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A69010 Institutions of Christian religion framed out of Gods word, and the writings of the best diuines, methodically handled by questions and answers, fit for all such as desire to know, or practise the will of God. Written in Latin by William Bucanus Professor of Diuinitie in the Vniuersitie of Lausanna. And published in English by Robert Hill, Bachelor in Diuinitie, and Fellow of Saint Iohns Colledge in Cambridge, for the benefit of our English nation, to which is added in the end the practise of papists against Protestant princes.; Institutiones theologicae. English Bucanus, Guillaume. 1606 (1606) STC 3961; ESTC S106002 729,267 922

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them which dwell in houses of clay 3. In the multitude and greatnesse of his owne sins Psal 130.3 If thou Lord straightly markest our iniquities who shall bee able to abide it For being thus seriously cast downe and humbled with the sence and feeling of our owne miserie and want and beeing deiected and discomforted in our selues wee doe then thirst after the grace of Christ and fly thereunto for succour For to this end he saith he was sent Esay 61.1 That he might preach glad tidings to the poore binde vp the broken hearted preach libertie to the captiues and to them that are bound the opening of the prison Comfort to those that mourne that hee might giue beautie for ashes the oyle of ioy for mourning the garment of gladnesse for the spirit of heauinesse and he calleth none to bee partakers of his bounty but onely those that labour and are heauie loaden Mat. 11.28 And chap. 9.13 I came not saith hee to call the righteous but sinners to repentance Examples whereof wee haue in the Publicane and the Pharisee Luk. 18.10 and so forward What things are there repugnant and contrarie to this Doctrine of iustification by faith 1. The error of the Papists who first teach that workes of congruitie that is workes preparatorie are the efficient impulsiue cause of Iustification Secondly that Sacraments doe iustifie ex opere operato by the verie worke wrought Thirdly that we are not iustified by faith alone because say they it is common to many wicked men but yet it doth iustifie as it it guided by charitie and that onely as in respect of the beginning of Iustification 4. that charitie is the forme of righteousnesse 5. That the doctrine of free iustification by faith giueth libertie to sinne and weakeneth the desire of well doing 6. That we must stand in doubt of the forgiuenesse of our sinnes 7. That men may satisfie the Iustice of God by gay shews of there owne works 8. Distrusting the merites of Christ they flie vnto the merits of good works and the helpe and succor of the saints 9. They attribute vnto the virgine Marie the aucthoritie and power of iustifieng .. 10. They ascribe vnto the Pope power to sell forgiuenesse of sinnes 11. the gift of the righteousnesse of Christ imputed through faith they make a mocke of 12. They teach that a man is iustifyed principally for Christs sake and lesse principally for euery mans owne workes and merits 13 that wee are iustified by an Euangelicall faith which commaundeth doe this and ye shall liue Luk. 10.28 by the fulfilling of the lawe the ministery and absolution of the Priests and the obseruation of mens traditions 14. That christian righteousnesse consisteth of faith and workes together 15. That Christ hath satisfied onely for the fault and offence and not for the punishment due vnto our sinnes 16. that men regenerate doe in this life by their owne obedience fully satisfie the law that they may oppose their workes before Gods Iudgment seat and that they may doe many workes of supererogation more then duety more then the law requireth of them 2 The error also of the iustitiaries who hold 1. that Iustification is not onely the pardoning and forgiuing of sinnes but also the sanctifying and renewing of the inner man 2. that Iustification according to Aristotle is a motion toward the atteyning of righteousnesse 3. that to Iustifie is nothing els but to powre into a man inherent righteousnesse or newnesse of life the former whereby beleeuers are indued with charitie and other vertues the later whereby a man being furnished with these qualities doth merite and deserue more and more righteousnesse and euerlasting life and that iustification is consummated and perfected by good works 4. that Christ by his death o●●ained this of his father that wee should be indued with inherent righteousnesse and charitie by the merite whereof we do obtaine life and saluation Fiftly they confound as one sanctification with iustification 3. The error of Osiander who affirmeth that men are made iust by the essentiall iustice of God that is by that iustice which is the v●rie diuine essence 4. The error of the Libertines who teach carnall securitie as if any thing were lawful for a man to doe who is iustified freely by grace The two and thirtieth common place Of good workes What are workes properly EIther the accomplishing of actions that is the effects of actions ordained for some speciall end 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as an house is the worke of him that buildeth it or else the verie actions themselues as the building of the house calling vpon god loue of our neighbour giuing of almes c. To omit sundry distinctions of workes what is a good worke To speake according to the word of god not Philosophically or ciuilie it is an action whether outward or inward conformable to the law and will of god Mat. 19.17 If you will enter into life keepe the commaundements And Rom. 12.2 Proue ye what that good acceptable and perfect will of God is By what names are they called Of the efficient or working cause the fruites of the Spirit of the instrumentall the fruites of faith from the fourme the workes of the lawe of their qualities good works good fruites Why doth the Scripture oftener vse the title of good workes then of vertue Because the name of vertue is verie glorious amonge the Philosophers whereby they vnderstand a voluntarie habite and a great and strong inclination and a naturall disposition to doe well but the name of good workes is more cleare because it signifieth not onely externall actions but also the inward of the will agreable to the word of god although the inclinatiōs be very weak How many kindes of good workes are there Two one which requireth our duetie towards God Another which requireth our duety towards our neighbour What is the efficient cause of good workes The proper efficient cause of them is the Holie Ghost in respect of Christ laid hold on by faith working in vs vnderstanding and will and by the word illuminating changing renewing bowing our members which are cleane turned away from God to the end that we may obey the will of God made knowne vnto vs. For he worketh in vs both to wil to doe Philip. 2.13 And without me ye can doe nothing saith Christ Iohn 15.5 whereupon Dauid Psalm 51.12 Saith create in me a cleane heart o God and renue a cōstant spirit in my bowels hēce they are called the fruites of the spirit not of free will vnlesse it be so farr forth as it is made free by grace a Gal. 5.22 The nearest efficient or the immediate cause and the beginning of good workes are the humane and naturall powers of the soule the vnderstanding will and affections but yet so farre as they are in parte or in some measure regenerate or become spirituall For neither the spirit that is the new qualitie begunne by the inspiration of
the holie ghost which is called the Spirit of Christ nor the flesh that is whatsoeuer reliques of corruption remaines in vs or the new and the old mā haue indeed either their distinct seates in our soule or seuerall operations but are mingled together one with another in all those faculties neither yet doe these qualities so contrarie one to another so well agree together that with mutuall consent they should produce a mixt work but doe so wrastle together in one and the selfe same work striuing one against another that one penetrating the other then proceedeth a mixt action from them both from theire mutual not consēt but conflict which of the qualitie preuailing is accompted either the fruite of the spirit or of the flesh The instrumentall cause is faith not by her owne vertue efficacie or operation but so farre forth as shee doth as an instrument apprehend that her obiect to which shee is caried namely Christ in respect of whom alone the holy Ghost doth renue vs creating in vs both the will and the deed and therefore whereas faith is termed the mother or the fountaine of good works by a Metonymie that is attributed to the instrumentall cause which doth properly belong to the principal efficient cause as Rom. 1.16 The Gospell that is the preaching of the doctrine of the Gospell is called The power of God to saluation that is spoken both because of the vnseparable coniunction common dependance of faith and good works For without faith it is impossible to please God Hebr. 11.6 And VVhatsoeuer is not done of faith is sinne Rom 14.23 Therefore Hebr. 11.4 and so forward all the worthie acts in th Olde Testament are ascribed to faith By faith Abell c. VVhat is the matter of good workes The things themselues where about such works are conuersant and which the moral law of God doth intreat of and prescribeth VVhatsoeuer things are true honest iust pure to be loued of good report if there be any vertue If there be any praise thinke of such things Phil. 4.8 VVhat is the forme of good workes As the essence and forme of sin and an euill work is Anomie and * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 swaruing from the law so conformitie of our actions vnto the commaundement of God is the forme of a good worke And therefore not the traditions or commaundements of the Church but the word of God wherunto to add any thing or to detract is an horrible sinne is the onely square and rule of good workes a psa 119.4 Deut. 4.2 Neyther are any of those things to be esteemed in the number of good works in the sight of God which are grounded on the bare will of man Math. 15.9 In vaine doe they worship mee with the doctrines of men And Ezech. 20.18 VValke ye not in the precepts of your fathers but in my precepts walke ye Whether is it sufficient that some worke should be good and agreeable to the law of God if that it be done according to the law of God in outward shew No but 1. There is also required the inward synceritie of the minde which proceedeth from faith whereby the heart is purified a Act. 15.9 2 That we be certainely perswaded in our mindes out of his word that that which we doe pleaseth God For Rom. 14.23 whatsoeuer is done without faith that is whatsoeuer we take in hand with a doubting conscience whether it please God and therefore whether it be commaunded of God or not it is a sinn 3 It is required that we haue respect vnto god and to his glorie alone as the cheefe end of a good worke For the pharisaicall Hypocrite giueth almes the publican not iustified geueth also but his is abominable in the sight of God because he desires to be seene of men b mat 6.1 But this mans almes is a good worke not onely because it is commaunded but also because it is done with sinceritye of the heart and in faith to the glorie of God And therfore vertues are to be discerned from vices not so much by the skill mouing them as by the ends VVhat then are good workes Such as are done in true faith according to the law of god are referred to his glory alone c Tim 1.5 Deut. 4.2 1. Cor. 10.31 Colos 3.17 VVho are they that doe good workes Onely the Regenerate For whereas the law of God doth especially require that fountaine of syncerity in the heart d Mat. 3.33 and from thence the respect of Gods glory truly the worke of the vnregenerate although it appeare verie glorious yet cannot simply and properly be called by the name of a good worke because that which is good is not well done of them that is in faith to the glory of God And therefore the worke is not liuing but dead as a figge leafe a Gen. 3.7 couering onely the inward vices for an euill tree cannot bring forth good fruite Math. 7.18 and Cap 12.33 whatsoeuer is done by the impure is impure b Iob. 14 4 Tit. 1.15 yet it may be called good but in vse not in worship But a man now already regenerate to wit who hath recouered some parte of the synceritie of his heart by faith according to the measure of integrity and sinceritie of his heart which he hath recouered is fitte in part to performe good workes Are not Cornelius his workes praised before he vvas baptised and belieued in Christ Act. 10.4 He is called a deuout man and one that feard God verse 22 Therefore now before he receiued the Sacrament of Baptisme he was conuerted vnto the acknowledging of the true God neither was he vtterly without faith in the Messias Besides he is said to pray continually and his almes were accepted and his prayers are said to be heard of God But it is impossible for any man or for any mans worke to please God without faith Heb. 11.6 Therfore hee had the beginnings of faith in Christ and therefore was now iustified and regenerate although as yet hee was not instructed in the full cleere knowledge of Christ and yet knew not that he was come For which cause Peter was sent vnto him who should more fully teach him Are the good workes of the regenerate pure and perfectly good and blemished with no fault No 1 Because the Scripture speaketh to the contrarie c Esa 64.5 Ia. 3.2 2 That any worke be pure and in euery respect good it is not sufficient that that which is done be not done without the holy Ghost and without faith but also it is further required that the first beginnings of a good worke in man to wit the vnderstanding will and affections doe most fully obey the spirit of God which is granted to no mortall man Christ alone excepted But there doth euer remaine in vs and in euery facultie of our soule the new and and the old man spirit and flesh the law of the mind as it is
in the word and sacraments or faith is the organ instrumēt or meane whereby man being a sinner apprehendeth and applyeth to himselfe Christ wholy with all his benefits and is vnited vnto Christ and liueth in him The Apostle Heb. 11.1 describing faith saith thus Faith is the substance of things which are hoped for the euidence of things that are not seen And Paul Ro. 4.20.21 painting out faith as in a map bringeth in the example of Abraham the father of the faithfull and saith Hee doubted not of the promise of God through vnbeleef but was strengthened in the faith gaue glory to god being fully assured that hee which had promised was also able to doe it Is that discription of faith Heb. 11.1 differing from the rest No forasmuch as therein there is exact mention made both of the forme of faith which is declared in the words Substance and Euidence also of the obiects namely things hoped for and things not seene For by the word Substance hee meaneth not a person as in the article of the Trinitie a Heb. 1.3 but the ground and as it were the prop whereupon a godly minde must stay and relie it selfe to signifie that faith is a certain sure safe possession of those things which are promised vnto vs by God As Psal 39.8 My Hypostasis or substance that is to say My hope is euen in thee And Heb. 3.14 We are made partakers of Christ if we keepe sure vnto the end 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the beginning wherewith wee are vpholden or vnderpropped Some translate the word Hypostasis existence or subsistēce because faith in some respect causeth things to haue a beeing as if they were which in trueth are not that is to say it setteth things before vs as if they were present which onely are in expectation Budaeus translateth it Strength or Courage In which signification it is vsed 2. Corinth 9.4 Least wee should bee ashamed 〈…〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. In this constant boasting Cha. 11.17 By a word deriued from the verbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is to sustaine to except not to giue placc to violence Hereupon it is that a souldier is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is bolde and hardie and turneth not his backe to his enemie but goeth to meete him and resists him and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 boldnes whereby a man standeth stoutly to it and without stirring his foote receiueth his aduersarie that inuadeth him And surely this notable signification doth well agree with faith For in the act of beleeuing wee haue neede of strength and patience we must resist the flesh we must conquer reason we must withstand our owne conscience sinne the wrath of God and all other things whereby the consent of faith is hindered and oppugned Wee had neede to be armed with such a strong shield that wee may receiue and quench all the fyrie darts of the diuell Ephe. 6.16 and ouercome the world 1. Iohn 5.4 As for the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is translated Euidence it is not a refutation or a reproofe but an argument demonstration that is an assurance wherby the minde being conuinced by diuine testimonies doth most stedfastly embrace the diuine promises But by the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which are hoped for and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which are not seene is vnderstood the Gospel those things which are offered in the Gospel namely fellowship with Christ forgiuenesse of sins iustification Resurrection and life eternall For these are the things we hope for and which doe not appeare and of themselues are not conformable vnto our reason and so are they the misteries of saluation in themselues and in their owne nature inuisible But those things which we see with our minde and in hope we do behold them in the word of God and doe accompt them as if they were done accomplished and present before vs. How many sorts of Faith are there Not many sorts but only one faith Ephe. 4.5 One Lord one Faith one Baptisme Now faith is one not in respect of the subiects for after that sort there are as many faiths that is to say giftes of faith as there are beleeuers but faith is and alwaies hath been one in Specie that is in respect of the thing beleeued and of the obiect whereupon it rests And this is the only obiect of faith namely the grace and mercie purposed and ordained for all beleeuers in Christ from the beginning of the world What is the efficient cause of Faith God himsefe working freely and giuing faith to whome hee will euen of his owne free good will Iohn 6.29 This is the worke of God that yee beleeue in him whom he hath sent Act. 16.14 God opened the heart of Lydia so that shee attended vnto the things which Paule spake Rom. 12.3 God hath dealt to euerie man the measure of faith Phil. 1.29 It is freely giuen vnto you for Christs cause not onely to beleeue in him but also to suffer for his sake The causes together with God the father are the son and the holy Ghost for as it is said in another place The workes of the Trinitie without are diuided Luk. 24.32 Christ opened the minde of his disciples that they might vnderstand the Scriptures And Heb. 12.2 Looking vnto Iesus the author and finisher of our faith 2. Cor. 4 13. We haue the spirit of faith that is to say we haue faith by the inspiration and gift of the same holy spirit The workmen together with God are the ministers of the worde 1. Cor. 3.5 Who is Apollo and vvho is Paule but the Ministers by vvhome that is by vvhose preaching ye beleeued The instrumentall cause of faith is the hearing of the word of God by the which word the holy Ghost vttereth his power Ro. 10.17 Faith is by hearing hearing by the word of God Esa 57.19 And Act. 10.44 VVhile Peter spake these vvords the holy Ghost fell on alll them which heard the vvord Furthermore another instrumentall cause is the beholding and vse of the Sacraments And to this end God ordained a ministerie in his Church yet so as no force is to be attributed either to the Ministers that speake or vnto the words themselues or to the Sacraments forasmuch as they haue no other effect but only to represent vnto our minds those things for the declaring whereof they are applyed by the ordinance of God but the force and power of them a Mark 16 20 1 Cor 12 6 commeth onely from God and there is but one and the same installer of man into life eternall who was the Creator of him vnto this life temporall 1. Cor. 3.7 Neither hee that planteth is any thing neither he that watereth but God vvhich giueth the increase And Cha. 15.19 I haue laboured more then they all yet not I but the grace of God which is with mee or which vvas present vvith mee And so the voice of
plainely appertaining to law For by being iustified the Apostle meaneth that a man is accompted iust being by the sentence of the heauenly Iudge acquited from condemnation and guiltines Which appeareth by the opposition of Iustification and Condemnation which Paule setteth downe Rom. 8.33 VVho shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods children It is God that iustifieth who shall condemne Iustification therefore according to the meaning of Saint Paule is a certaine pronouncing of sentence and as I may so say indeed rather a pronouncing iust then a making iust How many waies is a man said by Saint Paule to be iustified Onely two waies a Rom. 10.3 4.5 eyther by his owne righteousnesse that is to say by works or by the law as Rom. 2.13 The doers of the law if there be anie must bee vnderstood shall be iustified which is called Legall iustice or the righteousnes of the law Or else by faith or by the righteousnesse of another namely Christ that is to say by faith Rom. 5.19 VVe are iustified by faith which is called Euangelicall iustice or the righteousnesse of the Gospell VVhat doth this signifie to be iustified by workes Not as some thinke to get a habit of righteousnesse by iust works or to be made iust by workes but to be iudged and pronounced iust by reason of obedience yeelded vnto the lawe Or he is said to be iustifyed in whose life there is found that puritie and holinesse which deserueth the testimonie of righteousnesse before the throne of God after which sort Paule teacheth that no mortall man is iustified Rom. 3.20 By the workes of the law no flesh is iustified that is to say By the act whereby the law is performed or by the performance of the law no flesh shall be iustified Which sentence though in Greeke and Latine it be particuler yet in Hebrew it is vniuersall because the negatiue particle doth not agree with the Note or vniuersall signe none but with the verbe VVhat doth this signifie to be iustifyed by faith To be iustified by faith is to be acquited from sinne for Christs sake apprehended by faith Or he is said to be iustified by faith who being excluded in regard of his owne righteousnesse that is the righteousnesse of works doth by faith apprehend another righteousnesse that is the righteousnesse of Christ wherewithall being cloathed he doth appeare before God not as a sinner but as a iust and righteous man a Gal. 3.27 Ephes 5.17 Apoc. 7.14 What is iustification It is not the giuing of the holy Ghost regeneration or the infusion of a new qualitie or the preaching of Iustice or if wee shall speake Philosophically not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mutation or a motion toward the attayning of righteousnesse but it is the sentence of the heauenly Iudge whereby he doth in respect of the merit of Christ of his owne meere grace and fauour not impute vnto the sinner his sinne vnto death but imputeth the righteousnesse of Christ offered in the Gospell to his owne glorie and life eternall Or it is a free discharge from sinne and death both at once and an imputation of righteousnesse vnto life eternall and to the glorie of God and that for Christs sake and his righteousnes with both which being clothed wee appeare before the tribunall seat of God holy and vnblameable What be the parts of Iustification Two The former part is Remisson or Absolution and that twofold first from sinne secondly from death For first God from his tribunall seate pronounceth vs free from sinne for although sinne be in vs in deed yet because all that sinne how much soeuer it be is couered with the righteousnesse of Christ and therefore is not set before the eyes of God the Iudge God doth pronounce vs to be so freed from the same as if there were none at all in vs. And then secondly after he hath acquitted vs from the cause of death namely sin he doth also acquite vs from the punishment and death it selfe which is the wages of sinne Rom. 6.23 The later part of Iustification is Imputation whereby the heauenly Iudge doth iudge vs to be iust by the merite of another and doth adiudge vs vnto life eternall for th merit of another And this later is a kinde of effect of the former for hee that is iudged iust it must of necessitie follow that he be adiudged vnto life The Prophet Dauid 9.24 Seuentie weeks are determined vpon thy people and vpon thine holy Citie to finish the wickednesse to seale vp the sinnes to reconcile the iniquitie and to bring in euerlasting righteousnesse And Paule Romanes 3.4.5 By the first parte our debt is taken away and by the later our want is prouided for Also Remission healeth the guilt of sin the imputation of the righousnesse of Christ healeth the corruption and euill it selfe wherewithall the nature of mankinde laboureth and is laden VVhat is the efficient cause of Iustification Not man eyther from himselfe or from any other conferring any thing for that in the act of iustification man doth only behaue himselfe as a subiect and sufferer but God is the efficient cause who accompteth the obedience of Christ as if it were receiued from vs. For that saying of the Lord standeth firme Esa 43.25 I euen I am he that take away thy iniquities for mine owne sake I wil remember thy sinnes no more Which principle of Diuinitie the Iewish Scribes did also acknowledge as true Marke 2.7 VVho can forgiue sinnes but God alone and Rom. 4.5 But beleeueth in God that iustifieth the vngodly that is to say him that in himselfe is wicked he accompteth righteous in Christ And Rom. 8 33. God is he that iustifieth who is it that condemneth And hereupon it is that it is called the righteousnesse of God Rom. 1.17 3.21.22 Not that essentiall iustice of God whereby he is iust in himselfe neyther yet that communicatiue iustich which he doth communicate to his elect by the holy spirit but it is so called of the efficient cause namely because God doth freely impute or accompt the same vnto vs and partly also from the obiect because it alone is able to beare the rigour of Gods iudgement and to stand before his tribunall seat and therefore it is called euerlasting Dan. 9.24 because it was decreed by him from euerlasting VVhat is the cause of iustification working together with God Christ who by his merit and obedience hath purchased Iustification for vs. Rom. 5 9. VVe are iustified by his bloud and 2. Cor. 5.18 VVe are reconciled by Christ VVhat is the precedent cause Not the foreseeing of good works to come or of faith nor the estimation of works present but onely the grace of God not that which is freely giuen or infused whither it be faith or whether it be charitie but grace freely giuing that is to say the good will of God or the good pleasure of God a Ephes 1 9 and his loue toward vs men
eternall as Christ saith Iohn 3.3 vnlesse a man be borne againe c. 3 Because faith without which it is impossible for any man to be saued cannot be without good workes and faith hath charitie euer ioyned with her though not in action yet in possibility a Gal. 5.6 4 Because Bernard saith good workes are the way to the kingdome not the cause of raigning Neither can any man attaine to life eternall but by the way of good workes which God hath prepared that wee should walke in them Ephes 1.4 2.10 What is to be obserued in the sayings of the Scriptures vvherein iustification saluation and life eternall is ascribed to workes 1 Legal sentences are to be vnderstoode of perfect good workes such as none can be found in no creature But euangelicall sentences doe alwaies include faith in our workes And we must vnderstand that by faith in the first place iustification is receiued and acceptation to life eternall afterwarde in the second place and by consequence workes are accepted as the fruites of fairh and life eternall is promised to these for Christes sake 2 In such sayings there are not brought forth arguments from the cause why the person is made partaker of eternall life but it is shewed from the effects or the adiuncts what person is partaker of remission of sinnes life eternall So Luk. 7.47 Christ plainely proueth in way of resolution by this argument that the womans sinnes were pardoned because shee loued much But twoe diuerse questions are at no hand to be confounded The one to whom life eternall is giuen the other for what cause it is giuen To them that doe well and meditate in the law of God is happines and life eternall promised a Psal 1.13 119.1.2 Math. 25.3 but yet it is giuen freely for Christes sake b psal 32 1 3 In this question we must remember to obserue a rule of the Rabbines concerning the holy Scriptures In euery place wherein thou lightest on an obiection for an hereticks thou findest a medicine in the side thereof So the scripture wheresoeuer it ascribeth eternall life to workes as a reward calleth it an inheritance c math 25 35. Colloss 3.24 4 When as diuers effects doe depend alike of one and the selfe same cause the consequence from one effect auaileth to another because of their common dependance as Luk. 7.47 the consequence from loue auailes to proue the remission of sinnes because ech of them dependeth on faith 5 Where there is a subiect there is his proprietie and on the contrarie where there is a propriety there is his subiect So where there is faith there be workes and where there be good works there is faith 6 Seeing good workes doe spring from faith whatsoeuer is attributed to them must needs be ascribed to the roote i. faith whence they spring VVhat is the end and vse of good workes It is three fold 1. The glory of God namely that by them wee should glorifie God before men a Mat. 5.16 2 The testification of our true faith that we may make our calling and election sure to our selues in our owne consciences 2. Pet. 1.10 And also that we may liue sutable to the gospell our calling Ephes 4.1 I beseech you walk worthy of the calling wherwith you are called 3 The edification of our neighbour 2 Cor 9 which is done whilest that we further him by our workes or prouoke him to doe the like b 11. 12. 13 Act. 3.14 VVhat is contrarie to this doctrine 1 Euill workes 2 The error of the papists who teach that good workes may be done without faith as also of them that thinke they are perfect which boast of the perfection and purity of workes and securely rest in them Also their error who bragge of their merits of congruity and condignity and boast of the workes of supererogation which teach that their wilworships Numb 15.39 Ezek 20.18 19 Mat. 15.19 that is worships of there owne deuising are acceptable to god Which accompt these for good workes which are done with good intent and leane only on the will and tradition of men which imagine that the violating of these is more hainous then of the commandements of God As for that which is saide that we must heare the guides euen as Christ himselfe d. Luk. 10.16 Heb. 13.17 it must be vnderstood only of the true pastours of the Church which watch for the saluation of the soules committed to their charge And the error of them who affirme that man is iustified before God by workes as causes sclander vs that we contemne good workes as though this were in controuersy betweene vs and them whether good works are to be done wheras we doe more carefully vrge this then they doe 3 Of the Epicures or libertines which neglect good workes as vnprofitable The three and thirtieth common place Of Christian libertie What doe you vnderstand by this name Christian libertie NOT loosenesse or in generall simply euery libertie but in some respect restrained to some certaine kinde and certaine degrees For this Epithite or title Christian or spirituall puts a difference wherby this speciall kind of libertie is discerned from ciuill and bodily libertie and from the counterfeit liberty of other sects Neyther yet is it contrarie to bodily and ciuil libertie a Eph 6.5 1 Cor. 7 22 or to that seruice that we owe to God and to iustice b 1 pet 2.16 Rom. 6.18 1. Cor. 7.22 Hee that is called being free is the seruant of Christ that is he ought to serue Christ Againe whereas we speake of Christian libertie we must put difference betweene the libertie of the will whereof we haue spoken in the common place of freewill and the libertie of the person wherof here we are to intreat In Greeke it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. Cor. 3.17 for where the spirit of the Lord is there is libertie .. In Latine it is called libertas libertie or setting free not that it it is done by force as in old time when the Lord deliuered the people from Pharaoh vnlesse it be in respect of Sathan whose power and kingdome Christ hath destroyed neither is it obtained with the leaue of our enemies as when the people returned out of Babilon but by the full price paid not to Sathan but to God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the Apostle calleth the price of our redemption whereby vve are made free How manifold is personall libertie Paul sets it downe to be twofold not in the kinds but in respect of the degrees one whereby Christ hauing paide that endlesse price namely his bloud wee are redeemed that wee might be set free from the slauerie of sinne death and the Law c Ephe. 1.7 Rom. 7.6 which for instruction sake we may call the Redemption of libertie Whereof the Apostle maketh mention Rom. 6.22 Now are wee made free from sinne but are the
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 appointed vnto wrath as Paul speaketh 1. Thess 5.6 What is Election It is the Predestination of certaine men in Christ to eternal life namely wherby God willing to manifest the glory of his grace hath of his only goodnes mercie determined out of the whole race of mankind being subiect to sinne death freely to adopt in Christ some certain men to cal them effectually to iustifie them that through him they may be partakers of the heauēly inheritāce and of eternall life And this Election is eternall in the purpose of God although in respect of our selues we may thē be said to be elected when God doth execute his purpose in vs. Or electiō is the execution of Gods wil or the act in separating from the rest of the worlde through effectuall calling Iustification Sanctification those on whom he hath appointed from the beginning to bestow euerlasting life What is the principall cause of Election God is the principall cause All that the father giueth mee shall come vnto me No man can come vnto me except the father draw him Iohn 6.37.44 17.9 I pray not for the world but for these whome thou hast giuen me for they are thine Ephes 1.4 God hath elected vs. And Christ because he is the same God with the father sayth that hee hath chosen vs. Ioh 15.16 And the holy Ghost sayd Act. 13.2 Separate me Saul Barnabas for the work wherūto I haue called thē What is the efficient inforciue or precedent cause thereof The inward cause is only in god that is to say his meere Charitie the only goodnes of the wil of God Eph. 1.4.5 He hath chosen vs saieth he before the foundations of the world were laid according to the good pleasure of his wil. And his free loue Ioh. 3.6 Ro. 9.13 In which place saith he Iacob haue I loued the only grace mercy loue of God b Iohn 4.10 19. 2 Tim. 1.9 he hath called vs with an holy calling not according to our works but acording to his own purpose grace which was giuē to vs through Christ Iesus before the world was I say the meer good pleasure of god only respecting it self but excluding al other outward cause which is or can be in mē a Rom. 9.16 So then electiō is neither in him that willeth nor in him that runneth but in god that sheweth mercy where he calleth the thought indeauor of the mind a will the exercise of good works a race that by suppositiō for no mā willeth or runneth of himself but it is god which worketh in you both to wil to do according to his own free goodwill Phi. 2.13 So. Ephe. 1.9 According to the purpose of his good pleasure which he had purposed in himself as if it should be said that god considered nothing without himself wherof he might haue respect in determining or choosing cap. 2. to Tit. 3.5 Doth our election consist of our owne faith holines worthines linage or works foreseen of God or no In no wise 1. because our sure certain saluation is euidently in the singular freely bestowed grace of the merciful god acording to that It is not in him that willeth nor in him that runneth but in god that sheweth mercy Ro. 9.16 2 Because the praise glorie of our electiō is wholy due to god alone he chose vs to the praise of the glory of his grace Eph. 1.6 Moreouer if works foreseen faith or worthines might moue god to choose some the elect might haue wherof they might boast 3. Because god could foresee no worthinesse or good at all in men but what he had determined now already freely to bestow on thē by the benefit of his election who not by custom imitation but by nature are the enimies of god b Rom. 5.10 and sonnes of wrath c Ephes 2.3 dead in sin d Rom. 7.10 Ephes 2.1 vnapt euen to think a good thought as of thēselues e 1. Cor. 3.5 Finallie in whome by nature there is nothing but matter of eternall death damnation f Iob. 15.16 Psal 14.3 Ierem. 10.23 7. Because then there should be no cause why the Apostle should say O man vvho art thou vvhich pleadest against god Ro. 9.20 For he might haue answered that god foresaw the desert of the one of the other yet doth he not say so but flyeth to the iudgments mercie of god Neither the exclamation of the same Apostle Ro. 11.32 of the deapth c. should take place For he might haue declared in a word that some are e●ected others reiected for the workes which he foresaw would be in either 5 Because our saluation is more safe and sure by gods election then by our owne workes which euermore haue a doubt annexed to them a. Rom. 4.16 6 Because then it would follow that faith is of our selues not of god or that we first loued chose god which the scripture pointeth out to be false absurd b. Ioh. 3.5 6.37 8.47 15.10 ye haue not chosen me but I haue chosen you 7 Because that place Rom. 9.11 For yer the children Esau and Iacob were borne and when they had neither done good nor euill that the purpose of god might remaine according to election not by workes but by him that calleth it wat said the elder shall serue the yonger Where the Apostle drawing forth the reiection of Esau For that he was condemned to be his brothers bond seruant as also the election of Iacob because hee was made lord ouer his brother euen ouer the first borne that Esau his seruitude was ioyned with Gods hatred Iacobs rule with Gods loue out of Malachy the best interpreter of Moses chap. 3.e. As it is written I haue loued Iacob and hated Esau So that neyther any goodnes in Iacob nor any other thing in Esau may be accounted the cause eyther of the chusing of the one or reiecting of the other doth euidently impugne this foresight of faith 8. Because there can be no goodnesse in the world vnlesse God had placed and ordeined it 9. Because naturally the efficient cause cannot bee after his effect but Election is the cause of faith and good works for wee are called Elect that we might be holy Ephes 1.4 and without blame not contrary because he foresaw that we would be such for these two are contrary that the godly haue frō their election this that they should be holy and that they should attaine the same election by meanes of their workes And Paul writeth plainely 1. Corinth 7.25 that he had obtained mercie of the Lord that he might be faithfull 10. Because the Logicians rule is manifest VVhatsoeuer is the cause of the cause is also the cause of the thing caused If then faith and workes foreseene were the cause of Election they should also be the cause of Vocation and Iustification which are the effectes
end to another What is the proper end of Election The remote and farthest end in respect of God that electeth is his glory or praise and the declaring of his mercie Rom. 9.23 That he might make knowne the riches that is exceeding greatnesse of hss glory toward the vessels of mercie which hee hath prepared vnto glory Eph. 1.9 Hee hath elected vs to the praise of the glory of his grace wherewith hee hath made vs freely accepted in his beloued And verse 11. That wee shovld bee vnto the prayse of his glorie But in regard of vs that is nigh at hand or successiue that wee should be holy Ephes 1.4 and 2.10 Wee are his workemanship created vnto good workes which God hath ordained thst wee should walke in them And Rom. 8.29 That we might be made like to the image of God The last is our Saluation Life and Glorification a Col. 1.12.13 1 Thes 13.14 Act. 13.48 Rom. 9.23 VVhat are the markes of Election There are many markes whereof true faith in Christ effectuall through Charitie is the spring whereby a spirituall life is certainely discerned and thereby our Election is perceiued as the life of the body is by sense and motion VVhat is Reprobation A certaine execution of Gods will in casting off and refusing them which are predestinate vnto death Or it is a Predestination wherby God frō the beginning without any iniustice hath determined not to haue mercie on some that were corrupted in Adam and in his eternal iudgment to adiudge them vnto death for their sins being left to thēselues that in these as in the vessels of shame appointed to destruction which is spoken not in respect of the euent but of the purpose for that the particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth not only declare the euent but the scope and purpose hee might make knowne the glory both of his iustice and power a Exod. 9.16 Pro. 16.4 The Lord hath made all things for himselfe yea euen the wicked for the day of euill b Rom. 9.17 21.22 1. Pet. 7.8 Iudith 4 Apoc. 17.8 20.15 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What is the efficient cause of Reprobation God who as he hath elected vs according to the good pleasure of his will so hath hee reiected the reprobate according to his iust will or purpose which in order goeth before all for as hee taketh mercie on vvhom he vvill so vvhom hee vvill hee hardeneth For the same verbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is not otherwise to bee expounded either in the former or latter part of the sentence but because contraries are the consequents of contraries if it bee godly and truely spoken of God which no man denieth he hath mercie on vvhom hee vvill haue mercie Exod. 33.19 without doubt Paul spake truely and godly but vvhom he vvill he hardeneth And Ephes 1.11 God doth all things after the purpose of his will The word of Election doth approue the very same thing For in whose power it is to elect some in his power also it is not to elect others but to passe by them or to reiect them for neyther can the Election of some be granted without a reiection or neglecting nor a reiection or neglecting without the election of others And whereas it is said Ezech. 18.23 I will not the death of a sinner but that he returne from his waies and liue It appeareth to be an indefinite Proposition which differeth very much from an vniuersall and is to be restrained to them to whom is giuen the grace of repentance Which also Christ saith Matth. 23.37 Hovv often vvould I haue gathered thy sonnes and thou vvouldest not hee speaketh of the outward ministerie and as farre as he himselfe was generally promised for the saluation of this nation and as he was also carefull of it in speciall Are not some sinnes as Incredulitie c. the causes of the Decree vvhy some one is reiected No for if sinnes were the cause of Reprobation there should not one be elected because God hath foreseene that all men are sinners But onely the purpose and will of God which in euery worke of his is both iust and the onely rule of all iustice Therfore can it neither bee iustly blamed or accused by vs. a. For in these sayings Ioh 3.18 Hee that beleeueth not is iudged already And 16.9 The holy Ghost shall reprooue the vvorld of sinne because they beleeue not in me And Mark 16.16 He that hath not beleeued shall bee condemned Christ hath not appointed incredulitie the cause of the decree of reprobation but of execution thereof or of condemnation and iudgement Is not God tainted vvith the note of iniustice if his vvill only be determined the cause of Reprobation In no sort for when we entreat of this supreme will of God which ordaineth the causes of all things we must not say there must haue be●ne somewhat iust before God willed it but contrarie God must first haue willed somewhat before it could be iust For so is the will of God the principall rule of iustice that whatsoeuer he will ought to be accompted iust euen because it is his will but there is a deeper reason of Gods iustice then that it can be measured by any meanes of man Rom. 11.13 Rom. 5.20.21 or can be comprehended by the slendernesse of mans witb. And as he hath chiefe and free power by his proper right ouer all creatures So likewise ouer man as the potter ouer the clayc. That neither God should haue bene vniust if he predestinated none to saluation seeing he is debtor to no man and we are all borne the sonnes of wrath 2 Betweene the decree of that secret and vnblameable will of God in reiecting some and the corruption of mankind which is the true and first originall of the condemnation of the reprobate the will of the first man commeth which being created good of it owne accord corrupted it selfe and thereupon made open passage for the iust iudgment of God to destroy them to whome he vouchafeth not his mercie Moreouer although no man be condemned but whome the Lord hath reiected yet no man is condemned but he that is for certaine found to haue in himselfe iust causes of damnation Therfore it is manifest that this decree is most iust by the meanes and degrees as wel generall as special wherby the Reprobate in going on are the cause of most iust condēnation to thēselues so as they can accuse none but themselues For there is one cause of Reprobation and an other of the condemnation of man albeit then that sinnes are not the causes of reprobation which was from the beginning but the iust will of God is the cause yet are they the cause of the damnation which will follow in the last time Neyther are the Reprobate condemned simply for their reprobation but for their impietie and incredulity that is that decree of God is not the cause of the damnation to them that
their hands and that he shall be our Iudge whose brethren we are and the members of his bodie who is a most louing Iesus that is a Sauiour Patron Aduocate Redeemer and Intercessor for vs who laid downe his life for vs and who hath solemnly promised euerlasting life to all them that beleeue in him Rom. 8.32 VVho shall condemne It is Christ that maketh intercession Whereupon we haue good cause to wish for that day according to the saying of Christ When these things beginne to come to passe then looke vp for your redemption draweth neere Luke 21.28 So that it is a merueile which Tertullian in his Apolegetic cap. 38. writeth that Christians were wont to pray for the deferring of the end seeing we daily desire the comming of Gods kingdome 3 It terrifieth the wicked because him whom now they refuse for their Sauiour they shall finde to be their iudge who shall adiudge them to eternall torments VVhat is contrarie hereunto 1 The heathens opinions of the worlds eternitie 2 The Decree of Origen and the Chiliasts that at length a thousand yeares after the Resurrection all shall be saued 3 The errour of them who beside the iudgement that ensueth presently at the first seperation of soule and bodie thinke there doth not an other vniuersall iudgement remaine And of others who thinke that the soules of the godly are not rewarded in heauen nor the soules of the vngodly punished in hell before the day of iudgement 4 The wicked opinion of those mockers who denie or contemning that iudgement or scoffingly asking when that shall be which is so long deferred 2. Pet. 3.3 who so soone as they heare that the last iudgement shall bee cauill As the Epicures and Stoicks cauilled Act. 17.32 following Manilius who saith The fathers savv no other neyther shall posteritie beheld any other 4 The curiositie of them who eyther vpon some fained Reuelation as the Circuncellions the Anabaptists the Enthusiasts who were wont to spread their prophecies amongst the common sort and to set downe the verie certaine yeare moneth and day of iudgement or vpon some position and aspect of the Starres or on some imaginarie supputations of numbers and times or on Arithmeticall calculations as this Platonists or are giuen to iucidiall Astrologie or on common prophecies or on humane authority dare define that time as they who repeat I know not what Rabbines dreame as if it were a diuine Oracle pronounced by E●ias Six thousand yeares the world shall last two thousand years before the Lawe two thousand vnder the Lawe two thousand ●fter the Lawe and then shall the end be which saying may by the Historie it selfe be confuted as vaine because there was two thousand fiue hundred and thirtie yeares before the Lawe and fewer by many then two thousand yeares under the Law and it is manifestly contrarie to the saying of Christ Act. 1.7 For the end of the world doth depend neyther on the Law of nature or on course or any other cause but on the pleasure and secrete will of God onely The nine and thirtieth common Place Of Eternall life How many kindes or differences of life doe the Diuines make THree 1 There is a life of nature which the Apostle calleth an Animall life of the naturall soule being the better part of man a 1. Cor. 2.17 15 47 whereby the good and bad doe in this world one among another liue are quickened doe perceiue and vnderstand which may also be called a Bodily Temporall Naturall and Present life Whereunto the first or naturall death which is a dissolution of the bodie and the soule is opposed 2 There is a life of grace which Gods children onely in the spirituall kingdome of Christ doe enioy in this world which by way of excellency is called The life of God not so much for that it is from God as all the other three kinds of life also are as because God liueth in them that are his that this life he sheweth and approoueth b Ephe. 4.18 and it is called for the same respect The life of Christ because Christ liueth in his through a supernaturall faith and spirit and they liue vnto God and conforme their life vnto his will c Gal. 2.20 and it is called a new life a Christian life and a Renewing of the mind will and affections and it is also called a new creature a new man supernaturall and spirituall which is opposed to death in sinne and to the old man a Col. 3.3 3 There is a life of glorie whereby the soule being ioyned againe to her owne bodie shall lead a life which the Apostle calleth spirituall not in respect of the substance but of the qualities 1. Corinth 15.44 whereby the faithfull shall liue for euer and it is laid vp in Christ and in the end of the world shall be disclosed a and which is opposed to the second death and is called eternall whereof only here we are to intreat But how manie waies is aeternall life taken Two waies 1. Metonymically both for the way that is in the meanes and manner of comming to the inheritance of heauen Iohn 3.36 He which beleeueth on the sonne hath aeternall life And Cap. 17.3 This is eternall life that they acknowledge thee to be the onlie true god and whome thou hast sent Christ Iesus where by the way we may note Thee and whome thou hast sent Christ Iesus to be the subiects in this proposition and the only true God the praedicates of either subiect Also for Christ himselfe 1. Iohn 5 20. This is the true God and life eternall Efficiently indeed as he is God but as he is man and died for vs in part materially because sinne which is the cause of death was purged in his flesh in part also efficiently but by a secondarie meanes namely by his intercession good will and vertue of his sacrifice by the communication of his flesh with vs and of forgiuenes of sinnes and of life eternall which is therein partly also instrumentally because the deity quickeneth vs by reason of the substantiall vniō through the flesh And after this sense is life aeternall begunne in the faithfull in this life 2 Properly for the estate of the blessed after this life whereof Iohn in the same 3. chapter 16. verse whosoeuer belieueth on the sonne can not perish but hath euerlasting life And. 3.7 to Tit. 9. We are heires according to the hope of eternall life By what arguments doe we proue that there is a life eternall 1 From the nature of God for seeing there is a god and the same is liuing and eternall it followeth necessarily that there is a life eternall whereby god liueth and is eternall 2 From the condition of the soule for seeing that it is immortall it followeth that there doth remaine an other life after this wherein the soule liueth by it selfe though seperated from the body and in which life she acknowledgeth and praiseth god highly 3
the plants They are sprouts brought out of the earth being tilled by no man but hauing receiued from God power to grow to the end of the world and without any seede receiued into her neither helped of the Sun nor raine but onely by vertue of the word of God both in the beginning with flowers fruites and seeds as now it comes to passe in time of Autumne which now by vsing the second causes plowing sowing the Sunne Moone raine all which notwithstanding be in the hand of God d Mat. 6.30 1. Cor. 3.7 are brought forth successiuely according to their kind which are and liue onely both for meate as also for medicine and delight and the manifold vse of the liuing creatures e Gen. 1.29 2.9 And three are both herbes and trees created the third day wherein also these waters below which couered the earth were gathered together into one certaine place f Gen. 1.11.12 13. To what end were the Sunne Moone and the Starres in heauen created 1. To this purpose that they might be receptacles and as it were vessels or wagons to carie abroade that light which was created in the first day to put a difference betweene light and darknesse day and night 2. For signes daies times that is that they might signifie vnto vs many things to come raines windes heate cold drought and sundrie seasons g Iob 38.31.32 Amos 5.8 and that they might be significations of the anger or mercie of God h Ios 10.13 2. King 20.11 Luke 21.25 and that by their motion they might both make and distinguish artificiall daies moneths yeares seasons and courses of times as the Spring Sommer Autumne and Winter for the great good of liuing creatures and the seruice of men i Deut. 4 9. Psal 104.20.22.23 Mat. 5.45 3. That by a certaine vertue giuen vnto them of God they might affect the bodies of the elements by making them warme moist drie cold namely by the approching of the Sunne vnto certaine starres by which meanes are caused raine droughts heate cold and humours are increased for the cōferring of life for generation and for the perfecting of all things which pertaine vnto this present life k Job 38.33 Whereupon it is said in Hos 2.21 The heauen shall heare the earth and the earth shall heare the corne And this adorning of the heauen was made the fourth day l Gen. 1.14.15 16.17.18.19 Whether can things to come be foreknowne and foretold by the starres Indeed such things may which come to passe by the motion of the starres by their situation and position by the necessarie course of nature or naturally and ordinarily as the eclipses of the Moone or the Sun faire weather or tempests droughts raine winds snow heate cold and such like And probably those things which for the most part are wont to follow the motion of the starres as kinds of diseases barrennesie of the earth dearth of victuals and such like but onely in generall and not in particular m Mat. 16.2 neither yet as of their owne proper causes but onely as of signes Also physicall passions which follow the diuerse temperatures of the humours of the body because euery one followeth the disposition of his nature But not anie of those things which depend vpon the free will of man nor such as proceed from the meere goodwill and pleasure of God as those which belong either to saluation or damnation as also those things which we vse to place in the number of things contingent as good successe or bad successe which the Lord distributeth as it pleaseth him The reason is because neither are all the stars knowne of vs neither are the influences of those which we know vnderstood of vs neither can we perfectly obserue the moments of times wherein anie man is conceiued or borne and we see that the nature and disposition of twinnes is most contrarie And lastly because God doth moderate the starres and those things which he portendeth by them euen at his owne will and pleasure a Prou. 27.1 and Iames. 4.14 We know not what shall be to morrow But if anie do foretell and it so falleth out it either cometh to passe contingently or else by the reuelation of the diuell Therefore that iudiciall part of Astrologie as they call it or prognosticating which searcheth out what shall befall a man this or that yeare or day what shall come to passe to a man well or ill is vaine and vngodly and by no meanes to be tollerated in the Church of God b Deut. 18.19 Ier. 10.2 Act 1.17 Ioh. 21.22 The first Councell at Toledo Canon 21. If any man thinke we are bound to beleeue his Astrologie or Mathematicks let him be accursed Is it a sound opinion to thinke that the starres haue soules or that they be liuing creatures Yea rather it is impious because it tends to the vpholding of their error which worshipped the starres offered sacrifice vnto them c 2. Kin. 23.5 Ier. 7.17 44 19. and because none of the faculties or operations of the soule as vegetatiue sensitiue intellectiue can agree to a celestiall bodie Why did God place the creation of the starres betweene the creation of plants and beasts To the end he might shew that though ordinarily there doth concurre the Sunne with his motion and light as also other starres to the generation of plants and beasts yet the generation of things doth not simply proceed from the Sunne and the starres but from God sith that euen before the starres were created he commanded all plants with their fruites to be brought out of the earth And before the creation of beasts he would in great wisedome first create the Sunne and the starres which might giue light to the earth because that beasts aboue all things stand in need of light What are liuing Creatures Things created of God which haue their being liue and haue sense or else they be substances indued with an instrumentall bodie which haue besides the soule whereby they liue sense and power to moue themselues from place to place Whence were liuing creatures brought foorth Some out of the waters as fishes which are also called creeping creatures because they haue no feete which also haue no lungs and therefore breath onely by their gils and birds which are feathered winged twofooted although they seeme to be created of the earth d Deut. 2.10 and haue respiration and a voice which were made the fift day e Gen. 1.20.22.23 Some of the earth which liue vpon the earth whereof Moses maketh three kinds of beasts which be helpful vnto man some way as are cattell which liue by grasse not by flesh horses oxen sheepe and which may be tamed liue about the house as Elephants Camels Harts Creeping things which haue no feete or very short ones wherewith they be a little caried aboue the earth And beasts which be wild and liue by flesh as Lions Bears
made Psal 104.4 Who makest thine Angels spirits and thy ministers a flaming fire And in this fourth signification we vse the word Angel here purposing to speake first of Gods Angels and then in order of the wicked Angels Whence had Angels their beginning From God who created them of nothing and that through Christ Coloss 1.16 By whom al things were made whether in heauen or earth things visible and inuisible whether they be thrones or dominations principalities or powers I say all things were made by him and for his sake Are Angels without all matter or not They are not altogether and indeed without matter as neither is the soule of man for God alone is without matter For there is nothing created which is not also compounded either by natural composition as consisting of matter and forme or else metaphysicall namely of the essence or of the act and the power Yet because they do not consist of any corporall matter which is palpable and subiect to the sight but rather spirituall altogether and as they say in the schooles onely of the power and the act they are said to be without matter But God alone is a power or pure Act as Aristotle said verie well in the 11. booke of his Metaphysiks chap. 7. But when were the Angels created Not before the world For onely the Sonne of God was before the world Whence it followeth that they were created in the beginning of all things but in what day they were created it cannot sensibly be defined but onely it may probably be gathered by the historie of Moses that they were created the first day when the heauens wherin they dwell were created whereupon they be called the Angels of heauen a Math 24.36 Gal. 18. The cause why Moses concealed the creation of Angels when he recited the creation of all other things created is this that he purposed to apply and fit his narration to the capacitie of the common people and of the ruder sort and therfore only to set downe briefly the creation of things visible Christ saith Math. 18.10 that the Angels do alwayes behold the face of his Father therefore they haue bene alwayes The aduerbe alwayes doth not signifie eternitie or a thing without beginning but the continuance of their appearing before his Father for the seruice of the godly which began euen from the beginning of the world which the Greeke text doth more fully expresse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to wit which is vnderstood at all times What is an Angell It is as Damascene saith lib. 2. cap. 5. a spirituall or intellectuall substance alwayes moueable of its owne power without a bodie ministring vnto God according vnto grace and in nature immortall But the Apostle comprehending the nature and office of good Angels defineth them thus Hebr. 1.14 They are ministring spirits sent forth for the seruice of those who shall be heires of saluation Are the Angels substances really and truly subsisting They are substances because those things are attributed to them in Scripture which can agree to nothing else but to a substance really subsisting as to stand in the presence of God and to praise him some of them are said to haue fallen and other some of them to haue continued in the truth Further to haue appeared after diuerse maners yea taking vnto them bodies and to haue manifested them selues by sundrie effects Now actions are properly of substances that is of those things onely which haue their true subsisting And therefore looke how many Angels there be there be so many sundrie Angelicall essences subsisting seuerally euen as there be diuers men How were the Angels created All of them good because Gen. 1.31 Whatsoeuer God had made was exceeding good although some of them fell a Isa 14.12 and continued not in the truth And they also were good and created in the truth b John 8.44 And Iude in the sixt verse saith that they kept not their first estate but left their owne habitation Are the Angels mutable or immutable In regard of their substance they be incorruptible c Mat. 22.30 because they are without all matter but in respect of the power of God as they were made of nothing so they may be brought vnto nothing again if God should take away his hand Psalme 104.20 But in regard of that estate wherin they now are they cannot be changed by means of the grace will and decree of God although of their owne nature they be mutable as well to that which is good as to that which is euill For whatsoeuer is created the same is mutable saith Damascene And God himselfe speaketh thus of himselfe I am your God and change not Mal. 3.6 What is the reason that some of the Angels falling from the truth others continued in grace and truth The nearest and immediate cause is the goodnesse of the will of the Angels themselues wherein God had created them at the beginning The mediate or superior cause was the free fauor of God whereby their will was holpen that they were inabled to will and could will to persist in the truth and so indeede did continue whilest that others to whom this grace was not communicated not willing to persist and continue fell from the truth by their owne default Phil. 3.8 God worketh in you both to will and to do But the supreme and highest cause of all is the eternall firme and immutable decree of God and his good pleasure proceeding from his wisedome whereby he elected and predestinated some to be made partakers of his grace and to perseuere and reiected the other of his owne iust pleasure for his owne glorie 1. Timoth. 5.21 I charge thee saith the Apostle in the sight of God and the Lord Iesus Christ and of the elect Angels If they be elect then some of them be elect not all of them Can those then which continued in the truth fall from the same and so fall into sinne No because they are truly happie seeing they do euer behold the face of their heauenly Father Mat. 18.10 yet not by nature but by grace and the blessing of God for Christs sake But seeing they can no more sinne nor become miserable do they not cease to haue freedome of will No for whatsoeuer they will they will it freely Moreouer they are more free now then before then they had power to sinne and not to sinne now they are so free from sinne that they cannot sinne and so free from miserie that they cannot now become miserable any more for they are made most holy and also most happie What names are giuen to the Angels Of their nature they are called spirits because of their spirituall essence For Angell is a name of office Spirit of nature Augustine They are called also shining starres or morning starres a Iob. 3.8.7 because they are of a most pure cleare and shining nature The sonnes of God not by essence or nature as that onely begotten
iustly giuing them ouer to the lustes of their owne hearts Is it true therefore that God willeth not iniquitie Psal 5.5 If you vnderstand it simply that God in no sort willeth it d Isa 19 14 Rom 1 24 26. the Scripture gainsaieth For we read of Herode and Pilate Acts. 4.28 That they did which the hand and counsell of God had decreed to be done Also it ouerthroweth the Omnipotencie of God as though it were done quite against his will Therefore this case is to be cleered by this explication That God willeth not sinne by his approuing will or his reueiled will or voluntate signi the will which he hath signified to vs for by this he condemneth forbiddeth and punisheth it But he willeth it by his Secrete will voluntate arcani siue beneplaciti which will though hidden yet is most iust Further sinne ought to be distinguished into the action and malice of the action From the first God can not be excluded for in him we liue mooue and haue our being Act. 17.28 But it cannot be denied that he is a willing sufferer and a most wise ordainer except the wisedome and power of God be likewise denied For sinne serueth both for the glorie of God and the e Rom. 3.5 manifestation of his Diuine iustice and mercie and also for the saluation of the elect To whom all things worke together for their good Rom. 8.28 Yea euen sinnes saith Augustine Although not of themselues or from themselues but this commeth to passe by accident and from the goodnesse of GOD and that in them onely to whom their sinnes are forgiuen and their sinnes so farre forth as they are sinnes were ordayned to this purpose that the Sonne of God by his bloud might make satisfaction for them Moreouer also he punisheth sinne by sinne f Rom. 1 21 therefore he willeth sinne not as sinne but as it is a punishment or an act of Iustice For euerie punishment of sinne is iust and therefore God So God will not haue incest to be committed as it is a pollution and violating of the order of Matrimonie and a transgressing of the lawe and yet God willingly performeth the office of a Iudge in as much as hee vseth both that incestuous copulation and other sinnes of Absalons to exercise his reuenge d 2. Sam. 11 12. 16 21 22. Are there graunted two contrarie wils in God when by his secret vvill he is said to gouerne and rule those things which notwithstanding he forbiddeth openly in his law Noe but whereas there is one simple will of God it appeareth more diuers vnto vs because through the weakenesse of our minde we cannot conceiue how God not by one and the same meanes and end but by diuers meanes should will and not will the same thing to be done For his wisedome is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 manifolde and diuers Ephes 3.10 And dwelleth in light that may not be approached vnto 1. Tim. 6.16 Therefore Augustine saith Enchiridium ad Laurentium cap. 101. Great are the workes of God and his will towards all men exquisite so that in a wonderfull and vnspeakeable manner that is not done against his will which yet is doone against his will Doe all things come to passe by the prouidence of God as all Contingencie and Fortune is taken away 1 If we respect the nature of second causes the Contingencie and mutabilitie of effects may well be maintained For that is Contingent which when it is done hath such cause which could in it owne nature haue done otherwise But in respect of the first cause euen Contingent things are necessary namely so as that all things depend vpon the appointment and will of God So the bones of Christ in their owne nature might haue beene broken which by the decree of God could not be broken Ioh. 19.36 2 There is one Necessitie of Infallibilitie and another of Compulsion such a necessitie was in Balaam when hee blessed the people of Israell resisting his owne action with his whole will Numb 23.12 so those things which men or Angels doe they doe necessarily because God hath in his prouidence decreed this shal be done yet not by cempulsion or against their wils for God turneth their wils to that part which he hath decreed shal be done that whilest they doe they themselues also will that they doe Euen as men that they may liue in this world eate and drinke necessarily indeed but yet willingly God enclining their willes to that part 3 There is one Absolute Necessitie which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or simply called Necessitie namely of those things the opposites whereof are simply impossible by reason of the nature of the cause or subiect of which it is said as God loueth is wise iust good And there is another necessitie of Consequence or by Supposition which is of the effects of those things which when they are granted it is necessarie the effect should follow notwithstanding the causes might eyther not haue beene or haue beene chaunged So those things which God hath decreed should be are necessarie because of the vnchaungeablenesse of the diuine decree notwithstanding that which God hath done most freely that is from eternitie he could either haue not decreed them at all or otherwise decreed them Likewise those things which are indeed wrought by second causes which causes are so made by God that of their owne nature they cannot otherwise worke then they doe but yet by him they they may be taken away hindered or chaunged So the sunne necessarily mooueth and yet it standeth still at Iosuahs sight a Ios 10.12 13. The fire burneth the bodies put vnto it and yet burneth not the three young men in the furnace at Babylon b Dan. 3.92 94. So those sayings of Christ Mathew 18.7 It is necessarie that offences come And of Paule 1. Cor. 11.19 It is meet that heresies should come are to be vnderstood of the Necessitie of Consequence whose next causes are to be sought in the verie willes of men and diuels But that which is Luke 24.46 It behooued Christ to suffer is spoken by a supposition of the end or Necessitie of the Decree Note therefore an vsuall saying in the Schooles Future things when they are compared to the first cause and prescience of God they are necessarie but compared to next causes and considered in their owne nature they may be Contingent and it is no contradiction that the same thing in diuers respects should be necessary and contingent What doth this necessitie differ from the Stoicks Fate Much because they say necessitie consisteth in the continued and perpetuall order and ineuitable coniunction of second causes but we in the will and decree of God Againe they subiect God to Necessitie wee Necessitie to God Doth nothing come to passe by chance or fortune Nothing indeed at all if we consider the prouidence power and knowledge of all things which is in God but in respect of our selues who
forgiue vs our debts because of the likenesse for by sinne a man becommeth debter vnto God to vndergoe punishment and also oweth recompence to be made to his neighbour For as debts do ciuilly binde to satisfie the punishment vnlesse they be remitted so sin doth ciuilly binde to satisfaction of punishmēt except it be forgiuen Likewise it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a defect As 1. Cor. 6.7 Now therefore there is a weakenesse or defect amongst you Which word commeth of the verbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth to be ouercome to faint or yeld Also it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wickednesse naughtinesse lewdnesse sinne scelus a 1 Cor. 5.8 Also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 transgression a Rom 4.15 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 breaking of the lawe b Heb 1.9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vnrighteousnesse c 2 Tim. 2.19 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vngodlinesse which is referred to the first table against God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vnrigteousnesse to the second against men d Rom. 1.18 What is sinne 1. Iohn 3.4 It is there defined 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by taking away of the contrarie to it That is a transgression of the Lawe or a priuation of the Lawe to wit of the conformitie of our actions both of soule and bodie with Gods lawe for the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 containeth the value of two words because it consisteth of the priuatiue particle ae and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or as Ambrose briefly expressed it Peccatum est legis diuine praeuaricatio Sinne is a Praeuarication or going beyond the Lawe of God Augustine saith thus Peccatum est dictum vel factum vel concupitum contra Legem dei Sinne is whatsoeuer is said done or coueted against Gods Lawe Wee define it thus Sin is a rouolting a declyning or wandring from the Law or will of God binding the sinner to suffer eternall death But sometime it is vsed Metonymically for the whole man being corrupted as also for all his actions which oppose the lawe of God also for a sinne offering and sacrifice for sinne Exod. 29.36 And thou shalt offer a calfe for sinne i. a sinne offering euerie day for attonement thou shalt sprinkle the Altar with the sinne that is with the bloud of the sacrifice for sinne Leu. 8.15 2. Cor. 5.21 For he made him who knewe no sinne to become sinne for vs that is a sacrifice for sinne or a sinner not in himselfe but by the guilte of all our sinnes imputed vnto him as the opposition added in that place requireth this interpretation That we might bee made the righteousnes of God that is righteous with God and that by no inherent righteousnesse or properly our owne but that which being in Christ is imputed to vs. What be the causes of sinne They are of two sorts Outward and Inward The outward are diuerse 1. Sathan by his poysoned suggestions e Gen. 3.1.4 2. Men by their euill examples words and flattering f Gen. 3.6 Especially the fal of our first parents as it is described in that place 3. But by accident the obiects wherwith our senses meete enticing vs to the abuse of them and so to sinne g Gen. 3 6 1 Iohn 2.16 2 Sam 11.1 4. By accident also the Lawe of God it selfe which is holy iust becommeth cause of sin by forbidding those things which please the flesh commanding those which displease according to the verse The thing forbidden we most couet And that 's denyed we most loue it a Rom 3.20 4.15 5.20 7.7.8 All which are confirmed by the example of Adams first fall Gen. 3. 5 The cherishers of Sinne Idlenesse and Delicacie b Ezech. 16.49 But seeing nothing commeth to passe in the world or can come to passe without the most wise and iust prouidence of God may not hee be called thc Author and cause of sinne God forbid for hee hateth forbiddeth and punisheth it as a thing most disagreeing with his greatest goodnes According as Iohn saith in his first Epistle 2.16 Concupiscence by which name he vnderstandeth all sinnes is not of the father but of the world And Iames. 1.14.15 Euerie man is tempted whilest he is drawne away and enticed by his owne concupiscence Then concupiscence after it hath conceiued bringeth forth sinne And Ecclesiastes 7.30 This I know that God made man righteous but they haue sought to themselues many inuentions Although he suffereth sinne in his certaine counsell as we haue said in the Place of Gods prouidence What is the inward cause of sinne This likewise is of diuers kindes 1. The corruption of our nature which also is called vsually by the Apostles concupiscence Ephes 2.3 Wee haue had our conuersation in the lusts of our flesh in doing the will of our flesh and our owne thoughts 2. The consent of the will Mat. 5.28 Hee that looketh on a woman to lust after her hath alreadie committed adulterie with her in his heart 3. Ignorance by which the will is oft deceiued of which also the Apostle speaketh 1. Tim. 1.13 I thank Christ who hath set me in the Ministery who before was a persecuter and a blasphemer and an oppressor but be had mercie on me for I did it ignorantly through vnbeliefe 4. Weaknesse of minde and feeblenesse of faith whereby it commeth to passe that wee cannot alwaies resist the temptations of Sathan and the flesh but though we see that which is better and approue it yet in the meane while being ouercome we followe the worse as it came to passe in Peter a Mat. v 6.69 the verses following when hee denyed Christ and to Dauid when he committed adulterie b 2. Sam. 11.2.4..5 5. The wilfull and set malice of man of which Ieremie speaketh The heart of man is euill and vnsearchable who can knowe it Ierem. 17.9 Such was the sinne of the diuell 1. Iohn 3.8 Hee that committeth sinne is of the Diuell for the Diuell sinneth from the beginning In which place to commit sinne signifieth not simply to sin but of purposed malice to endeauour to sinne and to be led with a desire of sinning As Iudas the traitor who heareth that said to him That thou doest doe quickly In such maner the faithfull commit not sinne 1. Iohn 3.9 VVhosoeuer is borne of God sinneth not or committeth not sinne that is doth not favour sinne otherwise If we say we haue no sinne wee deceiue our selues and the trueth is not in vs. 1. Iohn 1.8 6. A habit or custome of sinning is not the least cause of sinne as Ephes 2.2 Yee walked in your sinnes according to the course of this world 7. Sinne it selfe is the cause of sinne according to that Iohn 8.34 He that committeth sinne is the seruant of sinne How many waies commeth it to passe that one sinne is cause of another sinne Fiue waies 1. When as one sinne being committed the grace of the holie
Ghost is lost which being lost man cannot choose but fall into other sinnes 2. When God punishing sinne with sinne deliuereth him that hath sinned into the hand of Sathan who worketh further in him effectually c Rom 1.26 Ephes. 2.2 2 Thess 2.11.22 3. In as much as it is easie falling from one sinne into the like for by the acts of things are caused and wrought dispositions and habits inciting a man to the like actions So prodigality is cause of theft drunkennesse of lust and one sinne draweth on another 4. Because one sinne cannot be committed without many other sinnes In which sense the Apostle saith 1. Tim. 6.10 That couetousnesse is the roote of all euill And Iames 2 10. Hee that offendeth in one is guiltie of all Ephes 5.18 Bee not drunken with wine wherein is ryot 5. In regard of the end Because often one sin is committed because of another as Iudas for the loue of money betraied Christ a Iohn 12 6 Mat. 26.14 15.15 Is sinne any Positiue and Priuatiue thing Sinne is not a thing positiue that is which hath a beeing and is created of God neither is it simply nothing and a meere priuation as death is the priuation of life and darknesse of light but it is a defect and destroying of a thing positiue namely of the diuine worke and order in a subiect who suffereth the punishment of his deprauation and reuolting from God And Paule calleth it a defect or priuation when he saith All are depriued of the glorie of God Rom. 3.23 Although in sinne there be indeede inward and outward motions which are things positiue but such as haue in them errour and confusion as in Cains murder of his brother the motion or lifting vp of his hands is a positiue thing b Gen. 4.8 But sinne it selfe is a reuolting from the Law of God a wandring and straying from the will of god a disorder and confusion of gods order In this sense Thomas saith that sinne is not a meere priuation that is onely an absence of a good thing but a certaine corrupt habit or an act voide of all due order that is a renting asunder and a troubling of that order whereby all our strength and inclinations ought to haue beene ruled VVhat is the subiect of sinne The reasonable creature because it is only incident to such because this creature onely vnderstandeth the Law will of God and his actions are by election and choise of the thing to be done but to bruite beasts this cannot befall How many parts of sinne are there Two the materiall and the formall part of Sinne or the euill of the fault and the euill of the guilt The first which is malum culpae and is the materiall part of sin is a disorder or transgressing of Lawe a defect a corruption an inclination or action opposing the Lawe of God which disease cleaueth vnto vs of it selfe but the guilt or formall part of sinne is a binding vnto temporarie and eternall punishment according to the order of Gods will and Iustice c Rom. 5.12 Ephe. 2.4 A remedie of this is the obedience or righteousnesse of Christ imputed vnto vs by faith The other is remedied both by the heauenly power and vertue which springeth from Christs resurrection which wee call Regeneration commonly Inherent righteousnesse and also that most perfect sanctification of mans nature in Christ What is the fruit of sinne Death and that of three sorts 1. The first a spirituall death of the soule by which it commeth to passe that the wicked beeing depriued of the presence of the holie Ghost which is the soule of the soule can doe none of those things which are of God and so being dead vnto God do liue vnto Sathan 2. The second of the bodie by which death also are signified the miseries which bring vs to this death 3. Euerlasting death of bodie and soule vnlesse in this life we turne vnto Christ These things are confirmed by testimonies Gen. 2.17 Thou shalt die the death Rom. 1.18 The wrath of God is reuealed from heauen vpon all vngodlinesse Rom. 6.23 The wage of sinne is death Iames 1.5 Sinne when it is accomplished bringeth forth death Whence are we to value and esteeme the grieuousnesse of sinne 1. By the greatnesse of the disloyalty against Gods Maiestie 2. By the punishment which followed Adams fall the calamities and sorrowes which ensued as sicknesse warre famine pestilence and other priuate or publike euils wherewith wee are at this day cumbred and inwrapped 3. By the value of that price wherewith wee were redeemed from sinne namely by the death of the sonne of God whom it behoued to become a sacrifice to make attonement satisfie the iustice of God 4. By the horrors of conscience wherby mens harts are tormented with the feeling of Gods anger 5. By temporall death 6. By the threatnings of eternall punishment which God seriously threatneth to those that be not conuerted How many kinds then are there of sinne Two kinds to wit The first fal of certain Angels our first parēts 2. That corruption and deprauation of mens nature before it being good and which followed vpon mans fall VVhat a fall was Adams fall which kindled the horrible vengeance of God against all mankinde It was a voluntarie transgression of the a Gen. 2.17 first commandement or law and of the order appointed by God proceeding from the suggestion and instigation of the Diuell b Gen. 3.4 VVhence came it to passe that man wittingly and willingly suffered himselfe to be driuen to such a horrible fall Not by intemperance in appetite seeing hee abounded on all sides with whatsoeuer delicates could be desired but by Infidelitie whereby first calling into question the truth of God then contemning it he turned to embrace a lye From whence issued Ingratitude Ambition Pride to which was annexed contumelie and stubbornesse against God seeing that Adam beeing not content with his own estate did vnworthilie despise so great liberality of God and sought to become equall to God whereby also he subscribed consented to those calūniations of Sathan by which he accused God of lying enuie and malice and hee gaue more credite to Sathan who in lying promised him great benefits by sinne then to God himselfe who threatned him destruction And to conclude he broke the commandement of God his Creator his King and Lord and shooke off his gouernment lewdly wilfully and obstinately By which meanes it came to passe that he reuolting from God by a cursed Apostasie fled into the campe of the Diuell the most cursed enemie of God and became the Diuels bond-slaue What is that corruption or deprauing of mans nature which before was good and to which Adam was created ensuing that Transgression It is a depriuation of the heauenly image to which Adam was created that is of wisdome vertue holinesse trueth righteousnesse wherewith he was before in his creation adorned and a succeding of Sathans
resemblances of vertues which although they are praised in the courts and iudgement places of men yet before the heauenly tribunall they are of no moment to deserue righteousnesse Yea more they are sins because whatsoeuer is done without faith that is without acknowledgment trusting in the Mediator is sinne Rom. 14.23 Therefore what kind of will is remaining in a man not regenerate A will altogither euill namely which doth with a prone inclination make hast to sinne for man is not depriued of will but of the soundnesse and goodnesse of his will Therefore Bernard speaketh thus Simply to vvill commeth from mans nature to vvill vvickedly commeth from corrupt nature to vvill vvell from supernaturall grace But doth not mans vvill freely encline to euill If free be opposed to compulsion or violent constraint in this case man is caried to commit sinne freely that is of his owne accord voluntarily and with earnest desire and so there is in him free vvill to euill a Iam. 1.14 Pruu 2.24 But if free be opposed to seruitude or necessitie certainly man enclineth to euill not freely but necessarilie and so mans will is seruile and thrall but so as this necessitie and slauerie is voluntarie So the will of a man vnregenerate is a Seruant and it is also free in diuers respects a seruant because of the necessitie of sinning free in regard of his will Iohn 8.34 Whosoeuer committeth sinne is the seruant of sinne and verse 38. If the sonne shall make you free you shall be free indeed Therefore if he shall not make free the will shall be a seruant not free and therefore more truly it shall be called seruile or slauish vvill not free vvill For by whomsoeuer a man is ouercome to him he becommeth slaue 2. Pet. 2.19 but if a man become slaue vnto sinne he is no longer free Hovv stands the vvil of man in his conuersion is it meerrly passiue or actiue also In respect of grace which commeth from without a man and preuenteth him the will in as much as it is not yet begonne to be regenerate is meerely passiue as the clay in the hand of the Potter a Rom. 9.21 because all his strength concerning spiritual and heauenly things is extinct by which he might prepare himselfe to grace or of himselfe receiue it being offered or by his naturall strength turne vnto God or wil desire or follow after that which is good acceptable to God for we are all dead in sin b but the dead man is only passiue in respect of his quickening yea moreouer the will is not only dead but also it is stubborne of it selfe and of it selfe and by it selfe q Epes 2.1 Colos 3 12 it cannot choose but resist being not moued kindled by God c Iohn 6. Therefore Dauid faith Psal 51.12 Create in me O God a cleane heart But in respect of the time in which the conuersion it selfe is wrought the will is not like a stocke but whilest it is healed and cured by the holy Ghost it is also actiue that is the will in the act of conuersion is not idle and void of all sense and motion as an Image but followeth the holy Ghost who draweth it For at the same instant God cause vs both by grace to will and to will indeed that is he mooueth and bendeth our wils and causeth vs to will indeed but yet so as all the whole efficacie of the action dependeth vpon Gods spirit Heereupon Aagustine lib. de Gratia lib. arbitrio cap. 2. It is certaine that we will when we will but he causeth vs to will who worketh in vs to will Therfore Phil. 2.13 It is God who worketh in vs both the wil the deed where Will is not vnderstood of the substance of the will but of a newe qualitie How is that to be vnderstood which Christ speaketh Ioh. 6.44 No man commeth to me except the father draw him Not so as if the will in the act of conuersion that is when the party conuerted is begon to be drawē by the word holy spirit did like an enemie make resistance neither is the case alike as when euil spirits vse the members of bodies possessed by them For we do not beleeue against our wils because faith is a knowledge in the mind and an assent in the heart but because of vnwilling God maketh vs willing of resisting consenting of sluggish lasie persons God maketh vs to become runners In which sense is that saying of Chrysostome to be taken God indeed draweth saith he but he draweth so as the partie is willing Act. 26.19 I was not disobedient to the heauenly vision What therefore be the causes of our conuersion The efficient cause and effectuall by it selfe is one namely the Holy Ghost of which it is saide Ezech. 36.26 I will giue you a newe heart a newe spirit wil I put in the middest of you and I will take the stonie heart out of your flesh and I will giue you a fleshie heart and will make you to walke in my commaundements The instrumentall cause or meanes is the word of God Rom. 10.17 Faith is by hearing and hearing by the word of God by which word being read heard and thought vpon the Holy Ghost becommeth regularlie effectuall enlightning the minde and turning the will The subiect of Conuersion is the vnderstanding and will of man which notwithstanding is saide also to concurre not to the conuersion but in the conuersion because no conuersion is wrought without the thing to be conuerted but in that regard that it is mooued not of it selfe but by the Holy Ghost that being driuen forward thereby it worketh of vnwilling becōming willing it willeth For the will is not onely the subiect of Gods operation which the spirit of God worketh in the elect but it is also such an instrument which beeing renewed and mooued by the Holie Ghost doth it selfe also worke together with it and mooueth it selfe What manner of free will is there in a man regenerate It is partly to good partly to euill How to good Because the Holy ghost reneweth by the word of God mans nature onely in part and therefore that will which before was seruant becommeth free only in part that is because a new l●ght and knowledge of God is kindled in the minde and in the will and heart new inclinations and motions agreeing with gods law that so man being caused by God to worke may himselfe also worke As Iohn 6.45 Euerie one that hath heard and learned of the father commeth vnto mee Phil. 2.13 It is God who worketh in you both the will and the deede How is there in them a free will to euill 1. Because Regeneration is onely begunne in this life not perfected by regeneration is to bee vnderstoode a a 1. Cor 13 9 12. 2 Cor. 11 9 renewing of minde will and affections and the reliques of the flesh or of sinne do alwaies remaine
will when a man disposeth of his goods how they shall be ordered after his death The Grecians doe properly and peculiarly call it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 According to the vse of Scripture it is vnderstood to be a couenant or agreement betwixt God and men who before were at variance in which couenant God doth promise to man those benefits which himselfe hath namely saluation and eternall life and man on the other part doth relie vpon God by confidence in his promises and doth confirme his faith nourish it by the testimonie of the couenant a Heb. 7.22 And for this cause is called of the Hebrewes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Berith which properly signifieth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Greeke that is a couenant betwixt them which liue 3 Metonymically with addition of Old or New it signifieth the bookes and distinct parts of the Bible The old Testament signifieth the writings of Moses and the Prophets and the new containeth the writings of the Euangelists and Apostles 2. Cor. 3 6. God hath made vs able Ministers of the Nevv Testament And verse 14. Euen vntill this day the same veile remayneth in the reading of the Old Testament Seeing the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Berith doth not signifie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or a testament but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is a couenant amongst them who liue 1. Reg. 5.12 why doe the Greeke interpreters of the Bible call the couenant made by God with men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or a testament Because 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in a generall word signifieth also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is a bargaine or couenant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which generally signinifieth to couenant and agree vpon a bargaine Luc. 23.29 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. I make a couenant with you as the father couenanted or gaue order to me 2 Againe because this couenant of God with men hath some thing common with a testament and differing from other couenants for in other couenants nothing is lesse required then the death of them who enter couenant heere on the contrarie it behooued that the couenant made betwixt God and men should be confirmed by the death of Christ For these causes also the Apostle Hebr. 9.15.16.17 Doth keepe the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and draweth an argument from the proper signification thereof And it is called a testament because it is a certaine testimonie of the will of God Of what parts consisteth the Testament betwixt God and men Of three 1. A free promise on Gods part 2 Faith in the promise on mans part 3 The outward testification or marke of the same euery of which parts by a Synecdoche a part for the whole receiue the name of Testament as Gal. 3.17 The law doth not make void the couenant confirmed before by God where the word Testament is vsed for a promise made by God to Abraham a Gen. 17.7 2. God said to Abraham b v. ● Thou therfore keep my Testament Psal 44.18 All these things are come vpon vs yet doe wee not forget thee neyther deale falsely concerning thy Testament where the word Testament is vsed to signifie the faith of man towards God 3. Gen. 17.18 This is my Testament that euerie male among you be circumcised and Luke 22 20. This cup is the new testament in my bloud and Act. 7.8 God hath giuen to Abraham the testament of circumcision It is vsed Metaphorically for an outward signe or testimonie and badge of the testament Gen. 17.11 Hath God made more or onely one couenant with men As since the time of the fall of our first parents hath beene and is the same way to attaine saluation by Christ so there is one perpetuall couenant or testament of God whereby God bindeth himselfe to giue saluation to all those who beleeue in Christ But doth not the scripture mention two couenants It doth indeed because of the dispensation of the same couenāt which at diuers times was diuersly appointed by god wherof the one is called the Old Testament the other the New Yet we must note that the old Couenant is vnderstood and called two waies somtimes in respect onely of Moses his lawgiuing and it is called the couenant of the law the sanction and establishing whereof is described Exod. 24. and sometimes to signifie the couenant of grace or free couenant in what manner it was made with Abraham and his posteritie Gen. 17.7 But by the appellation of the new couenant is vndestoode no more then the free couenant Of both these Ierem. 31.31.32 speaketh thus Bebold the daies shall come saith the Lord and I will make with the house of Israell and with the hovse of Iuda my couenant not according to that couenant which I made with their fathers in the day when I tooke them by the hand to lead them out of the land of Aegypt but this is my couenant which I will make with the house of Israell After those daiet saith the Lord I will giue my law in the middest of them and I will write in their heart and I will bee their God and they shall be my people and I will be mercifull to their iniquities After which words the Apostle addeth Hebr. 8.13 VVhen he saith a newe one he hath abrogated the former And Galat. 4.24 He teacheth that Agar the seruant was a shadow of mount Sinai from which was giuen the Law and that Sarai the free woman was a f●gure of the heauenly Ierusalem from which sprung the Gospell and he addeth that by these are signified the two Testaments the one bringing forth children vnto bondage that is slaues and the other to libertie or free men and in the ninth Chapter to the Hebrewes he maketh a comparison of the Old and New Testament the summe whereof commeth to this purpose that the Old testament was a shadowe of the New and the New a fulfilling of the Old the new was folded vp in the Olde and the New enfolded in the Newe But in this place where the question is concerning the likenes and difference of the Old and New Couenaunt we by the name of old vnderstand onely the free Couenant in such sorte as it was made with our fi●st parents straight after the fall and was confirmed to Abraham of which the law of Moses was an helpe and at length it was renued in Christ Dan. 9.27 How are these two testimonies one which are so diuers In substance or in respect of all the causes thereof to wit Efficient Matter Forme and End How do they agree in the efficient cause Because the antecedent cause of both the couenants was the wonderfull descending and as it were abasing of God whereby he stooped so low as to binde men in league and couenant vnto him which thing Moses testifyeth Deut. 8.17 9.5 Offering the pure mercie of God against the merits of the Iewes and Iosua 24.2.3 But the antecedent and meritoriovs cause is the death of
of the Iewes and Gentiles or the whole company of them who are receiued into the couenant for the Old couenant properly belonged to Abraham and the Israelites his posteritie Deut. 32.8 VVhen the most high God diuided to the nations their inheritance when he separated the sons of Adam he appointed the borders of the people according to the number of the children of Israell d Gen. 15.18 17.7 for the Lords portion is his people Iacob is the lot of his inheritance But the new couenant belongeth to all nations to whome God hath vouchsafed the light of the Gospell Mark 16.15 Go yee into all the world and preach the Gospell to euerie creature Hee that shall beleeue and be baptized shall be saued c. Act. 10.15.34.35.43 Rom. 1.16 3.29 As in many other places But may not God seeme mutable or vnlike himselfe seeing hee hath changed that which once hee purposed No in no case for neither hath hee changed his purpose nor done any thing disagreeing with it but hee sheweth himselfe most wise because in diuerse ages he knoweth how to vse diuerse meanes to bring his elect to the knowledge of their saluation in Christ according as hee saw the estate of both that is as both old and latter times required Euen as the Physition taketh one course of cure in a childe another in a man of ripe age according to the diuersitie of their constitutions and yet can hee not therefore bee tearmed inconstant or vnlike himselfe Therefore Paule Ephes 3.10 calleth this dispensation of the couenant the manifolde and diuerse wisdom of God because God in his wisdome doth in other maner call the Gentiles then in old time he did the Iewes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 VVhat therefore is the Old Testament It is a solemne maner of confirming the Couenant comprehended in the Morall Law the ceremonies and Sacrifices ordained to this end that the promise of grace and eternall life for Christes sake might bee kept with condition of faith obedience through faith on mans part to be performed What is the new Testament It is a full manifestation of Gods grace which hath shined to the world since Christs comming into the world which is effected without the strict and hard exacting of the Law and the administration of the ceremonies VVhen was this ordained In Paradise straight after the fall of our first parents for at that time was vttered the first promise pertaining to the Gospell concerning Christ to come a Gen. 3.15 and afterwards it was made to a certaine familie namely of Abraham b Gen. 12.3 17 4 5 19. 22 18 It was performed at the time when Christ was exhibited and confirmed by his bloud and death But why is one and the same Testament called Old and New c Luk 22 20 It is Old in regard of the promise New in regard of Christ alreadie exhibited Also it is Old in respect of the adiunct For the publishing of the Lawe did in time goe before the sending of Christ and that ample declaration of the Gospell or new as it were renewed as Iohn 13.34 The Lord there calleth the commaundement of Loue a new commaundemen wholy renewed or which must be euer new Besides because it was confirmed by Christs death For a Testament is confirmed and in force when the testator is dead otherwise it is not of force whilst he liueth who made it Heb. 9.17 Who made this will or Testament The sonne of God VVho are the hearers All that beleeue VVhat is the inheritance All the benefits which the death of Christ hath procured vs. VVhat are the tables of the Testament The holy Bible or holy Scripture VVhat seales are there to this Testament The Sacraments which in the Old testament were circumcision and the Passeouer but in the new Baptisme the Lords Supper What is the vse of this Doctrine It sheweth that there was alwaies one way to attaine saluation namely by faith in the free promise of Christ and that there was one and the same Church in the old and new Testament What opinions are against this Doctrine 1. The errour of Sernetus and certaine Anabaptists who faine that the people of Israell was fatted pampered in this life without any hope of heauenly immortalitie euen as swine or beasts are for the slaughter 2 The madnes of them who falsely imagined a threefold way of saluation namely the Law of Nature the Law of Moses and the Law of Christ as if there had beene three seuerall couenants of God differing in substance The three and twentieth common place Of the passion and death of Chist What vnderstand you by this terme of the passion of Christ 1 I vnderstand by a Synecdoche a part for the whole whatsoeuer Christ suffered from the first moment of his conception as for example his lying in the maunger when hee was newely borne when there was no roome for his mother in the Inne Luk. 2.7 And afterwards when vpon the eight day after his natiuitie hee shed his bloud in the circumcision the same Chap. vers 22. and from thence vntil the time wherein hee was offered a sacrifice for vs vpon the Altar of the crosse but especially all kinde of iniuries and that horrible punishment which was executed vpon him vnder Pilate 2. The passions of Christ are called the crosses or calamities of Christes mysticall bodie which is the Church or of his members which must bee heere accomplished vntill all the members in their certaine manner and measure become conformable to Christ by the crosse Whereupon the Apost Colos 1.24 saith thus I fulfill the rest of the afflictions of Christ in my flesh for his bodies sake which is the Church that is for the comfort of the Church a for as Leo the first saith The iust hau● receiued not giuen crownes and from the fortitude of the faithfull are sprung examples of patience not gifts of righteousnesse 3. Metonimically the adiunct for the subiect by passion is vnderstoode the Historie describing Christ passion VVhat is the Lords passion or suffering It is a part of Christs obedience whereby he himselfe beeing innocēt became a sacrifice for the guilty or thus It is a propitiatory sacrifice wherby the son of God being made man offered himselfe to the father that hee might merit for all that beleeue in him eternall iustification sanctification deliuerance from sinne and eternall death and in the end eternall life as Christ himselfe doth expound the matter Ioh. 17.19 I sanctifie my selfe that is I offer my selfe to the Father for them to be an holy and pacifying sacrifice that they also may be sanctified for euer VVhat are the efficient causes of Christs passion There are three efficient causes thereof God Sathan and men and all these in diuerse respects 1. The Counsel and determination of God the most absolute and high will of God that is his ordinance whereby from eternitie he hath so disposed of this businesse that therein he
the throne of iudgement chaseth away all euill with his eies And of the gouernment of the Messiah Isa 16.5 In mercie shall the throne be prepared and he shall sit vpon it in stedfastnesse in the tabernacle of Dauid And in this sense sitting doth signifie a Royall or Iudiciall dignitie and authoritie But what doth it it signifie ioyntly Mat. 20● 2 or together to sit or to stand at the right hand of any man 1 In humane affaires by the figure Metonymia it signifieth to obtaine the next place of honor dignity to any man as Psa 45 9 Vpon thy right hand the Queene standeth in a vesture of gold siluer 2 To be a fellow and companion or copartner of the rule and Empyre 3 To giue helpe and aid as Psal 142.4 I looked on my right hand and beheld whether any stood by me that is to say to helpe me Metaphorically it is attributed to God to the Church to Christ himselfe As for God he is said to stand at the right hand of men when he doth helpe and succour them and protecteth them against their enemies and dangers as Psal 16.8 I haue set the Lord alwaies in my sight for he is at my right hand that I may not he moued-So is God the father in this sence said to stand at the right hand of Christ that is to say that he is in degree of honour and dignitie next vnto himselfe· Psal 45.10 The Queene 1. The Church doth stand at thy right hand namely at the right hand of Christ that is it standeth in the next degree of dignitie 3 Christ is said to b Mark 16.19 sit c Act. 7.55 stand and d Rom. 8.34 be at the right hand of God the father Is Christ said to sit at the right hand of the father properly or Metaphorically Not properly for it no way agreeth with his Deitie and although it may in the proper signification be attributed and applied vnto his other nature which is bodily yet it must not be imagined that that glorious body in heauen doth either continually sit or is moued or standeth although it be indeed limited and locall and as for the right hand of God much lesse is that to be taken properly seeing God is without a bodie as is alreadie said Seeing then Christ sitteth at the right hand of the father doth it therupon follow that the father sitteth on the leaft hand No indeed for the father is not limited and in euerlasting happines all is the right hand because there is there no miserie VVhat is therefore meant by this kind of speach In his exposition of the Creed Augustine taketh it for resting with the father in that euerlasting blessednes for this was conueniēt for Christ saith he after so many labours sustained after the crosse and after death to rest blessed in heauen not indeed idle for hee gouernes the Church and makes intercession for vs but yet without labour The same Augustine also calleth the right hand of the father that eternall and vnspeakable felicity Against the Sermon as Arius c 12. whereunto the sonne of man is attained hauing receiued immortalitie euen of the flesh 2 Damascen saith that Christ hath togither with his father equal glory of the diuinity which he had before all beginnings And in this sence the transitiue preposition to doth note only a personal distinction Lib. 4. cap. 2 and order of beginning but not any degree of nature or dignity for there is no such matter in the persons of the deity 3 But we say also that it is meant thereby that Christ hath obtained all power in heauen and in earth as he himselfe who is his owne best interpreter expoundeth it Mat. 28.18 by a phrase borrowed from a King or a Prince which hath a sonne and that an onely begotten sonne or a first begotten sonne whom at length he appointeth to be his heire and successor maketh to sit at his right hand that he may reigne with him may exercise the right of dominion ouer all things which appertaine vnto the kingdom of the cceed Chap. 4. Whereupon Saint Augustine saith thus By the right hand vnderstand the power which that man that was taken from God did receiue that he might come to be a Iudge who before came to be iudged For the father iudgeth no man but hath giuen all iudgement to the sonne that all men might honour the sonne as they honour the father Ioh. 5 22 What is then the sitting of Christ at the right hand of the father It is his exceeding glorious estate or the great high degree of Christs exaltation wherein he is placed by his father the truth of both natures still reserued in which estate Christ doth not only rest from labour and enioy vnspeakable glory and vnmatchable felicity but especially he is placed not only the head of the church but the king and gouernour of heauen and earth that togither with his father he may gouerne all things both in heauen and in earth all things created being subiect vnto him Whence doe you confirme this Exposition Out of the Psal 110.1 Sit saith the father to Christ on my right hand till I make thine enemies thy footstoole which Paul 1. Cor. 15.25 expounding saith He must raigne till he haue put all his enemies vnder his feet Therefore to sit is to raigne And Eph. 1.21 after the Apostle had said that Christ sitteth at the right hand of God in heauenly places he addeth for expositions sake that he is exalted aboue all principalities and powers and that all things are made subiect vnder his feet and that he is appointed head of the Church VVhat is the cause efficient The father by whose will and ordinance he sitteth at the right hand of the father Psal 110.1 Sit at my right hand And Ephe. 1.20 And God hath set him at his right hand in the heauenly places This sitting then is it of the whole person or onely of one of the natures namely of the humane Words phrases are to be taken according to the matter about which they are vsed For to sit at the right hand of the father doth declare two things For sometime it sheweth the great equalilitie of the diuine glorie maiestie power and honour sometime it signifieth the qualitie that is the high perfection and felicity of the flesh of Christ now that it is exalted vnto the right hand of God which the schoolemen call Habituall grace In the later signification therefore sitting is to be applied vnto the humane nature wherein the humane nature in Christ is more blessed then the rest of the creatures hath royal iudicial power ouer all creatures a Iohn 5.27 but in the former which is the chiefe and principal of the whole person because as the whole person was broght low so the whole also was exalted in the Resurrection ascending into heauen and sitting at the right hand of the father
perfect obedience of Christ but our sanctification hath the Lawe for his obiect 4. In the nearest efficient cause Iustification hath not the cause in vs because it dwelleth not in vs Sanctification hath the will which is the beginning of all humane actions for the beginning of action is deliberation of deliberation will and reason And in respect of the persons efficient for Tit. 3.5 Regeneration and Renouation are attributed vnto the Holy Ghost as to the efficient But iustification is wholy ascribed vnto Christ In thy seede shall all nations be blessed Gen. 22.18 5. In effects Iustification absolueth and acquiteth vs beefore Gods Iudgement Seate Sanctification doth not so 6. Iustification is an act vnseparable but Regeneration is an act separable because it is not perfected in an instant but by a certaine order or successiuely and by degrees according to the good pleasure of God and it is here begunne and shall be perfectted in the life to come Moreouer Iustification is a matter of meere gift but regeneration is a matter of our obedience 7. Paule doth notably expresse the difference of him that is to bee iustified and him that is to bee regenerate for hee that is to be iustified lamentably crieth out of his inherent righteousnesse Rom. 7.24 O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer mee from the bodie of this death But flying to imputed righteousnesse which is grounded only vpon mercie hee doth exceedingly reioyce and with a ful confidence tryumpheth ouer life death and al aduersities whatsoeuer Rom. 8.33.34 c. What are the instruments or meanes of iustification The instrumentall cause outwardly shewing and offering the benefit of iustification is the voice of the Gospell Rom. 1.16 The Gospell is the power of God to saluation to all that beleeue that is to say it is the instrument of God truely powerfull and effectuall to saue For the righteousnesse of God is thereby reuealed from faith to faith Hereupon it is called the word of beleefe a Act. 5.20 the vvorde of saluation b Act. 13.26 the word and ministerie of reconciliation c 2. Cor. 5.19 The administring causes and witnesses of this blessing but not the sellers thereof are the ministers of the Gospell according to that Iohn 20.23 Whose sinnes yee remit they shall bee remitted and whose sinnes yee retaine they shall bee retained And 1. Tim. 4.16 Take heede vnto thy selfe and vnto Doctrine continue therein for in doing this thou shalt both saue thy selfe those that heare thee namely because faith is by hearing and hearing is by preaching The instrumentall cause inwardly is also twofold 1. The instrument giuen by God or the hand apprehending and receiuing the grace of Iustifycation offered is sauing faith infused into the beleeuers by the Holy Ghost Rom. 3.28 Therfore vvee conclude that a man is iustified by faith without the workes of the lawe So euery where By faith d Gal. 2,6 Through faith e Eph 2.8 of faith f Rom 3 28 for these are all of one signifycation but in no place are we said to be iustified or saued for faith Rom. 10.8 This is the vvord of faith which we preach And hereupon it is called righteousnesse of faith in regard it is apprehended by faith when the Gospell is beleeued 2. The inward sealing cause is the holy ghost who sealeth Iustification in our hearts so as wee cannot doubt therof Eph. 1.13 Wherein also after that ye beleeued ye were sealed with the Holie spirit of promise which is the earnest of our inheritāce And 1. Cor. 6.11 You are iustified by the spirit of God in the name of our Lord Iesus Christ 3. The outward sealing causes are the Sacraments the one of initiation or entrance the other of Redemption Rom. 4.11 He receiued the Circumcision as the seale of righteousnesse which is by Faith Also 1. Cor. 11.23 and Tit. 3.5 He hath saued vs by the washing of the new birth and renewing of the holy Ghost In what sence then are we said to be iustified by faith Not by any inward dignitie or merit of faith it selfe not as it is a worke or new quality in vs not by any force or efficacie of Iustifying taken from Charitie nor because it hath charitie adioyned to it or worketh by it not because faith doth participate of the spirit of Christ to the end the beleeuer may be made righteous for that wee are commaunded to seeke righteousnesse not in our selues but in Christ a 2. Cor 5 2● But wee are iustified by faith in regard it doth receiue and embrace the righteousnes that is offered in the Gospell Rom. 1.16.17 The righteousnesse of Christ is reueiled from faith to faith For as to iustification faith is a thing meerely passiue bringing nothing of our owne to procure vs fauour with God but receiuing that from Christ which is wanting in and toe our selues How then is faith said to be imputed for Righteousnesse Not absolutely but by Relation namely when it is vnderstood not to be alone but with his obiect Christ crucified as Rom. 3.22 The righteousnesse of God by the faith of Iesus Christ vnto all and vpon all that beleeue And verse 25. through faith in Christes bloud In which places by the word faith by a metonymie of the thing cōtaining for the thing cōtained Christ crucifyed is vnderstood but as he is apprehēded by faith In this sence Faith was imputed to Abraham vnto righteousnes or for righteousnes Rom. 4.9 And faith is imputed for righteousnesse vnto euerie one that beleeueth that is to say Christ crucifyed apprehended by faith is accounted our righteousnesse It is accoūted I say of god pronouncing from his tribunal seat the sentence of righteousnesse Euen as therfore the hand that receiueth a treasure that is giuen doth not enrich vs but the treasure that is it that enricheth so neither doth the work or action of faith iustify vs but Christ himself whom we apprehend by faith And this is that that the sound Diuines say that we are iustifyed by faith Correlatiuely that faith is imputed for righteousnes by reason of the obiect which assertion is plainly proued by that of Paul Rom. 3.27.28 Gal. 2.16 Where this sentence We are made righteous by faith is opposed vnto this proposition Wee are iustified by vvorkes as beeing contradictories Wherefore it is manifest by the nature of contradiction that no man is iustified by faith as it is a worke either our worke or Gods worke in vs but as it includeth the merit of Christ To speake properly and simply incredulitie is repugnant vnto faith and to the workes of the Lawe not working or the intermission of good workes is opposite but in respect of Iustification faith which resteth vpon the merit of Christ and workes which rest vpon the merits of Christ are contraries Hereupon also it is that Paule doth oppose the righteousnesse of the lawe and the righteousnesse of faith as contraries betweene themselues when Phil. 3.9
Cor. 1.10 All the promises in Christ are yea amen that is to say in Christ alone they are propounded to be exhibited and to be performed Doth not the merit of Christ at the least giue the vertue and efficacie thereof to our workes that they may merite and deserue the grace and fauour of God Christ hath merited for vs Iustification Regeneration and life eternall but that we our selues should merit euen any the least benefit much lesse those speciall benefits he hath not merited For then there should be some thing detracted from the meere grace of God and Christs merit if we should in any part come into participation of merit with him Therefore Paule Rom. 4.4 doth so seuer works and grace thar granting workes he denieth grace To him that worketh saith he reward is not imputed of grace And Rom. 11.6 he sheweth such a disagreement betweene works which those men call meritorious and grace that the one of them being granted the other must needs be denied But if it bee of grace then not of workes else grace should be no grace The same is to be said of Christs merit for seeing that the merite of Christ and grace do necessarily stand together Christs merit and ours can by no meanes agree together Doth not Paule in those places speake of workes done by mere naturall men before regeneration Nay but rather he speaks of good workes which cannot be done without faith a Ro. 14.23 And of the works of Abraham the father of the faithfull b Ro. 4.2.3 23. And there was neuer yet any question of the workes of the vnregenerate seeing they are all sinnes though some be more hainous then others For Eph. 2.3 By nature we are all the children of wrath to wit passiuely that is in daunger of the iudgement of God being angrie with vs and Hebr. 11.6 It is impossible vvithout faith to please God Seeing the Scripture doth commend vnto vs this rule of the iudgement to come in these vvords God will giue euerie man according to his workes Psal 62.15 Math. 16.27 Rom. 12.6 Rev. 22.12 shall sentence be giuen according to works as causes deseruing the recompence eyther of life or of death If you speake of the workes of the Reprobate it cannot be denied but they shall bee the cause of the sentence of death which shall be giuen But if we speake of the works of the elect then we affirme that God will giue sentence of life eternall and that he will rewarde the elect according to their workes yet not as causes of life and rewarde but as certaine effectes demonstrations and tokens testifying of the causes themselues But the true and onely causes are the decree of God from all eternity also vocation and iustification in time as that place proueth Math. 25.34 wherein we haue the expresse forme and manner of the iudgement to come Come saith hee ye blessed of my father take possession of the kingdome prepared for you before the foundations of the vvorld vvere laide For this calling of them by name and putting them in possession of the kingdome of heauen doth sufficiently shew the cause why the elect are put in possession of the kingdome of heauen to wit because they be blessed with all spirituall blessing in Christ Ephes 1 1.2 being freed from the curse of the law a Gal 3 14 they are the heires and sonnes of God by his free promise and therefore called and iustified For adoption vocation and iustification are parts of that blessing of God in time Whereupon those whom before verse 34. he had called the blessed of his father verse 37. he calleth iust and calleth the verie kingdome of heauen it selfe an inheritance 2 They prooue the cause of saluation to be laid in the eternall decree of God because before the foundation of the world there was prepared for those blessed ones that is which were called and iustified in time that kingdome into possession whereof he will put them 3 That particle according or euen as in those sayings doth not signifie the cause but the conformitie as in that 1. Corin. 13.12 That I may knowe according to that that is euen as I am knowne So GOD shall giue to euerie one according to his workes that is euen as hee hath done good or euill But the causes of death whereunto the reprobate shal be adiudged are placed out of themselues to wit the malediction of God and the decree of God for the king shall say Math. 25.41 get ye hence ye cursed into euerlasting fire and yet they let not but that their workes also be the cause of damnation Are not then besides those causes of the benediction and decree of God the good vvorkes of the elect in like manner the causes of saluation There is not the like reason of euill workes and of good works For euill workes are our owne and merite vnto vs but good workes are not our owne but workes of the holy ghost in vs such as we owe vnto God a Luk. 17.10 Besides euill workes are perfectly euill and euen the least euill that can be deserueth death but good workes are imperfectly good and there is nothing but that which is in euery respect absolute and perfect can procure life and that also by promise Therefore good workes cannot be numbred among the causes of saluation Adde moreouer that the Apostle doth manifestly attribute the sentence of life to faith imbracing the gospell 1 Thess 1.10 when he shall come saith he to bee made glorious in his saints and to be made wonderfull in them that beleue because faith is esteemed as our witnesse in that day Whether is there in those words Come ye blessed only a calling and adiudging them to life and then after followeth the cause taken from their works for I was hungrie and ye gaue me to eat Yea the compellation or calling and the proposition doth cōtaine the cause of the sentence and the reason is added after from the effects prouing that cause and testifieng of it as though he should say thus Enter ye into heauen because ye are blessed and ordeined vnto the kingdome of heauen For by your good workes ye haue declared that ye are blessed and from all eternity ordeined to the kingdome of heauen VVherfore will he giue sentence according to workes Because workes are better knowne to vs as the effects which be better knowne then the causes themselues now it is the will of GOD that in that Iudgment all thinges should be visible and perceiued by sense that iudgement may bee giuen of true and liuely faith by her naturall properties and true effects least we should boast of the visard of faith or the shadow of it in stead of true faith Againe not to shew the cause of saluation but to the intent wee should be stirred vp to the studie of good workes for so much as wee are certaine wee shall not lose our labour In what respect then is life
eternall called a reward In a generall signification according to the proper phrase of the Scripture whereby wage doth signifie not by relation but absolutely the extreame part or the end of any thing Also rewarde yet free yea a gift as Paule declareth Rom. 6.23 The wages of sin is death but the gift of God is eternall life through Iesus Christ our Lord. 2. Not as a cause but as a consequence because that though eternall life be giuen for another cause to wit for the merit of Christ apprehended by faith yet it is giuen also as an appurtenance in recompense of the labours and miseries which the godly suffer in this life as Christ saith Mat. 19.29 Whosoeuer forsaketh houses or brethren c. For my name sake shal receiue an hundred fold and shall inherit eternall life euen as the inheritance is giuen to the sonne not fot doing his duetie but because hee is a sonne according to that common saying As soone as the sonne is borne the portion is due as also in recompence of his obedience And why doth God promise reward to the good workes of his children Because they beleeue now they which beleeue are righteous through the righteousnes of Christ imputed vnto them to the iust life is promised and abundance of all good things To what purpose doth hee thus promise 1. That they might bee spurred on to doe their duety more cherefully 2. That they might be testimonies of Gods prouidence because the goods of this life come from him and are distributed at his pleasure according to the saying in the Prouerbs Pro. 10 20. The blessing of the Lord maketh rich and that hee will preserue his Church in this life and prouide for his wherefore Christ saith Seeke first the kingdome of God and his righteousnesse and other things shall be added vnto you Math. 6.33 3 That God might stirre vp his to beleeue to call vpon him to hope and giuing of thankes according to that Psal 50.15 I vvill deliuer thee and thou shalt glorifie me 4 That they might be remembrances and pledges of the promise of grace for which they are bestowed vpon vs. What causes ought to prouoke vs to liue vvell 1 The commaundement of God whereunto all creatures should obey 1. Thess 4.3 This is the vvill of God euen your sanctificaiton 2 Our dutie which we owe that we may declare our thankefulnesse towards him Rom. 8.12 We are debtors to God and not to the flesh neyther are we our owne men but his who hath elected vs to holines of life Luke 17.10 he hath redeemed vs from all iniquitie and cleansed vs in the bloud of Christ that we might be made followers of good works a Luk. 1.74 75. 1 Cor 16.19 20. 3 The necessitie of order of the cause and the effect for a good tree bringeth forth good fruit Math. 7.17 and they that are lead by the spirit of God are the sonnes of God Rom. 8.14 1. Iohn 3.9 Euerie one that is borne of God doth not commit sinne that is by affirming the contrarie he endeuoureth after holines because the seed of God abideth in him that is the holy Ghost so called by the effect because by his vertue as it were by a certaine seed we are made new men 4 Faith which cannot be kept where we go on in sinne against conscience 1. Tim. 1.19 Fight the good fight hauing faith and good conscience vvhich being put avvay some haue made shipvvracke of faith 5 The excellency of good workes because thorow Christ they are that worship which pleaseth God or sacrifices of thankesgiuing seasoned with faith as it were with salt kindled with the holy Ghost as it were with fire from heauen and sanctified by the merit of Christ and accepted of God thorow Christ 1. Pet. 2.5 6 Our owne dignitie For being iustified wee are the sonnes of God the holy Temple of GOD Kings and Priestes annoynted of the holy Ghost wherewith being clothed wee ought to publish the righteousnesse of God in thought word and deed and the prayses of God by confession 7 The promises of Gods blessings as well corporall as spirituall Leuit. 26.34 a Deut. 28. Esa 1.19 If ye vvill vvalke in my precepts I vvill giue you raine in due season and the free reward of our patience and obedience toward God as Moses Heb. 11.26 is said to haue respect to the recompence of revvard because 1. Timoth. 4.8 Godlinesse hath the promises of this life and that vvhich is to come 8 The good that comes by them for wee must doe good workes to further our neighbour by our godlinesse to glorifie GOD and to stoppe the mouth of the aduersaries b Luk 6.7 1 Pet. 2.12 14. c. Titus 2.8 9 That by the fruits of faith wee may be made more certaine of our election and vocation and being made new creatures may nourish in our selues the hope of life eternall 2. Peter 1.10 Iames. 2.17 Why must we auoid euill workes 1 Because they displease God Psalm 5.5 Thou art not a God that delightest in iniquitie neyther shall the vvicked dvvell vvith thee and they prouoke him to anger thou hatest all those which vvorke vvickednesse verse 6. 2 They doe dishonour the profession of the Gospell and the glorie of God Rom. 2 24. For your sakes is the name of God euill spoken of among the Gentiles as Nathan saith to Dauid 2. Sam. 12.14 Thou hast caused the enemies of the Lord to blaspheme by this meanes 3 Because they draw downe vpon vs punishments both publike and priuate warres famine pestilence c. Deut. 28.15 c. If thou vvilt not heare the voyce of the Lord thy God Leuit. 26.3 14. c. thou shalt be cursed vvhen thou goest forth into the field c. Againe Thou doest chastice the sonnes of men for their iniquities Psal 90.8 4 Because there followeth the tyrannie of Sathan into whose power the reprobate are deliuered vp in whose snares they are taken captiues and doe his whole pleasure 2. Tim. 3.26 5 Because by ill doing all spirituall exercises are hindred faith is weakened the conscience wounded calling one God disturbed and ceased the holy ghost greeued Ephes 4.30 do not ye greeue that holy spirit of God wherewith ye are sealed 6 They deserue eternall damnation as Paule witnesseth they that doe such thinges haue noe parte in the kingdome of god neither shall they possesse it Galat. 5.21 1. Cor. 6.10 Are good workes necessarie to saluation The question is ambiguous for if it be taken in this sense that our good workes are so necessarie to saluation that they are the cause or merite of righteousnesse saluation and life eternall it is false But if it be vnderstood that new obedience is necessarie so as it be a duety which we owe and an effect necessarily following reconciliation it is true 2 Because god will saue noe man without repentance and the gift of the holy ghost is necessarie to life
the Church hath borrowed the name of scandall to signifie layings in waite wherewith men are intrapped euen as beastes in the gins d Esa 8.14 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is properly when something in the way hindreth the feet whereupon a man lighting doth stumble deriued of the verbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies to stumble Rom. 14.13 to put a stumbling block or scandall before his brother hence it is called the stone of stumbling e Rom. 9.32 33 1 Pet 2.8 For euill examples of sinnes are like vnto certaine stones on which men lighting do stumble yea doe fall downe flatt Whereupon is that 1. Cor. 10.12 he that standeth let him take heed least he fall And 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 deriued of the verbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth to hitte against a thing to disturb or break of it is the very offence it selfe or the dashing against any thing in latine they call offence when in the way there lies some stone or logge against which men as they walke doe stumble so as they hurte their feete or else fall downe headlong whereupon Leuit. 19.14 it is said put not a stumbling block before the blinde Now this word scandall is in the perdicament of relation wherby it comes to passe that it signifieth sometimes the matter that is to say the very obiect or impediment offending any man and sometimes the manner or forme that is the very offence it selfe VVhat is the scandall Whatsoeuer is the cause or occasion to any man of offence whether it be word deed or example or counsell whereby our neighbour is either grieued or troubled or offended so as he is either hindered in the streight course of saluation or turned out of the way or is induced to any errour or sin Rom. 14.15 1 Cor 8.9 or else is confirmed in some euill a How many are the kindes of Scandalls Bernard maketh twoo Inward and outward Inward is when the old man giueth offence to the new man touching which Mat. 5.20 If thy right eye offend thee plucke it out cast it from thee where by the ey hand and foot he vnderstandeth the lustes of the flesh or of the olde man which doe often annoy the new man all impediments although neuer so deare which hinder a man so as he cannot walke in the continuall obedience of the law of god Outward which cometh from without and giues any man the cause or the occasion of falle This externall scandall how many folde is it Threefold Actiue either giuen or afforded passiue or taken and mixt of them both VVhat is a scandal giuen Whose fault proceedeth from the author of the thing or action it selfe either when a man doth giue another an effectuall cause of falling or else some word or deede that is euill in it selfe because it is repugnant to the loue of God and our neighbour and therefore such a thing as of it owne nature and of it selfe doth either confirme the liberty of sinning in others or else either greiueth the godly or doth carie them into error sinn a Math. 18.6 7 whereof Christ speaketh to Peter Math. 16.23 Get thee behinde me Satan thou art an offence vnto me For though Christ himselfe did not stumble yet there was noe let in Peter but that Christ being astonished with thinking of the crosse should haue broken off the course of his calling and Peters speach in very deed did greeue him and might haue giuen an occasion of falling to the weake How manifold is a Scandall giuen Double by deuiding the subiect into the accidents priuate publick Priuate which may also be called Domestical whereby one or some few are offended as children seruants husbands wiues as when the child seruant Husband or wife see the parents Maisters wiues or husbands abstaine from the worship of God heare them sweare to doe any thing or to speake vnchastly whereby it presently commeth to passe that they are either greeued or else ready to imitate their examples Against which Christ speaketh whosoeuer shall offend one of these litle ones which beleeue in me it had beene good for him rather that a Milstone should be hanged about his necke and he should be cast into the sea Mark 9.4 Publick is whereby some whole multitude is offended or else that which giueth an occasion of falling to many weake ones as coueteous men doe whoremaisters drunkards and such like which by their bad manners offend the Church and doe cast both themselues many others headlong into ruine 2 A scandall giuen is distinguished by the distribution of it from the adiuncts or from the difference of the persons that cause it and hereby it comes to passe that one is farre more greuous and pernicious then another for that which is giuen by a person placed in some great dignity is more dangerous and his example hurteth more then that which is giuen by some priuate person or otherwaies obscure So the adultery of Dauid the king is more greeuous a. Sam. 12 12. c. then of some obscure Citizen and therefore a scandall is more seuerely punished both in regad of the person himselfe who doth disgrace that place into which he is exalted by god as also in respect of other men to whome he hath giuen a more effectuall cause of falling by his euill example So that scandall is most greuous which is giuen of the ministers of the Churches and the students of diuinity when they either by false doctrine or impure liuing giue occasion to many to speake ill of the gospell As the sinne of the sonnes of Helie is said to be exceeding greeuous in the sighte of the Lord a 1 Sam. 2 17 And they sinne more hainously which be in the communion of the Church then they which be without So the gouernour of a familie being a drunkard sinnes much more greuously then a seruant VVhat is the cause of offence giuen The remote cause is the iudgment of God 1. Against the wicked as was the scandall and impediment which the wise men of Egypt gaue vnto Pharoh b Exod 7 22 And the false prophets in whome was the lying spirit gaue to King Achab c 1. King 22 22 and the lying signes of Antichriste wherewith those which receiued not the loue of the truth were deceiuedd. a 2. Thess 9 10.11 2. The iudgment of God for the godly or the good of the elect whereof 1. Cor. 11.19 There must be deuisions that those which are approued that is whome experience hath shewed to be of faith vnfained and sincere pietie might be made manifest The nearest cause is Satan whoe moueth men to all euill The helping cause is the naughtinesse and corruption of mans nature false teachers the vnskillfullnesse pride coueteousnesse impatiency of teachers In respect of which causes Christ saith Math. 18.7 It must needs be that offences come that is by necessity not by
compulsion nor by this necessity proceeding from God but from the voluntary corruption of man for no man is an offence to another against his will or through inconsideration but of purpose with deliberation Therefore though it be necessary that offēces come yet woe vnto the world because of offences VVhat are the ioint causes or by how manie meanes is an offence giuen Foure First By false doctrine and false worship such be heresies errors worshipping of idoles superstitions the traditions of men whereby the weake are withdrawne from the simplicity of the word 2 By word or speach and that either filthy cursed or blasphemous 3 By life and behauiours repugnant to the law of god such are filthy gestures hainous offences and euill examples in the abuse of Christian libertie whereby the weake are discouraged from christianity but for the most part the offences giuen by doctrine do more harme then the offences by manners because they worke more closely presently assault the faith but these other doe sooner appeare and doe lesse hinder our faith as in the beginning the deuill gaue Eue a deadly wound putting into her a false perswatiō a Gen. 3.2 And Solomons idolatrie brought forth the worshipping of idols for a long time after VVhat punishment is appointed for the authors of this scandall Christ Math. 18.17 doth threaten that lamentable sentence or horrible woe against them woe be vnto the world because of offences and. verse 6. he pronounceth that it is better for that man by whome the offence is giuen that a milstone being hanged about his necke hee should be cast into the bottom of the sea VVhat is an offence taken That which men take vnto themselues from the doeings or sayings of other men either from true doctrine and the outward forme of the Church or else in generall from any other things whatsoeuer But in speciall some speach of ours purpose or deede which is godly iust and of it selfe honest or at least not done wickedly and vnseasonably By meanes whereof notwithstanding some mā doth iudge ill of vs but without cause either of some frowardnesse ill will or a certaine sinister spitefulnesse of the minde or else vpon error and taketh it as an occasion of offence How manifold is an offence taken Double either from man or from the deuill from man which also by deuision of Accidents into the subiects is double of the wicked and of the godly The scandall of the wicked is of worldlie men as of the wise men of this world and of hypocrites who are offended 1. at the poore estate humility and crosse of Christ in our flesh assumed 2 At the absurdity imprudently conceiued of the nouelty simplicity of the doctrine of the gospell and preaching of grace whereby we are taught that all men being by nature sinners subiect to the wrath of god are iustified and saued thorow grace or by faith alone in Iesus Christ and by the article of election predestination and the mortifying of the old man 3 By the life and actions of the godly whereby they imagine themselues to be controlled in the free vse of the thinges of the worlde 4 Lastly by the crosses and persecutions which goe hand in hand with the profession of the gospel which offence because it springeth from the malice of them that are offended and from their spite it is called the offence of the Pharises of which Math. 15.12 The discples said to Christ dost thou not know that the pharises are offended hearing this speach of thine So Christ and the gospell were to the Iewes an offence taken and to the Grecians foolishnesse 1. Cor. 1.23 And the stone of offence And the rocke of offence to the twoe houses of Israel a. Esa 8.19 Luk. 2.34 1 Pet. 2.7.8 to witt by accident and priuatiuely as Christ being despised and reiected is the author of iust condemnation whereas in truth and by himselfe but to the elect he is the way the truth and the life and the fountaine of all good Concerning this we must obserue the warning of Christ Blessed is he that is not offended in me Math. 11.5 So the sermon of Christ concerning the eating of his flesh was a scandall to the Capernaites b Ioh 6.41 57 60 So the Iewes were offended with Peters going in to the Gentiles c gal 2.12 So the righteous actions of the godly are an offence to the wicked d Psal 56.6 7 So the disciples of Christ pulling the eares of corne are an offence to the Pharises e Math. 12.2 So many are offended by reason of the iarres which follow the preaching of the Gospell to condemne it VVhat are the causes of this offence taken The principall efficient cause is the iust prouidence of God which doth decree and execute this although men stumble through their owne malice as it is written Behold I put in Sion a stumbling stone and a rocke of offence The second cause is Satan who prouoketh the wicked to take all things in the worst parte The instrumental cause are the men themselues who are offended at the godlinesse of others The causes assisting are the blindnes of mans reason the corrupt iudgment of the world the affections of the flesh enuy malice rash curiosity the neglect of the holy scripture bad opinions conceiued the perswasion of a mans owne righteousnesse the desire of gaine and keeping credite hating to be instructed occasions are the confessing and preaching of sound doctrine the behauiours life deeds and crosses of the godly the condition of the truth As for the forme or manner it is expressed in diuers examples Is this kinde of Scandall to be auoided No but not to be regarded according to the comaundement of god Deut. 33.9 He that shall say to his father or to his mother I know you not he that shall not acknowledge his brethren and his sonnes these do keepe thy law o Lord. And according to the rule of Christ concerning the Pharises which were offended at his word Math 15.14 Let them alone they are blinde and the leaders of the blinde that is neglect them neither take care for offending them and of the Apostles Acts. 5 29. we must obey god rather then men And of Bernard It is better an offence should come then that the truth should be forsaken Besides we must preferre the first and second commaundement before all the duties to men according to the example of Elias against Achab a. 1. King 18 18 and of Paule against Peter those which plaid the Iewes b Gal. 2 3.4 5 11.14 What is the offence of the Godly taken Which is taken only of such as be yet weake in the Church or not wicked but is greedily taken of them that be more malicious that they may make the doctrine of the gospell doubtfull and vncertaine to the simple sort either by the calamities of the church the punishments of the innocents the heresies dissentions which
is patient toward vs deferring his comming onely vntill the number of the Elect were fulfilled and that all might haue oportunitie to conuert themselues vnto God What is the execution of predestination It is the disposing vse and application of all second causes or meanes whereby as it were by degrees God doth passe to the end of his highest decree Of how many sorts are those meanes Of two some are common as well to the Elect as the Reprobate wherein the Elect and the Reprobate are made equal others proper and speciall to either wherein the elect are discerned from the reprobate Those that are common are threefold namely the Creation of man male and female in the vpright state that is in righteousnesse and holinesse a. Gen. 1.26 Eccles 7.29 but changeable For God alone is vnchangeable 2 The Fall of man whereby he defiled himselfe with sinne most fouly b. which could not haue happened without both the ordinance and will of God that mans wretchednesse might giue place to God his mercie and the transgression of man to Gods iustice neyther yet can any thing be said to fall out without the knowledge of god or God being against it and vnwilling or vnaduisedly from whose will and pleasure not the little sparrowes are excepted Matth. 11.29 Neuerthelesse the fall of man was from his owne accord and of his owne will and therefore the fall of Adam sticketh as a fault in his free a●d vncompelled will wherewith he obeyed the serpent rather then god and not in the onely bare will of god whereupon it was very well said of Prudentius Nemo nocens si fata regunt quod viuitur et fit Imo nocens quicunque volens non quod licet audet No man is bad if fate doth rule and cause men liue in ill Yea he is bad who lawlesse liues and liues so with his will 3. The spreading of that sinne that is of the guilt and punishment from Adam ouer all men for no cleane thing can bee bred of an vncleane d. Iob. 14.4 from whence it commeth that all men by nature not by imitation and custome are the children of wrath Ephes 2.3 For seeing that God before he created mankind had determined both to shew a notable token of his mercie euen in the saluation of the Elect and also to declare his iust iudgement it was necessarie that eyther should bee included vnder sinne namely that he might haue mercie on them that beleeued and againe that hee might finde argument of iust condemnation in those to whom it is giuen neither to beleeue nor to vnderstand the mysteries of God Matth. 13.11 By these ruines of mankind therefore God all-wise decreed to separate some to himselfe to choose them and to bring them to life as vessels of his mercie and to leaue others in their corruption and to reserue them vnto punishment as vessels of his wrath against sinne and that with such wisedome that all the praise of the saluation of the Elect should wholy be referred to the mercie of God and the whole fault of the condemnation of the Reprobate should remaine in themselues Hovv many are the proper and peculiar meanes ordeined by God for the Elect They are sixe which being referred to Election or the Predestination of the Elect are properly the effectes thereof but compared one with an other and to the ende of Election may bee called both the causes and effects And three are like mediate causes the other three like the effects The first meanes is Christ not as the word is singly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 consubstantiall and equall with the father in all pointes for so is he the first cause of our Election together with the father and the holy Ghost and not the second Iohn 13.18 I knowe whom I haue chosen but as hee is the Mediatour in whome the father might choose according to that saying of the Apostle In him wee were chosen before the foundations of the world were layed Eph. 1.4 and through whom being applied to the Elect God would both remit sinnes as also impute perfect righteousnesse by which name Christ himselfe beeing defined 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is called a man as it were appointed Act. 17.31 and which was ordeined before the foundation of the world but was declared in the last times for our sakes 1. Pet. 1.20 Therefore the Father hath ordeined his Sonne that he might assume an humane nature into the vnitie of his Person who suffered and was dead for the satisfaction of the Elect that hee might redeeme them from iniquitie and might rise againe for their iustification a Rom. 4.25 Finally who to the Elect which apply him to themselues through faith might be VVisedome and righteousnesse Sanctification and Redemption 1. Cor. 1.30 In choosing and appointing which meane all these miracles of God saith Bernard doe at once concurre 1. Gods iustice his mercie towards his Elect as also his iustice in punishing their sinnes in his beloued one 2. In one and the selfe same person of Christ God and man 3. One and the same woman a mother and a virgin 4. One and the same Sonne 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without father without mother 5. And the same Christ our Iudge and Aduocate The second meane is Vocation effectuall vnto true repentance and acknowledging of Christ through the inspiration of the holy Ghost b Rom. 8.30 ad Tit. 2.14 3.7 Ordinarie in them that are of yeeres through the preaching of the Gospell Extraordinarie also as in Infants that are elected as namely Iohn Baptist in his mothers wombe c. Luk. 1.44 and in some that are deafe the meane thereof beeing vnknowne vnto vs. The third meane is faith in Christ or the applying of Christ by faith whereupon our most straight coniunction with him our vnion our incorporation or societie and ingrafting into him followeth d Iohn 15.5 17.21 Gal. 3.27.28 Ephes 3.6 1. Iohn 1.3 Rom. 11.17 From these follow three effects Iustification before God which consisteth in the imputation of Christs righteousnesse Iustification by which the Elect hauing the holy Ghost freely bestowed on them are renewed in the spirit of their minde and are made new men which by them also worketh good workes which are pleasing and acceptable to God for Christs sake and Glorification through the same Christ which very meanes Gods Predestination ordeyned from the beginning these and euery of them God of his meere grace applyeth to euery of the Elect by the effectuall preaching of the Gospell whensoeuer hee pleaseth sometime sooner sometime later euen as God himselfe doth will and decerne most wisely and most mercifully And this is the true golden chaine of Saluation and indissoluble knot which leadeth from the supreme cause thorough meanes ordeined and applied to the last effect The ende therefore cannot be hoped for without the meanes thereof neither ought th end to be separated from the meanes neyther may we omitting the meanes runne from one
perish but their owne naturall corruption and the fruit of that corruption from whom it pleaseth God to exempt his onely predestinated to saluation verie fondly do they then who confound the decree of reprobation with damnation seeing sinne is the manifest cause or the later but the will of God onely of the former Neyther also doth God for that cause make them wicked whō he reiecteth of poure out his malice on them but in his most iust though hidden and vnsearchable iudgement he doth not bestow on them the mercie which he giueth to the elect But they are punished voluntarily and of their owne malice according to that O Israll thy destruction is of thy selfe but thy saluation is of mee Osey 13.9 What are the common meanes of Reprobation The verie same whereof we spake before namely Creation in integritie righteousnesse For God did not create man in sinne For so should he be the author of sinne which God forbid 2 Mans fall who fell away of their owne accord and most freewill by which falling away they offended God 3 Mans corruption they corrupted themselues and so they drew vpon themselues through their owne fault iudgement and destruction a Pro. 2.22 Eccle. 7.30 VVhat are the particuler meanes of the execution of Gods decree for the reiecting some men Sixe likewise in number 1 An infinite increase of actuall sinnes 2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Infidelitie or an alienation and seperation from Christ 3 A forsaking or an vneffectuall calling or no calling at all by the preaching of the word or no inward consent to vocation for neyther hath the Gospell beene preached to all men nor in euerie age nor now also is it preached all the world thorough neyther is it graunted vnto all to beleeue Math. 11.25 but in verse 28. all are called vvhich labour and are heauie laden that is are wearie v der the burthen of their sinnes which onely is meete for them who acknowledge themselues to be sinners and flie vnto Christ 4 Stubbornnesse or hardnesse and blindnesse in sinne 5 Hence commeth a perpetuall turning away and contempt of God and proceeding from sinne to sinne 6 At length thereby followeth their most iust condemnation Iust therefore is the Lord and all his iudgements vpright Exod. 7.3.22.23 a Exod. 8.15 9.34 2. Par. 36.13 Act. 7.12.51 13.46 Is the execution of reprobation or the appointing of vvicked meanes subiect to the decree of God as faith and other meanes of saluation is to the decree of Election It is and it is not because the decree of God is said to be twofold simple in some respect the decree is called simple 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when God willeth and approoueth somewhat simply whereof himselfe is truely properly and principally the efficient cause in his owne time from whence also the decree may bee called effectiue 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of which sort is the decree of the saluation of the Elect and of all good meanes which tend to saluation as of Creation effectuall calling faith iustification and sanctification Whereupon God Ose 13.9 Thy saluation is of mee Moreouer God is the Author and cause of the substance that I may so speake of all actions and qualities both good and euill For the action is one thing by it selfe the fault or faultie qualitie of the action is another But the decree in respect is when God decerneth and will permit somewhat to be done and that also in his due time 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but hee doth not truly effect it himselfe but suffereth it to be done of wicked instruments not as though he beheld the affaires of men negligently and from a farre but as the ruler of all For Paule affirmeth that God prouoked Pharaoh and whom he will he can harden Rom. 9.17.18 for God is not a negligent God neyther were God omnipotent if against his will he should suffer any thing Whereupon also this may bee called a Decree of permission of gouernement or of dispensation And of this sort is the Decree of all euill meanes which tend to destruction as of the fall of man his hardening and the like for they come not to passe without the will and knowledge of God because by this meanes Atheisme or Epicurisme must necessarily follow but of all these mans will is chiefe purchasing Gods wrath heereupon is that rightly said Thy destruction is of thy selfe O Israell Ose 13.9 And neuerthelesse they are subiect to the Decree because though not by the decree yet for the decree and not without the decree they come to passe and whereof the deficient but not the efficient cause is surely purposed in God For as God createth faith in them that beleeue so when God left the wlll sinne came vpon mankind As the Sunne maketh the day of it selfe and with his owne light when it riseth and shineth and the night likewise but by the retyring of his light and the shadow of the earth Furthermore it is no decree of a sufferance of malice in that it is malice but in that it hath a purpose of goodnes For if we consider the decree of God the verie euill though bred in it selfe hath a purpose of good for what God hath determined to suffer and what he permitteth he doth it for some good end as for the euidence of his glorie and iustice Wherfore in respect of God who in determining to suffer and in permitting doth alwaies behold a good end the darkenesse helpeth forward the light and the malice which proceedeth wholy from the euill instrument is conuerted into good as the punishment of sinne and the meane of Gods glorie as that Paradox of Augustine might be verified That it is good also there should be euils for else God would not suffer euils to bee but he suffereth them not as against his will but as willing and as the same father saith truly and wisely That which is contrarie to the will of God commeth not to passe against his will What is the end of Reprobation Surely the iust condemnation of the Reprobate But in respect of God the declaring of his glory iustice and power a Exod. 9.16 Rom. 9.17 22. After what maner is the administration and application of the doctrine of Predestination to be taken in hand either of Pastors or of all men in priuate 1 We must take heed that we run not out from one extreem to another as from the decree to saluation or damnation or on the contrary neglecting the means neearer causes of saluation or destruction 2. As God descending vnto vs from his most excellent and eternal decree by the middle degrees or the means which are the effects of that decree doth lay open his glory mercy so we returning by those same degrees effects keeping the order of the effects do ascend to the certainty of our election which we shall find most firmely founded in the onely mercy of God VVhat ought to be
From the resurrection of bodies for there would be no neede of the rising againe of the bodies of the faithful if there were not a life whereunto they should rise Moreouer the articles concerning GOD of Christ of the Prouidence and of the Iustice of GOD of the soules Immort●●●●e of the resurection of bodies of the last iudgement could not stand vnlesse this article of life eternall bee annexed vnto them 4 From the handwriting of God written in the soule of euery one for the soule it selfe often teacheth vs there remaineth a iudgment with the feare whereof they are vexed who liue wickedly and they are renued in hope who loue godlines 5 From an Argument tending to absurditie because if only in this life that is if we hope in Christ for this life sake onely so that our faith hath respect to nothing else beyond this life we were the most miserable of all men 1. Cor. 15.19 6 From the testimonies of Scripture Dan. 12.2 some shall awake vnto euerlasting life Math. 25.46 The iust shall goe vnto life eternall Iohn 10.28 I giue vnto my sheepe eternall life Hebr. 13.14 Here we haue no continuing Citie but we seeke one to come 1. Iohn 25. This is the peomise that he hath promised vs euen eternall life 7 From examples for Enoch beeing translated heere into and afterward Elias were as an earnest penie thereof a Gen. 7 24. Heb 11 8 2 Kings 2 11 So was Christ also ascending into the heauen whose pleasure is that where he himselfe is we should be with him likewise Iohn 14.3 and 17.24 8 This an article of our fath I beleeue that life euerlasting What are the Epithites whereby it is commended in Scripture 1 In commendation it is called the kingdome 1 of God 2 of the father 3 of heauen b Math. 7 21 2 Metaphorically Abrahams bosome c Luk. 16 22 by a Metaphor taken from the bosome of parents wo are said to haue and carie their little children in their bosome because the faithfull like deerely beloued children being recouered out of this miserable world are cherished and refreshed in the embracing of the father of all the faithfull and are safe and free from all the perilous stormes of this life And there is a place wherin Christ hath prepared vs a mansion as himselfe declareth Math. 8.11 Many shall come from the East and from the West shall sit downe with Abraham Isaack and Iacoh in the kingdome of heauen Augustine though where it should be Epist 99 ad Evodion confese Lib. 9 3 confesseth he knoweth not yet defineth it to bee an habitation of secret rest and affirmeth that therein li●● the spirits of the blessed and there they enioy the gladsome presence of God 3 Analogically or by proportion Paradise or a place of delight and pleasantnesse e luk 23.43 by allusion to that garden planted in Eden of the situation whereof it is fond to dispute seeing it is manifest that the vniuersall earth was made waste by the Deluge 4 The house of the father a Ioh. 14.2 5 Metonymically the fulnesse of ioyes b Psal 16.11 6 The Lords ioy c Math. 25.21 7 The new holy and durable Ierusalem that shall be d Heb. 13.14 Reuel 21.10 8 An inheritance immortall and vndefiled and that withereth not reserued in heauen e 1. Pet. 1.4 9 The glorie of God because that eternall life consisteth in the communication of Gods glorie Rom. 3.23 All haue sinned and are destitute of the glorie of God 10 Our glorie for this is that alone wherein we may rest safely 1. Cor. 2.7 We speake the wisedome of God in a mysterie euen the hid wisedome which God had determined before the world vnto our glorie 11 Rest f 2. Thess 1.7 12 Refreshing g Act. 3.19 13 Peace h Luk. 1 79 14 So great happinesse as cannot be contained neither in the eies nor eares nor mind of any man i Psal 31 20 Isai 64 4. 1. Cor. 2.9 But why is it called eternall Because it shall neither be temporarie or determined in any certaine limits neither is it short vaine or subiect to any change as this our life is k Gen. 3 19 Ioh 14 5. and although it haue a beginning yet shall it neuer be taken away from them to whom it shall once be giuen l Math. 25 34 but shall last for euer without end What is life eternall It is a glorious estate wherein the elect being most perfectly ioyned vnto Christ their head after the Resurrection that shall be of the dead m Rom. 8 29 1 C●r 15.49 Phil. 3.21 Reve. 2 31 shall know God with his Angels in heauen after such a manner that we are not worthie yet to speake of and shall enioy his presence and praise him for euer hauing obtained the soueraigne good that Christ hath purchased for vs and shall be conformable vnto his likenes in bodie and soule as he is man Or it is the state of the blessed after this life wherein shall be a perpetuall acknowledgement of God perpetuall righteousnesse without sinne and death continuall ioy free from trouble griefe heauines and mourning n Ioh. 17.13 24 Isa 25 8. Reve 7.16 17 21.4 In a word eternall life shall be a certaine perfection of soules and bodies wherein there shall be nothing blame-worthie but according to the pleasure of God all things shall perfectly serue the will of Christ the Creator and Redeemer VVhat are the causes of euerlasting life The principall cause is God who of his mercie and free goodnes giueth and bestoweth it on vs through and for Christ our mediator a luk 12 32 Rom. 6 23. Eph. 1.5 2.5 luk 12.32 Iohn 6.40 This is the will of him that sent mee that euery man which seeth the sonne and beleeueth in him should haue euerlasting life and 1. Iohn 5.11 The meritorious very efficient cause is Christ onely Iohn 14.6 I am saith hee that way and that truth and that life The instrumentall offering and reuealing is the Gospell b Rom. 1.16 17 The instrumentall receiuing cavse is faith 1. Pet. 1.9 Receiuing the end of your faith euen the saluation of your soules The sealing cause is the holy Ghost c Eph. 1.13 14. but good workes and afflictions are not the cause of receiuing but the way of the kingdome saith Bernard And Act. 14.22 Through many tribulations must we enter into the kingdome of heauen Why is the gate called straite and the way narrow which leadeth vnto life Math 7.14 1 Because it was vtterly vnknowne and not to be found out by humane reason but Christ hath reuealed it vnto vs. 2 Because there is one onely passage vnto life through Christ not many 3 Because few enter in thereat if we compare them with the fashions of the world as the way of vertue compared to the waies of vices is narrow for that it hath but
remnant of the Elect. And the holy Ghost foretold of a generall Apostacie from the faith b 2. The. 2.3 1. Tim. 4 1 and Reuel 13.3.7 the whole earth followed the beast and wondred and power was giuen him ouer euerie kinred nation and all the inhabitants of the earth saith Iohn worshipped him All saith he whose names were not written in the booke of life that is all sauing the Elect. Where then was the Church Tertullian in his booke de poeniten saith that the Church may bee in one or two Wherefore if in those desperate times of the Church there were but one or two faithfull seruants of God it sufficeth that it may be called a Church Therefore it is not our part to determine at what certaine time the Church began to fall away but to labour rather by what meanes it may be freed from this calamitie What are the causes of a Church The principal cause is God the Father who hath chosen a church and at length calleth and gathereth it vnto himselfe Ephe. 1.4 Iohn 1.13 The faithfull are not borne of bloud nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God And 6.44 No man commeth to me except the father draw him a Exod. 13.21 Mat 18.18 The second or helping cause is the sonne of God himselfe Iohn 14.6 No man commeth to the father but by mee who also hath purchased a Church with his owne blood Act. 20.28 The fellow labourers are the preachers of the word the Prophets and Apostles and their true successours who are therfore called builders b Ro 15 20 1. Pet. 2.7 and maister builders c 1 Cor 3.10 but in respect of the ministerie onely The outward instrumentall cause is the preaching of the word whereby God gathereth himselfe a Church The inward and verie efficient cause is the holy Spirit The formall cause is the syncere profession both of faith and of true Doctrine likewise The Materiall cause whereof are men chosen out of the whole world according to the commaundement of Christ Goe into all the vvorld Preach yee the Gospell to euerie Creature Marke 16.15 16. Are not the blessed Angels likewise a Materiall part of the true Church They are surely and so are the soules of the blessed and that the most beautifullest part d Psal 103 20. Hebr. 1.6.7 12.23 The Apostle acknowledgeth a companie of innumerable Angels and an assemblie and congregation or Church of the spirits or soules And Christ also as he is man is head and Lord of euerie creature and so of the Angels also e Col. 1.17.18 But we speake of the Church insomuch as God hath purchased it by his bloud and doth gather it together by his word but God redeemed not the blessed Angels who neuer fell as neither did he take their nature on him Hebr. 2.16 Neither doth he call them to the cōmunion of this Church by the ministery of his word but onely established them in their first blessed beginning Therfore we affirme that the Church is to be reckoned of men onely according to the promise of the father made to the sonne Psa 2.8 Hath the Church an head Seeing the Church is a bodie not naturall or mathematicall but mysticall a 1 Cor. 10 17. 12.12 Col. 1.18 it must needs haue a head of whom it may be gouerned nourished and cherished and of whom it may depend for euerie liuing bodie hath it head to which it is subiected by the Creator himselfe and from whom it draweth life The Church therfore hath her head not many heads but one onely for it is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 headlesse nor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a beast of many heads succeeding one another by deaths preuention because it must haue died as often as it should be depriued of it head by death and must haue reuiued as often as it got any new head which were altogether monstrous but it hath one onely head to wit Christ who is the head of his Church as the man is of the woman b Eph. 5 27 1 23. 1 By perfection because he is the only true God and verie man that in all things he may haue the preheminence Col. 1.18 2.10 2 By office Because Christ onely is King Prophet and High Priest who hath rule dominion and excellencie ouer the Church as the head hath ouer the bodie c Reue. 1.6 3 By efficacie because he onely inspireth vigour sense motion spirituall life and all goodnesse into his members d Ioh 6 5 7 15 1 2 and he onely being fastened to the bodie by the bond of the spirit giueth to the whole Church his reedifying coniunction ioyning or fastening together and communion of the members betweene God and themselues e 1. Ioh 1 3 Ioh 17.22 Eph 4 12 he alone is neuer absent but euer present with his Church by his spirit f Mat 28 20 and he onely giueth life to the bodie g Eph 5 24 and neuer dieth Death shall haue power ouer him no more Rom. 6.9 So that hee needeth no head by deputation as one Bride receiueth not two heads nor two Bride-groomes 4 By Decree because he alone is the shepheard of one sheepfold h Ioh. 10.16 and the chiefe shepheard as Peter himselfe affirmeth 1. Pet. 5.4 Neither is the condition of any of the Pastors of the Christian Church equall to that of the high Priest long agoe vnder the Lawe for that one high Priest was a true type of Christ a Psal 101.4 Heb. 7.17 7.9.11 but none of the Pastors of the christian Church is a type of Christ Besides hee had charge but ouer one small quarter and but ouer one Temple and ouer one people by the ordinance of God but none can haue charge ouer the whole world through which the Church is dispersed for this were to desire to include the world in one Citie saith Hierome Therefore is not the Pope the Ministeriall head of the Catholicke Church because it cannot be prooued by any testimony of Scripture and seeing Christs kingdome is not of this world he hath no need of a Vice-Roy or Vicar and the Ecclesiasticall ministerie which consisteth in the administration of the Gospell and Sacraments cannot be performed through the whole world by 〈◊〉 any one man But concerning Constantines Donation made to Pope Syluester that voyce which Syluester heard from heauen This day is poyson entered into the Church doth sufficiently testifie what we must thinke of it Finally he that calleth himselfe the Vniuersall Bishop Lib. 4. Epist 76 is the most true forerunner of Antichrist as witnesseth Gregorius Magnus who was himselfe Bishoppe of Rome Hath the Church any foundation Seeing it is a Spirituall house b 1. pet 2 5 it hath a foundation which is twofolde 1 Ministeriall in respect whereof the Church is said To bee built vpon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles to witt euen on
a brother We must not therefore cease from admonition from instruction from correction nor leaue off to eate or drinke with him if necessitie shall constraine vs but wee must try all meanes whereby if it bee possible hee may bee a new man Wee must not I say seuer our selues in brotherly charitie from him who is seioyned from vs in external societie for this correction must bee stretched no further then charitie and other Diuine precepts do permit For excommunication is not a sword of an enemie which goeth about to kill vs but it is the sword of the Physitian which goeth about to heale vs as the antient haue taught As for denying them buriall being dead in the Churchyards the Scripture doth say nothing How long doth excommunication last So long as the party excommunicate doth estrange himselfe manifestly from the Doctrine and life of Christ a Rom. 16.17 but when hee shall repent and shewe in his words and actions some testimony of a better life then forthwith he is to be receiued into the Church againe for loosing and binding consisteth of contrarie causes of the same persons b 2. Cor. 2 5. c. As then the Church hath authority to cast out semblably it hath power to receiue sinners againe whose repentance is sufficiently detected What is the scope and end of excommunication 1. That wicked men bee corrected scandals be taken away and the Church kept pure as it is when the Sacraments so farre as possibly may bee remaine vndefiled and it is not defamed by the contumelie of God and the offence of many as if it were a receptacle of vncleane persons c Mat. 7 6 Rom. 2.2 ●4 1 Cor. 5 12 2. That no contagion bee deriued to other citizens of the Church for as it is commonly said Morbida facta pecus totum corrumpit ●uile Ne perdat reliquas est separanda grege One scabbed sheepe infects the rest Such to remoue I thinke it best And a little leuen doth leuen the whole lumpe 1. Cor 5.6 Gal. 5.9 3. That the partie excommunicated being at the least somewhat ashamed may returne home againe repent and desist from euill and to be saued This Paule calleth to deliuer to Sathan for the mortification of the flesh that his soule may bee safe that is this punishment being inflicted on him such sorrow and contrition such a remorse shame being begun in him that the flesh or old man which led him headlong into this sin may be tamed crucified and killed and the soule that is the inward man or new man which altogether seemed to yeeld in the combate may reuiue raise vp it selfe goe on and increase and so bee saued that so the sinne may die and the man may liue saith Augustine Sermon 32. vpon the words of the Apostle a 1 Cor. 5.5 1 Tim. 1.20 according to the prouerbe after correction insumeth amendment b 2 Thess 3 14 and so hee that repenteth may be saued as it is expounded 2. Tim. 2.25 26. that hee recouering soundnesse of iudgement may passe out of the Diuels snare wherein hee was captiuated and 1. Pet. 4. that his flesh beeing mortified hee may liue vnto God that is in spirit and may dy to sinne and liue to righteousnesse 4. That other citizens of the Church may feare and be kept in order 5. That the punishments which for the sinnes of the Church are threatned by God may be auoided VVhat is the effect of Excommunication It is not a brutish thunder bolt or a lightning out of a basen as it is in the Prouerbe that is it is not an idle scarcrowe or bugbear to feare children for God hath ratified that in heauen the which for iust causes is truely bound on earth by his true Church d Mat. 18.18 Ioh. 20.20 but a iudgement most fearefull in Gods church yet so as if those who are censurers shal become Gods instruments that is if any one be condemned by the lawfull sentence of the true Church out of the word of God otherwise it is better to be secluded from the societie of the wicked then to be reputed as one of them e for an vniust excommunication is a blessing f Gen. 12.3 Mat. 5.11 psa 109 28 Further the party excommunicate is deliuered to Sathan that is he is effectually declared to be vnder the power and kingdom of Sathan and that he hath no title to Christ his kingdome but is giuen ouer to destruction vntill such time as hee hath testified his true repentance g 1 Cor. 5.4 2 Cor. 2.6 7.8 for during the time of of Excommunication hee is bound out of the Church who is deliuered to Sathan whose bands are after loosed by repentance VVhat examples haue you of this Excommunication 1. In Adam and Eue h Gen 3 24 1● 4 11 and Caine i 2. In those leprous persons k Nu. 5 1.2.3 and Miriam Moses sister God himselfe being the author thereof m Leu. 5.2 6 she beeing secluded seauen daies out of the tents and afterwards restored againe In the separation of the vncleane till expiation were made o ●u● 9 6 11 12 In the prohibition of the polluted from the eating of the Sacrament c Chr. 30 2.15 vnder paine of cutting off n Leu 7 20. Wherupon wee reade that those who were defiled celebrated the Passeouer not the first moneth with the rest but the moneth following their expiation 3 In that incestuous Corinthian a 1 Cor. 5.3.4 6 4. In Hymeneus and Alexander b 1 Tim. 1.20 as also in the Emperour Theodosius whom Ambrose did excommunicate for the vniust slaughter committed at Thessalonica VVhat is Anathema The Graecians so call things giuen or dedicated for the benefit and treasure of the Church because they were wont to bee consecrated and hanged on the walles and pillers of the Temple Whereupon the Temple of Ierusalem was said to bee adorned 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with donations c L●● 21.5 but the word Anathema 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 although it be deriued from the same word yet it hath diuerse significations and is all one with that which the Hebrewes call Herem that is execrable or deuoted to perdition as Rom. 9.3 In this other signification Anathema is when hee who is incorrigible and desperate whether hee be an hereticke or blasphemer or any other way notoriously wicked is addicted and deuoted to perpetuall death and destruction Gal. 1.8 If any preach vnto you any other thing then wee haue preached let him be accursed Anathema and 1. Cor. 16.22 If any doe not loue that is if any do hate and persecute the name of Christ let him be Anathema Maranatha which was the last execration the reason wherof as we hardly knowe so the vse of it ought to bee very rare So in the old Testament Chore Dathan and Abiron were excommunicated or Anathematized and as it were bound to eternall destruction being swallowed vp
Christs bloud doth take away the thirst of the soule 3 As wine doth make glad the heart of man b Psal 10.15 so also the promises concerning Christ do make glad the soule 4 As wine doth heat the bodie and maketh vs more cheerefull and readie to doe our businesse so the bloud of Christ receiued by faith doth quicken the soule vnto all good motions and so the vertue of the spirit doth stirre vs vp and maketh vs more nimble vnto all good wokes 5 As wine driueth away coldnes so the bloud of Christ driueth away the coldnes of loue and charitie 6 As win● maketh vs more secure and more bold so the bloud of Christ receiued by Faith doth make vs secure and quiet before God and more constant in confession that there may be nothing at all which we ought to feare 7 As wine maketh vs wise so the bloud of Christ receiued by faith maketh vs wise in the confession and commemoration of Christs benefits 8 As wine driueth away the palenesse of the face maketh the face of man to shine as with oyle c Psal 104 15 so the bloud of Christ doth turne the colour of the soule being pale with feare of death into the verie colour of the Rose that is to say it appeaseth our consciences it maketh vs faire in the presence of God that wee may appeare before him with a fayre and ruddie face that is to say iust and accepted What if bread such as wee haue and wine be wanting in some countries with what signes is the supper to be administred With those earthly nourishments and corporall meats which all doe vse in that countrey in stead of bread and wine meate and drinke for this doth agree with the minde of Christ From hence it was granted to the Nouergian Priests as Volaterranus witnesseth necessitie requiring it that they did conscrate the mysticall cup without wine with that which they had in common seeing that wine caried into the countrey is quickly corrupted by the great force of the cold VVhat need is there now of those two signes that is to say of bread and wine seeing that the whole humanitie of Christ consisting of his parts of bodie and bloud doth liue glorious in the heauens and by reason of concomitancie that is to say a naturall ioyning together of the liuing bodie and the bloud the whole may be signified and giuen in seuerall kindes and where the quicke bodie is present there also must the bloud and soule be present and by reason of the hypostaticall vnion the diuinitie also may be there and so there may be no controuersie moued concerning those things that be equiualent but one may suffice in steed of two From whence is that Rime of Thomas Caro cibus sanguis potus manet tamen Christus totus sub vtraque specie that is to say The flesh is meate the bloud is drinke yet Christ remayneth whole vnder both kindes 1 Because the same reason of concomitancie doth belong to the Priests which notwithstanding celebrating the Masse will alwaies vse the whole sacrament 2 Because Christ Iesus who is the wisedome of the Eternall Father commending to his Church nothing superfluous ordayned those two signes and of set purpose commended the vse of the cup to all saying Drinke ye all of it to signifie the drinking of one and the same bloud shed for many common to all the faithfull without difference of Nation of sexe of estate But for mens conceipts the commaundement of God is not to bee violated who called distinctly and exactly bread the bodie not the bloud and wine the bloud not the bodie Neyther can the Church change the matter or forme 3 Because neyther for the connexion of parts in the thing signifyed is a diuulsion or diuision of the parts to be made in outward rite or ceremonie 4 Because there is not made an inclusion of Christ into the Sacramentall signes For Christ is present in the Supper not for the bread but for the man 5 Because that bodie and that bloud of Christ is not in this action represented vnto vs sacramentally as now the whole indiuided humanitie of Christ doth liue glorious but so farre forth as they were offered vnto death for vs vpon the crosse the bloud being shed out of the bodie for the words added to the signes doe plainly crie that the bodie and bloud of Christ are offered and exhibited to vs in the Supper as things separated in the sacrifice of the Crosse From whence we must conclude seeing that the concomitancie of the bodie and bloud cannot agree to the death of Christ for to be in the bodie and to be shed out of the bodie are things contrarie that that concomitancie is directly contrarie to the institution of Christ Neyther is the hypostaticall vnion of God and man therefore broken which is not broken in death although the soule and bloud be separated from the bodie Rightly therefore Beda The bread is referred to the bodie of Christ mystically the wine to the bloud And the ancient fathers spake no otherwise of this mysterie then if daily in the administration of the Lords Supper he should be slaine die and be sacrificed for vs This is in the cup saith Chrysostome which flowed out of his side and we are partakers of it But what If a man at this day be conuersant in those places where one part of the Supper is taken from the laity shall he altogether abstaine from the vse of the communion It were farre better for him to abstaine especially if hee haue learned out of the former doctrine of the Gospell that that corruption doth fight with the word of God For it is a great sin to consent to the least pollution of Christs institution against conscience Rightly therefore Ambrose He is vnworthie of the Lord which doth celebrate a mysterie otherwise then it was deliuered of him for he cannot be deuout which doth presume otherwise then it was giuen from that author What did Christ when he had taken the bread Hee instituted signes of a second kind that is the outward actions of them which do administer the Supper or rites of dispensation of the Lords Supper wherein he went before all ministers by his example What rites are they Hee gaue thanks to the father to whom he gaue all the thanks of our redemption as it were the chiefe cause thereof and in the vse as well of the Supper as of daily meat and of other things he taught vs to doe the same a Iohn 6.11 1 Tim. 4.5 by his example Moreouer also with blessing and thāksgiuing for the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is blessed and gaue thanks are vsed one with another Mat. 26.26.27 concerning the Lords Supper Mark. 14.22.23 not with the signe of the Crosse as the popish Cleargie ignorantly doe thinke as though he vsed coniuring but with blessing that is with prayers vnto God he prepared he appointed and he sanctified the bread
fulnesse of Christ Ephes 5.30 and 4.13 Of which place Zanchius in his comment vpon it discourseth most learnedly What therefore is that which is conioyned vnto vs Christ according to himselfe and according to his effect and grace that is Christ himselfe whole but yet spiritually and to bee considered in minde together with all his merits How is this vnion made whether by a reall actuall and corporall inuisible falling downe of Christs flesh into vs and by a naturall touching with ours or by a connexion contiguitie locall indistance orall perception or by an essentiall commixtion of the flesh of Christ and ours or by an ingresse of his bodie and soule or by a corporall coniunction By none of these For the veritie of the flesh of Christ and his ascension into heauen doe not suffer this Besides also out of so many substances of diuers bodies there should grow a most monstrous bodie but by a copulation or connexion altogether spirituall and supernaturall yet reall and true altogether after a diuine and heauenly manner For if the things which are vnited be respected it is an Essentiall vnion If the truth of the vnion it is reall But if the manner whereby this vnion is made it is spirituall That there is such an vnion it is truly manifest vnto vs out of the both simple sacramentall word of God but for the forme which may containe the exact definition thereof the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the very being of it how it is which some doe importunately require of vs the Apostle by the best right calleth a great mysterie Ephes 5.32 They shall be two in one flesh The reason whereof is such that we cannot in our mindes comprehend it For it is spoken Contradictorily that any thing is accuratelie declared eyther that the forme therof or formal cause is accuratly knowne and is secret For now wee see through a glasse darkely but then shall wee see face to face Now I know in part but then shall I know euen as I am knowne And wee walke by faith not by sight 1. Cor. 13.9.12 and 2. Cor. 5.7 And it is enough in this mysterie to know the efficient cause with the finall and adiuuant causes For also in actions wee then know chiefely when wee see the beginning of the motion saith the chiefe of the Phylosophers booke third that is when wee haue knowen the efficient cause Which is the proper cause or the meanes and the Energeticall that is efficient cause of this our communion with Christ The operation efficacie and working of the holy Ghost doth cause that a man receiueth Christ together with his merits For as the sinewes comming from the braine are scattered into the integrall parts of the liuing bodie and doe ioyne the middle low panch armes hands feet both to the head also to the members by a conueniēt situation function of euery part remaining safe So one the same spirit of Christ comprehending vs a Phi. 3.12 doth so make vs partakers of him that cleauing fast both to Christ the head to his members more straightly and more strongly then the members of the naturall bodie to the bodie wee may neuer be separated from him and from them as Paule teacheth 1. Cor. 12.12 As the bodie is one and hath many members and all the member of the bodie which is one though they be many yet are but one bodie euen so is Christ For so collectiuely by a word taken from the head he calleth both Christ who is the head and the mysticall bodie of that head which is the Church Whereby it commeth to passe from that great bounty of our Sauiour that Christ also himselfe becommeth so neerely ours and we likewise his that before the fathers iudgement seat Christ and the Church not by a hypostaticall ioyning of substances but by a mysticall belonging to this communion are as it were one and the same subsistence and wee are taken to be one Christ most effectually For by one spirit wee all are baptized into one bodie saith the same Apostle that is that we should be gathered into one bodie of Christ and haue beene all made to drinke into one spirit that is with one liuely draught of the Lords bloud b 3.19 Wee are made partakers of his one spirit 1. Corinth 12.13 And Irenaeus saith like as of drie wheat one lumpe cannot bee made without moysture nor one bread So neyther we being many could not haue beene made one in Christ Iesus without the water which is from heauē Therefore Paule 1. Cor. 6.17 He that is ioyned to the Lord is one Spirit with him whereupon also it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is The communion of the holy Ghost a 2 Cor. 13 13 And 1. Iohn 3.24 Heereby we know that Christ abideth in vs euen by the spirit which he hath giuen vs. And Rom. 8.9 If any man hath not the spirit of Christ the same is not his Therefore like as by one and the same soule all the members of the bodie are vnited with the head and are quickened so all the faithfull although they be in earth and their head in heauen yet in verie deed by one and the same spirit issuing from the head and by euerie ioynt of the mysticall bodie yeelding nourishment are vnited with him and being knit together doe abide liue and receiue increase according to the measure of euerie part Ephes 4.16 Gal. 3.5 By what meanes doe wee in like manner communicate with the flesh of Christ Not by nature as wee communicate with the flesh of Adam nor yet by a naturall and corporall instrument but by one supernaturall and spirituall that is by faith alone created in vs by that selfe same spirit whereby Christ doth comprehend vs a Phil. 3.12 by which we doe receiue lay hold vpon and as it were by an instrumentall cause possesse Christ himselfe Concerning which manner Ephes 3.17 the Apostle saith That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith Therfore wee are vnited to Christ by faith Therefore this vnion is made by the Spirit in respect of Christ and by faith in respect of vs. Neyther is their any other manner of vnion with Christ deliuered in the scriptures They erre therefore which say that faith is the formall cause of our vnion with Christ or of our iustification seeing that it is as it were a spirituall hand which receiueth Christ and his merits applied vnto it selfe by the holy Ghost Which are the outward instruments of this communion The Gospell and the Sacraments whereupon it is called the communion or fellowship of the Gospell b Phil. 1.5 because by the preaching of the Gospell and vse of the sacraments wee haue fellowship with Christ and his Church 1. Iohn 1.3 Is this sacramentall coniunction of vs with Christ necessarie It is being as it were the cause of all things which we haue in Chist and no other besides this for as the
day moreouer doth communicate to vs all wholsome graces necessary for vs to obtaine enioy life eternall as the feeling of Gods loue the certainty of Election the gift of iustification of regeneration faith good works other graces of his spirit he distributeth to euery man seuerally as he wil b 1 Cor. 12 12 Ioh. 1 16 vntill we liue with him eternally in the heauens According to the sayings Io. 15.5 He that abideth in me I in him the same bringeth fourth much fruit Of his fulnes haue all we receiued We are ioyned to the Lord we are one spirit with him that is to say by conformity of the vnderstāding of the wil of the affections and by that renuing of the image of God within vs by the holy Ghost a 1 Cor. 6.17 Againe Wee are changed into the same image 2. cor 3.18 Wee shall bee like him 1. Iohn 3 2. Hee shall make our bodies like vnto his glorious bodie Phil. 3.21 Hereupon Christ is said to be and to liue in vs and wee in like manner are saide to bee and to liue in him Whereupon Paul saith I liue not but Christ liueth in mee Gal. 2.20 by which wordes againe is not signified an existence of essence or of substance or an issuing out of qualities from the soule or bodie of Iesus Christ into our soules as some not well in their wits doe imagine but an operation vertue of this communion much more powerfull and stronger as well to iustifie as to sanctifie vs then is the strength of our soule it selfe conioyned with our bodie to quicken our body Finally from this communion betweene Christ and the beleeuers doth spring the coniunction of the beleeuers betweene themselues not by a certaine insinuation of soules and bodies and as it were by contiguitie and by soldering together but by vnitie of faith and of hope and by the bond of true holy and mutuall loue so farre forth that the heart and soule of them all may seeme to bee one b Act. 4.32 and which is therefore called the communion of Saints Which is the forth end of the Lords supper That it may be a testimonie whiles that we vse it according to his institution of our spirituall education or nourishment in Christ that is that wee are fed and sustained spiritually by the benefit of the bodie and bloud of Christ according to the promise Eate drinke this is my bodie which end is neere and of kinde to the former Which is the fift end The obsignation or seale of the new couenant betweene God and men that is of the promise of the Gospell concerning remission of sins wherein God witnesseth that he receiueth into fauour and remitteth sins for the death and passion of Christ to all which vse this Sacrament with a true and liuely faith like as hee himselfe saide This cup. c. And so the Supper is a most sweete couenant and consideration in which the sonne of God doth make a couenant with vs that hee will mercifully receiue vs and wee in like manner doe make a couenant with him that wee will beleeue him and take his benefits with thanksgiuing and that we will performe his obedience before all things VVhich is the sixt end That it may be a symbol and pledge of our resurrection both spirituall in this life which is called the first resurrection and belongeth to our soules a Rom. 6.4 5 11 in which they which haue part the second death shall haue no power on them b Apoc 20.5 and also by consequent of our corporall resurrection at the last day which belongeth to the flesh and is the latter and which deliuereth vs from the first death c vers 13 and moreouer to get life eternall and saluation by the vertue of the bodie of Christ being raised againe according to the saying of Christ Ioh. 6.54 Whosoeuer eateth my flesh and drinketh my bloude hath eternall life and I will raise him vp at the last day VVhich is the seauenth end That it may be a symbole and an earnest penny of the spirituall gathering together of communion or consociation whereby wee are vnited as it were into one bodie by the spirit of Christ as many as doe receiue the Sacrament together and that as many of vs as come to the same table doe take the same meat drinke are as members of the same familie and as it were table fellowes and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is consorts and confederates of the same holy thing like as the ancient were wont to confirme their couenants with the fellowshippe of holy things whereupon they were called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or faedera that is to say leagues or couenants Hereupon Paule 1 Cor. 10.17 because there is one bread one I say by a common notion of the Sacrament but not necessarily one in number VVe that are manie are one bodie that is to say mysticall in Christ For we all are partakers of that one bread Whereupon againe it followeth that our fellowshippe with Christ is not corporall and naturall seing that our fellowshippe betweene our selues that is of the Church is not corporall but mysticall and meerly s●●●ituall For euen as the bread is compacted of many graines and the wine doth consist of the iuyce of many grapes so wee that are many that is to say beleeuers are spiritually knit into one mysticall bodie the head whereof is Christ Rom. 12.4.5 Euen as in one bodie we haue many members and all the members haue not one office so we beeing many are one bodie in Christ a Eph. 3.6 and euery one one anothers members or concorpores that is of the same bodie in Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or one that is like vnto one man in Christ Iesus Which communion doth flowe as it were the effect from the cause from the former which we haue with Christ himselfe being the head and the consent of wils doth necessarily follow it from thence is mutuall loue among the communicants concord one heart one soule forasmuch as it is betweene the members of the same mysticall bodie which loue whoso feeleth not at all in his heart must needs abstaine from that Supper which is a louefeast For the Supper is an example whereby we may learne to offer our bodies and spend our life to Gods glorie and the defense of our neighbour if neede bee and also wee may accustome our selues both to distribute all good thing which wee haue receiued from God with the like liberality to the needie to powre out vpon others with the like charitie that it may be a certaine prouocation to loue brotherly charitie springing from the most excellent pledge of Gods loue towards vs most wretched sinners But God forbid that either wee should account this to bee the chiefe end or wee should with the Anabaptists haue these holy mysteries for example of imitation and onely
both can say Our prouerbe is One tale is good till the other be heard Seeing Christians are by the law of God forbidden to kill and it is prophecied of the Church Isa 11.9 and 65.25 there shall none hurt or destroy in all the mountaine of my holines doth not the Magistrate therefore offend in putting malefactors to death No For he executeth Gods iudgements And it is one of his royall vertues to reuenge the afflictions of the godly according to the commaundement of the Lord to take away the wicked out of the land and to cause all the workers of iniquitie to be destroyed out of the Citie of God a Psal 101 8 Neyther doth he beare the sword in vaine saith Paule Rom. 13.4 for he is the minister of God to take vengeance on him that doth euill But a way with that sauage crueltie Cassian tribunall which was called Reorum scopulus The Rocke of the acused yea precious rather in the eyes of the king must be the bloud of his subiects b Psa 72.14 But those propheticall speeches of the Prophet do signifie that there can be nothing hurtfull to the Church inasmuch as to them that loue God all things worke together for the best Rom. 8.28 Seeing our Sauiour Christ Iohn 8.7 answereth the accusers of the adulterous woman on this manner Let him that is without sinne among you cast the first stone at her may therefore offenders be condemned or punished but by them that are iust and free from sinne Yes for we must not respect the vice of the person but looke vnto his publicke office and the order and course of the lawes which the Iudge must follow in giuing sentence vpon others though himselfe be polluted with some kind of blot Although indeed it is true that it is no small scandall of offenc if the Iudge be guiltie of the same crime for the which he condemneth another man But that answere of our Sauiour Christ is a particular answere appropriate vnto the Pharisees that lay in wait for him to intrap him and thereby he reproueth their hypocrisie who being most seuere censurers of other men were blinde in their owne faultes and did most foully flatter and deceiue themselues May the chiefe magistrate with a good conscience shew fauour or giue pardon vnto malefactors that are lawfully conuicted So farre forth as the offences doe eyther directly concerne God himselfe and are committed against him as blasphemie Idolatrie magicke sacriledge or sorcerie in which God is eyther dishonoured or denied or else are committed against the very nature of mankinde as Sodomitrie or the burning lust of a man toward brute beast or theft these the magistrate should not forgiue for these offences doe as it were extinguish and dash the verie welspring and fountaine of mankinde And therefore in this case the king must beware that he doe not spare the offender with the hinderance and endangering of Gods glorie and of humane societie a Deut. 13 8.9 For in that case It is better as Bernard saith that one should perish then the whole companie Vnus quam Vnitas But so farre forth as the offences that are committed concerne onely some particular persons directly there vpon weightie reasons and wise vnderstanding of the matter hee may forgiue as farre as the safetie and state of the Commonwealth with equitie and iustice will permit the same For as it is lawfull for the Prince to aggrauate and increase the punishment that is appointed by the law vpon a good and iust cause as Dauid 2. Sam. 12.5 when he was questioned withall concerning the rich man that had taken away the poore mans sheepe pronounced him worthie of death so may the same prince vpon iust cause mouing him mitigate and abate the punishment that the lawe hath appointed Moreouer the will and purpose of the offender make a difference in the offence and the diuers and vnlikely circumstances of persons sexes age and the former course of a mans life may be causes that in one and the same fact of one and the same offence in men that are partakers in guiltinesse yet the crime may not be alike and therefore not the like punishment to be inflicted vpon them But if pardon be granted let it be 1 Vpon a iust cause and necessarie for the Commonwealth and not out of the sole fauour of the Prince toward any 2 Let not the offendor that is guiltie of a crime be freed from the whole punishment but onely from some part of the greatnesse of the punishment vpon hope of amendement After the example of Salomon toward Abiathar the Priest who tooke part with Adoniah when he sought to be king And by the example of Dauid toward Simei when he railed vpon him and cursed him b 1. K. 2.26 36 3 The Prince must take heed that the example of his lenitie do not breed libertie of offending and that the people doe not grow worse thereby for the impunitie of sinne when offenders may escape without punishment it makes them the bolder to offend The Magistrate indeed ought to be mooued with pitie toward those that are malefactors and to abstaine as much as may be from the exact torment of their deserued punishment but absolutely to forgiue those that deserue death he ought not For to him especially belongeth that saying which is so much beaten vpon in the law Thou shalt take away euill out of the middest of thee Deut. 19.19 And 1. King 20.42 Because thou hast let go out of thine hands a man whom I appointed to die thy life shall goe for his life Forasmuch as we haue no example or precept in the new Testament for warfare is it vnlawfull therefore for Christians to go to warre No For. 1. It was not the purpose of Christ in the Gospell to frame a politicke gouernement Epist 14. ad Marcell but to erect a spirituall kingdome 2 As Augustine saith They whom Saint Iohn Baptist commaunded to be content with their owne wages he did not surely forbid them to goe to warre And it is vsuall to argue from the Concreets to the abstractes and the consequent followes well where there is no ambiguitie as thus Iohn Baptist intertaineth and approoueth of souldiers that remained in their offices therefore also he approueth of warfare for by the approbation of the example in his proper subiect the thing it selfe in generall is approoued 3 If the Magistrate doe iustly punish those theeues whose offences are onely against a few then by no meanes may hee suffer the whole land to be spoyled wasted with robberies yet the offenders goe vnpunished For Hee beareth not the sword for nought but is the minister of God to take vengeance on him that doth euill Rom. 13.4 And lawfull warres whereof 1. Sam. 25.28 Abigail speaketh to Dauid Thou fightest the Lords battels Are of publicke reuenge 4 It is written Hebr. 11.34 that men that were truly a part Godly did make warres yea and that
by faith and ouerthrew their enemies But wee must remember this withall that a wise man must first trie all meanes before he goe to warre And the magistrate must beware that he be not therein led by his owne lusts or by any wicked or corrupt affection but as Augustine saith Let him euen pitie the common nature in that man in whom he punisheth his proper and particular offence And lastly the warre must be iust As for that speach Math. 26.52 He that smiteth with the sword shall perish by the sword It is to be vnderstood of him to whom the sword is not deliuered by the Lord that is to say hee that without any superiour authoritie commanding or granting the same vnto him doth vsurpe the sword to smite another man And to Peter being a shepheard of soules and a preacher of the Gospell it was said Put vp thy sword into his sheath as in like manner that 2. Tim. 2.4 is spoken to ministers No man that warreth entangleth himselfe with the affaires of this life Onely they may with their exhortations and prayers be helpefull vnto them that fight iust battels as Iosh 6.8 commaundement is giuen that the Priests should blowe the Trumpets in the time of warre Lastly that speach of the Prophet Micah prophecying of the kingdome of Christ Micah 4.4 They shall breake their swords into mattockes and their speares into sithes nation shall not lift vp a sword against natiō nor learne to fight is meant of the Christiās and thereby is shewed what their behauiour and endeuour shall be and ought to be among the Gentiles namely that they shall seeke loue and peace and concord which all they doe that embrace Chrst Iesus the Prince of peace with a true faith but outwardly to defend themselues against wicked men is not forbidden How many sorts of warre be there Two Spirituall and Carnall Spirituall is that kinde of warre or combat which the spirit hath against the flesh the diuell and the world a Gal. 5.17 In which warre faith in Christ Iesus the word of God a care zeal of iustice such like vertues are weapōs necessary for vs but they are spirituall weapons b Eph. 6.13 2 Cor. 10 4 1 Thess 5.8 The carnall warre is that which is fought with carnal weapons And the battell is the verie fight conflict of disagreeing persons among themselues this later the Graecians call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fight the former is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 warre What is politicall or carnall warre It is a lawfull defence or a lawfull recouery of those things which are wrongfully taken away or a iust and due punishment which is inflicted by a mans owne magistrate by force and by corporall weapons Which are iust warres 1 Those which without the manifest danger of the whole common wealth and of the common safetie cannot bee pretermitted 2 Those which are commaunded by the chiefe magistrate to whom the care of the commonwealth is committed or else by him that hath the gouernment thereof vnder him and in this case the priuate person must follow that commission that he hath receiued of his superiour magistrate for this action of warre is the principall part of the higher power 3 The warre must be vndertaken vpon a cause iust and necessarie and agreeable to the word of God 4 The warre must first be denounced to the enemie and the matters for which they warre must first be rehearsed that is to say there must be no warlike action vsed nor hostilitie performed vntill first the Heralds that is the publike messengers of armes and of warre haue denounced the same vnto the enemie and offered conditions of peace a Deut. 20 10 Gen. 11.12 5 They must be made with a right intention not in desire to hurt or in crueltie but labouring for peace and to bridle the wicked and relieue the good For as Augustine saith Men doe not seeke peace to the intent to make warre Libro 5. de verbis dōini but they make warre to the intent to seeke peace Which are iust and necessarie causes of warre The remote causes are peace in time to come and the amendement of our enemies against whom wee fight and by whom wee haue beene vniustly iniured and prouoked a Math. 5 9 23 The propinque or immediate causes are the requiring againe of the thing that is vniustly taken from vs and not restored or of the iniurie or contumely but chiefely the repulse punishment and reuenge of the offence that is committed against vs b Gen. 19.15 20.1 2 Sam. 10.6 7 And lastly the necessarie defence of those that are in league with vs or beeing in our armie are in some extreame daunger Is it lawfull to defend true Religion with weapons It is lawfull so to doe against those that are of other countries that haue no authoritie ouer vs yea and against any part of the Commonwealth which goeth about to ouerthrow the true Religion being once receiued by the publike consent of all estates of the land c Ios 22.10 11.12 2 K. 23.15 In this regard it was lawfull for Constantine to defend the Christians against Licinius his fellow in office For so God commaundeth in the law Deut. 13.14 to slay the inhabitants of that Citie within our dominions with the edge of the sword which shall worship other Gods and continue obstinately in their wickednesse and much more iust then and more necessarie is it to resist them that would force vpon vs strange Gods and wicked superstitions and take away the wholesome doctrine of the word of God or infect it with the brainsicke conceits of mens traditions And this the law of nature approueth which teacheth vs that wee owe all we haue to God and by which the Athenians in times past being enlightened did publikly bind their Citizens by an oth that they should fight for their Gods and for their Temples and holy rites both with themselues and with others But the Lord hath not commaunded his seruants to inuade other countries or to make warre for idolatrie but commaundeth his people to ouerthrow the Altars within their owne lands and territories a Deut 7.1 5 Neyther hath Christ commaunded vs for the propagation of religion to make warre vpon forraine countries which are not subiect vnto vs but to teach them and to preach the gospell vnto them and where the gospell is not receiued to flie and giue place Math. 10.23 Are those iust actions that doe accompanie and are incident to warre namely spoyles ambushes besiegings slaughter taking away their furniture and such other Calamities which are vsually done to the enemie in time of warre They are iust actions if the cause of the warre at first were iust Epist 105 ad Bonif. if that were vniust they are also vniust But yet Saint Augustine telleth vs that It is not sufficient that the warre be iust vnlesse it be also iustly performed Which that it may be