wherein our Blessed Saviour's example may
instruct us, the safest and easiest argument from his
actions in this case, is when they are instances and il∣lustrations
of his own Precepts. It is not his practice,
but his command that makes any thing a duty, and
when he practises according to it, that exemplifies the
commandment in its lively forms and circumstances, and
is a more sensible manifestation of the duty injoyn'd
by it. The adding of his practice, where he has given
a Precept, serves for a clearer illustration of it: but if
there be no precept, his practice alone doth not bind,
nor make any thing become a duty which before was
not one. And accordingly those instances, wherein
the Scriptures recommend his example to us, are things
injoyn'd by his own Laws. As when we are bid to be
me••k and lowly, as he was, Matt. 11. 29; to inherit the
virtue of Blessing our Persecutors and Slanderers from
his practice, 1 Pet. 3. 9; to follow his steps in a Patient
Resign'd endurance of unjust sufferings, without railing
or wrathful returns, 1 Pet. 2. 20, 21, 23. and the
like.
And as this is true of the example of Christ, so like∣wise
of the Examples of other Holy Persons recorded
in Scripture. For even their unmixt Actions, which
were not blameable in them, are sometimes unfit for
our imitation, being perform'd in pursuit of peculiar offices,
or authorized by such circumstances of things and other speci∣al
inducements, as they had at that time, and which do
not agree to us in common with them.
1. Several of their Actions, which the Scripture justi∣f••es
were by virtue of immediate divine warranty and com∣mission,
which would have fallen under a just censure, but for
that reason. Thus the Israelites borrowed of the Egyptians,
and pay'd not again, because God, the supreme Disposer