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

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that euer Christ appointed a Crucifixe to bee a signe of his presence or that God willeth their Images to bee signes of his presence Thirdly the Chaire of Estate is a signe only in the Kings absence for himselfe being present the ciuill worship is performed to himselfe but Christ is neuer absent from his Church and yet in his presence they set vp an Image to remember him by Thus that Church being an open Idolater must not bee ioyned with for she is not ioyned to Christ any longer but is a professed harlot neither i● it so indifferēt as some think to finde saluation there as well as by our Religion The fifth ground is Matth. 4.10 Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him only shalt thou serue That this is a chiefe ground needes no proofe and therefore wee will consider first the meaning secondly the aduersaries against whom wee must contend To know the meaning the words going before will affoord vs some direction wherein Satan hauing moued Christ to fall downe and worship him with bodily worship only and requiring not the maine worship due to God but a little bowing of the bodie betokening that he was the disposer of the kingdomes of the world this Christ denieth him with this reason ratified by Scripture that it is a worship and seruice proper to God and to bee tendred to him onely Secondly the words themselues are to bee weighed By worship is properly signified bodily worship in a bodily gesture the meaning then is thou shalt with thy bodie adore the Lord for so it is sutable to Satans demaund The word serue signifieth all worship due to God both inward and outward Only This word appertaineth to both the members and so to the whole sentence for else there should bee no direct deniall of Satans temptation requiring onely the former and not the latter But some will say we may serue men lawfully how then is seruice proper to God only There be two kindes of worship religious and ciuill Religious is an action or actions of reuerence and subiection whereby a man doth acknowledge the Godhead it self or the properties thereof either in God himselfe truly or in the creature falsely These properties of God are first to bee an absolute Lord. Secondly to bee Almightie Thirdly to be present in al places at all times Fourthly to heare all men in all places at all times Fiftly to know all things past present and to come yea and the hearts of men Sixtly to be giuer of all good things and the preuenter of all euill Now any action of reuerence in signification of any of these properties is a religious worship the very intent of the minde in religious worship being to ascribe either Godhead or diuine properties to the thing worshipped Ciuill or politique worship is when men performe actions of reuerence and subiection to others as acknowledging them to bee preferred aboue themselues in gifts or authoritie Thus bowing of the bodie is sometime religious when it is done to God in acknowledging his properties and sometime ciuil performed to a man in respect of his eminency in gifts or gouernment But these words of Christ are meant only of the former and not of the latter which belongs vnto man This ground thus truly conceiued affoordeth vs these two maine points of Religion first that God is to be worshipped with religious worship Secondly that all religious worship is proper to God and due to him alone Now religious worship is two-fold first inward standing in two things faith and inward obedience Secondly outward when this inward worship is outwardly testified consisting of three principall parts first in preaching hearing and reading the word secondly in receiuing the two Sacraments thirdly in prayer and thanksgiuing publike and priuate The Aduersaries hereof are the Papists who pretend the Catholike Religion but indeed ouerthrow it in deprauing the outward worshippe of God wherein the inward is testified The first part whereof standing in the preaching hearing and reading of the word they depraue first by mingling the pure word of God with mans word and writings and authorising bookes Apocryphall as Canonicall Scripture Secondly by making vnwritten Traditions Apostolicall and Ecclesiasticall as they say of equall authoritie with the Scripture Thirdly in that they teach in their Catechismes that the worship of God doth stand in obeying the Commandements of the Church as wel as the Commandements of God themselues and are necessarily to be practised vnto saluation so they worship God in vain Mat. 15.9 Fourthly in that they allow no Bible to be ●uthenticall but onely the Latin translation of Iere●ie renouncing both the Hebrew and Greeke fountaines and ye● learned Papists confesse that their Latin text i● corrupted and that therefore the true sense is to bee fetched from the Popes determination and from Councels and no other sense to be admitted Fiftly in that they make Images Lay mens bookes and teachers and debarre the people of the Scriptures publikely and priuately in the vulgar tongue and suffer it only to be read by them and vnto them in the Latin tongue vnknowne vnto them The second part of outward worship standing in administration of Sacraments they likewise corrupt and abolish for howsoeuer Baptisme is preserued for the substance of it in the Romish Church which as a lanterne carrieth the light it retaineth not for it owne but for the hidden Churches sake within it yet haue they abolished the Lords Supper for the substance of it first of a Sacrament they haue made it● reall sacrifice Secondly they haue turned the Communion into a priuate Masse where the Priest alone receiueth all and the people nothing Thirdly although in a Sacrament the●e must bee a distinction between the signe and the thing signified yet they make none but ouerthrow all such signification of the signes by their transubstantiation Fourthly they haue turned the bodie of Christ into a breaden God which they carrie about in boxes and worship which is as vilde an idolatrie as euer was among the Heathen not inferiour to the worshipping of Cats and Buls as gods among the Egyptians Fiftly they haue added to Christs Institution fiue Sacraments viz. Penance Confirmation Orders Matrimonie and annoynting But indeede Baptisme is a Sacrament of Penance the Lords Supper of Confirmation and further are they deceiued in the other The third part of outward worship concerneth Prayer and thankesgiuing this they ouerthrow likewise first they mocke God in praying in an vnknowne tongue not knowing what they aske much lesse seriously addressing themselues vnto the dutie which euen earthly Kings would disdaine Secondly in prayer must bee brought sense of want and contrition of heart this they cannot bring who are taught that they merit by prayer Thirdly prayer must be made in particular faith but this they make presumption Fourthly they allow praying to creatures the mediation of Saints and so denie the very substance of prayer which is to make
First they say Iude calleth himselfe a seruant of Iesus Christ and not an Apostle but all the new Testament was penned or approued by some Apostle This hindreth not but that he was one of the Apostles who also called themselues seruāts of Iesus Christ as Paul Rom. 1.1 and Peter 2. Pet. 1.1 Secondly by this reason the Epistles to the Philip. and Philemon as also of Iames Iohn c. might be reiected Thirdly he calleth himselfe as much as an Apostle Iude writeth of such things as the Apostles themselues had formerly foretolde vers 17. Therefore hee was no Apostle Iude liued after the Apostles Paul and Peter who with Iohn were the last of the Apostles and liuing after their decease who were the principal might very wel put them in minde of those things they had foretolde In the ninth verse hee bringeth in a profane Author concerning the strife and disputation betweene Michael the Archangell and the diuell about Moses body which cannot be found in Canonical scripture as also of Enoch the seauenth from Adam out of profane writers By this reason neither should the Epistle of Titus bee Scripture seeing Paul makes mention of the profane Poet Epimenides Titus 1.12 nor the epistle to the Corinthes where is brought in the speech of Menander 1. Cor. 15.33 nor the Actes of the Apostles where Aratus the Poet is cited Actes 17.21 This Epistle is taken out of Saint Peter from whom this Author hath borrowed both the matter and manner Therfore this Iude was no Apostle but some scholler of theirs If this were sufficient to proue this Epistle not authenticall then the whole bookes of Samuel the Kinges and Chronicles should be cast out of the Canon by the same reason which take the matter from Ciuill Chronicles Now if it be lawfull to take matter out of Ciuill Chronicles why may not one Scripture be taken out of another wee must therefore notwithstanding these weake allegations esteeme this Epistle to bee the Canonicall Scripture and the eternall word of God as our Church and the Church in all ages hath receiued it And now in the second place see how wee may come to be resolued that it is so to be allowed which wee may in this resemblance An Indenture betweene man and man is knowne to bee sufficient two waies First by the matter and contentes therin which plainly shewes an acte passed and done secondly by adding and annexing thereunto certaine outward signes and testimonies as the handes and seales of the parties the handes and names of the witnesses corroborating and strengthening the same the first is good in it selfe though not so confirmed to the parties without the second but the second is nothing without the first but if both th●se shall concurre and bee specified in the Indenture then it is absolutely authenticall both in it selfe and vnto the parties If this be applied to the scripture it shall be apparant to bee no lesse ratified then such an Indenture For first consider but the Contentes and matter it selfe of it it will speake the certeinty and truth of it read ouer the Epistle you shall finde the whole matter agreed vpon by the Prophets and Apostles and for the testimonie the Catholike and common consent of the Church or greatest part since the Apostles dayes hath set to her hand and seale that it is the truth of God no lesse assured then other bookes of the Canon which assent of the church though it cannot make vs yet may moue vs accordinglie to entertayne it Besides if we consider the endes as also the effects of this scripture which are the same with any part of the Canonicall wee cannot but confesse that it is the holy and sacred truth of God all of it conspiring with all the other to the aduancing of Gods glorie and furthering of mans saluation So much of the authoritie of this Epistle The second point is the Superscription which is in these words The Catholique Epistle of Iude. This title seemes to bee prefixed rather by some Scribe afterwards then by Iude himselfe first because this title Catholique was not heard of in the Church whilest the Apostles liued so as it is not so ancient as the Epistle Secondly the title seemes to bee vnfit for this and other Epistles intitled after the same manner and may be well forborne as the Epistles of Peter are called Canonicall which are no more Canonicall then others Thirdly most of the Post-scripts are vncerteine if not false as of that after the second Epistle to Timothie in which Timothie is called an elect Bishop of Ephesus and yet commaunded to doe the worke of an Euangelist 2. Timoth. 4.5 which cannot stand together to be the Bishop of one place and also vniuersally to preach vnto the whole world following the Apostles as the Euangelistes duty was and so of others This title then was not added by the Apostle but by some Scribe that copied out the Epistle it is not therefore holy Scripture as the Epistle is The third point concerning the Epistle in generall is the argument which doth exhort all Christians to constancie and perseuerance in their profession of the Gospell Secondly to beware and take heede of false teachers and deceiuers which craftely creepe in amongst them And thirdly these deceiuers are liuely set out in their colours and with them their destruction Now concerning the Epistle it selfe and the speciall partes of it Of it there be three partes first a Salutation in the 1. and 2. verses Secondlie an Exhortation from the 3. verse to the end of the 23. Thirdly a Conclusion from that to the end of the Chapter In the Salutation consider three thinges First the person that wrote this Epistle Iude. Secondly the persons to whom hee wrote to those which were called sanctified of God the father and reserued to Iesus Christ. Thirdly the Prayer ordinarie in Apostolicall salutations mercie vnto you c. Concerning the first namely the writer of this Epistle obserue three thinges first his name Iude secondly his office a seruant of Iesus Christ. Thirdly his Allyance and brother-hood being of the kindred of Christ himselfe First of his name Iude or Iudas which was the name of two of the Disciples of Christ the first was Iudas the sonne of Alpheus the brother of Iames and so neare allyed vnto Christ who was the writer of this Epistle The other was Iudas Iscariot or Iudas the traytor the sonne of Simon who could not write this Epistle because he died before Christ. In this name consider two thinges First the occasion of it and secondly the varietie of his name The occasion of this name is set downe with the reason of it in the 29. of Gen. 35. When Leah had borne three sonnes vnto Iacob shee conceiued againe and bare a fourth sonne saying Now I will praise the Lord therefore shee called his name Iudah which signifieth praise or confession so no doubt did Alpheus the father
was the seuenth from Adam Here two questions are to bee answered first whence had Iude this historie seeing it is no where recorded in the Scriptures and how knew he it to be Enochs I answere two waies first he either had it and learned it to bee his by some tradition which went from hand to hand or else written by some Iew or secondly he learned it out of some booke which went vnder Enochs name then extant in the daies of the Apostles though now lost it is certaine that one of these waies hee had it Hence the Papists gather that the Iewes had vnwritten traditions and consequently all their traditions are to be obserued Ans. We denie not all vnwritten traditions of which some are true and profitable but wee renounce and denie all those traditions which are made articles of faith rules of Gods worship necessarie to saluation for all such doctrines are written in the books of the Prophets and Apostles which containe perfect direction and rules concerning faith manners of which kind the Romane Church holdeth their traditions to be this is of another kind it being no article of faith nor necessary to saluation to knowe whether Enoch writ this prophecie or no. Againe from the second answere others who are no Papists conclude that some bookes of Canonicall Scripture are perished and lost But this is vntrue for then first the fidelitie of the Church which is the keeper of these Oracles should be called in question and secondly in the bookes Canonicall extant not one sentence or tittle no not the sense of any sentence is lost how then should whole bookes come to be lost It is alleaged that the books of Salomon are most of them lost Answ. The bookes of Salomon which were lost were bookes of humanitie and Philosophie for hee writ of all beasts birds trees euen from the Cedar in Libanus to the hyssop vpon the wall the books of humane truth might faile but no part of Canonicall Scripture Ob. Mention is made in the Scripture of the bookes of the Chronicles of the Iewes or Kings of Iudah but these are perished Ans. They were politique histories as are the Chronicles of England or other Countries Ob. The bookes of Nathan Gad Idd● Shemaiah and other Prophets are perished Ans. All these as is though by the learned are contained in the bookes of the Kings Chronicles and Samuel Ob. This book of Enoch is lost Ans. First it is doubted whether it was a booke or no or went by a tradition Secondly if it was a booke it was no part of Scripture for Moses was the first penman of Scripture who liued long after Enoch The second question why doth the Apostle make choise of this testimonie of Enoch rather than some other Prophet Answ. Himselfe giueth two reasons First he was the seuenth from Adam it is therefore an ancient testimonie to be receiued and reuerenced for the antiquitie but withall it sheweth what is true antiquitie namely when a doctrine of religion can bee prooued from some Prophet or Apostle for this testimonie was a prophecie and therefore that antiquitie which the Church of Rome challengeth to her religion and doctrine is but counterfeit because they are not able to iustifie the maine pointes thereof from any Prophet or Apostle yea in these wherein they dissent from vs they cannot bring their proofe and descent from within the first hundred yeeres after Christ. It is then a vaine plea and false pretence of them to boast of the antiquitie of their religion The second reason is in the word prophecied for Enoch spoke not this of his owne head or motion but from God for no creature Angell or man can foretell things to come it being a prerogatiue properly belonging vnto God Ob. Yes but the learned Physition can truely foretell the death of the patient to come Ans. He doth not properly herein foretell a thing to come for the death of the partie is present in the signes and causes of it Ob. But the Diuell could foretell Sauls death 1. Sam. 28.19 To morow shalt thou be with me and thy sonnes Ans. The Diuell could not properly foretell it but might see it in the causes and signes Againe hee might speake so to Saule because God had made him an instrument for the execution of that iudgement and destruction so as God only properly foretelleth that which is simply to come and no man or Angell The second point is the testimonie it selfe Behold the Lord commeth c. In which obserue three points first the comming of the Lord secondly the iudgement of the Lord thirdly the cause of it in the 15. verse To giue iudgement against al men c. First of the party comming Behold the Lord commeth Where the Apostle speaketh in the time present which is put for the time to come which forme of speech sheweth the certaintie of Christs comming to iudgement who shall as certeinly come as if he were now alreadie comming Concerning which certaintie it may be demaunded first whence commeth this comming of Christ to be so certaine Ans. From the vnchangeable will of God which hath certainly decreed the same For he hath appointed a day in the which he will iudge the world in righteousnes And thus are all other the articles of our faith most certaine in that they are grounded on the vnchangeable will and word of God Secondly how or from whence may we know this will of God to be so certaine Ans. From the manner of propounding the doctrine of it wherein the euidence of the spirit plainly appeareth saying peremptorily the Lord commeth euidently expressing the certaintie as if it were now present And the same may be spoken of the whole scripture which in it selfe is most sure and certain because it is the most vnchangeable will of God but how do we know it so to be will some say I answere by the euidence of the spirit the authoritie puritie maiestie effect and ends of the doctrine it neede not seeke euidence elsewhere than from it selfe not from man or the Church it selfe The Romish Church confesseth it is of it selfe and in it selfe sufficiently certaine but not to me or thee except the Church say so but this is a false position The Scripture is certaine both in it selfe and vnto vs and we know it so to be though neuer a man would acknowledge it the heart seasoned with grace will make the mouth confesse it Secondly the Apostle speaking in this forme he commeth for he will come wee learne to set before our eyes the comming of the Lord Iesus to iudgement and to make account of euery present day as the day of his comming the Scriptures euery where commend watchfulnes vnto vs which is to do nothing else but to make reckoning continually of this day But some will say we cannot make account daily of it for we see it commeth not neither may we enquire into the time of it Answ. Although wee cannot exactly
〈◊〉 for all offered whereby their sinnes are ●●p●ated that shall see the Lord in the holie of holies 4. Further let any indifferent and single eye behold and consider whether those bee but trifling differences which our reuerend Reignolds hath worthily disputed both against Bellarmine in his bookes intituled The Idolatrie of the Roman Church as also against Hart both in the two principall questions concerning Peters and the Popes supremacie by which their doctrine they would make Kings and Princes but vassals and ●eodataries vnto the Pope to whom they ascribe absolute power to excomm●●icate Kings to discharge their subiects from their obedience and allegeance to dispense with their oathes of loyaltie and faithfull subiection and dispose of their Crownes at his pleasure which no good subiect much lesse Christian can say is a triuiall point or a little to bee yeelded vnto as also in those sixe conclusions annexed wherein hee hath substantially and learnedly determined that the saith professed by the present Church of Rome is not the Catholike faith That their Church is so far from being the Catholike Church that it is no sound member of the Catholike Church and consequently that the reformed Churches of Great Brittaine France Germany c. haue lawfully that is by warrant of Gods word seuered themselues therefrom 5. Neither may wee yeeld that to be a circumstantiall question discussed betweene our learned Whi●taker and Stapleton concerning the Authoritie of the holy Scriptures which they so farre debase subordinate to their Church seeing through that great booke of his neuer like to bee answered by them he grauely prooueth that the foundation of Papisticall faith is laid vpon man and not vpon God and so it is an humane faith and not diuine vnto which their whole seruice is sutable according to Durandus his description in his Rationale And lastly none but inconsiderate men would auerre either that the most learned Protestāts of Europe haue spent their strength and beaten their braines only for the beating of the ●yre in matters immateriall or that those who haue a● yet vncontroleably published that the Popish Teachers haue reuersed the whole Decalogue with the most of the Articles of the Creede and Petitions of the Lords Prayer haue differed and squared in points not essentiall or that so many zealous Martyrs many of them of very profound knowledge should giue their liues and most innocent blood for matters of shadow as is pretended rather than of substance for thus to impeach the labours of the former or staine the sufferings of the latter would scarse beseeme any but either a Papist or some speciall fauourite of theirs Thirdly to such as are of minde that a harmelesse mediation may be made me thinkes it no other but the feeding of a fancie besides that it is not harder to make them preserue and yet neither without preiudice In which point as I would not seeme too rigorous or austere well knowing how sweete is the name and yet more pleasant is peace it selfe so would I chuse an honorable warre before a dishonorable peace a free and iust dissention before a base and slauish agreement such as theirs would be For Nahash the Ammonite will make no concord with Iab●sh Gilead vnlesse euery m●n suffer his right eye to be pulled 〈◊〉 that so he may bring some sha●● vpon Israel And first it seemeth to me a matter b●rder to bee b●●ught about than Loue of my shallow 〈◊〉 can expect e●er to see effected both in regard of our selues as also of them for if the truth bee with vs as wee are bound to confesse both in respect of i● selfe and the law whereby it is established th●n our turnings back● must not reprooue vs but hauing found the old way we are to walke in it without turning aside that wee may in it finde rest for our soules The Lords counsell to his Prophet must bee our direction in this case Sonne of man goe 〈◊〉 th●n to them but let them c●me to thee for to lose our hold of the truth much lesse to le●se any part of it ●s in exchange with falsehood were not onely a wrongfull betraying of it self but a wilful wronging of our selues and posterities whom Gods blessings for the present hath made able to ●old it entire not onely without danger but with encouragement power protection But more hopelesse or impossible rather in respect of them shall out meeting in the midway seeme to be to whomsoeuer with iudgement shall perpend these foure subsequent considerations First that their faith being not Apostolicall their Religion a false Religion their Church a false Church and their worship a false worship it will prooue not a matter of repairing as requiring lesse cost and labour but of founding their faith before they can bee raised vnto vs which how hard it is for them to bee brought vnto who are so setled in their lees and dregges for so many hundred yeeres they cannot be ignorant who know how difficult it is for a Bl●●kem●●re to ch●●ge his skin or a Leopard his spots for so hard is it for those who are accustomed to euill to be drawne to good Secondly that so long as the Pope holdeth his headship ouer the Church with that erroneous position that he cannot erre which hee is likely to lay downe with his Crowne and Crosier for sooner to part with them were a foule error if by much sweate some indifferent parley were cōpassed himselfe still remaining both partie and iudge as hee was in the Councell of Trent improbable yea impossible it were that any conclusions could on their part bee passed if on any at all propounded which any way might be derogatorie to his vsurped power and pre●ended supremacie Thirdly their cautelous circumspection lest by any meanes the knowledge of our doctrine might perhaps bee scattered among them argueth an vtter auersation in them for euer acknowledging it which appeareth in sundry their practises 1. In that they bind the consciences of all Catholikes to a perpetuall separation from all our Ecclesiasticall assemblies in religious publike duties which is the ground of all Recusancie to which purpose they teach it to bee a sinne to heare our sermons for that were a participation with blasphemies and for prayer with vs so straite laced are they as they may not say Amen in publike or priuate suppose at their tables if any Protestant bee present 2. In that they censure most seuerely al their subiects that trauell or traffike into Protestant countries blasting them with excommunication 3. In that they haue erected in their Cities an Inquisition to examine vpon oath any forreiner or stranger whereby they ransake not onely all his carriages but euen his conscience also lest he should bring any opinion within him or instrument without him that standeth not with their minds and liking wherein not onely some little escape but euen suspition it selfe prooueth often capitall 4.
person no vnrepentant sinner can be partaker of but onely the Church of the first borne as in Heb. the 12 whose names are written in the booke of life and who receiue daily spirituall increase for howsoeuer in the Catholike Church there be two sorts of men professing religion the one of them that do vnfainedly beleeue and are sanctified the other of them who make a shew of faith but indeede beleeue not but remaine in their sinnes of the former doth the Catholike Church consist and not of the latter who are no members s●t into the head of this body though they may seeme so to bee Secondly this confuteth the Romish Church who teach and hold that a reprobate may be a member of this Church Thirdly that none can bee the head of this Church and Catholique congregation but onely Christ for he only knoweth them who and where they be thorough the face of the whole earth not the Pope or any other creature hath any headship ouer this companie who are giuen and properly appertaine vnto the Sonne of God Fourthly that this Catholique Church is inuisible and cannot by the eie of flesh be discerned for what eye except of faith can see or discerne the depth of Gods election or whom he hath effectually called yea and who can infalliblie determine of the things that are within a man and therefore this is a matter of faith not of sense an Article of our beleefe not the obiect of our sight seeing faith is an euidence of thinges not seene which againe ouerthroweth that Romish doctrine which teacheth that the Catholike Church is visible and apparent vpon earth and so destroy that Article of our faith Fiftly that this Catholike Church being preserued by God the Father to life euerlasting cannot vtterly perish and bee dissolued all other congregations and particular Churches being mixed and the greatest part not predestinate may faile yet this cannot be ouercome Rom. 11.7 this election of God shall obtaine though the rest be hardened The gates of hell shall not preuaile against the faith of the Church because faithfull and true is hee that hath spoken and who will preserue in this Church a succession of wholsome and sound doctrine and heauen and earth shall be sooner dissolued than on iote of the same shall faile and perish But though that faile not the Church may fall from that and so faile That particular Churches and of them the most famous haue been ruined yea and fallen away and so may doe is euident by the Churches of Ephesus Corinth Galatia c. and no maruell seeing these consisted euer of mixed persons but the Catholique Church consisting onelie of a number elected and called though it also not being as yet without wrinkle may erre and faile in some smaller points yet being preserued by God to life cannot possibly faile in the maine and foundation This doctrine affordeth strong consolation to the elect of God both in regard of their frequent falles and infirmities whereby they might feare to cast themselues quite out of fauor as also in regard of the manifold assaultes and bickerings which in the world they doe and shall endure whereby they might seeme to the outward veiw to perish yet the truth is neither of both need so dismay them but that their faith and hope may still bee reuiued and strengthened seeing they are preserued to saluation Sixtly here are better notes of a true Church then the Papistes Antiquity Succession Multitude c. which can bee no notes Frst for Antiquitie in the beginning was a true Church but no Antiquitie Secondly succession failes for what men soeuer are called and sanctified are the Church Thirdly multitude no note for if there be a calling and sanctification of men there is a Church be there many or few But the true notes are the meanes of calling to the faith by the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles and obedience thereunto proceeding forward in sanctification euen vntill death without which notes none can truly say they are of the Catholique Church By which we may know the Church of England to be the true visible Church of God called and sanctified in the truth Ioh. 8.31 Now to proceede wee are in the next place to intreate of the order which God obserueth in bringing men by degrees to life euerlasting And first of the calling mentioned which is a worke of God who of his meere fauour and grace calleth vile and miserable men out of the world and inuiteth them to life euerlasting to vnderstand which we must know that the calling of God is two fold The first is generall when God calles a whole Nation kingdome and countrie that is when hee offers them saluation in the meanes as when hee sends his word amongst them affordes them the Sacraments to seale the Couenant giue● leaue to approch him in prayer and all this in the Ministrie of men that man might call man yea when hee vouchsafeth priuate meanes farre inferior to the former yet often seruing for a generall calling a● is the reading of the Scriptures yea of mens writings and some time report● as in Rahab● example and the woman of Samaria by these meanes the Lord generally calleth men offering but often not giuing grace offered in great iudgement turning away from a froward people If God offer but giue not grace it is a deluding of men No for first a man was once able to receiue it secondly hereby hee maketh them without execuse whom he will destroy thirdly hereby he keepes the wicked in outward order Vse Considering to be called of God is the first step to life euerlasting and we in this Church of England are thus called it remaines that euery man should answere this calling How shall this be done Frame thy heart to answere God as Dauid did when God bad him seeke his face Thy face O Lord will I seeke see also Marke 9.23.24 of the father of the possessed child and Psal. 40.6.7 whē Dauids eare was pearced hee answered Lord I come this ought to be the Answer of our hartes to the Lords voice sounding in the Ministry The second calling is more speciall when grace is not only offered but giuen also by God thorough the effectuall working of his spirit in our hearts which is the beginning of grace in vs hee himselfe laying the first foundation of it by giuing power to receiue the word to mingle it with faith and bring forth the fruites of new obedience for the better conceiuing of the nature of it consider sixe pointes First the ground and foundation of it namely Gods eternall free election of vs vnto life euerlasting as 2. Tim. 1.9 when I say free I exclude not only whatsoeuer man can imagine within himselfe as vaine in procuring such good vnto himselfe as not of works saith Paul least any should boast but also placing the ground of all our good out of our selues in the counsell of God which the
the good of the Church suffereth seducers in the Church both to exercise the faith and patience of his as also to preuent greater dangers which they might in their secure condition fall into Secondly hence wee see that such hypocrites as these be though they be in the Church yet are they not of it they are no members of that bodie as the Romish Church teacheth for they onely creepe into it The second fault that is laid to their charge is that they are intruders thrusting themselues into the office of teaching not being called thereto but creepe into the calling Whence wee note that it is most necessarie that those who are to teach publikely in the church should bee first called thereunto Reasons First besides the auoiding of this sinne of creeping into the Church it is the order that God hath set in the same that he that is to teach should first be sent Rom. 10.14 And No man taketh this honour that is lawfully to himselfe except he be called as Aaron was Secondly the Ministerie is Gods and not mans because the Minister standeth in Gods roome and speaketh in his name which he can neuer doe truly vnlesse God send him and depute him in his stead Thirdly the Minister must maintaine that which he teacheth vnto which he had neede as in all the parts of his calling of Gods speciall protection for the which hee must bee alwaies instant in prayer which hee can neuer be assured of if he be not perswaded of the truth of his calling Fourthly the people cannot heare with comfort and profit if they bee not perswaded that God hath called the teacher to instruct them Rom. 10.14 How can they heare c. This truth extendeth it selfe also to all other offices as well Ciuill as Ecclesiasticall all which are to bee welded and executed by men lawfully called vnto the same All entrance then into any office in Church or Common-wealth by money fauour of men or any vnlawful meanes is intrusion and such are not called of God but are to be ranged among these seducers who creepe into places and come not in by Gods call or approbation The second adiunct whereby the seducers are described is their estate before God being men of old ordained to this condemnation That is they were before all times locked enrolled or billed vnto condemnation euen as though their names had been set downe in a booke By condemnation is meant iudgement as the particle This doth plainly shew which maketh this the plaine meaning They were of old ordained to this iudgement in this life to trie to exercise and molest the Church of God and so consequently to procure vnto themselues at length their own iust condemnation In which words we are taught first that God keepeth his bookes of Registrie and records in which all things are set downe the persons behauiours and eternall estate of all men which bookes are of three sorts first the booke of his Prouidence containing all particulars of things past present and to come in which the Lord saw the members of Dauid when he was yet vnformed Psal. 139.16 In the same booke the number of the haires of our heads and the falling of sparrowes to the ground are recorded The second booke is of the last iudgement in which the persons and sinnes of all men al enrolled Dan. 7 9.10 The thrones were set vp the ancient of daies did sit thousand thousands ministred vnto him and ●enne thousand thousands stood before him the iudgement was set and the bookes opened Reu. 20.12 I saw all great and small stand before God and the bookes were opened and another booke was opened The third is the booke of life in which are written the names of those who are to be saued Phil. 4.3 Paul saith of Clement and other his fellowe labourers that their names were written in the booke of life Now by these books we may not grossely conceiue materiall bookes such as men note what they would remember in but the counsell election prouidence pleasure and knowledge of God wherein all these things are so certainly set downe as if any man should write them in a booke Out of which wee note two things first that in regard of God there is no chance neither any euent by it in regard of men indeed who know not the causes of things many chances may be but Gods prouidence and chance are contrarie he hauing all things written before him with their causes Secondly that nothing comes to passe without the decree of God no not the wicked actions of men Which God not onely foreseeth but decreeth for this Iude insinuateth saying they were ordained to this iudgement and euen that which is against the will of God commeth not to passe without his will God willing the being of that which he willeth not to effect and though hee esteeme not euill to be good yet hee accounteth it good that euill should be Further where hee saith ordained of old to this condemnation we learne that as God hath before all worlds decreed the electing of some to saluation so he hath decreed the refusall and reiecting of others to condemnation 1. Pet. 2.8 Many were disobedient vnto the which they were euen ordained 1. Thess. 5.9 God hath not ordained you to wrath but to obtaine saluation through Christ shewing that some are ordained to wrath who are not to obtaine saluation through Christ. Rom. 9.22 God is compared to a potter framing vessels of honour and dishonour vessels of mercie and vessels of wrath In the same place I haue loued Iacob and hated Esau that is I haue decreed so to doe For the whole chapter speaketh of Gods counsel vnchangeable decree Ob. If this be so will some say then God dealeth iniustly that absolutely ordaineth some men to condemnation and perdition Ans. We must know that wee are creatures and may not presume to prescribe a law of iustice to the Creator whose will is iustice it selfe whatsoeuer we may conceiue and maketh the things willed good because it is willed and not willed because it is good Secondly though God refuse and reiect men yet hee doth it in most wise order and iust proceeding in these two degrees first hee vouchsafeth to some men the riches of his grace tending to life euerlasting which speciall abundant grace hee denieth to some other passing by them who being left of him vnto themselues fall into sinne Secondly for sin God decreeth iudgement and condemnation so as he doth not simply and absolutely ordaine his creature to hell but in regard of sinne not that sinne is a cause of the decree moouing him vnto it but that hee decreeth not condemnation without respect of sinne and relation vnto it which speech wee neede not feare to speake because the holie Ghost so speaketh Vse First if some men be passed by of God we must humble our selues vnder his mightie hand and with feare and trembling worke our saluation Roman 11.20
doctrine else but a Pharisaicall leauen alwaies to bee purged out of Churches and states as the Iewes vpon some occasions were to purge al leauen out of their howses Let no man say it is but a little and such a difference which may be tolerated for euen the Pharisies doctrine was much of it more true thē this Pharisaicall doctrine of theirs yet was their leauen hid in it as in this the nature whereof is though it be but little yet to sowre the whole lumpe In a word as Caleb Ioshua said of Canaan the land is a very good land If the Lord loue vs hee will bring vs vnto it euen so if the Lord loue vs hee will expell these Giants from vs and giue vs security in our owne land from the Anakims or if not if any of these strangers abide with vs our faithfull prayer and hope is that as Salomon numb●●ing all the strangers in the land set them to worke in his Temple euen a hundred three fiftie thousand and sixe hundred so our wise and peaceable Salomon and Soueraigne will continue to set euen thousands of these to worship with vs in the Temple yea and in this one circumstance passe Salomons wisdome in not chusing ouerseers of themselues to cause them to worship The Lord Iesus strengthen his Highnes heart vnto this and many mo honorable workes and make vs happie in his long and prosperous Raigne to his renowne and glorie in this life and fruition of the blessed Crowne of righteousnes at the peaceable end of his through comfortable daies Amen FINIS COMMON PLACES OF CHRISTIan Religion more largely handled in this Commentarie 1 ACtuall sinnes pag. 121. 2 Angels their nature and fall pag. pag. 63. The combate between good and bad Angels pag. 84. 3 Apostles and Apostleship pag. 119. 4 Bookes of God pag. 48. 5 Callings pag. 43. 6 Catholike Church pag. 32. 7 Charitie pag. 135. 8 Christ a Sauiour pag. 151. 9 Christs comming to iudgment pag. 112. 10 Christian liberty pag. 30. 11 Church properties and markes of it pag. 32. 12 Church Censures and excommunicacation pag. 143. 13 Commandement first pag. 35. second pag. 36. third c. pag. 39. 14 Crosse to be taken vp pag. 34. 15 Diuinity of Christ. pag. 149. 16 Feare of God pag. 85. 17 Hope pag. 138. 18 Images pag. 36. 19 Intemperance pag. 89. 20 Iudgement day pag. 68. 21 Iustification by faith only pag. 26. 22 Keyes of the Church pag. 31. 23 Knowledge in the creatures naturall reasonable spirituall pag. 88. 24 Loue of God towards man contra pag. 15. 25 Magistracie pag. 76. 26 Mercy of God pag. 13. 27 Naturall corruption pag. 127. 28 Peace with God Man the creatures pag. 14. 29 Perseuerance pag. 11. 30 Regeneration pag. 28. 31 Repentance pag. 33. 32 Resurrection pag. ibid. 33 Reprobation pag. 48. 34 Saluation by Christ alone how to whom pag. 151. 35 Sanctification pag. 7. 36 Table second pag. 41. 37 Vngodlines pag. 49. 38 Vocation pag. 5. 39 Wisdome of Christ. pag. 150. 40 Worship of God pag. 38. DOCTRINES MORE CHOISE and generall collected and vrged in this Exposition 1 TO bee a seruant of Iesus Christ is more honour then to bee allied to Princes pag. 3. 2 Faith is a most excellent treasure pag. 17. 3 The Saints are the keepers of this treasure and must fight for it pag. 45. 4 It is a subtiltie of Satan to thrust the profane and wicked into the societies of the Saints pag. 47. 5 Publike teachers in the Church must of necessity be called and why pag. ibid. 6 Gods grace may not bee turned into Wantonnesse pag. 51. 7 No outward priuiledges are profitable 〈◊〉 of their right vse in faith and repentance pag. 56. 8 Great iudgements are at the beeles of great mercies if abused pag. 57. 9 Distractiō followeth vnbeliefe which is therefore to be vnma●ked and auoided pag. 57. 10 Gods seruice is the only liberty and freedome in sinne is to be chained in bondage pag. 67. 11 The mercy of God euery way matcheth his iustice pag. 70. 12 To take a view of the sinnes of the last times is necessarie for euery Christian pag. 71. 13 Our bodies are the Lords and therefore must be giuen vp to his seruice and preserued in holines pag. 75. 14 Sleepe in sinne and spirituall dreames the cause why so fewe embrace thē Gospell pag. 73. 15 A Christians dutie is to watch and be sober pag. 74. 16 Not to speake euill of but blesse Magistrates pag. 80. 17 Scripture is knowen to bee Scripture by Scripture pag. 83. 18 The Diuel the author of Idolatry pag. 8● 19 Not to requi●e euill for euill a Christian precept and an angelicall practise pag. 87. 20 Christian meeknes must be tempered with Christian zeale pag. 89. 21 Caines way may not bee beaten by Christians pag. 90. 22 Couetousnes in all but teachers especially to be auoyded and why pag. 96. 23 Contentation a speciall vertue and how atteined pag. 98. 117. 24 In feasting Gods feare must be preserued in the heart pag. 102. 25 All Ministers must be able to teach sound doctrine pag. 104. 26 Hearers ought to be as parcht land to to receaue it pag. ibid. 27 Christiās being trees of righteousnes must be 1. wel rooted 2. liue 3. beare fruit 4. beare good fruite in Christ the stocke pag. 106. 28 Wicked men are inwarly as vnquiet as the raging sea pag. 108. 29 Ministers as startes must receaue their light from Christ the sonne of righteousnes pag. 109. 30 All secrets of heart and life naked before God pag. 114. 31 The duty of the Church to remember the words of the Prophets and Apostles and why pag. 119. 32 To mock and scorne godlines a maine sinne of the last age pag. 121. 33 It is the property of the vngodly to follow and walk after their owne vngodly lustes pag. 122. 34 It is a great sinne to sep●rate from the assemblies of Gods people pag. 124. 35 To be a naturall man a fearefull sinne and who he is pag. 126. 36 Euery one ought to build vp himselfe vpon his most holy faith pag. 129. 37 The doctrine of faith a most holy doctrine pag. 131. 38 Euery man is to preserue loue towards man and the meanes pag. 135. 39 The duty of euery beleeuer is to restore and recouer offenders and the meanes pag. 141. 40 All glorie dominion maiestie and power is to bee ascribed to God and Christ of all his creatures in all things for euer Amen pag. 154. QVESTIONS DETERMINED AND the most of them disputed in this Commentarie 1 WHether this Epistle be Canonicall Scripture pag. 1. 2 VVhether a man may change his name pag. 3. 3 Whether sanctification bee from the Parents pag. 8. 4 Whether sauing grace may be lost pag. 11. 5 Whether the Scripture be to beleeued for it selfe pag. 17. 6 Whether it be sufficient of it selfe pag. 18. 7 Whether God created all things pag. 20. 8 Wherein