth a cure without which if a man were euery day baptized it would be vnavaileable to regeneration and sanctification Thus not to followe the rest and wast time in them we may see that when men willingly blind themselues it is iust with God to giue them vp to all delusions that in seeing they might not see nor vnderstand Vse 2. As to magnifie and reuerence these sanctified waters as the outward meanes in the right vse of which the spirit worketh and exhibiteth that which they represent so also to beware least wanting this inward worke of the spirit which giueth all efficacie and comfortable fruit of baptisme it become not a barren and a naked signe the rather in that the Lord himselfe obserued this corruption among his owne people that they stood too much vpon outward institutions as the Temple the law circ●mcision the fathers c. and therefore in many places charged them not to trust in such lying words but to get the foreskinne of their hearts circumcised as well as the foreskinne of their flesh and not to rest in the title of a Iewe which was to be one but outwardly and in the letter nor that they were descended of Abraham according to the flesh except they were Iewes within and descended of Abraham according to the faith also so as by doing his workes they might resemble him So when we see Christians stand so much vpon outward baptisme and are well contented without the inward vertue of it when we see them glorie in the bare title without the power of Christianitie it is our part to imitate the Lord and his Prophets and call our people to get the circumcision not made with hands but by the finger and spirit of God which is more then to wash the foulenesse of the bodie for it is to put off the sinfull bodie euen the wicked corruption of the heart for so it is expounded to be the resemblance of Christ in his death and buriall first and then in the life of grace and glorie to which he rose againe Boast not then of thy baptisme without this change of thy heart and life for then thou boastest of a broken vowe call it not thy Christendome vnlesse by it thou beest set into Christ and transplanted by it into the similitude of his death thou art no better before God then an heathen o● Turke notwithstanding thy bodie hath beene washed in this lauer if thy heart still remaine foule and filthy and as good neuer a whit as neuer the better And this I speake of good ground and in the language of Scripture Do we not see the Iewes charged as not circumcised although they had the skinne of their flesh cut Isai. ●4 57.3 and Steuen goeth not as we say behind the doore to call them st●ff●necked and vncircumcised so why may not we speake the truth retaining in our hearts and stile the reuerence of that holy ordinance that the water in baptisme further then ioyned to the word and applyed to this holy ende authentically to seale that which God hath engrauen vpon it is no better vnto the vnbeleeuer then ordinarie pumpe water It is too Iewish and yet too common that the religion and profession of Christiās standeth for most part in outward shewe and glorie and such things as are made by the hands of men wanting that spirit and truth which is indeede the crowne of Christianitie and yet alas what will the representation of Christs death and resurection doe good if the vertue and power of it be wanting in the soule Vnto thy outward baptisme get the heauens opened as in the baptisme of Christ and see that the spirit hath descended vpon thee to the conuerting of thy soule and begetting thee to a newe life for this is the soule of baptisme without which it is a dead letter and a fruitlesse ceremonie Vse 3. As it is with baptisme so is it with all other ordinances of God no outward meanes of saluation can be effectuall vnlesse the inward worke of the spirit be added We haue power to come and heare the word but vnlesse the anoynting teach vs we shall remaine vntaught yea let the Apostles themselues preach the Lord must worke with them also or nothing will be done These two the spirit of the Lord vpon vs and his word in our mouthes make vp a sweete harmonie And how is it else that men after so long powerfull preaching and frequent hearing remaine ignorant hard hearted rebellious surely the reason is because the Lord giueth not an heart to perceiue and because the spirit bloweth not there to giue the seeing eye and hearing eare which where it is wanting a man may sit out as many summons as Pharaoh did and neuer the better yea the more hardned So in afflictions and corrections which are durable and lingring on many why do men profit so little why doe they not open the doore of discipline why are not the roddes of correction the tree of life to a number surely because the spirit boareth not the eare he teacheth not the right vse of them Obiect But what can I doe withall if the spirit teach me not Answ. The spirit would not be wanting if men would come preparedly to be taught But 1. men come without beleefe and mingle not the word with faith and so it becommeth vnprofitable or 2. without repentance whereas the humble shall be taught in the way onely or 3. without praier and the spirit powreth not out these waters of grace but vpon thirstie
If we obserue in the multitude the high atheisme contempt of God and his word his Sabbaths Sacraments Ministers and his whole worship if we listen vnto the cursed oaths and imprecations if we cast our eyes vpon the iniustice pride riot hatred and earthlinesse which dwelleth euerie where with men can we now conceiue other but that the wicked spirit which ruleth in the world of the disobedient is abundantly powred out rather then this pure spirit here mentioned And if we behold the numbers of men who scorne and powre contempt on such as haue receiued the smallest measure of these graces can we thinke that such abundant grace is powred vpon men on earth seeing the most seeke vnder the titles of schisme or heresie to hunt it and banish it from off the face of the earth Or yet if we further looke vpon men that make shew of receiuing competencie of these waters who are yet neuer a whit washed nor euer a whit the cleaner they come to Church and heare they seeme to like good things and walke in ciuill conuersation but in regard of the soundnesse of their hearts we wash bricks or Aethiopians and loose all our labour may we not now well aske where is the abundance of this grace we speake of Or if we looke at such as haue receiued true grace howsoeuer the Lord will bring it to something in the ende yet we can scarse see on them or in them any such abundance but like strait necked vessels they receiue it but droppe by droppe although it be powred on them with full buckets We seldome see professors like trees of righteousnesse laden with the fruits of the spirit or walking or standing in Gods orchyard of the Church in a constant course of fruitfulnes but now and then in good moodes some works of pietie and mercie may be fou●d in their hands and the best of men come farre short of their watring in their encrease If the spirit were powred out from aboue would it not make our wildernesses fruitfull fields oh let vs bewaile our owne vncapablenesse in the sence of our wants and euerie man vrge his owne heart Is the spirit powred out on my soule he is the spirit of light and illumination I should then be filled with all knowledge of God he is the spirit of grace compunction and compassion I should therefore be much and often in the exercises of repentance and a broken heart he is the spirit of sanctification I should therefore abound in all holy conuersation he is the spirit of consolation I should therefore exceede with true and sound ioy and peace of good conscience he is the spirit of loue and therefore I should powre out workes of loue and mercie aboundantly if he were abundantly powred out on my soule Thus should euerie man examine his owne heart 2. If vpon this examination we feele not this plentie of grace we must ware of accusing God but condemne our selues in whom all the fault is as who refuse and despise so great grace If any aske how it can come to passe that such excellent grace should be refused I answer there are three maine causes of it 1. ignorance and blindnesse of minde 2. hardnesse of heart 3. securitie which three destitute vs of so abundant grace as is offered First we see not know not and therefore affect not these graces Ioh. 4.10 If thou hadst knowne the gift of God thou wouldst haue asked and he would haue giuen thee waters of life Water is so necessarie a creature as nothing can be more dangerously or vncomfortably wanting to the life of man this euery man seeth by the eye of his sence and so are much more these spirituall waters of life vnto the heauenly life which because men cannot discerne with the same eie they neuer affect nor thirst after them whence it commeth to passe that as the Poet in the fable men stand as it were vp to the chinne in these waters and yet die for water euen in the midst of those sweete streames die eternally for want of them If we want them therefore it is because we thirst not after them for onely he that thirsteth is called to them and Christ will giue onely to him that thirsteth to drinke of them Enlarge thy heart therefore wait vpon the Lord open thy mouth wide and he will fill it Samson readie to die for thirst called vpon the Lord and the Lord opened a chawbone and a riuer came gushing out so if thou seeing the necessitie and that there is no way but eternall death without these liuing waters and thirst after the Lord and call earnestly he will before thou shalt want euen by miracle abundantly supply thee but if thou esteemest of grace as a thing thou maist best want there is good reason thou be without it The second let is hardnesse of heart and worse then the former for that cannot affect because it knoweth not this will not though it know but keepeth the soule drie and barren without the least droppe of grace powre a sea of water vpon a rocke it remaineth a rocke still neuer a drop sinketh in and so is it with many a man he setteth himselfe by yeares together vnder the preacher he heareth gratious doctrine but the invinsible hardnes of his heart suffereth not one droppe of these dewes of heauen to sinke into his soule but as the light of the sunne shineth onely on the outside of a tree so doth this sunne of the Church on such a man but neuer getteth within him The third let is securitie ioyned with extreame neglect of meanes wherein the spirit vsually conveieth these graces A man that meaneth to be rich will not neglect his calling nor the meanes ●e seeth offered but he that meaneth to die a begger casteth vp al foldeth his hands together putteth them in his bosome care away let the squares goe as they will Art thou minded to bee rich in grace then must thou vse the meanes frequent the places and pipes where these waters flowe Quest. Where shall we haue them Answ. They runne from vnder the threshold of the Sanctuarie and the ordinarie pipes wherein the Lord in greatest abundance conueieth them are the word and Sacraments in their right and reuerent vse The Prophet Ioel hauing spoken of these abundant waters leadeth his hearers by the hand to the quickspring wher they rise In that day shall all the riuers of Iudah runne with waters and a fountaine shall runne out of the house of the Lord and water the valley of Sittim where the choice Cedars were betokening the trees of righteousnesse within the pale of the Church of God Here then is the place where thou maist drawe with ioy waters out of the wells of consolation all in the plurall number waters wells because here is promise made of more abundant blessing And yet while thy plough goeth abroad thou maist not be idle within doores for the Lord would
of their owne displeasure and sometimes out of their sonnes misdemeanours doe disinherit their heires but the Lord cannot growe into such displeasure with his children as ●ue● to cast them out whome in his Christ he hath once admitted into his house If his sonnes sinne against him he will visit their sinnes and scourge them with the rodds of men but his mercie and truth will he neuer take from them Now of the tenure by which we hold life eternall namely of hope I haue spoken twise before in this Epistle at large chap. 1.2 2.13 to which the reader may looke backe onely in a word note that it is a mark of a man set into this new condition to hope and wait for the blessed inheritance in heauen 2. Cor. 5.2 We sigh desiring to be clothed with our house from heauen 2. Tim. 4.8 the description of the godly to be those that loue the appearing of Christ. And if all creatures groane with vs for the time of their deliuerance how ought we much more for whom such things are prepared Hence it followeth 1. that it will not stand with a conuerted heart to linger after the things of this life or to make his heauen vpon earth or to haue equall affection to earth as heauen 2. nor to neglect the meanes whereby this hope is confirmed whether outward offring as the Gospel ministerie word Sacraments or inward receiuing as faith vnfained working in obedience Ver. 8. This is a faithfull saying and these things I will thou shouldst affirme that they which haue beleeued in God might be carefull to shew forth good workes The first words of this verse beeing as it were a finger pointing to some excellent matter some take to be a preface making way and winning attention to the sequel of the verse others thinke it to be an epiphonema or graue shutting vp of that matter which immediately goeth before as giuing consent and acclamation vnto the most weightie and necessarie doctrine of free iustification by the grace of God in Christ which doctrine because the Apostle by the spirit of prophesie did foresee would be most strongly opposed he purposely by a vehement asseueration strengtheneth as also the doctrine of Christian hope which although it be not of things seene yet is it of things so faithfull and firme in respect of the promise as the Christian soule may without wauering and doubting relie and leane it selfe vpon the faithfull accomplishment of it But I take it the words may not vnfitly be referred to the whole doctrine propounded both before and after there beeing the same scope of both for what new thing is the Apostle to teach which he had not taught and vrged before and what particular is expressed in the verse which formerly hath not beene deliuered to young and old men and women servants and other all which estates after their conuersion vnto the faith are in speciall called to readines in euerie good worke vers 1. and to what other ende are those large descriptions of our twofold estate but to strike on the same string that howsoeuer we could not in the former attaine to any fruitfull conuersation yet now in the latter it were a shame not to adorne our profession and calling and what other end learned we of the appearing of grace but that vngodlines and wordly lusts beeing denied we should liue soberly and righteously and godly in this present world So as I say the Apostle setteth a seale vnto his whole doctrine that it is true and faithfull most vndoubted and certaine in it selfe and most worthie of all our credit and faith seeing nothing can be truelyer spoken nothing more profitably beleeued nothing more comfortably practised then the truth here deliuered vnto vs. Quest. But are not other doctrines true and faithfull yea as true as this and is not all Scripture of diuine inspiration Answ. Yes neither doth our Apostle oppose the truths of Scripture as though one were more or lesse true then another but in more necessarie or more questionable truths he setteth here and there a marke or pointng hand both to vrge the authoritie and necessitie of the one and also to force men more easily to yeeld vnto the truth of the other Example hereof we haue 1. Tim. 1.15 in such a fundamentall point as is saluation onely by Christ to be opposed by so many hundreth heretikes it is no maruell if we see some starre set by it or a light held ouer it that none may passe by it vntill they haue diligently waighed and fully resolued vpon the truth of it In like manner beeing to entreat of the difficult labour care and work of the ministerie from which women as not beeing capable of it are interdicted and of the excellencie of the function which no man might either rashly take vpon him or negligently execute beeing lawfully called and beeing further to set downe a certaine rule vnto which all the lawefull callings in the Church are to be conformed In such a waightie matter as is the preseruation of the Church and pietie he prefixeth a worthie preface 1. Tim. 3.1 This is a true saying if any man desire the office of a Bishop he desireth a worthie worke But where the Apostle doth all these things as in this place he could with lesse reason depart from his ordinarie manner Doctr. The Ministers of God must teach euerie truth reueale the whole counsell of God and keepe nothing backe but some truths must be dwelt vpon and more auouched then others and namely such as are either more necessarie or more contradicted This is the wisedome of the spirit of God himselfe who by his penmen distinguisheth of truthes and hath neither prefixed Behold in the beginning of euerie sentence nor affixed his Selah in euerie ones ende but onely in truths more observable and remarkeable then the rest Which point may receiue a generall confirmation from this obseruation that the penmen of Scripture beeing to write the historie of things past because they were of facts more vndeniable as things running into the sences of men they stand not so much vpon ratifications and asseuerations yea a number of historicall books there are the authors of which are not known to the church But when they come to write prophesies of things to come and things in reason more improbable then the authors name his kinred his calling with other circumstances of time place and persons seruing to confirme and conuince the truth of prophesies are registred And if these truthes were either more necessarily then ordinarie concerning the Church or more liable to opposition and exception then was much more caution and confirmation vsed To avoide multitude of examples whereby this point might be strengthened I will onely insist in that prophesie which more neerely concerneth vs that liue now in the newe Testament namely of the Reuelation The which booke because it describeth the state of the Church from the time of Iohn the last of the
in your callings and seuerall conditions of life then look abroad into the field of my Church and there you shall not want wherein to employ your strength counsell exhortation mercie loue zeale diligence and all the graces yee haue Neither is it harder to set Christians on worke then to hold them vnto it The profits and pleasures of this life call them often from the speciall busines of Christianitie because they enquire not whether in such seuerall actions they seeke God or themselues What am I a beleeuer I should in euerie action glorifie God testifie my faith beautifie my profession edifie my brethren I ought to winne the ignorant bring on the weake or at least stoppe the mouth of the enemie who will be readie to say You may see what a slight excuse will serue any of them all to misse a sermon what a slight profit will make them forget themselues their father whom they professe and their Fathers house what a slender busines will interrupt and breake off for the time their family duties what a trifle will make them at oddes and suites with others yea themselues for they can be as contentious as any other Alas am not I a Christian a beleeuer am I not called to better things haue I not promised better should I make the deuill glad his instruments reioyce Gods spirit sad his children heauie should I occasion profane ones through my sides to wound all my profession should I open a Papists mouth or harden him against the truth should I cast backe weake ones by such fruites in me a professor should I cast off the care of my brethren and bring shame on all my fathers house Haue I faith or are these the fruits of it would it not rather be fed still in the ministerie would it not vpon all good occasions be working by loue can a beleeuer be so slacke so heauie so idle so secure so couetous so contentious so scandalous as I am oh I must looke better to the matter When I first entred into the wayes of God I said I promised I would looke to my waies I would not offend in my tongue in my hand in my eye in my life and conuersation and by Gods grace hereafter I will pay these vowes to the Lord in the sight of all his people Now for watching opportunities seeking occasions of doing good we feare them we flie them we avoid charitable motions and repute it our wisdome not to heare them selfe loue and selfe ease slaieth our profession deadeth our faith and burieth our loue to God and to men can working faith be so idle or beleeuing persons so workles or trees of Gods orchyard so fruitles shall greene leaues make vs good trees or good words good Christians Let vs pull out our hands out of our warme bosomes and fall to worke and leaue idle iangling It would bee more for the honour of God and his Gospell if professors would either doe more or say lesse practise something like or professe nothing at all Where is the communion of Saints become when doe professors meet together to edifie themselues by godly conference when enquire they one of an other where is a poore christian either sicke or in other distresse that we may gather him a little releefe were not such a fellowship as this likest vnto the purest Primitiue Church in the dayes of the Apostles themselues and were it not now fitter for beleeuers then liue so priuately minded as many as though we could not be religious vnles as of olde we cloister our selues like Monks liuing within our priuate wals feeding vp our selues storing vp for ours but forgetting Iosephs affliction And surely what is the cause we see not such a comfortable communion but because those that beleeue in God are so heauie vnto good workes the richer sort which should be as great wheeles to set forward the poorer either looke bigge vpon them or for other employments haue not so much leasure as they their own ploughs must forward whatsoeuer become of Gods and the poorer sort want both meanes and example Doctr. 3. In that the Apostle willeth Titus to affirme these things deliuered and addeth this as a reason because they are good and profitable we obserue that Ministers in their teaching must haue respect to these two things 1. That they deliuer true sound and good matter in it selfe 2. That it be profitable for the hearers First it must be true and sound else are they not of Gods sending for whom he sendeth he furnisheth with a word of truth as on the contrarie Satan is a lying spirit in the mouthes of seducers Now then is it true when it is deuided aright and then deuided aright when it is truly and properly grounded on the place whence it is raysed as also when it is truly and rightly applied Ayming 1. to please God and not men or the times 2. to beate downe sinne and not open a doore to libertie or licentiousnesse 3. to comfort and encourage such as walke vprightly and not make the hearts of those heauy to whom the Lord speaketh peace Let the doctrin be neuer so true if it be misaplied it ceaseth to be Gods who alwaies speaketh to the heart of his children Secondly it must be profitable as well as true For 1. euery thing in the Church must be done to edifie and consequently spoken also 2. All assemblies are appointed for the profit and for the better of the Church 1. Cor. 11.17 3. The commandement is to deliuer nothing but what may breed godly edifying 1. Tim. 1.4 and not to striue about words to no profit 1. Tim. 2.14 bounded with a threatning that the Lord will come against such Prophets as seeke out vaine things and such as bring no profit to his people Ier. 23.32 4. examples Paul professeth of himselfe that he kept nothing backe which was profitable Act. 20.20 Nay the Lord hims●lfe setteth himselfe a worthy example hereof to all teachers and preachers Isa. 48.17 I am the Lord thy God which ●eacheth thee to profit and leadeth thee the waie thou hast to goe Vse 1. It is not inough that a Minister be a great scholler but hee must be a true teacher too Many a learned man is a false Prophet wherof we haue pregnant example in the Church of Rome in whom we see the speach true that in Gods matters the greatest clearks are not euer the wisest men It is obserueable also in the Scribes Pharisies and Rabbies of the Iewes that depth of learning hath not alwaies the truth cheyned vnto it but that the Lord according to his accustomed manner working in and by weake things often reuealeth more sauing wisdome to some poore contemned humble soule then to all the great clearks who may otherwise professe that they haue the very key of knowledge which is not spoken that any should hence be emboldned to contemne so excellent an ornament as lea●ning is but only to shew that the Lord
tyeth not himselfe and truth vnto it Obiect But we haue no teachers who teach not the truth Answ. We are to blesse God that the truth of religion is so happily taught and protected as it is and Satan wanteth of his will that it is so and yet can we thinke that his mallice now towards the end is so abated or that the state of the Church is now aboue all times so priuiledged as that he hath not his instruments still labouring to corrupt and depraue the truth broaching so farre as they dare their priuate opinions for which the truth is little beholding vnto them The Prophet Ieremie speaketh of Prophets who prophecied lyes in the name of the Lord and saith they prophecied false vision and diuination and vanitie and the deceitfulnesse of their owne hearts why what was that in that they said Yee shall not see the sword and famine shall not come but I will giue you assured peace in this place If we shall heare such sweet inchanting voyces all is well with vs we haue the most flourishing and most reformed Church that euer was since the Apostles dayes and we may take a nappe and rest in our peace and prosperitie what way can we be mooued surely these words may seeme the visions of mens owne hearts the rather in that the Lord by his owne hand from heauen proclaiming the contrarie by durable plagues and lasting iudgements of plagues famines vnseasonablenesse of weather by yeares together and for the troubles and oppositions in the Church when or where were they stronger since the Gospel first entred If we shall here voyces whispering oh men are too precise too pure too forward and what need so much teaching so much running trotting to sermons and disgracing such as frequent the meanes of saluation more carefully with the tearmes of sermon-gadders and sermon-mungers and such Is the truth which desireth nothing more then the light beholding to such visions of mens owne hearts or can we here acknowledge the stile of the spirit and word of truth If we shall meete with doctrines giuing libertie to profane gaming and pastimes on the Lords sabboath and then hauing gotten in a finger go on to make it an indifferent thing to keepe or not to keepe but only the times of Church required by law and further make it questionable whether we ought to keepe this present Sabboath or devise some other is not this as great a blow to the truth as she can receiue more then she looketh for in the house of her freinds which let it preuaile we shall see a poore staruen pietie among men in very few daies If we meet with other defences iustifying and approouing euery thing and any thing to be spoken in the pulpit besides the pure word of God which is profitable to teach improoue correct and instruct in all righteousnesse that a man may moyle himselfe and hearers in pudles I speake comparatiuely in regard of the pure word of God when in the meane time the sweet streames which run from vnder the threshold of the Sanctuarie are neglected how is the truth here honoured when the Scriptures the fountaine of it are so vnequally matched If it shall be affirmed that whosoeuer shall in name professe themselues to be Christians the Sacraments are not to be denied them although they be openly wicked because all men are subiect to sinne If men shall make a tush and a light or no falt to sweare by faith or trothe c. because it is but a custome of the tongue surely we may say if these be the voyces of Prophets they are of such as Christ speaketh of which deceiue many which make iniquitie abound and the loue to the truth grow key cold Vse 2. To people to pray to the Lord 1. To giue pastors according to his owne heart not such as may seeke out vaine and foolish things the froth of wit and learning but such things as may feed their soules with wisedome and vnderstanding 2. For the spirit of discerning to trie the spirits by which are of God for the guise of false teachers is priuily to bring in damnable doctrines and craftely to creepe into mens affections and men more easily run after them because they speake something pleasing to corrupt nature sometimes in the matter sometimes in the manner and therefore such as would not be deceiued by them must be prouoked to more warinesse 3. For the spirit of subiection that they may receiue the truth as truth for else it will be iust with God to giue them ouer to be seduced with false teachers and to beleeue lyes For those that despise his counsell shall eate of the fruit of their owne way and be filled with their owne devises those that regard not to know God shall by God be deliuered vp to a reprobate sence and those that will not beleeue one Micah but hate him shall fall into the hands of foure hundreth false Prophets to fall by them 4. Commend the cause of the truth vnto the Lords protection entreating him that it may be continued euen to this our Church and Land the which surely by the great contempt and abuse of the light and the bringers of it we haue iustly forfeyted and deserue to be plagued with all kind of illusions as Poperie profanesse Brownisme Atheisme the which fearefull iudgements haue made out great head alreadie and are forerunners of greater euills and beginnings of more bitter sorrowes without timely repentance And to what other ground can we ascribe all these euills but vnto the iust iudgement of God for our hatred and abuse of the light the candlesticks of it Vers. 9. But stay foolish questions and genealogies and contentions and brawlings about the lawe for they are vnprofitable and vaine Although Titus hath beene in the former verse commanded to teach and beat home such true and profitable points of doctrine as we haue heard yet must he know that he hath receiued but halfe his errand and is but halfe way in his dutie wherein if he would be compleat he must further circumspectly watch against and represse all vaine and fruitles teaching especially those kinds here mentioned either suffering them not to breake out at all or if they doe to nippe and blast them quickly and betimes if he can he must stoppe them in the head if he cannot do that he must stay them in the streame The verse standeth on two parts 1. a precept to stay foolish questions and genealogies and contentions and brawlings about the law 2. a reason of it for they are vnprofitable and vaine For the meaning of the words we must knowe that our Apostle condemneth not the moouing of euerie question in handling the word for there are many necessarie ones in diuinitie which for our instruction and edification we may enquire and dispute thus we reade that Paul disputed often and thus we are trained and furnished in the diuinitie schoole to defend
the truth of God against the aduersaries of it and where Salomon brandeth him with a note of follie that maketh no question but beleeueth euery thing he sheweth that there is a wise inquisition into necessarie truths tending to edification But the Apostle expresseth what questions he disaloweth in a Diuine foolish questions that is vnnecessarie idle of no moment of no good vse to edification neither in faith nor loue in conscience nor manners Where me thinks Paul by the spirit of prophesie foresawe forewarned and forearmed the Church of that great malice of the deuill which in after ages preuailed to the ouerthrowe of all puritie of religion and piety it selfe and that was by turning men from the comfortable practise and proper vse of Scripture to seeke out an art of diuinitie appropriat to some few and so suddenly came to turne all the sound knowledge of the Scriptures into a skeptike and questionarie diuinitie whereby the deuill kept good wits from the knowledge and studie of tongues and the necessarie fundamentall points of Christian religion and set them on worke in the speculation of strange friuolous and curious questions wherein they were not one more against another then all of them against God and his truth and the building of his Church And this is the quod libe●a●ie schoole diuinitie then which nothing is more highly magnified of many at this day who had rather tast leekes then Manna and although our Apostle graunteth that it may haue a shewe of learning and wisedome falsly so called yet as here it is called foolish so elsewhere he confidently tearmeth it both foolish and vnlearned because it is occupied in such questions as haue neither wisedome nor learning in them while they make a shew of both Such are their questions concerning their heauenly Hierarchies and orders of Angels concerning the degrees of the Saints in heauen so definitiuely and magistrally determining as though they had newly dropped out of the clouds Paul durst neuer vtter such things who was wrapped into the third heauen Others of them as though at the request of the rich man they had been sent from hell are as confident of things done in purgatorie Others are at redde warre whether things notionall or ●eall be better some sweate in disputing whether the world could be better made others to be resolued whether the Pope be more mercifull then Christ because Christ deliuereth none out of purgatorie as the Pope doth But about their Sacrament and consecrated hoast their tumults are such and so ridiculous as a iudicious Diuine would be loath to foule his mouth or his hearers eares with them These are the toyles of the angelicall seraphicall magistrall and subtile Doctors Scotus Hales Holcoth Durand and such monsters of Diuines which how much true learning they containe the darkenes of their ages in which they liued and since sufficiently manifesteth Gods righteous iudgement was vpon them and the whole world since for their sakes and that sentence verified vpon them while they thought themselues wise they became starke fooles Let students looke how they spend time in them for the truth is that if a man be deuoted to them he shall be euer learning and yet neuer come to the knowledge of the truth nay it may be feared of some who were towardly set in the truth that comming into this schoole too timely are now growne crooked and out of loue with the truth and are indeed turned into the things they read The second thing which Titus must resist are genealogies which also must be rightly taken because there alwaies was and yet is an excellent vse of them in Scripture Before Christ they were so necessarie as the Iewes were commanded to keepe publike and priuate records of their tribes and families yea and if there were any that could not tell or finde his genealogie he was not to be admitted or if inconsiderately he were was to be deposed from publike office Numb 1.18 Nehem. 7.62 and to this purpose some holy writers of Scripture haue set downe for the vse of the Church to the ende whole bookes of genealogies but especially that the Iewes might be able to bring their descent from the Patriarks as we reade of Paul who no doubt could bring his line downe from Beniamin Philip. 3.5 The vse of these genealogies was manifold I will note two First to manifest the truth of God in the Scriptures 1. In the accomplishment of many speciall prophesies to particular persons For example God promised to Abraham that he should be a mightie man that this truth might be fully known must be set downe the whole descent and posteriritie and Princes that came of him although neuer so wicked from Ismael himselfe Rebecca also had a promise of two mightie peoples in her wombe and that the elder should serue the younger how should this be knowne to be accomplished but by the genealogie of them both for which purpose euen the dukes that came of Esau were all recorded The like of Iacobs prophesie concerning Ephraim and Manasseh for otherwise the wicked should haue no name nor register in the booke of God it is not for their owne sakes whose memories should rot but for the honour of God and his seruants they are there rolled to shewe that the godly were not only inwardly but euen outwardly blessed according to promise with such a fruitfull race and posteritie 2. It is a great light to the truth of Scripture when it setteth downe the persons by whom and the times in which euery worthy thing was done what also and by whome the Church suffered how all nations were euer enemies to religion but one little point or corner of the world how God had euer a Church in the world euen in the corruptedst times a litle remnant of Israel that worshipped him in spirit and truth which things are cleared by genealogie The second and principall vse of genealogie is to manifest the true Messiah vnto the world As 1. to shewe that because God would be appeased in the same nature that had sinned therefore he was true man and not in shew and that his humanitie incarnation and natiuitie should not be obscure his naturall descent is by the Euangelists brought downe from Abraham yea from Adam shewing vs thereby what is the proper end of all genealogie in the Scriptures 2. The nobilitie of his birth and worthines of his parentage and that he was the right heire to the Iewish kingdome 3. The truth of the prophesies concerning him that he was the sonne of Abraham and of Dauid and that the scepter departed not from Iudah till his appearing 4. The blessing wherewith that family out of which he came was advanced and distinct from al the tribes of the earth 5. His humilitie who came of all sorts of men and women publike and priuate poore and rich good and bad that he might be a fit Sauiour of all sorts of men not disdaining to place in
godly Ministers lade them with reproaches Pag. 419 Euery Christians care must be to stoppe the mouthes of the wicked Pag. 421 Seruants ought to be subiect to their masters 423 Theft of seruants neuer so coloured is condemned Pag. 429 Seruants are bound to shewe all good faithfulnesse Pag. 431 The meanest Christian may and must bring glorie to the Gospel Pag. 433 The Gospel is the doctrine of Gods grace Pag. 437 The doctrine of the Gospel is a sauing doctrine Pag. 440 The Gospel is a bright shining light Pag. 446 The Gospel is a schoolemaster as well as the Lawe Pag. 453 The doctrine of grace truely receiued teacheth to denie all vngodlinesse Pag. 458 A Christian must denie all lusts whatsoeuer may seeme to plead for them Pag. 463 The doctrine of grace teacheth both to eschewe euill and doe good Pag. 465 The Gospel looketh for some answearable return for the saluation it bringeth Pag. 467 The doctrine of the Gospel teacheth sobrietie of life wherein it standeth and rules of practise Pag. 468 The Gospel calleth for iust and righteous dealing at professors hands Pag. 471 The Gospel inioyneth a godly life the proper work of piety rules of practise Pag. 473 Godlinesse must be exercised in this present world Pag. 478 The Gospel receiued in truth lifteth vp the heart to wait for Christ his second appearing Pag. 482 The expectation of Christ his second comming is a notable meanes to prouoke to Christian duties Pag. 491 Christ his glorie shal shine out in ful brightnesse at his second appearing Pag. 494 Wee ought neuer to speake of God but in a weighie matter and reuerent manner Pag. 496 Christ gaue himselfe for his Church but not for euery particular man Pag. 505 Before Christ redeemed vs we were miserable slaues vnder sinne and death Pag. 511 The Sonne of God hauing once set vs free great is our freedome Pag. 514 Redemption and sanctification are inseperable companions Pag. 517 The members of the Church are Gods peculiar people Pag. 523 The worker must be good before any worke can be so Pag. 527 Iustified persons must needes bring forth good workes Pag. 527 The thing that God requireth in euery professour is zeale in weldoing Pag. 529 All proofes and reproofes must be fetched from the Scriptures Pag. 534 The word of God must be so handled as that the authoritie of it be preserued Pag. 535 To despise Gods Ministers is a grieuous sin Pag. 537 The doctrine of subiection to Magistracie must be often enforced and why Pag. 539 The scope of the Ministerie is to put men and keepe them in remembrance of Christian duties Pag. 540 The memorie ought to be taken vp with godly instructions learned in the Ministrie Pag. 541 Christianitie consumeth not Magistracie but confirmeth it Pag. 544 Euery soule must be subiect to the higher powers Pag. 548 Euery Christian must make account that euery Christian dutie belongeth vnto him Pag. 559 Euery man ought to preserue in himselfe a readinesse to euery good worke Pag. 563 The word condemneth as well vnbridled speaches as disordered actions Pag. 566 Euill speaking is a most hatefull sinne in Christians Pag. 568 A Christian may not be a common barrater Pag. 574 Christian equitie is a beautifull grace in Christians Pag. 579 Christian meekenes beseemeth euery Christian Pag. 584 The consideration of our common condition is a notable ground of meekenes Pag. 588 Whosoeuer is called vnto the faith hath experience of a change in himselfe Pag. 591 The whole course of an vnconuerted man is an vnwise walking Pag. 596 A marke of a man out of Christ is to resist and reason against the word Pag. 599 Before men bee brought to Christ their whole life is but a wandring from God Pag. 601 The spirit that is in man lusteth after envie Pag. 617 Then are wee saued when wee are sanctified Pag. 627 Before the Lord put forth his loue in Christ it could not bee reached of man nor angel Pag. 632 Workes of righteousnesse are excluded from iustifying vs before God Pag. 635 The Lord in baptisme not onely offereth or signifieth but truely exhibiteth grace Pag. 639 All the inward grace of baptisme is from the Holy Ghost Pag. 650 God in sauing men reneweth them to his owne image Pag. 655 The graces of the spirit are plentifully powred out vpon vs in the new Testament as not of a full mercie Pag. 660 Christ our Lord the onely fountaine of all our welfare Pag. 664 The righteousnesse of a sinner before God is not any qualitie in the beleeuer Pag. 669 The honour of the Saints is that they are heires of life eternall Pag. 674 All truthes must bee deliuered but some more stood vpon and vrged then other Pag. 680 A good worke cannot come but from a good man Pag. 684 Professors of the Gospel must be the first and forwardest in euerie good work Pag. 686 Doctrine must bee true and truely dealt withall Pag. 689 Sathan seeketh to corrupt the purest Churches by bringing in needelesse questions Pag. 696 There haue beene alwaies are and shall be heretikes in the Church of God Pag. 703 Euen heretikes and enemies of the Church must bee louingly dealt with by the Church Pag. 706 It is dangerous for the Churches to be left destitute of their teachers though for a short time Pag. 726 The Lord maketh good vse of the most wicked consciences Pag. 723 Christianitie enioyneth all kind of ciuill curtesie Pag. 731 Such as are in the Lords work must be carfully prouided for that they lacke nothing Pag. 732 Christianitie is no barren or fruit lesse prof●ssion Pag. 739 Religion is the strongest binder of man to man Pag. 748 OTHER PROFITABLE NOTES which besides illustration of Doctrines lie either in the explication of the sence or in application of the vses RVles to be obserued in changing of mens names in number three 4 Cases in which a man may forbeare to set his name to his writings 3. 5 Reasons to stirre vp ministers to diligence 5. 7 Reasons to stirre them vp to faithfulnesse 4. 7 Comforts for ministers in their seruice 4. 8 Priviledges of the Apostle aboue the ordinarie Pastor 3. 9 Men may be called elect of God 3. waies 11 Difference of sauing faith from all other 3. 14 Truth of faith discerned by 4. notes 15 Gospel called Truth for three reasons 18 Notes shewing the heart drawn vpward towards heauen 3. 26 Infallible properties of Christian hope 8. 28 Reasons why we must freely loue our brethren 4. 41 The doctrine of the Gospel called the common faith for 5. reasons 58 Duties to spirituall fathers 5. 61 Differences of the Apostolicall faith from the Romish Apostaticall 4. 63 Letters testimoniall not rashly to be giuen for foure reasons 65 The first person called father for 3 reasons 68 Christ called Lord for 4 causes 68 Men are called Sauiours 3. waies 69 The wickeds peace crazy in 3. respects 73 The power of the Magistrate and Minister doe differ in
of the blessed seede in whom all nations should be blessed Elizabeths speach sheweth the accomplishment thereof Blessed art thou among all women because the fruite of thy wombe is blessed which words she vttered beeing filled with the holy Ghost ver 41. or in generall looke to the whole old covenant of the old Testament it is after a sort ceased and a new established in stead of it see Heb. 8.8 In that he saith a new testament he hath abrogated the olde 2. Diuine vse was to signifie the inward circumcision of the heart wrought by Christ and therefore called the circumcision of Christ whereby he inwardly cutteth off the corruption of the heart iustifieth vs regenerateth vs setteth vs into himselfe communicateth all his merits and benefits of them vnto vs to all which purposes he once appeared in the flesh and now in his owne bodily absence sendeth out his spirit This Paul calleth circumcision made without hands Now how iust is it that when the circumcision without hands appeareth that the other made with hands should cease 3. Divine vse was to represent baptisme which was to come in place of it in the new Testament Coloss. 2.12 yee are circumcised in that yee are buried with him through baptisme Now then when baptisme which is Christian circumcision is once instituted necessarily must Iewish circumcision which was a type of it cease From which three ends we may answer that maine allegation for the continuance of circumcision in that it is called an eternall and euerlasting couenant But 1. the couenant is said to be euerlasting not simply but conditionally namely so long as the couenant of it lasted for gnolam signifieth not alwaies a time without all ende but such a time as after a long durance may admit determination and expiration 2. In respect of the thing signified that is grace in Christ it may be said to haue euerlastingnes 3. In regard of the perpetuall supplie thereof by baptisme which is to last as long as time but not in the ceremonie or shaddowe of it as the false Apostles taught much lesse with confidence in it as a meritorious cause of iustification All this hath hitherto let vs see the error and sinne of these seducers Now the danger will be descried if we consider that of Paul If yee be circumcised Christ will profit you nothing for what were this other then to denie the true Messiah and his appearing in fulnesse of time what were it but to reare vp againe the partition wall which is destroied what else then to renounce the new couenant of grace and establish againe the olde one of workes which was to giue place to the new so as truely saith the Apostle by establishing circumcision a man becommeth a debter to the whole law which cannot but be ioyned with the fall of all religion faith hope baptisme and consequently the losse of saluation it selfe Doctr. The plainnes of the Apostle in deciphering the seducers so manifestly as they might be knowne teacheth that where there is a common danger towards the Church by meanes of false teachers we are not to spare their credit but to laie them open as not onely their errors but their persons may be knowne and taken heed of in which regard Paul nameth these deceiuers And hereof are sundrie other forcible reasons 1. Because the saluation of the Church and members of it is more to be respected then all Satans synagogue 2. It is necessarie that such should be knowne for feare of infection for false teachers may do more mischeife in poysoning the flocke then a number of priuate men can doe 3. The Apostles tooke great libertie herein as Paul nameth Alexander the Coppersmith and wisheth Timothie to beware of him and Iohn in his third Epistle nameth Diotrephes for his ambition and promiseth to decipher him more plainely and so paint him out in his colours as that the Church might abhorre him But yet this text affordeth vs some conditions of such plaine reproofe which necessarily must be obserued to the right performance of the same As 1. the error must be certainely knowne as this was 2. It must not be euery small error but such a one as 1. greatly impaireth Gods glorie 2. greatly impeacheth mans saluation as we haue prooued this to doe For otherwise if their errors were either lesse dangerous in themselues or more dangerous to themselues alone although herein they must be made voide of excuse their wickednesse shewed them and their prepared damnation preached vnto them if they did not hurt others with themselues the true Pastors might with lesse danger dissemble their errors and let them rot away in their filthinesse but in the foresaid cases there must be no bearing of them 3. In the reproofe Christian loue must bewray it selfe as the minde and intention of the Apostle here no doubt was not to gall or vex these deceiuers nor to wrecke himselfe vpon them but carrie in his eye the care of the Church and the profit of Gods people Euery good action must be done well in a good manner and in a good intent and here especially the manner must discouer the intent and that is when such a spirit of meekenesse putteth forth it selfe that euen the parties openly reprooued may see their good sought in hauing their sinne discountenanced and their persons rather discouered then disgraced Vse 1. This doctrine noteth the simplicitie of some who thinke it very vncharitable so to note open offenders in open reproofs as men may carrie them leuell to the offenders or impute it to want of discretion or to some malitious intent of the discrediting of men whereas besides that no such thing is intended the propertie of charitie is more carefull to preuent the common hurt of the Church then to saue the credit of some few men of corrupt mindes 2. Whereas some idle and foolish heads haue set themselues on work to paint out some worthier men then themselues in their colours and to picture out some sort of men better then themselues men of sounder iudgement conspiring in all the maine points of true religion and of innocent and inoffensiue liues with the black coales of enuious and slanderous invectiues striuing to besmeare them these haue no colour of warrant for such a rouing and distempered practise For 1. they haue no calling God neuer setteth any man on worke to defame his seruants 2. Are such errors as are imputed to them knowne and conuinced or litigious and controuerted or are they such as ouerturne religion and saluation seeing they consent in the whole truth and substance of religion 3. Doe not all eyes which looke on such pictures see the intentions of the picturers to haue beene gall bitternes vexation and wrecking of mens persons so farre from the spirit of meeknesse that the spirit of malice hath suggested them with words as sharpe as swords and as Iob speaketh of the crocodile flames of fire goe out
●estinesse hastinesse and vnaduised frowardnes their conuersation blotted with base couetousnesse as if they were to liue ouer their yeares againe their minds no lesse bending towards the earth then their bodies and though they can scarse goe vp and down in the world yet for most part are they more drowned in wordly affaires then when they were in their most constant estate In a word blackeamoores were they young and now their skins are not changed the crimson tincture of their sinne cannot yet be washed nor they in their age breake through the snares wherewith Satan held them in their youth but the sinner of an hundreth yeare olde goeth on to punishment And here let none thinke that any dotage or passionate affections may be excused by reason of the age nay rather euery such breaking out is here doubled for an olde man especially should be discreete and the discretion of a man moderateth all passions Let Barzillai be an example to all olde men who beeing sollicited to embrace courtly delights he refuseth all such profers and setteth his minde vpon his owne death in his owne citie Sound in faith Now followe those three vertues which are requisite in olde men as they are auncient Christians The first of which is soundnesse of faith in which three things are to be considered 1. What soundnes of faith is 2. Why it is commended in speciall to olde men seeing euerie Christian must haue it 3. The dutie which hence is to be learned For the first Soundnesse of faith standeth in two things 1. when faith is sound in the qualitie that is sincere not deceitfull not hypocriticall 2. when it is sound in the degree of it not a shaking reede but growne vp from the infancie vnto some strength and stature Now vnto both these is required that faith be sound 1. in the ground of it 2. in the obiect 3. in the worke of it 4. in the fruits issuing from it in any of which if it faile it is vnsound vnlasting First the ground of sound faith is a sufficient measure of knowledge of the things of God reuealed in the word in a sound and incorrupted iudgement for so the Apostle affirmeth Rom. 10.14 that for the working of faith there must be the interpreting and deliuering of doctrine out of the word and an attentiue hearing and vnderstanding of it whereby after a sort the sonne of man is lifted vp that we may beleeue Ioh. 3.14 Now euerie degree of knowledge and measure of vnderstanding is not a sufficient ground of sound faith but such a measure as is able to discerne betweene things that differ for how can children in knowledge be grown men in the faith or how can any come to that ripe age of faith here meant but such as through long custome haue their senses exercised to discerne both good and euill This must be then such a knowledge as enableth a man both to maintaine the truth and convince the gainsayers and so hold his owne comfort by distinct and particular yea some depth of knowledge without which so farre he shall be from soundnes as that he shall be dangerously carried with euerie winde of doctrine There is a fulnesse of knowledge which the Apostle commendeth in the Romanes and this is a notable fit ground for this soundnesse of faith Hence it followeth that all that implicite faith of the laie Papists folded vp in an idle fancie without knowledge is vnsound and vngrounded for can any but a Papist beleeue he knowes not what Secondly the obiect of a sound faith more generall is the whole word of God from which faith can no more be seuered then the beames from the sunne but more specially the porper obiect is the couenant of grace in Christ yea Christ himselfe together with all his merits and all the promises of mercie freely propounded in the Gospel which is therefore called the word of faith Hence all Popish faith is here prooued againe vnsound because it is corrupt in the obiect leaning it selfe in stead of the word vpon canons councells traditions vnwritten decrees as also expecting saluation without the free couenant of grace by the merit of workes whereas in iustification before God all workes all boasting are excluded Rom. 3.27 and 4.24 Thirdly the worke of a sound faith is twofold 1. assent 2. application The former is a certeine and firme assent whereby we set a seale vnto all the promises of the Gospel as most sure and certaine holding euen an Angel accursed that should bring any other doctrine and keeping sure the profession of our hope without wauering in full assurance of vnderstanding For faith is no opinion or fancie but hath in it a certaintie arising from the stedfastnes of the promise and word of God Hence are all such exhortations as that 1. Cor. 16.13 Stand fast in the faith The latter worke of faith is application whereby a man not onely assenteth that all the couenant of grace is true in it selfe but also that it is true vnto him who therefore resteth and leaneth vpon it for his owne saluation beeing assured so vndoubtedly at one time or other of his saluation as if he were alreadie gathered vp among the Saints And this hand thus laying on Christ vnto righteousnes and applying Christ with his merits vnto ones selfe in particular to saluation is the forme of faith or rather faith it selfe formed and not any workes or charitie as Papists fondly dreame And that this certaintie is of the nature of sound faith appeareth because that modest but graceles vncertaintie and doubting of the Popish doctrine is opposed vnto faith and made a fruit of vnbeleefe Matth. 14.31 Oh thou of little faith why doubtedst thou of Abraham is said Rom. 4. that he doubted not nor reasoned with himselfe but was strengthned in faith beeing fully assured And what other reason is giuen why the inheritance was not giuen by the law which was impossible to be kept but by the promises of grace but that the promise might be sure to all the seede Rom. 4.16 Or how could our peace with God continue our comfort or last with vs if we had no assurance of it but still doubted of his loue Let vs therefore alwaies take notice of this especiall worke of sound faith which maketh the heart able to say with Iob I know my Redeemer liueth and with Paul who died for me and gaue himselfe for mee Neither must the godly refuse to subscribe to the truth of this doctrine because they neuer finde such constant and full assurance which is not mooued with some doubting and sometime exceedingly ouercast with grudgings of vnbeleefe for by this reason they might aswell conclude that they neuer had faith and it is no meruaile if faith and doubting be in one man seeing they rise from two diuerse yea contrarie principles which cannot but be found in the best euen spirit and flesh If thou lookest by the
eye of flesh thou canst not but doubt of the truth of the promises at least to thy selfe in whom so little good appeareth but open the eye of thy faith which at length seeth clearely the saluation of God chaseth away clouds of doubts and distrust and giueth glorie vnto God As he therefore that would deeme the orbe of the sunne to be greater then the earth must deny his sence and yeeld to reason so must the beleeuer renounce both sence and reason and liue by his faith Fourthly the fruits of a sound faith are 1. Inward and these are all the parts of renewed holines in the soule which cannot but accompany it 2. Pet. 1.5.6 Ioyne with faith vertue c. for it worketh a through change in the whole man by purifying the heart inspiring a new spirituall life raysing from dead workes and causing to grow vp in holines and in the feare of God It is as the heat in the bodie the fountaine of life and heate and as the roote of a tree affording life sappe and quickning of grace to all the the parts of obedience without which it is impossible to please God in any thing 2. Outward such as are the true loue of God and man For as it maketh vs the sonnes of God so it causeth vs to carie our selues as children desirous to please our Father in all things to performe vnto him all the parts of his worship publike and priuate to loue his word to confesse his truth though with the losse of our liues to thinke of him to speake of him to delight in his presence and fellowship and giue vp our selues wholly to obey him in his commandements and corrections Againe it maketh vs to loue Gods image in our brethren and out of this loue issueth a desire and endeauour to helpe them heauenward and care to performe all other offices of loue towards their outward man their persons their liues their goods their names c. These are the blessed fruits of that faith which is vnfained 1. Tim. 1.5 which worketh by loue Gal. 5.6 And thus haue we shewed the first point wherein the nature of sound faith standeth The second point is why soundnes of faith is required rather of old men beeing a grace which euery one young aswell as old must striue vnto Answ. 1. Because they haue had the vse of the word longer and therefore their profit should be answerable to their meanes neither is this assurance and soundnes of faith attained at the first but ariseth vpon a grounded knowledge which for most part is not to be found in the younger sort Secondly old men which ought to be auncients in profession and so haue more experience of Gods waies and working should shew forth the power of faith vnto others and therein become as cleare patternes and presidents vnto them and therefore whereas a lesser measure may be accepted in the younger yet for these to yeeld to doubting to wauer in the truth to be corrupt in iudgement to sticke in extremitie or faint in affliction is a greater sinne and more hatefull vnto God who more seuerely correcteth it in old men who should be leaders vnto others yea although they be deare otherwise vnto him Moses himselfe if by doubting he shall dishonour God shall be barred the good land for it Thirdly their age and experience in all meetings must haue the honour and place of speach when the younger sort must either sit silent or with Elihu speake in their turne when they haue done of them the younger expect solution of doubts and difficulties counsell in cases of conscience and wise aduise out of their experience Now if they should be tainted with false opinions and dotages or shake as ●eeds in the doctrine of faith and truth they cannot but become hurtfull and vnprofitable vnto such whose eyes are vpon them when they see them as inconstant in the faith and as subiect to wauer and reele as thēselues who in comparison are but newly planted 4. Their bodies outward man waxeth weak and beginneth to faile and therefore they had more need labour for strength and soundnes in the inner man which is a reason not to be neglected as presently we shall see Vse All these reasons are direct against such as plead that their years comming on them they cannot conceiue nor learne nor remember nor profit in religion as they are vrged in the ministerie their sences inward and outward serue them not their vigour and quicknes is gone but it is good for them to consider the hand of God vpon Zacharie Luk. 1. 18. for making his age a meanes to weaken his faith though in a farre more difficult case Doth not our Apostle here vrge it as a cheife argument that because they are old therefore they must the rather be furnished with grace of knowledge memorie zeale faith loue and patience and shall it goe for a good plea that because they are old therefore they shall be excused if they cannot attaine vnto these nor greatly force after them what a shame was it for Nicodemus beeing an auncient and Ruler in Israel to be ignorant in the point of regeneration and therefore Christ reprooued him Ioh. 3. And that was the sinne of the Hebrews when as for their time they ought to haue bin teachers they were to seek in the principles of religion and were babes needing milke such is the sinne of babish old men olde in yeares children in vnderstanding The third point is the lesson which hence we are to learne namely that euerie man must labour to recompence the decaie of nature with increase of grace the weakenes of the bodie with soundnesse of minde the failing of the outward man with the fortifying of the inward The wiseman wisheth timly to prepare against the inconueniences of old age with the remembrance of God in the youth how much more should olde men in the midst of their ruines and decaies by this meanes repaire and fortifie themselues And the counsell is generall that if the outward man perish care must be had that the inward be daily renewed Reas. 1. It is made a note of a true member of the Church to be more fresh flourishing and fruitfull in his age when other men languish decay and are daily enfeebled these trees of righteousnesse receiue new vigour and strength not to flourish onely but to be more fruitfull then euer And whereas amongst men those that see olde and decrepite age for want of naturall heate and moisture shriule and die away yet euen these same beeing true members of the Church hauing once the life of the Sonne of God breathed into their soules are neuer afterwards destitute of radicall heate and moysture but renew their age as the eagle and with their daies their strength For Christ is that Sunne of righteousnesse who once rising vpon a soule is so farre from setting againe that he is still rising euen vnto the perfect day of it