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A47625 A systeme or body of divinity consisting of ten books : wherein the fundamentals and main grounds of religion are opened, the contrary errours refuted, most of the controversies between us, the papists, Arminians, and Socinians discussed and handled, several Scriptures explained and vindicated from corrupt glosses : a work seasonable for these times, wherein so many articles of our faith are questioned, and so many gross errours daily published / by Edward Leigh. Leigh, Edward, 1602-1671. 1654 (1654) Wing L1008; ESTC R25452 1,648,569 942

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the fall and therefore good 1 Tim. 4. 4. Regeneration restores not the substance of man but the qualities Dr. Ames saith that Grevinchovius denied original sin and Dr. Twisse proves by this argument that the Arminians deny it As many as teach that all the posterity of Adam have as much power to every thing that is good as Adam in innocency they deny original sin But the Arminians teach that all the posterity of Adam have as much power to every thing that is good as Adam had in the state of innocency for they hold that all Adams posterity have such power to every good work that they want no other help but the perswasion and the concourse of God which Adam himself needed to every good work The Semipelagians also the Socinians and Anabaptists deny this original venome or blot to be a sin the Anabaptists that they might wholly take away Pedobaptisme denied original sin that there might not be a cause why infants should be baptized The denying of this fundamentall Article of Original sin is dangerous What need then of the Gospel what need of Christ himself if our nature be not guilty depraved corrupted these are not things in quibus possimus dissentire salva pace ac charitate Aug. about which we may dissent without losse of peace or charity The Papists say 1. Original corruption hath not rationem peccati but is only a privation of original righteousness The Councel of Trent decreeth it not to have the nature of sin Bellarmine saith it is a simple thing to be humbled for original sin Pighus saith it is no sin at all Andraedeus it s the least of sin 2. That the concupiscence and lust which riseth from the corruption of our nature the motions unto evil that we feel in our selves are no sins but are called so abusively or metonymically because they are from and incline to sin till we consent unto them and obey them till they reign in us See the Rhemists in their Annotat. Rom. 7. 7. and Iames 1. 15. Bellarm de statu peccati c. 9. 10. When our Divines urge that concupiscence is called sin several times in the sixth seventh and eighth Chapters to the Romans Bellarmine saith the Apostle doth not say it is peccatum propriè De statu peccati c. 8. 3. That original sin after Baptism is done away Si quis asserit non tolli in baptis●●ate totum id quod veram propriam rationem peccati habet anathema sit Decret 5. Sectionis Concil Trid. 4. That the Virgin Mary was not conceived in sin Piè ac rectè existimatur B. virginem Mariam singulari Deo privilegio ab omni omnino peccato fuisse immunem Bellarm. de Amiss grat statu pecc l. 4. c. 15. The Spirit of God in the holy Scripture expressely calleth the corruption of our nature sin as Psal. 51. 5. and in the sixth seventh and eight Chapters of the Romans fourteen times at the least Heb. 12. 2. 2. The Scripture saith expressely our original corruption is the cause of all our actual sins Iames 1. 14. 2 Peter 1. 4. 3. Infants that are baptized which have no other sin but original and who never consented to it nor obeyed it in the lusts thereof do dye Rom. 5. 14. therefore it must needs be sin and may be truly and properly so called for sin is the only cause of death Rom. 5. 12. Whatever holdeth not conformity with the rule of righteousnesse the law of God is sin it hath the nature of sin in its irregularity and defect of good and the effects of sin 2. The Scripture expressely teacheth us that this concupiscence even in the regenerate these evil motions that rise in us though we consent not unto them though we resist them are yet a swerving from the law of God and a breach of it Luke 10. 27. nay in the regenerate this corruption of our nature doth not only swerve from the law of God but opposeth and resisteth the Spirit of God Rom. 7. 23. Gal. 5. 17. therefore it must needs be sin This argument convinced Pauls conscience Rom. 7. 7. He means those motions unto evil which the heart doth not delight in nor consent unto When the Apostle saith Rom. 6. Let not sin reign in your mortall bodies By sin saith their Cardinal Bellarmine all men understand concupiscence and Ribera on Heb. 12. 1. saith That by sin the Apostle understandeth concupiscence calling it so with an article 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is the sin a note of singularity Cajetan in Rom. 7. calleth it formally a sin Vide Cassand Consult art 2. Tit. de Concupisc p. 4. The proper definition of sin being this a transgression of Gods law therefore concupiscence is sin see Exod. 20. 17. Object Cant 4. 7. Iohn 13. 10. Ezek. 36. 25. Ephes. 14. Therefore the regenerate have no sin left in them Answer The Church in this present world is said to be all fair as it wholly shines with its Spouses beauty which it puts on Concupiscence in respect of its own nature is a sin but in respect of the person who is a party regenerate in whom the guilt is pardoned it is as no sin When the Fathers say that lust is taken away in the regenerate they understand according to the guilt not the thing 3. Original sin after Baptism is not done away children are perverse death cannot seize where there is no sin How comes it to passe that infants baptized die before they come to actual offending if Baptism have abolished in them their original stain 4. The Virgin Mary was not conceived without original sin in her song she rejoyceth in God her Saviour Luke 1. 47. 2. 22. Christ came to save that which was lost Matth. 18. 11. See Iob 14. 4 1 Cor. 15. 22. Rom. 5. 12 16. 3. 9. Gal. 3. 22. All the ancient Fathers as far as we can learn out of their Writings believed that the blessed Virgin Mary was conceived in original sin Vide Rivet de Patrum autoritate c. 7. Daille Of the right use of the Fathers l. 2. c. 6. The Dominicans generally hold that she was conceived in sin All are infected with Adams sin 1. The Heathens Pagans Infidels Rom. 1. 18 21 24 26 28 to the last 2. The Jews Rom. 2. latter end 3. Christians Rom. 3. from 9. to 19. 4. Infants Rom. 5. 12 13. They are innocent in respect of actual transgression not in respect of original pollution are born blinde lame 5. Children of beleeving parents All men are equally guilty of original sin 1. In reference to Adam Rom. 5. 12 14. 2. They are equally deprived of Gods image Rom. 3. 9 11. Reprobate to every good work 3. Are equally depraved and corrupted Rom. 3. 12 13 14. Reasons 1. All men are equally in Adam one was not more in his loyns then another Rom. 5. 12 19. 2. All men equally partake of
of God coessential coequal and coeternal with his Father or that we have remission of sins by the effusion of his bloud They therefore who first hold pestilent Heresies and secondly who when before they professed the Christian Religion and held the truth have yet made a direction from the same to such Heresies and thirdly who labour to infect others and fourthly being convicted do yet obsti nately persevere in them and in the manner before mentioned such are and ought say some worthy Protestants to be punished by the Christian Magistrate with death They reason thus from the Office of the Magistrate Every Magistrate may and ought to punish offenders and the more pernicious the offenders are the more hamous ought the punishment to be That the Magistrate is both custos ac vindex utriusque tabulae these two Scriptures do plainly evince For he is the Minister of God to thee for good but i● thou do what is evil be afraid for he beareth not the sword in vain for he is the Minister of God a revenger to execute wrath upon him that doth evil Rom. 13. 4. 1 Tim. 2. 2. For Kings and all that are in Authority that we may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all godliness and honesty and are urged by Calvin Beza and divers others to this very purpose For if saith Beza the Magistrate have not power over Hereticks one of these two things must necessarily follow either that Hereticks do not do ill or that what Paul speaks in general must be restrained to a certain kinde of evil deeds viz. to corporal sins Ubi lex non distinguit nec non distinguere debemus From 1 Tim. 2. 2. both Melancthon and Beza collect that the Magistrate is constituted by God not onely a preserver of the second Table but also and especially of pure Religion and the external Discipline of it and so a punisher also of the offences against it Godliness and honesty makes Kings Guardians of both Tables as well of the first which containeth the worship of God as of the second which is the fountain of publick honesty D. Hampton on Luk. 22. 24 25. Vide Episc. Rosseus de potestate Papae in rebus temporal lib. 2. c. 14. pag. 460. That Magistrate which takes care onely of honesty doth but one and the least part of his duty See 2 Chron. 17. 7 8 9. For the inforcing of this Argument from these two Scriptures these Reasons may be added 1. The sins against the first Table Caeteris paribus are greater then those against the second Table and the Magistrate is more to respect the glory of God then the peace of the Commonwealth Heresies and corruptions in judgement are held by a Reverend Divine to be worse then corruptions in manners his reason is taken out of Levit. 13. 44. one that was leprous in his head was utterly unclean There was a special dishonour put on him that had the leprosie in his head there 45. v. compare with Mic. 3. 7. 2. Errours and Heresies are called in Scripture Evil deeds 2 Ioh. v. 10 11. and Hereticks Evil doers Phil. 3. 2. Divines generally hold that such who erre blasphemously are to be put to death such as Arius and Servetus in France One saith the Devil will think he hath made a good bargain if he can get an universal liberty for removal of the Prelacy That which Ierome wrote to Augustine Quod signum majoris gloriae est omnes Haeretici te detestantur may be applied to those of our times who have been Champions for the truth such evil doers will malign them but if they mannage well so good a cause it will bear them out Ierome was famous for confuting the Heresies of his times for writing against Helvidius Iovinian Vigilantius th● Luciferians and Pelagians Origen shews great learning in writing against Celsus Basil opposing Eunomius Cyprians writings against Novatus and Hilaries against Constantius deserves praise Austine wrote excellently against Pelagius and Gaudentius the Arians Manichees Quis unquam saith one in Ecclesia paulo eruditior post ortam novam haeresin reticuit Ea demum vera militia Christiana est haereses expugnare THE CONTENTS BOOK I. Of the SCRIPTURES Chap. 1. OF Divinity in general Pag. 1 Chap. 2. Of the Divine Authority of the Scriptures Pag. 5 Chap. 3. Of the Books of Scripture Pag. 28 Chap. 4. Of the New Testament Pag. 40 Chap. 5. Of the Books called Apocrypha Pag. 54 Chap. 6. Of the Authentical Edition of the Scriptures Pag. 58 Chap. 7. Of the Seventy and Vulgar Translation Pag. 75 Chap. 8. Of the Properties of the Scripture Pag. 81 Chap. 9. Of the Interpretation of Scripture Pag. 105 BOOK II. Of GOD. Chap. 1. That there is a God Pag. 121 Chap. 2. What God is Pag. 132 Chap. 3. That God is a Spirit Simple Living Immortal Pag. 136 Chap. 4. That God is Infinite Omnipresent Eternal Pag. 142 Chap. 5. That God is Immutable Pag. 150 Chap. 6. That God is Great in his Nature Works Authority a necessary Essence Independent wholly One. Pag. 152 Chap. 7. Of Gods Understanding that he is Omniscient and of his Will Pag. 160 Chap. 8. Of Gods Affections his Love Hatred Pag. 167 Chap. 9. Of the Affections of Anger and Clemency given to God metaphorically Pag. 170 Chap. 10. Of Gods Virtues particularly of his Goodness Pag. 172 Chap. 11. Of Gods Grace and Mercy Pag. 175 Chap. 12. Of Gods Iustice Truth Faithfulnes Pag. 181 Chap. 13. Of Gods Patience Long-suffering Holiness Kindeness Pag. 186 Chap. 14. Of Gods Power Pag. 191 Chap. 15. Of Gods Glory and Blessedness Pag. 194 Chap. 16. Of the Trinity or Distinction of Persons in the Divine Essence Pag. 204 BOOK III. Of GODS Works Chap. 1. Of Gods Decree and especially of Predestination and the parts thereof Election and Reprobation Pag. 216 Chap. 2. The Execution of Gods Decree Pag. 225 Chap. 3. Of the Creation of the Heavens the Angels the Elements Light Day and Night Pag. 233 Chap. 4. Of some of the Meteors but especially of the Clouds the Rain and the Sea the Rivers Grass Herbs and Trees Pag. 243 Chap. 5. Of the Sun Moon and Stars Pag. 258 Chap. 6. Of the Fishes Fowls Beasts Pag. 261 Chap. 7. Of the Angels good and bad Pag. 268 Chap. 8. Of Man Pag. 288 Chap. 9. Of Gods Providence Pag. 295 BOOK IV. Of the Fall of Man Of Sin Original and Actual Chap. 1. Of the Fall of Man Pag. 303 Chap. 2. What original Corruption is Pag. 308 Chap. 3. Of the propagation of original sinne and conclusions from it Pag. 313 Chap. 4. Of actual sin Pag. 315 Chap. 5. Of the evil of sin Pag. 318 Chap. 6. Of the degrees of sin Pag. 321 Chap. 7. That all sins are mortal Pag. 324 Chap. 8. Of the cause of sin Pag. 326 Chap. 9. Of the communicating with other mens sins Pag. 328 Chap. 10. Of the punishment of sin Pag.
confirmed by King Iames Daemonol l. 2. c. 6. B. Carletons Examinat of Sir Christ. Heyd Book c. 5. Saul was convinced of the evil of Witchcraft his zeal ran out against Witches yet after he himself went to a Witch The End of the fourth Book THE FIFTH BOOK OF MANS RECOVERY BY CHRIST Wherein are handled His Names Titles Natures Offices and twofold Estate of Humiliation and Exaltation CHAP. I. Of Mans Recovery SECONDLY Mans Restauration or Recovery from his miserable estate that he had plunged himself to by sin 1. What this Recovery is 2. The causes and parts of it Of the first It is a part of Gods special Providence whereby man is recovered out of the state of Sinne and slavery to Satan Death and Hell to an estate of Grace Life and Glory Death and sin entred by the first Adam the second Adam brought life and immortality to light by the Gospel Rom. 3. 24 25. Rom. 5. 18 19. 1 Cor. 15. 22. God still delighted to deal with a common person in the name of all the rest in both the Covenants there was a principal contracting party a common representee Adam in the Covenant of Works Christ in the Covenant of Grace either of these was to communicate his estate to his posterity Both these were common parents authors of life to their seed 1 Cor. 15. 45 49. But they differed 1. In the Dignity of their persons Adam was a holy man yet but an earthly creature Christ is the Lord from heaven See Rom. 5. 15 16 17. 2. In the Degree of the publick Office Adam was a common person but not a Surety for them Christ was a Surety Heb. 7. 22. able to give his a new heart 3. In the Manner of Representation Adam took nothing from us and conveyed nothing to us but sinne Christ took sinne from us made our transgressions to be his and his obedience is become ours 2 Cor. 5. 21. This work of mans recovery is Gods Master-piece all other designs are subordinate to this all his Attributes shine out in this God manifested great love to man at the first in making him happy in stamping his Image on him and in making himself his end but he discovered greater love in the work of redemption Iohn 3. 16. He discovered great power in creating the world of nothing but greater in mans recovery it is greater power to restore a creature when fallen then to uphold it at the first all other acts of power were but over the creature this was over his Son Iohn 10. 18. never was there such an act of grace to take the creature into personal Union with the God-head Zech. 13. 7. God discovered great wisdom in making the creatures and in his Law but that prescribed not a way how to satisfie God and sanctifie man and that so easily Heb. 2. 12. See Rom. 11. 33. He declared also his Holinesse and Justice rather then sin should go unpunished his own Son was punished 2. The Cause of it It comes wholly and onely from the free grace and favour of God Ephes. 2. 8. By grace you are saved through faith not of your selves it is the gift of God The ground of mans restitution was the bringing in of the second Covenant God vouchsafing to deal with man as a rational creature was pleased to deal with him in way of a Covenant the Covenant of Works being broken and it being impossible to enter into heaven that way Rom. 8. 3. God made a new and better Covenant called the Covenant of Grace of which Isaiah Ieremiah and Ezekiel speak This is the way of Gods bringing lost man to life and happinesse by a Mediator The first Covenant was Gods way of bringing man to life by his obedience The righteousnesse required to bring a man to life in the second Covenant is not his own righteousnesse but the righteousnesse of a Mediator 1. This Covenant of Grace was ever one and the same Christ the same yesterday to day and for ever all that obtain life obtain it the self same way The same Covenant that was revealed to Adam when he sin'd was revealed after to Abraham and Noah the Prophets and to us 2. Although for substance this Covenant be one and the same in all ages yet the external administrations of it were different in one manner before Christ exhibited in another after Then it was administred by Prophecies Promises Sacrifices T●pes Shadows after Christ exhibited in the flesh it was administred only in the Ordinances of preaching and the Sacraments Their Types Shadows Sacrifices Washing Circumcision eating rosted Lambs held out the same Christ that our Sacraments hold out 3. The Administration of the Covenant of Grace since Christ was exhibited is far more glorious theirs was called the old Covenant ours the new one This lies in three things 1. It is more universal a great while the other was onely in Abrahams family and after appropriated to the Nations of the Jews and some that turned Proselytes now the utmost isles of the world see the salvation of God 2. Now the Covenant of Grace is revealed more clearly the things about Christ were then dark babes may now understand those things that their Doctors did not 3. A greater measure of Grace and Holinesse is now communicated 3. The parts of this Recovery are two saith Mr Richardson 1. The work of Mans redemption 2. The Application of it The work of Redemption is the purchasing of man from his undone condition by a Redeemer or Mediator or the Recovery of man from his estate of sinne and misery by a full price paid for him by a Redeemer 2. The Application of it is whereby it is made ours by imputation These two are joyned together Iohn 3. 16. Mark 16. 16. The one of these is the Sufficiency of mans Recovery the other the Efficiency Paul and Peter speak often of a price paid for us I shall therefore shew 1. Who this Redeemer is that hath paid this price for us 2. What the price is that he hath paid for us Our Lord Jesus Christ Immanuel the Word made flesh God and man united in one Person is the Person The price that he hath paid was the subjecting of himself in our stead to do what we should have done and suffer what we should else have undergone Mat. 18. 11. Luk 19. 10. Rom. 3. 24 25. 1 Tim. 5. 15. All the Ceremonies and Sacrifices under the Law had relation to Christ they were but the shadow and he was the body First The Nazarite must be sanctified in his mothers womb to signifie that Jesus the true Nazarite should be conceived without sinne in the womb of the Virgin Secondly His two Natures were signified by the Goat that was killed and the Scape-goat and by the two Sparrows the one killed and the other let go His Offices of King and Priest typed by the High-priests Crown Garments and Ornaments His Death by the Sacrifices and his lifting up
2. 24. There is a justification 1. Ad Regnum which brings one into the state of Grace of which Paul speaks 2. In Regno Abraham was justified by works and he was called the friend of God of that Iames speaks Sanctification is of the same time with Justification but Justification doth in order of nature go before it for all the graces of Sanctification are bestowed on a man as in Christ Ephes. 1. 3. so one God made man a holy creature he was peculiarly devoted to Gods service when man fell the devil defiled this Temple God departed from us he a●ain cleanseth away this filth and repaireth his image in us * Loc. Commun Class 1. c. 11. There is a total change of the whole man the Mind Rom. 12. 2. Spirit Ezek. 36. 26. Heart Deut. 10. 26. Conscience Heb. 9. 14. Will Phil. 2. 13 Affections Gal. 5. 24. The body it self Col. 2. 11. Rom. 6. 12. Christ is our Sanctification three several wayes 1. Meritoriously he hath purchased it from God by his being an offering for all our defilement 2. As he is the exemplar or copy of it 3. He is by his Spirit the efficient cause that brings into the soul the vertue of his Death to kill sinne and of his Resurrection whereby his life is communicated to us See Dr Willet on Exod. 30. 34. Impuritas uniuscujusque rei consistit in hoc quòd rebus vilioribus immiscetur Non enim dicitur argentum esse impurum ex permixtione auri per quam melius redditur sed ex permixtione plumbi vel stanni Aquinas 2a 2ae Quaest. 7. Artic. 2. Puritan in the mouth of a Drunkard doth mean a sober man in the mouth of an Arminian it means an Orthodox man in the mouth of a Papist it is a Protestant and so it is spoken to shame a man out of all Religion It hath been an old custom of the world to hate and maligne the righteous to reproach them to call them Puritans though very Heathens have acknowledged that there is no Religion without purity Cicero Horace and others describing a man that is religious say that he is an entire man a man pure from sinne Mr Fenner on John 3. 20. See Mr Burrh on Hos. 2. 5. pag. 307. There is 1. A beauty in holinesse 1. Every grace is an ornament 1 Pet. 5 5. See Psal. 45. 1● 14 16. Ezek. 8. 14. 2. Holinesse is called a new Creation Eph. 2. 10. A Resurrection Ephes. 4. 5. 3. Sinne is a deformity 2 Pet. 3. 14 filthinesse it self 2 Cor. 7. 1. Ephes. 5. 27. Corruptio optimi pessima sinne is not only malum triste but turpe 2. This beauty of holinesse consists in four things 1. It is a conformity to the image of God 2 Cor. 3. 18. 2. Beauty consists in indeficiency when no part is wanting 1 Thess. 5. 23. 2 Tim. 3. 17. they are in parts perfect as children though not in degree 3. Beauty consists in a symmetry a due proportion of parts the understanding guides the man the will submits to the dictates of an enlightened understanding the affections are subject to the command of reason John 11. 33. 4. There is a lustre in beauty the Spirit of grace is called the oyl of gladnesse Psal. 45. 7. because it makes the face to shine Sincerity is the harmony and zeal the lustre or varnish of all graces Psal. 42. 11. 3. There is that beauty in holinesse which is not to be found in any thing here below 1. It is in the inward man 1 Pet. 3. 3. Absolom though outwardly beautifull was inwardly deformed 2. This commends a man to God 1 Pet. 3. 3 4. 3. All other beauty will decay by sicknesse or old-age not this Prov. 31. 30. 4. This prepares you for the wedding the time of this life is the time of Espousals the Marriage shall be in the life to come Revel 19. 7. Holinesse is the image of Christ. Sin is wounded at our first conversion Rom. 6. 13 14. but this work is carried on by degrees till it be utterly extinct Rom. 6. sin is called the the old man for its weaknesse and decay See 1 Thess. 5. 22 23. Anno Christ● 1262. exorta est secta Flagellantium qui ingenti turba obe●ntes pagos oppida nudi umbilico tenus facie tect a sese flagellis cruentabant manfit hic mos Romae ubi septimana quae diom Paschatis proximè antecedit poenitentes longo ordine nudis seapulis larvata facie publicè se diverberant flagellis Quem morem ipsi vidimus Lutetiae sub Henrico tertio Homines ad furorem usque superstitiosi nesciunt Deum amare immutationem cordium non verò dilaniationem corporum Molinaei Hyperaspistes lib. 1. cap. 29. Vide Novar Schediasm Sac. prophan lib. 1. cap. 22. They are hostes naturae not peccati Sin 1. abuseth us Man being in honour continued not a wicked man is called a vile person Psa. 15. 2. It de●iles us and stains all our actions Tit. 1. 15. 3. Deceives us Heb. 3. 12. Ephes. 4. 22. 4. It keeps away all good Isa. 9 2. 5. It lets in all evil Jer. 2. 19. The death of Christ is useful for mortifying of sin 1. By way of representation it shews us the hatefulnesse of sin Isa. 53. 10. Consider his agony and sorrow on the Crosse though sin was but imputed to him 1 Cor. 5. 21. 2. By way of irritation it stirs up in the soul a displicency against sin Isa. 43. 24. shall sin live that made Christ die 3. By way of pattern and example therefore the Scripture often expresseth our Mortification by our crucifying Gal. 2. 20. 5. 24. 6. 14. Of all deaths crucifying is the most painful and shameful it notes that sorrow and shame which Christians feel in the remembrance of sinne that which was done really in Christ must be done in us by analogy Phil. 3. 10. 4. By way of merit Christ shed his bloud to redeem u● 1. From the world Gal. 1. 4. that it might not be so pleasing an object 2. From our vain conversation 1 Pet. 2. 24. Grace is a part of Christs purchase as well as pardon 5. By way of stipulation and ingagement Christ ●●ood as a Surety before Gods Tribunal He was Gods Surety and ours on Gods part he undertook to bestow on us not only remission of sins but the Spirit of God to become a principle of life to us and of death to our corruptions Rom. 8. 13. 1 John 3. 19. on our part he undertook that we should no longer serve sin Rom. 6. 13. About means of mortification of sin See Mr Hilders on Psal. 51. 5. Lect. 64 65 66 67. Spiritual life is that supernatural grace by which the whole man is disposed to live to God 1. A supernatural grace because it comes from our union with Christ Joh. 6. 57. 2. By which one is disposed to live to God Gal. 2. 20. The supream or fundamental principle of spiritual
acceptation of persons and then of services There must be an acceptation of the person in reference to his service as well as state The service must 1. Flow from a regenerate nature and act John 3. 6. 2. Must be agreeable to a rule prescribed 3. The matter of it must be good to give alms is good but they must be of our own Ephes. 4. 28. 4. The means must be good it was ill done of Iacob to get the blessing by a lie 5. The ground of undertaking it must be good Jer. 23. 21. * The holy ends of service are mainly three 1. To please God Col. 1. 5. 2. To glorifie him Joh. 17. 4. 3. To enjoy Communion with him Heb. 10. 22. One should be equally prepared for the Lords Supper as for death Sacramentum articulus mortis aequiparantur say the Casuists Downam in loc Try how thou standest in the grace of God Calvin Judge thy life exactly Theod. Bring all things to the rule Morton Hoc dicit quia per schismata prostrata ●ra● Ecclesiae disciplina Ne credite inquit etiamsi Ecclesiae judicia essent impune vos laturos contemptum mysteriorum Grot. Examination is necessary 1. That we may know our estate 2 Our interest in Christ Job 8. 20. We must try whether we have spiritual life before we look after spiritual nourishment Isa. 1. 16. Jer. 17. 9. No man can come so worthily as he ought nor so fit as he ought 2 Chron. 30. 18 19 20 21. The benefit of the Sacrament is pro ratione fidei communicantium Origen Qui●quid 〈◊〉 〈…〉 ad 〈…〉 Corruptio op●imi p●ssim●● m●rs ●●● malis vita bonis Aq●●n ●eus erit corporis s●nguinis Christi violati Jerom. Par fecit quasi Christum trucidaret Heb. 6. 6 10 ●9 Grotius Dici●●r teneri reus corporis Domini qui illud est aspernatus ut Apo●●olus ipse explicat versu 29. Beza Be●●ay Christ as Iudas Theodoret Guilty of murthering him as the Jews Aquinas Iudas betrayed and the Jews murthered Christs body when he was abased we abuse it now he is glorified 2. They did it ignorantly we wilfully This sinne of unworthy receiving is Peccatum contra remedium universale contra medicinam unicam contra consolationem vitam animarum Id est edendo ac bibendo damnationem in se a●●ersit Quod per se salutare est in v●nenum ip●i vertitur Grot. Mat. 3. 8. Mat. 10. 11. 22. 8. Ephes. 4. 1. Indignè id est aliter quam dignum est tanta mysteria tractari Beza Certain Dona●ists saith Optatus lib. 2. casting the holy Sacrament to dogs were themselves devoured as dogs A Bachelour of Arts being Popishly affected at the time of the Communion took the consecrated bread and forbearing to eat it conveyed and kept it closely for a time and afterwards threw it over the wall of the Colledge but a short time after not enduring the torment of his guilty conscience he threw himself headlong over the battlements of the Chappel and some few hours after ended his life B. Morton l. 5. of the Masse c. 3. Sect. 6. He saith there he saw it it was one Sir Booth of St Iohn Colledge in Cambridge Cyprian Serm. 5. de lapsis hath two Stories of some that came to the Sacrament and did latenter accipere secretly receive to one the Minister gave the bread he took it but it stuck in his throat Gladium sibi samens non cibum The other took it but when he came to eat it he had ashes in his hand Alius qui ipse maculatus sacrificio a sac●rdote celebrato partem cum caeteris ausus est latenter accipere sanctum Domini edere contrectare non potuit cinerem ferre se apertis manibus invenit Gen. 22. 4 5. Num. 9. 10 13 Psal. 103. 1. See in M. Dod on the Sacrament a Catalogue of the sins against every Commandment and D. Wilkins his Discourse concerning the gift of prayer ch 8 9 10 11 12 13. The soul and all the powers of it must be given to God and that with preheminence above all other things and in all fulnnesse of perfection So far as he may be their object God is not to be hated Episc. Daven de justitia actuali Luk. 13. 3 5. John 3. 36. * Rom. 7. 13. It comes from the Devil it is called his work and wicked men are termed the children of Belial See John 6. 44. We should be especially humbled for original corruption Psal. 51. 5. Jam. 1. 14. All humiliation ariseth out of a sense of our own vilenesse and Gods displeasure the Law discovers that as well as actual sinne Consider 1 The greatnesse of the sinne Ratione quidditatis formalitatis ratione causalitatis it is the cause of all actual sins Ratione virtualitatis potentialitatis ratione eminentiae it is the first of that kinde 2. Think of David and Paul how they were troubled with it we have as great cause to be humbled as they 3. Think of the holinesse of God he is essentially holy as we are naturally sinful 4. Take some time to view thy self in the glasse of the Law Rom. ● 20. that is a copy of Gods holinesse go from Commandment to Commandment The end of the Sacrament is to keep in memory the great things Christ hath suffered for us 1 Cor. 11 24. See Exod. 12. 17 26. * Licet plagarum numerum in Christi flagellatione excesserint ministri quem Hebraei ex lege servabant ut ob id non Hebraeorum more sed Romanorum flagellatum Christum plerique dixerint quod tamen columnae fuerit alligatus etiam Hebraeorum morem consuetudinemque redolet quod miror posse in dubium revocari Novar Sched Sac prophan l. 1. c. 21. Not barely to go over the history of his passion but to get our hearts affected with his sufferings Lam. 1. 12. Zech. 12. 10. We must not leave meditating on Christs love till he be Totus fixus in corde qui totus fixus fuit in cruce Bern. There is 1. An historical remembrance of Christ when we look upon the death of Christ as of an innocent person and not on Gods design in it Luk. 23. 28. 2. Doctrinal or dogmatical this only rests in generals 3. Applicative Phil. 3. 8 10. not only look on Christ crucified but finde our selves crucified with him The historical remembrance is an act of fancy the doctrinal of reason this of faith 1. We should remember what Christ endured we deserved Isa. 53. 5. 2. There is no sinne light that was so heavy on Christ Matth. 27. 46. he mourned for our sins and shall not we our selves mourn and throw away those sins that stabbed him to the heart Certè patientem Christum nemo luget veriùs quàm qui ea ob quae passus est Christus odisse incipit Drexel Aetern prod c. 2. Sect. 23. 3. It is a great matter to recover a lost sinner 4 We should
329 Chap. 11. Signs of a Christian in regard of sin and that great corruptions may be found in true Christians Pag. 332 Chap. 12. Two Questions resolved about sin Pag. 335 Chap. 13. Of the Saints care to preserve themselves from sin and especially their own iniquities Pag. 336 Chap. 14. Of the cause of forbearing sinne of abhorring it and of small sins Pag. 338 Chap. 15. Of some particular sins and especially of Ambition Apostacy Backsliding Blasphemy Boasting Bribery Pag. 339 Chap. 16. Of carnal confidence Covetousness Cruelty Cursing Pag. 348 Chap. 17. Of Deceit Distrust Divination Division Drunkennesse Pag. 352 Chap. 18. Of Envy Error Flattery Gluttony Pag. 357 Chap. 19. Of Heresie Hypocrisie Idleness Impenitence Injustice Intemperance Pag. 361 Chap. 20. Of Lying Malice Murmuring Oppression Pag. 366 Chap. 21. Of Perjury Polygamy Pride Pag. 368 Chap. 22. Of Railing Rebellion Revenge Scandall Schism Pag. 372 Chap. 23. Of Sedition Self-love Self-seeking Slander Pag. 377 Chap. 24. Of Tale-bearing Vain-glory Violence Unbelief Unkindness Unsetledness Unthankefulness Usury Pag. 381 Chap. 25. Of Witchcraft Pag. 387 BOOK V. Of Mans Recovery by CHRIST Chap. 1. Of Mans Recovery Pag. 389 Chap. 2. Of Christ. I. His Person Pag. 394 Chap. 3. Of Christs being Man Pag. 396 Chap. 4. Of Christs Offices Pag. 404 Chap. 5. Of Christs double state of Humiliation and Exaltation Pag. 424 Chap. 6. Of Christs Exaltation Pag. 438 BOOK VI. Of the Church the Spouse of Christ and Antichrist the great enemy of Christ. Chap. 1. Of the Church of Christ. Pag. 447 Chap. 2. Of Pastors Pag. 454 Chap. 3. Of Ecclesiastical Iurisdiction and Government Pag. 466 BOOK VII Of our Union and Communion with Christ. Chap. 1. Of our Union with Christ. Pag. 485 Chap. 2. Of Effectual Vocation Pag. 489 Chap. 3. Of Conversion and Free-will Pag. 491 Chap. 4. Of Saving Faith Pag. 499 Chap. 5. Of the Communion and Fellowship Be●ievers have with Christ and their Benefits by him specially of Adoption Pag. 510 Chap. 6. Of Iustification Pag. 512 Chap. 7. Of the parts and terms of Iustification Remission of sins and Imputation of Christs Righteousness Pag. 519 Chap. 8. Of the Imputation of Christs Righteousness Pag. 522 Chap. 9. Whether one may be certain of his Iustification Pag. 524 Chap. 10. Whether Faith alone doth justify Pag. 528 Chap. 11. Of Sanctification Pag. 530 Chap. 12. The parts of Sanctification are two Mortification and Vivification I. Mortification Pag. 535 Chap. 13. II. Of Vivification Pag. 537 Chap. 14. The Sanctification of the Whole Soul and Body Pag. 540 Chap. 15. Of the Sanctification of the Will Pag. 542 Chap. 16. Of the Sanctification of the Conscience Pag. 544 Chap. 17. Sanctification of the Memory Pag. 546 Chap. 18. Sanctification of the Affections Pag. ib. Chap. 19. Of the particular Affections Pag. 549 Chap. 20. I. Of the Simple Affections Pag. 551 Chap. 21. II. Of Love and Hatred Pag. 555 Chap. 22. II. Desire and Flight Pag. 558 Chap. 23. Ioy and Sorrow Pag. 561 Chap. 24. Of Sorrow Pag. 565 Chap. 24. Of Hope and Fear I. Of Hope Pag. 568 Chap. 25. II. Of Fear and some mixed affections Pag. 571 Chap. 27. Of the sensitive Appetite Pag. 579 Chap. 28. Of the Sanctification of mans body and all the external Actions Pag. 580 Some special Graces deciphered Pag. 584 BOOK VIII Of Ordinances or Religious Duties Chap. 1. Something general of the Ordinances Pag. 605 Chap. 2. Of ordinary religious Duties first Of Hearing the Word Pag. 607 Chap. 3. Of Singing Psalms Pag. 609 Chap. 4. Of Prayer Pag. 611 Chap. 5. The sorts and kindes of Prayer Pag. 625 Chap. 6. Of the Lords Prayer Pag. 637 Chap. 7. Of the Sacraments Pag. 655 Chap. 8. Of Baptism Pag. 662 Chap. 9. Of the Lords Supper Pag. 678 Chap. 10. Of the Masse Pag. 700 Chap. 11. Of extraordinary religious Duties Fasting Feasting and Vows I. Of Fasting Pag. 735 Chap. 12. II. Holy Feasting or religious Thanksgiving Pag. 739 Chap. 13. Of a Religious Vow Pag. 740 BOOK IX Of the Moral Law Chap. 1. Some things general of the Commandments Pag. 749 And the ten Commandments in so many Chapters following BOOK X. Of Glorification Chap. 1. Of the General Resurrection Pag. 857 Chap. 2. Of the Last Iudgement Pag. 859 Chap. 3. Of Hell or Damnation Pag. 864 Chap. 4. Of Everlasting Life Pag. 868 THE FIRST BOOK OF THE Scriptures CHAP. I. Of Divinity in General IN the Preface or Introduction to Divinity six things are to be considered 1. That there is Divinity 2. What Divinity is 3. How it is to be taught 4. How it may be learnt 5. Its opposites 6. The Excellency of Divine Knowledge I. That there is Divinity That is a Revelation of Gods will made to men is proved by these Arguments 1. From the natural light of Conscience in which we being unwilling many footsteps of heavenly Knowledge and the divine Will are imprinted 2. From the supernatural light of Grace for we know that all Divine Truths are fully revealed in Scripture 3. From the nature of God himself who being the chiefest good and therefore most Diffusive of himself must needs communicate the Knowledge of himself to reasonable creatures for their Salvation Psal. 119. 68. 4. From the end of Creation for God hath therefore made reasonable creatures that he might be acknowledged and celebrated by them both in this life and that which is to come 5. From common Experience for it was alwayes acknowledged among all Nations that there was some Revelation of Gods will which as their Divinity was esteemed holy and venerable whence arose their Oracles and Sacrifices II. What Divinity is The Ambiguity of the Word is to be distinguished Theology or Divinity is two-fold either first Archetypal or Divinity in God of God himself by which God by one individual and immutable act knows himself in himself and all other things out of himself by himself Or second Ectypal and communicated expressed in us by Divine Revelation after the Patern and Idea which is in God and this is called Theologia de Deo Divinity concerning God which is after to be defined It is a Question with the Schoolmen Whether Divinity be Theoretical or Practical Utraque sententia suos habet autores But it seems saith Wendeline rather to be practical 1. Because the Scripture which is the fountain of true Divinity exhorts rather to practice then speculation 1 Tim. 1. 5. 1 Cor. 8. 3. 13. 2. Iam. 1. 22 25. Revel 23. 24. hence Iohn so often exhorts to love in his first Epistle 2. Because the end of Divinity to which we are directed by practical precepts is the glorifying of God and the eternal salvation of our souls and bodies or blessed life which are principally practical Wendeline means I conceive that the blessed life in Heaven is spent practically which yet seems to be otherwise Peter du Moulin in his Oration in the praise of Divinity thus
the guilt of our sins was upon him He loves his people 1. Before conversion Amore benevolentiae with a love of good-will and of pity which is properly shewed to one in misery Ezek. 16. 5. 2. After Conversion with a love 1. Of sympathy Isa. 63. 9. Heb. 4. 15. and 5. 2. 2. Of Complacency and delight Psal. 16. 10 11. that Psalm is a Prophecy of Christ see Ephes. 2. 5. This love of his delight is discovered four wayes 1. By his valuing of his people Since thou wast precious in my sight thou wast honorable 2. By his commendation of his Church and people as often in the Canticles 3. By his frequent visits Luke 1. 68. Rev. 3. 20. 4. By revealing his counsels to them Iohn 15. 15. 2. The effect or manner of Gods love is that God makes the person happy whom he loves For he doth amploy reward that joy and delight which he takes in the holinesse and obedience of the Elect while he pours plentifully upon them all gifts both of grace and glory This love of God to the Elect is 1. Free Hosea 15. 5. he was moved with nothing but his own goodnesse Ezek. 16. 8. 2. Sure firm and unchangeable Rom. 5. 8 10. 1 Iohn 4. 10. Iohn 13. 1. and 31. 3. Infinite and Eternal which shall never alter Iohn 3. 16. It is without cessation Psal. 27. 10. Diminution Cant. 8. 7. interruption Rom. 8. 35. to the end or alteration every created thing is imutable 3. Effectual as is declared both by his temporal and eternal blessings 1 Iohn 3. 1. Dei amare est bonum velle 4. Sincere It is a love without any mixture love and nothing but love This is the motive which perswades Gods to communicate himself and act for his people Isa. 63. 9. Rev. 3. 19. and hath no motive but it self Deut. 7. 6 7 8. 1 Iohn 4. 8. God hath no need of us or our love nor doth not advantage himself by loving us Iob 22. 2. 5. Great and ardent Iohn 3. 16. and 15. 13. Rom. 5. 6 7. God bestows pledges of his love and favor upon them whom he hath chosen and sometimes he sheds the sence of his love abroad in their hearts transforms us into his own image Cant. 4. 9. and 6. 5. see Zeph. 3. 17. We must love God Appreciativè love him above all things and in all Psal. 73. 24. Mat. 10. 37. Intensivè and Intellectivè with all our might and strength Affectu Effectu love him for himself and all things for the Lords sake else it is not 1. A Conjugal love 2. Not an equal love to love the gifts and not the giver We should love 1. All the Divine persons in the Trinity 1. The Father Ye that love the Lord hate evil 2. Christ for taking our nature upon him He gave himself to us and for us Cant. 5. 16. 3. The Holy Ghost for drawing our hearts to the knowledge of this great mystery Rom. 5. 5. 2. All the Divine properties and excellencies whereby God makes himself known to the sons of men Love him for his holiness Es. 6. beginning fidelity 1 Cor. 10. 13. Omniscience and Dominion The Scepter of thy Kingdom is a Righteous Scepter 3. We should love all his Ordinances Psal. 27. 4. and 84. beginning and all his discoveries to us in his word 2 Thess. 2. 10. We should expresse our love to him by our care in keeping his Commandments 1 Iohn 2. 3. Iohn 14. 25. and 15. 10. and earnest desire of his presence Psal. 4. 2 3. 2. Our love should be conformed to Gods in loving the Saints Psal. 16. 3. Gal. 6. 10. Iohn 3. 14. 1 Pet. 1. 21. and Christ above all desiring to be united to him 1 Cor. 5. 44. 1 Pet. 1. 8. 3. We should admire the love of God 1 Iohn 3. 1. For the sureness greatnesse and continuance of it it passeth our knowledge Ephes. 3. 19. he hath given his son for a price his spirit for a pledge and reserves himself for a reward That Tantus so great a God should love Tantillos so little creatures as we before we were Rom. 9. 11. tales when we were Enemies Rom. 5. 10. tantum so much Means to love God 1. Beg this love much of God in Prayer 2. Study much to know him his nature attributes excellencies 3. Labour to injoy communion with him 4. Mortifie other loves contrary to this inordinate self-love and love of the world 1 Iohn 2. 15. There are many promises made to the love of God 1. Of Temporal blessings Psal. 91. 14. Rom. 8. 28. 2. Spiritual all the comforts of the Gospel 1 Cor. 2. 9. 3. Of heavenly and eternal blessings Iames 1. 12. and 2. 5. 1. God is Maximè amabilis he is truly lovely 2. Consider the great benefits we receive from him Psal. 116. 12. 3. He desires us to love him Deut. 10 4. Mark 12. 33 4 This affection onely and joy abide for ever 1 Corinth 13. ult The second affection in God contrary to love is Hatred which is an act of the Divine will declining disproving and punishing of evil ' prevailing and reigning in the reasonable creature In which definition three things are to be noted 1. The object of Gods hatred 2. The cause and condition of the object hated 3. The effect of Gods hatred 1. The object of Gods hatred is the reasonable creature for that onely sins He hateth iniquity Psal. 71. 59. Hab. 1. 13. Prov 11. 1. and the creature which ob stinately and stubbornly persisteth in evil so that he doth rejoyce in the calamity and destruction thereof Psal. 11. 5. and 5. 6. Prov. 16. 5. 2. The cause and condition of the object hated is sin for which God abhors the delinquent creature onely the reasonable creature hath left his station and defiled himself with the filth of sin all the rest of the creatures whether brute beasts or insensible creatures persist in the state of goodnesse wherein they were created although perhaps not in the same degree of perfection and excellency for mans sin But although God cannot hate the creature unlesse as sinful yet not every degree of sin but a high measure of it makes the person hated It is true that God abhors the least sin yet he doth not abhor the persons of the godly in which are the reliques of sinne as he doth those of the wicked in whom sinne reigns 3. The effect of Gods hatred is to punish the person whom he hates Psal. 9. 11. whom when once it is rejected by God troops of evil do invade God both permitting and commanding and this actual hatred or outward manner of manifesting it it may not unfitly be referred to the Divine justice Hatred in God is a vertue and fruit of his justice and not a vicious passion Consider 1. The unsupportable horrors of conscience Prov. 18. 14. 2. The painful death of little children Rom. 5. 14. 3. How grievously God
whatsoever is amiable and gracious is so from him Gods Graciousnesse is that whereby he is truly amiable in himself and freely bountiful unto his creatures cherishing them tenderly without any defert of theirs Psal. 86. 15. and 111. 5. Gen. 43. 29. Pelagius taught that grace is given to men in respect of their merits Gratia Dei datur secundum merita nostra he said that Gods will had respect to merits foreseen for this Pelagius was condemned for an Heretique in three Synodes S ● Austin refuteth this error and referreth the matter to Gods will and purpose onely B. Carleton against Mountague Ch. 3. Vide Bellarm. de Gratia lib. arbitrio l. 6. c. 4 5 6. Iohn Scotus was the greatest Pelagian that lived in his time for it was he that brought in the doctrine of Meritum ex Congruo he teacheth that Faith Charity Repentance may be had ex puris naturalibus which some of the most learned Papists do confesse to be the true Doctrine of Pelagius Vide Bellarminum de Gratia libero arbitrio l. 6. c. 2. God is gracious to all Psal. 145. 8 9 10. but especially to such whom he doth respect in his well-beloved Son Jesus Christ Exod. 33. 19. Isa. 30. 19. Luke 1. 30. Gen. 6. 8. 1 Cor. 15. 10. Gods free favor is the cause of our salvation and of all the means tending thereunto Rom. 3. 24. and 5. 15 16. Ephes. 1. 5 6. and 2. 4. Rom. 9. 16. Titus 3. 5. Heb. 4. 16. Rom. 6. 23. 1 Cor. 12. 4 9. The gospel sets forth the freenesse fulnesse and the powerfulnesse of Gods grace to his Church therefore it is called The word of his grace Acts 14. 3. and 20. 32. The Gospel of the grace of God Acts 20. 24. Deus expandit gratiae immensum Coelum Luther Gods Graciousnesse is firm and unchangeable so that those which are once beloved can never be rejected or utterly cast off Psal. 77. 10. God bestoweth 1. Good things 2. Freely 3. Plentifully Psal. 111. 4. 4. In a special manner he is gracious toward the godly Love is 1. Grounded often on something which may deserve it the grace of God is that love of his which is altogether free 2. Grace is such a kinde of love as flows from a superiour to an inferior love may be in inferiors toward their superiors We should be also liberal in our services toward God in our prayers and good works We should desire and strive to obtain the grace and favor of God David often calleth on God to cause his face to shine upon him and to lift up the light of his countenance upon him The holy Patriarchs often desired to finde grace in the eyes of the Lord. It is better then life to him that hath it it is the most satisfying content in the world to have the soul firmly setled in the apprehension of Gods goodnesse to him in Christ. It will comfort and stablish the soul in the want of all outward things in the very hour of death 2. It is attainable Those that seek Gods face shall finde him Means of purchasing Gods favor 1. Take notice that your sins have worthily deprived you of his favour and presse these thoughts upon you till you feel your misery meditate on the Law to shew you your cursednesse 2. Consider of the gracious promises of the Gospel and see the grace of God in Christ. His grace was exceeding abundant saith the Apostle 3. Confesse and bewail your sins with a full purpose of amendment and cry to God for grace in Christ. 4. This stayes our hearts when we apprehend our own unworthinesse God is gracious and shews mercy to the undeserving the ill-deserving 2. We should acknowledge that all grace in us doth come from him the fountain of grace and should go boldly to the throne of grace and beg grace of him for our selves and others Heb. 4 16. Paul in all his Epistles saith Grace be unto you The Apostle Ephes. 1. 3. and so on speaks of Redemption Vocation Justification Glorification And all this saith he is to the praise of his glory and 12. 14. verses we should give God the praise of all He is the first cause and last end The Arminians will seem to say That all comes from grace and that faith is the grace of God but they say it is a power given to all and that God hath done alike for all onely some improve the power of reason and will better then others without any special discriminating grace from God then God is not the first cause that I believe it is the free working of God within me We should take heed of encouraging our selves in sin because God is gracious this is to turn Gods grace into wantonnesse We should frequent the Ordinances where God is graciously present and re●dy to bestow all his graces on us The word begets grace prayer increaseth it and the Sacraments seal it It refutes 1. The Papists which boast of their own merits By the grace of God I am that I am 1 Cor. 15. 10. Rom. 11. 6. By grace we are saved Ephes. 2. 8. They distinguish grace into that which is gratis data freely given as the work of miracles the gift of prophesying and that which is gratum faciens making us accepted as faith and love are graces making us accepted but the grace which maketh us accepted is freely given therefore they are not opposite members There is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Grace and the gift of grace they differ as the cause and the effect as Lux in sole and Lumen in aere one is in God subjectivè the other in man objectivè 2. The Arminians the Patrons of mans free will and enemies of Gods free-grace who say that a man may so far improve naturals as to merit grace and that God gives effectually grace to the wicked which shall never be saved to Iudas as well as Paul How is that effectual which moving men unto faith and repentance doth never bring them to one nor other it seems these Remonstrants never learnt this Lesson Arminio praeceptore for he defines effectual grace to be that qu● sortitur effectum which obtains the effect They say that a man without Gods grace may keep all the Commandments whereas Christ saith not as Augustine notes Iohn 15. 5. without me you can do little but Without me you can do nothing Never had the Church of God saith Dr. Featly in his Pelagius Redivivns 2. Parallel since the Apostle St. Paul a more valiant and resolute Champion of Grace then St. Augustine Pelagius would change himself into divers forms as is manifest by the History of him although sometimes he seems to restrain the whole operation of grace to external perswasions yet being pressed by Augustine and others both he and his disciples have often been compelled also to confesse the inward gifts of grace and the Holy
the repentance of Ahab 2. Of punishment by which he appointeth to the delinquent creature the punishment of eternal death for the least sinne Gen. 2. 17. Rom 6. 23. which death is begun in this life in divers kindes of miseties and punishments which for the most part are proportionable to their sins Gen. 3. 17. and 20. 18 but is perfected in the life to come when the full wrath of God is poured upon it Iohn 3. 36. 2 Thess. 1. 16. This justice is so essential to God immutable and as I may so speak inexorable that he cannot remit the creatures sins nor free them from punishment unlesse his justice be satisfied God cannot dispense against himself because sins do hurt the inward vertue of God and the rule of righteousnesse the integrity therefore and perfection of God cannot stand if he satisfie not that yet through his bounty and goodnesse he hath found out a way by which due satisfaction may be given thereunto viz. By Christ who hath born a punishnent equivalent to our sins for us The Scripture proves the justice of God 1. Affirmatively when it calls him Just A Revenger Holy Right and extols his Justice Exod. 9. 27. Psal. 11. 7 Ier. 12. 1. 2. Negatively when it removes from him injustice and iniquity respect of persons and receiving of gifts and also all the causes and effects of injustice Deut. 32. 4. 10. 17. Dan. 9. 14. Iob 8. 3. 3. Affectively when it Attributes to him zeal anger fury Exod. 20. 5. 32. 10. Numb 11. 10. which are not in God such passions as they be in us but an act of the immutable Justice 4. Symbolically when it calls him a consuming fire Deut. 4. 24. compares him to an angry Lyon an armed Souldier Isa. 38. 13. 5. Effectively when it affirms that he renders to every one according to his works 1 Sam. 26. 23. Gods Justice comprehends his righteousnesse and truth he is just in words and deeds Gods Justice is considered four ways 1. As he is free Lord of all and so his decrees are just Rom. 9. 13. 14. 2. As he is God of all and so the common works of preserving both the good and bad are just 1 Tim. 4. 14. Mat. 5. 45. 3. As a Father in Christ and so he is just in performing his promises and infusing his grace and in bestowing the justice of his Son 1 Iohn 1. 5. 4. As Judge of all the world and so his justice is not onely distributive but corrective His Justice is 1. Impartial he will not spare 1. Multitude all S●dome and Gomorrha and the old World perished 2. Great ones the excellency or greatnesse of any creature will not exempt it from punishment the Angels and Adam fell he spared not the Angels but threw them into hell Adam was cast out of Paradise for one sinne 3. Neernesse the Jews Gods people formerly are now cast off Moses and David were punished 2. General it extends to a mans posterity God will visit the iniquity of fathers upon their children 3. Inexorable no sinners can escape unpunished the sins of the godly are punished in their surety Christ and they are afflicted in this life God is Justice it self justice is essential to him his will is the rule of justice a thing is just because he willeth it and not he willeth it because its just He will right the wrongs of his children 2 Thess. 1. 6 7 8. He cannot be corrupted nor bribed Gods Justice comprehendeth two things under it 1. Equity in that he directs men equally and requites them equally commanding all and onely good things such as they in reason ought to do promising and threatning fit and due recompences of their obedience and disobedience 2. Truth whereby he declareth nothing to them but as the thing is and fidelity whereby he fulfilleth all that he hath spoken The Arminians urge How can God in Justice command a man by his word the performance of that which cannot be done by him without the inward help of the Spirit and yet in the mean time God denies this inward grace unto him God may without blemish to his Justice command man to perform his duty although he have now no strength to do it because once he had strength and he hath now lost it Precepts and Exhortations ordinarily signifie the approving w●ll of the Commander and his duty to whom they are propounded although sometimes the duty rather of the hearer then the will of the speaker be declared by them Rescrip Ames ad responsum Grevinch c. 12. Deus jubet aliqua quae non possumus ut noverimus quid ab illo petere debeamus Aug. de grat lib. arbit c. 16. Gods Commandments and Exhortations shew what he approves and wills to be done as good but his promises or threatnings shew what he intendeth effectually to bring to passe Mr. Pemble of Grace and Faith Da Domine quod jubes jube ●uid vis said Austin God giveth thee although thou be unable a Law to square thy life by for three causes Ut scias quid acceperis ut videas quid amiseris ut intelligas unde repetendum sit quod amiseris It reproves such as live in sin Exod. 34. 17. Psal. 5. 5. Gal. 6. 6. if God be merciful that he may be feared much more is he just that he may be feared 2. We must take heed of justifying the wicked we should be just in our actions to man in buying and selling in rewarding and punishing Magistrates Ministers Masters Parents should be just We should not murmure at Gods disposing justice in making us poor and should yield to his directing justice obeying his Commandments seem they never so unreasonable Mauritius the Emperor when his wife and children were murthered before him and his own eyes after bored out uttered this speech Iustus es Domine recta judicia tua We should get Christs righteousnesse to satisfie Gods Justice for us and to justifie us The consideration of Gods Justice should afright us from hypocrisie sinning in secret keeping bosom sins It ministers comfort to the godly who are wronged by the wicked they shall have an upright and just Judge who will uphold them in a good cause Psal. 33. 24. It may serve to exhort us to glorifie Gods Justice both in fulfilling of his promises and punishing wicked men Psal. 7. 18. and 51. 15. 4. God is True Truth or veracity is by which God is true as in himself so in his sayings and deeds He revealeth himself to his creature such a one as indeed he is Real truth or the truth of things is a property of them by which they are the same indeed which they seem It is an agreement betwixt the being and appearance of things it is double 1. Essential or of the very substance of things 2. Accidental of the qualities and actions of things and this as it is referred to the reasonable creature for
7. The object of it are some sinful men or the greatest part of sinful men which are called vessels of wrath fitted for destruction Rom. 9. 22. that there are more damned then saved is proved Matth. 20. 16. Matth. 7. 14. The end of reprobation is the declaration of Gods justice in punishing of sin There is no cause of reprobation in the Reprobate that they rather then others are passed by of God that is wholly from the unsearchable depth of Gods good pleasure but that damnation whereto they are adjudged is for their own sins There are five dreadful consequences of reprobation or preterition 1. Such whom God passeth by he never calls or not effectually calling is according to purpose 2. He deserts leaves them to follow their own corrupt lusts 3. Hardens them Rom. 9. 4. They shall prove Apostates 1 Tim. 2. 18. 5. They are liable to that dreadful sentence Matth. 25. 41. Obj. 1 Tim. 2. 4. Who will have all men to be saved Ans. That is God would have some of all sorts of men to be saved so all men is taken verse 1. Let prayers be made for all men that is all manner of men he instanceth in one kinde viz. Kings All is likewise here to be taken not pro singulis generum but pro gen●ribus singulorum So Austin expounded this place above a thousand yeers since All manner of men of all Nations and qualities All in this place doth not signifie universally every man in every age and condition but All opposed to the Jews onely all indefinitely and that in the times of the new Testament of which the Apostle speaketh Obj. 2 Pet. 3. 9 Not willing that any should perish but that all should come to repen tance therefore there is not an election of some and reprobation of others Ans. He speaks there onely of the Elect and he would have none of them to perish He speaks that for the comfort of the godly and includes himself amongst them long-suffering to us-ward therefore he means those in the same condition with himself He shews why God staies the execution of his wrath because all his Elect are not gathered See 1 Pet. 2. 8. There is nothing doth more set out the glory excellency and sufficiency of God then his Decree O the infinite depth of the wisdome of God which hath fore-seen decreed and determined with himself the innumerable things that ever did or shall come to passe We should not search into the depths of his counsels Deut. 29. 29. but in all things professe our dependance on him and refer all to his decree Psal. 37. 5. They are justly blamed that ascribe any thing to chance fate fortune or good luck as also such as are impatient under any crosse Admiring the methods of Gods eternal Counsel and the execution of it for the salvation of our souls will be a great part of our work in heaven That is a desperate inference If I be predestinated I shall be saved * though I neglect and scoff at sanctity God hath predestinated the means as well as the end he hath decreed us to be holy as well as happy 2 Pet. 1. 3. Ephes. 1. 4. Christ laid down his life not onely to save us from the guilt of our sins but to sanctifie us Tit. 2. 14. The Spirit of God is a Spirit of sanctification 2 Thess. 2. 13. In good things the Devil strives to sever the means from the end in evil the end from the means We must not reason whether we be predestinated but use the means prove our Election by our calling we should judge of our predestination not so much descendendo by prying into Gods secret Counsel as ascendendo by searching our own hearts It was good counsel that Cardinal Poole gave to one who asked him how he might most profitably reade the Epistle to the Romans He advised him first to reade the twelfth chapter to the end and then the beginning of the Epistle to the twelfth chapter Because in the twelfth chapter the Apostle falls on matter of duty and sanctification which is the onely way to attain to the knowledge of those great mysteries handled in the beginning of Predestination Take heed of abusing this Doctrine 1. Quarrel not with Gods justice because he hath determined not to give grace to some Rom. 9. 14. That any are saved it is from Gods mercy there can be no injustice in refusing when it is the meer mercy of God to take any as if of many Traitors the King spare some and hang up the rest neither have the Elect a just cause to glory nor the reprobate to complain since undeserved grace is shewed to the one due punishment inflicted on the other It bewraies no more want of mercy in God that he takes but such then it did want of power because he made not many worlds since the exercising of one and the other is determined by his wisdome It were unjust say the Polonian Churches in their Catechisme to punish any one because he hath not done that which by no means he could do But when God punisheth the wicked and those that are refractory to his word what doth he do else but punish those which do not do that which they cannot do See more there cap. 10. of the same branne 2. This may comfort the people of God who may be certain of their election and salvation Rom. 8. 38. 39. Paul had not this by immediate revelation because he concludeth upon such arguments as are general to all the godly see 1 Ioh. 3. 14. Certainty of mans election and salvation is not such as we have of arts and sciences yet the truths of God are more to be adhered unto then any humane principle 3. Nor is it such as we have of doctrinal truths we are not so perswaded of Gods favour in particular to us as that there is a God and that there is Jesus Christ because the dogmatical truth is contained in the Scripture the other is but a practical conclusion drawn from the General 3. It is not such an assurance as expelleth all doubting and wavering Mar. 9. 24. yet doubting is a sin and we are to bewaile it but the Papists teach doubting and praise it under the name of humility and say it keeps us from presumption They say we can have but a conjectural and wavering knowledge of our salvation justly therefore did Luther terme the Romish Doctrine concerning uncertainty of salvation Non Doctrinam fidei sed diffidentiae no Doctrine of faith but distrust 4. It is not such as presumption and carnal security excluding all use of the means work out your salvation with fear those which have been most perswaded of Gods love to them have been most active for him the love of Christ constraineth us 5. It is more then probable conjectural or moral 6. It is not of our own conscience and Spirit onely but inabled by the Spirit of God
praise God if against us to be humbled If thou beest hungry and in penury murmur not nor repine but say with the blessed Martyr If men take away my meat God will take away my stomack Merlin during the massacre at Paris some fortnight together was nourished with one egg a day laid by an hen that came constantly to the hay-mow where he lay hid in that danger The whole power almost of France being gathered together against the City Rochel and besieging them with extremity who defended the Town God in the time of famine and want of bread did for some whole moneths together daily cast up a kinde of fish unto them out of the Sea wherewith so many hundreds were relieved without any labour of their own Be of good comfort Brother said Ridley to Latimer for God will either asswage the fury of the fire or else strengthen us to abide it In the time of the Massacre at Paris there was a poor man who for his deliverance crept into a hole and when he was there there comes a Spider and weaves a cob-web before the hole when the murtherer came to search for him saith one certainly he is got into that hole No saith another he cannot be there for there is a cob-web over the place and by this means the poor man was preserved Let us observe the signal acts of Gods providence amongst us He studies not the Scripture as he should which studies not providence as he should we should compare Gods promises and providences together What we hear of him in his Word with what we see in his Works There is a three-fold vision of God in this life In his Word Works and in his Son answerable to our vision of God will be our communion with him The very Providence of God is sometimes called Prudence Nullum numen habes si sit Prudentia sed nos Tefacimus Fortuna Deam Coeloque locamus Juven Sat. 10. Prudence in man is a vertue some way like Providence in God Prudens dicitur quasi porrò videns Isid. in lib. Etym. Austin preaching once forgat what he had purposed to utter and so made an excursion from the matter in hand and fell into a discourse against the Manichees Possidonius and others dining with him that day Austin told them of it and asked them whether they observed it They answered that they observed it and much wondered at it Then Austin replied Credo quòd aliquem errantem in populo Dominus per nostram oblivionem errorem curari voluit Two daies after one came to Austin before others falling at his feet and weeping confessing also that he had many years followed the heresie of the Manichees and had spent much mony on them but the day before through Gods mercy by Austins Sermon he was converted and then was made Catholike The End of the third Book THE FOVRTH BOOK OF THE Fall of Man OF Sin Original Actual CHAP. I. Of the Fall of Man HAving in my Treatise of Divinity handled three principal heads there viz. the Scripture God and the Works of God I shall now proceed to speak of mans Apostasie and Restauration or of the Fall and Recovery of Man There is a four-fold Estate of man to be considered 1. That happy estate wherein he was made Ecc. 7. 31. 2. That miserable estate whereto he fell Rom. 3. 23. 24. and 5. 12. 3. That renewed estate whereto by grace he is called 1 Pe. 1. 3. 4. That glorious estate which is in Heaven reserved for him 1 Ioh. 3. 2. Having spoken already of his estate of Innocency or primitive condition I shall now speak of his corrupt estate in which I shall consider 1. The cause of it the Devils temptation and our first Parents yeelding to it 2. The parts of it sinfullnes●e of nature and life and the punishment of sin here and hereafter 3. The properties of it 1. Generall 2. Irremediable Though I shall not perhaps handle the last The Apostasie of man is his fall from the obedience due to God or the transgression of the Law prescribed by God In which two things are con●●derable 1. The transgression 2. The propagation of it Our first Parents being seduced by Satan sinn'd against the known Law of God in eating of the forbidden fruit Adams sinne was against his own light and therefore a presumptuous sin so some interpret that place Rom. 5. 14. Death reigned from Adam to Moses even over them that had not sinned after the similitude of Adams transgression that is those which had not the Law clearly revealed to them yet he was seduced by Satan whereas Satan sinned without temptation thence he is called the old Serpent because by the Serpent he seduced Eve When God saith Gen. 3. 22. Behold Adam is become like one of us knowing good and evill it confuteth S. Augustines conjecture that he beleeved not the Serpent but consented to his wife out of matrimoniall indulgence Etsi credendo non sunt ambo decepti peccando tamen ambo capti sunt diaboli laqueis implicati and sheweth manifestly that Adam also was circumvented with errour wherefore doth God else upbraid him so ironically that he is now like unto God That Sarcasmus in my understanding is a taxation of his credulous temerity in beleeving the Serpents promise When S. Paul 1 Tim. 2. 14. saith that Adam was not deceived but the woman he meant not to extenuate the mans offence or to exempt him from the fraud of the devil but to shew whether sex was more credulous or like to be seduced Doctor Hampton on Rom. 5. 9. The consummation of that transgression was the eating of the forbidden fruit or of the tree of knowledge of good and evill by Adam Gen. 2. 17. as the beginning of it was looking on it by Eve saith Paulus Fagius on Gen. 3. 6. 2. The tree was no better then the rest only God forbad him to eat of it for the triall of his obedience The lesser the thing was required to shew his obedience the greater was his fault in disobeying It is called disobedience Rom. 5. 19. and offence or fall Rom. 5. 15 17 18. Some say the devill as an unclean Spirit could not have accesse to Adams inward man to tempt him therefore he tempted him by a Serpent and audible voice as he did Christ by a visible Landskip of the world The time of Adams fall is not certain Some say he fell the same day he was created Neither Angels nor men did fall the sixth day before the Sabbath for then God looked upon all his works and they were very c good Gen. 1. 31. and therefore could not as yet be bad and evill by any sin or fall The objections against this from Iohn 8. 44. and Psa. 49. 12. are easily answered Some learned Divines as Simpson in his Chronology observes conjecture that Adam and Eve were cast out of Paradise the eighth day after
Original righteousnesse carentia justitiae originalis debitae in●ss● The Papists make Adam fallen to be the man in the Gospel that was wounded as he was going to Iericho by theeves and lay half dead The scope of that parable is to teach who is to be accounted our neighbour Our nature is not only void of Gods image Romans 3. 12. but fertill of all evil Genesis 6. Psalm 14. 53. Acts 13. 10. Ephesians 4. 19. It is hard to determine what kinde of positiveness can be in sinne There are two kindes of privations 1. Simple which doth meerly deprive as darkness doth light 2. Compound which besides the meer privation includes the contrary form privatio male disponens as sickness besides the meer privation of health includes the humours abounding Health is affectus corporis ad actum benè agendum disease is the contrary We call it positive because the Scripture describes it by habitual deprivation Ier. 17. 9. When we say such an one is a drunkard it is not only a meer privation of sobriety but a readiness to that sin because of the inhesion of it and to denote the efficacy of it Original sin is an affection ad actum malè agendum It is both a privation of the habit of original righteousnesse and also an evil disposition and proneness to all manner of sinne infecting all the parts and faculties of the soul. B. Down of Justificat l. 7. c. 7. Vide Hoornbeeck Anti Socin l. 3. c. 3. Sect. 1. It is 1. An internal uncleanness Titus 1. 15. It is called concupiscence which is the act of the will 2. An abiding uncleanness it never ceaseth so long as a man liveth to provoke him to sin Rom. 7. 21. Actual sins are but transient acts an affront to Gods commands Original sin is a rooted contrariety to his nature 3. An abounding uncleanness Psal. 14. Rom. 3. It defiles all men and all of men In the first Covenant Adam was made a root of all mankinde therefore all sinned and died in him being all in his loins Heb. 7. 9. Hence all that descend from him are children of wrath Ephes. 2. 3. Sin came upon all by Adam two waies 1. By imputation The Lord in justice imputing the guilt of the first sin to all his posterity Rom. 5. 12 14 19. 1 Cor. 15. 22. see 45 47. verses 2. By propagation The lump and root of all mankinde being corrupted so are the branches Gen. 5. 3. Iob 14. 14. Rom 11. 16. They are dead in sins Matth. 8. 22. Luke 15. 24. Ephes. 2. 1. 1 Tim. 5. 6. under the power of sin naturally under the guilt of sin legally Rom. 5. 15 18. Therefore regeneration is called a creation and resurrection Rom. 6. 5. Iohn 3. 35. Ephes. 1. 19 20. 1. All the faculties of the soul are dead the minde blind Zach. 11. ult 1 Cor. 2. 14. Ephes. 4. 17. and vain in its apprehensions resolutions thoughts Ier. 4. 14. 2. Reasonings The will most desperately shut against Christ and duty Matth. 15. 29. 23. 37. Luke 19. 14. Iohn 8. 44. violently evil Isa. 57. 17. The memory retains toys and lets go solid things The affections are not carried to their right objects we love sin are angry with those that reprove us or not in a right measure we over-love over-joy Col. 3. 5. they are contrary one to another and inconstant The conscience is not active in accusing or excusing Titus 1. 15. 1 Tim. 1. 19. 4. 2. Ephes. 4. 19. 2. They are dead in respect of spiritual duties 1 Thes. 1. 13. Heb. 1. the Sabbath is a burden 3. In their profession Rev. 3. 1. Iude 12. 4. In their whole conversation 4. An active powerfull uncleanness Rom. 7. 23. It is peccatum actuosum though not actuale it acts continually Gen. 6. 5. Sinfull acts and habits both flow from the pravity of our nature 5. A diffusive or infectious uncleanness like a leprosie or plague Psal. 106. 36. it makes all bad that we meddle with to the defiled all things are defiled It may well be called the sinning sin not only because it is the punishment of sin and the cause of sin but because it self is sin as Austin Next unto the sin against the holy Ghost and contempt of the Gospel original sin is the greatest sin Mr Shepheard All the sins of our lives are but original sin exercised and multiplied The will of man is more wilfull then the understanding blinde See Mr Fenners Epist. Ded. to his Hidden Manna or Mystery of saving grace The seat or subject of this sin is the whole man Some say only the passions that we have ●ound reason and and free will every faculty of the soul and member of the body is corrupted but principally the soul Eph. 4. 18 19 23 24. Rom. 12. 1 2. 1 Thes. 5. 23. and in it the understanding will and affections Ephes. 4. 18. The will is primarium peccati subjectum Rom. 7. 14. The Manichees and Illyricus a Lutheran make original corruption to be the essence and substance of a man those places of Scripture where it is called the old man a body of death and the flesh give no warrant for it but the Scripture useth them 1. To shew how near it is to us and inseparable even as our hands and feet and that we have it from our birth 2. To teach us that in all repentance and so in the graces of sanctification the greatest matter lieth within The Pelagians out of hatred to this opinion ran too farre into another extream holding that as man was born sine virtute so also sine vitio and they say That original sin is derived not by propagation but imitation and example We are by nature not imitation the children of wrath Pagans and Heathens never heard of Adam and many sins are commitred that Adam never did and they imitate not him the first drunkard and adulterer had no example The Ancient Fathers against the Pelagians and the Orthodox against the Arminians hold That original sin is propagated from Adam to all his posterity 1. God chargeth this on all the sons of men Ezek. 6. beg Isa. 48. 4. compared with 8. therefore it comes to them by natural inclination 2. The Saints who have studied their own spirits have confest this to be in them Psal. 51. 5. Rom. 7. 18. 3. Adam in his fallen condition must communicate such a nature as he had viz. defiled Iob 14. 4. Adam infected nature and after nature infected the person The continual actings of the depravedness of our nature in our conversation Psal. 58. 3. and the misery that lay on all men by nature even infants prove this Rom. 5. 12. and the necessity of regeneration Iohn 3. 5. The faculties of the soul only not the substance thereof are corrupted otherwise the soul could not be immortall neither could Christ take our nature upon him The substance of man abstractedly considered is Gods creature since
God is glorified there is no good in sin 4. Hell is contra bonum creatum against a created good sin contra bonum increatum against an uncreated good the glory of God Eighthly Every sin is after a sort the greatest evill as God is the greatest good After a sort I say non datur summum malum quod sit causa omnis mali say the Schools For it would then follow that there are two first Principles of things good and evil which was the heresie of the Manichees 1. God is per se bonus so sinne is per se malum evil in it self and good in no respect 2. As God is to be loved for himself because he is the chiefest good so sin is to he hated for it self one should hate sinne as sinne and then he will hate every sin à quatenus ad omne valet consequentia 3. God is the great reward of himself and sin the great punishment of it self Hos. 8. 11. Austin speaks of a poenalis vitiositas Ninthly Every one sin doth virtually contain in it all sins an idle word the sinne against the holy Ghost Rom. 5 14. the sin of Adam is called one mans offence See Heb. 12. 15. CHAP. VI. Of the Degrees of Sinne. IT was an errour of the Stoicks which Tully refuted and of the Jovinians which Ierome refuted that all sins were equall Though all sins be mortall yet they are not equall They are distinguished in name and really there are severall punishments one sin may be heavier and greater then another in divers respects In respect of the object 1 Sam. 2. 25. Zech. 2. 8. Psal. 7. 5. Prov. 3. 29. Exod. 22. 28. Act. 23. 5. Idolatry is a greater sin then theft the cause Lev. 4. 2. and 6. 2. the Law quality Prov. 6. 30 31. the matter the soul sinning Mat. 5. 13. and 10. 15. Luke 12. 27. Iohn 19. 11. the sin of a professour or publike person the time 1 Sam. 2. 17. Iohn 9. 41. the place effects end and manner of sinning as when one knows it to be a sin and commits it when sins are lived in one committed in the neck of another or the same sin is often committed There are Fautores actores and authores Sins against the first table caeteris paribus are greater then sins against the second A sin against God in that respect is greater then a sin against man 1. From the object who is so infinitely excellent 2. The graces which have reference to God are farre more then the duties to our neighbour 3. There is a lesse motive to offend God then our neighbour 4. It doth therefore become a sin because God is disobeyed whose Law is to love our brother 5. By proportion if a sin against our neighbour be lesse which is against his goods then his life because it is a greater good then much more concerning God Life is a greater good then riches God is to be more esteemed then life or goods are 6. That which is against a higher end is a more hainous sin there are sensuall and spirituall lusts Eph. 2. 3. 2 Cor. 7. 1. sins of the soul are greater then the sins of the body in that respect though otherwise there are greater aggravations therefore the heart is called the good or bad treasure because it gives all the sinfulnesse to the action Inward sins are greater then outward sins Mat. 5. 27. Psa. 5. 9. 1. They are the causes of outward sins Mat. 15. 18 19. and 12. 35. Iohn 13. 2. 2. They are the corruption of the chief part of a man the understanding judgement thoughts Mat. 6. 22. hence the Apostle praies for sanctification in the Spirit Eph. 4. 23. 3. They are against the chiefest part of Gods Law in regard of the obligation of it Rom. 7. it is spirituall his Law looks to the spirit and soul of a man 4. From the contrary inward obedience is farre more acceptable that is a great complaint by the Prophets this people draw nigh with their lips but their heart is far from me 5. The sins of the Spirit do most imitate and resemble the devil he cannot be a drunkard an Adulterer because he is a spirituall substance therefore his sinnes are pride malice and envy Rom. 2. 29. the devils are called spirituall wickednesses Eph. 6. all sin is from Satan per modum servitutis spirituall sins per modum imaginis 6. Where there is the greatest delight and union there is the greter sinfulnesse they rejoyced to do evill Amos 3. Sins of the heart are worse then of the life 1. They are more abundantly in the heart then in the life Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks 2. They are continually in the heart Rom. 2. Sin that dwels in me Evil thoughts are 1. A transgression of the Law as well as outward acts the Law saith thou shalt not lust Deut. 15. 9. some sins are perfected in the thought as envy and malice though they come not into act the Devils wrath malice envy make him an unclean spirit 2. We are called to repent of thoughts and ask pardon of them Act. 8. 22. See I●● 55. 7. the heart is the seat of the thoughts God cals for the heart 3. Consider the multitude of our vain thoughts 7. They are as incompatible with grace and sanctification as outward grosse sinnes are for that is a holy nature and regeneration is chiefly in the understanding and will 8. They do more strongly oppose the Spirit of God which works upon the soul first and the intellectuall parts 9. The cure of these is harder partly because they are more rooted and partly because they are more unperceivable and also because there are not those bridles to curb them which might be in outward sins there disgrace hinders and the Laws of men There are peccata carnalia majoris infamiae spiritualia majoris culpa Gerson Yet outward sins in some respects are above these 1. Because they are more scandalous and offensive 2. Outward acts strengthen inward corruptions more 3. They sometimes argue a more senselesse and cauterized conscience 4. There are greater means and motives against these a mans natural conscience tels him that these outward acts are sins Sins of omission are great sins there are great threatnings against them Ier. 20. 25. they fit the heart for doing evill Psal. 14. 4. the not doing of good is the doing of evill They are the great sins of our lives and go beyond sinnes of commission in these particulars 1. The greatnesse of the evil of sin is to be measured by the greatnesse of the Law that is the greatest Law in which the minde of the Law-giver is most In every commandement there is a precept and prohibition the precept commands duty the prohibition forbids sin omissions are against the precept the main thing the curse is but the accidentall part He breaks the first Commandement hath not Jehovah for his God
pardon Nullum peccatum est veniale dum placet sicut nullum mortale si verè displicet August Ambrosius saith All mortal sins are made venial by repentance Object Mat. 5. 22. There are two punishments lesse then hell fire Therefore all sins are not mortal Answ. That which our Saviour speaketh here of three several punishments is spoken by allusion to the proceeding in the Civil Courts in Iudaea and all that can be gathered from thence is but this That as there are differences of sins so there shall be of punishments hereafter 2. Maldonate the Jesuite ingeniously confesseth that by councel and judgement the eternal death of the soul is understood yet with this difference that a lesse degree of torment in hell is understood by the word Judgement then Councel and a lesse by Councel then by hell fire Object Mat. 5. 26. 7. 5. Luke 6. 41. 1 Cor. 3. 12. Some sins there are compared to very light things as hay stubble a mote a farthing Answ. 1. Some sins in comparison of others may be said to be light as a mote is little to a beam a farthing to a pound yet no sinne committed against God may be simply termed light or little Zech. 1. 5. being committed against an infinite God and having cost an infinite price 2. A mote if it be not taken out of the eye hindereth the sight so the least sinne hindereth grace and is sufficient to damn the soul. 3. Christ by the farthing Matth. 5. understands the last paiment of debt not sinne and the Apostle light and vain Doctrine by hay and stubble Purgatory is to cleanse men from their lesser sins but precious Doctrines or good works are there tried by fire Object James 1. 15. Sin When it is perfected brings forth death therefore not every sin not sin in every degree Answ. The Apostle there sets forth the method and order how sin comes to the height the word he useth for sin is of the feminine gender speaking of the conception and production of sin he saith Sin when it is finisht brings forth death actually the least sin merits death or the Apostle shews when death appears to us most not in its conception and production but when it is finisht Object Mat. 12. 36. He saith not we shall be condemned for every idle word but only that we shall be called to answer for it Answ. The same phrase is used concerning all kinde of sins yea those that are greatest and most grievous Object There is a mortal sin 1 Iohn 5. 16. therefore a venial sin Answ. He speaks of a mortal sinne not by nature or by merit but by event the event of which shall certainly be death and the person out of all hope of pardon Vide Bezam Of all words sin hath no diminutive not in any tongue known to us commonly only the Spaniard hath his Peccadillo a petty sin Dr Clark Sinnes considered in reference to the object are all great so Peccata sunt aequalia 2. The least sin that ever was committed had in it the whole nature of sin it is tam peccatum as truly sin as the greatest CHAP. VIII Of the Cause of Sinne. SIn properly is nothing formally subsisting or existing for then God should be the author of it but it is an ataxy or absence of goodnesse and uprightnesse in the thing that subsisteth Psal. 5. 4. 1 Iohn 2. 16. 1 Iohn 1. 5. Hab. 1. 13. Iob 34. 10. The Church of Rome slanders the Protestants and saith that they maintain God to be the cause of sin but we hold that the Devil and mans corrupt will are the cause of it Sin in man at first came from Satan Iohn 3. 8. 8. 44. Iohn 6. 17. Matth. 16. 23. the cause of sinne now man is fallen is from our selves Matth. 15. 19. God hath no hand in the acting and approving of sinne Rom. 3. 5. 9. 14. He is of purer eyes then to behold iniquity with approbation He is the wise permitter powerful disposer and eternal avenger of it God cannot sin or cause others to sin 1. Because his will is most holy and pure and the rule of perfection Isa. 6. He is holy in his Nature Actions he hath so confirmed his Angels in holinesse that they cannot sin 2. To sinne is to turn away from the chiefest and last end therefore he cannot sinne 3. God threatens sinners in his word and punisheth them therefore he allows it not 4. All deservedly hate the Manichees Marcionites and Libertines who would make that sacred and dreadful Majesty the cause of their detestable enormities therefore Bellarmine doth wickedly in imputing to Protestant Divines that which they detest with the greatest loathing That is a great Question in Divinity An Deus author peccati ex reformatorum placitis statuatur Four several kinds of power though not in yet over sinne may be ascribed to God a permissive desertive restrictive and disposing power First A permissive power else it could not be he may permit what he is not bound to hinder Secondly A desertive power it would not be if he withdrew not his grace sinne needs no efficient cause no more then darknesse Causa deficiens in moralibus efficiens Thirdly A restraining power there may be an act of restraining grace on the Devil Fourthly A disposing power whereby he disposeth and ordereth sinne to some excellent and good end his glory When God doth dispose or order the sin of any man 1. He doth not infuse this evil but use it 2. He useth it not as an evil or sin but as an instrument 3. He would not use it to such an end but that he is able to raise more good by it and to counterpoise all the evil in the action 4. God did not infuse malice into Iosephs brethren but made use of it rather to a sale then a murder he sent him before to save much people alive Gen. 45. 8. In the beginning of sin Gods will is exercised First By way of inhibition in giving a Law against it Secondly By way of permission leaying a lawlesse man to a lawlesse way In the progresse of sin God either hinders or over-rules it in the end he either punisheth or pardoneth it And all this without sin or the least blemish of sin For in the beginning of sin he sheweth his Wisdome In the progresse he sheweth his Power In the end he maketh manifest both his Justice and his Mercy Mr Wischart on the Lords Prayer Petit. 3. Those places Acts 2. 23. 2 Sam. 1. 43. besides a permission do expresse an active providence he is said to harden and deceive Gods permission is not otiosa but efficax permissio 1. God permits sin 2. Cooperates to the act as natural 3. Decreed it 4. As a just Judge he denieth grace 5. As the supream Judge he useth all these as instruments of his glory Papists and Arminians allow God no other power about sin but what is
barely permissive or desertive at most There are two ordinary similitudes one from a halting horse the rider which makes the horse go is not the cause of his halting but of his going only but it is a question whether this clears the doubt for the rider is but an outward moving cause to the other he doth not work to the motion of the horse as immediatly as the horse himself doth therefore this simile were good and fit if that opinion were true God doth only give being but not immediately work to the effect it self and if the simile were to the purpose it would be that the rider besides this outward motion did as immediatly help to going as nature it self As for the other about a dunghill the Sun-beams that work upon any boggy places and make them smell but yet they themselves are not defiled this would illustrate well for all the sins men runne into since the fall but how will it answer about the first sinne for Adams nature was not a bog The best way is to hold these two truths 1. God doth not sin nor is not the author of it 2. That he hath a providence about it and for the manner it is hard to determine Object God bid Shimei curse Ans. That was an improper command and implieth only that God used Shimei's tongue as a whip to scou●ge David Object Ezekiel 20. 25. Wherefore I gave them also statutes that were not good and judgements whereby they should not live There God seems not only to permit but also to command sin Iunius interprets it Ipsis incommoda noxiaque and mentions some particulars I gave them in the wildernesse decrees and ordinances that were not good for them but hurtful and judgements that did sentence them to death So the great Annotations instancing there in some of those judgements Weems understands it of the ceremonial statutes and nicely distinguisheth between not good and evil See Psal. 5. 4 5 6. The ceremonial statutes were good in their kinde and in respect of the end for which God ordained them Col. 2. 17. Some say God did deliver them over into the hands of wicked Princes he gave them over in judgement to obey their idolatrous Laws the statutes of Omri Others hold the genuine meaning to be that of the Chaldee Paraphrase They observed statutes which were not right and customs whereby they should not live Some Protestant Authors have used some incommodious and harsh phrases yet 1. They do most of them use but the Scripture-phrase and Bellarmine himself useth worse in this matter With what face can Bellarmine lay to Calvins charge that he makes God the author of sin when he wrote two books against the Libertines as Bellarmine himself acknowledgeth 2. De statu peccati c. 1. when the Protestants professedly handle the question An Deus si● Author peccati they determine it negatively therefore it is not fair for their Adversaries to conclude that they hold so by some passages in their writings which may seem to sound that way CHAP. IX Of communicating with other Mens sins NO godly man ought to partake or communicate with other mens sins Isa. 52. 11. Ephes. 5. 11. 2 Cor. 6. 15 16. 1 Tim. 5. 22. Revel 18. 11. Vitia aliorum si feras facis tua We are guilty of other mens sins or communicate with others First Negatively and privatively and that 1. By sinful silence the Heathen knew not the exactnesse of godlinesse when he said He repented him often that he spake but never that he held his tongue 2. When one omits to do his duty with that life courage and zeal which he ought as Eli reproved his sons but not sharply enough and punished them not for their sins 3. When one doth not pray for a reformation Psal. 51. or humble himself for the sins of others 1 Cor. 5. 2. 2 Cor. 12. 21. Secondly More directly and positively 1. He who commands or perswades Isa. 10. 1. as Ieroboam who made Israel to sin was a cause of all the peoples Idolatry there was not one of the one and twenty Kings of the house of Israel that departed from the sins of Ieroboam Balaam inticed the people of Israel to fornication and idolatry the Devil by being a tempter becomes guilty of all the sins committed by men Eve became a tempter to Adam 1 Tim. 5. 22. 2. He who is a minister and servant to execute the evil commands of others the three Worthies in Daniel refused to obey Nebuchadnezzar and the Apostles would obey God rather then men Doeg is cursed by God for this Ps. 52. 2 Kin. 1. 9. Ier. 7. 17 18. 3. He that gives consent and allowance to it Levit. 20. 4 5. though he do not act it Rom. 1. ult 4. He who defends praiseth and encourageth others that have sinned He that breaks one of these least commandments and teacheth others so to do Cajetan holds that to drink till a mans head be giddy is no sin or a venial one Another holds that there is a lawful idolatry the Papists canonize such acts to murder and poison Princes the Pharisees encouraged the people in sin 5. Those that familiarly converse with wicked men 1 Cor. 5. 11. 2 Thess. 3. 14. our very presence in idolatrous service is evil 1 Cor. 14. 15. 6 Permission and connivance at evil Levit. 20. 4 5. Qui non vetat peccare cum potest jubet This concerns Magistrates and other Superiours if they restrain not sinne when they have power and authority in their hands 1 Sam. 3. 30. 7. Provoking to sin 1 Kin. 21. 25. Ephes. 6. 4. Gal. 5. 26. 8. Giving ill example as when Magistrates and Ministers swear Ieroboam by his ill example as well as precepts made Israel to sin Mat. 23. 35. not that they killed Abel but they went on in their predecessours steps CHAP. X. Of the Punishment of sin GOD punished Adams sin with originall and actual sinne See Gen. 3. 17 18 19 23. The Lord sent Adam forth from the garden of Eden there is losse of communion and vers 24. he drove out the man as a testimony of his wrath and displeasure Before sin is committed it is Inimicus blandiens In committing it is Dulce venenum after committed it is Scorpio pungens That speech of Abner is true in sin 2 Sam. 2. 26. It will be bitternesse in the later end Ubi peccatum ibi procella saith Chrysostome sin alwayes brings a storm with it Lam. 3. 38. Raro antecedentem scelestum Deseruit pede poena claudo Sometimes sins are punished a long time after they were committed 2 Sam. 21. 1. the bloud of Christ was visited on Ierusalem fourty years after the wickednesse of Eli's sons was visited on the whole family in the dayes of Saul Iob saith Thou makest me possesse the sins of my youth God would shew patience as well as justice therefore he spares long to see if men will convert without blows
All evils of misery are but the issue of sin first sin entred into the world and by sin death 1. Temporal evils All publick commotions wars famine pestilence are the bitter fruits of sin Deut. 28. there is Gods curse on the creature mans body all his relations 2. Spiritual Terrours of conscience horrours of death 1 Cor. 15. 56. are the effects of sin What an evil is a condemning heart an accusing conscience yet this is the fruit of sin A wounded spirit who can bear Some will bear outward evils stoutly nay suffer death it self boldly but sin will not so easily be born when the conscience it self is smitten See this in Cain and Iudas many a one maketh away himself to be rid of this vexation This sils one with shame Iohn 8. 9. fear Gen. 3. 11. and grief Acts 2. 37. The greatest torment that in this life can be fall a sinner is desperation when the soul of a man convinced in her self by the number of her hainous offences loseth all hope of life to come and casteth her eyes wholly on the fearful torments of hell prepared for her the continual thought and fright whereof do so amaze and afflict the comfortlesse soul that she shrinketh under the burden and feeleth in her self the horrour of hell before she come to it 3. Eternal The everlasting absence of all good 2 Thes. 1. 19. and the presence of all evil Mark 9. 49. are the consequents of it Iustum est quòd qui in suo aeterno peccavit contra Deum in aeterno Dei puniatur Sin is finite in the act and subject but of infinite demerit being committed 1. Against an infinite Good therefore it deserves infinite punishment 2. The obligation of the Law is everlasting This was the first Doctrine which was published to man that eternal death is the punishment of sinne Gen. 2. 17. the Devil opposed it Gen. 3. 4. the belief of the threatning would have hindered them from sinne The Socinians say that man should have died in the state of innocency although he had not sinned and therefore that death is not a punishment of sinne but a condition and consequent of nature The holy Ghost assigns death to sinne as the cause See of it Rom. 5. 12. 6. 23. Our bodies were not mortal till our souls were sinful Arminians say That there is neither election nor reprobation of Infants and that ●o Infants can be condemned for original sin Iacob was in a state of election in his mothers womb Rom. 9. 11. All men in the counsel of God are either elect or reprobate But Infants are men or part of mankinde Therefore they are either elect or reprobate 1. Infants are saved therefore there is some election of Infants for salvation is a fruit of election and proper to the elect Rom. 11. 7. There is a manifest difference among Infants between those that are born in and out of the Church Gen. 17. 17. Acts 2. 37. 3 21. Children of unbelievers are unclean 1 Cor. 7. 14. and aliens from Christ and the Covenant of promise Ephes. 2. 11 12. 2. That opinion That no Infants are condemned for original sinne seems to be contrary to that place Ephes. 2. 3. If this were true the condition of a Turks childe dying in his infancy is farre better then the condition of Abraham Isaac or Iacob living for they might fall from grace say they and be damned but a Turks childe dying according to their opinion shall certainly be saved The worst punishment of sinne is to punish it with sin and so God punisheth it sometimes in his own people Isa. 63. 17. Mar. 6. 52. a judicial blindnesse and hardnesse is the worst See Ezek. 24 13. Rom. 1. 26 28. Revel 22. 11. Concerning National sins Sins though committed by particular persons may be National First When they are interwoven into the policy of a State Psa. 94. 20. when sin is established by a Law Rev. 16. 8. 17. 17. 6. 12. Ier. 15. 9. Secondly When they are universal and overspread the whole Kingdom Ier. 9. 2 3. Isa. 56. 11. Thirdly When the people that professe the name of God are infected with those sins Gen. 6. 2 3 4. Fourthly When few or none in the Nation bewail them Ier. 5. 31. Fifthly When they are openly countenanced and tolerated 1 Kings 14. 24. when there are no masters of restraint Iudg. 18. 7. Sixthly When they are the predominant humour of the Nation at that time The sins of Gods people which commonly provoke him to break a Nation 1. Their omissions that they stand not in the gap Ezek. 22. 30 31. improve not their interest in him 2. When their hearts are inordinately set upon the things of this world 2 Chro. 36. 12. Mat. 24. 39. 3. When there is a great unfruitfulness and lukewarmness in the things of God Hos. 10. 1. 4. When divisions are still fomented amongst those that fear God Isa. 9. 21. Desolations in a State follow divisions in the Church The sins which may provoke God against a Nation 1. Idolatry Ier. 5. 19. when the true God is worshipped in a way that he hath not appointed 2. Intestine divisions Isa. 9 ult compared with 10. 6. 3. Incorrigiblenesse under lesser judgements Isa. 9. 11. 4 Wearying of God Isa. 7. 13 18. 5. Unworthy and wicked compliances Hos. 5. 13. CHAP. XI Signes of a Christian in regard of sinne and that great corruptions may be found in true Christians OF the first Signs of a Christian in regard of sin First He is convinced of sin Iohn 16. 9. the Greek word signifies to evidence by demonstration the Spirit so demonstrates it that a man hath nothing to object Psal. 51. 13. Secondly He is free from its dominion as Paul saith Sinne shall have no dominion over you for you are not under the law but under grace and after Being freed from sinne Whosoever is born of God sinneth not John They do no iniquity David They serve not sin in the lusts thereof He hath not an habitual resolution to continue in sinne Thirdly He is troubled and wearied with the reliques of it and driven to Christ for pardon and help He is weary of sin and every sin so farre as he knoweth specially his own sin and that iniquity which cleaveth closest to him His flesh is inclined to it but his Spirit is a verse from it and even tired and burdened with it so that he often sighes out in himself the complaint of St Paul O miserable man that I am Still as he prevails more against sin the remainders of it do more afflict him sinne in it self considered is his greatest unhappinesse that he hath so vile a nature is prone to so vile deeds and doth in many things so foolishly offend this troubleth and disquieteth him even then when he hath no other crosse to trouble him and many times imbitters all his prosperity Fourthly He is grieved
full of doubts fears and horrours and make him grow worse and worse 3. With due care and diligent observing of our selves a godly man may much prevail to keep himself innocent from great transgressions and unspotted of the world Secondly The Saints can and will keep themselves from sin Reasons 1. Because they have received the divine nature by which they shun the pollutions that are in the world through lust by which they are made sensible of the evil of sin and framed to a loathing and hatred of sin every true Christian hath the spirit which will make him lust against the flesh The wisdom of the world is to keep themselves from misery the wisdom of Saints is to keep themselves from that which is the cause of all misery and the worst of all misery from iniquity The godly will not only be carefull to abstain from evil acts but to subdue their lusts to crucifie sin in the thoughts and desires Rom. 7 8 9. 1. The chief dominion of sin is in the heart there is the evil treasure the root 2. This is contrary to the chief part of the law the letter of the law is against the acting of sin the spirit of it is against lusting 3. This is the strongest part of sin and hardliest subdued 2 Cor. 10. 5. The way to keep our selves from sin 1. Often and earnestly call upon God to keep you by his Spirit of wisdom and strength for you are not able to keep your selves 2. Often renew and settle in your own hearts a resolution of not sinning and that upon spiritual grounds and considerations taken out of Gods word 1 Pet. 4. 11. David saith I hid thy word in my heart that I might not sin against thee This hiding the word is a calling to minde and serious pondering the commandments threats promises exhortations examples and reasons of Gods word against sin in the generall and against such and such sins in particular and pressing them upon our selves till they have wrought in us a setled and determinate resolution I will not sin I will not do this and this evil 3. It is requisite to observe and oppose the first rising of sin in the motions and desires thereof in the thoughts of it with a sigh groan ejaculation calling to minde some text of Scripture against it and stirring some detestation of it and calling upon our selves to keep our former resolutions against it The conception of sin is by the stirring and moving of ill desires within 4. Shun the occasions of evil Gen. 39. 10. Prov. 11. 14. all those things which our selves have found in our experience to provoke and stir our corruptions and to give them advantage against us Solomon saith Look not on the wine when it is red Prov. 23. 31. Secondly Our care of avoiding sin must shew it self specially against our own sins Ezek. 18. Cast away all your transgressions by which you have transgressed Psal. 18. 23. Reasons 1. Where the danger is greater the care of preventing must be most used Every man is soonest and most easily overtaken with these sins 2. What will be a greatest proof of his truth and sincerity and so the surest foundation of his comfort that should he be most carefull to practise this will make it appear that he strives against sin because it is sin when he striveth against those evils that are most pleasing to him 3. What will most further him in the works of sanctification and amendment of life that ought he most diligently to indeavour now in prevailing against ones corruptions he shall most further the work of grace and holiness in himself kill that sin and the rest will be more easily killed 4. There we should bestow most pains in which if we do not use care we lose our labour in other things Means were prescribed before to be used against sin in generall you must apply these in particular against your particular sins Pray often against these meditate and resolve most against these observe and resist most the first rising of these shun the occasions of these first A diligent and constant care to resist a mans own corruption is a sure proof of uprightnesse and such a one shall enjoy the comfort of his sincerity in due time CHAP. XIV Of the cause of forbearing Sin of abhorring it and of small Sins THe main cause of our forbearing any sin should be the sinfulnesse of it that is because it is repugnant to Gods will and offensive to him Isa. 59. 2. So Ioseph How shall I do this great evil and sin against God Loe what did curb him from that wickednesse which in the verdict of carnall reason he had so much cause to have committed and he might have done with so much safety and assurance even this It was a sin against God Ier. 44. 4. Nehem. 13. 27. Psal. 51. 3. Psal. 97. 10. Reasons 1. This is the very proper cause of all the other evil effects of sin and herein doth the very evilnesse and vilenesse of it consist The foul nature of sin stands in this that it is offensive to God and opposite to the will of that excellent Majesty to whom all creatures ought to be subject 2. Our forbearance of sin is no otherwise a fruit and effect of love to the divine Majesty then if we forbear it on this ground and further then it ariseth from this ground it is nought worth to our comfort nor shall bring us any everlasting reward Ezra 9. 14. Eadem velle nolle ea demum firma est amicitia 3. Unlesse this thought make us flye from sin we shall never forbear it constantly nor universally because no other motive will still and every where hold We must not only avoid sin but abhorre it Psal. 97. 10. Isa. 30. 22. Rom. 12. 9. David saith I hate vain thoughts Paul mentioning divers evils saith God forbid The wicked and much more wickednesse is an abomination to the just 1 Sam. 26. 11. Rom. 6. 2. Sin is often exprest by abomination 't is so to God it should be so to men Reasons 1. Because our affections must be conformable to God's Prov. 6. 16. He hateth nothing simply but sin and sinners for sins sake 2. Sin in it self is most hatefull because most hurtfull to man and injurious to God The ground of hatred of any thing is the contrariety of it to our welfare as we hate wilde fierce and raging beasts for their mischievousnesse a toad and serpents for their poisonousnesse which is a strong enemy to life and health so we hate thieves and murderers Sin is the most mischievous and harmfull thing in the world Our hatred against sin must have these properties 1. It must be universall we must hate all sins Psal. 119. 104. Iames 1. 21. 1 Pet. 2. 1. our own as well as others sins gainfull and profitable sins as well as others Hatred is of the whole kinde See Iob 34. 32. 2.
and blaspheming of it Mr. Bedford Of the sin unto death out of 1 Iohn 5. 16. Mr. Deering on Heb. 6. 4 5 6. saith It is a general Apostacy from God with wilfull malice and an unrepentant heart to persecute his truth to the end Mr. White in his Treatise of this sin thus describes it It is a wilfull malicious opposing persecuting and blaspheming the truths of God against knowledge and conscience without ever repenting and grieving for so doing but rather fretting and vexing that one can do no more It is a totall falling away from the Gospel of Christ Jesus formerly acknowledged and professed into a verball calumniating and a reall persecuting of that Gospel with a deliberate purpose to continue so to the end and actually to do so to persevere till then and so to passe away in that disposition It is a spitefull rejecting of the Gospel after that the Spirit hath supernaturally perswaded a mans heart of the truth and benefit thereof It is a sin committed against clear convincing tasting knowledge with despight and revenge Heb. 10. 29. 1. It must be a clear knowledge an ignorant man cannot commit it 2. Such a knowledge as le ts in a tast of the goodnesse as well as discovers the truth of the Gospel Heb. 6. 3. yet goes against this knowledge with despight opposeth the motions of Gods Spirit with rage this puts a man into the devils condition Compare Heb. 6. 4 5. with 10. 26 27. It is a voluntary way of sinning after one hath received not only the knowledge but the acknowledgement of the truth so much knowledge as subdues the understanding The will is chiefly in this sin he sins wilfully he trampleth under his foot the blood of the Son of God sins maliciously and with revenge The Jews put Christ to death with the greatest malice The conditions of that sin are 1. Hatred of the truth 2. A settled malice 3. An obstinate will 4. An accusing conscience Therefore this sin is distinguished from other sins by three degrees 1. That they all fall toti 2. à toto 3. In totum 1. Toti Because they fall from God and his gifts not out of infirmity or ignorance but out of knowledge will and certain purpose 2. A toto Because they cast away and oppose the whole doctrine his authority being contemned 3. In totum Because they are so obfirmed in their defection that they voluntarily oppose and seek to reproach the Majesty of God But the specificall difference of this sin is that they reproach those things which the holy Ghost hath revealed to them for true and of whose truth they are convinced in their minde This sin necessarily supposeth the knowledge of the Mediator wheresoever there is any mention of it in the new Testament there comes with it some intimation of the works of the Mediator In Matth. 12. they opposed Christ in his miracles in Heb. 6. Paul instanceth in their crucifying again of Christ Heb. 10. speaks of their trampling under foot the Son of God The devils sinned against light and with revenge but not against the light of the second Covenant this sin is purely against the Gospel Heb. 4. 10. 27 28 29. Objectum hujus peccati non est lex sed Evangelium Matth. 12. 32. He that commits this sin shall neither be pardoned in this world in foro conscientiae nor in the world to come in foro judicii neither in this world per solutionem ministerii by the Ministry of the word nor in the world to come per approbationem Christi When once the means of recovery by the Gospel are neglected contemned and despised then there is no place for remission see Heb. 1● 26. The sacrifices in the old Law were effectual in their time to the expiation of sin if joyned with faith The sacrifice of Christs death was alwaies effectuall but if this also be despised this being the last there is no more sacrifice for sin and yet without sacrifice no remission It is called the sin unto death not because it may kill for no sin but may kill if it be not repented of but because it must kill Divines observe two sorts subject to this sin Some have both known the truth and also professed it as Saul Iudas Alexander the Copper-smith all these made profession of the Gospel before they fell away Others have certain knowledge of the truth but yet have not given their names to professe it but do hate persecute and blaspheme it such were the Pharisees Matth. 13. All they who fall into this sin first do attain unto a certain and assured knowledge of the truth though all do not professe it Absolutely to determine of such a one is very difficult neither is there any sufficient mark but the event viz. finall impenitency But the grounds of suspition are such as these 1. Prophannenesse 2. Doubting of every saving truth and impugning it 3. Envying anothers grace and happinesse 4. Blasphemy 5. Want of good affections Many Christians are ready to suspect that they have sinned against the holy Ghost Some Divines give this as a rule If the Lord give you a heart to fear that you have sin'd against the holy Ghost then you have not Boasting A man boasts when he is full of that which he thinks excellent and to adde worth and excellency to him Psal. 34. 2. 44. 8. 64. 10. It is one of the sins of the tongue 1 Sam. 2. 3. a high degree of pride see Ezek. 28. 3 4. Rom. 2. 17. there is vera and vana gloriatio the highest act of faith is to glory in God we make our boast of God all the day long Psal. 44. but to boast of God when one hath no interest in him is vain Bribery A bribe is a gift given from him which hath or should have a cause in the Court of justice to them which have to intermeddle in the administration of justice Bribery or taking gifts is a sin Exod. 23. 8. the same is repeated Deut. 16. 19. Isa. 1. 23. Prov. 17. 23. Psal. 26. 10. Hos. 4. 18. Amos 2. 12. Micah 3. 11. Reasons 1. From the causes of it 1. Covetousnesse Samuels sons inclined after lucre and took gifts 2. Hollownesse and guile 3. A want of love of justice 4. A want of hatred of sin 2. The effects 1. In the parties self that offends 2. In others 1. In himself The bribe blindes the eyes of the wise 1 Sam. 12. 3. Exod. 23. 8. it makes him unable to see and finde out the truth in a Cause 2. It perverts the words of the righteous that is it makes them which otherwise would deal righteously and perhaps have had an intention of dealing righteously yet to speak otherwise then becomes it exposeth the offender to condigne punishment Solomon saith A gift prospers whither ever it goeth and it makes room for a man meaning that otherwise deserve h no
room For the punishment of it see Iob 15 34. Fire shall devour the tabernacles of bribery meaning that God will not fail by some or other means to bring destruction upon those families that shall thus augment their estates For others 1. It doth make all that are rich bold to sin because they hope to bear it out 2. It makes rich men also bold to do wrong 3. It grieveth the heart and spirit of the innocent that is in low estate and makes him call to God to be his avenger 4. It overthroweth the throne Prov. 29. 5. It brings publick desolation It is lawfull to pacifie an angry foe with a gift so did Iacob but to hire and corrupt a Judge with a gift is unlawfull He cannot lawfully take therefore neither thou lawfully give seeing these two are mutual causes and effects and therefore can hardly be separated in their guiltinesse Cambises caused a bribing Judge to be flaid quick and laid his skin in his chair of judgement that all Judges which should give judgement afterward should sit in the same skin CHAP. XVI Of Carnal Confidence Covetousnesse Cruelty Cursing CARNAL CONFIDENCE COnfidence in generall is that affection of the soul whereby it rests it self in the expectation of any good from any thing Therefore carnal confidence is a vice whereby the heart of man rests it self in the looking for any good of any kinde from any thing but God alone He is carnally confident which promiseth himself any thing desirable as health deliverance out of trouble long life because he hath such or such outward means which he thinks are able to bring forth such safety unto him The Scripture cals it Making flesh our arm A man is said to make that his arm which he thinks himself strong and safe if he have and so he is said to make riches a strong tower in the same sense Men are prone to this sin of false confidence David trusted in his strong hill Asa in the Physicians The Israelites in Egypt for chariots and horses 1 Sam. 17. 45 46 47. Luke 12. 19. The grounds of it are 1. Ignorance of God whose strength and greatnesse together with his grace and goodnesse the minde apprehends not Psal. 9. 10. 2. Ignorance of these earthly things their weaknesse mutability and disability to help and comfort Isa. 28. 15. the Prophet brings in the leud men of his time flattering themselves and soothing up their own hearts with fair words and promising all safety to their own souls in derision and despight of all his threats If a plague come through the land it should not touch them by vanity and falshood they meant wealthy friends and outward support which the Prophet here cals by this name ironically This is a great evil 1. It is a denying of God Iob 3. 28. Trust is only due to him such a one sets up another God Ion. 2. 8. A covetous man is therefore called an idolater Ephes. 5. 5. and covetousnesse idolatry Col. 3. 5. 2. It is the ground of all our miscarriage in practice 1 Iohn 5. 3 4 5. The world is a great hinderance to our keeping the Commandments 3. It is the ground of all disquiet if you would live a happy life seek a fit object for your trust Psal. 30. 6 7. Psal. 112. 7. Expect all good things from God alone Abraham looked for a childe from God when nature failed him This confidence in God is shewed 1. By preferring his favour above all things 2. By making his name our refuge in all troubles 3. By using all good means and only good to get any good thing and that without carking and vexation 4. By comforting our selves in him when all means fail us 1 Sam. 30. 6. Signes of false confidence 1. The inordinate desire of any earthly thing What a man desires more then he should that he looks for some good by 2. Immoderate joy when he hath gotten it He that findes great joy in any thing doth therefore joy in it because he thinks he shall be better for it 3. Impatience in the absence of it Iob 13. 24 25. 4. To grow bold to do evil and carelesse of doing good in respect thereof The cure of carnal confidence 1. Consider how pernicious this vice is it withdraws the heart from the Lord Ier. 17. 5. and brings his curse on the soul and body 2. It makes one unable to use well that which he hath 3. Consider the weaknesse and uncertainty of all outward things 4. Meditate on those places Psal. 62. 10. 146. 3. 1 Tim. 6. 17. Covetousnesse Is an insatiable desire of having or an inordinate love of money Avarus quasi avidus aeris Isidor It lies in the heart but is reckoned by the Apostle among outward grosse sins because it is consummate by outward fordidnesse It is taken two wayes 1. For detaining or taking other mens goods in an unlawfull way and so it is opposed to justice Or 2. For an inordinate desire to get and hold though God call for it and it opposeth liberality The desire is inordinate 1. For the measure of it when it is vehement and strong seeing wealth is a thing of a base and contemptible nature not worthy any earnestnesse of desire 2. For the quantity of the object the summe of wealth desired if he suffer his desires to be carried after more then that which is sufficient for the providing of meat drink and cloth for himself and his in a comfortable sort affecting an overplus The proper end of riches is comfortable maintenance 3. For the end of ones desiring when it is to serve and set up himself and is not to fit himself to do God service and to profit mankinde Laban and Nabal whose names Anagramatize each other are examples of avarice It is a great and dangerous sin Isa. 57. 7. Hab. 2. 9. Col. 3. 5. 1 Sam. 8. 3. Prov. 15. 27. Ier. 22. 17. The same Prophet complains of the people in his time that From the least of them to the greatest of them they were all of them coveting covetousnesse as the words are that is given unto it did yeeld their hearts to a desire of gain which complaint also he renews ch 8. 18. and in both places alleadgeth it as a cause of great sins Ezek. 32. 31. The Lord so hates it that the godly should not company with such 1 Cor. 5. 11. In the body when the spleen swels all other parts decay and consume so when the heart swels with desire of riches all the graces of God consume and fade away When all other sins wax old this waxeth young in thee Reasons 1. From the causes of it 1. Ignorance of the goodnesse mercy power and excellency of God and of the faithfulnesse profitablenesse desirablenesse of things heavenly and spiritual He knows not God nor the worth of the graces of Gods Spirit nor the excellency of his heavenly Kingdome who is glewed unto these earthly
and all the rest are nought for they came from Satan and serve to set him up in mens mindes and to quench the respect and fear of God Division All creatures in their natural estate are severed and divided one from another 1. They are divided from God the only and chiefest good 2. From the Angels 1 Cor. 11. 10. 3. One from another Isa. 19. begin 4. From themselves We are joyned to Satan and comply with the Idols of our own hearts Ezek. 14. begin 1. The nature of this division is not only local as that of Reuben Judg. 5. 15 16. by the river Iordan or in externals but spiritual which is the worst as spiritual union is the best This makes the difference in mens mindes judgements wils consciences Acts 26. 9. Iohn 16. beg divided in the very ends they propound and the means that lead to those ends and the rule The causes of it are sad the lusts and sins of our own hearts the just indignation of God These sins especially 1. Idolatry Iudg. 5. 8. 2. Covenant-breaking Levit. 26. 25. 3. Pride Ier. 13. 9. compared with 14. 4. Hypocrisie Isa. 10. 6. 5. Apostasie Arguments against division and falling into parties First Divisions are a judgement of God upon a Nation Zech. 13. 14. Secondly Consider the several sins that falling into parties puts men upon 1. It puts them on great thoughts of heart Iudg. 5. 15. 2. Men break forth into bitter censuring and reviling of those which are not of their own party Prov. 21. 24. Iames 4. 11. they set up their own will in opposition to God 3. It causeth men to be glad to hear evil one of another and take up any report for truth Nehem. 6. 6. and glad of any mischief that shall befall them Ezek. 25. 6. 4. This layes upon men a necessity of joyning with any to oppose that party though they be never so contrary in religion or affection Thirdly Falling into parties is a certain way of ruine 1. In the just judgement of God Hos. 10. 2. 2. In the nature of the thing Iudg. 5. 5. In cause of religion every subdivision is a strong weapon in the hand of the contrary part Hist. of Councel of Trent lib. 1. pag. 49. Two earthen pots floting with this Inscription Si collidimur frangimur If we knock we crack were long ago made the embleme of England and the Low countries but may now be extended to all Christians We shall finde in our English Chronicles that England was never destroyed but when divided within it self our civil divisions brought in the Romans the Saxons Danes and Normans Though our Civil and Ecclesiastical breaches be very great Lam. 2. 13. yet God can and will heal all the breaches of his Saints 1. Because he hath promised to do it Isa. 2. 4. 11. 6 7 8 9 13. 30. 26. 32. 18. 33. 20. Ezek. 28. 24. Ier. 32. 39. Zeph. 3. 9. Zech. 14. 9. 2. Christ hath prayed for it three times in Iohn 17. viz. 21 22 23. verses 3. Christ died to make his people one Ephes. 2. from 14. to the later end See 1 Cor. 12. Rom. 8. to the end There are some cementing or reconciling graces faith repentance charity Col. 3. 14. and humility There is much talk of peace and unity peace with truth or peace and holiness are joyned together in Scripture We should pray to Christ to heal our divisions that he would make us one we should put on love which is the bond of perfectnesse Col. 3. 14 15. See Phil. 3. 14 15. Drunkennesse Drunkennesse is a great sin Isa. 28. 1. Deut. 32. 32. Prov. 23. 29 30 31. The Scripture condemns it Be not drunk with wine saith the Apostle Salomon forbids to keep company with a wine bibber the Prophet denounceth a woe to the drunkards of Ephraim Drunkennesse is one of the fruits of the flesh and a drunkard one of those whom Paul excludes from heaven Nature condemns it it trampleth under foot at once the whole Law and Gospel too First For the Law it violates each Commandment The first the drunkard makes his belly his god he cannot exercise knowledge of God love fear confidence remembrance of sin or any vertue It breaks the second Commandment it is a direct breach of our vow made in Baptism and renewed in the Lords Supper for this is one of the works of the Devil which we then renounced Again it hinders a man from praying reading meditating or doing any good and religious duty It breaketh the third Commandment because it is an abuse of one of Gods creatures and so takes Gods name in vain it causeth that one can neither see God in his works nor do any works to his glory nor shew forth thankfulness for benefits nor patience in crosses and because it fils the mouth full of foul and desperate oaths The fourth he is unfit to sanctifie the Sabbath and if one be drunk on the Lords-day it is a great prophanation of it for it is farre from a holy work The fifth it makes one despise Parents Magistrates all Governors it makes him abuse Wife Children Servants and all his Inferiours it makes him lift up himself above his equals and despise all in comparison of himself The sixth it is a hurt to his own body and breeds vile diseases dropsie fever rednesse of eyes makes him rail revile quarrel and kill and commit all insolent injuries and hazards himself to untimely death Gal. 5. 21. The seventh for it fils heart and tongue and all full of filthinesse it inflames the body to lust a drunken Lot will commit incest Rom. 13. 13. The eighth it is a wasting of time and goods and a robbing of a mans self and family it often enciteth to cozenage and beguiling it is grosse injustice The ninth it makes him full of bragging and boasting and backbiting his tongue is as full of vanity as his head of vapours The tenth it fils the minde full of leud imaginations and exposeth him to Satans suggestions Perkins on Revel 2. 14. shews that Popery breaks every Commandment Mr Paget in his admonition touching Talmudique allegations pag. 422. to 436. shews how the Jewish Rabbins break every Commandment It is against the Gospel it oppresseth the heart and takes away reason that a man grows hard-hearted and fils men full of presumption There was a street in Rome called Vicus sobrius the sober street but is there a village in England that may be called Villa sobria the sober village If a man though he loaths drunkennesse should to symbolize with wicked company drink immoderately yet it is drunkennesse it is true he is not ebriosus an old soaking drunkard yet he is ●brius he hath committed the sinne of drunkennesse There is a two-fold privation of reason 1. Aptitudinal when a man drinks so immoderately that there is a disposition to disturb reason yet because he is of a strong brain and
contrary to charity either because a man loves not or hates his neighbour Charity doth no evil we should do as we would be done to The effects of it are bad it sets one man against another and so doth mischief to both slanderous tongues that told Saul in secret David sought his hurt made him to persecute him so vehemently The slanders of Haman caused Ahashuerus to make a Decree for the destruction of all the Jews in his Kingdom Iosephs Mistresses slanderous accusation brought him into much trouble Principall parts of slander There are four principall parts of slander The 1. and worst when a man doth purposely forge a lie against his neighbour without any so much as shew or ground as Mephibosheth was served by his naughty servant Ziba and as David himself was served by the bad Courtiers about Saul 2. When there hath been such a thing done or said but he misreports it adding or diminishing wresting and perverting it and so makes it seem evil that was not so in the intention and practice of the doer as they wrested our Saviours words to a blasphemous sense The third kinde when one reports a false report that he hath heard and taken up upon trust as Tobiah said it was reported and such a one did speak it that Nehemiah meant to rebell 4. When men complain of a good deed as if it were ill to them that will account it so as the enemies of the three children accused them to Nebuchadnezzar and those that told Iesabel of Obadiahs hiding the Prophets Helps against it 1. Speak nothing of any man that tends to his hurt and disgrace of which you are not certain which you cannot prove to be true Report is a lyar therefore trust it not 2. Though you do know any evil of your neighbour yet report it not but when duty bindes you and only to such as duty bindes you I mean chiefly of private faults or of publike if they be such as cannot be made better by speaking of nor do good to others by being known 3. Be not tatlers persons full of tongue apt to be still speaking he that speaketh much will speak much evil and among the rest some slanders when other talk faileth he will fall upon the faults of men 4. When you talk forbear medling with other mens matters be not busie-bodies He that 1. is of few words 2. When he speaks medleth as little as may be with others matters 3. Forbears to talk of their faults but as much as he must needs by the bond of duty and then is sure to say nothing but what he knows and can prove that man shall not prove a slanderer Make not your selves petty Devils by slandering and false accusing many have learned that evill precept of accusing boldly because something will stick CHAP. XXIV Of Tale-bearing Vain-glory Violence Unbelief Unkindenesse Unsetlednesse Unthankefullnesse Usury Of TALE-BEARING TAle-bearing It is a sin easily to beleeve false tales as Saul had an open ear to those Sycophants which were ready to accuse David to him of treason and conspiracy Ahashuerus to Haman who traduced the Jews as a people carelesse of the Kings Laws David to Ziba Reasons 1. It is an encouragement and hearkening unto those whose trade is to invent and beleeve lies 2. It makes a man guilty of those lies to which he hath given furtherance and countenance and so he is partaker of anothers sins 3. It is against the clear principle and rule of all actions viz. to do as we would be done by one is offended if another readily receive false tales against him Men are subject to this fault because they are not so perfect in wisedom and charity as they ought to be uncharitablenesse evill suspitions guiltinesse willingnesse to have other faulty and imprudent temerity are the causes of this over-hasty crediting tales A good man neither taketh up nor receiveth a slander against his neighbour Psalm 15. 2. let thy countenance be like the Northwinde to back-biting tongues Vain-glory. Vain-glory is a great sin Iohn 7. 18. Matth. 6. beg We are naturally prone to it Gal. 5. 26. It is when either by vain means which deserve not praise or when by good duties in themselves praise-worthy men seek the praise of men more then the glory of God Iohn 12. 44. But by holy means to seek a good name amongst men with intentional reference to the glory of God is not to be vain-glorious see Phil. 4 7. It is an inordinate desire of account and esteem from men The Philosophers which Ierome was wont to call Animalia gloriae popularis aurae mancipia in those very Books which they wrote against vain-glory whiles they did underwrite their own names are condemned as guil●y of that vanity which they seemed to oppose It is inordinate 1. When a man desires to be esteemed for those things which are in truth so vile mean base that they do not at all commend grace or countenance him which hath them as riches high place in the world learning wit strength beauty nimblenesse eloquence 2. When a man desires esteem from men with a neglect of the esteem and account which he should desire to have with God As Mr. Fox was going along London streets a woman of his acquaintance met him and as they discoursed together she pulled out a Bible telling him that she was going to hear a Sermon whereupon he said to her If you will be advised by me go home again but said she when shall I then go To whom he answered When you tell no body of it One must deny himself in all vain-glory attributed to him Rom. 12. 3. 2 Cor. 12. 6. see Acts 14. 14 15. Rev. 19. 10. He must 1. Be nothing in his own esteem 1 Cor. 11. 31. he must judge aright of his estate indowments and actions 2. He must be content to be nothing in the thoughts of other men Zach. 13. 5. Motives to shun vain-glory 1. There is no greater folly in the world then flattery and there is no greater flattery then self flattery 2. This disposition will betray a man to divers enemies 1. It will make a man exalt himself 2. It will strengthen a mans heart against admonition 3. It s easie for the vilest men to keep up a credit in the world the Pharisees were counted the only Saints 4. God will be highly displeased if we take to us false honour as he was with Herod How to distinguish real glory and vain-glory 1. All true honour is grounded on real excellency and that which is so in Gods account 1 Pet. 3. 3 4. 2. True honour must be à laudato viro from one that is praise worthy 3. From persons that know you Violence Violence is a great sin It is unrighteousnesse born forth with strong hand with strength of body wit or purse of friends unjustice maintained and backed with strength Two things must concur to it 1. An unequal and unrighteous intent
behalf Christ prayers ex vi pretii we ex vi promissi He tenders to God all his promises and the ancient decrees and purposes Iohn 7. 13. 2. He addes his own desires that they may be accomplished Iohn 17. 24. 3. He makes answer to any thing which is objected against any of these as the devil is an Accuser so he is an Advocate 1 Iohn 1. 2. 4. Christ doth this constantly and earnestly Rev. 8. 21. 5. He tenders also your desires mixeth his incense with your odours and he tenders them as his own as truely as he bears your sins he prayes your prayers Christs Intercession 1. Began immediately upon the fall he began to be Intercessour when he began to be a Priest this was part of his Priestly Office Revel 13. 8. Heb. 3. 4. Before he came in the flesh he interceded vi pretii praestandi since he ascended into heaven he intercedes vi pretii praestiti 2. His Intercession was effectual in all ages of the world ever since there was a golden Altar and an Altar of Incense one referred to Christs oblation the other to his Intercession Heb. 7. 25. Rev. 8. 2. 3. His Intercession is of as great extent as all Gods promises and Christs purchase Lev. 16. 12 13. Ioh. 16. 24. 4. All the long prayers Christ hath made for the accomplishment of the promises and necessities of the Church God hath heard Zech. 1. 12 13. 3. 23. Ioh. 1. 41. see 22. Because 1. Christ hath with God the Father one and the same will Ioh. 10. 30. 2. Because of the acceptation of his Person Ephes. 1. 6. Cant. 5. 6. 3. They are all offered on the Altar of his Godhead Heb. 9 14. So Christs Priesthood hath two parts 1. The work of our Redemption 2. The applying of it By Intercession forus and then by bestowing his bloud upon us to purge our consciences and actually to justifie us for these two go still together that the whole work may be Christs The Effects of this Priestly Office 1. Satisfaction This is implied in all those places where Christ is said to lay down his life as a price for sin and to become an Atonement for our iniquities Justice is satisfied by declaring a due measure of hatred against sinne and a due respect of his honour who is wronged by it 2. Reconciliation with God God is reconciled with us in Christ. 3. Obtaining of Remission of sins 4. Communication of his Spirit and Graces By his stripes we are healed The Priestly Office of Jesus Christ is the greatest Magazine and Store-house of comfort and grace on this side Heaven to all Christians Paul opens and presseth it on the Hebrews labouring with unbelief the Priestly Office of Jesus Christ. Both the Kingly and Prophetical Offices of Jesus Christ are principiated in this Revel 1. 16 18. See vers 13. Antichristianism is an invasion on the Priestly Office of Christ the Masse that Incruentum Sacificium is a derogation to the Sacrifice of Christ their prayers to Saints to his Intercession their satisfaction to his Satisfaction The Pope is styled Pontifex maximus Christ did by one Sacrifice perfect for ever those that are sanctified This Office of Christ is set up out of meer love and compassion for the relief of distressed souls Christs princely Office is for terrour Psal. 2. there is a mixture of terrour in his prophetical Office The light shined in darknesse and the darknesse comprehended it not The Covenant of Grace is laid upon the satisfaction of Christ Heb. 9. 14 15. He made full satisfaction to Divine Justice for all our sins else the Lord might come on the Debtor if the Surety had not made full satisfaction to the Creditor Ephes. 5. 2. Christ did more fully satisfie God and Divine Justice then if all we had gone to hell and been damned to all eternity the debt was now paid all at once not by a little weekly the Divine Justice would have been satisfying not satisfied by us We are not able to make any Atonement for sin Micah 6. 6 7. Psal. 49. 7 8. The Jews to this day believe that God is atoned by Sacrifices the Papists that he is pacified by penance and works of Supererogation But God now rejects all those things of his own appointment Heb. 10. 3 4 5 6 7 8. and Christ is set forth as a propitiation for sinne through faith in his bloud The Arminians although in words for shew they professe the satisfaction of Christ yet indeed they no lesse then the Socinians deny and overthrow the satisfaction of Christ and the efficacy of his merit They place not the nature of Christs satisfaction in that he on the Crosse sustained the person of the elect for this they deny and so satisfied God the Father for them as if they had satisfied him in their own person But in that that he got the Father a right and will of entering into a New Covenant with men which he might make with them upon any condition as well of works as faith Also they deny that the end of the satisfaction or merit and death of Christ is the application of the reconciliation and remission of sins Sacrifices of the old Testament were 1. Living things 2. Not living but solid as bread 3. Not living and liquid as wine and oyl There was alwayes Destructio rei oblatae if it was a living thing it was slain answerable to which Christ is said to be a Lamb slain Heb. 9. 22. if it were not living and solid it was bruised so Christ was bruised for our iniquities if it was not living and liquid it was poured out so Christ. Some object against the equity of this How could God punish an innocent person for the nocent This was equal since all parties were agreed 1. God the Father Matth. 3. 17. 2. Christ Heb. 10. 7. There was the ordination of the Father and free submission in Christ. It is no injury to require the debt of the Surety Again Some object this How could Christ being one Person expiate the offences of so many thousands Adam by vertue of his publick capacity could ruine all Rom. 5. 15. to the end therefore Christ might much more expiate the offences of many because of the dignity of his Person And for this reason his sufferings though but temporary might compensate Justice for the eternal torments of sinners sith sufferings are not finite in their merit and efficacy though discharged in a short time Act. 20. 28. God was more pleased with his sufferings then displeased with Adams sin The Socinians make this the only cause of Christs suffering to be an example to us this is the lesse principal They say God may have that liberty which man hath a man may forgive his neighbour offending without satisfaction and so may God God could have pardoned sin without satisfaction Quid omnipotente potentius saith Austin But this way of Christs suffering was expedient First In reference
souls of men 2 Cor. 11. 3. Ministers must preach often especially on the Sabbath Our Saviour preacht every Sabbath day Luk. 4. 21. So did Paul Act. 17 2. See 2 Tim. 4. 2. The Fathers preacht twice every Lords-day and almost every week-day Paul bids the Minister preach in season and out of season the Sabbath by reason of the publick meeting is a season of preaching it is requisite therefore for him to preach every Sabbath Again Christs custom was to go into the Synagogue every Sabbath-day and so the Apostles 3. The sanctifying of the Sabbath must be done in the best manner that may be both by Minister and people the Minister must be helpful to the people in the sanctifying of it he may then preach if he will give himself to reading and study as he is commanded 4. His duty is to labour in the Word and Doctrine that is to take great pains in it therefore he must preach Sabbath after Sabbath 5. Every one is required to be plentifull in the work of the Lord therefore the Minister in his special work of preaching must be plentifull and this he is not unlesse he preach at least every Sabbath and if his strength will serve him twice both morning and evening Ministers must in their preaching denounce Gods wrath against sinners 1 Sam. 12. 25. How comminatory are our Saviours words O generation of vipers how can you escape the condemnation of hell And Woe unto you Scribes and Pharisees Hypocrites And Woe unto the world because of offences And Woe be unto you that are rich and that laugh There shall be weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth Paul is sharp 1 Cor. 6. 9 10. For such things sake the wrath of God comes upon the children of disobedience Tribulation and anguish shall be upon every soul that doth evil Moses dischargeth many vollies of curses upon those which break the Law of the Lord. Reasons 1. Because there is in every man an old man to be beaten down the threats of the Word are a necessary instrument for working in a man a hatred of sin 2. There remaineth in the best of Gods servants much presumption whereby they are apt to imbolden themselves in sinning the Law must make way for the Gospel the threats of the Word are a most needful means of humiliation This is the most fruitful and profitable teaching It is good for the impenitent to make him repent and for the penitent to make him repent more if they wisely limit the threats they utter There is a Frierly kinde of preaching to presse resemblances and similitudes too farre and a Jesuitical preaching to declaim much against Hereticks and urge some things of Morality But the best preaching is to convince men of their misery by sin and to shew them the way to avoid it Plain preaching is most profitable for a mixt Auditory He is the best Scholar that can teach Christ plainliest and for my part if I would set my self to be idle I would choose that kinde of preaching which is counted so laborious Dr Taylor on Tit. 9. Paul saith he there being the greatest Schollar of all the Apostles was the most fearful to make the least shew of it Doctor Preston being asked Why he preached so plainly and dilated so much in his Sermons answered He was a Fisherman Now Fishermen said he if they should winde up the Net and so cast it into the Sea they should catch nothing but when they spread the Net then they catch the Fish I spread my Net said he because I would catch the Fish that is I preach so plainly and dilate so much in my Sermons that I may win souls to Christ. Ministers must preach in the evidence and demonstration not so much of Art or Nature as of the Spirit and Grace Many turn sound preaching into a sound of preaching tickling mens ears like a tinkling cymbal King Iames resembled the unprofitable pomp of such self-seeking discourse stuft with a vain-glorious variety of humane allegations to the red and blew flowers that pester the corn when it stands in the field where they are more noisom to the growing crop then beautiful to the beholding eyes There is a kinde of fine neat dainty preaching consisting in well-sounding words and of strains of humane wit and learning to set out the skill and art of the speaker and make the hearer applaud and commend him which a man may well doubt whether ever God will blesse to the winning of souls These self-preaching men that make preaching little else but an ostentation of wit and reading do put the sword of the Spirit into a velvet scabbard that it cannot prick and wound the heart The word of God seems to be most conveniently applied by handling it after the manner of Doctrine and Use this course is of all other the fittest for the memory of speaker and hearer for the capacity of the simple and for the profitable making use of all learning and reading It giveth least scope to wander from the Text and holdeth a man most closely to the revealed will of God It hath the clear example of Christ who Luk. 4. having read his Text first interpreted it then observed the points of Doctrine saying This day is this Scripture fulfilled in your ears Then he began to apply it by way of reproof which he illustrated with ●it examples out of Scripture and so would have proceeded but his hearers moved with rage interrupted him The Doctrine must be soundly deduced out of the Text and then substantially handled It is a proposition either expressed in the Text or else concluded from it It must be proved by a Text or two of Scripture and confirmed by reason taken from the causes or effects or some other logical argument The Use is a Proposition syllogistically inferred from the Doctrine as the Doctrine is from the Text. The chief kinds of Uses are 1. Confirmation of truth 2. Refutation of error 3. Reproof of sin mixed with terror and dehortation 4. Instruction mixed with exhortation to do well 5. Consolation or strengthening for and in well-doing All Doctrines will not yeeld all these Uses but some one some another wherefore those must be taken that are fittest for time place or matter The preaching of all Doctrines is to end in Use and Application When Christ had laid down all the speculative considerations about the day of Judgement he bids them make use of it Matth. 24. ●2 Exhortation is so necessary that all the ministerial work is called by this name Act. 2. 40. 13. 15. See 1 Tim. 4. 13. 6. 2. In all the Epistles after the doctrinal part followeth the hortatory Tit. 1. 9. See Iohn 4. 9. We have divers examples of such as applied the word particularly to the hearers 1 King 18. 18. Hos. 5. 1. Mal. 2. 1. Luk. 3. 19. This preaching is enjoyned to Ministers under the Gospel Isa. 58. 1. Tit.
Conversion and Free-will I. Of Conversion COnversion is a coming back again to God from whom one departed by sin Hos. 14. 1. Turning is a word borrowed from Travellers who being out of the way get into it again by turning that is by leaving the way in which they did walk and taking another different way from it contrary to it if one have gone the quite contrary way There is first Habitual Conversion the first infusion of life and habits of grace conversion from a state of sin Act. 3. 19. Secondly Actual the souls beginning to act from that life and those habits a conversion from some particular grosse acts of sinne Luke 22. 32. It is so called because of the great breach grosse sins make on ones Justification 1. Puts a damp on all his graces Psal. 51. 10. 2. There is a suspension of all the comforts of grace vers 12. so that one may be said Quodammodo excidere in respect of the use and comfort Isa. 63. 10 17. Mans aversion from God by sinne and conversion to God by grace is the summe of all Divinity A sinner departs from God two wayes 1. As the chief good 2. As the utmost end therefore conversion is a change of these two when one makes God his chiefest good and his glory his utmost end A man in turning to God First Makes God the chief good 1. If he make him the chief object of his contemplation Psal. 139. 17. Where our treasure is there will our hearts be also 2. If he choose him as his portion Iosh. 24. 22. Psal. 119 57. 3. If he desire all things else in subordination to him Prov. 30. 8. sine summo bono nil bonum 4. Judgeth of all times or persons according as they have this good or are serviceable for it 5. Fears sin above all things which will separate between God and him Secondly He makes Gods glory his chiefest end this is Gods end Prov. 16. He makes God the utmost end of his being Rom. 14. 8. and acting 1 Cor. 10. 31. Rom. 11. 30. From him as the first cause To him as the last end God is our chiefest good therefore must be our utmost end See Psal. 73. 25 26. It is the first Question in the Assemblies Catechism What ought to be the chiefest and highest end of every man in this life The Properties and Qualities which ought to be found in true Conversion It must be 1. Present and seasonable While it is called to day call upon the Lord while he is near and seek him while he may be found The present time is the only time of converting not the future now at this instant time God offers mercy exhorts cals To day if you will hear his voice harden not your hearts the future time is uncertain we cannot assure our selves of another hour We have many examples daily of the falshood of late repentance The longer we defer it the more difficult it will be as a sore without a plaister the more hardly it is healed 2. Universal or General we must turn from all sinne without exception or reservation of any and chiefly from our own sins Grace is called Light Leaven The Law of God forbiddeth all sinne God hateth all sin Christ died for all sin the conscience condemneth all sin and in our Covenant with God we renounced all sinne Cast away all your transgressions hate every false way 3. It must be hearty sincere unfeigned God complains of some that turned unto him feignedly 4. Constant persevering to the end a continuing still more and more to convert a daily renewing these acts and reforming our faults we must cleave to the Lord with full purpose of heart The order and manner of this work how and in what measure it is wrought in the Saints First The Doctrine of the Gospel is propounded and made known in both the parts of it viz. that which concerns mans misery in himself and the perfect and only remedy in Christ to all penitent sinners Secondly The soul is enlightened and enabled to assent unto this Doctrine Thirdly It is yet further stirred up to consider of this Doctrine so beleeved and to give heed to it as Lydias minde was wrought upon when Paul preacht Fourthly It begins to apply that Doctrine to it self so farre as to be affected with the sense of its misery but so as there is wrought also a hope of getting out of this misery and a perswasion that he shall be accepted and hereupon follows conversion For he that sees himself in an ill state and sees also a certain way out of it being perswaded that he may by such and such means escape and avoid will undoubtedly apply himself to seek his own good and the Spirit of God by working this perswasion converts the soul We may plainly see this order in Davids renewing of his conversion after his sinne and in the hearers of Peters Sermon Act. 2. where first they heard and marked Peter then were pricked in heart then asked What they must do to be saved and being instructed by Peter to convert did so and were saved Marks or Signs of Conversion 1. Such a one hath had experience of the discovery of sinne as the greatest evil and of misery to himself by sin Sin revived and I died 2. The Lord hath wrought in him a glorious discovery of Christ and an instinct after union with him which is faith Phil 3. 10. 3. He is brought under the guidance and power of the Spirit Ioh. 3. 6. 1 Cor. 6. 11. Mat. 11. 5. Gospellized brought under the power of it hath a spiritual bent in his soul a new principle new ends 2 Cor. 5. 17. He sees things with another eye He hath a new law planted within him which will make all duties easie and sweet to him Ier. 31. 33. 4. He is made like to God every Saint is a living Image of God He will love persons the more he seeth of God in them and Ordinances the more pure they are 5. Where there is life there will be growth 1 Pet. 2. 3. they will grow up as willows as calves of the stall Mal. 4. True Conversion differs from false 1. In the efficient cause for first the true spring comes from the Spirit of God by means of faith in the Gospel stirring up a desire of Gods favour and freedome from sinne for attaining that favour the false from a natural desire of ones welfare that he may escape the punishment of sin 2. In the formal or manner of doing true Conversion is a willing and deliberate act out of choice false a forcible act done out of compulsion 3. Final the true seeks to please God the false to ease it self Motives to and Means of Conversion By Motives I mean certain considerations and arguments that in all reason should prevail to make men resolve upon the work By Means some things tending to enable men the better to do it when they have
all 2 Cor. 5. He became sinne for us and his righteousnesse is imputed to us that phrase is repeated eleven times of Gods imputing Christs righteousnesse to us Faith is said to be imputed for righteousnesse but not as a grace or quality in us for that faith is but one grace but the Law requires an universal righteousnesse even an entire conformity to the Law of God by faith in Christs bloud we obtain Justification 2. To justifie is to absolve or pronounce righteous we cannot be so from our own righteousnesse which is imperfect the Scripture cals Christ our righteousnesse 1 Cor. 1. 30. Rom. 5. 18. as Adams sinne was made ours by imputation we being in his loins so Christs righteousnesse is made ours we being in him the second Adam * Piscator and Mr VVotton make Justification to be nothing but the Remission of sins and imputation of Righteousnesse and the Remission of sins the same thing a man being therefore accounted righteous because his sins are not imputed to him and they deny that the Scripture ever saith Christs righteousnesse is imputed to us Mr. Baxter in his Aphoris p. 186. confesseth that the difference between Justification and Remission of sins is very small Mr. Gataker in Mr. VVottons Defence pag. 58. and also in his Animadversions upon the Disputes between Piscator and Lucius and in his Answer to Gomarus seems to distinguish between Justification largely taken and Remission of sins The righteousnesse by which we are justified and stand righteous before God is not our own righteousnesse but the righteousnesse of Christ Phil. 3. 8 9. 2 Cor. 5. 21. not the righteousnesse of Christ as God the second Person in Trinity but as Mediator God-man In which there are two things 1. The perfect holinesse of his humane nature Heb. 7. 26. 2. The perfect righteousnesse which he performed in doing and suffering according to the Law this is imputed to us Christs active obedience his good works and holy life could never have been meritorious for us nor brought us to heaven if he had not died for us therefore our Justification and obtaining of heaven is ascribed to his bloud as if that alone had done both Rom. 5. 9. Heb. 10. 19. Revel 5. 6 9 11. his intercession and prayers had not been meritorious for us if he had not died for us The parts of Justification First Imputation of Christs righteousnesse that is God accounting his righteousnesse ours as if we had in our own persons performed it Rom. 4. 6 9 23. as there is a true and real union between us and Christ so there is a real imputation of Christs righteousnesse to us Cant. 6. 10. Revel 12. 1. a soul triumphs more in the righteousnesse of Christ imputed then if he could have stood in the righteousnesse in which he was created The imputation of Christs righteousnesse was first rejected by the Jesuites Carl. Consens Eccles. Cathol contra Trid. de gratia c. 5. Secondly From thence there follows a forgivenesse of sins 2 Cor. 5. 19. Psal. 32. This is called hiding ones sins Blotting them out Burying them in the Sea Dan. 9. 24. Some say not imputing of sinne and imputing righteousnesse are not two parts but one single act there is the term from which and to which There are two sorts of contraries such which have both a real being as white and black in colours 2. Privatively as light and darknesse darknesse hath no being but the absence of light so sinne and righteousnesse are two contraries but sinne hath no being for then God should be the authour of it introduction of light is the expulsion of darknesse not imputing sin and imputing righteousnesse is one thing else the Apostles Argument say they would not hold Rom. 4. 6. where he alledgeth Psal. 32. He brings that place which speaks of not imputing sinne to prove that we are justified by Christs righteousnesse imputed This they esteem their Argumentum palmarium saith Gomarus Thus they argue Paul here proves by the testimony of David that Justification is an imputation of righteousnesse either by his words or by words that are equipollent not by his own words therefore he proves it per verbornm aequipollentiam and consequently those speeches to impute righteousnesse and forgive sins are equipollent but a thing may be proved also saith Gomarus by force of consequence and M. G●taker saith the Argument is weak Christ dying is the deserving and satisfactory cause to Gods Justice whereby we obtain Justification and Remission of sins Some Hereticks hold God was never angry with man only men were made enemies by their own sins and do therefore conclude that satisfaction by Christs bloud as by way of a price is a falshood and all that Christ did by dying and suffering was only as an example to teach us in what way we are to obtain remission of sins and therefore according to them Justification is a pardoning of sin without Christ as a Mediator Arguments to the contrary 1. Christ is called a Redeemer Rom. 3. 14. 1 Cor. 1. 30. and Iob I know that my Redeemer liveth He is a Redeemer and we obtain our Justification by this Redemption therefore he is the meritorious and deserving cause of it he hath redeemed us by his bloud and we are bought with a price 2. He is a Mediatour 1 Tim. 2. and he is the Mediatour of the New Testament These things are implied in that 1. That God and men were equally disagreeing God was alienated from men and men from God 2. Christ came that he might pacifie God angry with us and convert our hearts who were rebels against him 3. The means by which this was done the death of this Mediator as appeareth Heb. 9. 15 16. 3. From those places where Christ is called a Propitiation 1 Iohn 2. 1. in allusion to the Mercy-seat Exod. 25. 17. Numb 7. 89. Two things are implied here 1. That God was exceeding angry with us for our sins 2. That Christ did pacifie him by his bloud The Mercy-seat was called also the Oracle because God answered by it and the covering because it covered the Ark in which were laid up the Tables Christ is compared to this both in regard of his Prophetical Office because God doth by him declare his will as also in regard of his Priestly Office because by this God is pleased 4. From the places where Christ is said to be a Sacrifice Ephes. He gave himself an Offering and a Sacrifice and in the Hebrews Christ was once offered whence note 1. That Christs death is a true Offering and Sacrifice 2. It was done in the dayes of his flesh for the destruction of sin 5. All those places must needs prove Christ to be the meritorious cause where Christ is said to take away our sins and the punishment from us Isa. 53. He bore our iniquities 2 Cor. 5. 21. When were we justified seeing Justification is a change not of our quality but state
in the Covenant Ier. 31. Heb. 8. The holy Ghost seldom names it without some high expression Psal. 51. Ephes. 1. Remission of sins and of which This Remission is both free and full Isa. 1. 43. Ezek. 25. 18 22. Heb. 8. 12. Manasseh Salomon Paul Mary Magdalen were great sinners yet pardoned God doth of his own free grace and mercy forgive us our sins Psal. 51. 1. Rom. 3. 24. Eph. 1. 7. 1 Ioh. 2. 12. The word remitting or forgiving implies that sinne is a debt or offence as Christ cals it in his form of Prayer God is said to forgive when he takes away the guilt and frees us from condemnation Isa. 44. 22. Secondly The inward cause in God which moves him to it is his grace for God might have left all mankinde under the power of their sins as he hath done the Devils Thirdly The outward meritorious cause is the bloud of Christ. Paul in the Epistle to the Hebrews largely shews that it was the bloud of Christ typified by the Sacrifices that purgeth us from our sins by Christs merits Gods grace is obtained Fourthly The instrumental cause is faith Rom. 3. 25. 5. 1. not considered as a work but as an act of the soul receiving and applying Christ to us not going out to him as love doth for then it were a work Fifthly The immediate effect of it is Sanctification and the healing of our nature Rom. 8. 1. to be cleansed or washed from sin implies both the taking away the guilt of it and giving power against our corruptions For these six thousand years God hath been multiplying pardons and yet free grace is not tired and grown weary Our sins are covered Psal. 32. 1. as a loathsom sore cast into the Sea Micah 7. 19. as Pharaoh and the Aegyptians blotted out as a debt in a book Isa. 44. 22. Psal. 55. 1. Object We have forgivenesse of sins upon a price therefore we are not freely forgiven Answ. Forgivenesse of sins and Christs Satisfaction may well consist whatsoever it cost Christ it costs us nothing 1. It was infinite grace that God should ever intend to pardon a wretched sinner Ephes. 1. 6. 2. That he should give his Son for this and that this sinner should be pardoned and not another Object God will not forgive except we repent and beleeve Acts 2. 19. 10. 42. Answ. God promiseth forgivenesse to such only as repent and beleeve but they have forgivenesse meerly from the grace of God not from the worthinesse of their beleeving or repenting Hos. 14. 4 2. These graces are freely given them To you it is given to beleeve and God hath given repentance to the Gentiles To whom it appertains to remit sins The power of remitting sins belongs only to God I even I blot out thy transgressions Isa. 43. 25. that is true in the Gospel though not well applied Who can forgive sins but God only because it is an offence against him that you may know who hath power saith Christ to forgive sins I say unto thee Walk he only by his own power can forgive it who by his own power can remove any judgement the effect of sinne Ministers are said to remit sins Iohn 21. 23. but that is because they have a special Office to apply the promises of pardon to broken hearts See Luk 24 47. Acts 13. 38. The Ministery of Reconciliation is committed to them as to the Embassadours of Christ 2 Cor. 5. 18 19 20. An confessio auricularis sit necessaria ad remissionem peccatorum Whether auricular confession be necessary to the remission of sins The Church of Rome will have it necessary for every one to confesse unto a Priest all his deadly sins And such indeed are all whatsoever without the mercy of God in Christ Rom. 6. ult Gal. 3. 10. which by diligent examination he can finde out together with the severall circumstances whereby they are aggravated Nothing will suffice to procure one that is baptized remission of sins without this Confession either in re or in voto as Bellarmine doth expound it This is no small task which they impose upon the people of Christ Quid molestius quid onerosius saith Bellarmine therefore sure they had need to have good warrant for it especially being so peremptory as to Anathematize all which shall refuse to subscribe unto them No general Councel untill that of Laterane under Innocent the third about twelve hundred years after Christ decreed a necessity of auricular confession Erasmus ad Act. 19. affirmeth that it was not ordained by God nor yet practised in the ancient Church after Christ. The hinge of the Question is not concerning confession of sins in general unto a Minister but of particular sins neither whether we may but whether we ought necessarily purpose a manifestation of every known mortal sin and the grievous circumstances thereof or otherwise stand hopelesse of all remission of our sins B. Mort. Appeal l 13. c. 12. S. 1. There is no ground in Scripture for it but much against it in that the Scripture in many places sheweth it sufficient except in some cases to confesse unto God only Besides such Confession as Papists require viz. a particular enumeration of all mortal sins with their several aggravating circumstances is not possible and therfore not of divine Institution Cardinal Cajetane on Iam. 5. acknowledgeth Non agi de Sacramentali confessione That confession Matth. 3. 6. 1. Was not made of every one apart of every particular fault they had committed and secretly in St Iohns ear 2. The Greek word signifieth confession of known faults and overthroweth the recital of secret sins which ear-confession requireth 3. It is contrary to the nature of the meeting which was publick 4. To the nature of a Sacrament administred which being publick required a publick confession of mans corruption 5. This was but once and before baptism and not as the Papists have it here and before the Lords Supper Cartw. in loc The apprehension of the pardon of sin will sweeten every condition 1. Sicknesse Mat. 9. 2. 2. Reproach 2 Cor. 1. 12. 3. Imprisonment Rom. 8. 34. 4. It will comfort one in the remainders of corruption Rom. 8. 1. 5. Deadly dangers The Angel of God saith Paul stood by me this night whose I am and whom I serve 6. It will support us at the day of Judgement Act. 3. 19. Reasons 1. Because sin in the guilt of it doth imbitter every condition even death it self 1 Cor. 15. 26. then one looks upon every crosse coming from God as an avenger Ierem. 30. 14. and upon mercies as given him to fat him to destruction Secondly This makes a man look upon every affliction as coming from a Fathers hand when he can look on sinne as pardoned Heb. 12. 9. there is an ira paterna Thirdly Remission of sins gives him boldnesse at the throne of grace Ephes. 3. 12. 1 Iohn 3. 21. How to know whether
the world others natural moderate in things indifferent and shunning the occasions of sinne the meditating on the death of Christ is the purest and most effectual way of mortifying sinne 1 Pet. 4. 1. Look upon Christs death not only as a pattern but cause of Mortification Iohn 3. 14. Heb. 12. 2. 1. Look upon sin as the causes of Christs sufferings Zech. 12. 10. Act. 2. 37. 2. Consider the greatnesse and dreadfulnesse of his sufferings Rom. 8. 32. 3. The fruit of his sufferings Col. 2. 15. 4. Reason must argue from the end of Christs sufferings which was Mortification as well as comfort and pardon 1 Iohn 3. 6. Ephes. 5. 27. Improve the death of Christ 1. By faith Rom. 6. 6. 7. 25. 2. By Prayer Heb. 10. 19. 5. A preparation to this duty Labour daily to finde out thy sins we are naturally very prone to entertain a good opinion of our selves and discern not many evils in us 1. Study the Law Rom. 7. I was alive without the Law but when I saw the inward motions of sinne were abominable to God I died compare thy own soul with it 2. Study thy own wayes When thou art crost how art thou troubed say Is not this anger when others reproach thee how art thou troubled say Is not this pride and self-love 3. Have an ear open to the admonition of faithful friends leave not thy heart till it plead guilty 4. Make use of Ordinances the Word read and heard Prayer the Sacrament after he had commanded them to put off the old man Colos. 3. he saith Let the Word dwell plentifully in you David begs of God to strengthen him 5. Take heed and shun all the occasions that foment and cherish thy corruptions 1. Inward thy own thoughts we cure the itch by cleansing the bloud Iob 31. 1. Why should I think on a maid 2. Outward there are two of all sins 1. Idlenesse the devils cushion 2. Evil company 6. Upon special seasons there must be the solemn exercise of fasting and humiliation because we must mortifie the inclinations of sin Iam. 4. 9. CHAP. XIII II. Of Vivification THere are two parts of a Christians duty Dying to sinne and Living to God It is called living to God Rom. 14. 8. Gal. 2. 19. to holinesse the life of righteousnesse rising to Christ. It is first Habitual when the Spirit of God infuseth such principles where by we are able to live unto God Secondly Practical Vivification is the constant endeavour of a beleever to exercise all those Graces which the Spirit of God hath planted in him The life of a thing is the acting according to the principle of it so something daily draws out the exercise of those holy Graces the Spirit of God hath wrought in him Prov. 4. 23. Practical Vivification reacheth to all things which concern Christianity but consists in two things 1. The active bent and propensenesse of the inward man to the things of Gods Kingdom 2. Strength and ability to act according to the rule The School-Divines make this spiritual bent to stand in five things 1. In oppugnatione vitiorum the same with practical Mortification 2. In contemptu terrenorum 3. In repulsione tentationum 4. In tolerantia afflictionum 5. In aggressione bonorum operum quamvis arduorum This strength comes 1. From the principle within the life of the habits 2. The Spirit of God dwels in them and stirs them up to act This new life is Christs rather then our own He is the root and author of the life of Grace Iohn 8. 12. The Gospel is the ministration of life Col. 3. 4. 1 Iohn 5. 11 12. 2 Tim. 1. 10. There is a threefold life 1. Natural or personal 2. Politick 3. Divine or Spiritual 1. The natural life flows from the Union of soul and body 2. The politick life comprehends all those things which people perform one to another by vertue of their Relations and Associations of people together by Lawes Thirdly Spiritual life which ariseth from the intercourse between God and the soul. There is a great similitude and dissimilitude between also the natural and spiritual life They agree in these things 1. Natural life supposeth some generation so doth spiritual life therefore it is called Regeneration 1 Iohn 2. 27. 2. What the soul is to the body in the natural life that is God to the soul in a spiritual life As the soul is the principle of all the actions and operations in the body so in the spiritual life Christ works all but by the man 3. So long as the soul is in the body one is an amiable creature when that is gone he is but a carkasse so so long as God is with the soul it is in good plight 4. Where there is life there is sense and feeling spiritual life is seen by the tendernesse of the heart Ephes. 4. 18 19. it is sensible of injuries done to it by sin Rom. 7. 24. or the decayes of it by Gods absence 5. Where there is life there is a nutritive appetite an instinct to preserve life 1 Pet. 2. 2. This life is nourished by the Ordinances and constant influences of the Spirit 6. Where there is life there will be growth Gods people grow more wise solid They differ thus 1. The Union between the soul and body is natural between God and the soul from free grace 2. In the natural life there is an indigence till the soul and body be joyned but there is no want on Gods part though he be not united to the soul. 3. The soul and man united make one person so do not God and the soul. 4. The natural life comes wholly from corrupt principles and it is a fading life Iam. 4. 14. but he that lives this one life once lives it for ever Ioh. 6. 5. This divine spiritual life stands in two things First We by our Apostasie are fallen off from God when God restores us to life he restores us to his favour Ephes. 2. from v. 11. to the end and so sin and the curse is removed Secondly There is wrought in the soul a sutable frame of Spirit to do the thing● agreeable to the will of God an inward principle of holinesse the repairing of Gods Image in us Ephes. 1. 2 ch quickned by him Christ is our life and the fountain of this spiritual life three wayes 1. He is the meritorious cause of it he hath purchased all this for us by his bloud he bare the wrath of God for us by his active and passive obedience He hath merited that all this life should be communicated to us 2. He is the efficient cause of it works all this in and to us he sends his holy Spirit into the souls of all those whom he means to save applies to them their peace and pardon and quickens them 3. As he is the exemplar rule and copy how our life should be led The preaching of the Gospel is the ministration of
Spirit the corrupt self is lookt on as an enemy Rom. 7. lat end I delight in the Law of God in the inward man and concludes but I my self that is his sanctified self serve the Lord. Mark what it is that thou esteemest in thy self Is it Grace Gods Image and what thou dislikest and strivest to destroy is it the body of sin 2. Then that love is subordinate to the love of God God to every sanctified man is the Summum bonum ultimus sinis therefore all other things are but media subordinata none of us must live to himself 3. Such a one loves himself for those ends God allows him 1. That he may be happy for ever God presseth us to duty by this argument that we may have eternal life 2. He would have thee get more knowledge grace experience that thou maist be more serviceable here The third object of our love is our neighbour Marks to know whether my love to my neighbour be a sanctified love First When it is subordinate to the love of God when I love him under God we must love our neighbour in God and for God Secondly I must love there specially where God loves those that have most of God in them All my delight is in the Saints Christ calls this a new Commandment Thirdly There will be a performing of all second Table duties Love is the fulfilling of the Law I will give him that respect which is due unto his place I will strive to preserve his life chastity estate good name I shall be content with my own and rejoyce in his welfare It is the nature of love to seek the preservation of the thing beloved The fourth object of our love is the rest of Gods creatures which he hath given to us Marks to know whether our love to the creature be right or no 1. When the beholding God in the creature draws the heart out the delighting to behold the wisdom and power of God in the creature 2. Mark for what end thou lovest the creature Every creature must be delighted in as it brings us nearer to God or serves as an instrument to honour him thou lovest the creatures because they are a means to keep thee in a better frame for duty CHAP. XXI II. Of Hatred THe affection opposite to love is Hatred 1. The nature of hatred 2. The image of God in it 3. The extream depravation of it by sin 4. The work of grace sanctifying it Of the first Hatred in a reasonable soul is a motion of the will whereby it flies from that which it apprehends to be evil and opposeth it indeavouring to hurt it It ariseth from a discord and disconformity of the object There is a two-fold hatred 1. Odium abominationis a stying only from a thing 2. Odium inimicitiae whereby ● pursue what is evil There was little use of this affection in our primitive pure estate there was nothing evil to man or in himself a concord in all There are dive●s causes of this hatred 1. Antipathy 2. What hinders us from attaining good envy jealousie there was nothing then to work this but the sinne of the devil only which whether man knew it or no is uncertain yet this affection was in him and sanctified First He was prone in his spirit to shunne a real evil sinne in that degree it was evil Secondly The depravation of this affection the image of the devil As much of our original corruption is found in this affection as any The greatnesse of the depravation of this affection appears in three things 1. The object of it 2. The Quality of it 3. The fruits Only sin is the proper object of it but now our hatred is wholly taken from sin it abhors nothing that is evil The second object of it now is that which is truly and properly good 1. God himself primarily all wicked men hate him Psalm 81. 15. Rom. 1. 30. in all his glorious perfections Justice Holinesse 2. Christ Iohn 7. 7. 15. ●h 3. All good men You shall be hated of all men for my names sake 4. All Gods wayes and Ordinances Fools hate instruction Prov. 1. Secondly The Quality of this affection It is 1. A causlesse hatred Christ saith They hate me without a cause and so the Saints may say 2. Perfect entire without any mixture of any love 3. Violent Psal 55. 3. 4. Cruel Psal. 25. 9. 5. Durable irreconcilable Thirdly The effects of it 1. All sins of omission 2. Abundance of actual wickednesse contempt and distrust of God his wayes and children Fourthly The Sanctification of this affection of hatred The work of grace in every faculty is destroying the power of corruption and creating in it those principles of grace that turn it again into the right way 1. It is taken off from those objects to which it was undeservedly carried afore 2. It is ordered aright for measure 3. It brings forth that fruit which God requires First What the work of Gods grace carries the affection of hatred to 1. It makes all our opposition to God and his Ordinances cease it ceaseth to hate good and hates that which is evil 2. It is carried to the right object which is every thing that is really evil to us the will shuns and opposeth it Two sorts of things are really evil 1. What ever is opposite to our natural being our life peace wealth name as sicknesse affliction death 2. What is contrary to our spiritual being as sin All evils of the first nature come from God Gods will is the rule of all holinesse therefore we should submit 1. Our will to God to do what he pleaseth That is the greatest evil which is against the greatest good God sin and wicked men oppose him the greatest evil must have the greatest opposition I hate every fal●e way sin strikes at the being and excellency of God we must dislike wicked men for sins sake 2. The work of grace appears in the degree and measure of working when it sanctifieth any affection It is according as the light of understanding guided by Gods counsel orders the Spirit of evils sin is to be more hated then punishment and the greater the sin the greater should be the opposition 3. The work of Gods grace in sanctifying this affection is much seen in the fruits of hatred This stands in two things 1. Hatred is a Sentinel to the soul to keep out evil it makes the soul warily shun and avoid those things which are really evil to me it is a deep and severe passion not sudden as anger 2. It quickens the soul to the destruction of the thing hated it maketh it endeavour its ruine Signs I. Of Hatred Speaking against a thing still and disgracing it is displeased at its company and cannot endure its presence II. Of Sanctified Hatred 1. If it be sanctified thou ceasest to be a hater of God This makes a creature so like the devil that no
cannot be without righteousnesse 6. Frequently renew godly sorrow carnal mirth ends in sorrow godly sorrow ends in joy this will keep thee low in thine own eyes 7. For maintaining of your joy be careful of your bodies next to sin nothing is more to be shunned then to be under the power of melancholy How our joy may be sanctified in respect of the outward mercies and good things of this life God allows his children to take joy and comfort in all the things of this life in wine musick Live joyfully with the wife of thy youth This Joy is sanctified 1. When we take joy in every creature so as we finde God in it see his love to us 2. As any creature bears Gods Image David loved Salomon because he was a Iedidiah 3. Be as if not in all the joy that thou takest in them 1 Cor. 7. be moderate 4. Let not thy heart draw thee from God 5. All the joy thou takest in the creatures must be in due season as well as in due degree not in time of mourning Rejoycing alwayes in the Lord. See Mr Wheatleys Oyl of Gladnesse CHAP. XXIV Of Sorrow THe opposite passion to Joy or Delight is Grief and Sorrow It is a passion which doth tie up binde and streighten the heart through the apprehension of evil present Grief in it self is a good affection planted by God in mans nature at the first to be a means of causing him to avoid things that were evil for him and would procure his hurt It is procured by the gathering of the worst and grossest bloud about the heart which causeth a dulnesse in the Spirits and consequently unlivelinesse in all the other parts for the bloud and spirits are the instruments of all affections To grieve is natural to grieve for sinne is a strain above nature Grace doth not destroy but correct nature Contrition of spirit is called the Sacrifice of God Psal. 51. 17. he will not despise it that is will most favourably accept it See Isa. 57. 17. This was signified by the Meat-offering of fine flower mixed with oyl which was to be joyned with their burnt offerings That fine flower did type forth this contrition by which the heart is as it were ground to pouder that it may by the holy Ghost be offered up unto God Levit. 2. 1. Isaiah speaks of this Chap. 66. 2. Contrition of heart is that grace whereby a mans soul is truly humbled in the sight of his sins Matth. 5. 4. It differs somewhat from the grace of humility For humility was in Adam during his innocency and should have been in all of us if we had never sinned and as some think is in the Angels for all creatures that are truly good do cast down themselves before God and make no account of themselves in regard of him which to do is to be humble but contrition of spirit doth necessarily presuppose sin and when the soul doth so apprehend the nature of sinne and its own sinfulnesse that it is thereby cast down abased afflicted this is brokennesse of heart It differs also from terrour of conscience stiled attrition by the Schoolmen that looks to the punishment of sinne this chiefly to the evil of sinne as it is sinne and to the very fountain of all sin the corruption of nature from which all actual sins arise Few affections or graces contribute more to a Christians welfare then this a great part of Gods image and the practise of holinesse lies in it There is a two-fold sorrow 1. Sensitive expressed in a sensible manner 2. Intellectual The sorrow of the will or rational sorrow is a being displeased with a thing as having the heart distasted and disliked with it a feeling of sinne as evil with an aversnesse of the will Passionate sensible sorrow is such a stirring of the heart as brings forth tears this follows the bodily temper Not so much the greatnesse of the sorrow as the efficacy of it must be looked unto and the motive of it that it be the consideration of the spiritual mischief of sin in provoking God and causing his displeasure the smallest measure of sorrow thus grounded and working is repentant The work of Gods grace in sanctifying it 1. The Author of it 2. The true Object 3. The gracious Effects First Of the Authour of it It is the holy Spirit that is the worker of all godly sorrow It infuseth such a principle that it turns it from all evil objects and sets it on the right objects in that measure and proportion that the thing requires Secondly The true Object of it We must grieve First For the sins of others even of particular men and the publick sins Psa. 119. 136. David saith in another place He beheld the transgressours and was sorrowfull and Ieremiah saith He would weep in secret for their pride Jerem. 13. 17. 2 Pet. 2. 7. Secondly For the miseries and calamities of others which is pity chiefly publick calamities of the Church and State as Nehemiah and Mordecai Thirdly Our own crosses and afflictions which befall us in our selves and others as Iob did mourn when the evils befell him and David when he was threatned his childe should die and Paul was sorry for the sicknesse of Epaphroditus Fourthly Our own sins and offences for which we are called to afflict our selves and mourn and to turn unto the Lord with tears and lamentations 2. The measure of our sorrow 1. Simply all our sorrows must be proportionable to their cause 2. Moderate not as men without hope neither for friends nor crosses nor continue overlong 3. Comparatively we ought to grieve more for our sins then crosses for the faults of others then their afflictions We should grieve most for sinne appretiativè if not intensivè It should be a Christians best sorrow for quality if not his greatest for quantity Sorrow for sinne is more intellectual and durable Semper dolet de dolore gaudet the matter of this sorrow still continues yet a Christian is to testifie his godly sorrow sometimes more then another 1 Sam. 7. 6. Zechary●2 ●2 10 11. The Objects of it are Such things as are principally and properly matter of grief to him either the absence of that wherein their real goodnesse lies or the presence of a real evil 1. The want of Gods presence in his favour and grace the want of his Image and Ordinances 2. The presence of that which is really evil Gods wrath and displeasure David and Heman could have no peace because God was angry To lie under the guilt of sin Psal. 51. to be under the power of corruption Rom. 7. when Gods name is dishonoured Psalm 119. Rivers of tears runne down mine eyes because men keep not thy Law Rom. 9. I have great heavinesse of heart because my brethren are cast off The gracious Effects or Fruits of godly sorrow Eccles. 7. 3. that is by the sadnesse of the heart exprest in the countenance the heart is
another I. The rectitude of it In the state of Innocency there was little use of it while man did not offend God nothing offended him Christ was perfectly holy and yet angry at the hardnesse of mens hearts and the pollution of the Temple so man might have been angry at the sin of the devils when he knew it Then it would have been no perturbation to his spirit nor blinding of his minde II. The corruption of it Wherein observe 1. The Object this corrupt anger is conversant about and the measure of it 2. The Causes which produce it 3. The many cursed Effects it produceth in mens lives Of the first There are many Objects of anger The right object is dishonour done to Gods name sin that only displeaseth God The object of it is mistaken 1. When I am angry with God he is exempted in regard of his excellency and spotlesse holinesse Ionah was faulty this way and Salomon notes it of men who have perverted their wayes that they fret against God 2. When I am angry with my Superiours it being the passion of correcting punishing the faults of such should grieve us not anger us therefore Ionathan was not altogether blamelesse for being angry against his father Saul in the behalf of David 3. When I am angry with an innocent party where there is no fault there should be no displeasure Lastly In most cases to be angry with unreasonable or senslesse creatures which are too mean to be the objects of anger as Balaam was wroth with his Asse so to be angry with a horse for stumbling or starting unlesse when they be exorbitant from their natural goodnesse as when the Lion and Bear would worry a sheep Secondly One offends in the measure or quantity of anger when he is angry more then enough The proper end of anger is to awaken courage and set it a work to chastise evil or to resist and beat it down that the minde may not be surprized with it such a moderate stirring of this passion as doth serve thus to set the minde a work to resist and oppose a fault or evil thing is allowable but if it come to a greater heat or flame then so then it exceeds and is naught If it be more vehement where the offence is less then it is excessive There may be a fault in the defect when we are not moved a just occasion of anger being offered as in admonishing reproving or correcting Secondly The Causes which produce it Since the fall the natural humours of the body The immediate cause of it is pride and arrogancy the fruit of self-love Proud and haughty scorner is his name that deals in fierce wrath Should such a one as I be thus dealt with 2. Our low esteem of others in comparison of our selves 3. Those things which should cause us to be meek and quiet as learning wisdom any affront done to that excellency which God hath given us whereas these should cause us to be meek our weaknesse which should also make us meek puts us into passion simple and sick folks are most passionate Thirdly The cursed Effects and fruits of this passion of anger 1. It produceth a great deal of sorrow and woe in this world The angry man never wants woe who hath reproaches enemies 2. It disarms the soul of its own force and layes it open to be invaded by an enemy In patience possesse your souls Prov. 25. ult 3. Puts out the eye of our reason Ira furor brevis Eccles. 7. 9. Impedit ira animum ne possit cernere verum Ionah said to God I do well to be angry to death 4. It hurries all the other passions of the soul it s own way 5. It is destructive to one of the principal ends of mans being to humane society Prov. 22. 24. 6. It sets the tongue on fire whence comes reviling raging Moses when he was angry spake unadvisedly with his lips 7. It produceth abundance of wicked actions swearing cursing quarrelling hurting and rude carriage crying stamping staring 8. It hinders a man from any communion with God 1. From hearing Receive the ingrasfed word with meeknesse 2. Prayer 1 Tim. 2. 8. Unbelief and anger hinder our prayers 3. The Sacrament that is a feast of love 9. It quencheth all the motions of Gods Spirit and closeth with the devil he by it possesseth the very soul Ephes. 4. 26 27. Mans nature is enclined to causlesse ungrounded and excessive anger 1 Sam. 20. 30 31. Eliab was angry with David when he spake valiantly Nebuchadnezzar raged against the three children for not worshipping his golden Image and against the Wise-men of Babel for not being able to declare his dream Herod also was wroth against the Wisemen because they returned another way and brought him not word back again concerning the childe Jesus whom they came to enquire of and worship A godly man may fall into passionate fits be over-cholerick as David and Ionah Reasons why man is so prone to this unreasonable distemper 1. The abundance of those vices in every one which concur to the working of unjust anger 1. Self-love which makes one prone to anger because it is so wakeful jealous observative 2. Folly Anger rests in the bosom of fools A fool in the day of his wrath is known An angry man exalteth folly gives it a high room in his heart makes it a great ruler and commander within him now all men are in the corruption of nature fools and have that title given them by the holy Ghost 3. Pride By pride alone cometh contention saith Salomon 2. Anger is a common fault therefore Salomon saith Make no friendship with an angry man lest thou learn his wayes 3. Men make small account of it a little passion choler they say 4. The bodily temper in the farre greater number furthers it the fiery choler which is in a mans body is the instrument of this hot vice So having a soul defiled with those vices which beget anger a body consisting of such humours as will set anger on work finding many examples of it and making little account of it no wonder if a man do prove a wrathfull creature This anger is greatly disgraced in Scripture Prov. 12. 16. 14. 17 29. 21. 24. 19. 19. 22. 24. 29. 22. it is a fruit of the flesh Lastly The work of grace in sanctifying anger 1. The efficient cause of holy anger The principal cause is the Spirit of God in planting a new nature in the soul and so in this affection Morall Philosophy may go a great way in moderating anger but the Spirit of God only makes it holy 2. Sanctified reason is the immediate caller of it out and orderer of it if it be holy anger it is a grace and therefore must be called out by reason Secondly The motive or occasion of it we are angry for what we should 1. Grosse and presumptuous sins done wilfully openly as Christ was angry
opinion of tying grace to the Sacraments overthroweth 1. The highest and most proper cause of our salvation which is Gods free election to which only grace is tied 2. The only meritorious cause of our Regeneration which is the bloud of Christ properly purging us from all sin 3. The most powerfull next and applying efficient which is the holy Ghost Titus 3. 5. The Papists thrust the souls of such babes as die without Baptism into a Limbus puerorum a place very near hell and their bodies out of Christian burial as they call it into an unhallowed place The Thief on the Crosse wanted the outward Baptism yet was saved Luke 23. 43. He that beleeveth and is baptized shall be saved See M. Perk. Cas. of Consc. l. 2. p. 108. to 115. Baptism is necessary not only as a thing commanded but as an ordinary means of Salvation yet that necessity is not so absolute that the denial of Baptism even to Infants should be a certain argument of perdition The Persons who must baptize The Papists say Those that are not ordained and women in case of necessity may baptize No woman is a fit Minister of Baptism For 1. The Minister in his ministerial actions sustaineth the person of Christ which a woman cannot do 2. Those which are called to baptize are called also to preach for the Sacrament without the Word is a dumb Ceremony and as a Seal to a blank and Paul who would not permit a woman to teach ministerially would much lesse suffer her to baptize If any man should set the Kings broad Seal to any instrument but the Lord Keeper his fact were high treason And is there lesse danger in counterfeiting the great Seals of Gods Covenant Aquinas parte tertia Quest. 67. Artic. 3. saith Lai●us potest baptizare and Art 4. mulier potest baptizare That place Matth. 28. is as strong against womens baptizing as it is against their preaching For the Ministery of the Word and Sacrament cannot be pulled asunder which the Lord hath joyned together from time to time The Priests and Levites which were appointed to teach the people were also appointed to sacrifice and minister other Sacraments in the Church Cartwright denieth Women and Laicks power Whitgift and Hooker plead for it but K. Iames would have it appropriated to the Minister The ordinary Minister of Baptism is a person consecrated Baptism being the solemn Rite of initiating Disciples and making the first publick profession of the institution it is in reason and analogy of the Mystery to be ministred by those who were appointed to collect the Church and make Disciples D. Taylors Divine Instit of the offices Ministerial Sect. 4. Zippora circumcised her sonne before her husband Moses which was a Prophet of the Lord and to whom the office of Circumcision did appertain 2. She did it in choler If the essentials of Baptism be observed viz. washing In the Name of the Father Sonne and holy Ghost it is Baptism The Baptism of Hereticks is Baptism and therefore it is imputed to Cyprian for an errour that he affirmed Baptizatos ab Haereticis esse rebaptizandos and the Donatists are esteemed Hereticks for that reason No man may baptize himself Smith was a Se-baptist he baptized himself which neither Iohn Baptist nor any did before him How Christs Baptism and Iohns differ There was the same Doctrine the same Rite the same Oblation of Grace in the Baptisme of Iohn and Christ Therefore it was the same Baptism for Substance and of the same efficacy Vide Scultet Exercit. Evangel lib. 1. cap. 35. The Persons who are to be baptized Infidels converted to the faith and the Infants of one or both Christian Parents Some deny Baptism they acknowledge not the baptizing of Infants or others but onely the inward Baptisme of the Spirit See Matthew 28. 19 20 Mark 16. 26. The Scriptures teach that this Sacrament is necessary for Infants Iohn 3. The Scriptures shew that Infants are in Covenant Ezek. 6. 20. that is at the birth his by vertue of the Covenant and were in times past sealed with the seal of the Covenant They witnesse that the Kingdom of Heaven belongs to Infants Matth. 19. By Baptism Christians are admitted into the Society of this Kingdom Antipoedobaptists acknowledge from Matth. 9. 14. Rom. 9. 11. that Infants are saved See Psal. 103. 17. Christ commands all Nations to be baptized Infants are part of a Nation Mat. 28. 11. I think the Apostle doth plainly hold Col. 2. that Baptism hath succeeded in the room of Circumcision which is also the common and received opinion of Divines Gillesp. Miscel. c. 18. Infants of Christian Parents ought to be baptized because the children of the Jews in Covenant were circumcised for let the particular differences between Circumcision and Baptism be never so many yet in this they agree that they are both Sacraments of initiation and so belong to them that be in Covenant the faithful and their seed M. Ball. Vide Rivet in Gen. 17. That which confirms me in the belief that the Apostles did baptize Infants where they baptized housholds where fathers and children were together is because of the continued practice of it in the Church of God ever since of which we have as good evidence as of any controverted point in Ecclesiastical History Supposing Infant-baptism a nullity I cannot understand how any in the world should this day be lawfully baptized unlesse it can be made good that a person unbaptized himself may be a lawful Minister of Baptism to others for certainly untill the Anabaptists arose in Germany all the baptized world were baptized while they were Infants and consequently the first Anabaptist was baptized by an unbaptized person and so in conclusion we must all turn Seekers and be content without Baptism till Christ give some extraordinary commission from Heaven unto some men to be Apostles in this businesse M. Martials Def. of Infant-bap p. 245. A man by embracing one errour undertakes for all of the same cognation and line as for example He that is entangled with the errour of those who deny the lawfulnesse of Infant-baptism stands obliged through his engagement to this one errour to maintain many erroneous and Anti-Evangelical opinions Where ever God takes parents into Covenant he takes their children also See Deut. 27. 14 15. 2. Infants are as capable of the benefits of Baptism as men there is no benefit of Baptism but the party that receiveth it is passive we are said to be baptized into Christ to be made one with him the union begins on his part so to receive remission of sin 3. Infants while they are so may be truly members of a visible Church Luke 18. 16. One hath better ground to go by to administer Baptism to a childe of believing Parents then to men of years a mans profession may be unsound and hypocritical for the other I have Gods promise I will be
of our hearts heartily loving all men even our enemies We must also pity and help the distressed shew kindnesse and meeknesse to all even those that hurt us not revenging our selves nor hurting or grieving any by evil deeds or speeches For our neighbours spiritual safety we must exhort comfort and admonish one another with all meeknesse and must pray one for another The seventh Commandment requires all care to preserve our own and our neighbours chastity To preserve our own chastity we must abhorre all impure desires behaviours speeches and deeds with all occasions provoking thereto and must use temperance and sobriety with fasting and praying at fit times and diligence in our calling We must preserve our neighbours chastity by modesty and shame-fac'dnesse in attire words countenance and gesture The eighth Commandment requires a right carriage of our selves in regard of our own and our neighbours goods In respect of our own goods we must get them justly and keep them thriftily from evil and idle expences use them liberally for good purposes and not set our hearts upon them For our neighbours goods we must neither take nor keep any thing from any man whose own it is by force fraud or unequal bargains we must seek the profit of our neighbours as our own profit 2. We must do to them as we would have them do to us and not corrupt justice and equity by partiality and self-love The ninth Commandment requires all due care of maintaining our own and our neighbours good name and credit 1. Our own by lowlinesse and esteeming meanly of our selves accounting others better then our selves by being true sparing and holy in our speeches innocent and humble in our carriage slying ill company and all appearances of wickednesse and abounding in good works 2. Our neighbours by judging and speaking the best of them their words and deeds praising their vertues and defending their innocency The tenth Commandment requires that we be fully contented with our own condition and keep out all inclinations and motions after the things that pertain to others II. The Gospel The Law holds forth the holinesse and purity of God the Gospel holds forth the grace and favour of God Rom. 2. 4. There are two great ends of the Gospel and the Ministery of it 1. Union with Christ 2 Cor. 11. 2. 2. Reconciliation with God 2 Cor. 5. 20. The Angels sang when Christ was born on earth peace and good-will toward men The Gospel hath two parts as some say 1. All are cursed and damnable sinners This must be believed so firmly as that we assent to the particular comprehended under the general bringing it home to my self and saying to my self I am a cursed and damnable sinner 2. Jesus Christ is a perfect and all-sufficient Saviour he can and will save all penitent sinners and me also among the rest upon my turning to him He hath sealed this to me in Baptism which is the Baptism of repentance for remission of sins which doth assure me that upon repentance shall by the bloud of Christ attain full remission of all my sins this is ●● believe the Gospel We have gone asiray like lost sheep but he hath laid upon him the iniquities of us all Rom. 3. 23 24. For all have sinned and come short of the glory of God Being justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Iesus Christ. The terms of the Gospel are three 1. To choose Christ as he is there offered Iohn 6. 40. 2. To receive the Gospel with readinesse Act. 17. 17. Mat. 13. 44. 3. That we should give up all for Christ and to him Rom. 12. 1. It requires three things especially of us 1. True Repentance for sins committed 2. True Faith in the Mediator which expiates sins 3. A sincere desire to obey God which hath pardoned us our sins Impenitency unbelief and disobedience then are sins against the Gospel Sins against the Gospel are greater then sins against the Law Heb. 2. 3. because committed against greater light and greater love the love of the Father in sending of Christ of Christ in coming of the Spirit in manifesting therefore the curses and punishment of the Gospel are grievous Mat. 3. 10. Mark 16. 16. He that loveth not the Lord Iesus let him be Anathema Maranatha Psal. 2. 12. Christ is the best friend and worst enemy His wrath is 1. The wrath of a Mediator and Deliverer who then shall speak a good word for you Psal. 50. 22. 2. He is able to execute his wrath he hath all power in his hand as well as all love in his heart Two sorts of sins ripen men for wrath 1. Sinning against Ordinances Ezek. 10. 2. Amos 8. 1. 2. Sinning against the Gospel Matth. 3. 10. Having laid down the rule viz. the Law and Gospel for the finding out the number of our sins I shall now shew the uses of them for finding out the measure of them First For the Law we must not be content to rip up our sins by the Law but aggravate them 1. By the greatnesse of the Commander the great God of all the world that gave the Law with thunder and lightening is offended He is glorious in his Essence Subsistence working sinne provokes the eyes of his glory Isa 3. 8. 2. By the latitude and extent of every Commandment Psal. 119. 96. it bindes the conscience and commands the heart forbids all sins at all times together with their causes occasions provocations signs 3. Consider the filthinesse and sinfulnesse of sinne it is called filthinesse it self and is worse then hell for that is of Gods ordaining Persons and things are termed evil from it evil Angels men times 4. Consider the price of the bloud of Christ and the greatnesse of his punishment sin was such a hainous and notorious thing that nothing else could satisfie God all the Angels in heaven could not expiate one sin 5. Aggravate sinne by the person sinning from the evil circumstances and unprofitable ends by the effects giving scandal 2 Sam. 12. 14. by the manner of committing it wilfully and with a high hand Secondly We should labour especially to mourn for Gospel-sins 1. Because the sins of the Gospel carry the greatest guilt 1. They are against the second Covenant the Heathens perish under the guilt and curse of the first Covenant the second Covenant was never offered to the Devils when they fell from God they had never a second offer of mercy 2. They are against the bloud of the Son of God Heb. 6. 6. 10. 29. To sinne against God in his Son is a greater sin then to sin against the Law the Law is subservient to Christ in the Gospel 2. No man lies under such fierce wrath 2 Cor. 2. 15 16. no condemnation is confirmed by an oath but theirs Heb. 3. 11 12. 3. That which should have been for your welfare becomes your snare Acts 26. 18. Heb. 6. 10. Isa. 28. 13. The Gospel is
together with Herbs Plants Trees and so all Images of them are blamed 3. The Waters under the Earth are named and thereby are signified all manner of Fishes The waters are said to be under the earth because God made the earth hollow that there the waters might be contained Psal. 104. 6. And God particularly nameth all these places besides which there is no other place that we might fully conceive that his meaning is to forbid all manner of Images of all things whatsoever whether of God of creatures of what sort and kinde soever The Gentiles abused the Images of most of all these Rom. 1. 23. This is the first part of the Prohibition the second is Thou shalt not bow down nor serve them that is to any such Image Quibus verbis omnem omnino cultum quocunque modo Idolis tribuatur prohibet Scultet To bow down notes the outward gesture of the body used of men to shew reverence and is used to denote all manner of reverent behaviours which either nature hath ordained or custom of Countreys authorized to expresse respect and regard of things as worthy of honour and account Vox Hebraea gestum honoris indicem significat Grot. in Exod. 20. To do service noteth all manner of actions to be accompanied with such reverent gestures the former is a circumstance of service the later the substance of it So no manner of account is to be shewed to pictures neither by any outward gesture of body nor by any kinde of service at all Zanchy de Decalogoc 14. doth otherwise distinguish between these two words Hitherto the Prohibition the confirmation is taken from the Lords interest I am the Lord thy God 2. From one Attribute of his jealousie See Exod. 34. 14. Jealousie is that property of a husband or wife whereby they cannot endure that the yoke-fellow should give either their affections or body to others beside themselves Consortis impatiens ut mariti Grotius It noteth the holinesse of Gods nature that cannot away to have that service which is due to him communicated to Images or to any other thing with or besides himself it is love joyned with anger sith God cannot away with this we should not practise it 3. There is an argument from Gods effects of visiting the sins of the fathers on the children to the third and fourth generation of them that hate him Visiting is twofold 1. In love and favour Luke 1. 58. 2. In displeasure to punish as here Punishing is the laying of misery upon any one that hath done a fault proportionable unto his fault The object of this punishment are the children of them that hate God even to the third and fourth generation as in the Babylonish transportation Et nati natorum qui nascentur ab illis For a man may live to see his posterity to the fourth generation Iob 42. 16. and so see himself punished in them So Aquinas 1a 2ae Quaest. 87. Artic. 8. Kellet Miscel. lib. 1. cap. 7. and others Some say the wrath of God descends from fathers to children onely in case the children imitate and write after their fathers copy supposing these words In them that hate me to relate to the children But this is expresly against the words of the text and the examples of the thing God afflicts good children of evil parents for their fathers sins and the words are plain and determinate God visits the sins of the fathers in tertiam quartam generationem eorum qui oderunt me of them of those fathers that hate me Doctor Taylor on Exod. 20. 5. par 1. The cause moving to punish is the sins of the Fathers Now God punisheth the sins of the Fathers on the children by giving up the children to follow or exceed their Parents in sinning that so he may bring upon them a more full vengeance to shew his detestation of his Fathers sins Seeing no man would have his posterity to be plagued himself must not sin in breaking the former prohibition They hate the Lord which do not worship him as he hath commanded them but after their own fantasies and after the traditions of men God in no other Commandment but the second threatens to punish the sins of Fathers upon the children because superstitious worshippers of all men are strengthned by the tradition of their Fathers O our Fathers did thus and thus Shall we be wiser then our fore-fathers M. Burrh on Hos. A second effect of God is shewing mercy that is doing good and helping out of evil and the object of this to thousands the promise is opposed to the commination but is of larger extent Rabbi Salomon hence observes that the goodnesse of God doth as much exceed his severity as fifty exceed one viz. because his severity is restrained to four generations but his goodnesse is extended to thousands two thousands at the least Non mille sed multa millia ita ostenditur quanto largior sit Deus in benefaciendo quam in puniendo Grot. in Exod. 20. Of them that love him and keep his Commandments Not that pretend to love him indeed and shew their love by obedience to his revealed will There is a great difference between keeping Gods Commandments and fulfilling his Commandment Keeping noteth a truth fulfilling a perfection This Christ only had but the truth every Christian must have The scope end and summe of this Commandment is to order us in the solemn worship of God called Heb. 9. 1. Ordinances of divine service and usually termed religious exercises For the constituting of a solemn worship of God three things are required 1. That it be done with immediate reference to God and that himself or something in his stead be made the object thereof and so therein we draw near to him and he to us 2. That it tend in the doers intention directly and of it self to the honouring of God and pleasing him and getting of grace from him by exercising of some or all the vertues required in the first Commandment 3. That there be a separating of our selves from all other businesses to be wholly and altogether imployed about such acts in which the difference between common and solemn worship doth seem to stand Worship consists in three things 1. There must be a right knowledge and high apprehension of God the person to be worshipt 2. A reflexion of this knowledge 3. An abasement of the creature under the reflexion of this knowledge Revel 5. Christ is represented as sitting on a Throne The people of God are there brought in as compassing him about they have high apprehensions of the person of Christ his glory and holinesse 2. They reflect these excellencies 3. They abase themselves fall on their faces vers ult Every religious exercise or ordinance of divine service hath usually divers particular acts that be as parts of the whole and in the orderly uniting of which the whole is accomplished And whatsoever is done
so absolute a Soveraign that when he hath manifested his good pleasure all should be husht and ended and therefore after that he which will fume and take on doth offer indignity to God and neglect his due subjection to that Soveraign Prince of his life whom he ought above all things to regard And so much for the abuse of those holy things which are intermingled with our common affairs Now it follows to speak of the dishonour done to God in disordering of our common actions so far as they touch himself and the things by which he hath manifested himself to us Now these are 1. Inward 2. Outward Inward in regard of Gods Works or our own In regard of Gods works first by ascribing them wholly and principally to other causes without taking any notice of him at least any diligent notice As for example First To Fortune or Chance good or bad if a man go and finde a thing of price to his enriching or so have any other sudden and unexpected benefit coming unto him this he doth in his minde ascribe to good luck and saith that he had great good fortune Contrarily if he go on the way and there lose something of value and price he storms and saith he had bad luck or if any occurrent fals out that disappoints his present hopes he in his minde looks no higher but thinks it ill luck as the Priests of the Philistines told the Princes that if the Kine did not carry the Ark directly towards the way of Bethshemesh then all the misery which had befaln them by Mice and Emerods was but some chance that had befaln them Again men impute Gods works sometimes to the course of nature so as to thrust out him the Authour of Nature or else to tie him to any inferiour cause in nature Thus the Atheist saies it comes by nature that some years are unseasonable and some again seasonable Nature is Gods instrument being nothing else but that common course which he hath established in things if men therefore would from nature ascend higher to the Authour Maker Ordainer of nature which hath by his great wisdome established that course herein they would not sin for God doth work things according to his own determination by usual and natural means most commonly but to be so intentive to nature as to have no thought or but weak few and slender thoughts of God this is a grievous profaning of his Name A third thing which men do impute Gods works to to his dishonour is their friends and foes their benefactors out of good will and their malicious adversaries out of their uncharitableness as the Israelites looked to Assur not to God in whose hand Assur was as a rod and contrarily being succoured by their well-willers they ascribed all to their policy wisdome and friendship Lastly Men ascribe things to their own wisdome care industry pains courage thinking within themselves that their hand hath gotten much that their sword hath saved them as the King of Assur boasted what great matters he had done and Nebuchadnezzar boasted that it was great Babel which he had built Now when any of these things fortune nature our friends our foes our selves are so thrust betwixt God and us that we see not God because of our fond doating on these either feigned or subordinate causes here God is exceedingly dishonoured Another way of dishonouring God in his works is by perverting them to evil and vile purposes and ends 1. By hardening our selves in our sins from his long-suffering patience and forbearance as Solomon saith most men do because sentence against sinners is not speedily executed therefore are they fully bent upon mischief and as the Apostle chargeth them Rom. 2. to heap up wrath to themselves against the day of wrath by turning Gods grace thus into wantonness 2. When men charge Gods actions with unjustice and so either deny or blemish his providence especially in case of crosses befalling them so taking occasion to murmure and be impatient as Iob was by fits and as it is often seen in good men but most of all in bad as they said Where is the God of judgement When men take occasion from any of Gods works to repine against or entertain hard conceits of him this is a grievous sin and a dishonouring of him in his works 3. When men grow proud of his benefits thinking highly of themselves because of those good things he hath undeservedly bestowed upon them and are lifted up as if they had not received them for God gives his mercies to better purposes then to swell the heart as some man because he hath wealth thinks himself better then all that have less thinks that he may be dispensed with in sins that he should not be called upon to such and such duties and contemns others in comparison of himself So did Nebuchadnezzar abuse Gods advancement of him to be lifted up yea Davids heart was somewhat lifted up and be grew secure and therefore proud and Uzziah also for this is a disease marvellous hard to escape which is the true cause why the Lord is fain to be narrow-handed toward his servants in regard of these things because he would not have this pernicious disease to grow upon them and sees that out of abundance it would come forth such is their weaknesse The last abuse of Gods works is by hardening our hearts against them and a wilful refusing to be brought unto that amendment which we might if we would see plainly that he intends as Pharaoh hardened his heart against the wonderful works done by Moses and the wicked Pharisees hardened their hearts against all Christs miracles then which what greater despight can we offer to God to resolve we will not go though he leade and though he drive us or that we will go on though he hold us back with a kinde of violence And these be the principal waie● of dishonouring God in his works 2. We dishonour him in our works by mis-intending them either to ends lawful in excessivenesse or to unlawful ends as for example when men labour in their calling onely or chiefly to be rich when men do eat onely to fill the belly most of all if men do these for wrong ends as to do a work in ones calling to anger another or the like for herein we do sinfully pervert the order that should be observed and cast our eyes from him upon whom they should alwaies be fixed as Iehu in exalting of justice in Ahabs family aimed at nothing but the lifting up of himself and establishing the Kingdome to his own house This is a living to ones self and a serving of ones self whereas we ought no longer to live to our selves but to him which hath redeemed us The common sin of mankinde and that which doth stain and defile all the Moralities of unsanctified men causing that those things of theirs are abominable before God which to men carry the most glorious appearances
of all that good they had by him or of all that they might have hoped to have enjoyed by his means if he had lived Furthermore publick persons are injured both the Magistrate in that the Laws and orders by him justly made are like mounds by an unruly beast troden down and broken and the whole Common-weal in that both the peace and quietnesse thereof is disturbed and seeds of discord and enmity sown among the members thereof for most times the murder of one breeds a quarrel amongst many that survive and also a member thereof is cut away to the hindring it of that service which his sufficiencies either for the present did or for the future might have afforded it And lastly A stain and blot is cast upon the face thereof and that such a stain as cannot be washed away but by the bloud of him that did cast it on It is also mischievous to the committer exposing him either to a violent death by the hand of the Magistrate or to fearfull punishments by Gods hand For the bloud-thirsty man shall not live out half his dayes and to everlasting damnation at last for murderers must be without unlesse repentance come betwixt Murder hath often been strangely discovered by Dogs Cranes Crows See the Theatre of Gods Judgement Chap. 11. Psal. 9. 12. Habakkuk 2. 11. and Camera Histor. Meditat. l. 2. c. 6. Luther reciteth a story of a certain Almaigne who in travelling fell among thieves which being about to cut his throat the poor man espied a flight of Crows and said O Crows I take you for witnesses and revengers of my death About two or three dayes after these murdering thieves drinking in an ●nne a company of Crows came and lighted upon the top of the house whereupon the thieves began to laugh and say one to another Look yonder are they which must revenge his death whom we dispatched the other day The Tapster over-hearing them told it to the Magistrate who presently caused them to be apprehended and upon their disagreeing in speeches and contrary answers urged them so farre that they confessed the truth and received their deserved punishment See Goularts memorable Histories p. 415 416. to 429. Self-murder is a great sinne and a manifest breaking of this Commandment For as in all the other Commandments the Lord doth forbid men to wrong themselves as well as their Brethren so likewise in this no man may sinne against his own honour and dignity no more then against the honour and dignity of another No man may defile his own body nor waste his own goods nor blemish his own name more then his neighbours therefore neither may he kill himself The killing of ones self is the highest degree of violating this Commandment because it crosseth the nearest of all bonds and observes not the rule of charity there where most charity is due for love should alwayes begin at home 2. This fact crosseth the strongest inclination of nature and clearest principles of reason for nature makes a man desirous of his own being and studious of his own preservation This is then contrary to the two strongest laws and rules of life the Law of God and nature 3. The causes of doing it are very naught First It comes from extremity of pride and impatiency He will not be at Gods command nor at his direction nor be at all unlesse he may be as he will himself and so it ariseth from an untoward mixture of high-mindednesse and base-mindednesse Base-mindednesse because he hath not strength enough of resolution to bear some evil which he feels or foresees high-mindednesse because he will not stoop unto the ruler of all things to bear the burden which he layes upon him 2. Another cause of this sin is horrible despair infidelity A third cause of it is an enraged conscience as in Saul Iudas Achitophel 4. The vehement temptation of Satan taking advantage either of a melancholick constitution of body or of the affrightments of conscience Thirdly The effects of it are bad for by this means a man wrongs God himself and the world He wrongs God first by breaking his Commandment 2. By defacing his Image 3. By leaving his standing wherein he was placed by him without and against his will Secondly He wrongs himself for he extreamly hazards himself to damnation if not certainly casts himself into hell for he runs upon a most palpable and fearfull crime and leaves himself no leisure at all to repent of it It is a hard thing to hope that he should be pardoned who willingly thrusts himself out of the way of repentance and doth commit such a fault that we never read of any in Scripture that did commit it but damned reprobates Lastly He doth great wrong to others also his friends and well-willers to whom he gives occasion of the greatest grief that can possibly befall them about the death of their friend in that the manner of dying is so uncomfortably wretched Besides to all the world it leaves a miserable scandal seeing all think and speak hardly of him that hath so done and it leaves a bad example to others Sauls murdering of himself made his own armour-bearer do it Iudg. 16. 30. Samson by publick calling as a Judge and singular divine calling as a Type of Christ and deliverer of the Church did pull the house down on himself and the Philistims that by his death he might deliver unto death the publick enemies of the Church Heb. 11. 32. Besides It cannot be said that Samson killed himself indeed he died with them but the end he propounded was not that he might die but he sought revenge upon the enemies of God which was the work of his calling and that which was like to bring and procure it As a zealous and diligent Preacher who by his pains and study in his Ministery impaireth and spendeth his health and strength cannot be said to be the procurer of his own untimely death for he hath spent his strength in his calling to which end God gave it him See Elton on this Command and M. Baxters Saints everl Rest par 1. Sect. 6. The Heathen Philosophers have adorned this fact as Cato is extolled for it see therein the vanity of mans reason and wit that can fall in love and liking yea admiration with such a monstrous wickednesse Amongst the Donatists there were the Circumcelliones who gloried in casting themselves down from rocks into the fire or by yielding themselves to death other wayes because it is written that the flesh is to be mortified and he that hates his life shall finde it With us the self-murderers are accustomed to be cast out in high-wayes or else in places where none else are usually buried and to have a stake knocked into them for the great horrour of the fact and to warn others Helps against this sinne 1. Maintain the peaceable and pure estate of your consciences this will make life sweet to him that
word all wanton and uncleanly speeches phrases songs that may be and is called wanton which tends to satisfie unlawful lust in ones self and to provoke it in another Words that may enkindle and enflame grosse words tales of unclean acts and sonnets that have such a kinde of description of those actions as tend to set the minde on fire with them This is that which the Apostle cals rotten communication when he saith Let no corrupt or rotten communication come out of your mouths and again It is a shame to name the things that are done of them in secret When a man talks of any impure action with delight when he maketh mention of any impure part or deed with intent to stirre up others especially when he doth sollicite another unto this deed by such speeches or means this is an horrible sinne for nothing then stands betwixt words and deeds but want of opportunity This is the breach of this Commandment in Word Now follows the breach of it in Act or in Deed. And that is in regard of things leading to the action or the action it self 1. In regard of things leading to the action there is wantonnesse or lasciviousnesse so the Scripture cals it in the several parts of the body the eye the ear the foot the hand And 2. In the whole body as all impure imbracings and kissings which is called by the Apostle dalliance or chambering and mixed dancing of men and women especially if it be a wanton dance with a wanton ditty Thus is this Commandment broken by actions leading to the leud deed Now by the deed it self either out of Matrimony or in Matrimony Out of Matrimony by two sins 1. Uncleannesse 2. Fornication Uncleannesse is all strange kinde of pleasure by this act where it is done otherwise then according to the rule of nature this is either with others or with ones self There is a self-pollution 1. Speculative in wicked and unclean thoughts therefore God is said to be The searcher of the heart and reins which are the center of those lusts Matth. 5. 28. 2. Practical in unclean acts Some Divines say polluting of ones self is a greater sinne then the polluting of others because it is against a greater relation but in polluting others they pollute themselves therefore that is the greatest sinne Fornication is when two single persons that have not entred into a Covenant of Marriage do abuse each others bodies It is called Fornication à fornicibus in quibus Romae solebant meretrices prostrare from the vaulted houses where such strumpets used to prostitute themselves 1 Cor. 6. The Apostle hath several arguments there to prove fornication to be a great sin vers 13. 1. It crosseth the end of Gods Creation The body is not for fornication but for the Lord. A third Argument is drawn from the glorious resurrection vers 14. glory and immortality shall be put on the body therefore it should not be polluted here A fourth Argument is drawn from the spiritual relation between the body and Jesus Christ it is a member of his mystical body ver 15. A fifth from the spiritual Union between the body and the Lord vers 16 17. A sixth from the intrinsecal pollution that is in the sinne of fornication above other sins vers 18. No sins are more against ones own body A seventh Argument is taken from the inhabitation of the Spirit in them vers 19. They are dedicated to the Lord no unclean thing might come into the Temple when it was dedicated to the Lord 1 Cor. 3. 17. The eighth is drawn from the voluntary resignation that the people of God have made of themselves soul and body unto God Ye are not your own vers 19. therefore Gods it is an act of justice suum cuique tribuere The ninth is drawn from the act of redemption v. 20. You are bought with a price Christ hath purchased the body as well as the soul therefore you should gratifie God with both It is a fearful sinne No fornicatour shall enter into the Kingdom of Heaven 1 Cor. 5. 11. 6. 9. Reasons 1. It is a cause of many other sins Prov. 23. 28. 2. A punishment of other sin Eccles. 7. 26. Prov. 22. 14. Rom. 1. 24 26 28. 3. It is directly opposite to sanctification 1 Thess. 4. 3 4 5 7. 4. No sinne is committed with such delight and pleasure as this is and therefore it must bring in the end more bitternesse to the soul therefore the Scripture speaks so often of the bitternesse of this sinne Heb. 12. 15 16. Iob 13. 26. These tricks of youth will be bitter to men one day Prov. 5. 3 4. Eccles. 7. 27 28. See Iob 3. 12. Prov. 6. 30 31. Heb. 13. 4. Rev. 21. 8. The Turks thus punish whordom they take the pa●ch of a bea●● new killed and cutting a hole thorow thrust the adulterers head in this dung-wallet and so carry him in pomp thorow the streets Some Countreys punish it with whipping others with death The punishment which in the Old Testament was appointed to be executed against it by the Civil Magistrate was death Levit. 20. 10. Thus is this Commandment broken out of marriage in marriage it is broken by the married in regard of others or themselves In regard of others by the sinne of adultery which is coming near another mans husband or wife For whoremongers and adulterers God will judge and those that do such things shall not inherit the kingdom of Heaven He that committeth this sinne doth his neighbour greater wrong then if he had robbed and spoiled him of all other his goods and possessions whatsoever Therefore the Lord in the Decalogue hath placed that Commandment as a greater before that of theft and Salomon Prov. 6. 30 35. maketh the Adulterer farre worse then a thief because he may make satisfaction to a man for the wrong he hath done him so cannot the Adulterer That is a dreadful Text Prov. 2. 19. The mother of Peter Lombard the Master of the Sentences and Gratian the Collector of the Decrees and Peter Comestor an Authour of School-Divinity was but a whore and she being near unto death confessed her sinne and her Confessour reproving the crime of her adultery committed and exhorting her to serious repentance she answered she confessed adultery was a great sinne but when she considered how great a good followed thence since those her sons were great lights in the Church she could not repent of it A Papist in Queen Maries time taken in adultery in Red-Crosse-street said Yet I thank God I am a good Catholick Sylla sirnamed Faustus hearing that his Sister had entertained two adulterers into her service at once which were Fulvius Fullo and Pomponius whose sirname was Macula he put it off with a jest upon their names Miror inquit sororem meam Maculam habere cum Fullonem habet Of this sinne there are two kindes First Single
still in God 1 Sam. 2. 7. Hos. 2. 9. therefore God may take away one mans Estate and give it to another 2. The Egyptians had forfeited what God had given them therefore it was just with the Lord to take it away 3. He might do it not onely as an act of vindicative justice to the Egyptians but as an act of remunerating justice to the Israelites there being no Magistrates to do them justice and reward them for their service Gen. 31. 9 16. 4. The Hebrew word there used signifies to ask or desire and Iunius and Ainsw on 12. 36. render it not to borrow It may be questioned whether it be just to punish theeves with hanging when the Law of God hath not appointed this punishment Exod. 22. Some therefore think our Law hath been too severe that way and too remisse in case of Adultery Chrysostome saith Ubi damnum resarciri potest non est homini adimenda vita yet by the Law of Moses he that stole a man though he could restore him was punisht with death But there is no comparison say some between goods and the life of a man yet those thieves that either assault a mans person on the high-way or break open a mans house to rob him are great offendors Draco the Law-giver of Athens appointed death to be the punishment of theft Solon mitigated that rigour and punished it with double restitution The Locrians put out his eyes that had stolne ought from his neighbour The Hetrurians stoned them to death There was no Common-wealth where this sin was not highly detested and sharply punished except the Lacedemonians where it was permitted and tolerated for their exercise of warlike Discipline Mr. Gage in his Survey of the West-Indies c. 12. saith in Nicaragua they adjudged not a thief to death but to be a slave to that man whom he had robbed till by his service he had made satisfaction A course saith he truly more merciful and not lesse just then the losse of life Mens excuses for it First It is but a small matter 1. Thou art the more to be condemned is it but a little matter and wilt thou venture that which is more worth then all the world thine own soul for it 2. Thou then maist the better forbear it 3. Hadst thou a tender conscience it would much trouble thee Austin was troubled for his stealing of apples when he was a boy and this he records in his Confessions too he thought it so much 4. By this little the Devil will carry thee to greater it may be in consequence great a great tree groweth from a little Mustard-seed Secondly They do it for necessity Solomon saith If a man steal for necessity men will not much condemn him but he speaks it comparatively with the sin of adultery there can be no necessity to sin though when a man steals that hath enough it is a greater offence Thirdly They have enough from whom they steal This doth not therefore warrant them to pervert all right and justice as if they were Magistrates or God himself to appoint how much every one should have Fourthly They do it secretly they shall not be known nor discovered God and thy own conscience are enough to manifest it to all CHAP. X. The ninth Commandment THou shalt not bear false witnesse against thy Neighbour Hebr. word ●or word Thou shalt not answer about thy neighbour a testimony of falshood That is thou shalt not answer in judgement ei●her for or against thy Neighbour falsly THe word answer is sometimes in Scripture taken more generally for speak as Prov. 15. 1. Matth. 11. 25. and so it is here to be taken as if it had been said Thou shalt not speak any thing whereby thou maist hurt the good name and credit of thy neighbour The former Commandment was concerning our own and our neighbours goods this requireth that we hurt not our neighbours nor our own good name but as occasion shall be given maintain and increase it By neighbour he understands any man for every man is neer to thee by nature of the same blood and flesh Act. 17. 26. Isa. 58. 7. The secret and inward breach of this Commandment consisteth in ungrounded suspition and unjust judging and condemning of our neigbours contrary to the expresse commandment of our Saviour Matth. 7. 1. The outward breach of it is either without speech or with speech Without speech either by gesture or silence By gesture when one useth such a kinde of behaviour as tends to vilifie mock and disgrace his brother Psal. 22. 7. By silence when one holds his peace though he heareth his neighbour slandered and he can testifie of his own knowledge that the things spoken are false and injurious By speech this Commandment is broken either by giving or receiving By giving out speech either true or false One may slander another by reporting the truth if one speak it unseasonably and his end be evil and malicious this was Doegs fault 1 Sam. 22. 21. In speaking that which is false either concerning ones own self or another Concerning himself 1. In boasting and bragging Rom. 1. 30. 2. By excusing those faults we are charged with or are guilty of 3. By accusing as when men in a kinde of proud humility will deny their gifts with an intent to get more credit So much for breaking this Commandment by speaking that which is false concerning themselves Now it follows concerning others and that is either publick or private Publick when the Magistrate or Judge passeth false sentence in any cause that comes to be heard before him Herein also may Counsellors offend when they uphold and maintain an evil Cause for their fee. Witnesses also do offend this way when they come before the Judges and give a false and lying testimony This is a hainous sin as appears by the punishment Deut. 19. 18 19. 2. Private either in unjust accusing or unjust defending That unjust accusing privately is called slandering and back-biting when one will speak ill of his neighbour and falsely behind his back The causes of detracting or back-biting are 1. Want of consideration of our selves Gal. 6. 1. We are not humbled for the world of corruption that is in-bred in us 2. Uncharitablenesse and malice Iam. 3. a malicious heart and reviling tongue go together 3. Pride and envy the Pharisees could not give our Saviour one good word because of their en●ie against him whose way Doctrine and conversation did contradict and obscure theirs 4. An hypocritical affectation of holinesse above others Ex hoc uno pij sumus quod alios impietatis damnamus so the Pharisee dealt with the Publicane so the Papists traduce us as vile they are the onely Saints There are divers waies of back-biting or detracting 1. To impose falsely a fault upon the innocent party as when the Pharisees charged Christ that he was an Impostor and wine-bibber so when Potiphar's wife forged that tale against
best Expositors of it ibid. Iudgement The last Iudgement l. 10. p. 859 All are to be judged and by Christ l. 10. p. 859. to 862 The day of Iudgement terrible to the wicked but comfortable to the godly l. 10. p. 860 861 The time uncertain the place and signs of it l. 10. p. 861 862 The preparation and performance of it and Corollaries from it l. 10. p. 862 863 Iunius commended l. 1. p. 116 Iurisdiction Ecclesiastical l. 6. p. 466 467 Iustice. Whether inherent Iustice be actual or habitual l. 7. p. 518 Iustice what it is l. 7. p. 588 589 Iust. God is Iust l. 2. p. 181. to 184 Whether God see sinne in the Iust l. 7. p. 523 Iustification How the word is used in Scripture and what Iustification is l. 7. p. 512 The difference between it and vocation ibid. Whether all one with remission of sins l. 7. p. 513 The parts of Iustification l. 7. p. 514. to 521 One may be certain of his Iustification l. 7. p. 524 525 The several periods of Iustification l. 7. p. 515 Iustified Whether we be Iustified by inherent or imputed righteousnesse l. 7. p. 517 518 Whether we be Iustified by Christs active and passive obedience l. 7. p. 518 519 Whether faith alone Iustifies l. 7. p. 528 529 K KImchi commended l. 1. p. 112 Kinde God is Kinde l. 2. p. 191 Kingdom Kingdom of God two-fold l. 8. p. 643 The meaning of that Petition Thy Kingdom come l. 8. p. 643 644 Kings Kings why they are so called the Authors of those two Books and best Expositors of them l. 1. p. 33 Knowledge l. 7. p. 589. to 593 L LAbour Christ underwent hard Labours for us l. 5. p. 428 Lactautius commended l. 1. p. 115 Lamentations Lamentations why so called l. 1. p. 38 Where and how long Ieremy prophesied ibid Fit to write Lamentations and why ib. The best Expositors of it ib. Latine The Vulgar Latine Translation why so called l. 1. p. 64 Which are the best Latine Translations of the New Testament ib. Law Law what it is l. 9. p. 751 The Moral Law l. 9. p. 751. to 756 There are four precepts in the first Table and six in the second l. 9. p. 751 The Moral Law is in force in the Christian Church l. 9. p. 751 752 753 It is a glasse bridle rule ib. The Law cannot be perfectly fulfilled in this life l. 9. p. 850 831 Legends why so called l. 1. p. 24 Leviticus Why the third Book of Moses is so called l. 1. p. 31 32 The best Expositors of it ibid. Lexicon Which are the best Lexicous for understanding the Hebrew and Greek text l. 1. p. 111 Liberty The willing good necessarily hinders not Liberty l. 3. p. 272. 278. m. Life Several kindes of Life l. 2. p 139 140. l. 7. p. 537. 538 How Gods Life differs from the life of the creatures l. 2. p. 140 141 What spiritual Life is ibid. Wherein natural Life and it agree and differ ibid. Evidences of spiritual Life Motives to it and Means of it l. 7. p. 539 540 Life everlasting l. 10. p. 568. to 571 Light Light an excellent work of God l. 3. p. 240 241 Its abstruse nature and excellent use ibid. Limbus Insantum l. 10. p. 862 Lion A strange story of a Lion l. 3. p. 267 Living God is Living l. 2. p. 139. to 142 Long-suffering God is Long-suffering l. 2. p. 187 Lot The nature and use of Lots l 9. p. 792 793 When abused l. 9. p. 803. to 806 Love Love what in God l. 2. p. 167 168 The Properties of it l. 2. p. 168 Our Love to him ibid. The affection of Love in us what l. 7. p. 551 Gods Image in it ib. It s corruption and sanctification l. 7. p. 551. to 554 Luke Luke only makes a Preface before his Gospel and who best interpret him l. 1. p. 15 The difference between Lumen and Lux l. 3. p. 240 The Lutherans confuted about the ubiquity of Christs body l. 2. p. 147 Lying l. 4. p. 366 367 Lyranus commended l. 1. p. 116 M MAimonides commended l. 1. p. 112 Malachy when he wrote and who best expound him l. 1. p. 40 Maldonate commended l. 4. p. 367 Malice ibid. Man made after Gods Image l. 3. p. 288 Mark Mark wrote in Greek l. 1. p. 41 42 45 When he wrote and who best exp●und him l. 1. p. 45 Martyrs Divers suffered for the truth l. 1. p. 14 15 How true Martyrs differ from false l. 1. p. 15 Masius commended l. 1. p. 117 Masse Masse why so called the evil of it l. 8. p. 700. to 703 Private Masse unlawful l. 8. p. 703 704 It is not lawful to be present at the Masse l. 8. p. 704 Massorites their exact diligence in numbering the words and letters and points of Scripture l. 1 p. 66 67 Masters their duty l. 9. p. 828 Matthew Matthew wrote in Greek l. 1. p. 〈…〉 Never any doubted of the authority of 〈…〉 〈…〉 When he wrote and who best expound 〈…〉 〈…〉 Mediatour Mediatour who and how Christ is our Mediator l 9 p. 4●● 450 Whether Christ was a Mediatour according to both his Natures l. 5. p. 410 411 Meditation Meditation what it is l. 1. p. 24 When it is fit to Meditate of the creatures l. 3. p. 230 231 Marks to try when we Meditate fruitfully of the creatures ibid. Meek How God is Meek l. 2. p. 171 Memory what it is its sanctification l. 7. p. 546 Mercy Mercy what in God l. 2. p. 177. to 181 How his Mercy differs from mercy in us l. 2. p. 177 On what terms and to whom he will shew Mercy l. 2. p. 179 What in us l. 7. p. 593. to 596 Metals Metals what l. 3. p. 249 Which most precious ib. m. Meteors what they are their several kindes and matter l. 3. p. 243 244 Micah Micah when he prophesied and who expound him well l. 1. p. 39 40 Minister Minister his calling l. 6 p. 456. to 459 The Minister afore the Church l. 6. p. 457 His duty l. 9. p. 831 832 The honour of that function and their maintenance l. 6. p. 460 461 Miracles Miracles of Confirmation and Preservation l. 1. p. 12 13 How true and false Miracles differ l. 1. p. 13 14 What they are l. 2. p. 127 128 Monks Monks why so called they are highly honoured by Papists l. 6 p. 479 480 Moon Moon how called in Latine and Hebrew l. 3. p. 260 It is the cause of the Seas ebbing and flowing ibid. Mortification l. 7. p. 535. to 538 Mountains a great work of God l. 3. p. 250 Murder Murder what it is l. 9. p. 835 A crying sin l. 9. p. 837 838 Self-murder a great sin l. 9. p. 838 839 Murmuring l. 4. p. 367 368 Mystery Mystery of the Trinity a great Mystery l. 2. p. 215 N Nahum NAhum when he wrote and who expound him best l. 1. p. 40
315 Distinguished l. 4. p. 316 Four things in sin ibid. A raigning sin what and how known l. 4. p. 317 The evil of sin l. 4 318. to 320 The degrees of sin l. 4. 321 322 Sins of omission worse then sins of commission in some respects l. 4. p. 323 What sins make us like the devil ● 3. p. 287 Sins against the Gospel greater then against the Law l. 4. p. 323 324 All sins are mortal l. 4. p. 324 to 327 God not the cause of sin l. 4. p. 326. to 329 How we communicate with other mens sins l. 4 p. 328 329 The punishments of sin l. 4. p. 329. to 331 National sins what l. 4. p. 331 Signs of a Christian in regard of sinne l. 4. p. ● 332 He may have great corruptions ibid. 333 Two Questions about sin resolved l. 4. p. 335 336 The Saints are carefull to preserve themselves from sin and especially their own iniquities l. 4. p. 336. to 339 The sinfulnesse of ●●n should chiefly cause us to forbear it l. 4 p. 338 We must not only avoid but abhorre sin l. 4. p 338 339 We must take heed of little sins and secret sins l. 4. p. 339 How God punisheth the sins of parents in their children l. 9. p. 769 Sitting What Christs Sitting at the right hand of his Father means l. 5. p. 441 442 Of Sitting at the Sacrament of the Lords Supper l. 8. p. 735 Socinians Socinians reject all things in Religion which they cannot comprehend by reason l. 1. p. 9 Confuted l. 4. p. 330 Sorrow Christs Sorrow godly l. 5. p. 428 429 Sorrow in us what and its sanctification l. 7. p. 565 566 Spectrum unde l. 3. p. 285. m Spirit Spirit what l. 2. p. 136 138 God is a Spirit ibid. 137 Angels are Spirits l. 3. p. 270 Starres how distinguished l. 3. p. 260 Steal Steal What it is l. 9. p. 827 It is forbidden ibid. Stork Stork why so called l. 3 p. 263 Her love to her young ones and theirs likewise to her l. 3. p. 263 265 Subjects Subjects their duty l. 9. p. 832 833 Sufferings Christs great Sufferings l. 5. p. 425. to 438 S●n the making of it a great work l. 3. p. 258 259 Superstition Superstitian whence and what a great sin l. 9. p. 784 Supper The divers names of the Lords Supper l. 8. p. 878 879 How described l. 8. p. 879 The ends of it l. 8. p. 688 It is to be taken in both kinds l. 8. p. 687 688 Scandalous persons are to be kept from it l. 8. p. 682 Yet one may receive with the wicked l. 8. p. 683 684 Whether Iudas received the Sacrament of the Lords Supper l 8. p. 684 685 At what time the Lords Supper was instituted and its elements l. 8. p. 685 686 The elements may not be changed l. 8. p. 689 690 The breaking of the bread in the Supper not an indifferent Ceremony l. 8. p. 690 69● It is not material whether the bread be leavened or unleavened l. 8. p. 691 692 Whether it be necessary to mingle water with the eucharistical wine l 8. p. 692 693 694 The consecration of the elements l. 8. 694 695 The elements must not be adored l. 8. p. 696 697 The Sacrament is not to be carried up and down l. 8. p. 700 The necessity of the Lords Supper l. 8. p. 705 And why we must receive it l. 8. p. 706 Of preparation for it l. 8. p. 706. to 721 There must be due carriage at it l. 8. p. 731 732 And after l. 8. p. 722 How oft it ought to be received and the gesture at it l. 8. p. 732. to 736 Surety Surety what l. 5. p. 451 452 Christ is our Surety ibid. Sybils were counterfeit pieces l. 1. p. 15 Synods Synods what they are and their kindes l. 6. p. 469 470 What required to them who are to be called to them and whether General Councels may er●e l. 6. p. 470 471 Whether Councels or Synods be above the Pope l. 6. p. 472 Syriack Syriack it was spoken in our Saviours time l. 1. p. 42 The Syriack translation of the New Testament l. 1. p. 62 63 T Tale-hearing TAle-hearing Hearkning to Tale-hearers is ●●in l. 4. p. 381 382 Targum why so called l. 1. p. 60 Tempter Tempter the devil so called and why l. 3. p. 282 His wayes of Tempting ibid. How to know his Temptations l. 3. p. 284 285 Christ was Tempted by him l. 5. p. 426 427 How the devil and world Tempt and how God preserves his people l. 8. p. 650 651 Theology what it is and its several kinds l. 1. p. 2 Thessalonica a chief City in Macedonia l. 1. p. 48 Thessalonians who do best on both ib. Testament The Scripture is distinguished into the Books of the Old and New Testament l. 1 p. 28 29 Why the Scripture is called a Testament l. 1. p. 29 The Books of the Old Testament for the most part were written in Hebrew l. 1. p. 29 And how divided ibid. Of the New in Greek l. 1. p. 41 And why ibid How divided l. 1. p. 40 to 44 Thanksgiving See Feasting Thought A Christian is to make conscience of his Thoughts l. 9. p. 850 The cure of evil Thoughts l. 9. p. 8●0 Thunder what it is and its use l. 3. p. 243 244 Timothy who do best on both Books l. 1. p. 48 Titles Titles of Books not used heretofore l. 1. p. 30 31 Whence the Hebrews take the Titles of their Books l. 1. p. 31 Titus who best expounds him l. 1. p. 48 Torpedo hath a benumming quality l. 3. p. 262 Tostatus commended l. 1. p. 117 Traditions Traditions what they signifie l. 1. p. 92 93 Reasons against the Popish Traditions l. 1. p. 94. to 99 The several kinds of them l. 1. p. 95 96 Translate The Scriptures ought to be Translated into vulgar Tongues l. 1. p. 21 22 The several Translations of Scripture l. 1. p. 60 to 65 Transubstantiation refuted l. 8. p. 697 to 700 Trees Trees their nature and use l. 3. p. 256 to 259 The Tree of Life and Knowledge of good and evil in Paradise why so called l. 3. p. 294 Whether the Tree of Life was a Sacrament ib. Trinity Trinity the word hath sufficient ground in Scripture l. 2. p. 204 The mystery of the Trinity cannot be known by the light of nature l. 2. p. 204 Yet it is necessary to be known by them that will be saved l. 2. p. 205 A difference between Trinity and Triplicity ibid. The Doctrine of the Trinity explained and applied p. 204. to 216 True The word of God is True and certain l. 1. p. 82 God is True l. 2. p. 183 184 Truth what it is and the several kinds of it l. 2. p. 183 V VAin glory l. 4. p. 382 Vatablus commended l. 1. p. 116 Versions The several Versions of Scripture l. 1. p. 60 to 64 What authority they have l.
be no● your utmost end he will not be your chiefest good Hoc desideri● c●lendus est Deus ut sui cultus ipsi ●it merces Augustine See 2 Kings 10. 31. A constant heedlesness in duties is a great signe of an hypocrite It is not enough to worship God but we must seek him in worship Ps. 22. 26. which notes an exact care in serving him See M. Mauto● on Jam. 1. 21. Doct 1. 2. Examination of our estate is as necessary as our pu●ging from sinne and the excitation of our affections 2 Cor. 13. 5. In the Priesthood under the Law there was to be a consecration as well as an offering Mal. 3. 3 4. Heb. 9. 14. The main care must be to get the person reconciled to God Those that discern not their interest in Christ if they had it and have lost it by returning to folly 1 Pet. 3. 7. are not to come reeking from their sins and so rush into Gods presence Isa. 1. 15. Neither are they wholly to decline Worship and restrain Prayer 1. There must be a serious acknowledgement of their sins with shame and sorrow Psal. 51. 3. Numb 2. 14. John 1. 2. 2. They must earnestly sue out the former grace and pardon Psal. 25. 6. 51. 12. Those who never had assurance must know 1. That it is comfortable in our approaches to God the Apostle hath taught us to begin our supplications with our Father Heb. ●0 21 22. 1 Tim. 2. 10. 2. Some believers have lesse peace that they may have more grace 3. When we cannot reflect upon our actual interest the direct and du●●ful acts of Faith must be more solemnly put forth 1. Disclaim more earnestly your own personal righteousness Dan. 9. 18. 2. You must adhere to God in Christ more closely cast your selves upon God with hope Psal. 22. 18. 3. It is safe to say I am my beloveds though we cannot apply Christ to our selves Psal. 119. 94. Have high thoughts of the work aforehand 1 Chron. 29. 2. take the fi●test opportunity of doing duties Christ is present in the Ordinances Rev. 1. 18. 1. As a Speaker Heb. 12. 25. 2. That he may delight himself in the graces of his people Cant. 8. 1. 3. To execute judgement as well as shew mercy 2. The Angels are there present 1 Cor. 11. 10. as your Guardians Dan. 4. 13. and to delight in your graces Cant. 5. 2. 3. The Devil is present Matth. 13. 1. To draw you to evil 1 Sam. 2. 22. 2. To hinder you in whatever is good Zach. 3. 1. 3. Comes to steal away the Word out of your hearts Matth. 13. 19. 4. To aceuse you Rev. 12. 12. Zach. 3. 1 2. 5. As an Executioner expecting a commission from Christ to lay hold on thee John 13. 27. Iephta must not offer her himself but some Priest to whom he must bring her and he not in any place but upon the Altar of God In vovendo suit stultus in reddendo impius Hieron * Take a great deal of heed to your own hearts in the duty least your thoughts vanish Eccles. 5. 3. Salomon compares the vanity of mens thoughts in services to dreams where the thoughts are incoherent 2. Observe in duties the approaches or withdrawings of God from your souls See Matth. 15. 10. 24. 15. 2. 3. chapter of Revel We must 1. Practise the good resolutions taken up in the service keep it evermore in the hearts of thy servants 2. After every duty we must be humbled for our rashnesse before God as Iacob Gen. 28. 16. * There must be a faith 1. That his duties shall be accepted Gen. 4. 7. 2. In the general rewards of religion Gen. 4. 8. 3. In the Messiah to come Reasons 1. Because faith discern● by a clear light and apprehension keeps God in the eye Faith is conversant about God the object of worship Heb. 11. 6 27. and discerns the worth of his service and represents more of priviledge then burden Psal. 19. 10. 73. 28. 2. It receives a mighty aid and supply from the Spirit of God Rom. 8. 26. 3. It works by a mighty principle love Gal. 5. 4. It fils the soul with a sweet apprehension of Gods love love will carry one to a duty that is against the bent of nature Gen. 34. 19. 2 Cor. 5. 14. 4. Faith discourseth and pleads in the soul with strong reasonings 1. From the mercies of God 1. Special Gal. 2 20. 2. Common 1 Tim. 1. 16 17. 2. From the Promises 1. Of assistance 2 Cor. 12. 10. Phil. 4. 10. 2. Acceptance 2 Cor. 8. 11. faith shews the Mediatour Ephes. 3. 1 2. Revel 8. 3 4. 3. O● reward 2 Cor. 7. 1. 2 Cor. 1. 4. It sees assistance in the power of God acceptance in the grace of God reward in the bounty of God Psal. 2. 11. Worship is therefore called fear as we may see by comparing Deut. 6. 13. Isa. 29. 13. with Matth. 4. 11. 15. 9. God hath his name in Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from fear and the same word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies both fear and religion Heb. 5. 7. See Chap. 12. 28 29. Abraham Gen. 18. 27. Elijah 1 King 18. 42. the four and twenty Elders Revel 4. 16. Christ himself Matth. 26. 33. were reverent in their acts of worship For publick prayer kneeling and standing are mentioned 1 King 8. 54. The Publican stood Luk. 18. 13. in preaching the eyes of the hearers should be fastened on the Preacher Luk. 4. 20. See Neh. 8. 3. at the Sacrament our eyes should observe the Elements as visible Sermons Exod. 23. 8. Christ read the Scripture standing Luk. 4. 16. by that he taught how he honoured the Word of God the same thing is affirmed of the people Nehem. 8. 5. For that cause that we may shew our respect to the Word of God we are bare saith M. Cartw in his Harmon when the Scripture Text is read Master Hildersam hath the like on Joh. 4. Constantine the Great used to shew much reverence and attention to the word of God preached so that many times he would stand up all the Sermon while and when some of his Courtiers told him that it would tend to his disparagement he answered that it was in the service of the great God who is no respecter of persons See Crak Epist. Dedic to his Defence of Constantine Profanenesse is the sin of despising and contemning the true worship of God setting light by it accounting it as a thing not at all profitable and therefore not at all doing it They call not on the name of God saith the Psalmist This was the sin of the Priests themselves Mal. 1. 7 12. There is 1. A virtual or habitual intention when one keeps a purpose to intend 2. Actual The causes of actual roving and the distractions of the thoughts in service are 1. Want of love to God and holy things affection and attention go together Psal. 1. 2.