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A25294 The substance of Christian religion, or, A plain and easie draught of the Christian catechisme in LII lectures on chosen texts of Scripture, for each Lords-day of the year, learnedly and perspicuously illustrated with doctrines, reasons, and uses / by that reverend and worthy laborer in the Lord's vineyard, William Ames ... Ames, William, 1576-1633. 1659 (1659) Wing A3003; ESTC R6622 173,739 322

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spiritual distemper and as it were with a drunkennesse and lethargick stupidity whereby he is sensible of nothing rightly and spiritually Reas 3 Because we are so borne in sin that in a manner it becomes natural to us nor ever have had we experience of any other condition As those that are borne with deformed and crooked limbs and never saw aright and well proportioned disposition of all the members do not know that their own limbs are deformed and ill proportioned but esteem their distortion and disproportion to be the right proportion it self even so is it in this case of sin and corruption of nature Use 1. Of Admonition that for this cause we might more and more humble our selves before God seeing that we are so miserable that of our selves we can never know our own misery Use 2. Is of Direction to deny all our natural wisdome that so we may flie to God and seek wisdome from him that we may know our selves and him aright Doctr. 2. The onely way to know sin aright and the cause of our mysery is by the law of God It is gathered from these words For unlesse the law had said c. Reas. 1. Because the law of God doth in some way enlinghten the eyes of our minde Psal. 19. Reas. 2. Because the law of God is the rule of our life and is therefore the touchstone not onely of the straightness but also of all the obliquity and crookedness of it Reas. 3. Because the law of God is set before us as a glasse wherein we may clearly see our faces and quality Iames 1. 23. Now it performs this use of a glass to us by a comparison made between the perfection which the Law requires of us and the manifold defects and deformities that are found in our life Questions hence arising Quest. 1. Whether did not some wise men at least among the Heathen know sin without this Law of God I answer 1. That they were not altogether without this law of God because in part they had it written and ingraven in their hearts But yet 2. They knew not many sins which by the Law might easily have been known 3. They knew not sin under the first and most proper reason of it to wit as it was an offence against God but onely as it was repugnant to reason in man himself 4. They knew not those spiritual miseries which accompanie sin 5. They did not know sin practically and efficaciously so as to be by that knowledge driven to a spiritual humbling of themselves before God Quest. 2. In what manner doth this Law of God shew us our sin I answer 1. It sheweth us our duty or the will of God that we should do 2. It shews us our fault in transgressing of this will 3. It shewes us our guilt whereby for this guiltiness we are bound over unto punishment 4. It shewes also the punishment it self for the threatenings of the Law wherein the punishments are contained and denounced are parts of the Law and belong unto its sanctification or ratification Use 1. Of Direction that in passing judgement upon our lives we follow not either our own fancies nor the tenets and opinions of the vulgar but the law of God alone Use 2. Of Admonition that we often make trial of our life according to that law and that as well for time past for our greater humiliation as for the time to come for our caution and better direction in every part of our conversation The Third Lords Day Rom. 5. vers 12. Wherefore as by one man sin entered into the world and death by sin and so death passed upon all men in whom all have sinned THe Apostles purpose in this place is to illustrate that Doctrine which he had before taught concerning justification by Iesus Christ for which end he makes a comparison of the likeness between this grace of our Lord Iesus Christ and the sin of Adam our first Father after the flesh And the comparison runs upon the efficacy and effects of each of them The Proposition of the Comparison is in ●… 12. and the Reddition to that is after explicated by way of Parenthesis In the Proposition Adam is set forth as the cause of a twofold effect to wit of the bringing in of sin and of the bringing in of Death And the reason of the Connexion of these effects with that cause is given in the last words of this verse to wit from the conjunction that all had with Adam in that first sin in these words In whom all men c. Doct. 1. Sin entered into the world not by Gods creation but by mans defection This is manifest in the Text by man not by God c. Reas. 1. Because God made man upright and after his own image that is not onely free from all sin which may in some sort also be said of all other Creatures but also adorned him with all those endowments and faculties whereby Gods nature might as it were in a pourtrait be expressed and represented and by help whereof in keeping of the law he might have attained unto a certain sort of divine blessedness or felicity For as there is no fault in a pourtrait so it be well drawn or made by a perfect workman unless the fault be in the Original from whence the pourtait is taken so also no fault could be in man created according to Gods Image and that by God himself unlesse some fault be attributed to God himself whose Image man is Reas. 2. Is because God did not onely prescribe a law unto man in the Creation but also engraved it upon his heart by which means it was that man had in himself a most certain Testimony of his uprightness in which and to which he was created and withall a most sufficient and ready means of living well and unblameably to God For the law of God perfectly purely written in the heart of man is as it were a solemn Testimony registred in a Table or Book that man was made fit and able to keep that Law It is as it were the voice of God sent down from Heaven whereby man was called and stirred up to observe that way of living which is taught thereby Reas. 3. Because God added thereunto a pledge and Sacrament in the Tree of Life whereby he would have that Covenant of the Law written in the heart more clearly confirmed also outwardly to wit that he would by the observation of his Law first perpetuate mans life in this world unto the solemn justification of him at his appointed time and then advance him to a further and heavenly Felicity And on the other side he threatens Death unto him in case he should depart from that Will and Law of God all which had been done to no purpose if man had been at first made by God himself in any measure or manner sinfull and perverse Reas. 4. So far was God from being the cause of sin in the first creation of
the sufferings and patience of Jesus Christ so also in the life to come we shall be made partakers of his glory Rom. 8. 17. Doct. 4. Christ together with his highest dignity bath also highest power This the Text evidenceth in as much as God's right hand signifieth his power and sitting down on his right hand signifies the highest communion and society with God in this power that can be Reas. 1. Because dignity and power might so have the same degrees For dignity separated from power is no more but a dead title and therefore seeing Christ hath highest dignity and glory it followes also that he is endued with highest power Reas. 2. Because Christ is constituted Lord as well to correct governe as to preserve glorify his Church He must therefore of necessity both have the power of right and the power of strength fitting and competent for these ends For the Lord hath both a power of right and of might to exercise and put in execution all this as well immediately and by himself as mediately and by instruments or servants And this is that power that Christ professeth was given unto him in Heaven and on earth Mat. 28. 18. Now it is given to Christ and agreeth to him most properly as he is Mediator or as man assumed to the unity of one person with God but not so properly as God and therefore it is said to agree to him as he is the son of man Ioh 5. 27. Use Is of Consolation For though this divine power of Christ be terrible to his enemies yet to believers it brings firm hope and affiance and comfort because as Christ himself saith Ioh. ●…0 24. such an one hath everlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but is passed from death unto life And hither also tendeth Rom. 8. 34 35. when there the Apostle proves that nothing can separate from the love of Christ because he sits on the right hand of God Doct. 5. Christ hath the quiet and unmovable possession of this power For in this sense it is that he is said to sit on the right hand of God Reas. 1. Because he hath overcome all his enemies virtually and shall actually in his own appointed time subdue them all fully and bring them under the yoak Reas. 2. Because there is nothing on earth or under the earth can in the least trouble or molest this his possession Reas. 3. Because this state and condition of Christ is not onely immortal and free from all change by vertue of Covenant and divine Promise but also of its own nature being now accomplished according to free Covenant and such will the happiness of the least Saint be Use This also is of Consolation which though it may strike terror and amazement in the hearts of Christ's enemies yet it raiseth and rouseth up the dejected and drooping spirits of all such as put their trust and confidence in him for he sitteth on the right hand of God in power and majesty there making intercession for us The nineteenth Lords day Mat. 25. from verse 31. to 39. Vers. 31 When the Son of man shall come in his glory and all the holy Angells with him then shall he sit upon the throne of his glory 32 And before him shall be gathered all Nations and he shall separate them one from another as a shepherd divideth his sheep from the goats 33 And he shall set the sheep on his right hand but the goats on the left 34 Then shall the King say to them on his right hand Come ye blessed of my Father inherit the Kingdome prepared for you from the foundation of the world 35 For I was an hungred and ye gave me meat I was thirsty and ye gave me drink I was a stranger and ye took me in 36 Naked and ye clothed me I was sick and ye visited me I was in prison and ye came unto me 37 Then shall the righteous answer him saying Lord when saw we thee an hungred and fed thee or thirsty and gave thee drink 38 When saw we thee a stranger and took thee in or naked and clothed thee IN this place the acts or procedure of the last day are expounded The parts are two Christ's coming and the end of his coming which is the last ●…udgement In this last judgement 1. The preparation thereto is described 2. The execution of the sentence In the preparation Christ's majesty and glory in which he shall then appear is c●…iefly here set down 1. From his train and attendance that shall wait upon him consisting chiefly of the glorious Angells 2. From his glorious Throne 3. From the effect of this coming to wit to the gathering of all mankind together and separating of the good from the bad The sentence to be pronounced is twofold 1. Of salvation to the good 2. Of condemnation to the evill The sentence of salvation is declared 1. From its causes 2. From its adjuncts The principal cause is God's good will which is shewn 1. From the effect of that grace or favour that is the cause of our salvation which is the blessing of God 2. From the relatiou that thence ariseth which is that of a Father giving an inheritance and of a Son 's receiving the same 3. From the adjunct of time that this salvation was not then first appointed for them but prepared for them from the beginning of the world The adjunct signs also whereby this salvation is declared are good works which by the Trope or borrowed manner of speaking called Syne●…doche of the special put for the general by the learned are designed by the works of mercy and are amplified by that relation which these works have to Christ himself whilest they are exercised towards his members The sentence of condemnation is quite contrary to the former handled by the comparison and proportion of like things The execution of the sentence is briefly set down in the last verse of this Chapter Doct. 1. The universal or general judgement is most certainly to come to pass This judgement is called universal that it may be distinguished from that particular one which in some sort is exercised on the greatest part of men even in this life upon every one in particular when they pass out of this life For this comprehends all men together and therefore is called universal It may be also called universal or understood so because in it upon all mens and angels deeds and matters generally without exception sentence shal pass It is also called the last judgement because after it no new judgement is to be looked for but the execution of that judgement only shall follow upon it Reas. 1. Because before that time the judgement of God towards men is not compleated and fully perfected because in this life through God's forbearance and long patience evill men in joy many good things and good men are oppressed with many evills From this consideration many of the very Heathens themselves collected that