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A09442 Lectures vpon the three first chapters of the Reuelation: preached in Cambridge anno Dom. 1595. by Master William Perkins, and now published for the benefite of this Church, by Robert Hill Bachelor in Diuinitie. To which is added an excellent sermon, penned at the request of that noble and wise councellor, Ambrose, Earle of Warwicke: in which is proued that Rome is Babylon, and that Babylon is fallen Perkins, William, 1558-1602.; Hill, Robert, d. 1623. 1604 (1604) STC 19731; ESTC S114472 318,460 389

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in vision Now S. Iohn saw the holy Ghost in forme of seuen lights in a vision Reu. 4. 5. Which are before the throne This he speakes by comparison taken from earthly kings which fitting in their thrones do there shew their might and maiestie most So S. Iohn he saw God the Father sitting in a throne by vision and Christ at his right hand and before the throne the holy Ghost Hence it followes not that he is inferiour to the Father and to the Sonne but by this comparison and kind of speech S. Iohn sets out the office of the holy Ghost which is to be sent by the Father and Sonne to the Church to enlighten the members thereof and to sanctifie them Seeing that he ascribes grace and peace from God the father and also from the seuen spirits that is the holy Ghost hence we note the holy Ghost is very God for from whom grace and peace proceeds he is perfect and very God We learne that we may direct our prayers to the holy Ghost for to whom grace and peace is ascribed to him we may direct our prayers seeing he can giue grace c. but they be ascribed to him and he can giue them ergo we may pray to him for them There be some which doubt whether we may pray to the holy Ghost but they may aswell doubt whether he be God or not but they say we haue no example Ans. It is false for here we haue an example for though this grace and peace c. be a blessing yet in substance it is a prayer as though he had said O Father Sonne and holy Ghost let thy grace and peace be vpon the Church Which are before the throne of the Father Hence we note the holy Ghost is a substance and a person subsisting not a quality as some Heretikes hold confessing the Godhead of the Father of the Sonne and denying the Godhead of the holy Ghost But here we see for the holy Ghost he is a substance and person subsisting standing before the throne of the Father not a gift or grace proceeding from God but a person distinguished from the Father and the Sonne the Father he sits on the throne the Sonne is on his right hand the holy Ghost distinguished from them both stands before the throne And from Iesus Christ. That is grace and peace from Iesus Christ. Where Christ Iesus is ioyned to the Father and the holy Ghost in bestowing grace and peace on his Church Ob. Why is Christ the second person of the Trinitie placed after the holy Ghost the third Person Answ. For two causes First Christ is considered two wayes first as he is the Sonne of the Father secondly as he is the Mediator of the Church Now as he is the Sonne of the Father he is the second Person in Trinitie and so before the holy Ghost in order Secondly as he is Mediator and so he is after them both the Father and the holy Ghost Esa. 61. 1. The Spirit of the Lord is vpon me hath sent me to preach Where Christ is sent by the holy Ghost to preach as he is Mediator and so as he is sent in that respect he is after the holy Ghost Secondly he is placed after the holy Ghost because the maner of them which pen the Scriptures is to set them in the last place of whom they meane to speake last So Mat. 1. he setting downe the genealogie of Christ from Abraham though in all those there was none more excellent then Christ yet he is in the last place because of order the Euangelist meaning to speak and treat of him he sets him in the last place purposing still to continue his historie of the life and death of Christ. So here S. Iohn he placed Christ in the last place because he purposed to continue his historie in speaking of the death and passion of Christ and other things which concerne him Now what saith he of Christ From this fift till the ninth verse he describes Christ first by his offices secondly by the execution of his offices His offices are three first he is set out by his propheticall office in these words which is that faithfull witnesse secondly by his priestly office the first begotten of the dead thirdly by his kingly office and that Prince of the kings of the earth First his propheticall office First he is a witnesse Secondly a faithfull witnesse Thirdly that faithfull witnesse First he is a witnesse Esa. 55. 4. I gaue him to be a witnesse to the nations In that he is called a witnesse there are signified many duties of his propheticall office as first to reueale the will of his Father secondly to certifie the Church of the certaintie of the same and in these two stand his whole office propheticall First to reueale his Fathers will to the Church is his office for there is none which knowes his Fathers will but he which came from the bosome of the Father and he hath declared it Ioh. 1. 18. And he hath not onely declared his Fathers will since he came in the flesh but from the beginning he reuealed the will and word of God When the Lord rained fire on Sodome Gen. 19. 24. there Iehouah the Father rained downe by Iehouah the Sonne So when the couenant was made to our first parents it was made in Christ the promised seed It was renewed to Abraham and the Patriarkes from the Father by the Sonne as appeared in the bush where Iehouah appeared but 1. Cor. 10. there he is called Christ. The Prophets and the Apostles wrote as they were inspired by Christ they were but his instruments to speake and write that he put into them by the holy Ghost The matter and the stile and phrase of the Scripture all came from Christ. Nay when any particular man comes to vnderstand the Scriptures this is by the working of Christ he opens their eyes He gaue the disciples vnderstanding as they went to Emaus to vnderstand the Scriptures The second duty of Christ is to certifie men of his Fathers will and that in conscience of the certainty of his Fathers will This certification is generall or particular When he certifieth men that the word written or spoken by man out of the word is the word of God neither nature nor learning can do this but it is proper to Christs Propheticall office and for this he saith to his disciples he will send them the comforter which shall leade them into all truth Here we must know first by what meanes he assureth vs secondly the principall cause of this assurance The meanes is the word it selfe The principall cause is the operation of the holy Ghost By this three points are resolued First the Papists aske how a man can come to know that the Scriptures read and taught be the word of God Answ. We must here haue recourse to the word and to the faithfull witnesse and desire
members we must hate that he hateth loue that he loueth so shew that we be true Christians and members of Christ. Ob. Christ he hateth wicked men why then suffereth he them to liue destroyeth thē not or take them out of his Church Answ. He suffereth them for iust cause for he can bring good out of euill light out of darknesse he can turne that which is most wicked in it selfe to his glorie and the benefite of his Church and children and the destruction of his enemies Then no maruel though he suffer them which he hateth Let him which hath an eare heare what the Spirit saith c. In this verse Christ inferreth this conclusion vpon the former words It containeth in it two parts the first a cōmandement the second a promise A cōmandement Let him that hath ears c. A promise in the end of the verse For to him will I giue of the tree c. and this conclusion serueth to stirre vp the Church of Ephesus to consider of the former things Christ taught her In the commandement is three things the first who be cōmaunded He which hath an eare secondly what is commanded namely to heare thirdly the thing which must be heard What the Spirit saith The parties commaunded to heare are described they which haue an eare that is which can heare Mat. 13. Christ expoundeth it he which hath an eare to heare that is an hearing eare he must heare and giue attention to the word By this we see there be two kinds of hearers one is a deafe hearer not hauing an hearing eare as those which bring outwa●d and bodily eares to the word but not the eares of the hart for their hearts are not affected with the word they cannot obey that they heare Secondly there is an hearing hearer who not onely heareth with the outward eare of the bodie but he hath his heart pierced and touched hath new eares made by Gods spirit this is he which bringeth both the eares his head and heart to the word who is affected with it applyeth it to his owne heart and beleeueth the word heard Such an eare had Dauid the Lord God bored his eare and made him new ears euen ears of heart Mine ears hast thou opened And when the Lord spake to him hauing new eares he answereth the Lord Lo I come his heart heard the Lord. Such eares had Isaiah Send me Such had Lydia her eares were opened and she became attentiue to Paules words the Lord gaue her new eares Seeing Christ maketh this distinction of hearers on earth then grace is not vniuersall sauing grace is not giuen to euery particular man that he if he will may heare and haue saluation for there must be some deafe hearers as well as hearing hearers Then all cannot heare nor haue eternall life seeing all cannot come to faith and repentance by hearing Nay though God admit all into the Church yet he giueth not grace to euery one to heare so that he becometh a profitable hearer to beleeue and repent by hearing Mat. 13. It is giuen to you to know not to others noting that some onely haue the spirit of God to heare to know his will and become obedient to the same Seeing the commandement is giuen to hearing hearers we must labour to become such to become good hearers not to bring onely the eares of the bodie to the word but the eares of the heart not onely eares of our bodie which we haue by creatiō but the eares of our soules which we haue by regeneration and neuer thinke our selues well till we 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that hearing of the heart to beleeue and obey that we heare can affect the same and be changed and turned by it Iosiah heard the law and that not with bodily eares but with his heart so that he turned to the Lord accordingly Dauid Psalm 26. God biddeth him seeke him he hauing his eares bored anew maketh answer Lord I will seeke thy face Take heed then of deafe eares when we heare the word daily not profiting by it are not changed in life for this deafe eare is a fearefull iudgement of God that men hearing should not heare nor obey and be bettered by that they heare And yet this is our common hearing for the most part we come bring our bodily eare to the word but our hearts hearken not they obey not that we heare but we remaine as blind and ignorant and as full of sinne as euer and that after long hearing Which sheweth we are indeed deafe hearers The second point is the dutie commanded namely to heare Hearing in the word of God is not onely listening with the bodily eares but to be attentiue to the word and with attention to adde faith repentance conuersion and obedience to it for we if we be good hearers then we must heare so as we be changed from the corruption of the old man and learne to beleeue in Christ. Eph. 4. 21. and as much as we practise and obey so much we learne for we heare no further then we obey Then seeing we must so heare the word we must suffer our selues to be chaunged and altered labour to obey the word and to be changed by it And except we thus heare the word is not to vs the sauor of life but of death and as the good hearing is the readie means to saluation so the deafe hearing is to destructiō The third point which is commaunded by God namely that which the Spirit speaketh The thing which we must heare with attention faith obedience is repentance for our wants and sinnes for of that Christ spake afore Then this is a most necessarie thing for men to consider their owne wants and sinnes and the iudgement of God for them for else Christ would not haue added these words for the conclusion of the Epistle who hauing shewed thē their wants and the remedie and the iudgment of God for 〈◊〉 sinnes he addeth this caueat which sheweth the necessitie of these things Then it standeth vs vpon to consider our own personal wants our sinnes and the wrath of God against them for the omitting of this dutie is the bringing of Gods iudgement vpon vs and the practise of it is the preuenting and turning away of Gods iudgements And as priuate men of their personall sinnes so must countries cities in generall remēber their wants sins and do their first workes In the end of the verse are two reasons to moue them to heare the first because the things spoken are spoken by the Spirit that is the holy Ghost the third person in Trinitie the second because he speaketh not to one or two but to all the Churches in one Ob. But how can the Spirit speake these words seeing Christ speaketh them Ans. Both may stand for all outward actions of the persons in Trinitie are common to them all and seeing this to teach the Church is an outward action it belongeth to
practise this because we bring from our cradles naturall presumption which perswades vs that we be in the fauour of God that we haue his loue to vs. But we must cast off this naturall presumption and take a new course and the first step to come to grace is to see that we want grace we must see that we be lost sheepe prodigall children in our selues the very fire-brands of hell and this to see our owne want of grace is the first step to grace The second step is to desire it when we see that we want it to hunger and long for it Thirdly to lay hold on it to apprehend this fauour and grace by true and liuely faith to apply the promises of saluation by faith in Christ Iesus and this is the last steppe to get this grace Secondly in that he sets downe first grace secondly peace here is the true order of seeking for things and blessings in this life First for grace and Gods fauour secondly for peace and welfare not first peace and welfare but first for grace So Christ bids vs first to seeke the kingdome of God and the rigteousnes thereof and then when we are in Gods kingdome of grace all things needfull shall be ministred to vs. This discouers the bad practise of most men who begin at a wrong end first with peace in their callings to get honour riches pleasure or preferment neuer seeking first for grace and Gods fauour but if we would haue peace we must first haue grace But men if God blesse them in riches health and wealth they say Oh God loues me but alas we deceiue our selues for we may haue peace yet want grace we may haue this welfare health wealth libertie and yet want grace nay the peace of the wicked is no blessing but a curse And though the Lord giue a man health wealth libertie which be but common blessings he may be out of his grace and fauour seeing the Lord bestowes these common blessings on those which be his enemies Psal. 73. 12. But though the wicked haue all these common blessings they be accursed And though a man had grace the fauour and true loue of God and had no other health wealth nor libertie yet he were most happy and blessed Frō him which is was c. Here he sets down the cause efficient and the author of these two Grace and Peace the Author is God distinguished into three persons the Father Sonne and holy Ghost the Father in these words which is was and is to come the holy Ghost is noted in these words And from the seuen spirits which are before his throne thirdly the Sonne in the fift verse S. Iohn in the first place describes the Father by his true nature in these words Which is was and is to come in which he alludes to that Exo. 3. 14. 15. where Moses demaunds of God if the people should aske who sent him what he should answer the Lord tels him say I am Ehjeh Iehouah hath sent me where are two names to one end namely to expresse the nature of God Now S. Iohn he expounds them here where he saith He which is which was and is to come Further these two names Ehjeh Iehouah be two such names as cannot be translated fully in our English tongue but are more significant in their originall Hebrue tongue for they import thus much Grace and peace be from him which is in himselfe and from himselfe a most perfect and absolute substance which was and which is to come a most absolute perfect simple substance and essence so that he is a nature most simple pure and subsisting in and by himselfe 1. Cor. 8. 4. An idoll is not so it is nothing in and of it selfe but onely in mans braine it hath no subsisting and being of it selfe by nature but by mans art and thus the Lord differs from all false gods seeing he hath his being in and from himselfe not of or by any other thing None other hath this propertie but God By this we see the nature of all creatures which is that though they haue their subsisting and being as mans body and soule yet it is not from themselues but from God not taken out of his essence for then they should be God And the Lord hath no parts as we haue but he makes all things out of himselfe of nothing Seeing then we haue all we haue of God our bodies soules and all we inioy we must in lieu of recompence in thankfulnesse and obedience giue our selues soules and bodies to his seruice to do his will and pleasure The Lord is most absolute and eternall euery way without beginning or ending Angels and the soules of men they be eternall but not as absolutely though they be eternall in that they shall neuer die yet had they a beginning Secondly they are eternall not absolutely but by participation for God made them eternall but the Lord is most absolutely euery way eternall From him which is to come That is to iudgement to iudge all his creatures especially men and Angels That God which is was which hath his being of in and from himself he shall come to iudgement This must we remember and thinke of that he which is God of himselfe and by himselfe which giues vs life and being he shall iudge vs and this will be a meanes to make vs do our dutie in conscience But many men flatter themselues saying God will not come in my time to iudgement but though the Lord come not to generall iudgement in this life yet he will come in particular iudgement by death in this life Thirdly if we would alwayes remember this it would bridle out liues and make vs keepe a good conscience before God and all men Act. 16. 24. And from the seuen spirits which are before his throne These words commonly are expounded of the Angels of God which stand and minister vnto him but it cannot be meant of them for two causes First those which are here called seuen spirits from these grace and peace come but it cannot come from the holy Angels which attend to minister before the Lord. Secondly in this verse which is a benediction or a salutation of Iohn to the Church the seuen spirits are set before Iesus Christ the second person of the Trinitie which cannot be true of the Angels who in no respect can be placed before Christ therfore it cannot be vnderstood of the holy Angels But for my part I vnderstand it thus And from the seuen spirits c. that is from the holy Ghost This exposition is most agreeable to all the circumstances of the text and the holy Ghost is called the seuen spirits first because though he be one in substance yet he is seuen that is many in gifts and operations and for this cause the spirit of God cals himselfe the seuen spirits Secondly he cals him so because he sets downe the Father Sonne and holy Ghost as he saw them
all three and that the Father doth the Sonne doth and what the Sonne doth the holy Ghost and the Father do in outward actions Secondly Christ after his ascension teacheth not bodily but by his spirit for Christ being at his Fathers right hand sendeth his comforter to leade vs into all truth Now seeing the holy Ghost speaks in the Scripture he teacheth vs we see how the church of Rome sinneth in that they will haue a iudge which must speake for Christ he being in heauen and the Scriptures being not able to speake but are as a dumme iudge therefore the Church that is men in the Church they must be iudge of Scriptures But we see that the holy Ghost speaketh in the Scriptures and Christ he is iudge alone of them The Church is an instrument onely and cannot giue sentence of them but they be of themselues sufficient to take away any doubt whatsoeuer 2 Faith is no part of repentance but a cause of it for they be 2 distinct parts of Christianity the first a sermon beleeue and repent where repentance followeth faith as a fruite of it Thirdly obedience is no part of repentance but a cause thereof ergo repentance stands not in these three properties neither is all one with regeneratiō for this goeth before them for godly sorrow is the cause of repentance but regeneration is before godly sorow ergo before repentance too The second point is how we must practise repentance this stands in two things first true humiliation secondly true reformation of life Humiliation stands in confessing our sins miseries and wants and in condemning our selues for them and in harty praier to God for pardō Reformation is the changing of our bad actions to good and if need require to make satisfaction to men Dauid Psal. 32. first humbled himselfe secondly he prayed for pardon and withall promiseth reformation of life Manasses fel from God but he prayed to God humbled himselfe 2. Cron. 33. 12. So the prodigal son And Dauid in all these Psalmes of repentance humbles himself Psal. 32. 38. 51. 130. 143. 77. And so must we do if we truly repent Then we see the dānable doctrine of the Papists which make repentance stand in contrition and confession of sins to a Priest satisfaction for a man may do all these and yet be a reprobate So did Iudas he had contrition confessed his sinne made satisfaction and yet his repentance was not true repentance Another abuse is that they make contrition a part of repentance which is indeed no grace but may be a cause of grace Besides to confesse all sinnes to a priest is a gibbet to a mans conscience and more then God himselfe requireth Last of all to teach that a man must satisfie Gods iustice is to ouerthrow the satisfaction of Christ. The third point is Who commaunds this It is Christ. Now some out of these words gather that God giueth sufficient grace to euery man to repent if they will for say they if he command repentance and yet some cannot then he but mockes them and it is as if we should bid one bound hand and foot to rise and walke Ans. The Lord giueth not that commaundement to euery particular man but to the Church or to some people which shal become a Church and then he doth it to gather the elect Now in the Church there be elect and reprobate now this commandement to repent is giuen to the elect directly but to the reprobate by consequence as they be among the elect in the church And this commaundement is giuen to both for diuers ends first to the elect to shew them what they ought to do not their ability what they can do secondly that it may be an outward means to bring them to repētance for when he giueth them this commandement he is present by his spirit Phil. 2. 12. he bids them work out their saluation but addeth God giueth the will the deed shewing that God giuing that commandement is present by his spirit to worke in them abilitie to performe it Now the wicked being in the Church haue the same commaundement not directly neither to those ends but first to keepe them in outward ciuill order secondly to make them without excuse But whereas they reason thus If Christ command all to repent then all haue sufficiēt grace to repēt but the first is true ergo Ans. The first part is false vnles it be restrained thus if he command to this very end that they should repent and practise it for he giueth cōmandement to some not that they may do it but as to Pharaoh to harden their harts For the second part that he giueth commandement to all the meaning is he giueth it onely to the elect directly because he giueth them his spirit to obey it but to the wicked by consequence as they be mingled in the Church with his owne children The fourth point is who must repent namely the Angel and whole Church of Ephesus Ob. But they had repented before how then doth he bid thē repent againe Ans. There are two degrees of repentāce one is the beginning the other is the renewing of it In the practise of which two stands the whole life of a Christian first to begin to repent when he is truly called and secondly in continuing and renuing it dayly as he often falleth If we haue begun by Gods grace we must not stay there but go on and be renued euery day There is no man but he shall see in him selfe daily new sins slips and wants for which he must haue renewed repentance Then seeing we daily increase our sins we must take heed we lie not or continue in sin without this repentance for we are not so much condēned for sin as for lying in sin this if a man repent brings not condemation but lying in sin doth then aboue all things take heed of this let vs daily labor to know our sins to be acquainted with our wants to humble our selues pray for pardon 2. Cor. 5. 20. I beseech you saith Paul be reconciled to God they were reconciled before for they were iustified and sanctified but he would haue them to labour to be more assured of their iustification and to haue a more full and sensible feeling of it and that because their apprehension by reason of their weaknes is but sin all The like must be had of vs. The fift point is why or for what cause namely for their decay in loue especially and other wants Christ prescribeth to thē repentance not that they had none at all And so Christ preacheth to vs by his Ministers to repent of this decay in loue if we haue had loue and feele it now decayed we must repent if we haue not then we must labour to haue it And Christ we see giueth a large commaundement not for drunkennesse whooredome theft or such grosse sins but euen for their decay in loue want of knowledge faith feare
taught by his grandmother Lois and Eunice his mother in the Scriptures But hence some gather without ground that as a womā may not teach so not gouern But this cannot be proued out of the word and it hath no force For though a woman may not teach and stand in Christs stead in the congregation yet she may gouerne and stand in his stead in the Common wealth be a Queene Dutchesse Countesse c. For there is special reason why she may not stand in Christs stead in the Church seeing men onely so stand in his stead for Christ tooke on him the person of a man not of a woman but that letteth not but she may stand in his stead in the Commonwealth if she come to it by succession seeing it is her patrimonie and inheritance And we haue great cause to blesse almightie God for the gouernment of a woman more then any which euer yet ruled ouer vs. But it is said the man is the womans head therefore he must beare rule not she Ans. He is the head that is more excellent as he is man but not in regard of any gifts for a woman may passe a man in grace and gifts of God and other respects and so may haue rule ouer the man though he be more excellent as he is man she inferiour as she is woman The second fault reproued in the Church of Thyatira is the suffering of a woman to teach and seduce Then as to suffer a woman to teach openly in the Church is a fault so to suffer her to seduce is a fault likewise Seeing Christ reproueth them for suffering her we see it is not left to mans will to teach and hold what he will but men must be restrained that they teach and hold nothing which standeth not with the word of God they must reproue patrons and defenders of sects and schismes and new doctrines for which our Church is to be commended which hath lawes for Papists Protestants and Recusants which is both lawfull and commended by Christ. To aggrauate these two faults he describeth her by her properties first that she is called Iesabel that is one like Iesabel secondly by her action she called her selfe a Prophetesse First the woman Iesabel But why doth Christ call her so First because this woman was like Iesabel and did in her person reuiue the wicked manners and opinions of Iesabel for as Iesabel was an idolater brought in idolatrie the worship of Baal among the Israelites so this woman in the Church of Thyatyra Secondly as she was giuen to fornication so this woman was a maintainer and teacher of the same Thirdly as Iesabel was a woman of authoritie and by her authoritie did countenance and defend her sinnes false religion and the worship of Baal so this woman was also of great authoritie and by the same taught and maintained her diuellish opinions In this reason see the practise of the diuell who laboureth in ages following to renew and reuiue the vices and sinnes which were before their errors For as he had Iesabel in Ahabs time who was a patron of fornication and idolatrie so in the Apostles time he had this woman who renewed these opinions another Iesabel like her The end is to further his kingdom for the diuell seeth that these meanes most dishonour God hurt his kingdome and most of all build his kingdom and so he dealeth in al ages to reuiue the opinions errors scismes of old So they which follow Machiauel imitate the doings of Achitophel So the Papists reuiue the errors of the Scribes and Pharises they which separate themselues frō our Church the opiniō of the Donatists the Family of loue the error of the Valētinians The second reason is because by this name he might draw thē to dislike of her and not to follow her but that she might be in as great disgrace as Iesabel was in the old Testament And this Christ doth to teach vs in reading the bookes of the old and new Testament if we reade of any wiked men that we should dislike their vices and errors take heed of them and auoid them nay if we see them in vs we must dislike our selues for them and contrarily if we reade of a vetruous man or woman we must imitate their vertues like and loue them and our selues for them if we haue the same The second argument whereby he describes her is her action Which calleth her selfe a Prophetesse that is she doth chalenge to her selfe to be such a one as taught the word by the instinct and help of Gods spirit and that all she taught was the word of Gods spirit She taught fornication was no sinne and that one might go into the Idoll temple and eate of their offerings and yet she pretends all to be done and taught by Gods spirit making him the teacher and author of her errors Seeing wicked men and women father their errors on Gods spirit we must labour to get the spirit of discerning to know whether the spirit be of God or not and we must not be of no religion because many teach false doctrine but rather labour to haue the spirit of discerning to try the spirits which we heare Againe when we are accused or slandered we must be content for we see this woman taught false doctrine and yet fathered it on Gods spirit which indeed was not of him but of the diuell and so made him the author of errors Now if the Lord be thus dealt withall made the author of lies by wicked men shall not we be content if we be slaundered who by our sinnes deserued the same As she chalenged her selfe to be a Prophetesse so she proued her selfe to be one namely by her owne testimony and her owne word she said she was one Here Christ sheweth the note of a false Prophet namely a mans owne word and testimony but a true Prophet hath many tokens and arguments to proue him to be so As in the Primitiue Church they spake sundry tongues without study often wrought miracles as seales of a true Prophet Secondly they held vnitie of doctrine in integritie of life and conuersation to confirme their callings Thirdly they had excellent gifts giuen them of God as zeale courage and constancy to maintaine their callings which were extraordinary but this woman had nothing but her owne word and bare testimony In the second place the more to disgrace her and the church of Thyatira her teaching was described by the end which was to deceiue men Here is another marke of a false Prophet to teach to seduce and draw men to some sinne or wickednesse The end of true teaching is godlynes but of false it is to draw men to sinne in life and conuersation After he describeth her seducing by two arguments first the persons my seruants secondly the meanes to make them commit fornication and to eate of things offered to idols For the persons my seruants this increaseth her fault seeing they
here he commands her to embrace the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles Hence we see Christ would haue this Church to embrace the doctrine taught by his Apostles to maintaine that and not to regard any other but though an Angell from heauen did preach any other doctrine he should be accursed Galat 1. By this we may iudge of the maine religions which be in the world namely of the Turkes Iewes and Papists The Papists magnifie their religion standing on vnwritten traditions but they cannot proue they be Apostolical ergo we must not regard them no nor doctrines which men say they haue by reuelation for we must onely regard Apostolicall doctrine As for the Turkes religion it was not the Apostles preaching but crept in six hundred yeares after them And for the Iewes all their religiō is against the Gospel Then good men in diuers countries shold not be of diuers religions but they should embrace the doctrine taught by the Prophets and Apostles of Christ neither should men because of dissent in religion be of no religion for Christ inioynes this Church to maintaine the doctrine of the Apostles though many discented from it Hold fast to the end Here not how long not one or two dayes but to the end and we must looke to this seeing Christ so straightly commands it because this is the foundation and mark of true religion and the readie way to saue mens soules to be constant to the end and for this 2. Tim. 2. Paul bids him teach that he learned that others might instruct them which follow and so conuey it from age to age and for this the Church is called the ground and pillar of truth And so the Lord Eph. 4. giueth the Church Pastors first such as by their teaching maintaine puritie in maners and teachers which maintaine it in doctrine Then this is the Churches dutie to continue puritie of religion to the end of the world If the marke be set wrong in the hauen it is enough to cast away all the ships so if the puritie of doctrine be corrupt which is the direction of our soules to heauen then we shall make shipwracke of our soules in hell Then the Ministers must not onely teach truly but labour to beate downe false doctrine which poisons the doctrine of the Gospell And because men labour not to maintaine the puritie of religion and true doctrine the Lord 2. Thess. 2. giueth them vp to beleeue lies and fantasies of men To him which ouercometh c. In these words is the last part to wit the conclusion of the Epistle containing two parts first a promise secondly a commaundement In the promise note two things first the parties to whom secondly the benefits promised The partie to whom to him which ouercometh whom here Christ describes to be he which keepes his workes by his practise of obedience He which keepes or obserues This is the forme of obedience namely the obseruing of the works of Christ which is not a keeping of them according to the rigour of the law but a constant purpose and indeuour to keepe them for the children of God haue this priuiledge that their will and indeuour is accepted of God for the deed in Christ Iesus There are many which haue litle knowledge these must not be cast downe but if they haue a desire and indeuour to liue according to the will of Christ making conscience of sinne their obedience is true obedience and acceptable to Christ. My workes Here is the matter of obedience namely Christs works that is such workes as Christ hath ordained in his word by his spirit and is the author of in his members Christ cals these workes his workes therefore we must not thinke or speake or do our words or workes but onely Christs workes commanded and ordained in his word and caused in vs by his spirit which we do when we conforme our works and wils to his word and will We see no worke is acceptable to God which is not ordered by Christs word though we think highly of it Esay 6. he reproueth them for teaching the feare of God by mens cōmandemēt This condemnes the Turkes Papists and Iewes religion which are not workes of Christ but of sinfull men standing in praying to Saints fasting vowing Masses c. My workes Not one or two workes but all my workes the creature must obey Christ not in some but absolutely in all things he will not pattstakes but wil haue all or none Dauid Psal. 119. conformed himselfe to the whole law So Hezekiah he turned to all the law of Moses Vnto the end Here we see Christ will haue our obedience to be constant c. we must not iudge of obedience by one or two actions but by the course of a mans life if his life hath bene good with conscience of sinne then his obedience is good For say a man by reason of sicknesse rage and raue at his death yet if he haue liued well and made conscience of sinne we must not iudge of him by that fit Now the benefits promised are two first power to rule secondly the morning starre I will giue him power which I haue receiued of my father These words must be referred to the words not following but before For the better vnderstanding of them two questions are necessary first what is the power of the Mediator secondly how farre he conueyeth power to his seruants For the first the power of Christ as he is Mediator is great and described by three arguments first to rule ouer nations here is the largenesse of it for Christ hath power ouer all men all countries and kingdomes in the whole world are in his hand Secondly it is soueraigne and absolute ruling and ouerruling all creatures ouerruled of none This soueraigntie stands in two things first that he giueth lawes that binde the conscience so that if men keepe them not he hath power to condemne them nay he ruleth mens wils and affections he can make them obey him in spite of their hearts Seconly in that he hath this power of himself and from himself Reu. 3. he hath the keyes of heauen and hel Psal. 2. he can breake them in peeces as a potters vessell Thirdly he receiues it from his father as he is God he is equall to his father yet as he is Mediator he receiueth it from him thus is his power generall soueraigne and absolute To come to the second question How farre this power is ours and imparted to vs. Answ. The generall soueraigne power of Christ is not giuen to vs or to any creature but to him who is God and man it is incommunicable to any creature and proper to the person of Christ. Then Christ speaketh these words not to shew that his absolute soueraigne power is giuen to vs but because his creatures haue the benefit of it the full comfort and saluation of the elect cometh from it they haue fruite of it in that they partake
like a stocke I wil giue thē and make thē come therfore a man being effectually called he cannot either come or not come at his pleasure as though God did for his part offer man grace and will him to come yet he may refuse it and not come but if God call man cannot but come else Christ would not haue said I will giue him and make him come But they say Matth. 23. Christ saith to Ierusalem How oft would I c. but you would not Answ. He spake that not as he was God but as he was a Prophet or the Minister of circumcision to the Iewes Againe say they Act. 27. they resisted the holy Ghost Ans. That is the doctrine of the Apostles and Prophets which was indicted by the holy Ghost not the spirit of God himselfe for no inferior power can resist a superior To come to the next Who be conuerted Namely a certaine synagogue of the Iewes at Philadelphia which said they were worshippers of Christ yet indeed were the synagogue of Satan and bond-slaues of the diuell Here we see not onely small but great and old sinners may repent and be saued Christ he died for all kinds of sinners great rebellious and obstinate if they can repent they may be conuerted and come to Christ. 2. Thess. 2. 26. they must waite for the repentance of those which were taken in the diuels snares so as he would wish them no surer Rom. 1. some were giuen ouer to a reprobate sense yet it is likely that some of them repented Then we see great grieuous and notorious sins may be forgiuen yet we must not abuse the grace of God to liue in sinne but gather comfort hence that though we be great sinners yet if we can repent there is mercie with the Lord no sin can hinder vs from Christ. We reade that Christ healed three sorts of dead men some when they went to the graue some buried and some which lay foure dayes and stanke as Lazarus did So Christ healeth all kind of persons he calleth men of all sorts euen them which lie stinking in sinnes and are almost rotten in them Then take the benefite of Christs exceeding mercie when he calleth thee to repent come and cast away thy sinne though thou be a vassal of Satan a man rotten in sin yet Christ hath mercy infinit he can heale and help thee and he came to call not those which think they be righteous but such as are penitent sinners to take them out of the Lions paw and to saue the lost sheepe of Israel Then abuse not this exceeding mercie but blesse his Maiestie for it and vse it as a meanes to repent to bring thee to newnesse of life to breake off thy sin and to make thee a liuely member in Iesus Christ. I will make them come and worship Now followeth the third point in the conuersion of a sinner namely the good fruites of their repentance and conuersion I will make them worship These words are expounded 1. Cor. 14. 25. where the children of God prophecying there cometh in an vnlearned man he falleth downe and worshippeth so here he will cause these wicked Iewes to come and fall downe and worship and adore the true God in the congregation of Gods church and people In these words note two fruites of conuersion the first concernes God the second the church of God and the members of the same For the first to worship God it is a true fruite of a conuerted sinner which no man can truly performe as he ought till he be conuerted to wit to worship and adore God in the companie of his saints people The natural man knoweth that there is a God that this God must be worshipped but to worship him as he ought it is a worke that none but he which is truly conuerted can performe Another may performe outward worship heare the word receiue the sacraments but true worship which is in the heart and spirit for God is a spirit that he cannot performe Now for the worship of God three properties are to be noted in these words first They shall come and worship not worship simply but come signifying that the true worship of God must be voluntary willing and cheerefull not of constraint or compulsion but as though there were no law or iudgment for them if they did not Psa. 110. they came freely not by compulsion Then we see how most men come short for men are not touched with loue of the word neuer or seldome come to heare it onely come to morning or euening Prayer because if they do not the law wil compell them These are no true worshippers of God for he cannot abide any worshippers but willing and voluntary And worship That is reuerence God with bowing the body or knee and this is the second property we must expresse our reuerence in conuenient and seemely bowing of the body or the knee Then we see this is not a thing indifferent but necessary to vse meete and conuenient gesture of the bodie in the seruice of God to bow downe and prostrate our selues our soule and bodie Esay 6. the Angels in the presence of God couer their feete with three wings and their face with other three testifying their reuerence and adoration in the worship of God So must Gods people worship him in soule and bodie c. But we come short in this dutie for whereas we should vse seemely and conuenient gesture of the bodie to shew our reuerence and humilitie we see many lie snorting and leaning on their elbowes others vnreuerently with their heads couered which ought to be bare for God is a God of soule and bodie therefore we must reuerence him with both Before thy feet This is the third propertie namely in the congregation of Gods people they shall prostrate themselues at their feet in hearing the word or prayer they must be humbled the pride of their hearts beaten downe be smitten with feare of Gods Maiestie and of their owne sinnes Act. 16. 29. The Iaylor ouer night put Paule into prison but in the morning finding all the prison doores open and thinking all the prisoners to be gone he would haue killed himself Now being thus astonished and affraid Paule preacheth the Gospell to him which before he contemned but now being smitten with feare of the Maiestie of God he heareth Paule willingly with trembling and cometh kneeling and crowching to him saying What shall I do c. And vntill a man be smitten downe with feare of Gods glorious Maiestie with sense of his iudgements for his sinnes and so come to humble himselfe he cannot be a true beleeuer of Gods will and word The cause why there be so few true professors and that all serue God with formall worship is because they were neuer cast downe they were neuer smitten with feare of Gods Maiestie neuer confounded for their owne sinnes for till these be in vs in some sort we cannot worship God we cannot
reason of sinne a punishment and in it owne nature a curse And all the hurt that cometh by the creatures whereas they be at enmitie betweene themselues or with men it is a curse for mans sinne And in that they be subiect to vanitie too all is for the punishment of our sinnes Further all losses and damages and crosses whatsoeuer and wants of temporall blessings they are miseries The like we may say of all callings for there is none but it is subiect to griefes and vexations no man can carie himselfe so in any calling but he shall feele some woe and miserie And as in this life so in the end of this life the miserie is bodily death that is a separation of the soule from the bodie which if man had not fallen should haue remained vnseparable This in it owne nature is a fearefull curse for it is the very gate of hell And after this life followeth the full accomplishment of Gods wrath all the miseries in this life are but preparations to that Then cometh destruction endlesse in the place of the damned For this destruction is first a separation from God and excludeth men from all societie with him secondly an apprehension of Gods wrath in the whole man bodie and soule for euer Thirdly it is in the place of the damned with the diuell and his angels therefore this miserie is the summe and accomplishment of all miseries the rest are but beginnings of this Thus you see what mans miserie is Now then considering what is the fountaine of our miserie originall sin what is the nature of miserie namely it is a curse and punishment we see what it is to be wretched and miserable Thou art wretched That is tainted with sinne and subiect to punishment for it in this life in the end of it and after it Now touching this generall point we are to consider the end why Christ saith this And knowest not c. Which is that he might teach them and vs to learne to know our miserie and to feele it and to be touched in conscience for it Whosoeuer shall but lightly reade ouer this Epistle shall see that this is the very end of it for they thought themselues to be highly in Gods fauour when it was nothing so indeed I pray you all therefore which are now assembled here to heare things touching eternall life and the saluation of your soules forsake abandon other conceipts and turne your eyes to this that you may see what be the miseries to which you are subiect and when you see them go further labour that your hearts may be touched that you may euen crie out with the men of Ierusalem What shall we do Till then we shall be like these Laodiceans neither hote nor cold We shall neuer haue true and sound religion in vs till we feele the waight of our miserie I acknowledge that the sight of our miserie is Gods grace but go to the root and seeke that all pride may be expulsed and you may embrace the Gospell which ministreth a remedie for all miserie But thou art miserable This word miserable signifieth one that is worthy to be pitied which he vseth to expresse the greatnesse of their misery meaning that they were so far subiect to misery that they were to be pitied of all men so that this is not added to shew any new thing but to inlarge the former Learne we hence that it is not our dutie to disdaine a sinner that is in misery or to reproch scorn but to pitie him the more grieuous sinner a man is the more he is to be pitied It was Dauids maner so to do 1. Sam 16. and he was so farre from contemning a sinner that he shed riuers of teares Psal. 119. 136. And Ezec. 9. the good man was moued with the bowels of compassion when the people were sinfull The like is in Ier. 9. It was the Corinthians fault when the incestuous man had sinned they were neuer a whit humbled or moued with pitie but puft vp with pride and contempt so that they scorned him and Paul reprooueth it in them And this is a fault in many of vs that men are not humbled when they see other men sinne our hearts are not touched with sorow for it but rather puft vp If we haue receiued more grace then other let vs not despise or scorne them which haue not the like measure Thus much of their misery in generall As for the particulars they are in number three that he might strike their hearts with a sense of their misery he is not content to set it downe in generall termes but enters into particular names three maine miseries of theirs The first word signifieth one so poore that he hath not a rag to his backe nor a bit of bread to put in his mouth more then he gets by begging But here he meaneth spiritual pouertie which what it is we shall best vnderstand when we know what is true riches to wit the grace and fauour of God in Christ for the pardō of sins to life euerlasting So the poore man is he that wants this that hath no good thing acceptable to God who in regard of his soule is as a begger which hath nothing for the maintenance of this temporall life Thus you haue the meaning of this first word Now the end likewise is to be considered why Christ calleth them poore namely that they and we might striue to see our pouertie that we might become poore in spirit for they thought themselues rich therefore Christ to beate downe this conceit and to prepare them to true grace tels them they are poore in regard of grace and life eternall And here we are taught a principall point of religion namely to feele our owne pouertie that we haue no goodnesse in vs and therefore to despaire vtterly of our saluation in regard of our selues This is greatly commended in the Scriptures therefore learne another dutie As we are by nature poore and haue no goodnesse in our selues so labour to see it and to be out of heart with our selues that is to be poore in spirit otherwise you may come to church heare the word receiue the sacraments but neuer haue saluation or haue spirituall blessings except you be first acquainted with your poore estate that you are very beggers nay more plaine bankerupts for so Christ taught vs to pray Forgiue vs our debts therfore Christ tels the proud Church of her pouertie Happie and blessed were our state and condition if we could learne this and lay aside our pride for we are so poore that we must pleade nothing but pardon no merit or satisfaction If we did this then would we esteeme aright of the Gospell and haue some comfort by it Now because we haue not this we do not embrace the Gospel heartily and chearfully as we ought Cary therefore away this lesson with you that the beginning of all grace is to feele the want
Manna haue power ouer nations be clothed in white made pillars in Gods temple and sit with Christ Iesus in the throne of his Father And though the sonne of Ishai cannot make vs Captains of thousands yet that Sonne of Dauid will make vs the sonnes of God That we may do so we must beleeue the Gospell put on Christ Iesus and be renewed by repentance The first is necessarie the second comely the third profitable To come to the first it is necessarie we should beleeue for he that beleeueth not is condemned alreadie he is condemned in the counsell of God in the ministerie of the word and in his owne conscience and he shall be condemned in the day of iudgement for the wrath of God abideth vpon him The more I consider the fruites of faith the more I see the necessitie of faith Through it we are saued by it we are iustified in it we liue We are saued from Satan iustified before God and liue in the Church In the Church nay by it we liue in heauen for he that beleeueth in the Sonne of God hath euerlasting life Faith is that which purifieth the heart maketh the whole man to runne the wayes of Gods commandements giueth entrance to grace accesse to God in prayer made the Elders well reported of and each Christian to stand to the profession of Christ. It is that hand by which we must apprehend Christ that shield by which we resist all the fierie darts of the diuell and that meanes by which we do good to others By faith we receiue the spirit are members of Christ we are risen with him he dwelleth in our hearts we feed on him continually resist Satan are the children of God and the word which we heare becometh profitable And what shall I say faith is of such a qualitie that it vniteth vs to Christ maketh vs certaine of our saluation bold in our profession ministreth true ioy giueth temporall blessings sanctifieth our gifts and maketh vs refuse the pleasures of this present world In a word no sinne can condemne him who hath this true faith and no vertue can saue him who wanteth it To come to the second which is Christ the obiect of faith The most comely garment that euer we can weare it is to be couered with the robes of Christs righteousnesse Iacob was blessed by Esaus garments we are blessed by Christs garments What we see through a greene glasse seemeth all to be greene and what God seeth thorough Christ it is al amiable We must put on this aparel not as the Church in the Canticles I haue put off my clothes how shall I put them on againe or as a gowne that we cast off when we come to our home but we must so put him on that we neuer put him off againe We must put him on by imputation imitation infusion and profession by imputation of his righteousnesse imitation of his vertues infusion of his Spirit and profession of his name Thus we must labour to get Christ for what though a man could commaund the earth with Alexander the sea with Moses the fire with Eliah and the Sunne with Iosuah What though he were as rich as Salomon as wise as Achitophel as strong as Sampson as swift as Ahimaaz as beautifull as Absolon as fortunate as Metellus descended as Paul was of the bloud royal of Princes yet hauing not Christ he hath nothing Yea say a man had the abstinence of Aristydes the innocencie of Phocion the holinesse of Socrates the almes deedes of Cimon the moderation of Camillus the honestie iustice and faithfulnesse of both Catoes all these out of Christ were but splendida peccata and to be esteemed as dung in regard of Christ. For haue him and haue all things want him and want all things he is in at and after death aduantage I come to the last it is profitable to repent for if we turne to the Lord he will turne to vs and that we may turne consider his mercies in forgiuing his benefites in giuing his patience in forbearing and his iudgments in punishing The word preached sinnes committed and that few shall be saued the shortnesse of life the vncertaintie of life and the certaintie of death the ioyes of heauen the torments of hell the comfort of the elect and that else we can haue no comfort in death pray we cannot vnlesse we repent and perish we shall vnlesse we repent but blessed shall we be if we do repent But manum de tabula Magister adest this discourse following will teach vs these things and it am I bold to present to your Worships Iohn sent his Reuelation to many Churches and I present his Epistles to many worthie personages and to whom may I better present them thē to you Iohn was a disciple full of loue and you are breethrē full of loue The Preacher of these Lectures was well knowne to many but to none better then to many of you especially to those who were in my time worthie members of that most worthie Colledge with him And the rather I do it that times to come may reioyce in the Lord that from one honorable root haue issued so many profitable branches to the Church You are sixe brethren as pillars of your house there were three sisters as fruitfull vines of the same one is not but is with the Lord and her I knew a Ladie of admirable vertues the other two are and long may they be so You are all brethren by nature of one venter nation of one countrie grace of one spirit affection of one heart fortune in great fauour and of one hope by your holy behauiour And concerning brotherly loue I need not to write vnto you for you are taught of God to loue one another Your Scilurus at his death need not teach you concord by giuing to each of you a sheafe of arrowes which cannot well be broken whilst they are conioyned for you by your amitie make your selues inuincible If Chilo the Lacedaemonian died for ioy to see one sonne crowned at Olympus and Diagoras Rhodius did the like when his three children got the garland at a wrestling and Iacob so reioyced to heare of his one Ioseph to be aduanced greatly in the kingdome of Egypt how might that happie father of yours reioyce to see at one time one sonne sitting as high Sheriffe of the shire another preaching before the Iudges of Assize and the third pleading as Councellor at the barre and all the rest of great expectation in the kingdome Thus wise sons are a ioy to their parents and all may behold how good and comely a thing it
the meanes they barre them of their saluation the end of them whereas S. Iohn would by these wordes Blessed c. drawe men and allure them to to reade and delight in the Scriptures Seeing the end of this booke and the rest is to bring men to happinesse we are here admonished all of vs to reade and meditate in them and search them as Ioh. 5. 39. euen as we would search for gold or some precious thing which we would faine finde so the word imports And he addeth the reason For in them you thinke to haue eternall life But some will say I cannot reade I was neuer brought vp in learning S. Iohn cuts off this excuse in the next words Blessed is he which reades or heares the words of this prophecie So that if he cannot reade yet if he heare and keepe it he is blessed Then those which can not reade them they must procure others to reade they must hearken and heare diligently We must learne to carrie in minde the distinction betweene the bookes of God and writings of men Gods word brings a man which keepes it to happinesse but man 's of them selues can not vnlesse they haue light from the word of God And if this distinction were imprinted in our harts we should not be so delighted either to heare or speake the words of God mixed with the words of sinfull men First among the Iewes it was not lawfull to mingle cloth of diuerse kinds then much lesse will the Lord suffer his word to be mingled with the sayings of erronious and sinfull men be they neuer so learned or ancient Secondly here followeth the right manner and way of hearing and reading the Scriptures which stands in two things First we must set downe a certaine end why we reade the Scriptures which is that we may attaine to happinesse fellowship with God and life euerlasting And when this takes place that we set downe this end that we reade and heare them with care and conscience to practise them Secondly we must keepe thē remember the things we reade or heare And this second point is principall to heare and to reade so as we keepe those things we heare or reade and so as we make obseruation of that we heare so the words import Here we see the cause why we heare and reade the word dayly yet no profite comes thereby the cause is because we be onely hearers we keepe it not to make vse of it in our liues That we may keepe the word which we heare or reade it is so commended to vs in many places Luke 2. 19. Mary is said to keepe and to ponder all these things in her heart Psal. 119. 8. Dauid he hid the statutes of the Lord in his heart Luke 11. Blessed are they which heare the word and keepe it Iames 1. 21. We must keepe the word which is grafted in vs where it is compared to a ciens or graffe which is set into a stocke so the word is ingrafted into our hearts and there it must abide and bring forth fruite That we may keepe this word we must first learne the elements of Religion in the Catechisme both old and young must learne them for that is the beginning of all knowledge and though a man reade and heare the word and yet learne not the grounds he cannot keepe it So that we see the cause why many especially aged folke heare the word from yeare to yeare and neuer profit but are as ignorant as euer they were they be alwayes learning yet neuer learne any thing the reason is because they will not abase themselues to learne those principles of Religion those first seeds without which they cannot profit by and keepe the word That we may keepe those things we heare or reade we must con our part before we come we must addresse our selues we must not rush on Gods ordinance without preparation In the old Testament when the people offered sacrifice they must sanctifie themselues so we in receiuing of the Lords supper we prepare our selues reuerently Now that we do in the Lords supper we must do in hearing the word seeing there is no difference but that that Supper is onely a visible word the word preached is an audible word When the people receiued the law the Lord cōmaunded them to sanctifie themselues three daies before So then when we come to heare the word which is the law expounded we must sanctifie our selues prepare our hearts to heare it This preparation stands in these things 1. we must put out of our hearts all by-thoughts all cares and thoughts of worldly affaires and we must set our hearts to seeke the Lord Ezra 7. to looke in the law that we may know the will of God reuealed in his word withall we must make our carnest prayers to God that he would open our eyes that we may see his will soften our hearts and make our eares attentiue as Lidiaes were and also giue vs grace to embrace his word and keepe it When we are about to heare or reade the word we must haue humble hearts else we cannot keepe the word nor beleeue the promises in the same The Lord he reueales his secrets to the humble in spirit that is which be humbled for their sinnes troubled and touched with their owne infirmities which haue contite broken and bruised hearts but in the proud heart there is no keeping of the word there is no hole in it for the word to lie in but it is wholly possessed and puffed vp with selfe-loue and pride The heart must be an honest heart we must not onely haue our hearts touched with the remembrance of our sinnes but they must be honest hearts good hearts such as are not purposed to liue in sinne or any one sinne be it neuer so litle but wholy purposed to serue the Lord we must not come with vnchast or wicked hearts with minds to leaue all sinne but yet to liue in some one sinne We must haue a beleeuing heart Heb. 4. 2. The old Iewes heard the word but it profited them not because they mingled it not with faith in their hearts where he compares them to a vessel in which there must be both the word and faith and these must be mingled together it must be tempered by faith then it will be a word of power of life and saluation and this is the onely meanes to remember the word and to beleeue truly the iudgements denounced against sinne and sinners and promises pronounced for the true beleeuers But incredulitie is when we except the curses against sin as not pertaining to vs and cannot apply the promises of the Gospell This is the proper cause of all ignorance and obliuion so that we must labour aboue all things for this true faith to beleeue the word and then we shall well and easily remember it We must haue hearing hearts besides these eares of the body we must haue new eares pearced We
17. This is a common sinne in this age for we teach the word but in an humane manner Men speake and preach the word but onely to shew their owne wit learning reading and gifts but he which deliuereth not the word in that maner he ought and wherein he receiues it he is a false witnesse Christ he is a faithfull witnesse and that faithfull witnesse then we see the damnable practise of most men now adayes for they heare the word continually preached and reade the same yet the Prophet cryes out Who hath beleeued our sayings None feare the threatnings of the law none beleeue the promises of the Gospell What an heauie and horrible thing is this that we should not beleeue the promises of saluation nor feare the threats of the law for our sins seeing it is the doctrine preached and confirmed by the testimonie of Christ Iesus the true and faithfull witnesse of the Fathers will to man This is to make Christ a lyer to make him a false Prophet and giue him the lye By the consideration of this that Christ Iesus is the faithful witnesse that the doctrine deliuered out of his word is confirmed by his testimonie must we take heed that we feare and trēble at the threates of the law that we beleeue assuredly the promises of the Gospell for they which will not beleeue haue their portion in the lake of fire and brimstone Reuel 21. 8. Againe seeing Christ Jesus is that faithfull witnesse which giueth testimonie to mens cōsciences in particular of their saluation this teacheth vs to beleeue the promises of the Gospell that they belong to each of vs in particular as to Iohn Peter c. and euery true member of Christ for he is the true and faithfull witnesse he alone giueth testimonie to mens consciences Now though it be against all sense yet we must beleeue him seeing he is true and if we do not we make him a false witnes giuing him the lye Then it is no presumption as the Papists say to beleeue our election and saluation in particular nay it is an horrible sinne not to beleeue it seeing Christ a most faithfull witnesse testifies the same to our consciences by his holy Spirit Nay for this end to perswade euery man in particular he appointed his Sacraments bread and wine in the Supper and water in Baptisme that euery one might particularly receiue thē particularly be assured of the same For in that he offers them he doth as if he should say I offer you in them life euerlasting Then to doubt of this that we may assuredly perswade our selues in particular of our owne saluation is to call into question whether Christ be a true witnesse a true and faithfull Prophet or not And the first begotten of the dead Here in these words is contained the second office of Christ namely his Priestly office The first begotten of the dead He alludeth in these words to the estate of the families among the Iewes for as among them he which was first borne and eldest of the familie had many priuiledges and preheminences as of the Lordshippe of the Priesthood of double portion c. so Christ which is compared to the eldest and first borne he hath his priuiledges yea euen Christ crucified he hath his prerogatiues among the dead aboue all that are dead So Paule calleth him the first and beginning of the dead and after expounds it that he might in all things haue the preheminence Colos. 1. 18. The second priuiledge is that Christ being dead was the first which rose from death to life for none rose from death to life before him Ob. Lazarus Moses Elias in the mount they had their bodies restored thē againe yea Lazarus rose to life againe before Christ. Answ. Moses and Elias receiued their bodies againe Lazarus also liued againe but these returned againe to their former miserie as Lazarus he rose from death to die againe so Moses and Elias tooke to them their bodies againe not to enter into eternall happinesse but to their former miserie but Christ he rose from death to eternall happinesse and rose not to die any more but his resurrection is the first steppe to eternal life and felicitie The second priuiledge which he hath aboue all the dead is that he by his owne power and by the vertue of his Godhead raised his manhood But all that rise to life saue Christ they are raised by vertue of his resurrection not by their owne power None can raise themselues but by the vertue of that mysticall vnion betweene Christ the head and vs the members For as the first fruites being offered to the Lord they sanctified all the rest so Christ Iesus the first fruites of the dead did by his resurrection sanctifie and make acceptable all our resurrections In this is a notable comfort for all Gods children against the immoderate feare of death for if Iohn had said Christ is the first borne among the liuing it had bene a great comfort for then had he shewed that we be his familie on earth that the companie of his children on earth is his familie and he is the head of them he our elder brother But in that he saith the first begotten of the dead here is an excellent comfort for the Lord sheweth thereby that he hath speciall regard euen of the dead of his familie for the companie of his members which be dead they be his familie and in this familie Christ is numbred as the elder brother And in that respect he hath a double right first of a King secondly of a Priest Of a King in making the dead to obey his voyce and to rise from the dead at his cōmaundement Secondly of a Priest to offer himselfe an acceptable sacrifice to his father and also by his death to sanctifie and perfume the death of the godly so that their death is to them no death For as the first fruites sanctified the rest of the corne so Christ the first fruits of the dead he sanctifieth the death of al his children so that death sanctified by his death is no curse to the godly the graue is not a prison but a pleasant chamber of rest And Prince of the kings of the earth Here is the third namely the kingly office of our Sauiour Christ. He is called a Prince of the kings of the earth in two respects first as he is God the Sonne of God and so King together with the Father and the holy Ghost gouerning all things by his diuine power being equall to them Secondly as he is Mediator as he is God and man in two natures he is called a Prince of kings So Mat. 28. All power is giuen me of the Father not as he is God but as he is God and man the Mediator or Godincarnate So the Lord gaue him a name at which euery knee shold bow euen as he is Mediator And of these two I take it he meaneth
they must be annointed so must we be annointed Psal. 45. Christ was annointed aboue his fellowes but yet his members they are also annointed he in greater measure his members in lesse measure yet by the same oyle with him which is the vnction of the holy Ghost We haue receiued the annointing of Christ. 1. Iohn 2. 7. And the Lord he bids the wicked not to touch his annointed meaning not onely his seruants Abraham Isaac and the Patriarkes but his true members We haue the same spirit Christ had in his manhood though not in the same measure And the Lord he giues vs these gifts of the spirit signified by this oyle to this end that we may be fit kings priests So that first he giues vs right to a kingdome and then he giues vs gifts to discharge our dutie 4. To whom hath he made vs kings and priests to God and the Father euen his Father Now men might haue said If all his members be kings then all may liue as they list But he addeth they be kings but to God shewing that the interest they haue giuen to them to the kingdome of heauen it is giuen thē that they may be kings and priests to Gods glorie to his worship and seruice and to shew that all the interest belongs to God absolutely to vs by him in Christ. Lastly he addeth God and his Father which expounds the former word God for it is not taken for his nature absolutely but for the first Person God euen his Father Which sheweth that they must not liue as they list for they be made kings to the honour and seruice of God the Father who is here named alone not because he is aboue the Sonne and holy Ghost for they be equall but because he is the first person in order and the fountaine of the Deitie from it it is deriued to the Son and holy Ghost Now after the meaning of the words followe the vses First whereas all the true members of Christ be kings and priests in this life we are taught how we must carie our selues namely as enemies to them which be of the kingdome of Satan sinne the world and the flesh we must be deadly and sworne enemies to them we must haue no concord nor amitie with them For if we be kings of the kingdome of grace then we must be enemies to them which belong to the kingdome of darknesse there must be no fellowship between light and darknesse Now that we may so carie our selues as enemies we must first haue care to keepe guard to defend our selues as kings against all our enemies sinne Satan our owne flesh and the inticements of the world As Kings protect their kingdomes so must we stand on our guard defend our soules and bodies and euery facultie and part of them our wils affections thoughts and inclinations 1. Ioh. 5. 18. He which is borne of God keepeth himselfe as with watch and ward that sinne or Satan touch him not 2 We must make war and enter combat against Satan sinne our owne flesh all our spirituall enemies the corruptions of our nature and all the inticements of the world We must make no truce with them because they will neuer be reconciled so long as we haue interest into the kingdome of heauen 3 We must labour to kill and destroy these our enemies as much as possibly we can by that power we haue from Christ our head we must kill and crucifie the corruption of our owne hearts that is our owne sinnes We must like a valiant king seeke to haue the bloud of these enemies and seeke to conquer and vanquish Satan his power and might the world and our owne corruption 4 If we be kings in this life we must become Lords and rule ouer our selues our soules and bodies must be brought into subiection and order for in this that we be kings of our selues we shew especially that we be kings in this life We must not haue rule of the whole world but be ruling and maistering our owne corruptions and affections bringing them into subiection and order herein stands our kingdome in this world If a man were Prince ouer the whole earth and yet could not rule himselfe he were but a poore Prince nay he were no Prince indeed but though a man had not so much as a foote of ground in this world and could rule and maister himselfe his thoughts and affections this man were a valiant king Seeing we be kings we must do the duty of Iudges for kings they be as absolute Iudges and they must execute iudgement In the day of iudgement we shall be iudges but we must be iudges in this world and we must not iudge other men but we must be our owne iudges Wherefore as iudges summon arraigne condemne c. so must we summon and arraigne yea iudge and examine our selues call our selues to account and as guilty persons condemne our selues acknowledging we be worthy to be cast into eternal damnation with the Diuell and his Angels and withall pleade for pardon approch to the throne of grace and forgiuenesse and in these we shew our selues vpright iudges and and by this meanes we shall be freed from the iudgement to come If we be kings by Christ we must cary our selues as kings couragiously constantly in the afflictions and miseries which we shall suffer for Christs sake for herein stands the royalty of a king that he beares couragiously and constantly all the troubles which befall him so must we in the afflictions and troubles of this life which we suffer for Christ shew our selues in suffering them to be kings and conquerors Seeing we be spirituall kings we must aboue all things labor and seek to haue that our right and heritance to be possessors of our kingdome Must we so then we must not haue our hearts glued and fast tied to the things of this world but we must so vse this world as though we vsed it not If a King should lay downe his crowne and go and become a shepheard or of some manuall trade all men would maruell at it so when we fasten our selues to these worldly things we do as it were cast aside our kingly crowne and abase our selues But we must euer haue one foote fixed in heauen striuing to come to our inheritance there Seeing all the true members of Christ be kings and priests this should be an inducement to all backward persons to moue them and stirre them forward to christian religion and not to account of it as precisenesse seeing that by it we come to haue right and interest to the kingdome of heauen to be Lords of all creatures For why should we not esteeme of the Gospell as a most precious iewell seeing that we which are vassalles of Satan and fire-brands of hell as all men are by nature become the members of Christ yea Kings and Priests to God And seeing this is effected by the ministery of the Gospel this
this last day when he shall see his Iudge with his eyes then it wil stirre it wil torment him it will attach accuse and condemne him it will lay to his charge his sinnes his contempt of Christ and his word his vnbeleefe in the time of grace it will be as a thousand witnesses to condemne him This should cause all men to labour to get a good conscience washed and purged in the blood of Christ which will not lay to our charge any one sinne but assure vs we be in the fauour of God which wil not make vs feare but looke vp to our redeemer and to reioyce in him We must take heed when our conscience lieth asleepe and accuseth not no not at death for it will then deceiue vs but search and examine our hearts and consciences and seeke to haue them washed and bathed in the blood of Christ. Lastly he confirmeth this doctrine of the second comming of Christ by a double note of asseueratiō Euē so Amen One of these is taken frō the Ebrewes Amen the second from the Grecians 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Euen as we auouch a thing first by a simple and bare affirmation or negation secondly by an earnest asseueration thirdly by an oath Now in that S. Iohn vseth these two kinds of assuring in this weightie matter of Christs second coming we see our dutie we must not vse the like at any time or thing but onely in matters of weight and moment so S. Iohn here he shall come and that certainly vndoubtedly it shal be so Then the practise of thē is wicked which vse these words in matters of no weight at euery word and much more which bind euery word with an oath which is far more Yea though our Sauior oftē vseth these words of asseueration yet onely in matters of weight and moment and when the hearers were to be certified of the truth of a thing which was of importance 2 He would by this shew that the coming of Christ is certaine and most vndoubted and to make vs out of all doubt he addeth these two words of asseueratiō Euē so Amē most certainly it will come then we should often thinke of this matter for in our nature there is a corruption which perswadeth vs that the coming of Christ is not yet that we shall not be summoned either by generall or particular iudgement therefore as the wicked seruant we deferre the comming of Christ. To take away this corruption he saith he cometh yea certainely vndoubtedly he cometh and that out of hand Thirdly to shew a speciall note and marke of Gods child for he doth not onely asseuere but withall desireth and longeth for the coming of Christ Lord let it be so Amen let it euen be so They long for and desire Christ his coming to iudgment but the wicked could wish with all their hearts that it might neuer be The godly they know that when Christ shall come then they shall haue that crowne of immortalitie and glorie which he hath prepared for all which desire his coming But the wicked and they which are not reconciled to God in Christ nor assured of their owne saluation they cannot for their life once wish and desire the coming of Christ. So that by this one note we may iudge of our owne estates whether we belong to Christ or not for if we desire and long for his second comming to iudgement if we wish he would come quickly then it is a certain token and signe we be reconciled to God in Christ that we belong to him But if as yet we feele not this longing and hungring desire in vs then we must suspect our selues and labour to feele it euery day for it is the desire of the Saints and of all the true children of God After that S. Iohn had described Christ at large here in this eighth verse he bringeth him in speaking of himselfe by a figure I am Alpha and Omega saith the Lord. The end and scope of this eighth verse is to confirme the former description of Christ. The reason is thus framed He which is the beginning and the end of all he is sufficient to be a King Priest and Prophet and is both able and willing to bestow all blessings on his Church This first part of the argument is omitted the second part is contained in this eighth verse But I am the beginning and the end c. I am sufficient c. In this eighth verse are three points concerning Christ first he is the beginning and the end I am alpha and omega secondly he is was and is to come thirdly he is almightie omnipotent 1 The first point is that Christ is the beginning and the end which he expresseth by a comparison taken from the Greeke alphabet or the A. B. C. of the Grecians for as in their Greeke alphabet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is the first letter and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the last so I saith Christ am the beginning of all things and the end of all as those letters in the Greeke alphabet so am I in all things the first and last Out of this that Christ borroweth this comparison from the Greeke alphabet the Papists gather that the word may be read and deliuered to the people in an vnknowne toung because Christ here vseth an vnknowne toung to those whom he gaue this vision But though the vnlearned and vnlettered English man knoweth not what 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is yet the Church to whō this booke was written being the Grecians knew what they meant generally Againe though the spirit of God vseth a strange word in one place we may not follow that in the whole word of God in the whole seruice and worship of God as the Papists do Christ is said to be the beginning and the end first because he is the very first of all things there was nothing before he was he had a being when all other creatures were not but begunne to be then was he the same that he is now he had his being and subsisting before all creatures and for this saith S. Iohn chap. 1. verse 1. In the beginning was the word that is the Son of God he had his being and subsisting when all other creatures wanted it and began to be This proueth the eternitie of Christ because he had his being before any creature was created he was a substance and essence begotten of the Father before all worlds not created as other creatures are or made of any other Secondly he is called the beginning because he giueth a beginning to all creatures for all things which were created were created by him and had their being from him So that he is the true beginning of all things Coloss. 1. 16. All things are from him he is the beginning of all and all are for him he is the end of all Seeing Christ giues a being to all things then we when
of great superstition S. Iohn would not haue left all companie of men but that he was compelled to leaue thē then the life of those which voluntarily leaue all companie of men liuing in cloisters and secret places cannot be a life of perfection but of all imperfection man is borne to do good to others Seeing S. Iohn was banished and here receiued his visions we see that those which honour God he will honour them For S. Iohn was banished then which what could they do more to hurt him Yet then because it was for Gods cause God doth most honour him in reuealing to him these visions So when Ioseph was sold of his brethren and most dishonoured of them then God exalted him The same may be said of Daniel who when he was most dishonoured of men then the Lord exalted him aboue all other men and the same is true of all Gods children they which honor him he will honour them 2 The cause for which he came into this Isle For the word of God that is because he was by calling a publisher and preacher of the word of God for which cause he was banished By which we may note that all naturall men as Domitian and the Romaines were and all men are by nature hate all that professe God hate his word they cannot abide it For S. Iohn a most worthie Apostle a famous man for gifts a singular preacher of the word of God yet for this very cause is hunted nay banished not for his owne cause but for the word of God This hath bene seene in all heathen Emperours yea and all men by nature hate the word yet though they hate it in their hearts the same word it winneth them and hath taken place in them to conuert them and to make them to loue it which sheweth that the word taught by the Prophets and Apostles is indeed the true word of God not the inuention of man For if the word which is hated of all men by nature had not some diuine power in it it could neuer make such mē to loue it by grace which hate it by nature For no word of man can make a man which hateth the same to loue it but onely the word of God Seeing Iohn was banished for Gods word all Ministers are to cast their accompts to make a reckoning that they may and must suffer persecution nay banishment for the word of God For that which the principall founders and chiefe builders of the Church haue suffered that cannot be auoyded of them which are ordinarie Ministers Christ he acquainted his disciples with this and telleth them that they are euen accursed when all men speake well of them Luk. 6. 26. They must not seeke to haue all thinke well of them but rather feare if all men like of them they are accursed And witnesse bearing That is for the testimonie of the history and doctrine of the Gospell the summe whereof is that Iesus Christ the sonne of Mary is our Redeemer to procure to vs righteousnesse and life euerlasting Now he addeth after the other this of the Gospell as a doctrine how to come to life euerlasting and righteousnesse in Iesus Christ to shew for what part of the word we are most hated and persecuted not so much for the law as for the Gospell because the law is partly natural the Gospell is aboue nature as to beleeue that God made his couenant with our first parents that the seed of the womā shold bruise the serpents head Now the Gospell is the glad tidings in which there is declared that the promised seed is come and therefore the diuell he hateth this part most of all and laboureth man to hinder the course of the Gospell rather then of the law So three hundred yeares after Christ he laboured by might and maine to extinguish the Gospell to keepe men in ignorance of the Messiah but when he could not preuaile by force might he vsed sophistrie and deceipt and brought in heresies to obscure the truth of the Gospell and to ouerthrow the natures offices and benefites of Christ. Then we are bound to do the contrarie seeing he laboureth to extinguish it we must labour to maintaine and defend it we must labour as much to know it as he doth to keepe vs in ignorance that so we may obey and beleeue it And I was rauished on the Lords day c. In this tenth verse are two circumstances the first which is the third in number is the maner of receiuing this vision and giuing of it to Iohn namely in a traunce the second or fourth the time on that Lords day or that day of the Lord. I was in the spirit Here we see he receiued this vision in a trance I was in the spirit that is I was by the mightie and extraordinarie worke of the spirit of God cast into a traunce This appeareth by comparing this Prophecie with other as with that of Ezechiel who when he receiued any vision was cast into a traunce by Gods spirit To vnderstand this consider two things first what a trance is secondly the end of it A trance is an extraordinarie worke or action of Gods spirit ergo not of the constellation and temperature of the starres nor from the constitution of mans bodie or imaginations of men but wrought by the holy Ghost Secondly it is not euery worke but an extraordinarie work aboue the order of nature a powerfull and mightie work of the holy Ghost wherein the whole man both in bodie and mind is altered and for that cause S. Iohn saith I was in the spirit This action consisteth in two actions one of the mind and the other of the bodie In procuring a trance the spirit of God casteth a man into a dead sleepe whereby all the senses both inward and outward are benummed So Gen. 15. 12. when God renewed the couenant with Abraham he cast him into a trance that is into a dead sleepe the senses all were benummed onely the mind and soule working The other action of the holy Ghost is on the mind to draw it from fellowship with the bodie and all the senses to haue fellowship with God that so the spirit of God may enlighten it with light and knowledge of things which are to reuealed to it And so we see in other extasies and traunces as that of Peter his mind was drawne from the fellowship with the bodie and was in fellowship with God Then a trance is a mightie and powerfull worke of the holy Ghost both in bodie and mind whereby both the mind is drawne from fellowship with the bodie and vnto the fellowship of God and also enlightened with light and knowledge of God to vnderstand things to be reuealed Now followeth the end of a trance The cause why men are cast into trances in receiuing any visions is that as S. Iohn here they might know that the things deliuered were not inuented of themselues but
giuen of God For in Iohn his bodie and all his senses were benummed he neither heard saw nor felt but they were asleepe and therefore the vision must needes be from God Secondly that they might take the deeper impression in his and their mind for when the mind is freed from fellowship with the bodie not hindered by any fantasies of the senses they being all asleepe and quiet then the mind hath best oportunitie to attend and marke to know and vnderstand and also to imprint deeper in memorie things reuealed Here we see the great care of God who would not haue his children to receiue these visions by senses imperfectly but that they might throughly vnderstand know beleeue and carie thē away in faithfull memorie he deliuered them in extasies and trances the mind then being no whit hindred with fellowship of the bodie but freed from the same The like care had he of his Prophets that they might certainely know constantly beleeue and faithfully remember those visions he would not haue their minds troubled with the fellowship of the bodie or of the senses inward or outward And there is good reason of this for they which must teach a thing to other to make them know and vnderstand to beleeue and remember the same it is reason they should vnderstand and hold it themselues and keepe it well in memorie This seeing the Lord did to make them to vnderstand more throughly to beleeue more constantly and to carie away more faithfully this teacheth Ministers that they must haue also the through vnderstanding and knowledge of the word beleeue it constantly and remember it carefully Now we must not looke for and expect trances as they had but we must come to this by continuall studie in the word which is the ordinarie meanes to come to that knowledge it is the meanes by which all men Preachers students and hearers do know Then we should seeke to be cunning in the text of Scripture to vnderstand the proper sense of it to be good text men to vnderstand beleeue and remember it Then this is a fault of those which in studying of diuinity wil rather reade auncient writings of men nay the base writings of of wicked and hereticall Friers then of the holy word of God In that he receiued this vision will of God in a trance and had it so made fully known vnto him we see that though he was indued with singular gifts yet the Lord addeth more knowledge to his former so that we see that saying iustified To him which hath shall be giuen S. Iohn being so carefull to do his dutie of an Apostle the Lord reuealeth his will to him in most full maner Euen so all that haue care to know the will and word of God though their knowledge be small at the first yet the Lord will help them adde dayly to their knowledge and increase it So we see why many heare the word but increase not but waxe worse or stand at a stay the reason is because they labour not to haue their knowledge increased for if they did then to him which hath he should haue more added Nay contrarily when we be negligent to heare and to know the wil and word of God we haue a spirit indeed but not Gods but the spirit of slumber of blindnes and ignorance so that we see and see not heare and vnderstand not Esay 29. 10. On the Lords day In these words is the fourth circumstance namely the time when this vision was graunted to S. Iohn This day which here is called the Lords day among the Iewes was the first day of the weeke called by vs Sunday It is called the Lords day for two causes first because on this day Christ rose from death to life for Christ was buried the euen of the Iewes Sabbath which is our friday and he rested in the graue their whole Sabbath which is our saturday and rose the first day of the weeke early in the morning which is our Sunday and for this cause first it is called the Lords day 2 It is called the Lords day because this first day to the beleeuing Iewes was to them in stead of their Sabbath in which day they worshipped God solemnely it was the day appointed to his seruice among them and for this cause especially it is called the Lords day To vnderstand how it is called the Lords day we must know three points first who changed this day from the Iewes Sabbath secondly for what cause thirdly whether the Church haue now in the new Testament power to change the Sabbath day to any other day then this seuenth day The changer and appointer of this Sabbath of the new testament was Christ himselfe though it be commonly thought that the Church in the new testament and Christian Emperors changed it My reasons are these 1. That which the Apostles deliuered and inioyned the Church that they receiued from Christ either by voice or instinct for they deliuered nothing of their owne head but they deliuered this inioyned this Sabath to the Church although they receiued it from Christ. That they inioyned this day of rest and Sabbath to the Church it appeareth 1. Cor. 16. 1. For Paul ordained that the collection for the poore should be on the first day of the weeke he ordained it and left it not to the choise of the Church but appointed it by authoritie Apostolicall from Christ. Now the day of collecting for the poore as appeareth in the histories of the Church was the Sabbath day when the people were assembled then they vsed to make their collection for before that collection there went the word preached and the sacrament of the Lords supper and this was the custom of the Church many yeares after Christ first to haue the word preached and the sacraments administred then to gather for the poore and for this cause the Lords supper is called a sacrifice or a masse not as the Papists vse it but because in it we offer not to the Lord but to the poore which was sent them and so gaue the name to that sacrament to be called the masse By which it appeareth that they appointed by Apostolicall authoritie the first day of the weeke to be the Sabbath of the new Testament which here is called the Lords day A second reason is this The Apostles kept this day for the Sabbath of the new testament Act. 20. 7. and it cannot be proued that they obserued any other day for the Sabbath but onely in one case when they liued among the Iewes when they kept their old Sabbath A third reason is Iohn 20. 19. 26. That same day which Christ rose from death being the first day of the weeke he appeared to his Disciples to instruct them and the eight day after he appeared again the first day of the weeke instructing them in matters belonging to the kingdome of heauen Now it is more then likely Christ would celebrate and
seeke to get one foot out of the graue of sinne and securitie And he had Here S. Iohn describeth him by his parts and the properties of euery part In his right hand seuen starres that is seuen Angels seuen Ministers of the seuen churches of Asia The Ministers are compared to starres first because as starres send out light to men on earth so the Ministers ought to giue light to men euen spirituall light by doctrine taught by them and by conuersatiō of life among them Secondly they be compared to stars because as the stars haue their continuall abode in heauen neuer descend downe so the Ministers of the word especially should haue their conuersation in heauen It is the dutie of all but more specially of the Ministers in regard of their callings first by seeking their owne saluation secondly by seeking the saluation of others by which two they must haue their conuersation in heauē though they haue their bodies in earth thirdly because they shall be honoured of God in heauen as the starres for Dan. 12. they which do their dutie they shall shine like starres in the firmament They be in Christs right hand that is all regiment and gouernement in matters of the Church belongs to Christ he alone hath the whole disposition and ordering of the ministery seeing he alone is head of the Church and the Ministers they be in his right hand he rules and raignes in his church he careth for it and looketh to it Seeing these starres be in Christs right hand this shewes that the choosing furnishing of the ministers of the word belongs to Christ Eph. 4. he giueth them their gifts and places then we ought in this last age to pray the Lord to send out laborers into his haruest that so his children might be gathered and an end made of these miserable dayes He holds these seuen starres in his right hand Whereby we see he giueth them defence and protection so long as they be faithful in their callings He carieth them in his right hand though they haue sundry discouragements yet seeing Christ he ordereth their ministery and disposeth of it if they be faithfull nothing should hinder their course nothing should cut them off from their duty neither the want of obediēce in them to whom they preach and labour not seeing that fruit they should nor the iniuries of the enemies of their profession nor any thing else Seeing they be in his right hand this sheweth the excellency of this calling of the ministery Idle men esteeme it most base accept of it as of a meane calling and so discourage many but in the sight of God it is an high and holy calling he carieth them in his right hand defends them and protects them Now what greater glory can there be then that they should be so honored to be borne and caried in the right hand of the King of heauen and earth though wicked men dishonour them esteeme so basely of thē This should stir those who haue good gifts to get this high and holy calling thus to be honoured of Christ. They must be vnblameable for seeing Christ carieth them in his right hand he will hold nothing but that which is holy and pure as he is but if it be defiled sinfull and wicked he will take it out of his right hand put it vnder his brazen foote and grind it to peeces and the more he had honoured them the more will he dishonour them By the same reason the hearers are bound to profit else they must drinke of the same cup for if the ministers be punished for not preaching then they for not hearing And out of his mouth c. In these words he describes him by the two last parts of his body his mouth and his face And in his mouth was a two edged sword c. By this two edged sword is meant the doctrine of the law and the Gospel vttered and propounded by the Prophets and Apostles and this two edged sword is described Heb. 4. 12. It is mightie in operation c. The doctrine of the law and the Gospell is compared to a two edged sword because as a sword with a double edge enters not onely into the flesh but to the bones yea euen to the marrow so the word preached it enters into the heart deepely to the diuiding of the spirits yea it enters to the very bottome of the heart it searcheth euery nooke and corner which is most secret The word hath a double operation one in the wicked another in the godly In the wicked this sharpe two edged sword of the word it wounds them at the heart with a deadly wound and so by the same wound brings them to eternall death Esa. 11. 4. He shall with his breath that is the sword of his word slay the wicked This is that sword that hath and will kill Antichrist Ob. But how cometh it that the word of God should wound or kill any how should it slay a wicked and vnrepentant sinner Answ. We must know there be three degrees of spirituall death The first is the separation of bodie and soule when the bodie is laid in the graue the soule conueyed to the place of torments The second is when a sinner in this life by the word is wounded and smitten and so receiueth in his heart a deadly wound The third degree is at the end of this life at the last iudgement whē soule and bodie shall go into hell fire for euen a sinner receiueth his deadly wound in this life which is the first steppe to hell and eternall death in the life to come In the inflicting and giuing of this wound there be three actions of Christ required which he worketh in the hearts of the wicked by the doctrine of the law and the Gospell The first is to reueale to them their sinnes all their pride rebellion hypocrisie the damnable corruptions of their hearts and all their sinnes against the first and second Table 1. Cor. 14. 24. 25. If in the Church all prophecie there come in one which beleeueth not he is rebuked of all because they iudge him an hypocrite and so the secrets and corruptions of his heart are laid open and discouered by the word preached The second action of Christ is this he after reuealeth to them the wrath and curse of God against sinne his indignation against the breakers of the law and for this cause the law is called the killing law because it sheweth iudgement without mercie for the transgressions of the law Thirdly Christ by the word preached sharpeneth the sting of conscience maketh it awake and terrifieth a man when he heareth or remembreth the word and the curse denounced against sinners So Felix when Paul preached to him of iustice and temperancie he fainted and trembled the word was a two edged sword of the spirit to wound his conscience with terrour and feare So Dan. 5. Beltashar seeing but an hand writing he
quaketh for feare the word of God came into his mind and made his conscience accuse him and his knees smote together for feare So then by this we see how Christ killeth the wicked by reuealing their sinnes shewing the wrath and anger of God against sinne and sinners which repent not and the curse of the law and also by sharpning the sting of conscience to wound them and strike them at the heart and so they by this haue the first wound of eternall death Though the Lord may in mercie recouer them of this wound yet of themselues they be in the estate of death and vnlesse they repent they are in the first step to eternall death For those horrors and feares which come into a mans heart in regard of Gods wrath and iudgements seuered from grace are no grace but the first wound to eternall death vnlesse the Lord giue grace Seeing Christ carieth the two edged sword of the Spirit in his mouth whereby he woundeth his enemies with a deadly wound at the heart then when we see any which cometh to heare the word and after rebelleth stormeth and rageth against the same being wounded in conscience therewith we must not be displeased with it but pitie his case seeing he is wounded at the heart with a deadly wound and he in this case is in the first steppe to eternall death vnlesse the Lord recouer him of this wound In those Churches and places where the word hath bene long preached and the people remaine in blindnesse and ignorance and vnreformed we must in these take pitie on them seeing this is a heauie iudgement of God on them for these are wounded with a deadly wound by the sword of the spirit because the word hath bene long and often preached to them without profit and the word it neuer returneth emptie but either saueth or destroyeth woundeth or healeth them So that though men may liue ciuilly before men making a faire shew yet if they be vnreformed and liue in ignorance these are but dead men in the sight of God the word hath giuen them the first deadly wound therefore we must pitie their estate If we come into the field see an hundred men lye wounded and gushing out bloud some in the head some in the sides and some in the feet we cannot but be exceedingly moued so in the church of God many are vnreformed in obedience and repentance and though we cannot see their bloudie wounds with bodily eyes yet we may see them lye wallowing in the bloud of ignorance and securitie of impenitencie and wickednesse therefore we must pitie their estate for they be dead men indeed seeing they be not reuiued by the word in reformation of life and obedience for the word either quickeneth or killeth Seeing the word without grace killeth we must not content our selues with it but seeke to feele the worke of the Spirit peace of conscience and reformation of life by the word Let vs then by a liuely faith labour to apply Christ by the word to lay hold on him and his righteousnesse so that we can say we liue not but Christ in vs. But this word hath another action in the elect children of God which though it be manifold yet all tend to further and procure their saluation The first work of it in these is to wound deepely and to kill the corruptio● of mans nature in his heart with a deadly wound that it neuer recouer againe Yet though it wound a man it killeth not the person as in the wicked but onely the corruption of his heart and quickeneth the person to Christ killeth him in regard of rebellion and vnbeleefe We are sacrifices to be offered to God therefore we must be killed not in our bodies and soules but in our corruptions affections and rebellions That we may be killed the two edged sword of the Spirit is required which giueth our corruption the deadly wound and cutteth vp the root Since the second action after our conuersion change is this the word of God must cut and pare the remnants of our corruption by lessening and weakening of it daily Ioh. 15. As the husbandman cutteth loppeth and pareth off all branches that beare no fruite so the word of God cutteth and pareth away the remnants of corruptions in our hearts that so our hearts may bring foorth more fruite Thirdly the word of God serueth to keepe his people and children in awe and subiection and therefore Christ holdeth the scepter of the word in his mouth that though the wicked will not be kept in awe yet his elect may tremble and feare at the lifting vp of the same Amongst men if many be fighting let the Magistrate but hold vp the sword of Iustice euery man yeeldeth and putteth his sword into his sheath and shall not we much more cease from sinne and feare when Christ the King of heauen and earth holdeth out the scepter of his word And if any refuse to be subiect and to obey the Magistrate he is counted a rebell if men refuse to obey the scepter of Christ shall they not be so accounted So then by these actions we see the power of the word it killeth corruptions in our hearts pareth it and the remnants of it and it keepeth men in awe and subiection Yet it differeth in the wicked and in the godly in the wicked it maketh them feare and woundeth them to death destroying both soule and bodie in the godly it woundeth them indeed not in their persons but in the corruptions of their hearts It maketh vs fit to encounter with the diuell and to vanquish him in all his temptations if it be vsed with knowledge Seeing the word of God serueth to kill our corruptions we when we heare the word must receiue and beleeue the same not onely when it is deliuered in generall but applyed in particular though it touch vs and wound our hearts we must suffer it and reioyce in it for that is the first steppe to health to haue our corruptions ripped vp and touched When the sword of the spirit entreth to our hearts it will ransacke euery nooke and secret corner then we must reioyce in this blessing of God suffer it gladly seeing it is the onely meanes to come to life If one be sicke of a Fistula he will suffer the Chirurgeon to rippe and launce him to search euery part of the wound and shall not we suffer the Phisition of the word to display to lay open to ransacke and search the corruption of our hearts seeing that is the onely way to recouer health For we cannot liue to God till we die to our selues and to our sinnes we cannot p●ssibly die to our sinnes till our corruptions be destroyed and all our sinnes killed and wounded to death In his mouth Other Kings carie their scepter in their hands but he in his mouth to shew that no doctrine must be receiued of vs vnlesse it proceed from his mouth for he receiued his
Fathers will deliuereth it to his Church to his Prophets and Apostles and they to vs. And his face shone c. For as the Sunne is to the world so is Christ to his Church Now as the Sun performeth two duties to men so doth Christ the first is to giue light and driue away darkenesse to take away the night and bring the day so Christ he is the Sunne of righteousnesse Malach. 3. He giueth the light of knowledge to his seruants he sendeth the light of the word which can dispel darknes and enlighten his people in the knowledge of his will and word Then are we bound to labour aboue al things for knowledge of his will and word First when the day dawneth we set open our doores and windowes to receiue the light and comfort of the same now Christ is in the midst of his Church he sendeth light he shineth clearely being the Sonne of righteousnes then we must open the doores of our hearts and the windows of our soules and consciences to receiue his light and comfort into vs. Seeing Christ giueth light by his word we must in all our life be guided and directed by that light We are pilgrimes going through a vale of misery and darknes Christ is the light he shineth as a blazing torch we must then do all our duties by direction of this light we must in all our wayes haue our eyes fixed in this word which is the sonne of light and direction The action of the Sunne is to warme and comfort dead and cold bodies and to reuiue them as we see in the spring time it reuiues those creatures which before were as dead with cold so Christ giueth not onely light but life he giueth spiritual comfort to bodies frozen for cold he comforts them reuiues them by his spirituall heate and for this is called the Sunne of righteousnesse comforting our cold and frozen hearts in sinne and iniquitie Then we must labour aboue all things to be partakers of this spirituall life and comfort which cometh by the spirituall heate of Christ. As men will in winter go into the Sunne to feele the heate of the beames so must we come out of our sinnes get into the sun-shine of Christ that his beames may streame vpon vs plenteously to haue life conueyed to our benummed and dead consciences We will seeke to haue honour riches preferments and pleasures of this life but Psa. 44. we should desire the Sunne of righteousnesse to shine on vs with the beames of mercy to haue him quicken our dead hearts with the heate of his holy spirit That we may haue this spiritual life we must die our selues ere we cā liue to the Lord we must first be killed ere we be made aliue If we wold liue to God we must suffer the two edged sword to pierce to the heart to cut vp and cut off all our corruptions to suffer it to enter into vs to ransack our rebellious harts and to be thrust to the hilts that so it may diuide betweene the spirit the flesh pare off al the rottē flesh of corruptiō in vs for when we are killed to our selues discouraged in regard of our own sins we are most fit to be made aliue to God A body which is almost dead for cold is the most capable of heate and when we are thus cast downe in regard of our sins then we must labor to haue the comfortable beames of Christ to shine in our hearts to warme and to quicken vs and his fauourable countenance to shine on vs which if we haue though we haue neither honour riches nor preferment yet we haue enough and if we want that heate all things else are nothing The third worke or action of the sun is to discouer all things In the night nothing appeareth all haue one forme but when the Sunne cometh with his light all things appeare and a man may in the beames see the very motes so Christ the chiefe sunne seeth all things and he will discouer all nothing so secret which is hid from him nothing so close which his eye seeth not he knoweth and he can and will discouer all mens actions yea their secret thoughts Seeing Christ knoweth all our thoughts so as he can make thē manifest and open note that though we may liue so as men cannot iudge of our hypocrisie yet Christ seeth our dealings as the sunne is manifest to our eye so our actions are cleare to his eye This should make vs take heed to all our waies and workes that we do or thinke nothing but as in his presence for we cannot blind his eyes but he seeth it euen as clearely as we see the light of the sunne If men of occupations would consider this that all their actions are cleare to Christ they would not commit so much crueltie and iniustice there would not be so many sins practised of vs dayly as there are And when I saw him I fel at his feet as dead In these seuenteenth eighteenth verses Iohn proceeds to describe our sauior Christ as God gaue him a vision by other arguments that is by his actions The first action is contained in these seuenteenth and 18. verses which is a confirmation of S. Iohn being greatly afraid and this confirmation is the whole matter and substance of these two verses In this note two things first the occasion secondly the meanes The occasion mouing Christ to confirme S. Iohn in the second part of the seuenteenth verse the meanes in the end of the seuenteenth verse in the eighteenth The occasion was an exceeding feare of death which made Iohn as dead as appeareth by Christs comforting of him In this feare note 3 things first the cause secondly the effect of it thirdly the kind of feare The cause in these words And when I saw him c. which was the appearance of Christ to Iohn in his maiestie and glory which made Iohn exceedingly feare S. Iohn seeing the maiestie and glory of Christ he is exceedingly afraid and astonished as a dead mā We all by nature since the fall of Adam are fearefull sinners Before he fell he walked talked with God face to face but after his fall he fled and hid himselfe he could not brooke his presence because he had sinned and since his fall mans frailtie and weaknes is such that he cannot abide the presence and maiestie of God but as Manoah Iudg. 13. 22. seeing an Angell of God said We shall surely die because we haue seene God shewing that the presence of God of his maiestie is terrible to sinfull man euen so it is with all men Now seeing we haue lost our first estate we must labor continually to haue the image of Satan abolished in vs and the image of God daily renewed we must become new creatures seeke aboue all things to haue our former fellowship with God which we lost in Adam for in this fellowship with God
any openly wicked in life or doctrine we must not keepe any priuate companie with him shew him no speciall familiaritie but withdraw our selues from such as burdens to vs. And hast examined them This sharpe dealing of the Church of Ephesus hath 2 parts the first is examination the second cōdemnation of the false Apostles The first part is the discouerie of these false Apostles The second the opposing of her selfe against them being discouered The discouerie of the false Apostles teacheth two points first that God hath giuen to his Church and to the Ministers and members of it speciall grace and wisedome an excellent gift of discerning 1. Cor. 2. 15. 1. Cor. 11. Spirituall men endued with the Spirit of God can discerne of the Lords bodie and bloud betweene bread and wine in the Sacrament and common bread and wine 2. Cor. 13. Proue your selues shewing that the Church and the members thereof haue power and the gift of wisedome to try whether they haue faith or not 1. Ioh. 5. Trie the spirits And here she hath power to discerne of false Apostles and by this gift the Church of God differeth from all other societies of men no societie saue the Church of God hath this gift to iudge betweene good and bad truth and error true Apostles and false Apostles Secondly we gather hence that the Church of God can iudge whether a Church be a true Church or not Some men it pleaseth to call this to question nay to deny that there is any Church in England but call it the synagogue of Satan and say there is no ministerie in it no word no Sacraments Now seeing the Church of God can iudge of vs in England and the churches in Germanie in Scotland other Euangelicall and reformed Churches iudge the Church of England a true Church it is so though they deny it For we must rather stand to the iudgement of one or many particular true churches then of any one priuate or of many men Yea seeing the church of God can iudge of false Apostles it hath also power to iudge of Scriptures to iudge which books be canonicall which are not And that which the church of Rome saith is false that the Church indeed can iudge but as it hath authoritie from their Church This Church of Ephesus had this power long before Rome was in such name nay it was in this time of Iohn of farre greater name then Rome and more famous and excellent The second point in what things this discouerie of false Apostles consisteth in what this iudiciall action standeth which God hath giuen to the Church It standeth in two things first examination of false doctrine and false teachers Secondly condemnation of thē after examination For the first he saith And hast examined for the second and found them lyers To come to this examination the Church of Ephesus had a gift of examination and did examine false Apostles and their doctrine But how may a particular Church examine a false Apostle and his doctrine To do this the man or Church which would do it must first prepare themselues and make them fit to examine and in this preparation must haue an humble heart and lowly spirit for God reuealeth not his will to proud men such as haue high minds in their conceit And in this humbling of himselfe he must cleane renounce his owne wit and reason and in regard of himselfe become a foole in his owne reason if he will be wise in the word of God After this preparation he must make prayers to God in his spirit that the Lord would reueale the thing to him and that he would open his eyes by the meanes vsed to iudge of truth falshood Luk. 11. Iam. 1. 5. In the next place he must labour throughly to know and well to conceiue of their false doctrines he must seek to vnderstand them their grounds the differences betweene them and the truth For it is a fowle fault to propound a mans error and not in that meaning he propounded it or gaue it They must further proue and trie whether the doctrine be of God or men To do this he must come to the word of God which must be iudge in the matter not a dumme letter as the Papists hold but the true iudge in all matters and most sufficient Esa. 8. 19. 20. Ioh. 5. Search the Scriptures Only the Lord must be iudge in his owne matters he must giue sentence and no Angell Saint or man Now this he doth in the written word therefore they must search whether such doctrines be contained in the Scriptures or can by necessarie consequence be collected out of them They must after all this looke to their liues for it is not possible that a false Apostle should lead a good life We must looke on his faith and repentance and the fruites of them for though he may bleare the eyes of the world yet if his life be well sifted it will appeare by his faith and repentance he is but an hypocrite and therefore Mat. 7. Christ biddeth vs trie them by their fruites A bad tree cannot bring good fruite but if a man trie and tast them though they appeare beautifull to the eye yet we shall find them to be but hypocriticall and this is a iudgement of God vpon such that they shal be descryed by this one marke by their liues and conuersations If they teach false doctrine they haue liues answerable they cannot but liue accordingly There was neuer any which was a famous hereticke in the Church but his life was stained with monstrous sinnes as the historie of the Church declareth The second part of the discouerie is condemnation or sentence against them for after she had examined them finding them not that they seemed to be she pronounced them to be false Apostles and lyers Note she calleth them lyers vseth sharp speeches and yet sinneth not seeing Christ commendeth her so Ministers to shew their hatred against vice may vse sharpe speeches not to raile or taunt but only to shew our hatred and misliking of sinne So Iohn Baptist calleth them a generation of vipers Christ called Herod a Foxe Paul the Galatians fooles In that she calleth them lyers it sheweth three things first that they spake falsely and deliuered that which was vntrue secondly that they sinned of knowledge thirdly that they did it of malice to hurt and deceiue the Church for these three be the properties of a liar Againe here we see that which Paul Act. 20. foretold by the spirit of Prophecie to be fulfilled that among the Ephesians should arise lyars on them which professed the Gospell with them Againe if men in the daies of the Apostles they being yet aliue durst so take on thē Apostolical authoritie to cal thēselues Apostles and were none no maruell if the Pope of Rome durst sixe hundred yeares after them take this vpon him and say he is Peters successor to take on him Apostolicall power
when a man keepeth this promise made in baptisme and performeth this condition to God and stipulation then he is faithfull to God when he breaketh it then he is vnfaithfull 1. Pet. 3. 21. Secondly the Lord he giueth his seruants many graces as faith hope loue repentance c. these he committeth to man to see how he will vse or abuse them 1. Tim. 6. 20. we must labour to keepe them to vse them well and this if we do to Gods glorie and to our owne good then we be faithfull to God else not as if a man commit a thing to be kept by another if he loose it or keepe it not well he is not faithfull to him Be faithfull As if he had said Thou hast made a promise in baptisme to keepe faith and a good conscience and thou hast had many graces promising to vse them well to keepe them in life and death be faithfull in persecutions afflictions keepe faith and a good conscience and then thou artfaithfull Against this dutie three sorts of men offend first they which though they haue made a couenant in baptisme to serue the Lord to keep faith and a good conscience yet liue in ignorance and securitie neuer seeking to know the Lord to vnderstand his will or to obey him yet these will brag of their good meanings though they haue no care at all to please God no care to keepe their couenant made with God and their stipulation in baptisme to him Secondly they which for a good while haue had faith and a good conscience and haue come to serue the Lord yet after long time fall away being entangled with the world with the profits and sinnes thereof and so leaue all and come to breake faith and a good conscience both these are vnfaithfull seruants and their reward if the Lord dealt in iustice with them is destruction and yet all men in a maner be of these two sorts they either liue in ignorance or fall away after a long time The third sort are they which professe a long time liue in faith and good conscience and be earnest professors yet in time of triall and persecution they will leaue all profession of religion to saue themselues Then seeing all these offend we must labour to know God to obey him to keepe his graces bestowed on vs to the end to liue and die in his seruice and to lose our life rather then any one grace which God bestoweth vpon vs. And I wil giue thee the crown of life Here is a reasō to moue thē to go on in persecutiō to be faithful to the end Hēce the Papists gather that a man may merit heauen seeing there is promised a crowne of life Ans. It is called a crowne of life by resemblance for as men in a race first run and after they obtaine the crowne at the end of their race so men must first in this world liue godly run and finish their course after that they haue their crowne in heauen I answer againe this reward is not of the worke but the promise is made to the workers not to the martyredome but to the martyr which hath by suffering death shewed his faith in Christ it is not made to the passion or suffering but to the person suffering not for his suffering but to him as he is in Christ declared to be so by his suffering death So then that promise is not made to the work but to the worker and not for his work but for the worthinesse of Christ in whom he is a true member of the Church The vse then is that if we keepe this promise in Baptisme made before God his Angels and the Church we shall haue the reward of all which is the crowne of life in the kingdome of heauen promised to such as be faithfull to the end Let him which hath an eare heare In these words are the cōclusion or last part of the Epistle Now in these three verses for the most part is a rehearsall of those things which Christ deliuered before in this and in the former Chapter Now seeing Christ the head and Doctor of his Church is most perfect in his doctrines both for matter and maner of deliuering the same seeing he repeateth againe and againe the same things and seeing Peter put them often in mind of their common saluation hence we note that Ministers may often repeate the same doctrine not onely the same matter but in the same maner and words So did Christ the head Doctor of the Church so may we or any preacher preach the same sermon againe in maner and matter not for to ease our selues but for the good and benefite of the Church as Christ seuen times repeateth the same doctrine to the good of the Church and common benefite of all The hearers then if they find the Preacher shall deliuer the same doctrine againe or often they must not find fault for then they might as well find fault with Christ himselfe who not once or twise but often repeated the same words In this eleuenth verse is a conclusion of the Ep●stle to the Church of Smyrna and it hath two parts first a commaundement secondly a promise In the commandement first what is cōmanded secondly to whō The duty commanded is to heare There are two kinds of hearing good and bad Here he requireth good hearing with faith and obedience not naked and bare outward hearing Then we see the true knowledge of the Gospell standeth in hearing with faith and obedience for we know no more then we beleeue and obey if we beleeue and obey nothing we heare and know nothing with sound hearing to saluation The second thing is to whom the commaundement is giuen to them which haue eares to heare for some are deafe some be liuely and hearing hearers They are deafe which heare onely with outward and bodily eares not affected in hart nor chaunged in life by the word they are good hearing hearers which are touched and affected by the word changed and renued in life by the same hauing not onely outward eares of the head but inward bored by Gods spirit in the heart Hence we learne two things first that election is not generall and vniuersall of euery particular man for there is was and shall be euer some deafe hearers Secondly we learne our duty that we must not onely heare the word and lend our outward eares but withall ioyne faith obedience and conuersion in life so heare that we be changed in life and turned to God else our hearing is fruitlesse nay to damnation The third thing is what they must heare What the Spirit saith namely that which is before in the former words deliuered by Christ. The principall things be these first that the Lord seeth and regardeth the tribulations and afflictions of his Church secondly that Gods Church and people being to suffer the crosse and afflictions must forethinke of it and consider of it before
with him in his glory in heauen Ephes. 2. 7. 2. Cor. 6. the Saints shall iudge the world that is shall be witnesses and approuers of Christs sentence not that they shall haue power to giue iudgement but they shall be caught vp first and he giuing sentence they sitting by him shall approue it Secondly he giueth vs this power because he by this inables his in their owne person to ouercome sin the world and their owne corruption By this we see our dignitie euery seruant of God hath power ouer nations ouer the world to rule and breake them in peeces to iudge and condemne them Is this our priuiledge then we had need to take heed of all sinne for we cannot condemne other men of sin and be guiltie of sin our selues For it is a great disgrace for a Iudge to condemne a malefactor of murther or theft and be guiltie himselfe So Christ if we be full of sinne and make no cōscience of it he wil neuer let vs sit to iudge the world with himselfe Then seeing we are Kings Iudges and haue such priuiledges we must looke to our selues Againe this is our comfort in persecution if thou be the child of God thou art a King a Iudge though thou be now poore abused and persecuted yet the time cometh when thou shalt iudge and condemne thy persecutors and be auenged of them And rule the nations as a shepheard ruleth his sheepe that is to gouerne and feed them Iohn 21. Feed my lambes that is feed and rule Hence the Papists gather Peter was the generall Bishop to guide and feed Christs sheepe that is the world but then euery Christian should be a Pope for euery one hath power to rule the nations ouer the whole world but none will say euery one should haue so large authoritie then it is not meant of supremacie Further from this place the Papists gather that Saints be patrons of countries and kingdomes secondly that we may pray to Saints in heauen for say they they haue rule of nations ergo they know them and what they do But they abuse the text for it is not said any Christian shall rule ouer one nation but ouer all indefinitely neither do they rule as Christ but as hauing benefit of his power Again both their collectiōs are bad for by nations here is not meant any country or kingdome but the wicked onely they haue rule ouer not all nations simply but wicked men and vnbeleeuers And I will giue him the morning starre Here is the second benefit promised by Christ to him which ouercometh namely the morning starre with all the benefits which come thereby The morning starre is that starre which riseth before the Sunne some time of the yeare and by heathen men is called Venus which in deed is Christ himselfe Reu. 22. 16. Now Christ is called a star first because he illuminates mens wils and vnderstandings in things belonging to saluation secondly to shew that the prophesie of Balaam Num. 24. is now in the new Testament fulfilled for now Christ hath by his Apostles reuealed himselfe plentifully to all nations Againe he is called the morning starre for speciall resemblance for that starre riseth not at midnight or in the beginning of the night but in the morning in the beginning of the day and then shineth brighter then all the rest So Christ the true morning starre came not in the beginning of the world or in the middest of it but in the latter age he came in the new testament and fulnesse of time and now he reuealeth his will more fully then euer in the old testament 2. Pet. 1. 9. Christ then is called this morning starre for in the old testament they had darknesse and candle light but now Christ shineth out brightly I will giue him Here is a promise of two benefits first perfect illumination and lightning whereby all ignorance shall be dispelled after this life and men shall then so farre know God as mans nature can comprehend The second benefit is the light of glory not onely of knowledge but perfect glory for by fellowship of this glory of Christ we shal be made like Saints and Angels shining starres in the kingdome of heauen Seeing Christ is a starre we see how they be deceiued which liue in sin and ignorance without good conscience in pleasure and securitie and yet they thinke they belong to Christ they haue the true light but such as liue in blindnesse neuer seeking to know Gods will obey him these are in darknesse haue no light in Christ for what fellowship is there betwixt light and darknesse We must follow Peters rule first labour to haue this starre to shine in our hearts which is when we vse meanes to haue the beames of this Sun to shine on vs to get knowledge in the mystery of our saluation by Christ to haue this Sun of righteousnes to lighten our minds and withall to warme and refresh our dead soules as the sun in the spring reuiues all things which seemed dead We must set open the doores of our hearts and entertaine this comfortable light Seeing Christ is the morning starre not that shines in the night but in the morning in the day time we must labor to leade our liues in godlinesse and sobrietie as children of the light Rom. 13. 12. and if we will not walk in this light it shall be taken from vs and we shall be cast into eternall darknesse Let him which hath an eare Here is the second part of the conclusion but of this often before CHAP. III. VERSE 1. And to the Angell of the Church of Sardis c. THIS is the fift particular commandement to Iohn that he should write an Epistle to that great and famous citie of Sardis The Epistle hath three parts first a Preface secondly body or substance thirdly a conclusion First the Preface sheweth in whose name the Epistle was written to giue it the more authoritie It containeth a liuely description of Christ in his kingly office as he is the soueraigne head of his Church and that in two royalties and priuiledges first in that he hath the seuen spirits secondly the seuen starres For the first I shewed what it meaneth chap. 1. vers 4. namely the holy Ghost who is the author of all grace so that to haue the seuen spirits is as much as to say he had the holy Ghost Ob. All Gods seruants haue the holy Ghost therefore that is no peculiar priuiledge of Christ. Ans. True but not in the same maner for Christ had it two wayes first in regard of his Deitie secondly of his humanitie First as he is God he hath in him the beginning of the holy Ghost for the holy Ghost proceedeth from the Father and the Sonne Therefore Christ is said to send the holy Ghost and to worke by him and whatsoeuer he doth in the Church he doth it by him and for that cause Christ is said to haue the seuen spirits
outwardly in bodie but in the seruice of God ioyne heart and hand be indeed as good professors as we beare the world in hand we are the Lord will remoue our crowne and giue it to a nation which will bring foorth better increase and seeke to maintaine it better Vers. 12. Him that ouercometh will I make a pillar in the temple of my God Here is set downe the promise which containeth two things first to whom the promise is made to him that ouercometh secondly the thing promised in the words following For the first he giueth to vnderstand that whosoeuer will haue his seruice pleasing vnto God must dispose himselfe to fight a good fight and to wage battell against all his enemies A man cannot be a good Christian except he be a good souldier when he beginneth to turne to God then he hath innumerable enemies both within himselfe and without to make him take another course and turne from God now if he be not a good souldier these enemies will ouercome him For the second the thing promised is eternall life in these words I will make him a pillar in the temple of my God Christ here alludeth to men in this world who haue bene wont to build pillars vpon hils and mountaines that the posteritie to come might remember them when they were dead and rotten 1. Sa. 18. 18. Absolom in his life had reared him vp a pillar which is in the kings dale for he said I haue no sonne to keepe my name in remembrance This then is the sense It is the custome of men to set vp pillars for the remembrance of their bodies but I will make the man himselfe that ouercometh a pillar In the temple That is in the Church triumphant figured by the temple at Ierusalem as if he should say Others set vp pillars in fields and mountaines but I will make him a pillar in the temple of my God I will make him a pillar That is I will not onely make him a part but a worthie part in the temple My God This is set downe to shew that God is Christs God as he is Mediator otherwise as he is God the second person he is equall to the Father And he shall go no more out First he shall abide a pillar for euer he shall not need renewing as the pillars of men do This pillar shall haue three names first the name of God whereby he doth signifie that he is the seruant of God Secondly the name of the citie of my God By citie is not meant the triumphant Church but the place thereof namely the high heauens The meaning of it is I will make it manifest that he is a citizē of the place of glorie This citie is described in the words following by a resemblance it is called new Ierusalem because that was a citie that resembled Paradise where Adam was New Ierusalem But how can it be called new Ierusalem seeing it was before the earthly Ierusalem Answ. It is called new not in regard of the being but in regard of reuelation for it was before the beginning of the world Which came downe out of heauen from my God It is not said it shall come downe but it is come downe This clause is added to answer to an obiection which he that ouercometh might make thus Heauen is farre off how can heauen come downe from heauen Ans. It cometh downe to vs by the preaching of the Gospell for by it we begin to be citizens thereof Eph. 2. The third name is my new name By the name of Christ we are to vnderstand glorie and power Ob. But Christ had glorie and power from all eternitie Ans. True he had so but this is to be meant as he is God incarnate Now the ends and reasons which made him describe the estate of life euerlasting are these first to comfort them which keep faith and a good conscience he doth describe the reward thereof being an excellent meanes to incourage men to go forward in the faith Learne we then in all our afflictions to keepe this faith and good conscience to the end by beholding the estate of life euerlasting and the reward thereof Moses desired to suffer afflictions because he had respect to the recompence of the reward The second reason of this description is to bring men to view the excellencie of life euerlasting Many men are drawne from religion because they take such pleasure in earthly matters which they would not if they thought eternall life so great a matter The third reason is to teach men to practise Paules rule in the 1. to Tim. 6. 12. to lay hold on eternall life Men with both hands lay hold on the world both of honour and riches none layeth sure hold of life euerlasting though it be neuer so sweet pleasant blessed and glorious The fourth reason is to make the people of God not to feare the cruellest death that can be seeing bodily death is a doore to glory Thus much generally of the twelfth verse now it followeth that I speake particularly I will make him a pillar That which the seruants of God shall be in the Church triumphant that they must beginne to be in the Church militant If therefore thou wouldest be a pillar in heauen thou must begin to be one on earth by vpholding and maintaining the Gospell Againe in that he saith I will make him a pillar in Ierusalem that is the Church triumphant they must learne to amend their erronious opinion who thinke euery Church as holy as Ierusalem and is to haue the same reuerence And I will write vpon him That is he shall haue God for his God Here he giueth vs to vnderstand that we can haue no fellowship with God but by Christ God will neuer saue nor blesse vs out of Christ his Sonne If therefore thou wilt giue thankes to God thou must do it through Christ if thou wilt receiue any temporall blessing of God it must be in and by not out of Christ. I will make him a citizen of the kingdome of heauen Here we must learne to carrie our selues in this world as citizens of heauen and not of this world otherwise we can neuer looke for heauen Phil. 3. 20. I will make heauen come downe Here we may see the mercie of God to man heauen was shut vp by our sinnes but God hath opened it by the bloud of Christ that we might enter therein Therefore if we will haue the new name we must become new creatures for neither circumcision nor vncircumcision auaileth any thing but a new creature if we content our selues with the old man we shall neuer come to heauen Vers. 13. Let him that hath an eare heare what the spirit saith to the Churches This is the last part of the Epistle written to the Church of Philadelphia Now whereas Christ againe and againe repeateth the same words the Ministers of the Gospell haue a warrant if they preach the same Sermon to the people
yea though they preach it oftentimes But they must looke that they do it not for ease but for the good of the Church And therefore the hearers hearing the Minister repeate the same doctrine ought not curiously to reprehend him for then they may as well reprehend Christ himselfe as before I haue shewed Here then is a dutie commaunded namely to heare this hearing is the good learning that bringeth true faith saluation and sincere obedience with it But to whom is this commandement giuen To hearing hearers and to such as do not onely receiue the word of God with their outward eares but with the eare that is in the heart Hence we learne first that God doth not giue to all men grace to heare his word to their saluation Secondly that we must so heare that thereby we may be conuerted and changed But what is to be said namely what the spirit teacheth to the Churches That we might heare attentiuely he vseth a double reason one drawne from the speaker another from the auditors to wit the Churches But I haue spoken of these before And to the Angell of the Church of the Laodiceans write c. As before all the other Epistles so before this last Epistle there is a commandement giuen to Iohn to write it And the Epistle hath three parts as the former had first a Preface secondly the matter thirdly a conclusion First of the Preface wherin Christ is described in whose name it was penned by two arguments First by his name and title Amen a faithfull witnesse Secondly by his priuiledge and propertie the beginning of the cratures Amen is an Aduerb of affirmation or asseueration signifying truly verily certainly The reason why he is so called is rendred in the words that follow which are a commentary and full exposition of this The faithfull witnesse c. So that to this end he is called Amen to shew that he is a true and faithfull witnesse See chap. 1. 5. there I expound it And here I will repeate the heads onely of that exposition He is called a witnesse betweene God the father and vs because he doth not onely reueale the fathers will to vs but sealed it with his blood and giueth vs many testimonies inward and outward but of all testimonies that of the Scripture is most certaine And for these three respects he is thus termed first because he doth reueale it and seale it and ratifie it by inward and outward testimonies secondly because he wold accomplish his fathers wil. 2. Cor. 1. 20. All the promises of God are in him yea and Amen that is most certaine and therefore he is a witnesse yea a faithfull witnesse Thirdly he is called a true witnesse because he speaketh the truth that which he reuealeth from his father is the will of his father who is truth it selfe he saith as the thing is without error or falshood nay his will is the rule of all truth This is the meaning of the first argument Now the vse and the end why here Christ is so called if we do but reade the Epistle and marke the contents we may guesse probably at the end which is that he might shew himselfe an example to the Angell of that Church who was slacke and negligent in his ministery therfore Christ instructs him how to cary himself without respect of persons teaching the word of God truly and faithfully See chap. 1. 5. And not only to the Angel but to all the Church yea to all Christians he propounds himselfe an example of two worthy vertues faith and truth he would haue all to be true and faithfull in their life and conuersation euen as he is This faith is a vertue whereby a mans word becometh as sure as an obligation as we vse to speake whereby we make good all our words othes and promises Truth is that whereby a man without lying deceit or fraud speaketh the truth from his heart that I say which is necessary to be knowne for his owne and others good and for the glory of God Set we this example before our eyes and as Christ is a true and faithfull witnesse so let vs be carefull to shew our selues true in all our words and speeches and to be faithfull in all our promises These be excellent graces in Christ and fruites of the spirit in Christians therefore let vs be knowne by these to be like Christ. The second end of this title is to induce this Church to apply it selfe to the word of God effectually for it was faultie in this point therfore that he might bring them to this he saith that he is a faithfull witnesse How should they do this Thus consider in the word the law and the Gospell the commaundements promises and threatnings and apply them particularly euery man to himselfe the commandements to know sinne the threatnings to humble vs and that we may be touched in conscience and made fit to receiue Gods grace see an example of it Luke 15. in the prodigall son I haue sinned and am not worthy c. So Daniel and Ezra humbled themselues No man can truly be humbled till he make this particular application of the word which he readeth and heareth Now the Gospell also must be thus applied we are bound to beleeue the promises of life eternal not onely that they are true but to apply them to our selues The Gospell requireth a further thing which is the foundation of the church for proofe see Phil. 3. 7 8 9 10 11. The summe is this he esteemes all things losse in regard of Christ and desires the righteousnes which is by faith in Christ and to know the vertue of Christs resurrection Now marke the fifteenth verse let so many as be perfect be thus minded teaching euery one of vs our dutie to apply Christ to our owne person Thus are we bound in conscience to apply the Gospell to our selues and whosoeuer doth not so he makes God a lier as much as in him lieth 1. Iohn 5. And this is the principall end and reason why Christ calleth himselfe so that men might not onely beleeue the word in general but apply it in particular to themselues The not doing of this is the cause of negligence in religon of so many luke-warme Christians and professors Therefore let vs all learne this dutie It is not enough to know the word no nor to be able to teach it but aboue al things to lay it to the conscience to apply it that we may be truly humbled and turne to God therefore iustifying faith is that which applieth in particular Now the second title of Christ is the beginning of all creatures Col. 1. 16. By him all things were created in heauen and earth therefore in regard of creation he is so called Yet I doubt not but there is a further cause why he is so called here namely because he is the beginning of the new creatures as Ephes. 1. 10. where it is said we are Gods workmanship created
is called that Counseller He is both King of and Counsellor to his Church And surely this title of right belōgeth to him for first by his office he aduiseth men how they shall escape eternall death and be saued secondly he teacheth how a man may please God in all his actions thirdly how he may flie sinne These three he doth daily in his church and children and that not by extraordinarie but euen by ordinarie meanes as by his word and spirit and therefore may well be called our Counseller neither can any either Angell or man thus counsell vs but onely Christ. Now in that Christ is such a person by office and profession therefore we must acknowledge him to be our Counsellor yea the Counseller of the Catholike Church and euery part therof Therefore we learne to do him all the honour we can Counsellors of the common law are feed reuerenced and honoured for their counsell though it be but for worldly matters and it oftentimes faileth Much more is Christ to be honoured whose counsell concerneth the things of God and cannot faile but shall stand Nay as his counsell is infinitely more excellent then the counsell of any other creature so much more is he to be honoured Further in all dangers and temptations one must resort to Christ for counsell for to this end is he a Counseller He told them they were miserable and therefore gaue them counsell declaring that he is at hand in all our miseries and distresse And therefore we must resort to Christ for his counsell and rest vpon it and order our selues according to it The good king Iehosaphat when the Moabites and Ammonites banded together was in great distresse but what did he We said he know not Lord what to do but our eyes are toward thee That is we looke to thee for counsel and direction we must rest rely vpon thee for wholesome counsel good direction So should all men do in distresse and daunger as we are now by reason of our sinnes and the professed malice of our enemies for by all likelihood these dayes are the time of our chastisement and correction therefore we must say as he said Therefore in all distresse whether it be sicknesse or pang of death forsake all ill counsell go not to wizards and Astrologians for helpe but humble your selues and pray for his counsell So much for the first part that is the maner of prescribing this remedie Now of the remedie it selfe As the miserie had three parts and those great miseries all so Christ propoundeth his remedie in such sort that it is answerable to the three branches of the miserie first gold that thou mayest be rich secondly rayment thirdly eye salue By gold according to the analogie of the Scripture we are to vnderstand the graces of Gods spirit as true faith repentance feare and loue of God man All these are called gold as the triall of our faith is said to be more precious then gold We may likewise vnderstand al other gifts of the spirit yea all Christs merits Christ himself the fountaine of all Purged by the fire That is precious and fine gold of speciall account that is purged from all drosse by the art of man This sheweth what is the propertie of his gifts and graces they are as precious as fine pure gold as 1. Pet. 1. 5. This is worth the marking that the gifts of Gods spirit are of great price and value and that before Gold Psal. 119. 72. Math. 13. 4. This teacheth all how to beautifie themselues in soule and bodie The blind and false opinion of the world is that strange attire and forreine fashions beautifie and adorne the bodie and it is commonly thought that Iewels and precious stones adorne vs and indeed it is true in some persons such as be great personages but strange fashions and outlandish attire disgraceth the bodie The right way to beautifie the bodie indeed and to make it truly glorious and to adorne the soule also i● to get these graces for these are as precious as fine gold Our bodies shold be the temples of the holy Ghost the houses of a worthie guest therefore we should the rather labour for the best ornaments And if you will adorne your selues as you ought you must do it with the graces of Gods spirit and abhorre these fond and absurd fashions which no wise man can like of That thou maist be rich c. These graces haue a further effect and serue not onely to adorne and beautifie but also to make men rich Here then see the common folly nay madnesse of men which spend all their time wit and strength to enrich their bodies and leaue their soules vnfurnished What a madnesse is this that so many should neglect true riches and studie for nothing more then that which is nothing lesse then riches euen counterfeit riches By this text it is more then manifest that such are more then mad and that this folly is very great Therefore seeing true riches be the graces of Gods spirit seeke for these So much for the first part of the remedie White garments That is Christ himselfe and his righteousnesse imputed As Gal. 3. 27. euen as a garment is put on the bodie so is Christ and his righteousnesse and the fruite thereof that is sanctification all this is meant by garments here Now the end is to couer the nakednesse of the soule which is deformed and defiled with sinne Eye salue That is the spirit of illumination knowledge wrought in the mind by the spirit of God For as eye-salue doth cleare the eye sight and sharpen the same where it was by some occasion hindred so doth Christ by illumination make a man know and vnderstand God in Christ and discerne betweene good and euill of things temporall and eternall Thus you haue the meaning of these words Now by the exposition you may see that by all these we can vnderstand nothing but Christ himselfe and his merits One and the same thing is signified by three words to shew that there is in Christ the fulnesse of grace and that he hath remedies for all our wants The Laodiceans were poore in spirituall goods and Christ was their riches naked and he their garment blind and he their eye-salue So that looke how many sinnes there be in men so many contrarie remedies there be in Christ. What wants soeuer be in vs he hath a supply of them all The Papists make him an insufficient Sauiour in that they patch our merits to his and so they disgrace Christ but we are to count Christ a most perfect and absolute Mediator and Redeemer in himselfe without vs. To buy The meanes how these worthie gifts of God are gotten Christ saith by buying and bargaining he saith not receiue but buy This is an allusion to the state of that citie which was rich and consisted most of Merchants which liued by buying and trafficke therefore he speaketh to them in their
chiefly Babylon is fallen in credite of her doctrine For besides so many Princes and estates of Christendome that by publike authoritie haue receiued the Gospell and vtterly abolished all Babylonicall doctrine euen in the midst of her tyrannie and persecution great multitudes daily are lightened with the bright beames of the Gospell that for all Inquisitions imprisonments exquisite torments and cruell burnings they neuer a whit diminish but rather increase as God hath prouided that the bloud of the Martyrs should be the seed of the Church And they are more then obstinate if they do not acknowledge that this matter is gouerned from God aboue For if it had bene of men it must needes haue decayed before this time and haue come to nought as Gamaliel said of the doctrine of the Apostles Therefore in fighting against it they shew thēselues but after the maner of the old Gyants to make warre against God Or as it is contained in this Prophecie that Antichrist should gather together the Princes of the earth to make battell against him that sitteth vpon the white Horse whose name is The word of God but all to their vtter confusion and destruction For the word of God must conquer and preuaile in the last age and Antichrist must be consumed by the spirit of the mouth of Christ which is his holy word and vtterly abolished by the glorious brightnesse of his coming to iudgement as S. Paule testifieth in the second Chapter of the second Epistle to the Thessalonians Therfore it is vaine that they seeke to vnderprop the doctrine of Babylon by crueltie and tyrannie for all will not serue seeing the time of her final fall approcheth and now already our Sauiour Christ with the spirit of his mouth hath wasted and consumed a great part of that credit estimation in which the doctrine of Babylon of long time hath triumphed And it is our parts to pray that her credit may dayly more and more decrease that the kingdom of Christ may be perfectly established amongst vs and the kingdom of Antichrist overthrowne euen from the foundations that no superfluous relicks of Babylonical religion may remain where the church of Christ is in building but that the doctrin of Babylō may fal altogether Thus I haue declared that Baylon in wealth and substance in power and authoritie in credit estimation of her doctrine is falne and that without hope of recouery for her credit is cracked not onely amongst her enemies the Protestants but euen amongst her best friends and greatest Arch-papists For I suppose there is none in the world so blind so superstitious so deuoutly addict in all points of Popish idolatrie and superstition as they were 30. or 40. yeares past Although they close their eyes neuer so obstinatly against the light of Gods word yet some effect of the beames of force wil pierce euen through their eye-lids And that they thēselues cannot dissemble although they would neuer so faine but that they haue bene deceiued with grosse errors and shameful superstitions their pardons their pilgrimages their legends who is now so blind that seeth not how the world hath bin seduced by them And the simplicitie of the people abused to satisfie their vnsatiable couetousnesse As for the greatest Patrons of Poperie that be learned they cannot denie but that great errors haue bene receiued and taught for truth Yea the Pope himselfe hath acknowledged that many errours haue crept into the church yea euen into the Masse but the reformation of them pertaineth to him alone and the generall Councell But what hope of reformatiō is to be looked for at their hands let it be seene in the decrees of the last Councell of Trent What litle Mise those great mountaines in so many yeares trauell haue brought foorth In fortie or fiftie yeares consultation two great matters reformed One for Pardoners not to be common pedlers another for the Communion in both kinds to those that desire it so they confesse it were as good in one kind and agree with them in all other points of Poperie Yet all was not well they confesse by their correction And as for the greatest Pillars and Proctors they haue if they be pressed neare acknowledge a great deale more As one that landed lately at Yarmouth before witnesse of good credit testified that if he might be satisfied in two points concerning the Popes supremacie and the reall presence for other matters he would not greatly striue So that I will conclude that Babylon is fallen in riches in power in credit of Doctrine not onely with Protestants but euen with Papists themselues But now I know what will be obiected against me That I haue trauelled all in vaine to proue that Babylon is fallen and that Babylon is Rome and that I haue abused the texts of Scripture and sentences of old Doctors to proue the same For whatsoeuer is contained either in the Scripture or in the writings of the auncient Doctors to proue that Babylon is Rome is to be vnderstood of Rome vnder the heathen Emperours and not vnder the Popes and that all this while I haue wrested the Scriptures and enforced the Doctors to affirme that which they neuer thought of Indeed I will confesse that some Prophesies contained in this Reuelation were fulfilled in the heathen Emperours and that the heathen Empire was an introduction vnto Antichrist but that Antichrist the great enemie of the church of Christ and which is principally called Antichrist could not be any of the heathen Monarchie I will make it manifest by plaine demonstrations And first I will retaine this Principle sufficiently proued before that Rome is the See of Antichrist and that by authoritie of Scriptures and consent of auncient Writers we can seeke him no where but in the Romaine Empire And now the controuersie resteth in this whether the heathen Emperors or the Pope be he First S. Paul in the second chapter of the second Epistle to the Thessalonians speaking purposely of Antichrist saith expresly that he shall sit in the Temple of God which is the Church of Christ. But it is manifest that the heathen Emperours did not sit in the Church of God therefore the heathen Emperour is not this Antichrist And by the same reason it is manifest that Mahomet is not that especiall Antichrist because he sitteth without the temple of God as there be diuers that would haue these things to be vnderstood of Mahomet or Ottomanus but it is as cleare as the Sunne at noone dayes for as much as neither the heathen Emperors nor Mahomet nor Ottomanus sitteth in the Temple or Church of God that none of them is that great Antichrist of whom the prophesies of the Scripture are to be expounded And whereas some of them interprete the abhomination of desolation where of Christ speaketh to be meant of Antichrist or at leastwise to be a signe of him that cannot be vnderstood of the heathen Emperours or any other that is without the Church for that
of him his spirit and so we shall be able to discerne and iudge of it for no naturall man can do it no naturall man can discerne the things of God but he which is enlightened by the Spirit of God he can Secondly a man must haue Christ his testimonie of Scripture which is the Scriptures themselues for in them he setteth downe this testimonie of the Scriptures But if Christs testimonie be set downe of the Scriptures why do not all men know it Vnlesse a man haue a natural facultie of seeing he cannot discerne the Sunne though it shine so vnlesse a man haue grace from Christ to iudge of the Scriptures he cannot iudge of thē but if any haue the spirit of discerning then if he read and mark the phrase and manner of writing the stile and authoritie of the Scriptures he shall see then in euery line a testimonie of them giuen by Christ. How can a man know the true religion seeing the Turke Papist Iew Protestant haue their religions and dye in them I answer for to know which is true of these we must haue recourse to the faithful witnesse Christ and what he saith is true religion that we must hold for true religion Now Christ he giueth testimonie of them in the Scriptures and the Scriptures be as a letter sent from heauen to the Church shewing and testifiing which is true religion not that of the Iew Turke or Papist but of the Christian. Sundry men hold diuerse opinion in matters of religion as the Iew Turke Papist Christian which is the true opinion how is it knowne Answ. Still we must haue recourse to the witnesse of truth the faithful witnesse and Prophet of the Church and he is the iudge of these cōtrouersies Now in the Scriptures if we marke them we shall see his iudgement which of these is true But if there be diuerse opinions of Scriptures what must be iudge In this diuersitie of opinions yea of the Scriptures thēselues we must still haue recourse to the Scriptures if we note the circumstances the manner of writing if we conferre Scripture with Scripture we shall easily find out the true sense and meaning for the Lord sets out in them his iudgment plainly and fully The second certificate is particular belonging to the Propheticall office of Christ which is to certifie men in particular that the promise of the Gospell belongs to them as to Peter Iohn c. that he is the child of God and that euerlasting life belongs to any child in particular and this is done especially by the word not read but preached being ioyned with the working of the Spirit Rom. 8. We haue the spirit of Christ which testifies with our spirit we be the sonnes of God Now if this be the dutie of Christ to certifie men in particular that euerlasting life belongs to me or to any particular man then their doctrine is damnable who deny this seeing it is the proper office of the propheticall office of Christ. And in this he differs from al other Prophets and Apostles which be witnesses for they can witnesse onely outwardly to the eare but he can speake and testifie to the conscience neither can any of them certifie any man particularly though their ministerie tend to that end Christ is not onely a witnesse but a faithfull witnesse first because he testifies not his owne will but his which sent him namely his Fathers Secondly he testifies all his Fathers will neither adding nor detracting from it Thirdly because he teacheth it as he receiued it sincerely in the same manner in which he receiued it not altering changing or deprauing his Fathers will That faithfull witnesse The Lord hath sundrie faithfull witnesses as the Prophets Apostles the Church nay the Sunne and Moone Psal. 89. vers 37. but Christ alone is that faithfull witnes whereby he is distinguished from all other witnesses for he is aboue all other his witnesse is authenticall sufficient of it selfe needs no confirmation The witnes of the Apostles and Prophets be not authenticall and certaine but as they consent with Christs witnesse Secondly he is that witnesse because he is the Lord of that house whereof he giues witnesse namely the Church but the Apostles and Prophets are but seruants Thirdly Christ his witnesse is inward it assures and speakes to the conscience but the witnes of men as of the Prophets and Apostles is outward onely it comes to the eares it neuer binds and assures the conscience so that for that prerogatiue he is aboue all witnesses and here called THAT faithfull witnesse 1. Whereas Christ the Doctor and Prophet of the Church is called a faithfull witnesse we learne that all Ministers must be faithfull witnesses for euery Minister of the Gospell when he preacheth out of Gods word he is in the roome of Christ speaketh that which Christ should speake therefore he must be like Christ a faithfull witnesse 2. Now that they may be faithful witnesses they must deliuer the testimony of Christ aboue all other things and before all testimonies of man in the office of their ministery So it was meate and drinke to Christ to teach his Fathers will So Abraham his eldest seruant shewed his fidelitie in that he would not eate or drinke till he had done his maisters message Gen. 24. 33. So the Ministers must haue care first to teach the wil of God aboue all things secondly they must testifie all the will of God concerning matters of saluatiō As among men we count him a faithful witnes which testifies all the truth and no more but the truth so they be faithfull Ministers which testifie the whole will of God in things belonging to saluation neither adding nor detracting So Paul cleared himselfe that he was free from all mens blood seeing he deliuered the whole will of God in matters necessary for saluation and kept nothing backe 3. He must neither adde nor take away much lesse in any case depraue the word of God and this is the true marke of a faithfull witnesse In the Church of Rome a man may heare things concerning morall vertues handled soundly but come to faith and repentance matters of saluation they take away one part and adde another to the Scriptures they hold the Creed in word yet in deede they deny the same as by their doctrine it will appeare 4. The true witnesse must deliuer the testimony of Christ in that manner he receiues it namely in a spirituall manner in a plaine easie manner in a familiar kind of speech that the conscience of euery hearer may be moued When we seeke to obscure the word we do corrupt the same and as trades men and huxters we cannot be content to declare the word in a plaine easie familiar speech but as they set out their wares with sterching blowing spicing c. so we set a gloze on the word and make merchandize of it 2. Cor. 2.