Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n affection_n love_n love_v 1,622 5 6.3349 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A73382 The portraiture of the image of God in man In his three estates, of creation. Restauration. Glorification. Digested into two parts. The first containing, the image of God both in the body and soule of man, and immortality of both: with a description of the severall members of the body, and the two principall faculties of the soule, the understanding and the will; in which consisteth his knowledge, and liberty of his will. The second containing, the passions of man in the concupiscible and irascible part of the soule: his dominion ouer the creatures; also a description of his active and contemplative life; with his conjunct or married estate. Whereunto is annexed an explication of sundry naturall and morall observations for the clearing of divers Scriptures. All set downe by way of collation, and cleared by sundry distinctions, both out of the schoolemen, and moderne writers. The third edition, corrected and enlarged. By I. Weemse, of Lathocker in Scotland, preacher of Christs Gospel. Weemes, John, 1579?-1636. 1636 (1636) STC 25217.5; ESTC S123320 207,578 312

There are 7 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

grace once received cannot be lost 135. H. Hand 20. the properties thereof ibid. Hatred what it is 183. God cannot be the object of hatred ibid. love and hatred are opposite 185. twofold hatred 186. 187. how far the regenerate hate sinne ibid. hatred anger envy differ 188. remedies to cure hatred 189. hatred and presumption differ 215. Head 14. the excellency thereof 15. Heart the first mover 21. the excellency thereof ibid. wherefore placed in the left side 22. the fat of the heart 25. Hope what it is 211. how it differeth from desire ibid. hope considered as a naturall or theologicall vertue 212. I. Iesuites plead for nature 127. they make a threefold knowledge in God 120. they establish a threefold grace 127. our dissent frō them in mans conversion 130 131 132. Ignorance diversly distinguished 82. 102. 110. 185. Injurie hath three things following it 227 Image of God wherein it consists 65. a twofold image of God 60. wherein man beares the image of God 64 man having Gods image all creatures are subject to him 234. a two fold condition of Gods image 247. it is taken up foure waies 63 Immortality how a thing is said to be immortall 30. how Adams body was immortall before the fall 31 reasons to prove the immortality of Adams body naturally 33 34 35 36. reasons to prove the immortality of the soule 44. 45. the heathen knew of the soules immortality 49. Infinite thing how apprehended 90. a thing is infinite two waies ibid. 195. Iustice the most excellent vertue 1. Iustification twofold 137. God doth three things in our justification 117. K Kidneyes are in a secret place 25. Knowledge of the creatures shall evanish in the life to come 78. 79 fulnesse of knowledge twofold 80. 81 divers distinctions of knowledge ibid. 82. 85. 86. 87. a twofold act of knowledge 84. how knowledge is in the Angels and mans mind 85. a threefold knowledge in Angels ib. a difference betwixt our knowledge and the Angels 91. L Libertie twofold 108. Impediments hindering the wills liberty 115 Light the greater it bee obscures the lesser 71. Love what it is 161. sundry distinctions of love 162 163 164 165 166. things are loved two waies 164. 169. degrees of love 166. the perpetuitie of love 166 love is an affection or deed 175. a twofold cause of love ibid. How wee are to love our parents 176. 177. love descends 178. how farre an unregenerate mans love extends 181. wee should love our enemies ib. true love is one 182. remedies to cure sinfull love ibid. Life contemplative preferred to the active 278. Man hath a threefold life 222. 260. the Active in some case is preferred 257. Mans life considered two waies ibid. whereto these two lives are compared 259. Mans life resembled to sixe things 260. 263. Liver inclosed in a net 23. Lungs seated next the heart ibid. M Magistrates authority consists in foure things 172. Man a little world 41. hee is considered 3. waies 136. the first part of mans superioritie over his children 237. man diversly considered 150. he hath a passive power to grace 116. man and wife one 268 Matrimony hath two parts in it 269. Members of the body placed wisely by God 13. the difference of the members 14. Middles are often chosen as evill 114. all things are joyned by middles 39. things are joyned two waies 113. wee see a thing by two middles 79. there is a twofold middle 152. 154. no middle betwixt vertue and vice 153 Miracle creation is not a miracle 9. when a worke is a miracle ibid. the resurrection is a miracle ibid. two conditions required in a miracle 118. mans conversion is not a miracle 119. N Nature taken five waies 250 Necessity diversly distinguished 36. 109. 178. Neighbour how to be loved 173. in what cases hee is to bee preferred before our selves 380. wee are not to love all our neighbours alike 175. In what cases wee are to preferre our selves to our neighbours 174. 175 Nothing taken divers waies 4. made of nothing 6. O Oppositiō twofold 185. 214. Order twofold in discipline 71. Originall righteousnesse was not supernatural to Adam 249. but naturall 250. reasons to prove that it was naturall 251. to make it supernaturall draweth many errours with it 253. P Passion what it is 139. 140 what seate they have in the soule ibid. they are moved by the understanding ibid onely reason subdues the passions 141. they have a threefold motion ibid. they are only in the concupiscible irascible faculties 142. their number is in the divers respects of good and evill ibid. the divisions of the passions 143 where the passions are united 144. Christ tooke our passiōs 145. what passions hee tooke ibid. how they were ruled in Christ 146. no contrarietie amongst his passions 148. what contradiction ariseth in our passions ibid. it is a fearefull thing to be given over to them 149. how the Moralists cure the passions 151. the Stoickes roote out all passions 158. foure waies Christ cureth the passions 159. 160. 161 how farre the godly are renewed in their passions 148. Perfection diversly distinguished 66. 186. Philosophie twofold 95 Poligamie is unlawful 310. Power diversly distinguished 116. 240. 241. Poverty twofold 243. Proposition hypotheticke when true 121. R Recompence fourefold 226 Reasō hath a twofold act 84 Resistance diversly distinguished 133. 134. Renouncing of things twofold 243 Resurrection a miracle 10. Rib what is meant by the fift rib 24. the rib taken out of Adams side no superfluous thing 266 it was one of his ordinary ribs ib. how this rib became a woman 267. what matter was added to it ibid. Right to a thing diversly distinguished 241. 242. 244. what right Christ had to the creatures 241. 242. S Sadnesse hath many branches 144. Sciences how found out 71. the first principles of sciences are not inbred 68. Seeing three things required for it 79. we see three waies 75. Senses the common sense differeth from the particular senses 27. wherin the five senses agree 28 wherein they differ ibid. which is the most excellent sense 29. 30. whereunto they are compared ib. Similitude twofold 61. one thing hath a similitude to another two waies ibid. it differeth from an image 63. fim litude a great cause of love 245. Servile subjection 236. five sorts of servants ibid. it is contrary to the first estate 237. Sinne in a countrey fourefold 274 God doth threethings to sinners 276. Sin three things follow sinne 35. how it is in the understanding 101. a man sinnes two waies 102. how the workes of the Gentiles are sinne 157 Soule hath three faculties 34. how they differ 52. the rising of the body doth perfect the glory of the soule 35. how the soule of man differeth from the life of beasts 42. and frō al other things 43. the soule hath a twofold life 50. how the soule is in the body 53. the soule cannot animate two bodies 54. what middle the soule keepeth 57. our soules
thou art perfect and thinkest that thou hast kept the whole Law if it be so yet one thing is resting to thee sell all thus wee see how Christ applies himselfe to his conceit here Object But it may be said that this young man spake not out of an ambitious conceit for the text saith that Christ loved him Answ The event sheweth that hee spake but out of the ambition of his heart and the words of Christ shew this also Mark 10.24 How hard a thing is it for a rich man to enter into the Kingdome of God and where it is said Christ loved him verse 21. The Greeke word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth friendly to speake to him and to deale gently with him but Christ liked him not in the estate that hee was in for hee went away trusting still in his riches and loving them better than Christ Christ and his Disciples renounced not all kind of right of those things which they had Conseq therefore that observation of the glosse upon the tenth of Marke is false Some have money and love it some want money and love it but these are most perfect who neither have it nor love it and to this they apply that of the Apostle Gal. 6.14 I am crucified to the world and the world to me as though a man could not beecrucified to the world unlesse he renounce it all and goe a begging Thus the Church of Rome serveth God with will-worship which hee never required at their hand Esay 1.12 By their vowes of poverty chastity and obedience this they make one of their counsels of Evangelicke perfection So much of Gods Image in man both inwardly in his soule and outwardly in his dominion superiority over all inferiour creatures it rests to speake of three conse quents proper to this image 1. Wherefore Gods image was placed in man 2. This image being placed in man whether it was naturall unto him or supernaturall 3. The benefit he reapeth by this Image which was his society with the Angels CHAP. XVI Of the end wherefore God placed this image in Man GOd placed this image in man Prop. to keepe a perpetuall society betwixt man and him Illust 1 Similitude and likenesse are a great cause of love Adam loved Evah when hee saw her first because shee was like unto him As a man when hee lookes into a glasse hee loveth his image because it is like to him but dissimilitude breeds hatred A man loves not a serpent or a Toade because they are most unlike him David marvailes that God should looke upon man Psal 8. but in the end he brings in his similitude in Christ or else he would hate us Secondly God placed this image in man as a marke of his possession therefore the Fathers called him nummum Dei for even as Princes set their image upon their coyne so did the Lord set his image upon man therefore miserable are these who adulterate this coyne and blot out this Image of God he deserveth now to be arrained as a traitour before God Man in innocency was like unto God A collation betwixt the innocent and old Adam but now he is become like unto the beasts of the field Psal 49. now God may justly exprobrate unto him Behold man is become like one of us There was a great change in Naomi when shee came to Bethlehem shee was not then Naomi beautifull but Mara bitternesse there is a greater change now in man when he is falne from his first estate and lost this holy image Man was made to the jmage of God Conseq therefore no man should lift his hand against him Gen. 9. no Prince will suffer his image to be defaced much lesse will God There arose a sedition at Antioch for that Theodosius the Emperour exacted a new kind of tribute upon the people Theodoret. lib. 5. cap 21. in that commotion the people brake downe the Image of the Empresse Placilla who was lately dead The Emperor in a great rage sent his forces against the City to sacke it When the Herald came and told this to the Citizens one Macedonius a Monke indued with heavenly wisedom sent unto the Herald an answere after this manner Tell the Emperour these words that he is not onely an Emperor but also a man therefore let him not onely looke upon his Empire but also upon himselfe for he being a man commands also these who are men let him not then use men so barbarously who are made to the image of God He is angry that justly that the brazen image of his wife was thus contumeliously used shall not the King of heaven be angry to see his glorious image in man contumeliously handled Oh what a difference is there betwixt the reasonable soule and the brazen image We for this image are able to set up an hundred but he is not able to set up a haire of these men againe if he kill them These words being told the Emperor hee suppressed his anger and drew backe his forces if men would take this course and ponder it deepely in their heart they would not be so ready to breake downe this image of God by their bloody cruelty CHAP. XVII Whether the Image of God in Adam was naturall or supernaturall THe second consequent of the image of God being placed in man is concerning the nature of it There are two things which principally wee and the Church of Rome controvert about touching the image of God The first is conditio naturae Duplex conditio imaginis Dei naturae Iustitiae the condition of nature the second is condtio justitiae concernig mans righteousnesse The Church of Rome holds that there was concupiscence in in the nature of man being created in his pure naturalls but it was not a sinne say they or a punishment of sin as it is now but a defect following the condition of nature Bellarm. lib. 7. cap 28. and they say that it was not from God but besides his intention And they goe about to cleare the matter by this comparison when a Smith makes a sword of yron he is not the cause of the rust in the yron but rust followeth as a consequent in the yron but if this rebellion flow from the condition of nature how can God be free from the cause of sin who is the author of nature Their comparison then taken from the Smith and the iron is altogether impertinent Triplex dissimilitudo compparation is first the smith made not the yron as God made man therefore he cannot bee sayd to be the cause of the rust of yron as God making man concupiscence necessarily followes him according to their position Secondly the rust doth not necessarily follow the yron neither is the yron the cause of it but some externall things they make concupiscence necessary to follow the body Thirdly the Smith if he could he would make such a sword that should take no rust but God according to
Tongue God will not have a heart and a heart in a man Psal 12. so hee will not have a Tongue and a Tongue in him Pro. 8.13 that is a double Tongue Before the fall A collation betwixt the innocent and old Adam the Tongue of man was like the pen of a swift writer Psal 45.1 and uttered those things which his heart indited but since the fall it is a world of iniquity and defileth the whole bodie and setteth on fire the course of nature and is set on fire of hell Iam. 3.6 now it is an unruly evill and filled with deadly poyson Iam. 3.8 Coll. 2 Before the fall he spake but with one Tongue but since the fall he is bilinguis hee speakes with a double tongue Prov. 8.13 and sometimes trilinguis Eccles 33. Lingua tertia commovit multos a third tongue hath troubled many The Chalde paraphrase calleth a backbiter a man with a three fold Tongue or a Tongue which hath three stings The Iewes give an example of it in Doeg who killed three at once with his evill report Saul to whom hee made the evill report the Priests of whom he made the evill report and Himselfe who made the evill report The Heathen in the dedication of the severall parts of mans body gave the eares to Minerva the tongue to Mercurie the armes to Neptune and the eye to Cupid c. Of the Womans Dugges God hath placed the Womans Dugge in her brest Duplex est causa physica moralis and not in her belly as in beasts and that for two causes the first is a Physicall cause the second is a Morall cause The Physicall cause God hath placed them so neere the liver that the milke might be the better concocted and the more wholsome for the child The Morall cause that the woman might impart her affection and love more to her child by giving it sucke with her Dugge which is so neere the heart The giving of Sucke was one of the greatest bonds of obligation of old betwixt the mother and the children when they intreated any thing of their children they would say By these Dugges which gave thee sucke I request thee doe this Virgil. Of the Hand By the Hand we promise and threaten it is the right hand of fellowship Gal. 2.9 We reckon by it Wisedome commeth with length of dayes upon her right hand Prov. 3.16 The ancients reckoned upon their left hand untill they came to an hundred yeeres and then they began to reckon upon their right hand So the meaning of Salomon is that wisedome should make them to live a long age even to a hundred yeeres As wee reckon with the hand so wee worship with the hand Iob protests that hee blessed not his hand when hee saw the new Moone Iob 31.27 The Idolaters they used to kisse their Idols Ose 13.2 But because they could not reach to the Moone to kisse her they kissed their hand in homage before the Moone and Iob purged himselfe of this kinde of Idolatry And the speciall providence of God is to bee marked in the hand of man that hee hath made him to take his meate with his hand and hath not left him to gather his meate with his lipps as the beasts doe for if man did so his lippes should become so thick that he should not speake distinctly wee see by experience that those who have thicke lippes speake not distinctly Of the internall members of Mans Bodie Of the Heart All the passions are seated in the heart we see in Feare such as are transported therewith call backe the blood to the heart as to the place where feare exerciseth her tyrannie therewith to defend themselves and therefore it is that those creatures that have the greatest and largest hearts are most fearefull because the heat is more largely dispersed within their Heart and consequently they are lesse able to resist the assaults of feare Object But it might seeme that our anger is seated in the Gall love in the Liver and melancholy in the Splene and so the rest therefore the affections have not their seat in the Heart Answ These foure humors seated in the Gall Liver and Splene are not the seate of the passions but they are the occasion whereby the passions are stirred up as the abundance of blood in the Liver stirreth up the passion of our love which is seated in the heart The heart is the first mover of all the actions of man for as the first mover carryeth all the spheres of the Heaven with it so doth the heart of man carry all the members of the body with it In naturall generation the heart is first framed and in spirituall regeneration it is first reformed The heart liveth first and dyeth last So in the spirituall life the life of Grace begins in the heart first and is last left there hence it is that Michael the Archangell and the Devill Iud. 9. strove no faster about the body of Moses than they doe about the heart of man therefore the Lord saith Sonne give me thy heart Prov. 23. The Iewes compared the heart of Man for the excellency of it to three things First to the holiest of all where the Lord gave his answers So the Lord gives his answers First out of the heart Secondly they compare it to Salomons throne as the stateliest place where the King sits So the Lord dwels in the heart of man as in the throne Thirdly to Moses Tables in which he wrote his Law Prov. 3.3 Write Wisedome upon the Tables of the heart God dwelt in the heart of Man before the fall A collation betwixt the innocent and old Adam but since the fall there is a great change in the heart for out of the heart proceed Murther Adultery evill speakings and such Math. 15. It was a great curse which the Prophet denounced against the house of Ahab 2. King 10.27 That it should bee turned into a Iakes but a farre greater change now unto the heart of a man being now a receptacle of all uncleannesse The heart of man before the fall was a wise heart Coll. 2 and placed in his right side Eccles 10.2 But the heart of a foole is now in the left side Eccles 10.2 The Anatomists marke when the heart inclineth more to the right side the spirits of these men are more lively and are more apt for contemplation the right hand is the stronger hand because more heate proceeds from the heart to the right hand then to the left But when the heate equally disperseth it selfe to both the hands then a man is Ambidexter hee hath the use of both the hands equally alike By the right hand wee doe things more easily because motion proceeds first from the heart to it The meaning then of Salomon is that the heart of the wise man is a strong heart a couragious heart apt to doe good and a most honorable part wherein the Lord hath set his residence but the heart
of man since the fall is a weake heart a faint heart slow to doe any good as a base and ignorant heart Of the Liver The Liver in inclosed by a net called Reticulum the seventy translate it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as yee would say an huske for even as the huske incloseth the Corne so doth this net compasse the Liver and it is to be marked that God hath fenced his noblest parts as the braine with Piamater and Duramater the Heart with Pericardia and the Liver with Reticulum Of the Lungs The Lungs the bellowes of the voyce Veritas est in re ut in causa in enunciations ut symbolo in mente ut in subiecto haec dicitur complexa veritat are seated so neere the heart to teach us that speech is but the interpreter of the heart against those who thinke one thing and speake another To make a man speake truth three things are necessary first there must bee veritie in the matter secondly in the conception of him who speaketh thirdly in his speech The first must be in signato the second in conceptu the third in signo If the matter be not true then the conception is false if the conception bee false then the speech is false If a man should set the kings armes aright first there must bee such a thing as a Lyon secondly the Lyon must bee set right upon the seale thirdly the seale must be set right in the waxe if any of these three be wanting the Kings armes are not rightly set So the matter which we speake of Veritas theologica logica must first be true in it selfe secondly we must conceive it rightly thirdly we must utter it rightly But in Logicall verity it is otherwaies for if there be an agreement betwixt the matter onely and the Tongue it sufficeth although it bee not rightly taken up by the minde As when I say there are Antipodes whether I beleeve this to bee true or not it makes not much it is a Logicall truth because there is an agreement betwixt the matter it selfe and the Tongue But a theologicall truth will have an agreement in all the three Augustines notation then of a lie is not persit Consequence mentiri est contra mentem ire to lie is to speake contrary to the minde for it expresseth not fully the nature of a lye for a man may lye speaking an untruth taking it to bee truth therefore Iohn maketh an untruth a lye 1 Iohn 2.4 He that saith I know him and keepeth not his Commandements is a lyer and the truth is not in him For if the matter be not true in it selfe although hee take it to bee truth and do utter it yet it is a lye it is a materiall lie and an untruth Mendacium materiale formale although it be not a formall lie So Heretickes broaching their errors which they take to bee truth teach lyes Before the fall A collation betwixt the Innocent old Adam man spake as he thought but since the fall he hath found out equivocations and mentall reservations and speaketh oftentimes contrary to that which he meanes Of the Ribbes There are two sorts of Ribbes in the body of man the first called by the Anatomists Costae legitimae whereof there are seven these defend the vitall parts the second Costae spuriae whereof there are five lying to the belly Quest When Abner stroke Hazael at the fift Ribbe and Ioab Amaza which of the Ribbes is it meant of here Answ It is meant of the inferiour Ribbes which wee call the short Ribbes and any of these five Ribbes is called the fift Ribbe When Abner strucke Hazael at the fift Rib he strucke him on the right side because he was behinde him but when Ioab strucke Amaza hee strucke him on the left side because hee was embracing him The stroke of Abner was deadly because he strucke him through the liver and the stroke of Ioab was deadly because he strucke him in at the Pericardia that compasseth the heart round with water to refrigerate it for the nether part of the heart reacheth down to the fift Ribbe When the Souldier pierced Christs side Iohn 19.34 it is said Hee pierced his side and there came forth water and blood the Syriacke Paraphrast saith Hee pierced his Ribbe that is the fift Ribbe where the Pericardia lay Of the Intrailes The Intrailes are called by the Hebrewes Rechamim and by the Greekes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the bowels of compassion Luke 1.78 When a woman seeth her child in any danger her bowels earne within her which is attributed to Christ himselfe when he saw the people scattered in the Wildernesse Marke 6.34 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He had compassion upon them in the Greeke it is His bowels did earne within him he is a pitifull high Priest who is touched with our infirmities Heb. 4.15 Of the Intrailes called Iejunum intestinum When the meate is out of the stomacke and the Hungry gut called Iejunum intestinum emprie then man begins to be hungry this gut by the Greekes is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and from it comes the Greeke word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to fast Of the Kidneyes The Kidneyes lie in a hid and secret part of the body therefore David when hee would declare how God knoweth hid and secret things he saith Thou triest my Reynes Psal 139. that is my secretest cogitations for although the affections be seated in the heart as the cause yet they are ascribed to the Reines as the occasion the cause of sinne is in the heart the occasion in the Eye Ier. 12.2 Thou art neere in their mouth and farre from their Reines Before the fall A collation betwixt the innocent and old Adam all the members of mans body were the weapons of righteousnesse but since the fall they are the weapons of sinne Rom. 6.13 His throat is an open sepulchre Psal 5.9 His feete swift to shed blood Esay 59.7 His right hand a hand of falsehood Psal 26.10 In a Sheepe every thing is good his wooll and his skinne to cloath us his flesh to feede us his dung to dung the land his small guts to be Lute strings but in a man since the fall every member is hurtfull In the sacrifices under the Law the caule and the fat about it was commanded to bee taken from the heart the liver and the kidneyes Exod. 29.13 Levit. 3.3 4. Esay 6.10 It was to be taken from the heart to signifie that the seate of our understanding which is the heart is corrupted from the Liver to signifie that our anger is corrupted from the Kidneyes to signifie that the seate of our concupiscence is corrupted Man before the fall had a beautifull body answerable to the holinesse of his soule Coll. 2 but since the fall Beauty in a woman without grace is like a ring in a swines snowt Prov. 11.22 The Philosopher gave this counsell to his schollers every morning to
to signifie that Iesus Christ subdued not onely his sensitive faculties but also the intellectuall in his will and understanding and it was for this that the High Priest under the law was forbidden to we are his girdle about his sweating places Ezek. 44.18 that is about his middle as the Chal. de Paraphrase interpreteth it not beneath but about his pappes to signifie the moderation of all his passions It is a true axiome quod operatur Christus pro nobis oper atur in nobis that which Christ doth for us he doth in us He subdueth his owne passions Reconciliando that He may subdue our passions Secondly Christ reconciles the passions which strive so one against another Iudg. 17.6 when there was no King in Israel every man might doe what hee pleased so these passions doe what they please contradicting one another till Christ come in to reconcile them Moses when he saw two Hebrewes striving together he sayd ye are brethren why doe ye strive Exod. 2.13 So when Christ seeth the passions striving one with another Hee saith Yee are brethren why doe yee strive Acts 7.24 Thirdly Rectificando Christ sets the passions upon their right objects whereas before they were set upon the wrong objects and he turnes these inordinate desires the right way A man takes a bleeding at the nose the way to stay the bloud is to divert the course of it and open a veine in the arme So the Lord draweth the passions from their wrong objects and turnes them to another Mary Magdalen was given to uncleane lust the Lord diverted this sinfull passion and she became penitent and thirsted after grace Luk. 8.2 So hee turned the passions of Saul when he was a bloudy murtherer to thirst for grace Act. 9. We know a womans appetite to be a false appetite when shee desireth to eate raw flesh or coales or such trash and that shee is mending againe when her appetite is set upon wholsome meates So when the passions are set upon wrong objects then a man is in the estate of sinne but when the passions are turned to the right objects then a man becomes the child of God Fourthly when Christ hath sent these passions upon the right object Immobiliter permanendo hee settles them that they cannot bee mooved for as the needle in the compasse trembleth still till it bee directly setled towards the North pole then it stands So the affections are never setled till they bee set upon the right object and there he tyes them that they start not away againe Psalme 86.9 David prayeth knit my heart to thee O Lord. The beasts when they were brought to be made a sacrifice were tyed with cords to the hornes of the Altar Psalm 118.27 that they might not start away againe So the Lord must tye the affections to the right objects that they start not away againe The passions are either in the concupiscible or irascible part of the Soule There be six passions in the concupiscible appetite Love hatred desire abomination pleasure sadnesse CHAP. VI. Of the Passions in particular in the concupiscible appetite Of Love LOve Amor est voluntarius quidam affectus quám coniunctissimè re quae bona judicatur fruendi is a passion or affection in the concupiscible appetite that it may enjoy the thing which is esteemed to be good as neere as it can Man before the fall Prop. loved God aboue all things and his neighbour as himselfe God is the first good cause and the last good end Illust he is the first true cause by giving knowledge to the understanding he is the last good end by rectifing the will therefore the understanding never contents it selfe untill it know God and the will never rests til it come to the last good end God is A to the understanding and Ω to the will He is mans chiefe good therefore he is to be preferred to all things both to our owneselves and to those things we count most of beside our selves wherefore Luk. 14. he faith He that loveth his life better than me is not worthy of me So Math. 10. He that loveth his father or mother better than me is not worthy of me so hee that preferres his owne love before God is not worthy of the love of God There are three sorts of love Illust 2 emanans or natural love imperatus or commanded love elicitus or love freely proceeding Triplex amor emanans imperdius elicitus Naturall love is that love whereby every thing hath an inclination naturally to the like as heavie things naturally goe downe to the center of the earth beasts are carried by sense and instinct to their objects the Pismire in Summer layeth up provision against the Winter Prov. 6.8 This naturall instinct the Greekes call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So man is carried to his object by love because he must love something what better object could hee chuse to love than God Commanded love is that whereby reason sheweth us some good thing to be loved and then our will commandeth us to love the same If wee had no more but reason to shew it to us and the will to command us these wee enough to moove the affections to love God Love proceeding freely is that when the affections make choyce of God freely when as they consider his goodnesse that breeds admiration in them when they doe consider his beauty that breeds love in them and his sweetnesse doth satisfie their whole desires so that nothing is so worthy an obiect to bee beloved as God who hath all these properties in him God loved us first Ioh. 3.16 therefore we are bound to love him againe There are three sorts of love First Triplex 〈◊〉 quaerens vtile lascivus pur●● the love that seekes his owne profite onely as when a subject loves his Prince onely for his goods such was the love of Laban to Iacob here the Prince is not bound to love his subject againe neither was Iacob bound to love Laban for this sort of love Secondly the love that lookes to filthinesse and dishonestie such was the love which Putiphars wife carried to Ioseph Gen. 39.9 Ioseph was not bound to love Putiphars wife againe in this sort of love The third sort of love is most pure and holy love and in this love wee are bound to love backe againe God loved us before wee loved him hee loved us freely and for no by-respect therefore wee are bound to love him first and aboue all things The Part loves the being of the whole Illust 3 better than it selfe this is seene in the world the great man and in man the little world for the water in the great world ascends that there should not bee vacuum or a vastnesse in the universe for the elements touch one another as wee see when we poure water out of a narrow mouthed glasse the water contrary to the nature of it runneth up to the ayre that
there may not bee a voyde place it preferres the good of the whole to the owne proper center so in the little world man the hand casts it selfe up to preserve the head So God being all in all to us we should hazard all for him Man in innocencie loved God onely for himselfe Prop. Some things wee love for themselves onely Illust 1 some things we love not for themselves Amor propter se propter aliud but for another end A sicke man loves a bitter potion not for it selfe but for another end which is his health Some things we love both for themselves and for another end as a man loves sweet wine for it selfe because it is pleasant to his taste then he understands also that it is good for his health here he loves it not onely for it selfe but for his healths sake But Adam in innocencie loved God onely for himselfe Quest Whether are we to love God more for the moe benefits he bestowes upon us or not Answ 2.2 q. 24. art 3. Thomas answers thus God is to be beloved although hee should give nothing but correct us as a good child loveth his father although he correct him but when it is faid we are to love God for his benefits for Super Iob. serm 3. notes not the finall cause here but the motive therefore Augustine faith well Non dilige ad praemium sedipse Deus sit praemium tuum love not for the rewards sake but let God bee thy reward it is a good thing for a man to thinke upon Gods benefits that he may bee stirred up by them to love God and love him onely for himselfe and for his benefits Moses and Paul so loved God that they cared not to bee eternally cursed rather than his glory should be blemished Exod. 32.33 Rom. 9.3 Object But when God promised Gen. 15.1 2. to be Abrahams great reward Abraham said What wilt thou give me seeing I goe childlesse then the father of the faithfull might seeme to love God for his benefits and not for himselfe Answ The Text should not be read thus I am thy exceeding great reward but thy reward shall be exceeding great as if the Lord should say unto him thou wast not inriched by the spoile of the Kings but I shall give thee a greater reward Abraham replies what reward is this thou canst give me seeing I goe childlesse Abraham had sowen righteousnesse and therefore should reape a faithfull reward Prov. 11.18 though he were not inriched by the King of Sodome Gen. 14.22 So that Abraham loved God onely for himselfe in the first place and he seekes a reward succession of children in the second place and by this his Faith is strengthened for he adheres to the promise of God Gen. 13.15.16 The first Adam loved not the creatures for themselves A collation betwixt the innocent and old Adam neither loved he God for another end but for himselfe neither loved he God for himselfe and for another end but onely for himselfe therefore the Church Cant. 1.4 is commended quia amat in rectitudinibus because she loveth God directly for himselfe But now men love the creatures onely for themselves and herein they are Epicures Some againe love God for the creatures and these are mercenaries but these who love God for himselfe these are his true children and herein Augustines saying is to be approved who saith fruimur Deo utimur alijs we enjoy that which wee love for it selfe but we use that which wee use to another end But the naturall man would enjoy the creatures and use God to another end Man in innocency loved God Coll. 2 judicio particulari hic et nunc above all things that is Duplex amor 1. judicis particulari 2 judicio universali he knew Iehova to bee the true God and so loved him But since the fall he loveth him above all things judicio universali for his wil oftentimes followeth not his judgment thē he loved himselfe for God but now he loveth all things for himselfe this inordinate love of a mans selfe breeds contempt of God but the ordinate love inspired by God teacheth us first to love God and then our selues 1. Ioh. 4.7 Let us love one another because love is of God where he sheweth us that the love of our neigbours must proceed from God therfore the love of our selves must begin also at God It is true Iohn saith 1 Ioh. 4.20 If we love not our brother whom we see how can we love God whom we see not not that the love of the regenerate begins first at our neighbour but this is the most sensible note Duplex amor a posteriori et a priori to know whether we love God or not this love is a posteriori as the other is a priori Object But it may seeme that a man in corrupt nature may love God better than himselfe because some heathen haue given their lives for their country and some for their friends Answ This corrupt love was but for themselves and for their owne vaine glory and in this they love them selues better than any other thing We are bound saith Saint Augustine Coll. 3 to love somethings supra nos secondly to love some thing quod nos sumus Lib. 1 de doct Christ cap. 5. Gradus amoris sunt 1. amare supra nos 2 quod nos sumus 3. juxta nos 4. infra nos thirdly to love some things juxta nos fourthly to love some things infra nos Man in his first estate loved God above himselfe in the second roome his owne Soule in the third place his neighbours soule and last his owne Body He was first bound to love himselfe then his neighbour his own soule before his neighbours soule his owne body before his neighbours body for this is the rule under the Law Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy selfe Math. 22.39 The rule must bee before the thing ruled It is not said Luk. 3.12 he that hath a coate let him giue it to him who wants a coate but he who hath two coates let him give one to him who wants a coate but under the Gospell the rule of our love must be as Christ loved us so we must love our neighbours Ioh. 13.4 But man since the fall hath inverted this order mightily he loves his owne body better than his neighbours soule than his owne soule yea better than God and oftentimes his hogges better than his owne soule yea than God himselfe as the Gergesites did Math. 8.34 Quest Alexander Hales moves the question whether the Angels proceed thus in their manner of love if God be he who is above them whom they are bound to love above themselves and in the second roome themselves juxta se other Angels what place must the soule of man come into in their consideration whether juxta or infra and what must be the estimation of the body of man in their love Hee
our owne private cause and Gods cause Thirdly we must distinguish betwixt the persons of evill men and the actions of evill men Wee are to love our enemies although they have wronged us and should love their persons we are to pray against their sinnes but not their persons 2. Sam. 15.31 Act. 42.9 Wee are bound to wish to our private enemies things temporary unlesse these things be hurtfull to them but if they be enemies to the Church we are not to supply their wants unlesse we hope by these means to draw them to the Church But if the persons sinne unto death 1 Ioh. 5.19 then we are to pray not onely against their actions but also against their persons and because few have the spirit to discerne these wee should apply these imprecations used in the Psalmes against the enemies of the Church in generall Quest Whether is the love of God and of our neighbour one sort of love or not Answ Objectum amoris vel est formale vel materiale It is one sort of love the formall object of our love in this life is God because all things are reduced to God by love the materiall object of our love is our neighbour Vno habitu charitat is diligimus deum proximum licet actu distinguantur here they are not two sorts but one love and as there is but vnus spiritus varia dona one Spirit and diversity of gifts 1 Cor. 12. so there are due praecepta unus amor two praecepts and one love The remedies to cure sinfull love since the fall That wee may cure our sinfull love and set it upon the right object First wee must turne our senses that they be not incentivum et somentum amoris perversi that is that our senses bee not the provokers and nourishment of perverse love It is memorable which Augustine markes that the two first corrupt loves began at the eye First the love of Eva beholding the forbidden fruit which brought destruction to the soules of men Secondly when the Sonnes of God saw the daughters of man to be faire they went in to them Gen. 6.1 this fin brought on the deluge it had beene a profitable lesson then for them If they had made a covenant with their eyes Iob 31.1 Secondly it is a profitable helpe to draw our affections from things beloved to consider seriously what arguments we may draw from the things which we love that wee may alienate our minds from them and wee shall find more hurt by the things we set our love upon than wee can find pleasure in them If David when he look't upon Bethsabe with an adulterous eye had remembred what fearefull consequence would have followed as the torment of conscience the defiling of his daughter Tamar and of his concubines and that the sword should never depart from his house 2 Sam. 11.12 and a thousand such inconveniences hee would have said this will be a deare bought sinne Thirdly consider the hurts which this perverse love breeds He who loves sin hates his owne soule Psal 10.5 Fourthly let thy minde be busied upon lawfull objects and idlenesse would bee eschued it was idlenesse which brought the Sodomites to their sin Qui otio vacant in rem negotiosissimam incidunt these who are given to idlenesse fall into many trouble some businesses CHAP. VII Of Hatred HAtred is a turning of the concupiscible appetite from that which is evill or esteemed evill Odiumest quo volunt as resilit ab objecto disconvenienti vel ut disconvenienti A collation betwixt the innocent and old Adam Man in his first estate loved God with all his heart but since the fall he is become a hater of God Rom. 1.30 and of his neighbour 1 Ioh. 2.9 and of himselfe Psal 10.5 How can God who is absolutely good be hated Quest seeing there is no evill in him Answ God cannot be directly the object of our hatred bonum in universali cannot be hated God is both truth and goodnesse therefore he cannot be hated The understanding lookes to truth and the will to goodnesse God is both truth and goodnesse therefore hee cannot be hated in himselfe but in some particular respect as men hate him because he inflicteth the evill of punishment upon them or because hee commandeth them something which they thinke hard to doe as restraining them in their pleasure or profit So the wicked they hate not the word as the word but as it crosseth their lewd appetites and curbes their desires Gal. 4.6 Am I become your enemie because I tell you the truth The sheepe hates not the Wolfe as it is a living creature for then it should hate the Oxe also but the Sheepe hates the Wolfe as hurtfull to it and in this sense Men are said to be haters of God These who behold that infinite good cannot hate him but of necessity love him therefore the sin of the divels was the turning away of their sight from God and the reflection of their understanding upon themselves admiring their owne sublimity remembring their subordination to God this grieved them wherby they were drowned with the conceite of their owne pride whereupon their delection adoration and imitation of God and goodnesse were interrupted Diabolus tria amisit in lapsu delectationem in pulchritudine Dei a dorationem majestat is imitatiouem exemplar is bonitatis So long as they beheld the Majesty of God they had delectation in his beauty adoration of his majesty and imitation of his exemplary goodnesse Quest Whether is the hating of God or the ignorance of God the greater sinne it may seeme that the hating of God is the greater sinne Namcujus oppositum est melius Arist ethic 8. c. 6. ipsum est pejus for that whose opposite is best it must be worse it selfe but the love of God is better than the knowledge of God therefore the hating of God is a greater sinne than the ignorance of God Ans The hatred of God and the ignorance of God are considered two wayes either as hatred includes ignorance or as they are severally considered As hatred includes ignorance then hatred is a greater sinne than ignorance because he that hates God must be ignorant of him But if we consider them severally then ignorance is to be distinguished into ignorantia purae negationis and ignorantia pravae dispositionis and this latter ignorance proceeding from a perverse disposition of the Soule which will not know God as Pharaoh sayd Who is the Lord that I should know him and obey his voyce Exod. 5.2 must be a greater sin than hatred for such ignorance is the cause of hatred and in vices the cause must bee worfe then the effect but perverse ignorance is the cause of the hatred of God Therefore this sort of ignorance is a greater sinne than the hating of God We must not then understand the axiome according to the first fence here for there is no contrarietie betwixt hatred