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A89737 The orthodox evangelist. Or A treatise wherein many great evangelical truths (not a few whereof are much opposed and eclipsed in this perillous hour of the passion of the Gospel) are briefly discussed, cleared, and confirmed: as a further help, for the begeting, and establishing of the faith which is in Jesus. As also the state of the blessed, where; of the condition of their souls from the instant of their dissolution: and of their persons after their resurrection. By John Norton, teacher of the church at Ipswich in New England. Norton, John, 1606-1663. 1654 (1654) Wing N1320; Thomason E734_9; ESTC R206951 276,720 371

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because they are but parts of a whole Hence it followeth that the hamane Nature was not before it was assumed The second person in the Trinity in assuming it created it and in creating it assumed it he did not create it without but within his person Obj. If the humane nature of Christ hath not a created personally then Christ as man is wore imperfect then other men who are persons Deest personalius non propter defectum sed propter perfectionem Daver in Col. 2.9 Of the personal union Deitas sustentat humanitatem tanquā suā et propriam et i●●i dat subsistentiam Daven in Col. Ans The humane Nature of Christ is without a created personality not for the defect of any thing requisite unto its perfection but for the addition of the personal union which far excelleth all created excellency it is without a created personality that it may be made partaker of an increated personality The assumption of the humane Nature into the increated subsntence of the second person of the Trinity is the personal union The Word was made flesh and remaining what he was began to be what he was not The Incarnation is the miracle of miracles a document to beleevers a testimony against unbeleevers Isai 7.14 None can declare Christs generation Isai 53.8 Neither can any declare his Incarnation his Name is secret Judg. 13.18 Wonderful Isai 9.6 A name that no man knoweth viz. perfectly but he himself Rev. 19.12 The Trinity is the greatest the Incarnation is the next mysterie And without controversie great is the Mysterie of godliness God was manif st in the flesh c. 1 Tim. 3.16 Concerning God and Christ we may fitly use those words though there spoken in another sence Prov. 30.4 What is his Name and what is his Sons Name if thou canst tell The divine Nature Parkins on the Creed i. e. the increated person supplyed and always supplyeth the place of created personality giving subsistence to the manhood in Christ Mr Perkins yet acknowledging that amongst all the Works of God there cannot be found another example hereof in the world illustrates the subsistence of the humane Nature in the divine by the plant Missel or Misselto which having no root of its own both lives and grows in the stock or body of the Oak or some other tree In that the person of Christ is increated but one and that one person subsisteth in both Natures hence it followeth 1. That Christ though he assumed the nature of man yet the manhood assumed was not a person otherwise there would be two persons in Christ 2. That the Body of Christ the matter whereof was the sanctified Seed of the Virgin Mary was compleatly Organized and inspired with a reasonable Soul from the instant of its conception besides the ordinary course of nature otherwise the divine Nature should have assumed an Embrio not the nature of a man 3. That though Christ be the Son of God by Eternal generation Christus est unus in utraque natura non duo unus et idem sive tempore natus de patre Filius dei 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 et in tempore natus de Virgine Filius hominis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Trelcat Jun. lib. 2. loc 4. in respect of the increated proceeding of the second Person from of the first Mat. 16.16 Ioh. 8.42 And the Son of man being born of the Virgin Mary in the fulness of time in respect of his humane Nature Mat. 1.1.18 21 23. yet the person being but one there is but one Son not two Sons 4. That the Virgin Mary is by Elizabeth truly called the Mother of our Lord Luk. 1.43 and by the Ancients Maria a veteribus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dei para appe atur Synop. pur Theol. disp 25. Nata est humana natura ex Maria Virgine ergo et tota persona nata est sc Secundū illū sui parti Keck Th. lib. 3. c. 2. the bringer forth of God for the humane Nature never subsisting but in the divine in that the humane Nature was born of the Virgin Mary therefore the whole person was born of the Virgin Mary Because that which is true of the part is true of the whole in respect of that part by the communication of Idioms or properties therefore also that Holy thing which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God Luk. 1.35 The personal union in respect of the manner of it The Manner of the Personal Union 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sub slantialae Tho. p. 3. q 6. Pa. 2. vid. G● Har. cap. 17. Of the Office was without any change of either nature one into another without confusion of one nature with another they remain distinct in themselves and in their properties without division Neither soul nor body did ever subsist in themselves but from the first instant of their Creation they subsisted in the second Person of the Trinity without separation of one nature from another There was no cessation of the Personal Union during the time of Christs death no not whilest his body lay in the grave Lastly It was substantial the substance of the Manhood was united to the substance of the Divine Nature subsisting in the second Person Jesus Christ God-man is as we saw before the greatest of the Essential Works of God that Miracle of miracles such as God never made before nor ever will make the like again Unto this Person God-man Man that in our nature he might suffer for us and God that his sufferings might become effectual unto us thus fitted for the greatest service by the union of both created and increated excellency in him The Father committed the work of Mediation which was readily and freely accepted by the Son thereby undertaking by Bond of Covenant and Virtue of Office the absolute meriting for and application unto the Elect the freedom from all the evil of the curse and the fruition of all the good of the promise Satisfaction and Merit are contained in the Office of Christ formally and Efficacy is contained therein virtually Christ is Mediatour not as man alone nor as God alone but as God-man As God-man he is a Middle-person and consequently a fit Mediatour between God and man Isai 7.14 Matth. 1.23 As God-man he became of no reputation Philp. 2.7 8 9. As God-man he was a Prophet Deut. 18.15 Matth. 11.27 A Priest John 10.17 18. Heb. 4.14 Heb. 7. A King Acts 2.36 Luke 1.33 As God-man he overcame death for us Heb. 2.14 Reconciled us Rom. 5.10 11. Col. 1.21 22. Entered into Heaven for us Heb. 4.14 6.20 c. Therefore he is Mediatour as God-man not as man alone nor as God alone The Lord Jesus took not this honour upon himself but was called thereunto by the Father hence he is said to be preodained 1 Pet. 1.20 fore-appointed Rom. 3.25 Elect of God Isai 42.1 Sanctified of the Father that is set apart to the Office
it selfe Oneness is an affection immediatly flowing from the meer being of a thing whereby it is individed in it selfe and divided from all other beings or things Union is the conjunction of two ones or more into a third being for example sake Ens unum unio take a man consisting of Body and Soul the Soul first hath a being then this singular being and not another then it is united unto the body in a third being namely the person of a man the like is true of the body In Vocation we receive our being in Union is the manner of our being In Vocation we are made Beleevers in Union is considered the order between Christ and Beleevers In Vocation is the foundation of our union in Union is the relation built upon that foundation Inter illa quae convertuntur secundum essendi consequentiam illud est prius quod habet rationem subjecti Alsted Metaph. par 1. cap. 25. In Vocation is the spirit of grace infused in Union this infused spirit is made an in-dwelling spirit Without Union there can be no Communion This necessarily pre-supposeth that things cannot act one upon another that doe not reach one the other they cannot give and take one from another that doe not some way meet together yet here we must know that the contact or mutual touch of things is not alwayes Local when their substances or Bodies doe immediatly touch one another but often-times vertual only when notwithstanding they doe not immediately touch one the other yet they reach one the other in their efficacy Instances whereof we have many in Natural causes as the Loadstone and Iron separated in place yet act one upon another that by attracting this by following In Political matters persons though distant in place one from another yet exercise civil communion in the affairs of this life In Spiritual things as namely in the Sacrament the Body and Blood of Christ is united to the Elements vertually that is by vertue of Divine institution and promise not Locally to deny that were to deny the Sacrament to be a Sacrament to say the last were to affirm Ubiquity whether Transubstantiation with the Papists or Consubstantiation with the Lutherans So here the Person of Christ who in respect of his Body is in Heaven and the persons of his Militant members who in respect both of Souls and Bodies are upon the earth are united to and doe Spiritually touch one another I am the Vine yee are the Branches he that abideth in me and I in him the same bringeth forth much fruit for without me yee can doe nothing Joh. 15.5 For the better discerning the order of the dependence of Communion upon Union The order of the dependence of Communion upon Union from whence it floweth we may consider in Union as is also to be done in other relations these foure particulars First The subject of the Relation the person of Christ and the person of the Beleever Secondly The foundation of it on Christs part the Divine institution absolutely considered on our part faith considered only as an infused saving quality in the Soul Thirdly A mutual reference on Christs part superadding a respect to Divine institution whereby according to the appointment of God he looks at the Beleever as his Member superadding also on the Beleevers part a respect unto faith whereby faith which in it selfe is but a quality hath now adhering to it an order to its object whence it looks at Christ as its head In relatis spectanda Subjectum Fundamentum Mutuus ordo Efficacia This mutual order between Christ and the Beleever is the relation it selfe Fourthly The efficacie of the relation The efficacie of a Relation springeth from its foundation the foundation then of this being firstly the absolute grace of God in election and thence flowing downe in the Promise according to the merit of Christ by the effectual operation of the Spirit Needs must the River of life be full ever-flowing Tametsi relatis est ens debilis entitatis tamen est magnae efficaciae and quickning that ariseth from and is mantained by such fountains the influence of the Occan into water-springs of the Sun and Heaven into inferior bodies is not to be compared thereunto Next to the increated Communion of the Trinity in the Divine Essence and the communicated influence from the Divine nature to the Man-hood is the influence of the Lord Jesus Christ unto the members of his mystical body And thou shalt make them drink of the river of thy pleasures for with thee is the fountain of Life In thy light we shall see light Psal 36.8 9. As the union between Christ and the soul The excellency of this communion flowing from union so the communion flowing from this union is mystical a glimpse of whose excellency as it readily shineth forth in this place in respect of the subject object and nature thereof so cannot but be of precious and vigorous use to the serious and spiritual Reader as he passeth along The subject thereof is the Catholick Church or body of Christ The Mystical body of Christ is a spiritual Totum The my stical body of Christ what or Whole consisting of the Person of Christ and all the persons of the Elect effectually called both Angels and Men orderly united by the Spirit unto Christ as their Head and in him one unto another after the manner of the body of a man So as from him is supplied grace suitable to their seveveral relations therein for the effectual and perfect communion both of all the members with the Head and of themselves one with another unto the increasing it self with the increase of God The Militant part of the Mystical body of Christ consisting both of Jews and Gentiles make one new man Eph. 2.15 The Mystical body Triumphant is compared to one perfect man Eph. 4.13 Christus omnia ejus membra constituunt unam personam my sticam Tho. quaest disp de gr ch art 7. ad 11. Davenan Coloss 1.24 Christ and all his members are one Mystical Person This innumerable number as they are but one mystical body so they all have but one soul viz. The Spirit of Christ whence they are united in this life sincerely in the life to come perfectly In point of judgement Eph. 4.13 Till we all come in the unity of the faith and in the knowledge of the Son of God c. In point of affection 1 Cor. 12.12 Of perfect communion Joh. 17.22 23. And the glory which thou gavest me I have given them that they may be one even as we are one I in them and thou in me that they may be made perfect in one and that the world may know that thou hast sent me and hast loved them as thou hast loved me Stay yet a little and look upon this spiritual and glorious body walk about Christ mystical go round about him tell the Members mark ye well the
knoweth all things that can be known by the concreated abilities of Angels or men of it Isai 11.2 It s Principle is a habit infused of God its Medium the light of grace 3. Experimental whereby he knew all things that could be known by practise and rational observation of Events of it Luke 2.52 It s Principle the faculty of Reason it s Medium personal experience Heb. 5.6 And observation of reiterated Events by the light of reason Christ's beatificial knowledge neither admits increase in respect of the habit or act His infused knowledge admitted not increase in respect of Habit though it might in respect of the Act. His experimental knowledge seemeth to have admitted increase both in respect of the Habit and Act. Christ's growth in wisdom is compared to his growth in stature Luke 2.40.52 5. The Right of Divine Adoration Heb. 1.6 Revel 5.8 Yet we are to know that we worship not with divine Worship the Manhood as considered in it self but as being personally united to the Godhead that is We worship the Lord Jesus as God-man 6. Communication of Properties which is a manner of speech whence that that is proper to either nature is not only verbally but really predicated of the Person consisting of or subsisting in both natures The Composition which is of the divine and humane Nature is rather a Composition of Number then of Parts because notwithstanding the real change in the humane nature thereby it is without any change of the divine Nature adding only a relation thereunto Like as it is in the Relative Attributes of God which infer a change in the creature Quod est partis quâ pars id etiam est totius secundam illam partem Keck Log. l. 1. ss 1. c. 25. Tho. p. 3. q. 35 a. 5. Beza in Heb. 2.11 Keck Theol. lib. 3. cap. 2. Keck Log. lib. 2. ss 2. Porro ista praedicatio Homo est Deus Est praedicatio per unionem The. part 3. qu. 16. art 2. Estius lib. 3. dist ● ss 1. but none in him the divine Nature remaining what it was assumed that which it was not The divine and humane Nature are as it were Parts of the whole Person for the divine Nature is not a part properly that would argue imperfection Now that which is true of a part absolutely is true of the whole in a limited sence i. e. in respect of thar part Thus that which is true of the soul or body must needs be granted to be true of the whole man So we say such a man studieth when it is his soul not his body that studieth such a man eateth when it is his body not his soul that eateth The Communication of Idiomes or Properties taketh place when Christ is spoken of in the Concrete not in the Abstract that is when not one Nature only is intended but the Person with both or either Nature For example sake The Lord of Glory is crucified 1 Cor. 2.8 though it was only the humane not the divine Nature that was crucified God purchased the Church with his own blood Acts 20.28 Here God is taken in a concrete sence signifying the Person together with the divine and humane Nature The Man Christ Jesus is Mediatour 1 Tim. 2.5 The Son of man hath power to forgive sin Matth. 9.6 This Man is God c. The word Man is taken in a concrete sence signifying the person with the humane nature These spreches then proceeding in the Concrete the Communication of Properties is to be attended both which considerations are of great use to help us to understand these and the like Propositions 7. Capableness of the Office of a Mediatour The State wherein the Lord Jesus executed his Office of Mediatourship is either of Humiliation or Exaltation Of the two States wherein Christ performed and still performeth the Office of a Mediatour The State of Humiliation continued from the time of his Incarnation until the time of his Resurrection The State of Exaltation began at his Resurrection and continueth for ever The Degrees of his Exaltation were His Resurrection opposite to his Death His Ascension into Heaven opposite to his Descent into the Grave His sitting at the right hand of the Majesty of God that is in a State of Glory next to the Glory of God himself opposite to his continuing in the grave The Lord Jesus Christ as God-man now sitting at the right hand of God is still fulfilling his Mediatourly Office not in a condition of humiliation as sometimes upon earth but in a manner sutable unto his present State of Glory He exerciseth the Prophetical Part of his Office by sending forth the Ministry of his Word by giving gifts and making the improvement thereof effectual for the calling home and building up of his Elect Matth. 28.18 19 20. Ephes 4.11 12 13. He exerciseth the Priestly Part. 1. By appearing in the Presence of God for us Heb. 9.24 2. By continual presenting unto the Father the Satisfaction and Merit of his perfect obedience performed by him in his state of humiliation for us Rom. 8.34 Heb. 7.25 3. By manifesting his constant will and desire that this his satisfactory and meritorious obedience should be accepted of the Father for us 1 John 2.1 4. By declaring it to be his constant will and desire that the benefit thereof should be effectually applyed unto us Heb. 7.25 Heb. 10.10 He exerciseth the Kingly Part by applying unto his Elect by his Spirit what he revealeth as a Prophet and purchased as a Priest by ruling in his Elect with his Word and Spirit together with defending of them from his and their enemies At the end of the World all enemies being subdued and the Elect perfectly blessed the present temporary manner of the Administration of the Mediatorly Office of Christ by external means whether sacred or civil divine or humane Ordinances and Powers shall cease 1 Cor. 15.24.28 Which notwithstanding Christ shall continue King and Head of the triumphant Church for ever The Lamb is the Light thereof Revel 21.23 Thou art a Priest for ever Psal 110.34 Of his Kingdom shall be no end Luke 1.33 Though the present Form of Christ's Government shall end with the world yet his Government shall not end but together with and subordinately unto the Father he shall govern them by the immediate efficacy of his Spirit without all use of external means Then shall the Son also himself be subject unto him that put all things under him that God may be all in all 1 Cor. 15.28 CHAP. IV. Of the Decree FOr our better proceeding in the Consideration of this Subject it may be helpful to our understanding that we observe this Method 1. To consider what the Decree is 2. What is the Object of the Decree 3. The Liberty of the Decree i. e. of God decreeing 4. The chief Objections made against it to remove them 5. The Order of propounding it 6. The usefulness of this Doctrine The Decree is
the passive voyce as being received by Christ before he makes mention of himselfe in the active voyce as having actively received Christ Receptie respeciu hominis est vel passiva vel activa Medulla l. 1. c. 26. Upon this Text Doctor Ames grounds that Spiritual and profitable distinction of a double receiving of Christ Passive and Active Passive whereby the Spiritual principle of grace is ingenerated Active proceeding from that ingenerated habit of grace and the operation of God fore-going and exciting thereunto we are received of Christ before we doe receive Christ Christ in working the grace of faith receiveth us by the act of faith we receive him Christ taketh the Soul before the Soul taketh him A third place to the same purpose is Ephes 2.1.5 And you hath he quickned who were dead in trespasses and sins even when we were dead in sins he hath quickned us together with Christ The infusion of the habit of Faith or Grace into the Soul is the quickning of the Soul until then the Soul is dead as a dead body so a dead Soul is passive in respect of its quickning or being made alive That the infusion of saving faith or saving grace is the infusion of Life appeares thus The Spirit of the Command and Promise viz. that infused grace which inclineth us to obey the Command and receive the Promise is Life the Image of God in Adam which consisted in a conformity to the Command was his spiritual life the spirit of Faith is the spirit of the Command 1 Joh. 3.23 this is his Commandement That we should beleeve on the name of his Son Jesus Christ that it is the spirit of the Promise is out of doubt Joh. 3.33 As the Image of God in Adam which consisted in conformity to the command was his Spiritual life so the Image of God created anew in the Soul is life either this is life or what can be life As the spirit of sinne is the spirit of death so by the rule of contraries the spirit of effectual saving grace is Spiritual life He that hath the Sonne hath life 1 Joh. 5.12 But every Beleever hath the Sonne From the nature of the grace of faith receiving of Jesus Christ as our Lord and Saviour being of the essence and form thereof as a natural principle of natural sense motion and action is natural life so a supernatural principle of supernatural sense motion and action is supernatural life But such a Principle is saving faith and each other saving grace No Life-lesse principle can enable the Soul to a Life-act it cannot be reasonably conceived how a Beleever as a Beleever should not be alive The summe is this text holds forth an Active-quickning Christ enlivening a dead passive Soul So from Scripture the Arguments follow First from the supernatural nature of the Habit of saving faith or of the habitual frame of the New Creature In receiving a supernatural Habit Theologi vocant habirum infusum per se quiaper se sua natusra postulat ita non alitèr fieri suarez Meraph Tom. post disp 44. sect 13 n. 6. or Principle the Soul is passive saving faith or the habitual frame of the New Creature is a supernatural Habit or Principle therefore in receiving saving faith or the habitual frame of the New Creature the Soul is passive Supernatural is that which exceeds the power of Nature and is received of the Soul by way of inspiration only as the gift of Prophecy or both by inspiration and infusion as the habits of grace such habits the Schools call Habits infused of themselves their very nature denying them to be otherwise attained either by acts or any created cause whereby they are distinguished from Habits infused by accident such as are the gifts of Tongues and the gifts of healing which though they are ordinarily acquired and gotten by acts of study and practise yet have sometime been infused as in the Apostles time In receiving that supernatural saving habit or principle before which the soul hath received no supernatural saving habit or principle the soul is passive But the grace of saving faith is such a supernatural saving habit or principle received before which the soul hath received no supernatural saving habit or principle Therefore in receiving the supernatural saving habit or principle of faith the soul is passive From the nature of the subject of saving faith which is wholly unable to confer any causative power towards the producing of such an effect In receiving a miraculous impression the soule is passive but the infusion of the habit of faith or principle of life in Vocation or Conversion is a miraculous impression Vocation is a miracle it being no lesse a miracle to raise a soul from spiritual than a body from natural death therefore in receiving the infused habit of faith the soul is passive notwithstanding God oft-times makes such use as he pleaseth of men in working a miraculous effect in them yet because in such works the whole efficiency alwayes flows from God and none from man Men are passive in receiving such miraculous effects or impressions Moses putting his hand into and plucking it out of his bosome Exod. 4.7 Naamans dipping himself seven times in Jordan 2 King 5.14 conferred no more power to the curing of their Leprosie nor the womans touching the hem of Christs garment Mark 5.28 29. to the healing of her issue of blood than if they had done nothing In receiving that saving power to do before which there is no such active saving power the soul is passive we cannot do any thing whilst we are but yet receiving power to do but in receiving the habit of faith we receive that saving power to do before which there is no such active saving-power Therefore in receiving the habit of faith the soul is passive Vocation is compared to Circumcision of the heart Deut. 30.6 to Creation to powring out of the Spirit so is the habit of faith there called Tit. 3.6 to quickning or making alive As therefore the person circumcised was passive in Circumcision the creature in its creation the subject quickned in its vivification and the subject into which precious water is powred is passive in respect of the water powred thereinto So the soul in Vocation which is all these spiritually as being that work wherein the heart is circumcised quickned hath inherent saving grace created in it and powred out into it by the Spirit must needs be passive The contrary tenet makes us in the creation of faith to be our own creators in part An assertion as full of pride as empty of reason it makes us in part authors of our faith a high degree of spiritual facrilege against the glory of Christ and grace of the Gospel Obj. 1. The Soul before and in receiving of grace is active in respect of the use of means therefore not meerly passive Sol. Passive is taken either absolutely for that which is simply passive and
Church For thy Maker is thy Husband the Lord of Hosts is his name and the Redeemer the holy one of Israel the God of the whole earth shal he be called Isa 54.5 Thou shalt no more be termed forsaken neither shall thy Land any more be termed desolate but thou shalt bee called Hephzi-bah and thy Land Beulah for the Lord delighteth in thee and thy Land shall be married Isa 62.4 The fourth is the state of glory And the glory which thou gavest me I have given them that they may be one even as we are one I in them and thou in me that they may be made perfect in one and that the world may know that thou hast sent me Joh. 17.22 23. Touching the bands 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Commissurae vocantur ea omnia quae nos Christo devinciunt ab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tango per has commissuras Christus tangit nos nos Christum tangimus see Exod 12.22 Heb. or tyes which hold the Head and Body together so as Christ and the Beleever doe thereby in this union touch one another for so the word turned Bands Col. 2.19 implieth we are to know that according as the third beings or tertiums differ whereinto Christ and a Beleever are united so the bands differ whereby they are united thus If Sameness of spirit be the third being then God in Christ giving his Spirit in a word of grace on the one part and the Soul receiving passively that Spirit of grace as an empty vessel receiveth oyl on the other part are the bands of union When the body mysticall is looked at as that third being then Christ in the gift of the grace of faith giving himselfe as our God actually is the band on his part and either the Souls receiving of Christ actually in its passive receipt of faith or actively by the act of faith is respectively the band on our part When we look at this union Christus suum consensum nobis efficacitèr patefacit suum Spiritum in corda nostra infundendo per hunc enim efficit ut sentiamus eum revera velle idque ex patris etiam voluntate nostrum esse sponsum eòque caput 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nostrum Zanch. in Eph. cap. 5. Th. 3. in the third being of a Spiritual Marriage-estate the consent of Christ manifested by his infusion of his Spirit is the band on his part and the act of faith drawn forth by the power of assisting grace whereby we receive and take Christ as our Husband is the band on our part Lastly If we consider this union in the third being of a state of glory Christ giving glory is the band on his part our receiving whether passively or actively may respectively bee looked at as the band on our part The just observation of these several kinds of Union may haply be of use to reconcile that tenet which affirmeth Union to be by the habit of faith with that tenet ordinarily held forth in the writing of the Orthodox affirming Union to be by the Spirit and Faith understanding by faith the act of faith The first kinde of union is by the Habit not by the Act the second may be looked at as being by both either Habit or Act the third is by the Act not by the Habit. That proposition of frequent use among Divines sc Union is by the Spirit and faith that is by the Spirit on Christs part and Faith on our part Zauch in Eph. 5. de unione quaest 4. is to be understood of the third kind of union Touching the manner of this Union wherein Christ and the Beleever are united we may not unprofitably consider it First negatively Secondly positively Negatively it is not essential such as is the union of the three Persons in one essence in God Nor personal such as is the union of the Divine and Human nature in one and that an increated person in Christ Not natural whether essential as is the union of the form with the matter or by Local contact i. e. natural touching one of another as water is united to the vessel or by mixture as water is united to Hony or by the coupling together of a common and special nature as the Genus is united to the Species or by Cohesion as when one part of the body cohereth with another or by Adhesion as when Pitch cleaveth to our hands or by Inhesion as an accident inhereth in the subject or any other whatsoever 't is not civil as is the union of many persons into one body Politique Secondly Positively 't is a Spiritual and a Mystical union therefore the whole into which these Members are united is called a Mystical body This Spiritual union in respect of the verity thereof is real in respect of the things united 't is substantial in respect of its way or manner 't is supernatural and secret in respect of the neernesse of it 't is close and intimate 'T is a true not an imaginary union 't is sayed to be real or substantial in respect of the things that are united viz. the substance of Christ and the substance of the Beleever In this union we doe not receive the species or likenesse of Christ as the understanding receiveth the species of the Object but not the Object it selfe not are we thereby made partakers of the Spirit of Christ alone and not of himselfe but we are made partakers of both the very person of Christ and the person of the Beleever are as we saw before united together as the person of the Husband and the person of the Wife notwithstanding Local distance are united together From the neernesse of the union between Christ and his Members the body Mystical is called by the name of Christ Christ is considered either Personally in himselfe or Collectively together with the Church which is his Body so both Head and Members are required to make one Christ that is Christ not Personal but Mystical in which latter sense the Scripture calleth the Head and Body taken together by the name of Christ 1 Cor. 12.12 For as the body is one and hath many members and all the members of that one body being many are one body so is Christ Gal. 3.16 And to thy seed which is Christ that is all his Mystical body Hence the sufferings of Paul and of other Beleevers which we must yet remember were edificatory not satisfactory in way of edification not in way of satisfaction are called the sufferings of Christ Col. 1.24 The end of union is an everlasting and satisfactory communion 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nempe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Of the order of Union 1 Cor. 1.9 to the glory of God in Christ the good of the whole Mystical body and our own happinesse Union in order of nature though not in order of time followeth Vocation which appeareth by the considering of a being or essence Oneness and Union distinctly A being or essence is the thing
sand which is by the Sea shore 1 King 4.29 yet Solomons heart compared with Adams innocency or his own Soul now in glory was but a narrow heart Between Pauls Soul in the body and in glory there is as great a disproportion as between a childe and Solomon 1 Cor. 13.11 Prop. 2. The Soul separated dependeth not upon the Body in respect of its operations It dependeth not upon the body for the knowledge either of immaterial or material objects both being present to the Soul either by the essence of things themselves or by their intelligible species or by the Divine essence supplying all species Three things are required to the operation of the understanding 1. An intelligent faculty 2. Light to illustrate the understanding 3 The presence of the object with the understanding whatsoever is understood must be united with and touch the understanding which is done either by the eminent presence of things in the Divine Essence Zanch. de operibus Dei part 3. l. 2. c. 2 so the soul understands in glory or by the formal presence of the very things so the Angels understand themselves and so we as some conceive see the Light or by the similitude or image of the thing commonly called a Species so we understand intelligible objects in this Life The soul whilst it is in the body dependeth not upon any corporcal organ phantasie inward or outward sense as an instrument whereby it understands but as an instrument to represent the object to be understood which representative faculty of the phantasie being performed and that in a more eminent manner either by the Divine Essence it self supplying those Species or by way of infusion of them at or immediately upon the instant of its separation after the manner of the concreated Species of things in Angels or by occasional abstraction of them from objects The soul separated remaineth free to its operations without the use of the body Angels understand material and immaterial objects Angeli cognoscunt materialia per hoc quod sunt in iis per suas spocies intelligibiles The par 1. q. 57. art 1. Piscat praesatin Ezech. by the SPECIES or that which answereth the species of such objects without Corporeal organs In an extasie rapture or trance of which some reckon about five thirty in the Scripture which are spiritual Visions of the soul during that space retiring as it were out of the body or at the least not making any use of the body therein so far is the soul from not understanding at all or from not understanding so well as that it then understandeth best in this life Paul is taken into the third Heaven heareth unspeakable words which it is not lawful for a man to utter all which we must needs grant might be done without corporeal organs he himself telling us once and again That whether it was in the body or out of the body he could not tell 2 Cor. 12.2 3. Conimb de de anima l. 3. c. 8. q. 8. art 2. Tollet q. 21. Immaterial Objects may be understood by the soul in the body without corporeal organs or sensible species The soul in its separation from the body undergoeth a privative not a positive change It suffereth a change in respect of its information of the body and operations by the instruments of the body It informed the body before but not now It exerciseth the same operations now that it exercised before though not in the same manner then with but now without the body In the state of glory Tho. 2.2 qu. 175. art 4. Conim de anima l. 3. c. 8. qu. 8 art 3. the soul is free to contemplate materiall objects either in themselves by intelligible and sensible species according to the use of corporeal organs glorified or according to their representation in the Divine Essence As grace doth not destroy but help so glory doth not destroy but perfect nature The soul glorified and reunited to the body at its pleasure useth but dependeth not upon the phantasie for the understanding of material objects Prop. 3. The condition of the body in the state of death prejudiceth not the blessednesse of the soul The soul may be blessed though the body be dead We look too much upon the dead carkass and too little upon the living soul Christs body in the grave interrupts not the happinesse of his soul in Paradise As the body in the grave doth neither good nor evil so it feeleth neither good nor evil It is as if it were not Joseph is not Ger. 42.36 The bodies of the Saints at death cease for ever from sin and from all suffering that is felt there is neither sin nor tear in the grave And from suffering it self at the Resurrection The body is neither sensible of the want of the soul nor doth the soul feel any misse of the body The body is neither sensible of good or evill concerning it self nor concerning the soul the soul though it be not touched with any evill yet it is affected with good concerning the body whilst it looks at it as sown 1 Cor. 15.43 As at rest Isa 57.2 As fallen a sleep 1 Cor. 15.6 As in Covenant with Christ Matth. 22.32 all which phrases are proper to the bodies of the Saints The soul hath no grievance for the absence of the body yet it hath contentation in its Rest and a glad expectation of its future meeting Such is the condition of the body in the grave which yet we must so mind as not forgetting the soul in glory The body is at rest the soul is in blessednesse that the one is at rest hindreth not the blessednesse of the other the body is asleep but the soul putteth forth its perfect operations The body is asleep in the custody of Jesus 1 Cor. 15.18 The soul beholds the face of Jesus Jacobs sleeping body troubleth not his communion with Christ and his Angels Gen. 28. Pauls soul in the third heavens misseth not his body though as may be supposed for the time soul-lesse upon earth 2 Cor. 12.2 The condition of the soul dissolved in the Lord is as it were a blessed rapture lasting from our dissolution to our resurrection though the grave be a land of darkness as darkness it self and of the shadow of death without any order where the Light is as darkness Job 10.22 yet is not that long-home of the body so dark and disorderly as the everlasting home of the soul is light and beautiful The godly soul prepared should be no more afraid of death in regard of the body than of its fall into a kindly sleep after weary labour and as glad of dissolution in respect of it self as of going to be with Christ which is far better Phil. 1.23 Prop. 4. The soul from the instant of its dissolution is freed from all imperfections of sin sorrow and infirmity God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes Rev. 7.17 The spirits of just men
Being of himself and also his giving Being to all creatures and to his Word both Promises and Threatenings 2. Iah Psal 68.4 signifying that God is an absolute Being of himself and gives Being to all creatures 3. Ehjeh asher Ehjeh Exod. 3.14 I am that I am or I will be that I will be It signifieth Gods eternal and unchangeable Being in himself and that he is now and will be for ever that which he was before to Abraham Isaac and Iacob To this Name Christ alludeth Iohn 8.58 Before Abraham was I am 4. El Isai 9.6 signifying that God hath all Power in himself and giveth to all creatures the power which they have 5. Eloah Psal 18.32 of the same signification 6. Elohim Gen. 1.26 signifying that he is the Object of divine Worship he that alone hath power to make happy and miserable it is a word of the plural number aptly pointing us unto a plurality in the divine Essence and so may note the mystery of the Trinity or three Persons of the divine Essence 7. Adonai Psal 2.4 Lord it is also of the plural number and signifieth the absolute Lordship of God also that God sustaineth and upholdeth all things and so holdeth forth the proof of his Providence 8. Shaddai Gen. 17.1 signifying the Alsufficiency of God or that God is he who is alsufficient wanting nothing and able to provide for all 9. Iehovah Tsebaoth Lord of Hoasts who as is well observed hath two general Troops as his Horse and Foot the upper and the lower Troop or the creatures above and beneath already prest and ordered waiting for the word to do him service 10. Ghnel-jon Psal 9.2 translated the most High signifying that God in his Being and Glory is far above all creatures The first three come from Being Pasor in voce 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The second three from Power The third three from Government The last is from Eminence In the New Testament two Names are more especially observable Theos Mat. 4.7 God signifying a Being that is to be feared of all which disposeth of all things and beholdeth all things Kurios Col. 4.1 Lord or Master signifying that God is the only Lord and hath absolute power over all creatures The divine Attributes are certain essential Properties which God is pleased in Scripture to ascribe or attribute unto himself they are also called the Perfections of God or divine Predications or Titles They are not distinguished from the Essence really but notionally that is they are not distinguished at all in God but only to us-ward according to our manner of conceiving All the Attributes in God are one and the same Perfection It is better said of God that he is his Attributes then that he hath Attributes The Attributes are not distinguished in God but in our manner of understanding Est inadequatus conceptus sed non falsus See Weemse Of the Image of God in man cap. 13. who being unable to comprehend that meer act at once do conceive thereof after the manner of many acts The Sun when it is perpendicular had it an eye would behold all that at once which we by reason of the inadequateness and unproportionableness of our sight are necessitated to view by parts In God all things are one and the same according to the Nature of God though out of God many and divers according to their own proper and created nature The same heat in the Sun produceth divers effects according to the various disposition of the objects Hardness in Clay softness in Wax Life in Insects and Plants c. The same lines are one in the Center but distinguished and multiplyed in the Circumference Water that is the same in the Sea out of the Sea is variously and diversly qualified sweet bitter Sulphureous c. The matter in the Liver is the same but the four humors of Blood Choller Melancholy and Flegm that proceed from thence are very divers The Soul which is one and the same produceth very differing effects as appears in the operations of the understanding will and affections The sum is The Attributes as was said before are not distinguished in God that is from the divine Essence or one from another really but only notionally or virtually in our conception and in their objects in respect of the various effects thereupon For every and all the Attributes are the divine Essence it self according to that received Proposition Fenner Theol lib. 1. c. 3. Alsted Theol. sect 3. loc 2. Zanch. de Nat. Dei lib. 2. cap. 5. qu. 2. Whatsoever is in God is God And this is the reason why some well describe the Attributes from the Essence of God which manner of description besides many useful notions clearly intimated thereby doth in the describing of the Relative Attributes principle and fortifie the understanding against that perilous Tenet of Arminianism concerning the Decree passing upon good or bad foreseen with the evil consequences following thereupon The divine Attributes though they can neither exactly be numbered or distributed yet for our better understanding we may consider of them as Negative Relative Positive Negative Attributes are such as remove from God all imperfection Negative Attributes by these we help our understanding in our meditation of God by way of Negation The more principal of them are in number five viz. Simplicity Eternity Immensity Immutability Infiniteness to which or some of which any other of like nature may conveniently be referred Simplicity is God one meer and perfect act without all composition God calleth his Name I am Exod. 3.14 that is meer Essence wherein is nothing past nor to come Because spirits are immixt in respect of bodies to shew that he is not compounded he saith he is a Spirit Iohn 4.24 When we say that God is a meer and perfect Act the meaning is that God is a Cause without any Cause a Being that is not from any Being not compounded of an Act by which he is and Possibility by which he might not have been or may not be of whom it never could nor can be said that any thing was to be in him which was not or cannot be that is That God is a pure and simple Act without all composition is evident Because of his Perfection all composition supposeth imperfection because he is the first Being Were there any composition in God it would follow there were first and second in God Something in God that were not first or that there were more first Beings Because God is a Being of absolute necessity Deus est ens necesse esse Smising de Deo uno tr 2. disp 2. n. 49. Composition implyeth either that there must be more Beings of absolute necessity or that there is something in God that may not be Composition supposeth Succession i. e. something past or to come in God contrary to his Name I am Nay it supposeth that not-being is not repugnant to the Nature of God Where there is Composition
nothing of any causal vertue towards the working thereof Contrary to the Doctrine of the Arminians teaching that Christ and Free-will are partial causes of Conversion No otherwise than as a Boy drawing of the ship with his father is a cause of the motion thereof whence according unto them like as Free-will without the grace of Christ is insufficient so the grace of Christ without the co-working of Free-will sufficeth not to the working of the grace of faith in the soul A Teret empty of Reason and full of pride making us in part our own Creators in respect of saving grace the most excellent creature a Tenet repugnant to the grace of the Gospel making us sharers with Christ in the work of Vocation the glory of the alone working whereof by vertue of his special grace is one of the Crown-Jewels of the Lord Jesus a Tenet fundamentally perillous unto souls directly tending to make them rest in a false Conversion and so without a new work fall short for ever of falvation Vocation Peter Mart. in Rom. 7. v. 4 Regeneratio fit in instanti Ames coron art 4. c. 4. Polon Syntag. Conversion or Regeneration is wrought in an instant God in saying Live makes alive In this respect it is in the first as it shall be in the second Resurrection In a moment in the twinkling of an eye whilst God speaks the word the dead shall rise Because Vocation or the infusion of Life is the introduction of a form which is done in an instant The form consists in an indivisibility it is an indivisible thing t is not infused successively Et quemadmodum in Christum credere non est motus successivus sed instantaneus ita insitio nostra in Christum non est motus successivus sed mutatio instantanea Twiss vind grat l. 3. errat 8. Sect. 1. Spanhem de grat vin resp ad exot. 28. n. 4. or by parts as natural life so spiritual life consists in an indivisibility i. e. it hath its being all at once and is uncapable of division into parts Because Vocation inferreth an essential change in the subject There is a change in a subject or of a subject change in a subject is either of quantity or quality this is called an accidental change Change of a subject is an essential change which in natural things is called Generation in spiritual Regeneration Now that every essential change whether Physical i. e. natural or spiritual is in a moment is thus evident Generation is taken improperly for the way and preparation or previous alteration which tendeth to the essence i. e. the union of the form with the matter so we say the Infant in the womb is generating some certain months space this is an accidental change or properly for the essential change viz. the introduction of the form so the Infant is generated in a moment after that the matter is now sufficiently altered and prepared to receive the form An essential mutation that is the mutation or change of the subject both in Nature and Divinity is wrought in an instant because it is rather the determination of a motion than the motion it self As Generation properly taken is a passive mutation of a natural body whence from the union of the form with the matter the body beginneth to be that which it was not So Regeneration is a passive mutation of an elect soul whence by reason of the union of grace with the soul the person beginneth to be that which he was not In that Generation is the acquiring of a new and corruption is the laying down of an old form therefore generation and corruption cannot be effected divisibly and successively or gradually otherwise it would follow that in the same thing and in the same instant there were either no form or two forms i. e. that some one thing were nothing or two things In the moment of Conversion God works that blessed work which shall never be undone that is wrought in an instant which shall remain for ever CHAP. XIII Of the Vnion of the Belcever with Christ FOr the better proceeding herein let us 1 Shew out of the Scripture That there is an Union between Christ and the Beleever 2 Consider what this Union is 3 The order of Union 4 The necessity of Union in order to Communion 5 The order of the dependence of Communion upon Union 6 The excellency of this Communion Of all other Unions three are most eminent the Union of the three Persons in one Essence this is the Mystery of all mysteries The Union of the two Natures in one person in Christ this is a great mystery 1 Tim. 3.15 The Union of a Beleever with Christ and in him with God This is a Mystery Eph. 5.32 The Union of the Mediator with the Father who as God is one with him both in respect of Essence I and my Father are one Joh. 10.30 and in respect of will Whatsoever the Father doth that doth the Son likewise Joh. 5.19 And as man is one with him in respect of their agreement as concerning the thing willed Not as I will but as thou will Mat. 26.39 is the example and pattern of Beleevers Union with Christ and in him one with other Joh. 17.11 That they may be one as we are one and verse 21. that they may all be one as thou Father artin me and I in thee that they also may be one in us Of this mystical Union between Christ and beleevers we read often in the Scripture sometime in proper and plain termes That they may be one as we are Joh. 17.11 He that is joyned to the Lord is one Spirit 1 Cor. 6.17 Sometimes in elegant and lively Metaphors first of a Vine and branches Joh. 15.1 2. I am the true Vine and my Father is the Husbandman Every branch c. 2 Of Implantation Rom. 6.5 For if we have been planted together in the likenesse of his death we shall be also in the likenesse of his resurrection Christ here is represented under the similitude of a Plant for as a Plant that is set into the earth seemeth to lye dead and is unmoveable for a time but after springs up and flourisheth so as other Plants sprout forth grow up and are nourished thereby as we see in Ivie and Misselto So Christs body lay dead in the grave for a while but afterward sprung up and re-flourished in his Resurrection as that Plant of renown with whom we being planted together grow up by his grace 3 Of Ingrafting Rom. 11.17 19 23 24. where Christ is tacitly compared unto the Stock the beleever unto the Graft or Cyon for notwithstanding Abraham be the instrumental root good Olive tree and stock there expresly spoken of in whom his seed that is all beleevers for he is called the Father of all that beleeve Rom. 4.11.16 both the Nation of the Jewes first then the Gentiles and then the Jewes againe for the promise sake made unto him Gen.
17.7 I will be the God of thee and of thy seed after thee are sanctified and accordingly in due time actually ingrafted into him Beleevers in profession but not really so only externally real beleevers both externally and internally yet Christ is not there excluded whom we are to look at as the Root good Olive and Stock principally and effectually into which Abraham himselfe with all other Beleevers are ingrafted 4 Of incorporation into one mystical body whereof Christ is the Head Beleevers are the Members 1 Cor. 12.12 13. 5 Of a Spiritual conjugal estate wherein Christ is the Husband Beleevers are his Spouse Eph. 5.32 Lastly Of a Building wherein Christ is compared to the foundation or corner Stone Beleevers to a House or living Stones built or layed thereupon Matth. 7.25 and 16.18 1 Pet. 2.4 5. Union is the conjunction of the Person of Christ What Union is and the Person of the Beleever into one third being whence ariseth an everlasting relation and answerable communion of Head and Members between Christ and the Beleever for ever As in Marriage the type of this Union the consent of Parents and Parties is the efficient cause So here the will of God the Father the will of Christ and the voluntary consent of the Beleever caused by the operation of the Spirit are the efficient cause of this Marriage God the Father from all eternity hath willed the Incarnation and Marriage of his Son unto the Elect. The will of Christ is conformable unto the will of his Father Hos 2.19 20. The Elect by beleeving give their consent to be married unto Christ The Ministers of the Gospel are the instrumentall cause Joh. 3.29.2 Cor. 11.2 The matter of this union is the whole person of Christ on the one part and the whole person of the Beleever on the other part Mark it diligently that the whole person of Christ and the whole person of the Beleever are united together The whole Person of Christ is united unto the Beleever else we were not united unto Christ for neither the Divine nor Human nature considered apart is Christ Christ is God-man in one person Christ is not our Head as God alone nor as Man alone but as God-man Secondly Deitas est fons unde fluunt omnia bona vita salus Humanitas est caualis per quem ad nos derivantur omnia haec bona It would else follow that our union would be unprofitable the Humanity profits nothing without the Divinity it is the Spirit that quick neth the flesh profiteth nothing Joh. 6.63 the Divinity wil profit nothing without the Humanity Joh. 6.53 Then sayed Jesus unto them Verily verily I say unto you except yee eat the flesh of the Sonne of Man and drink his blood yee have no life in you The Divinity is the fountaine from which all good things flow the Humanity is the chanel by which all good things are derived unto the Elect. As the whole Person of Christ is united unto the Beleever so the whole person of the Beleever is united unto Christ we are not only one with Christ in respect of our Souls 1 Cor. 6.17 but we are also one with Christ in respect of our bodies For we are members of his Body of his flesh and of his bones Eph. 5.30 One flesh If man and wife by vertue of their Marriage union which is but the Type become one flesh then Christ and the Beleever by vertue of their Spiritual union which is the Antitype must needs be one flesh vers 31. our person being in the same Mystical body with his person our flesh must needs be in the same Mystical body with his flesh where yet we must observe that this conjunction of our flesh with the flesh of Christ is not Corporal but Spiritual and to be understood of our flesh not simply but sanctified As our flesh hath spiritual Communion with the flesh of Christ in the Sacrament so our flesh hath union with the flesh of Christ in regeneration Such as is our Communion such is our Union but our commun on is from the whole person of Christ to the whole person of the Beleever therefore our union is between the whole person of Christ and the whole person of the Beleever Neither is our Soul alone joyned with the Soul of Christ alone Neque anima nostra sola cum sola Christi anima neque caro nostra sola cum sola Christi carne sed tota cujusque fidelis persona cum tota Christi persona verè conjungitur Zanchi Imo tota cujusque fidelis persona anima corpore cum tota per sona Christi verè conjungitur Buc. loc 48. quest 110. nor is our flesh alone joyned with the flesh of Christ alone but the whole person of every Beleever is joyned with the whole person of Christ See the Theses of Zanchy upon Eph. 5.32 treating largely and profitably of this subject See Bucanus also to the same purpose the whole person of every Beleever Soul and Body is truly conjoyned with the whole person of Christ The form of this union is the actual conjoyning of the person of Christ and the person of the Beleever in some third being Of the form of Union by the bands on either part For the better understanding the form of this union three things are to be attended 1. That third being or thing wherein Christ and the Beleever are united 2. The bands on Christs part and on the Beleevers by which they are united 3. The manner of this union Concerning the third being or thing which for readinesse sake in this discourse may be called a tertium wherein Christ and a Beleever are united it being premised and remembred that all union is of two ones or more into a third one arising out of and distinguished from both we are carefully to observe that the Scripture mentions divers Tertiums or third ones whence also so many kinds of union may not unprofitably be collected wherein Christ and the Beleever are united foure whereof are these The first Tertium or third being wherein Christ and the Beleever are united is Sameness of spirit but he that is joyned to the Lord is one spirit the created grace which is in the Beleever is the same in kinde with the created grace that is in the Manhood of Christ Hereby know we that we dwell in him and he in us because he hath given us of his Spirit 1 Joh. 4.13 Now if any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his Rom. 8.9 Partakers of the divine nature 2 Pet. 1.4 The second is One Mysticall body For as the body is one and hath many members and all the members of that one body being many are one body so is Christ For by one Spirit we are all baptized into one body 1 Cor. 12.12 13. The third is the Spiritual Marriage estate Eph. 5.32 This is a great Mysterie but I speake concerning Christ and the
are made perfect Heb. 12.23 The soul shall be in a better estate than it was when it first came from God being now in Christ and having attained perfection in him both in respect of Kind and Degrees Adams soul in Christ is a more excellent spirit than it either was or was capable of being under the first Covenant the Angels in Christ are more blessed than they had been in their first blessed estate without Christ The soul from the moment of its dissolution untill the Resurrection is like to the soul of Christ in Paradise whilst his body lay in the Grave The place of the Blessed is usually known by the name of the third Heaven Consider 4. Of the Adjuncts of blessednesse where first of the place The third Heaven is a simple and shining body created immediately of God to be the Throne of his special presence and of the gracious manifestation of his perfections and the habitation of the Blessed both Angels and Men. The whole Region of the Air unto the Moon is in Scripture called the first Heaven from the Moon to the highest Stats inclusively the second Heaven That which is above these the place of happiness the third Heaven 2 Cor. 12.2 This third Heaven is also called A house not made with hands 2 Cor. 5. A City whose builder and maker is God Heb. 11.10 The City of the living God Heb. 12.22 Christs Fathers house Joh. 14.2 That better and heavenly Country of the Saints Heb. 11.13 14. Paradise Luke 23.43 Heaven the Heaven of heavens 1 King 8.27 The world to come The School-men call it Empyreum from its splendor and shining brightness this third Heaven we have only from the Scripture Aristotle was ignorant therof it being invisible It s place is far above all visible Heavens Eph. 4.10 Christ ascending thereinto Caelo beatorum proprie competit nomen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quia terminus est sinis ultimus supre nusque mundi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 est quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is said to be made higher than the heavens Heb. 7.25 Hence it is called the third Heaven and the Greek word turned Heaven intends such a place as is the supreme term and bounds of this present world It is probably thought to be created the first day there being no inconvenience to include the third Heaven in those Heavens mentioned Gen. 1.1 In the beginning God created the Heaven and the Earth Also because the Angels whose habitation is the third Heaven were created the first day Job 38.6 7. It was created immediately of God not of any pre-existing principle and as it is for a more excellent use so doth it consist of more excellent matter distinguished from and excelling of the matter of the other Heavens Gemmes Metals precious Stones or what ever material creature in this visible world It excelleth the quintessence of the Chymists namely that spirit which they extract from Herbs and Metals for those spirits though never so subtile yet are elementary and mixed bodies It excelleth the quintessence of the Philosophers who understand thereby a material substance diverse from the matter of the four Elements whereby all things are compounded In which sense some learned men after Aristotle will have these visible heavens to be quintessential which notwithstanding yet the third heavens are more subtile and pure than they all being not onely immixed Keck Phys● l. 2. c. 1. but invisible and having its natural place above all these bodies and not descending It is incorruptible because having no principle out of which according to order of nature it did arise there is no principle into which according to the order of nature it can be returned It is uncapable of a Physical change into any other body It is impassible by any creature and as by nature its Maker hath freed it from corruption so by a superadded act of his good pleasure he hath freed it from annihilation It is an house not maile with hands eternal in the Heavens 2 Cor. 5.1 It is clear and shining 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 totus lucidus The City hath no need of the Sun or Moon to shine in it it is all as a most glorious Sun and therefore called by the Learned as was intimated before Empyreum not from its heat but from its resplendence and most pleasant light All the lustre and shining beauty in these visible Heavens Gems Metals precious Stones c. could it be united into one object were not to be compared to it As the place of the damned is the place of the greatest and most grievous darknesse So the place of the blessed is a place of the greatest and most pleasant light It is spacious containing in it all invisible and visible creatures and consequently this visible world This is the great City of the great King He measured with the reed twelve thousand furlongs the length and the breadth and the height of it are equall Rev. 21.16 It is the Court of God and Christ wherein are habitations for innumerable company of Angels and for the spiritual seed of Abraham which are as the sand of the Sea-shore which is innumerable In my Fathers house there are many Mansions if it were not so I would have told you it Joh. 14.2 As it is said of Topheth though in a contrary sense It is large and deep for the King it is prepared So may it be said of Heaven It is large and high for the blessed it is prepared It is most pleasant free from all evil and full of all good a proportionable object to glorified eyes and a suitable place to glorified bodies The light of it is fitly compared to the light of a Jasper stone Rev. 21.11 which is not darkned by clouds neither doth hurt our eyes but the more we look on it the more it pleaseth us neither doth it leave shining when the Sun shineth nor doth the brightnesse of it go out at any time Solomons Temple was a magnificent building for which Solomons expence excepted David prepared in silver and gold seven hundred millions 1 Chron. 22.14 besides brasse iron without weight about which were occupied seventeen thousand Labourers thirteen thousand and three hundred Over-seers Solomons and Hyrams Builders 1 King 5. together with Hyram and the cunning Artificers of David and Solomon I have sent unto thee a cunning man c. skilful to work in gold and in silver in brasse and in iron in stone and in timber and purple in blew and in fine linnen and crimson also to grave any manner of graving and to find out every device which shall be put to him with thy cunning-men and with the cunning-men of my Lord David thy Father 2 Chron. 2.14 All which help notwithstanding the Temple was seven yeers in building 1 King 6.38 The house which I build is great for the house which I am about to build is wonderful great 2 Chron.
same Mystical Body or the manner of their meeting together sweetned with more affecting ingredients and circumstances than the meeting of Jacob Joseph and Benjamin together with their ability unity complacency c. and all this mixed with the immediate presence of Christ If Peter but for a smal time seeing and hearing the faces and discourse of Christ Moses and Elias breaks out It is good for us to be here much more cause is there for them so to doe being not only Spectators and Auditors but also Interlocutors with them and the residue of this ful and blessed Society and that for ever As the communion of the Sanits in this life is a great part of our comfort on earth so the communion of the Saints in glory is no little part of the joys of Heaven The duration of this Blessednesse is for ever 3. The Duration of all Duration is Either increated viz. eternity properly so called this is the duration of God Or created viz. eviternity the duration of the Blessed in glory Or time the duration of the Creature in this world Between Eternity Eviternity and Time some who have more accurately considered the natures thereof distinguish thus Eternity is without beginning without end without succession Eviternity is without end but not without beginning and though without succession in respect of the duration of their Persons yet not without succession in respect of their operations and other accidents Time hath both a beginning succession and end In Eternity all is present nothing past nor to come In Eviternity in respect of the duration of their Persons there is nothing past but in other respects there is both past and to come that is the instant that was in some respect passeth not away but alwayes remaineth but in other respects there are instants to be which are not yet come In Time there is both past present and to come Eternity is a Duration consisting of an eternal Now without beginning or ending Eviternity is a Duration having a continuing Now with a beginning but without an ending Time is a successive Duration having a beginning and ending without any remaining Now. The Body is not so miserable under the Curse Consid 5. Of the condition of the Body after the Resurrection as it is blessed in the Promise as in the state of Corruption it is abased lower than all created Bodies so in the state of glory it is exalted higher than all other Bodies Christs excepted The excellency of the glorified Body consists especially in two things 1 In that we shal see Christ as he is Man with these eyes 2 In certain inherent Caelestial qualities That we shal see Christ as he is Man with these eyes Job manifestly testifieth For I know that my Redeemer liveth and that he shall stand at the latter day upon the earth and though after my skin worms destroy this body yet in my flesh shall I see God whom I shall see for my self and mine eyes shall behold him and not another cap. 19.25 26 27. The sight of Christ as Man is the next object unto the Beatifical Vision it self as the created grace which the Man-hood received was out of measure Joh. 3.34 yet not simply for being a creature it is bounded but respectively in regard of us we being unable to measure it so the glory of the Manhood is out of measure The Humanity of Christ in respect of its personal union farre exceeds all the glory of Angels and glorified Souls The glory of the Man-hood is as much as the Creature is capable of the glory of the Body is derived both from the Divinity and the glory of his Soul The fulness of the God-head dwelling in him bodily doth as it were radiate through his body hence there must needs arise great joy unto the beholder both from the eminency of and our interest in this object Christ in glory and Christ in glory ours as much of the Creator as is possibly visible in the nature of man wil be to be seen in Christ as much contentation as the Creature can be made partaker of by the sight of any one visible object wil be the portion of the beholders of Christ as he is Man The inherent caelestial qualities of the Body at the Resurrection are principally four viz. 1 Impassibility called Incorruption Clari Subtiles Agiles Impassibilesque omnes quadruplici pollebunt dote Beati Estius Sent. lib. 4. dist 44. Vide Scot. Richard c. in lib. 4. d. 49. 1 Cor. 15.42 43. 2 Clarity called Glory 1 Cor. 15.42 43. 3 Agility called Power 1 Cor. 15.42 43. 4 Subtilty called A Spiritual body 1 Cor. 15.42 43. Impassibilitie doth not only exclude Corruption for the bodies of the Damned cannot dye but it freeth the body from all hurtful passions Dos Impassibilitatis either of grievance or infirmity Rev. 21.4 As it was in an extraordinary manner with the bodies of the three Children in the Babylonish Furnace for a time so shall it be with the bodies of the Saints for ever the Fire hath no power upon their bodies neither can the smel of fire passe upon them neither heat nor cold can trouble them nor the Sword pierce them Darts are not counted so much as stubble they laugh at the shaking of the Speare Dos Claritates Glory is a shining brightnesse a resplendent lightsomness or a Caelestial sparkling splendor of the Body whereby it may be thought to exceed all the beauty and splendor of Gems Pearls Heavens Sun Moon and Stars yea even of the Heaven of Heavens though all were put together The third Heavens though exceeding all inferiour Creatures as we saw before are but the place of these Bodies which shall be like unto his glorious Body Philip. 3.21 The joy of the Spirit shineth in the countenance no wonder if the faces of those shine whose spirits are filled with joy by beholding the face of God the Sun radiates and shews it self thorough the Window the Fire sends forth a bright lustre thorough Chrystal Stephens Face in this life was seen as it were the face of an Angel Act. 6.15 behold how Moses his face shone upon a little speech with God in the Mount what then may be concluded from the perpetual and perfect vision of him so as Aaron and all the Children of Israel were afraid to come nigh him Exod. 34.30 but Then shall the righteous shine forth as the Sun in the Kingdome of their Father he that hath cars to hear let him hear Mat. 13.43 not that they shal not out-shine the Sun but because there is no more shining body visible to us therefore are the Bodies of the Saints in glory compared thereunto When Christ upon the Mount put on the apparition of that glory for a little time which now he wears for ever Peter and James and John were unable to bear the sight of that transfiguration and of Moses and Elias appearing with him in glory Mat.