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A25291 The marrow of sacred divinity drawne out of the Holy Scriptures, and the interpreters thereof, and brought into method / by William Ames ... ; translated out of the Latine ... ; whereunto are annexed certaine tables representing the substance and heads of all in a short view ... as also a table opening the hard words therein contained.; Medulla theologica. English. 1642 Ames, William, 1576-1633. 1642 (1642) Wing A3000; ESTC R23182 239,577 422

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carried unto Christ and by Christ unto God but repentance is carried to God himselfe who was before offended by sin Acts 20. 21. Repentance toward God and Faith toward our Lord Iesus Christ. Secondly they have divers ends for Faith doth properly seeke reconciliation with God but repentance a sutablenesse to the will of God Rom. 3. 25. A reconciliation through Faith in his bloud Acts 26. 20. That they should turne unto God doing workes meete to repentance 31. Repentance in respect of that carefulnesse and anxiety terror arising from the Law which it hath joyned with it doth goe before Faith by order of nature as a preparing and disposing cause but in respect of that effectuall and kindly turning away from sin as God is offended by it so it followes Faith and depends upon it as the effect upon his cause and herein is proper to the faithfull 32. Although this repentance doth alwayes bring griefe with it for sins past and present yet it doth not so properly or essentially consist in griefe as in turning from and hatred of sin and in a firme purpose to follow after good Amos 5. 14. 15. Hate the evill Love the good 33. That repentance is not true and sound which doth not turne a man from all known sin to every known good neither that which doth not virtually continue and is actually renewed as often as need is from the time of conversion to the end of life 34. Repentance is wont to be perceived before Faith because a sinner cannot easily perswade himselfe that he is reconciled to God in Christ before he feele himselfe to have forsaken those sins which did separate him from God CHAPTER XXVII Of Iustification 1. COmmunion of the blessings flowing from Union with Christ is that whereby the faithfull are made partakers of all those things they have need of to live well and blessedly with God Eph. 1. 3. He hath blessed us with all spirituall blessings Rom. 8. 32. He who spared not his own Son c. How shall he not freely with him give us all things also 2. This communion therefore doth bring a translation and change of condition to believers from the state of sin and death to the state of righteousnesse and life eternall 1 Iohn 3. 14. We know that we are translated from death to life 3. This change of state is twofold relative and absolute or reall 4. A relative change of state is that which consists in Gods reputation Rom. 4. 5. And he that worketh not but believeth in him that justifieth the ungodly his faith is imputed to him for righteousnesse 1 Cor. 5. 19. God was in Christ reconciling the World tot himselfe not imputing to them their offences 5. Hence it admits no degrees properly so called but it is together and at once perfect in one only act although in respect of the manifestation sence and effects it hath divers degrees Hitherto pertaines justification and adoption 6. Iustification is a gracious sentence of God whereby for Christs sake apprehended by Faith he doth absolve the believer from sin and death and accounts him righteous unto life Rom. 3. 22 24. The righteousnesse of God by Faith of Iesus Christ in all and upon all that believe as they who are freely justified by his grace through the redemption made by Iesus Christ. 7. It is the pronouncing of a sentence as the use of the word declares which doth norset forth a physicall or reall change in the holy Scriptures but that judiciall or morall change which consists in pronouncing of a sentence and in reputation Prov. 17. 15. He that justifies the wicked Rom. 8. 33. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect It is God that Iustifies 8. Therefore Thomas with his followers doth fowly erre who would have justification as it were a physicall motion by a reall transmutation from a state of unrightousnesse to a state of righteousnesse so as that the terme from which is sin the terme to which is inherent righteousnesse and the motion is partly remission of sin partly infusion of righteousnesse 9. This sentence was 1. As it were conceived in the mind of God by a decree of justifying Gal. 3. 8. The Scripture foreseeing that God would justifie the Gentiles by Faith 2. It was pronounced in Christ our head now rising from the dead 2 Cor. 5. 19. God was in Christ reconciling the world to himselfe not imputing their sins to them 3. It is virtually pronounced upon that first relation which ariseth upon Faith begotten Rom. 8. 1. There is therefore no condemnation to them that are in Christ Iesus 4. It is expresly pronounced by the Spirit of God witnessing unto our spirits our reconciliation with God Rom. 5. 5. The love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Spirit that is given to us In this testimony of the spirit justification itselfe doth not so properly consist as an actuall perceiving of that before granted as it were by a reflected act of Faith 10. It is a gratious sentence because it is not properly given by the Iustice of God but by his grace Rom. 3. 24. Freely by his grace For by the same grace whereby he called Christ to the office of Mediator and did draw the elect to Union with Christ he doth account them being already drawn and believing to be just by that Union 11. It is for Christs sake 2 Cor. 5. 21. That we may be made the righteousnesse of God in him for the obedience of Christ is that righteousnesse in respect whereof the grace of God doth justifie us no otherwise then the disobedience of Adam was that offence in respect whereof the justice of God did condemne us Rom. 5. 18. 12. Therefore the righteousnesse of Christ is imputed to believers in justification Phil. 3. 9. That I may be found in him not having mine own righteousnesse which is of the Law but that which is by Faith of Christ the righteousnesse of God through Faith 13. But because this righteousnesse is ordained of God to that end and by his grace is approved and confirmed so that sinners can stand before him through this righteousnesse therefore it is called the righteousnesse of God Rom. 10. 3. 14. But this justification is for Christ not absolutely considered in which sence Christ is also the cause of vocation but for Christ apprehended by Faith which Faith doth follow Calling as an effect and followeth righteousnesse by which being apprehended justification followes whence also righteousnesse is said to be of Faith Romans 9. vers 30. 10. 16. And Iustification through Faith Chap. 3. 28. 15. This justifying Faith is not that generall Faith whereby in the understanding we yield assent to the truth revealed in the holy Scriptures for that doth neither properly belong to those that are justified neither of it own nature hath it any force in it selfe to justifie neither doth it produce those effects which are every where in the Scripture given to
justifying Faith 16. Neither is it to speake properly that speciall confidence whereby we doe apprehend remission of sins and justification it selfe for justifying Faith goeth before justification it selfe as the cause goeth before the effect but Faith apprehending justification doth necessarily presuppose and follow justification as an act followes the object about which it is exercised 17. That Faith therefore is properly called justifying whereby we rely upon Christ for remission of sins and for salvation For Christ is the adaequate object of Faith as Faith Iustifyeth Faith also doth no otherwise justifie then as it apprehends that righteousnesse by which we are justified but that righteousnesse is not in the truth of some sentence to which we yield assent but in Christ alone who is made sinne for us that wee might bee righteousnesse in him 2 Cor. 5. 21. 18. Hence are those Sermons so often repeated in the new Testament which doe shew that justification is to be fought for in Christ alone Iohn 1. 12. 3. 15. 16. 6. 40. 47. 14. 1. 54. Romans 4. 5. 3. 26. Acts 10. 43. 26. 18. Gal. 3. 26. 19. This justifying Faith of it own nature doth produce and so hath joyned with it a speci●…ll and certaine perswasion of the grace and mercy of God in Christ whence also justifying Faith is oftentimes not amisse described by the orthodox by this perswasion especially when they doe oppose that generall Faith to which the Papists ascribe all things but 1. This perswasion as touching the sence of it is not alwayes present For it may and often doth come to passe either through weakenesse of judgement or through divers tentations and troubles of mind that he who truly believeth and is by Faith justified before God yet for a time may thinke according to that which hee feeles that he neither believeth nor is reconciled to God 2. There be divers degrees of his perswasion so that neither all believers have altogether the same assurance of the grace and favour of God nor the same believers at all times which yet they cannot properly affirme of justifying Faith without a great deale of detriment of that consolation and peace which Christ hath left to believers 20. Iustification absolves from sin and death not immediatly by taking away the blame or staine or all the effects of sin but that oblation and guilt to undergoe eternall death Rom. 8. 1. 33. 34. There is no condemnation who shall lay any thing to their charge who shall condemne 21. Neither yet doth it so take away the guilt as that it takes away the desert of punishment from the sin which the sinne it selfe remayning can in no sort be taken away but it so takes away the guilt that it takes away the revenging pursuit of the desart of it or the deadly effects of it 22. This absolution from sins is called in a divers respect but in the same sence in holy Scriptures Remission Redemption and Reconciliation Eph. 1. 6. 7. For as the state of sin is considered as a bondage or certaine spirituall captivity in respect of the guilt so his justification is called Redemption but as the same state is considered as a subjection to doe punishment so it is called remission as also a passing by a blotting out a disburdening a taking away a casting away a removing a casting behind the back Rom. 4. 7. Col. 2. 13. Mich. 7. 18. Isay 43. 12. 38. 17. Psal. 32. 1 2. And as the same state is considered as a certaine enmity against God so justification is called a reconciliation Romans 5. 10. As also a certaine winking at sin Numb 23. 25. A covering of sin Ps. 32. 1 2. 23. But not only the sins of justified persons that are past are remitted but also in some sort those to come Numb 23. 25. He seeth no iniquity in Iacob nor perversnesse in Israel because justification hath left no place to condemnation Iohn 5. 24. He that believeth hath eternall life and shall not come into condemnation and it doth certainly and immediatly adjudge one to eternall life It also maketh all that remission which was in Christ obtained for us to be actually ours neither can sins past and present be altogether and fully remitted unlesse sins to come be in some sort remitted also 24. But there is this difference that sins past are remitted by a formall application by sins to come onely virtually sins past are remitted in themselves sins to come in the subject or person sinning 25. Yet those that are justified doe daily desire the forgivenesse of sins 1. Because the continuance of this grace is necessary to them 2. That the sence and manifestation of it may be more and more perceived as severall sinnes required 3. That the execution of that sentence which in justification is pronounced might bee matured and furthered 26. Besides the forgivenesse of sinnes there is required also imputation of righteousnesse Rom. 5. 18. Rev. 19. 8. Rom. 8. 3. Because there may be a totall absence of sin where notwithstanding there is not that righteousnesse which must come in place of justification 27. But this righteousnesse is not severally to be sought in the purity of the nature birth and life of Christ but it ariseth out of all the obedience of Christ together with remission of sins as the same disobedience of Adam hath both robbed us of originall righteousnesse made us subject to the guilt of condemnation CHAPTER XXVIII Of Adoption 1. ADoption is the gracious sentence of God whereby he accepts the faithfull for Christs sake unto the dignity of Sons Iohn 1. 12. As many as receive him to them he gave power to be made the Sons of God to those that believe in his Name 2. It is called a gracious sentence of God because it doth manifest the gracious will of God toward men 1 Iohn 3. 1. See what love the Father hath shewed to us that we should be called the Sons of God 3. This sentence is pronounced with the same diversity of degrees as justification for it was first in Gods predestination Eph. 1. 5. He hath predestinated us that he might adopt us to be Sons Afterward it was in Christ. Gal. 4. 4 5. God hath sent forth his Son that we might receive adoption Afterward it was in believers themselves The same Chapter Verse 6. And because yee are Sonnes GOD hath sent forth the Spirit of his Sonne into your hearts crying Abba Father 4. It is properly conversant about the faithfull that are called and justified Iohn 1. 12. For by adoption we are not made just which would necessarily follow if adoption were part of justification it selfe as some would have it neither is it a calling unto Christ but a certaine excellent dignity flowing from the application of him Romans 8. 17. Heires together with Christ 5. Yet calling and justification have the respect of a foundation to this relation of Adoption for the right of Adoption is obtained by Faith and
a cause doth the effect 31. Neither is faith extrinsecally directed toward God by love but in its proper and internal nature it respects God as its object 32. Iustification of Faith doth in no sort depend upon Charity as the Papists will have it but upon the proper object of Faith 33. Where Faith is said to worke by love Gal. 5. 6. It is not because all efficacy of Faith depends upō charity as upon a cause but because Faith doth shew forth and exercise its efficacy in the stirring up of Charity 34. The particle by doth not there shew a formall cause but as it were an instrumentall as when God is said to regenerate us by the word 35. That Faith which is without works is said to be Dead Iames 2. 26. Not because the life of Faith doth flow from workes but because workes are second Acts 〈◊〉 flowing from the life of Faith 36. Faith is said to be perfected by workes Iames 2. 22. Not with an essentiall perfection as the effect is perfected by the cause but by a complemental perfection as the cause is perfected or made actually compleat in the producing of the effect 37. Because the object of Charity is the very goodnesse of God as it is in it selfe but Faith and Hope doe respect God as he is propounded to us to be apprehended therefore that inclination of the mind toward God which belongs to Charity doth more evidently and constantly appeare in weake believers then the speciall acts of Faith or Hope because the goodnesse of God is more manifest in it selfe then the way of apprehending it which is represented to us in this life as it were darkly CHAPTER VIII Of hearing of the Word 1. FRom these vertues of Religiō towards God Faith Hope and Charity there ariseth a double act of Religion which respects that spirituall communion which is exercised betweene God and us Hearing of the word and Prayer 2. The reason or foundation of this distribution is in this that we doe affect God with religious worship when we yeild him due honour whether this be by receiving that which he him selfe propounds to us or by offering that which may be received by him according to his perfection for in both respects we doe that which is immediatly and directly honorable to God 3. The first act of Religion therefore is about those things which are communicated to us from God and the other is about those things which are yeilded to God from us 4. Hearing the word is a religious receiving of the will of God 5. Therefore hearing is here taken for any receiving of the words of God whether they be communicated to us by preaching or by reading or any other way because God is wont to worke in a singular manner and by his own institution in the preaching and hearing of the Word 6. Therefore this word ought not to be taken so strictly that it should either chiefly or necessarily include alwayes the outward sence of hearing but that it may note any percieving of the will of God and chiefly set forth an inward receiving and subjection 7. The receiving of the Word consists of two parts Attention of mind and intention of will 8. Attention is an applying of the understanding to perceive the revealed will of God Acts 16. 14. The Lord opened the heart of Lydia that she might attend to the things which were spoken by Paul It is often called in the Scripture especially in the Old Testament A seeking of the will of God or of God himselfe to set forth that great desire wherewith we should be carried to know Gods Will as to the finding out of some thing which we can by no meanes want Esay 58. 2. Yet they seeke me dayly and delight to know my wayes as a Nation which doth righteousnesse and doth not forsake the judgement of their God they inquire of me the ordinances of Iustice they delight in approching to God 9. In this attention there needeth that providence whereby we may discerne what that is that God willeth Rom. 12. 2. That yee may prove what is that good pleasing and perfect Will of God which when it is perceived we must not deliberate further whether it be good or to be observed or no for the will of God itselfe is the last bound of all religious inquiry Gal. 1. 15. 16. When it pleased GOD to reveale his Sonne in mee I did not consult with flesh and blood 10. Intention is an applying of our will to a religious observance of the will of God already perceived Psal. 119. 106. I have sworn and will performe it that I will keepe thy righteous judgement 11. The purpose of the intention ought to be so strong and firme that without all exception we be ready to observe whatsoever God will command Ier. 42. 5 6. The Lord be a true and faithfull witnesse betweene us if we doe not even according to all things for the which the Lord thy God shall send thee to us whether it be good or whether it be evill we will obey the voyce of the Lord our God 12. In respect of this intention the Law of God it selfe is said to be in the heart of a believer Psal. 40. 9. 119. 11. Ier. 31. 33. Heb. 8. 10. 13. This hearing that it may be right ought to be from religious observance bringing subjection of the inward acts and inclinations of the mind Romans 6. 17. From the heart yee obeyed that forme of doctrine to which yee were delivered 14. But that it may be truly religious It is requisite first that it arise from Faith whereby we believe that to be the word of truth which God reveales unto us and also are accordingly affected toward it Hebr. 4. 2. The word being heard did not profit them not being mingled with Faith in them that heard it Luc. 24. 32. Did not our hearts burne in us whilest he spake to us 15. By this Faith we cleave to the word Psa. 119. 31. And the word it selfe cleaves unto and is ingrafted in us unto salvation Iames 1. 21. That ingrafted word 16. Secondly the same hearing must flow from that hope whereby we doe embrace that which God hath promised as the word of life also expecting life by it Deut. 32. 47. Iohn 5. 39. It is your life yee looke in them to finde eternall life 17. By this hope it comes to passe that the faithfull bring forth fruit with patience Luc. 8. 15. 18. In like manner it must have love joyned with it whereby we cleave to the same word or to God revealing himselfe to us in that word as simply good Psa. 119. 97. How doe I love thy Law 1 Thess. 2. 10. They received not the love of the truth that they might be saved 19. In respect of this love the Word of God doth dwell plentifully in the faithfull Colossians 3. 16. So as they are also transformed into the forme and fashion of it Romans 6. 17. 20. Such an
16. But his wel-pleasednesse is in those good things which are communicated by him to us but our wel-pleasednesse is in that goodnesse and Divine perfection which in no sort depends upon us 13. Love of good will is that affection whereby we yield our selves wholy to God and we wil and endeavour that all things be given to him which pertaine to his glory Revel 4. 10 11. They fell downe and cast their crownes before the throne saying Thou art worthy O Lord to receive glory and honour and power 1 Cor. 10. 31. Doe all to the glory of God 14. God in bearing us good will doth make us good by conferring that good which he willeth but we cannot properly bestow any good upon him but only acknowledge with the heart publish by words and declare in some measure by deeds that goodnesse which he hath 15. That mutuall Charity which is between God and the faithfull hath in it selfe some respect of friendship Iohn 15. 15. I have called you friends because I have made knowen all things which I have heard from my Father 16. In this friendship although there is not found that equality which is among men that are friends yet that equality which is possible doth appeare in a certaine inward communion which is exercised betweene God and the faithfull in which respect God is said to reveale his secrets to the faithfull Psalm 25 14. Iohn 15. 15. And to be as it were familiarly conversant with them Revel 3. 26. If any shall heare my voyce and shall open the doore I will goe in to him and sup with him and hee with me Iohn 14. 23. If any love me hee will keepe my Word And my Father will love him and we will come to him and dwell with him 17. Charity doth implicitly containe in it the keeping and fulfilling of all the Commandements of God Rom. l 13. 10. 1 Iohn 2 5. and 3. 18. For he cannot truly love God who doth not study to please him in all things and to be like him 1 Iohn 4. 17. Herein is our Charity made perfect that as he is such also are we 18. The manner of our Charity towards God is that it becaried to him as to that which is simply the highest good and end so that neither God nor the love of God is principally and lastly to be referred to any thing else because such love should be mercenary Iohn 6. 26. Ye seeke me because yee ate of the loaves and were filled 19. Yet wee may love God as our reward Genesis 15. 2. And with respect of other good things as of a reward Gen. 17. 2. 20. The degree of Charity towards God ought to be the highest first in respect of the object or as they say objectively that is willing a greater good to him then to any 2. In regard of esteeme or as some speake appretiatively that is preferring him and his will before all other things even our own life Matt. 10. 37. Luc. 14. 26. So that we rather choose to die then to transgresse even the least of his Commandements 3. Intensively that is in respect of the vehement indeavour in the application of all the faculties to the loving of God Deut. 6. 5. Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy mind and with all thy strength 21. According to this description of Charity it is rightly said of some Divines that God is only to be loved that is simply by it selfe and according to all the parts of Charity namely with affection of good will desire of Union and wel-pleasednesse of enjoying in the highest degree although our neighbour also is to be beloved in a certaine respect for another thing in part and in a lower degree 22. To this Charity is opposed that feare which hath torment by the presence of God and feare of punishment to be in-flicted by him 1 Iohn 4. 18. Perfect love casteth out feare because feare hath torment 23. Hence Charity being perfected casteth out feare Ibid. Because that feare is an horror arising from the apprehension of evill by reason of the presence of God and so is opposed to Charity which is caried unto God as unto that which is absolutly good 24. Secondly there is opposed to it an enstranging from God which is called by some hatred of abomination Psalm 14. 3. Iohn 3. 20. They are all gone out of the way He hates the light for as Charity consists in affection of union so this enstranging is in disjunction But that hatred of God is most contrary to the love of God which is called hatred of enmity Iohn 13. 23 24 25. They have hated both me and my Father For as the love of Charity is in good will so this enmity against God is in that that ungodly men doe desire and will ill to him if it might be that he were not or at least that he were not such an one as he is 25. For although if God be apprehended so as he is in himselfe he cannot be the object of hatred yet as he is apprehended as one that taketh vengeance on sinners so far forth he is often hated of the same sinners because in that respect he is most contrary to them Ioh. 3. 20. Whosoever evill doth hateth the light neither commeth to the light least his deeds be reproved For as the love of God is in the godly the cause that they hate impiety contrary to God so the love of iniquity in the ungodly causeth that they hate God as contrary to their iniquity 26. But the degrees by which men ascend to this height of ungodlinesse are these 1. Sinners love themselves inordinatly 2. They will that which pleaseth themselves although it be contrary to the Law of God 3. They hate the Law because it is contrary to this desire 4. They hate God himselfe who is the giver and author of such a Law 27. The love of this world also is opposed to the Charity towards God 1 Iohn 2. 15. Because this world agreeth not with God his will There Verse 16. If any love the world the love of the Father is not in him Because whatsoever is in the world is not of the Father 28. For as the perfection of Charity is in this that the mind doth rest in God so it must needs be against Charity that the minde doth rest in that which is contrary to God 29. Charity is no more the forme of other vertues then any vertue commanding or ordering the acts of another is the forme of it but because those acts which in their nature doe not respect God are referred to him by Charity and in him such acts are perfected therefore by a metaphor it is not amisse called the forme of those acts and of the vertues also from which they come 30. But Charity cannot be the intrinse call forme of Faith because in its nature it followes Faith as an effect followes the cause it doth not goe before as
subject to our lust 15. But it comes most often from presumption whereby one is confident that God will doe this or that which he no where promised or at least did not promise that he would doe in that manner and with those meanes that they expect whence also it is that every tempting of God is by some referred to presumption and in respect of arrogancy it is opposed to prayer wherein we doe humbly represent our will to God that it may be performed by him as he pleaseth 16. But it is alwayes opposed to some act of religion wherby wee depend upon the will of God because when we tempt God we doe it that God may as it were depend upon our will 17. To desire some speciall signe of God with some speciall reason inspiration or instinct is to tempt God Matth 16. 1. The Pharisees and Sadduc●…s tempting him required him to shew them a signe from Heaven 18. Yet to refuse a signe offered by God is to tempt or weary him Is. 7. 11 12 13. Aske a signe I will not aske neither will I tempt God Yee weary my God Humbly to seeke a signe of God about some particular necessary thing which otherwise is not sufficiently manifested a believer may sometime doe without sin Gen. 15. 8. How shall I know that I shall inherit the Land 19. Proving or purging of a suspected offence by triall of hot Iron scalding water and the like are temptings of God for there is a certaine miraculous shewing of the power of God expected or required in them to proove an hidden truth without just cause because there are other meanes appointed to find out mens faults which also if they faile such things may be unknowne without any fault 20. Of the same kind are single Duells or monomachies which of old were permitted by publick authority and are yet too much frequented for in them the righteousnesse of the cause is committed to be decided by the singular providence of God from that successe which he is thought to give according to his Iustice without any certaine and just reason 21. Beside these temptings which doe properly pertaine to triall there is also a tempting as it were of inducement towards God when there is required or expected helpe from him to commit some hainous wickednesse 20. Yet those inducements may fithly enough be referred to temptation of triall because the Will of God is tried in them They differ from others in this only that that object about which the Will of God is tried is an action in it selfe unlawfull in which respect the honour of God is specially hurt and violated because together with the temptation there is joyned a certaine most foule mocking of God 23. Tempting or proving of God is sometime taken in good part and is commanded Mat. 3. 10. Try me now in this saith the Lord of Hosts 24. But this tempting is an act of Faith leading us to obey and practise those things which God hath commanded with expectation of that fruit and blessing which God hath promised 25. This lawfull tempting of God doth put back all the tentations of the Devill 26. That unlawfull tempting of God doth lay us open to the tentations of the Devill neither are wee ever overcome by any tentation of the Devill unlesse wee doe in a sort tempt God CHAPTER XIII Of instituted worship 1. INstituted worship is the meanes ordained by the Will of God to exercise and further naturall worship 2. All such like meanes ordained of God are declared in the second Commandement by forbidding all contrary meanes of worship devised by men under the title of Graven and Image which seeing they were of old the chiefe inventions of men corrupting the worship of God they are most fitly by a Synechdoche frequent in the Decalogue put instead of all devises of mans wit pertaining to worship 3. This worship doth not depend In specie and immediatly upon the nature of God or upon that honour w●…ch by vertue of our Creation we owe to God but upon the most free institution of God 4. Hence this worship was divers according to the divers constitution of the Church one befo●… Christ exhibited and another after 5. It is a meanes having relation to the naturall worship otherwise it were not worship because one cannot give that honour to God which is due to him as touching the essence of the act any other way then by Faith hope and Love whereby we doe receive from God with due subjection those things he propounds to us to be received with the same subjectiō we offer to him those things which may be offered by us to his honour But because the acts themselves are in a speciall manner exercised in those things which God hath instituted for his honour therefore there is in them a certaine secundary worship and a certaine partaking of the former 6. But it hath in respect to that naturall worship the affection of an effect which existeth by vertue of the former and of a meanes and instrument whereby Faith Hope and Love in which that worship is contained doe exercise their acts and of an adjuvant cause whereby they are furthered and also of an adjunct to which thy are subjected 7. But it is properly called worship as it is a meanes and helping cause of that primary worship 8. But because the command of God being put it depends and flowes from the primary worship of God therefore it is oft perswaded and urged by those arguments which are taken from the inward and essentiall manner of worshipping God as in the second precept They that love me and keep by Commandements Deut. 10. 12 13. What doth the Lord thy God require of thee but that thou feare the Lord thy God walke in all his wayes that thou love him worship the Lord thy God with all thy heart and all thy soule observing the precepts of the Lord and his Statutes 9. That rule therefore of interpreting the Scriptures which is wont to be delivered by some is not universally true that all those duties morall and immutable which have morall and immutable reasons joyned to them except it be thus understood that those duties doe follow upon those reasons no speciall command coming betweene Lev. 11. 44. I am the Lord your God that sanctifie you that ye may be holy as I am holy ●…t defile not therefore your selves with any creeping thing 10. No worship of this kind is lawfull unlesse it hath God for the Author and ordainer of it Deut. 4. 2. 12. 32. Keep you all things which I shall command you Ad not to the word which command you neither take from it every thing which I command you observe to doe ad not to it nor take from it every thing which I command you observe to doe ad not to it nor take from 1. Chron. 16. 13. Our Lord broke in upon us because we did not seeke him aright 11. That is declared in those words
also of Christ Rev. 21. 22. The Lord God Almighty is her Temple and the Lambe 1. Cor. 3. 16. Know yee not that yee are the Temple of God and the Spirit of God dwelleth in you and 6. 19. Know yee not that your body is the Temple of the holy Spirit who is in you 21. Finally that authority and majesty which is proper to God is given to the Sonne and the spirit 1. Cor. 2. 8. The Lord of glory 1. Pet. 4. 14. that spirit of glory All holy prophecy is attributed to Christ and the holy Spirit 1. Pet. 3. 19. Christ by his spirit went and preached to the spirits that are in prison 2. Pet. 1. 21. Holy men spake being moved by the holy Spirit Acts 28. 25. The holy Spirit spake by Isaiah the Prophet 22. Now that the holy Spirit is propounded to us in all these as a person subsisting it doth manifestly appeare by this that life understanding will and power is given to him every where together with all acts proper to a person 23 Also his distinction from the Father and the Sonne is cleerly taught when he is called another sent comming from the Father and the Sonne Iohn 14. 24. Hence God is the object of our Faith is every way sufficient to impart salvation to us For all love grace and the communication of those things which pertaine to living well doe flow from the Father Sonne and holy Spirit 2. Cor. 13. 13. CHAPTER VI. Of the Efficiency of God 1. THe Efficiency of God is that whereby he worketh all in all things Eph. 1. 11. Who worketh all things Rom. 11. 36. Of him by him and for him are all things 3. That Effecting working or acting of God being actively taken as they are in God acting not really diverse from God himselfe For no composition ormutation of power and act can have place in the most simple and immutable nature of God Yet it addeth a certaine relation of God to a reall effect 4. He worketh all in all things because the Efficiency of all and every thing depends upon the first cause not only as touching its substance but also as touching all reall circumstances Isay 45. 7. That I Iehova doe all these things Lam. 3. 37. 38. Who is he that saith and it commeth to passe when the Lord commandeth it not Out of the mouth of the most high proceedeth not evill and good Also whatsoever hath any perfection in genere moris in matter of manners is accounted among the workes of God but not imperfection or defects which are opposed to the subjection that is due to God 4. In the efficiency of God shines forth both his Essence and his subsistance 5. That Efficiency which pertaines to the Essence of God is his omnipotency 6. The power of God being considered as simply powerfull is altogether the same with his sufficiency and pertaines properly to the nature of God as it is considered under the respect of a being and so is before the knowledge and will of God Rom. 11. 23. for God is able to graft them in againe 7. But power in asmuch as it is in execution is in some sort after sufficiency and pertaines to the Efficiency of God and so doth follow the knowledge and will of God Psal. 115. 3 and 135 6. Whatsoever he pleased he did 8. In these therefore this order is to be conceived That first we conceive in God Posse to be able secondly Scire to know thirdly Velle to will Lastly Efficere potenter powerfully to effect which differs from the effectuall will of God but only ratione in reason whence is that Syllogisme of Faith which in Matth. 8. 2 3. is distinctly explained Lord of thou wilt thou canst I will Therefore it is done Where the argument is from the will comming to the power 9. Hence the very Will of God as it is an effecting principle hath a kinde of power Rom. 9. 19. Who hath resisted his will neither is executive Omnipotency any thing else then the effecting will of God Psalme 33. 9. Hee commanded and it was done Revel 4. 11. By thy will they are and were created 10. Therefore it is an error against the nature of God to say that God properly willeth to doe many things which yet by his Omnipotency he doth not Eph. 1. 19 20. The exceeding greatnesse of his power in us that believe according to the working of his mighty power 11. The Omnipotency of God is that whereby he his able to effect all things that he willeth or can will 2. Cor. 20. 6. In thy hand is power and strength and none can resist thee Luke 1. 37. With God there is no word which cannot be done Phil. 3. 21. He is also able to subject all things unto himselfe 12. Hence also God is everywhere called in the old Testament 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mighty God Isay 9. 6. Ieremy 32. 18. Also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God al-sufficient Gen. 17 1. 35. 11. Ruth 1. 20. 21. And in the new Testament he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Lord Almighty 2. Cor. 6. 18. Rev. 1. 8. 48. And the only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Potentate 1. Tim. 6. 15. Power is attributed to God actively because he hath power to communicate something to others such as is the power of the cause 13. Potentia vel potestas causae A causing power yet properly active power doth not agree to God as if in respect of himselfe he were first idle and after did put himselfe forth into act for God is a most pure Act. Iames 1. 17. 14. Therefore we must not imagine such an active power in God which is a different thing from his Essence for the very Essence of God is this power whereby he is powerfull As the same Essence is mercy it selfe whereby he is mercifull 15. But an active power agrees to God in respect of the Creature which is properly said to be able to receive and prove that act of God which before it did not feele and prove Matthew 19. 26. All things are possible with God 16. The Omnipotency of God is conversant about things absolutely possible whatsoever God willeth or can will Ibidem 17. It is not therefore exercised about things which are altogether 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 impossible and doe imply a certaine contradiction either in God or in the things created 2. Tim. 2. 13. He cannot deny himselfe 18. Hence a certaine distinction ariseth of Divine Omnipotency whereby it is distinguished into absolute power and ordinate or actuall power 19. Absolute power is that whereby God is able to doe all things possible although they never shall be Matth. 3. 9. God can of these stones raise up children unto Abraham and 26. 53. Thinkest thou that I cannot now pray my Father and he shall presently give me more then twelve legions of Angels Mark 10. 27. Eph. 3. 20. 20. The ordinate power of God is that whereby he not only can doe
includes divers respects to the Creatures it becomes manifold so that it is true that the Idea of one Creature is not the Idea of another 20. There are in God platformes of all perfections which are in the Creatures because they proceed from the active power of God but not of imperfections if they be formally considered as imperfections 21. Therefore the knowledge of evill depends upon the denying of good as the being of evill consists in privation of good for every thing as it hath its being so it is knowne 22. Ideas as they are many so some of them are Connexa knit together among themselves and depend one upon another whence also a certaine order ariseth of former and latter 23. Idea's as they are considered going before the Decree of Gods Will doe represent a quiddity of things and only a possible existence as they are considered after the determination of Gods Will they represent the same thing as actually to come according to their actuall existence 24. From that divers consideration there ariseth distinction of Divine knowledge into that which is called Knowledge of simple understanding and knowledge of vision 25. Knowledge of simple intelligence is of all possible things that is of all and every thing which may be done by most perfect knowledge in God 26. Knowledge of vision is the knowledge of all future things whether they be in their own nature necessary or free or contingent 27. These things that God knowes by the knowledge of simple intelligence or meere understanding he knowes by his all sufficiency but those things that he knowes by knowledge of vision he knowes by his Efficiency or by the Decree of his own will Psal. 33. 15. He that frames their hearts observeth all their workes Isa. 44. 2. Who as I foretelleth and declareth it or ordereth it to me from the time that I disposed the people for ever that the things to come and which shall come to passe may be declared to them 28. A middle knowledge by which God is fained of some to have known before the Decree of his will by supposition such events to come to passe if such causes were put seeing that it doth both determine events to come certainly to passe independantly from Gods Will and doth make some knowledge of God to depend chiefly on the object I say such a knowledge cannot stand with the great perfection of God 29. The Divine Idea according to the variety of Notions which are in the things doth put on divers respects In respect of the Principles it is called intelligence whereby God perceiveth every severall thing in every thing in respect of truth belonging to every severall thing it is called Science which as to the extent of it is Omniscience as to that being which things have in their proper measure is called Praescience In respect of the dependance of truths which they have among themselves it is called Sapience whereby he knoweth what is convenient for every thing and what is disagreeable from it In respect of the whole order to be appointed in practise it is called Prudence whereby he knowes to apply the fittest occasions to every thing Lastly in respect of putting in practise it is called Art Whereby hee knowes to effect all things most skilfully Heb. 11. 10. 30. Those words are often used promiscuously in the Scriptures to explaine the perfection of Divine understanding to the capacity of those who have an understanding very imperfect yet of their own nature they admit this distinction and not another 31. That conjecturall knowledge which only some doe give to God about contingent things to come doth plainly repugne the nature and perfection of God Of those three things which were propounded as concurring to the perfection of Gods Counsell namely A scope conceived of the minde and intention of will The Third remaines to be considered which is called Good pleasure 32. The Good pleasure of God is an act of Divine will most freely and effectually determining of all things 33. Good pleasure indeed in Scripture doth most usually set forth the good will of God whereby he willeth and determineth a saving good unto his yet because all the Counsell of God is well pleasing to him it is rightly used by Divines to explaine every Counsell of God even according to the Scriptures 34. This will is truly free because whatsoever it willeth it willeth it not by necessity of nature but by Counsell 35. It is most free or chiefly and absolutely free depending upon no other but the freedome of the will of men and Angels by reason of that dependance which it hath on God is lesse free partaking of another 36. Freedome in those operations which are outward is not only concomitant as it is in inward operations but also it is antecedent by way of a principle because that which God willeth to worke outwardly he willeth not out of necessity of nature but of precedent choise for there is not a necessary connexion betweene the Divine Nature and those Acts. 37. This will is Effectuall because whatsoever it willeth he effecteth it in its time neither is there any thing that is not done if he willeth it to be done Psal. 115. 3. 135. 6. Iehova doth whatsoever he pleaseth 38. Hence the Will of God is the first cause of things Rev. 4. 11. By thy will they are and were created But the Will of God as it willeth to worke outwardly doth not presuppose the goodnesse of the object but by willing doth make the object Iames 1. 18. Because he would he begat us Rom. 9. 18. He hath mercy on whom he will 39. Therefore there is no cause properly so called to be given of Gods Will. 40. Hence it is rightly said that God doth will one thing to exist for another but not that that one thing is a proper cause whereby the Will of God is inwardly moved to appoint that other thing So God would that the Sunne and stars should exist for the generation conservation and corruption of things below yet the Sunne and Stars are not a cause why God would that those things should be generated conserved and corrupted And so it is in all things out of God which indeed among themselves are causes and effects even as they depend upon the Divine will but there is no cause of Gods Will out of it selfe 41. Also the willing of one thing in God is not properly a cause effecting that he will another thing in himselfe because the Efficiency of a cause upon an effect and dependance of the effect upon a cause cannot be in the Will of God which is God himselfe truly and simply willing all things together and at once with one onely act yet it is true that the Schoolemen say that a passive attingency of the Divine will in respect of one thing is a cause of a passive attingency in respect of another and so in this sence it is truly and piously said that God willeth some one
Eyes and the Fruit of the Tree to be desired to get knowledge she tooke and eat 7. Therefore the first degree and motion of this disobedience was an inordinate desire of some excellency by the lifting up of the mind which that she might attaine the forbidding of God being laid aside through unbeliefe she would make triall whether the forbidden Fruit had some power to confer such an excellency 8. Hence was the grievousnesse of this sin which did not only containe pride ingratitude and unbeliefe but also by violating of that most solemne Sacrament did make shew of as it were a generall profession of disobedience and contempt of the whole covenant All which also were so much the more foule by how much the condition of the sinner was more perfect 9. In the committing of this transgression two things are to be considered the causes and consequents of it 10. Causes were one principall And others adjuvant 11. The principall cause was man himselfe by the abuse of his free will Eccles. 7. 29. For he had received that righteousnesse and grace by which he might have persisted in obedience if he would That righteousnesse and grace was not taken from him before he had sinned although that strengthning and confirming grace by which the act of sinning should have been actually hindered and the contrary act of obedience brought forth was not granted unto him and that by the certaine wise and just counsell of God God therefore was in no wise the cause of his Fall neither did he lay upon man a necessity of falling but man of his own accord did freely Fall from God 12. The adjuvant causes were the Devill and the Woman 13. The first sin of the Divell was pride From pride did presently follow envy towards God and Gods Image in Man For because he had lost an orderly Excellency by affecting one out of order therefore the Excellency of others grieved him and he was maliciously bent to oppose it But the Devill was not the compelling cause neither the cause of sufficient direct necessary or certaine efficacy in procuring that sin but only the counselling and perswading cause by tempting whence also it is that he hath the name of the tempter Mat. 4. 3. 14. The tempting of the Divell is a fallacy or sophisticall argumentation whereby under a shew of that which is true and good he labours to seduce to that which is false and induce to that which is evill 15. In this tentation the good which he propounded and as it were promised was shewed to be as it were the greatest the way to be used to attaine that good was propounded to be as it were easie and light that greatest evill which did hang over his head was hidden from him 16. The Devill is wont to goe the like way in all his tentations which he doth insnare mankind with yet in this tentation a certaine speciall cunning is to be observed which containes many crafts and those very subtile 17. The first of them was in that he chose a Serpent for his instrument which had a certaine naturall aptnesse which the Devill knew how to abuse 18. The second slight was in that he dealt with the Woman 1. Tim. 1. 13. Whether in the presence or absence of her husband the Scripture is silent 19. The third slight was in that he determined nothing at the first speech but only propounded a certaine question to the Woman as if he were ignorant of those matters Hath God indeed said 20 The fourth was that his question had much ambiguity in it for so might be understood that he should not aske of Gods command but of the sence or meaning of that command peradventure not sufficiently understood by man If the question be understood of the command it selfe then he might seem to have asked whether God had forbidden them that they should not at all eat of the fruit of any Tree or as the Woman her selfe answered whether he had forbidden them the use of that one Tree and so had not simply given them leave for all 21. The fift was that having first called the command of God into doubt by that question he did so artifically extenuat the sanction of it or communication adjoyned in the conceit of the Woman now wavering that she should deny either the truth or at least the necessity of it 22. The sixt was that after he had weakened the Commandement and the sanction of it it doth oppose a prediction quite contrary 23. The seventh was that to confirme that prediction he doth both abuse the Name of God and the Name which God had imposed on the Tree Gen. 3. 5. God knoweth that what day ye shall eat there of your Eyes shall be opened and you shall be as Gods knowing Good and Evill 24. Hence it is that the Divill is called a Serpent a Lyer a Seducer a Man-slayer Revelations 12. 9. Iohn 8. 44. Rev. 20. 10. 25. With this tempting of the Devill there was joyned the tempting of God whereby he did so order that businesse that it might thence be manifest what was in Man But this tempting of God was neither Evill nor tending to Evill 26. A third tempting did follow these namely of Man towards God wherein he did in a certaine manner make triall of the truth and Grace of God namely making triall whether God would preserve him although he did not cleave to him or whether he would certainly doe what he had threatned 27. A fourth temptation of Eve did accompany that namely towards her selfe whereby she received the tentation or suggestion of the Devill into her selfe and applied to her selfe to her own ruine 28. From that arose a fifth whereby the Woman serving the Divill as his instrument did tempt Adam and from that proceeded a sixth whereby Adam tempted himselfe whilst he consented with a certaine purpose to the Woman and the Devill 29. Either all or most of these tentations are found also in every Mans sins 30. And so that sin was consummated as touching the Fall of Man-kind in Adam for Adam was properly the beginning of Man-kind not Eve Unlesse as she was made for him and with him did make one and the same beginning Hence it is that we read in Scripture of a second Adam but not of a second Eve CHAPTER XII Of the consequents of Sinne. In the Former disputation wee treated of the Fall and the causes of it now follow the consequents of the Fall 1. THE consequents of Sinne are 1. Guiltinesse and Filthinesse 2. Punishment properly and distinctly so called 2. Guiltinesse is the binding of the Sinner to undergoe just punishment for his fault Levit. 5. 2 3 4 5. He is guilty Rom. 3. 9. We have proved that all are under Sinne. And Vers. 19. All the world is guilty before God 1. Cor. 15. 17. Ye are in your Sinnes 3. Hence that distinction of Guiltinesse of the fault guiltinesse of punishment as also that distinction of the Papists
as in the kingly seat and Chariot of triumph 5. The glory of this triumph was a changing of the humble forme of a servant and that most abject condition which in it he did undergoe into blessednesse altogether Heavenly Phil. 2. 9. Wherefore also God did highly exalt him and gave him a name above every name 6. In respect of the Divine nature it was onely an active manifestation in respect of the humane nature it was a reall receiving with sutable actions flowing from it 7. The humane nature received all those perfections which a created nature could take For in the soule there flourished all kind of fulnesse of wisdome and grace not only in respect of the principle and habit but also in respect of the act and exercise his body also was adozned with greatest purity agility splendor and strength Hebr. 12. 2. For the joy that was set before him he endured the Crosse Phil. 3. 21. Who shall transforme our vile body that it may be life to his glorious body 8. But as the soule of Christ being now exalted did still retaine the nature of a soule so also the body glorified did in no wise lay downe the essence and essentiall properties of a body therefore it can neither be every where nor together in many places nor in the same place with an other body Penetrativè Which indeed all that have eyes to see may cleerly perceive in those phrases of Scripture Being taken from them he was caried up into Heaven Luke 24. 51. He is not here he is risen Mat. 28. 6. And many such like 9. There were three degrees of Exaltation opposite to as many degrees of his extreame humiliation namely his Resurrection from the dead being opposed to his death his ascending into Heaven opposed to his descending into the Grave and to the Lowest place of the Earth and his sitting at the right Hand of God opposed to his remaining in the Grave and in the state of death or in Hell 10. Christs Resurrection was of his whole humane nature which before had fallen by death In respect of the soule it was from Hell or from the state and dominion of death to which the soule as it was a part of the humane nature was subject In respect of the body it was from the dead and from the Grave 11. The soule is said improperly to have risen againe but the body and humane nature properly For the body and the man did properly recover his perfection but the soule did recover the act and motion of its perfection in the body 12. There are two parts of his Resurrection the first is an internall act namely a reviving restored by the uniting of soule and body the second is an externall act namely his going out of the Grave to the manifestation of life restored 13. Unto this Resurrection there did give testimony 1. The Angells 2. Christ himselfe by divers apparitions ten whereof at least are reckoned up in the Scriptures and also by divers proofes taken out of the Scriptures 3. Men who were certified of it by seeing hearing and handling him 14. But Christ did rise not by the power or leave of another although this operation be attributed to God the Father Acts 2. 24. But by his own power Iohn 2. 19. Destroy this Temple and within three dayes I will raise it up And 10. 18. I have power of taking up my life againe 15. The time of Resurrection was the third Day after his Death and Buriall Mat. 16. 2. Luke 24. 7 Acts 10. 40. 1 Cor. 15. 4. 16. The end of this Resurrection was 1. That he might be declared to be the Sonne of God Rom. 1. 4. Declared mightily to be the Sonne of God by the Resurrection from the dead 2. That he might seale a full victory of death 1 Cor. 15. 57. Thankes be to God who hath given us victory through our Lord Iesus Christ. 3. That he might fulfill those parts of his office which did follow his death Rom. 4. 25. He was raised againe for our justification 4. That he might shew himselfe both justified and justifying others 1 Cor. 15. 17. If Christ be not risen your faith is vaine yee are yet in your sinnes 5. That he might be the substance example and entrance of our spirituall and corporall Resurrection Vers 20. 21. 23. of the same Chapter He is made the first fruits of them that sleepe In Christ shall all be made alive 17. For Christ as God is the cause absolutely principall of our Resurrection as satisfying by his humiliation and death he is the meritorious cause but as rising from the dead he is the exemplary cause and withall a demonstration and an initiation 18. The ascending of Christ into Heaven is a middle degree or certaine progresse of exaltation whereby leaving the Earth he ascends up into the highest Heaven as into his throne of glory Acts 1. 11. He is taken up from you into Heaven Ephes. 4. 10. Hee ascended farre above all Heavens 19. This ascension was of the whole person yet it doth not agree to the Divine nature but figuratively namely as it was the cause of ascending and was joyned with the humane nature in excellency manifesting also his glory in it whereof he had as it were emptied himselfe when he descended into it by the incarnation but it doth most properly agree to the humane nature because it suffered change from a lower place to an higher 20. The time of his ascension was 40 dayes after his Resurrection Acts 1. 3. not sooner because the infirmity of the Disciples did require the delay of this space of time that their faith might be confirmed by divers appearings and they might also be more fully instructed in those things which pertaine to the Kingdome of God Acts 1. 3. Not later least he should seeme to thinke upon an earthly life 21. The place from which he did ascend was mount Olivet Acts 1. 12. Where also he entred into deepest humiliation Luc. 22. 39. That he might teach that his suffering and ascension did pertaine to the same thing 22. The place into which he ascended was the Heaven of the blessed and which is not an ubiquitary Heaven as some doe imagine so as that ascension should only be a change of condition and not of place but it is the highest above all the other Heavens Eph. 4. 10. The seat house or mansion of God Iohn 14. 2. So that in respect of locall presence Christs humane nature is rightly and truly said to be with us in Earth Mat. 26. 11. Although he himselfe in respect of his person and that spirituall efficacy which doth depend upon the humane nature is every where with his unto the end of the world Mat. 28. 20. 23. The witnesses of this ascension were both many men and Angels Acts 1. 24. In respect of order he was the first of all those who ascended into Heaven in priority of nature because his ascension was a cause by vertue
according to his purpose Eph. 1. 11. And his purpose according to election Rom. 9. 11. And election also according to purpose the counsell and good pleasure of the Will of God Eph. 1. 5. 26. There doth a certaine knowledge particularly accompany these acts of will in election in the mind of God wherebyGod doth most certainly know the heires of eternall life whence also election it selfe is called knowledge or fore-knowledge Rom. 8. 29. But this knowledge of God because with greatest firmnesse it retaines the distinct names of those that are to be saved and the good things appointed for them as if all were written in Gods Booke therefore it is called the booke of Life Psalme 69. 29. Revelations 3. 5. and 13. 8. 27 This election was only one in God in respect of whole Christ mystically considered that is of Christ and of those who are Christ as there was one Creation of all mankind yet as a certaine distinction may be conceived according to reason Christ was first elected as the Head and then some men as members in him Eph. 1. 4. 28. Yet Christ is not the meritorious or impulsive cause in respect of the election of men it selfe although it hath the reason of a cause in respect of all the effects of election which follow the sending of Christ himselfe 29. Christ himselfe in the first act of election as touching the worke of redemption is rightly said to be an effect and meanes ordained to the salvation of man as the end as this salvation is the action of God Iohn 17. 6. Thine they were and thou gavest them me Yet as this salvation is our good Christ is not the effect but the cause of it So it may be rightly said in respect of the first act of election that Christ the redeemer was the effect and subordinate meanes but in the third act of election he is to be considered as a cause Eph. 1. 3. He hath blessed us with all spirituall blessings in the Heavens in Christ. 30. Reprobation is the predestinating of some certaine men that the glory of Gods Iustice might be manifested in them Rom. 9. 22. 2 Thess. 2. 12. Iud. 4. 31. Three acts are to be conceived in reprobation as before in election 32. The first act is to will the setting forth of Iustice. Therefore the end of God in reprobation is not properly the destruction of the Creature but the Iustice of God which shines forth in deformed destruction 33. Hence is the first difference in reason betweene election and reprobation for in election not only the glorious grace of God hath the respect of an end but also the salvation of men themselves but in reprobation damnation in it selfe hath not the respect of an end or of good 34. The second act is to appoint those certaine men in whom this Iustice of God should be made manifest Iude 4. 35. That act cannot properly be called election because it is not out of love neither doth it bring the bestowing of any good but the privation of it Therefore it is properly called reprobation because it doth reject or remove those about whom it is exercised from that love wherewith the elect are appointed to salvation As therefore in election there is love with discerning so in reprobation there is seene the deniall of love with putting a difference 36. But because this negative setting apart which is found in reprobation doth depend upon that setting apart which is in election hence the remote end of reprobation is the glory of that grace which is manifested in election Rom. 9. 22. 23. He suffered the vessels of wrath that he might make known the riches of his glory toward the vessels of mercy 37. Because of this setting apart whereby God will not communicate blessednesse upon some persons he is therefore said to hate them Rom. 9. 13. This hatred is called negative or privative because it denies election but it includes a positive act whereby God would that some should be deprived of life eternall 38. Neverthelesse in this is the second difference of reason between election and reprobation that th●… love of election doth bestow the good on the Creatu●… immediatly but the hatred of reprobation doth only deny good doth not bring or inflict evill but the desert of the Creature comming between 39. The third act of reprobation is an intention to direct those meanes whereby Iustice may be manifested in the reprobate 40. The most proper meanes of this kind are permission of sin and living in sin Rom. 9. 18. ●…2 Thess. 2. 11. 12. 41. In this act there is the third difference of reason between election and reprobation that election is the cause not only of salvation but also of all those things which have the consideration of a cause unto salvation but reprobation is not properly a cause either of damnation or of sin which deserves damnation 〈◊〉 an an●…ecedent only 42. Hence also followes a fourth disparity that the very meanes have not alwayes among themselves the respect of a cause and effect for the permission of sin is not the cause of forsaking hardning punishing but sin it selfe CHAPTER XXVI Of ●…lling Hitherto of Application The parts of it follow 1. THE parts of Application are two Union with Christ and communion of the benefits that flow from that Union Phil. 3. 9. That I may be found in him having the righteousnesse that is by the Faith of Christ. 2. This Union●… that spirituall relation of men to Christ whereby they obtaine right to all those blessings which are prepared in him 1 Iohn 5. 12. He that hath the S●…e hath life 〈◊〉 And. 3. 24. He dwelleth 〈◊〉 him and he in him 3. This Union is wrought by calling 4. For Calling is a gathering of men together to Christ that they may be united with him 1 Pet. 2. 4. 5. To whom comming Eph. 4. 12. For the gathering together of the Saints for the edifying of the Body of Christ. From which Union with Christ there followes Vnion with GOD the Father 1 Thess. 1. 1. 2. 1. 1. To the Church which is in GOD the Father and in our Lord Iesus Christ. 5. This therefore is that first thing which pertaines to the application of redemption Eph. 1. 7. 8. 9. In whom we have redemption c. After he made known unto us the mystery of his will and it is that first thing which doth make a man actually elected himselfe that is the first act of election which is shewed forth and exercised in man himselfe whence also it is that Calling and election are sometime taken in the Scriptures in the same sence 1 Cor. 1. 26. 27. 28. Yee see your Calling God hath chosen foolish things and weake things 6. Hence the Calling of men doth not in any sort depend upon the dignity honesty industry or any indeavour of the called but upon election and predestination of God only Acts 2. 47. The Lord did ad to the Church such as should
be saved And 13. 48. As many as were ordained to life believed Rom. 8. 30. Whom he predestinated them also he called Tit. 3. 5. Not by works of righteousnesse but of his own mercy Iane●… 1. 18. Of his owne will begat he us by the word of truth 7. The parts of Calling are two The offer of Christ and the receiving of him Iohn 1. 11. He came to his own and his own received him not But to as many as receive him he gave to them c. 8. The offer is an objective propounding of Christ as of a meanes sufficient and necessary to salvation 1. Cor. 1. 23. 24. We preach Christ the Power of God and the wisdome of God Heb. 7. 25. He is able perfectly to save those that come to God by him Acts 4. 12. Neither is there any other name under Heaven which is given among men by which we must be saved 9. But there is nothing propounded nor ought to be propounded of Christ in the Calling of men to be believed as true which is not simply and absolutely true For this is both against the nature of a testimony as it is an object of that Faith which is in the understanding the formall reason whereof is truth and also is against the nature of the Gospell it selfe which by an excellency is called the word of truth Eph. 1. 13. 10. The offer of Christ is outward or inward 11. The outward is a propounding or preaching of the Gospell or of the promises of Christ. Acts. 9. 15. That he may beare my name in the sight of the Gentiles 12. Yet that man be prepared to receive the promises the application of the Law doth ordinarily goe before to the discovery of sin and inexcusablenesse and humiliation of the sinner Rom. 7. 7. I knew not sinne but by the Law 13. Those promises as touching the outward promulgation are propounded to all without difference together with a command to believe them but as touching the propriety of the things promised which depends upon the intention of him that promiseth they belong only to the elect who are therefore called the sonnes and heires of the promise Rom. 9. 8. 14. The inward offer is a spirituall enlightning whereby those promises are propounded to the hearts of men as it were by an inward word Iohn 6. 45. Whosoever hath heard of the Father and hath learned commeth to me Eph. 1. 17. That he might give unto you the spirit of wisdome and revelation the eyes of your mind being enlightened that ye may know what is that hope of your calling 15. This also is sometime and in a certaine manner granted to those that are not elected Hebrewes 6. 4. 10. 29. Mat. 13. 20. 16. If any one oppose himselfe out of malice to this illumination he commits a sin against the Holy Ghost which is called unpardonable or unto death Hebr. 6. 6. 10. 29. 1 Iohn 5. 16. Mat. 12. 32. 17. The receiving of Christ is that whereby Christ being offered is joyned to man and man unto Christ. Iohn 6. 56. He abides in me and I him 18. In respect of this conjunction we say that we are in Christ 2 Cor. 5. 17. And to put on Christ. Gal. 3. 27. To be dwelled in by Christ. Eph. 3. 17. The house of Christ. Hebr. 3. 6. the Temple of Christ 2 Cor. 6. 16. To be espoused to Christ. Eph. 5. 23. Branches of Christ Iohn 15. 5. Members of Christ 1 Cor. 12. 12. And the Name of Christ is a certaine manner communicated to us 1 Cor. 12. 12. So also is Christ. 19. By reason of this receiving Calling is called conversion Acts 26. 20. Because all they who obey the call of God are wholly converted from sin to grace from the world to follow God in Christ It is also called regeneration as by that word the very beginning of a new life of a new Creation of a new Creature is often set forth in the Scriptures Iohn 1. 13. 3. 6. 1 Iohn 3. 9. 1 Pet. 1. 23. 22. As in respect of the offer it is properly called Calling as God doth effectually invite and draw men to Christ. Iohn 6. 44. 20. Receiving in respect of man is either passive or active Philippians 3. 12. That I may apprehend I was apprehended 21. Passive receiving of Christ is that whereby a spirituall principle of grace is begotten in the will of man Eph. 2. 5. He hath quickned 22. For this grace is the foundation of that revelation whereby a man is united with Christ Iohn 3. 3. Except a man bee borne againe hee cannot see the Kingdome of God 23. But the will is the most proper and prime subject of this grace because the conversion of the will is an effectuall principle of the conversion of the whole man Phil. 2. 17. It is God that worketh in you both to will and to doe of his own good pleasure 24. The enlightning of the mind is not sufficient to produce this effect because it doth not take away that corruption which is in the will neither doth it communicate unto it any new supernaturall principle by vertue whereof it may convert it selfe 25. Yet the will in respect of this first receiving hath not the consideration either of a free agent or a naturall patient but only of obedientiall subjection 2 Cor. 4. 6. Because God who hath said that light should shine out of darkenesse he it is who hath shined in our hearts 26. Active receiving is Actus olicitus an act of Faith drawn forth whereby he that is called doth now wholly leane upon Christ as his Saviour and by Christ upon God Iohn 3. 15. 16. Whosoever believes in him 1 Pet. 1. 21. Through him believing in God 27. This act of Faith doth depend partly upon a principle or habit of grace ingenerated and partly upon the operation of God moving before and stirring up Iohn 6. 44. None can come to me unlesse the Father draw him 28. It is indeed drawen out and exercised by man freely but certainly unavoydably and unchangeably Iohn 6. 37. Whatsoever my Father giveth mee shall come unto mee 29. With this Faith wherewith the will is turned to the having of the true good there is alwayes joyned repentance by which the same will is turned also to the doing of the true good with an aversnesse and hatred of the contrary evill or sinne Acts 19. 4. Marc. 1. 15. Repent and believe the Gospell 30. Repentance hath the same causes and principles with Faith for they are both the free gifts of God Eph. 2. 8. Faith is the gift of God 2 Tim. 2. 25. Whether God will at any time give them repentance They have the same subject because both have their seat in the heart or will of man Rom. 10. 9. 1 Kings 8. 48. With the heart man believeth They shall returne with all their heart They are also begotten at the same time But first they have divers objects for Faith is properly
of those that are endued with vertue into Infants and men of ripe age Heb. 5. 13 14. 46. The communion of vertues is both in the connexion and subordination of them among themselves 47. For connexion is that whereby all vertues which are simply necessary doe cleave together among themselves 1. In respect of the beginning from whence they flow For every good giving and every perfect gift descends from the Father of lights By the spirit of grace Iames 1. 17. 1 Cor. 12. 2. In respect of the end and intention which is to the same thing in generall for all vertues doe so respect God that if his authority be violated in one it is withall virtually violated in all Iames 2. 10. 3. In respect of that helping indeavour which they performe mutually one to another For one vertue doth dispose to the act of another and also doth defend and confirm the same with the act 48. Yet vertues are not so essentially and intrinsecally knit together that every one is of the essence of the other or doth necessarily depend upon it as upon a procreating cause 49. Subordination of vertues is that whereby the act of one vertue is ordered to the act and object of another either as a meanes to an end which is the command of a superior upon an inferior vertue as Religion commands Iustice temperance and the like when it refers their acts to the furthering the worship and glory of God or as a cause to its effect which belongs to every vertue in respect to every one for so Religion it selfe is ordained to bring forth and conserve Iustice. 50. Whensoever the act of one vertue is ordered to the end of another vertue this ordination although in respect of the direction it depends upon Prudence yet in respect of the effectuall force and authority it depends upon a superior vertue CHAPTER III. Of good Workes 1. AN action of vertue is an operation flowing from a disposition of vertue Mat. 12. 35. A good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth good things 2. In the same sence it is called an action or worke that is good right laudable and pleasing to God 3. Unto such an action there is required first a good efficient or beginning that is a will well disposed and working from true vertue for good fruits doe not grow but out of a good Tree Mat. 12. 33. Secondly a good matter or object that is something commended by God Mat. 15. 9. In vaine they worship me teaching doctrines which are the Commandements of men Thirdly a good end that is the glory of God and those things which tend unto his glory 1 Cor. 10. 31. Doe all to the glory of God 4. But the end and the object are oftentimes all one both in good and evill actions especially in the intention and election of te will where they end it selfe is the proper object For those acts are either conversant in the end it selfe as in the matter or object as the acts of desiring willing wishing loving injoying or in those things which tend to the end as they are such so as the goodnesse or deformity is properly derived from the end 5. For although that good intention or intention of welldoing which is generall and confused doth not make a particular action good if other conditions be wanting neither doth a speciall intention of good suffice for it if the meanes be evill as if any intending to bestow any thing on the poore or upon pious uses should to that end take to himselfe other mens goods yet an evill intention doth alwayes make an action evill and a good intention with other conditions doth make very much to the constitution of a good action 6. But there is required to an action truly good that at least virtually it be referred to God as to the chiefe end 7. In the fourth place also there is required a forme or a good manner which is placed in the agreeing of the action to the revealed Will of God 8. Moreover this will of God doth informe an action of man as far forth as it is apprehended by reason Hence the very conscience of man is the subordinate rule of morall actions so as every action must agree with a right conscience and an erring or doubtfull conscience is first to be laid down before a man may doe against it although a lighter scruple or sticking of conscience must not any way put off any action otherwise approved 9. But that this forme or manner be good it requires all the circumstances to be good for a singular action is alwayes clothed with its circumstances upon which the goodnesse or evillnesse of it doth not a little depend 10. But those circumstances being referred to the act of the will doe passe into the nature of an object For the will whiles it willeth some worke willeth all that which is in it and so all the known circumstances either expresly or implicitely and a knowen circumstance being changed oftentimes the act of the will is changed 11. But the same circumstances being referred to the act of any other faculty besides the will are only adjuncts 12. So the end it selfe is rightly reckoned among the circumstances although not in respect of the will yet in respect of the faculties and other Acts. 13. By reason of these circumstances it comes to passe that although many Acts in the generall or in their owne nature are indifferent yet there is no singular Act that is morall and deliberate but it is either good or evill 14. An Act in its kind indifferent is when the object of it includes nothing which pertaines to the will of God either commanding or forbidding yet such acts being in exercise severally considered if they be properly humane proceeding of deliberate reason are either directed to a due end and have conformity to the will of God and so are good or they are not rightly directed but dissent from the will of God and in that respect are evill 15. Besides actions good evill and indifferent some doe observe that there are some acts that do Sonare in malum have an evill sound that is being absolutly considered they doe impart a certaine inordinatenesse but by some circumstances comming to them they are sometimes made good as to kill a man the like but even those acts ought to be referred to indifferents for they o●…ly seeme to have some evill in themselves as also to free a man from danger of death seemeth to have some good in it selfe with which shew also many that are not evill are deceived but the true goodnesse or pravity of these actions depends upon the object and other circumstances to slay the innocent or set at liberty the guilty is evill to slay the guilty justly or deliver the innocent upon just reason is good 16. The goodnesse of all these causes and conditions is collectively required for an action absolutely good but the defect of some one
makes the action so far forth evill 17. Hence our good workes whilest we live here are imperfect and impure in themselves 18. Hence they are not accepted before GOD but in Christ. 19. Hence in the workes of the regenerate there is not that respect of merit whereby any reward is obtained by Iustice. 20. Yet that reward which is imputed not of debt but of grace Rom. 4. 4. is sometime assigned to those imperfect indeavours Mat. 5. 12. Because although all our blessednesse is the meere gift of God Rom. 6. 23. Yet the fruits of grace abounding in us are put upon those accounts whereby we doe get the certainty of that gift Phil. 4. 17. I require that fruit abounding which may be put on your accounts 21. The action of vertue is either inward or outward 2 Cor. 18. 10. 11. To will to doe to performe 22. The internall action is properly of the will it selfe 23. The externall action is of another faculty distinct from the will whether it be of the understanding or of the sensitive appetite which is commonly called internall or of the executive power which is usually called externall 24. The internall action of the will hath goodnesse or evillnesse so intrinsecall that an act cannot remaine the same in the nature of it but it must be the same in manners but an outward act may remaine the same in nature and yet become another in manners namely of good may become evill and of evill good As if any one beginning to walke out of an honest purpose doe persist in his journey for an evill end 25. There is one and the same goodnesse or evillnesse of an internall act and an externall commanded by it for it is the same act in kind of manners For to will to worship God and from that will towards God are not two acts of obedience but two degrees of one and the same act so that the goodnesse of the one is perfited in the other 2 Cor. 8. 11. Performe to doe that very thing that as there was a readinesse to will so there may be a performance 26. The outward act without the inward is not properly good or evill but the inward is good or evill without the externall because the goodnesse of an action depends first and chiefly upon the will which is often accepted with God although the outward work it selfe be absent 2 Cor. 8. 13. If there be first a ready mind one is accepted according to that he hath 27. But as vertue in its own nature tends to an act for it is a disposition to doe well neither is it idle so the internall act of it tends to an externall and produceth it and in it is lead to its end Iames 2. 22. Thou seest that Faith was the helper of his workes and by works Faith was brought to its end 28. Yet the externall act joyned with the internall doth not properly and by it selfe increase the goodnesse or evillnesse of it in respect of the intention only but by accident it doth increase it as it doth continue or increase the act of the will it selfe 29. The goodnesse and evillnesse of any act which depends upon the object and the circumstances of the act is in respect of its nature in the externall act before it be in the internall although in order of existence it is first in the internall For to will to give every one his owne is therefore good because this thing to give every one his own is good yet the goodnesse doth exist in the act of willing before in the act of giving So to will to steale is evill because to steale is evill The reason is because the exterior act is the cause of the inward in order of intention and the inward act is the cause of the outward in order of execution 30. But that goodnesse or evillnesse which depends upon the end is first in the inward act and after in the outward because the very intention of the end is the inward act of the will so-to-forsake the World for righteousnesse sake is good because to will righteousnesse is good and to give almes for vaine glory is evill because it is evill to will vaine Glory 31. Obedience that appeares in outward actions without the inward is hypocrisie and so is not indeed obedience but a certaine shadow of it 32. Yet inward obedience without outward although it be incompleat yet it is true and if there be an effectuall will present so that opportunity or ability of executing is only wanting it is no lesse acceptable to God then if it had an externall act joyned with it 2 Cor. 8. 12. 33. Therefore we must not judge of actions good or evill by the event For although it is equall and God himselfe willeth that he that is judge of offences among men doe incline to the more fovourable side if the event it selfe doe favour Exod. 21. 21. and so forward yet before the tribunall of God the inward sin is as great caeteris paribus other things answerable when neither event not outward act followes as if both should follow Mat. 5. 28. Whosoever lookes on a woman to lust after her hath committed adultery already with her in his heart 34. Yet inward obedience is not of it selfe sufficient because the whole man ought to subject it selfe to God our bodies are to be offered to God Rom. 12. 1. He is to be glorified in our bodies 1 Cor. 6. 20. Neither is that true inward obedience which doth not incline to externall 35. The workes which are called workes of supererogation whereby the Papists doe boast that some of theirs doe performe more excellent workes then are commanded in the Law of God by the obsevation of certaine counsells which they faigne doe not command but counsell only a singular perfection are the dotings of idle men which know neither the Law nor the Gospell 36. Unto the best workes of the faithfull there adhereth that imperfection which hath need of remission yet the workes themselves are not sins CHAPTER IIII. Of Religion 1. OBservance is either Religion or Iustice. 2. This distribution as touching the thing it selfe is made by God in the division of the decalogue as it is enfolded by Christ. Mat. 22. 37. Also the sence of the same distribution is expressed in other words Rom. 1. 18. Where all disobedience of man is distributed into impiety and injustice which could not stand unlesse all obedience also were conversant in Piety and Iustice which is also more plainly opened Tit. 2. 12. Where of those thres thinge propounded Righteousnesse and Piety doe make the parts of new Obedience and Temperance notes the manner or meanes of performing the same namely denying worldly lusts 3. Unto the same also that distribution of a Christian life tends which is more frequently used into holinesse and righteousnesse Luc. 1. 75. Eph. 2. 24. And the same is the meaning of that distribution which is of love towards God and love towards
our neighbour 4. Yet we use the names of Religion Iustice because Religion is a word most generall containing all those duties which are owing to God and it is most emphaticall because it expresseth that proper and distinct way whereby they are due to God Acts 26. 5. Iames 1. 26 27. And often in the Epistle to the Hebrewes 5. Religion is Observance whereby we performe those things which doe directly pertaine to the bringing of honour to God Romans 1. 21. When they knew God yet they glorified him not as God neither were they thankefull 6. Therefore this neme is not amisse by some said to be derived à Religando from binding againe because in this part of obedience we doe directly and immediatly tend unto God that we may cleave and as it were be tied to him 7. It hath the first place in observance 1. Because obedience towards God must necessarily begin from God himselfe and from those affections and acts whereby we are caried towards him 2 Cor. 8. 5. They gave themselves first to the Lord and then to us by the Will of God 2. Because Righteousnesse towards men must be performed by force and vertue of Religion that it may be true obedience towards God for it would not be obedience towards God unlesse it did bring honour to God neither could it bring honour to God unlesse it should proceed from a religious affection 1 Cor. 10. 31. Doe all to the glory of God whereunto that phrase also belongeth In the Lord in the Name of the Lord. Col. 3. 17. And as to the Lord and not to men There Verse 23. 3. Because Religion hath command over the acts of Iustice and is the cause of them not only virtually effecting but also directing and ordering Iames 1. 26. If any seeme to be religious among you not refraining his tongue but deceiving his own heart this mans religion is vaine 4. Because religion is in a certaine manner the end of all the acts of Iustice as far forth as they dispose to the act of religion as a certaine greater thing 8. Hence Iustice it selfe is sometime called religion in the Scriptures There Verse 27. But religious worship pure and without spot before God and the Father is to visite the fatherlesse c. Not only because it is a signe which is not separated from true religion but also because it ought to be exercised by the command of religion and have its beginning from it 9. Hence the offices of religion a re the first and chiefest Mat. 6. 33. 22. 37. First seeke the kingdome of God The first and great Commandement 10. They are the first in order so that they ought to be taken care for in the first place There 11. Hitherto pertaines that phrase which every where we meete with in the Psalmes of seeking God early in the morning 12. Also they are chiefe in dignity and so chiefly to be cared for Mat. 10. 37. He that loveth father or mother above me is not worthy of me 13. Hence the duties of religion ought to be performed with more intent and stirred up forces then the duties of Iustice for that rule pertaines properly to them not to these to love with all the heart all the soule and all the thought Mat. 22. 37. 14. Which yet must not be so understood as if all the strength were not also required in performing and fulfilling the duties of the second table but. 1. Because this is principally required in the duty of Religion 2 Because it is not required in the other dut is in respect of our neighbour whom they doe immediatly respect b●… in respect of God and by vertue of religion 3. Because one may love his neighbour with too much intention as touching the very materiall act of loving although this cannot be done under the respect of vertue and love but we can no way love God with too much intention 15. Hence if some duties of piety and justice cannot be performed together an equall and prudent comparison being used the duties of piety are to be preferred Mat. 12 46 47 48. Luke 2. 49. Behold my mother and my brethren why did ye seeke me knew ye not that I must goe about my fathers businesse 16. But an equall comparison is when a just proportion is observed of the greatest to the greatest and of the lesser to the lesse 17. But because God is more worshipped with the inward affection then with the outward worke but men doe more need the outward worke therefore the outward worke of religion may sometime be omitted that a necessary worke of Iustice and mercy may be fulfilled Matthew 12. Verse 1. 3 4. 7. 10. 12. I will have mercy and not sacrifice c. 18. Neither yet is religion in the meane while by this meanes violated because religion it selfe doth command to omit an externall worke that a necessary may be performed 19. The immediate object of religion unto which it is caried is God and that so adequate that no duty of religion may be referred to any other object without greatest injury to God hitherto pertaines that title of God whereby he is said to be Zelotes Zelotypus zealous or Iealous 20. But that respect under which religion doth consider God is that Divine excellency which shines f●…rth in his sufficiency and efficiency it is not some one attribute but a perfection arising of all his attributes Ex. 34. 6 7 8. Iehova Iehova the strong God mercifull and gracious long-suffering full of loving kindnesse and truth c. Therefore all the attributes of God have some power to beget religion in us so in the Scriptures the speciall respect of it is referred sometime to mercy Psal. 130. 4. with thee is pardoning that thou mayest be reverently worshipped sometime to Iustice. Deut. 4. 24. Heb. 12. 29. Let us have grace by which we may so serve God that we may be accepted of him with reverence and feare For our God is a consuming fire And so also to all the other attributes 21. Hence religion doth immediatly flow from that Faith wherewith we believe in God as in the sufficient and efficient cause of life 22. So is that to be understood which is wont to be said that religion respects God as the first beginning and supreame Lord of life And so that distinction of the Papists is too empty whereby they confesse that those acts of religion which respect God as the first beginning of life are to be performed only to God but they contend that other acts of religion may be communicated to the Creatures also when there is no act of religion which doth not belong to God as the first beginning of life 23. The proper act of religionis to bring honor to God and it is called worship Exod. 12. 25 26. and adoration Iohn 22. 23. For it must containe in a certaine manner good unto God otherwise it should not be obedience towards him but there can be no
is declared in the Scriptures when the power of magistracy although it be ordained by God Rom. 13. 1. yet it is called an humane creature 1. Pet. 2. 13. which name doth not at all agree to the lawfull ministers of the Church 2. Magistracy is an ordinance of God the Creator and so belongs to all kind of men but the Ecclesiasticall ministery is a gift and ordinance of Christ the Mediator and so doth not properly and ordinarily perraine but only to those who are of the Church of Christ. 3. A magistrate hath jurisdiction joyned to his government and so if he be the supreme magistrate upon just cause he may make and abolish lawes and commit jurisdiction to others but th ministers of the Church considered in themselves are meerly mandatory that have nothing of their own but whatsoever they do lawfully they do it as in Christs stead who commands them and so can neither make lawes nor commit that power which they have received to others 4. It belongs to magistrates to procure the common good both spirituall and corporall of all those who are committed to their jurisdiction by politick meanes and a coercive power 1. Tim. 2. 2. but it is ministers duties to procure their spirituall good who are committed to them by Ecclesiasticall meanes Acts 20. 28. Heb. 13. 17. 49. But they cannot be exactly distinguished in the things themselves the persons and causes about which they are occupied for there is nothing person or cause so Ecclesiasticall but in some respect it may pertaine to the jurisdiction of the magistrate neither is there any action so secular so it be done by a member of the Church but so far as it respects obedience to God it may pertaine to the taking notice of by the Church 50. Therefore the exempting of Ecclesiasticall men as they are called from the jurisdiction of the civill magistrate as also the unloosing then from obedience due to Magistrates and Parents brought in by Papists under a pretence of Religion and perfection is altogether contrary to the perfect Law of GOD. 51. In respect of this ruling which comes from the power of superiors there is due from inferiours subjection and obedience Hebrewes 13. 17. Obey your leaders and submit your selves 52. Subjection is an acknowledgment of their authority 1. Pet. 2. 18. Eph. 5. 22. 53. Obedience is the performance of those things that are prescribed Eph. 6. 1. 5. 54. This obedience ought alwayes to be limited according to the limits of power which the superior commander hath 55. Hence we must not obey men in those things which are against the command of God for we must obey in the Lord Eph. 6. 1. And in the feare of God Col. 3. 22. Or also against the command of those superior persons who have greater authority then they 56. Hence also that obedience must not be blinde or without examination of the precept but an inferior ought to enquire so far as is requisite for the matter in hand whether the precept belawfull convenient and binding Acts 4. 19. 57. But if the precept be not lawfull then an enduring of the punishment wrongfully inflicted hath the place and force of obedience 1. Pet. 2. 19. 20. 58. In respect of the good that is communicated either by the gifts or by the power of superiors inferiors doe owe submissive thankfulnesse 59. Thankfulnesse is a desire to recompence benefits received 60. For it is a certaine welwishing affection having respect and proportion to the benefit of another yet so that it must not be contained in the affection it selfe but must be manifested in answerable indeavour 61. Thankfulnesse indeed is the common duty of all men who have received any benefit from others but there is a certaine singular way of thankfulnesse of inferiors towards superiors which is declared in that word when thankfulnesse is said to be submissive 62. Hitherto pertaines the relieving of their necessity whether they stand in need of substance helpe or counsell Gen. 45. 9●… 63. This thankfulnesse which respects those by whose benefit we doe under God subsist namely our parents and country or those who sustaine the same person with them is called piety 1. Tim. 5. 4. 64. The duty of equalls towards all their equalls is that one prefer another in honour Rom. 12. 10. Ephes. 5. 21. 65. Friendship is towards some that are joyned neerer in love and communion Prov. 18. 24. 66. The beginning of all honour to be given to our Neighbour especially of that which is due to superiors and equalls is humility 67. This humility as a vertue whereby one doth so moderate his esteeme of himselfe that he will not in any kind attribute any thing to himselfe above that which is meete for him Phil. 2. 3. In humility of mind thinking every one better then himselfe 68. Unto humility is opposed pride and envy 69. Pride is an inordinate affection of a mans owne excellency 70. This affectation of a mans own excellency if it be exercised about good things that we have it is called boasting if about those things which we would seeme to have it is called arrogancy if about the fame and esteeme which we seeke with others it is called vaine glory if about dignities it is called ambition if about the undertaking of matters which are beyond our strength it is called presumption 71. Envy is a sorrow for the good of our Neighbour because it seemes to diminish our own excellency Num. 10. 29. 72. For if there be feare of anothers good because wee see some evills like to come from thence either to others or to our selves it is not envy but an honest feare Prov. 28. 28. 73. If the cause of sadnesse be not that another hast good but that we have not and that good is to be wished for by us then it is not envy but emulation Rom. 11. 14. 74. If the cause of sadnesse be the unworthinesse of him who enjoys that good then it is not properly envy but indignation Pro. 29. 2. 75. Yet all these affections if they exceed measure are wont to be noted in the Scriptures under the name of envy Psal. 37. vers 1. 7. Pro. 3. 31. CHAPTER XVIII Of humanity toward our Neighbour 1. IUstice which respects the condition of our Neighbour absolutely considered doth either respect the person of our Neighbour or his outward commodities 2. That which respects his person doth either respect his life or his purity 3. That which respects his life is humanity and it is commanded in the sixt Commandement For seeing here mans life is properly provided for or as the Scripture speakes Gen. 9. 5 6. The soule of man and the bloud of man all that duty which is here handled is rightly set forth under the man of humanity 4. This Commandement doth not properly treat of the life of the brute Creatures because they are in mans power Gen. 9. 2. 3. Neither have they common society with man yet because a fit
by explication 37. Therefore in an asseveration there is not a second contestation comming to the former as there is in an oath but an illustration of one and the same thing 38. Neither is there any calling upon God in a mere asseveration which is essentiall to an oath 39. Yet an asseveration is not convenient but to the more grave testimonies for it is as it were a middle degree between a simple testimony and an oath 40. We must most of all abstaine from those asseveratioins our common speech which have some shew of an oath CHAPTER XXII Of Contentation 1. COntentation is a vertue whereby the mind doth rest in that portion that God hath given him 1. Tim. 6. 6. Heb. 13. 5. Phil. 4. 11. 2. This contentment is commanded in the tenth Commandement as appeares by the words themselves neither is it any way meet that this Commandement be referred to that inward and originall purity of righteousnesse which is the fountaine of all obedience for that is not generally commanded in any one Commandement but in all neither doth it more pertaine to the second table which is the condition of this precept then to the first 3. Yet because of all vertues which are contained in the second table there is none more internall or more intimate to primitive righteousnesse then contention and we are as it were lead by the hand from this to contemplate and seeke that therefore that purity is not unfitly by occasion of this precept handled here 4. Unto this contentation is joyned joy for the prosperity of our Neighbour as of our own Rom. 12. 15. 5. In that contentment and joy consists the top and perfection of all charity toward our Neighbour In which respect also contentment is in a certaine manner the perfection of godlinesse and a godly man 1. Tim 6. 6. For godlinesse is great gaine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with contentment or producing the perfection of co●…tenment 6. Hence it is commanded in the last precept according to that order which proceeds from the more imperfect to the more perfect and from that which is more known to that which is lesse knowne 7. For this is a duty most perfect and most unknowne to us by nature that whatsoever we conceive or will it be joyned with the good of our Neighbours 8. Therefore although this of its own nature hath the first place among duties to our Neighbour as the foundation of all the rest yet because it is last in having a being in man corrupted therefore it is commanded in the last place 9. Unto Contentation is opposed concupiscence Heb. 13. 5. 10. But by concupiscence is not onderstood the power and faculty of lusting and desiring which is naturall nor the act or operation of that naturall faculty which is also naturall and lawfull neither the whole inclination of our nature which is corrupt which is not specially condemned in any one precept but in the whole Law nor all those chiefe actuall lusts which are inordinate a great part whereof is contrary to religion and condemned in the first table nor lastly all lusts which tend to the hurt of our Neighbour for those which have a deliberate consent and purpose of prosecuting joyned with them are condemned in the severall Commandements But that desire whereby the mind is first instigated and tickled with desire of the good things which are our Neighbours although it be not yet come into the mind to get them by unlawfull meanes 1. Kings 21. 2. Marc. 10. 19. 11. By reason of that affinity or neere consanguinity which those first motions of injustice have with originall corruption whence they doe arise they are wont by many to be as it were confounded with it But. 1. Originall sin is as it were an inbred habit perpetually dwelling in us having it selfe in respect of the existence alwayes in the same manner whilest we live here but these morions are transient actions proceeding from that habit 2. That sin dwelling in us is no more originall then a generall principle of all vitious actions but those acts which are condemned in this place are manifestly circumscribed as having respect only to our neighbour 12. The Apostle himselfe Rom. 7. doth plainly open this precept by a Synecdoche of the operations of sin for concupiscence Ver. 7. is the same with the affections of sinners Ver. 5. And with concupiscence effected by sin Ver. 8. And so must necessarily be distinguished from sin dwelling in him Ver. 7. 13. Neither is it any marvaile that the Pharisees of whom Paul was one did not acknowledge the first motions of concupiscence to be sins seeing the same is yet stiffly denied by their cosen germans the Papists 14. They that divide this last precept of concupiscence into two so as one is of coveting the house and the other of coveting the wife with that which followes in this matter 1. They are forsaken of all reason 2. They are constrained either to roote out altogether the second precept of the first Table or to turne it at least into a needlesse appendix of the first that they may seeme to retaine in some so●… the number of ten words or rather which is evident in many or●… 〈◊〉 obs●…ring the force of the second precept they may with some shew remove it from themselves and their superstitions they are constrained to teare in sunder this tenth precept 3. They cannot certainly designe which is the ninth and which is the tenth precept because in the repetition of the Law Deut. 5. 27. Coveting of the wife is put before the coveting of the house 4. They can declare no distinct injustice between these covetings whence also it comes to passe that they themselves in explaining the decalogue doe alwayes joyne or rather confound te ninth and tenth precept 5. The very words of the decalogue doe expressely note one precept when they forbid one act Thou shalt not cover and one common object whatsoever is thy Neighbours 15. There is referred to concupiscence as a cause the inordinate love of our selves which is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. Tim. 3. 2. 16. This selfe-love is the foundation and originall in a sort of all sins not only against our neighbour but also against God himselfe 2. Tim. 3. 4. 17. This concupiscence is that which is distributed by Iohn into that which is of the flesh respecting those things which pertaine to food and lust and into that which is of the eyes respecting those things which pertaine to outward delight and profit and into that which is of the pride of life respecting those things which pertaine to the glory and pompe of this world 1. Iohn 2. 16. 18. Unto joy and well-pleasednesse in the prosperity of our Neighbour is opposed envy or an evill eye Mat. 20. 15. And 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or rejoycing in the hurt of our Neighbour Psal. 17. 3. 4. Obad. 12. 19. In this last precept that perfection of Iustice is commanded which is in some sort explained throughout the whole 〈◊〉 ●…e as in the first precept of the 〈◊〉 ●…e all Religion is in a certaine manner commanded so that in the first precept of the first table i●… contained that first and great Commandement Thou shalt love God with all thy heart and the second table like to this thou shalt love thy Neighbour as thy selfe is contained in the last of the second Table 20. From this perfection which shines forth in any one of these precepts it is manifest that a perfect and accurate fullfilling of the Law is impossible even to the faithfull by that grace which is bestowed upon them in this life For seeing as it is well said the rule and measure of our obedience is in affirmatives Thou shalt love with all thy heart and in negatives Thou shalt not cover both of which is impossible in this life it doth necessarily follow that none can exactly satisfie the Law 21. In this life we know only in part 1. Cor. 13. 9. And therefore we act only in part we have received only the first fruits of the spirit Rom. 8. 23. And therefore we cannot exactly observe a Law altogether spirituall Rom. 7. 14. We carry about us flesh that lusteth against the spirit Gal. 5. 17. Therefore we cannot obey without concupiscence inclining and drawing another way Finally we are not perfect Phil. 3. Verse 12. We cannot therefore performe perfect obedience but we have alwayes need to have that petition in the heart and in the mouth Forgive us our debts 22. Yet it is truly and rightly said that the yoke of Christ is easy and his burden light Mat. 11. 30. And his Commandements are not grievous 1. Iohn 5. 3. Because the Law is there considered 1. As it is observed by the faithfull who delight in it Rom. 7. 22. Psal. 119. 14. 16. Not as it ought to be observed for that observation brings rest unto the soules of the faithfull Mat. 11. 29. Although imperfection cleaving to them is grievous and troublesome to them 2. In respect of the spirit not in respect of the flesh Matthew 26. 41. 3. Remission of sin of all imperfection which cleaves to our indeavours being joyned with it 4. In comparison of the Letter of the Law which killeth 5. A comparison also being had of the reward appointed by God to imperfect obedience begun in which sence even all afflictions are counted light 2. Cor. 4. 17. The easinesse therefore and lightnesse of the Law of God is not in the proportion of it to our strength but in the grace of our Lord Iesus Christ and the love of God together with the Communication of the Holy Spirit which is with all those that love the Law God Amen FINIS