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A97309 The whole body of Christian religion, by Hieron. Zanchius. Translated out of Latine by D. Ralph Winterton. Zanchi, Giralamo, 1516-1590.; Winterton, Ralph, 1600-1636. 1659 (1659) Wing Z7; Thomason E1897_1; ESTC R209936 137,419 420

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of Bishops in a Church yet not any succession be it what it will but such as hath also the continuation of the Apostles doctrine We acknowledge I say that it may be truely demonstrated from such a succession that such a Church is Apostolike As of old the Church of Rome and the succession of the Bishops thereof even unto the times of Irenaeus Tertullian Cyprian and some other insomuch that those Fathers did not without cause appeal thereunto and to other such like in their accustomed citations of the Heretikes of their time But as on the one side as concerning those Churches in which the Apostles doctrine together with Christian discipline and the right administration of the Sacraments is retained pure although they were not planted by the Apostles neither can show the perpetuall succession of their Bishops without interruption even from the Apostles time yet we do acknewledge them for Churches truely Apostolike and say with Tertullian and others of the Fathers that they are so to be acknowledged So on the other side what Churches were planted and watered by the Apostles themselves although they can demonstrate unto us the continuall succession of their Bishops without any the least interruption yet if they cannot demonstrate unto us as well the continuation of the Christian and Apostolike doctrine as the succession of their Bishops we may acknowledge and confesse that they have been indeed Christian and Apostolike Churches but that they are such now we cannot acknowledge For as it is not the cap or the hood that makes a Monke as it is in the proverb but pietie and sanctitie of life So neither is it the succession of Bishops but the doctrine of Christ and Christian Religion that makes a Church truely Christian DOCT. VII That not any consent whatsoever but onely that which is in the doctrine of Christ sufficeth to evidence that some are true and Christian Churches SO also we conceive that it cannot be evinced from any kind of agreement of Churches amongst themselves that they are the true Churches of God seeing there ha's been the greatest unity and concord even in the Synagogues of the Iews and the assemblies of the Turks as also heretofore in the conventicles of the Arrians and Donatists but we judge them onely to be demonstrated as such from their consent in the purity of Christian Doctrine and true piety For when the Apostle saith I beseech you 1 Cor. 1.10 brethren by the Name of our Lord Iesus Christ that ye all speak the same thing and that there be no divisions among you but that ye be perfectly joined together in the same mind and in the same judgements he meanes in that Lord Iesus Christ by whose Name he did request them to that unanimitie DOCT VIII That the being of Churches is not destroyed by every kind of dissension that may arise in them NEverthelesse we are not so unjustly rigid against those wherein there is not a perfect harmonie and the same judgement concerning all particulars as therefore to deny them to be Christian Churches Because as any kind of concord do's not constitute a Church so neither does every dissension whatsoever destroy it provided this fundamentall principle that there is such a person as Christ true God and true Man the true and perfect Saviour be firmely acknowledg'd and so the whole summe of Apostolicall Doctrine which is delivered in the Creed be received with universall assent DOCT. IX The same further asserted FOr as reprobates and hypocrites do not hinder Churches from being truely such by their being members of them so likewise those dissentions in the Churches which are raised either by wicked men or amonst the godly themselves through the weaknesse of the flesh or ignorance are not sufficient to abolish them which is attested by the Apostle when speaking concerning the ministers of true Churches he saith that upon the same foundation some do build gold silver pretious stones but others wood stubble hay And in the Epistle to the Philippians Chap. 3. vers 15.16 having first explained the summe of Christian Doctrine and exhorted them all to prosist in the same he subjoines But if any thing ye be otherwise minded God shall reveal even this unto you Neverthelesse whereto we have already attained let us walke by the same rule let us mind the same thing For otherwise if where ever discords happen to arise touching Religion there are not to be acknowledged any true Churches then were not the Corinthians in the time of St. Paul the Church of Christ since not onely many schismes distracted them while one professed I am of Paul another I am of Cephas and a third I am of Apollo but also strange contests and controversies about Religion had fill'd them with feuds and animosities So also will it follow in Galatia for in those Churches soon after they had been excellently planted and constituted by St. Paul there crept in many seducers by whom divers heresies were sowed among them In a word it must be concluded from thence that there never were any either in the East or West that could be truely said to have been Churches because they were never free from contentions not onely raised between the Catholicks Hereticks which had degenerated from Catholicks but even among the holy Fathers themselves as Histories abundantly witnesse insomuch that the Christians by reason of those dissensions and sects us'd to be derided and mocked by the unbelieving gentiles upon their Theaters as we have experience of the like usage at this day from the Turks and Iews upon the same cause But as in the primitive Church it did not follow from those disagreements of the Christians that they were not therefore the people of God so neither can it with equity be otherwise reputed of us but that we have reason to affirme the contrary to be thence deducible it being the property of the good wheat viz. of the Gospel by which the Churches are gathered to Christ that where that is sowne the enemie Satan should soon after scatter his tares in the same field Neither indeed were the champions of darknesse as Simon Menander Ebio Cerinthus Valentinian and other the like plagues heard of any where more or sooner then in the Church that upon the first preaching of the Gospel of Christ Besides that the Church at present in the world could not truely be termed the Church Militant had it not enemies both within and without wherewith perpetually to encounter DOCT. X. That the peace of the Church is not to be disturbed or schismes raised upon every difference in doctrine or ceremonies MOreover we do not approve that any man should make a separation from his own Church or disturb the peace of the Churches and infringe brotherly love much lesse that one Church should condemne another for every difference in doctrine or ceremonies where the foundation is retained as heretofore Victor Bishop of Rome when he went about to excommunicate the Churches
means which God hath ordained for the salvation of soul and body as likewise those which contend that all things come to passe by such an absolute necessitie that they take away all contingency and leave man no libertie at all and lastly those which will have God so to work all in all that they stick not to commit blasphemie in making God to be the author of sin and to have a part in it CHAP. VII Concerning the Fall of man and originall sin and the fruits of it DOCTRINE I. That Adam voluntarily and of his own accord sinned against God by his disobedience WE believe That Adam the first man considering that he was a Gen. 1.27 created after the Image of God and b Eccl. 7.29 made just and upright and endued with free-will in such sort that if he would he might have not sinned and so never died considering this I say we believe that he c Gen 3.1 c. at the devils perswasion God not hindring him but leaving him d Eccl. 15.14 to follow his own counsel of his own accord with true freedome of will sinned against God by his disobedience so that he can neither translate the fault upon God nor his own nature as he received it from God nor any other creature but ought and must attribute it onely unto himself because he would so DOCT. II. What the nature and qualitie of Adams sin was WE understand That Adams sin was his voluntarie a Gen. 3.6 transgressing the b Gen. 2.17 commandment of God in eating the forbidden fruit as Moses sets it down and as the Apostle speaketh his c Rom. 5.19 disobedience which consisted not so much in the outward act as in his voluntarie purpose of mind in that he would not obey God DOCT. III. What and how manifold death followed upon Adams sin SO we confesse That man being destitute of the grace of God by his own fault lost that life by which he did live holily unto God having his understanding blinded his will depraved and the integritie of his whole nature perished as concerning things belonging unto God and a life well-pleasing unto God That he became a Ioh 8.34 the servant of sin and the slave of Satan and truly b Eph. 2.1 dead unto God That c Rom. 5.12 he incurred death both that of the body which is common to all men together with all bodily calamities and also and that especially that of the whole man which is eternall that is to say most miserable most grievous most unhappy to live with the devil in everlasting torments a life beyond all comparison worse then any death from which he could never have been d 1 Cor. 15.22 delivered but by Christ DOCT. IV. That in Adam all men sinned NOw for as much as all mankind which by naturall generation was to be propagated from Adam was in the loynes of Adam whereupon the commandment joyned also with a commination belonged not to Adams person onely but to all mankind Therefore we believe with the Apostle and confesse that a Rom. 5.19 in Adam sinning all men sinned so that the disobedience was not so much proper to him as common to all mankind because his guilt descended upon all his posteritie whether born already or yet to be born as the Apostle plainly teacheth and most firmely proveth by opposing b ibid. the disobedience of Adam and the obedience of Christ the one to the other For if the obedience of Christ be as well ours by imputation as it was Christ's own by his proper action because we are born again of his incorruptible seed and of his spirit then likewise it followes that the disobedience of Adam is imputed unto us and his guilt becomes ours because according to our carnall generation we are born of his seed who is the Father of all men DOCT. V. That presently upon Adams disobedience there followed the corruption of his whole nature in all men ANd as upon Adam's actuall disobedience there followed presently in the just judgement of God the corruption of his whole nature which is by the Apostle called a Rom. 7.7 August Tom. 7. contra Iul. Pelag lib. 5. cap. 3. lust or concupiscence which is both a punishment for sin foregoing and a sinne it self and the cause of other sins So also all men which by naturall propagation are descended from him are infected with the same contagion and corruption of nature This we believe as we have been taught out of Holy Scripture and and this we confesse with the whole Church For in Adam all men sinned and the guilt of his disobedience came upon all DOCT. VI. What we properly call Originall sin WHerefore we say that this hereditary stain and corruption of nature is so in all men a sinne and therefore commonly called Originall sinne that yet notwithstanding we in no wise separate it from the guilt and imputation of that first disobedience As on the contrarie we doubt not to affirme that the righteousness of Christians consists not so much in the regeneration of nature which is the work of Christs Spirit and commonly called by the name of Inherent righteousness as in the imputation of the perfect obedience and righteousness of Christ whose members we are DOCT. VII That the contagion of our nature is truely a sinne ANd although this contagion did overspread Adam and all his posteritie and was inflicted as a just punishment for that first transgression of Gods commandment Yet thus much we know as certainly as can be out of holy Scripture that it is not onely a punishment for sin but also the cause of all other sinnes and likewise a sinne it self and such a one as is alone sufficient to condemne us DOCT. VIII That concupiscence even in the regenerate is of it 's own nature a sinne ANd we have learned that concupiscence of it's own nature is so farre forth a sinne and so repugnant to the Law of God making all men subject to eternall damnation unless they be redeemed by Christ that yet we make no manner of doubt but in the very regenerate themselves although it be not imputed unto them any more for as much as the guilt thereof is taken away by faith in Christ it is truely and of it self a sinne and such a one as deserves eternall death seeing that it is as the Apostle also teacheth 1 Iohn 3.4 the transgression of the Law and is condemned by the Law of God DOCT. IX That from our naturall and imbred concupiscence as from a fountain there flow forth continually streams of actuall sins and transgressions WE believe further that this our naturall pravitie is such a fountain of all evil and so inexhaustible that from thence there spring forth continually the most filthy waters of evil passions wicked cogitations and ungodly desires which unlesse they be restrained and kept in by the Spirit of Christ will breake forth outwardly into wicked and
called CHAP. VI. Concerning Gods Providence and his governing the world DOCTRINE I. That the world and all the things which are therein are governed by Gods Providence WE believe that God after that he had created all things so rested from his work that nevertheless he never ceased neither yet doth cease to guide a Wisd 14.3 govern and look after the world and all the things that are therein as well small as great but especially mankind in generall and every man in particular So that b Matt. 10 29 30 not any thing happens or is done in the world which is not guided and c governed by his Providence DOCT. II. That God governeth his Church after a more peculiar manner ALthough all and every thing is subject to Gods Providence yet we believe that he hath a more especiall Wisd 14.3 care of his Church and that he guideth governeth it after a more especiall manner as likewise the wills and actions of all and every one of his elect For as much as he after an especiall manner d Rom. 8.30 calleth justifieth and sanctifieth them but not all and further e Philp. 2.13 worketh in them both to will and to do of his good pleasure and further saith f 2 Cor. 2.16 I will dwell in them but g Acts 14.16 not in all and at length bringeth them unto everlasting life but suffers others in his just judgement to walke in their own wayes and run on headlong to destruction Whereupon we are commanded to h 1 Pet. 5.7 cast all our care upon God for he after a peculiar manner careth for us DOCT. III. That God ordinarily governeth the world by second causes ANd this we learn also out of holy Scripture That although God by himself without any coadjutor yea sometimes contrary to ordinarie meanes bringeth to passe many decrees of his divine Providence yet there are farre more which he ordinarely useth to bring to passe by the ministerie of second causes both in the government of whole world in generall and the Church in speciall For a Hos 2.21.22 I will hear saith the Lord I will hear the heavens and they shall hear the earth and the earth shall hear the corne and the wine and the oyle and they shall hear Iezreel DOCT. IV. That the meanes unto the end are not to be neglected and that God in his Providence willeth the one as well as the other FRom hence we gather That although we are certain God careth for us yet the meanes which God hath appointed for the salvation of the soul and body are not to be despised neither must we tempt God but follow the Apostle who although he was fully perswaded of the saving of all that were in the ship with him when the saylers began to think how to shift for themselves said to the Centurion and to the souldiers except these abide in the ship Act. 27.31 ye cannot be saved For God which hath appointed to every thing it 's own end he also hath appointed the beginning and the meanes by which to come unto that end DOCT. V. That in respect of God all things come to passe necessarily and in respect of us many things contingently WHereas God in his Providence doth conserve and also move the second causes which he is wont to use in the government of the world every one in it's own nature and some of these are destinated by their own nature to the producing of certain effects and again some are not We understand and confesse that although in respect of God a Matt. 10.29.30 Exod. 21.13 without whose foreknowledge and will nothing in the world comes to passe all things are necessarie yet in respect of us and the second causes they are not all necessarie but most of them are contingent For what can be more casuall contingent then this That b Deut. 19.5 when a man is hewingwood the head of his axe should fly out of his hand and kill the traveller that passeth by And yet the Lord saith that it is he which killed him And again our Lord Iesus Christ died for us voluntatily and yet it is said It was necessarie or c Luke 24.46 Thus it behoved Christ to suffer In like manner Herod and Pilate condemned Iesus with full and free consent of will And yet the Apostles say that d Act. 4.28 they did no more then what the hand and counsel of God had determined before to be done DOCT. VI. That God is not the authour of sin which is committed in the World ANd from hence also we understand and confesse That although many wickednesses are committed in the world whilst God moveth all things yet they cannot be imputed to him and his Providence For e Acts 17.28 God moveth indeed all things and giveth power unto every thing to work but he instilleth no sinfull qualitie unto any man whereby he worketh after an evil and sinfull manner As therefore the earth which affordeth sap to the bad trees as well as to the good is not to be blamed if a bad tree bring forth bad fruit So much lesse can God justly be said to be the authour and cause of our sins although he a Heb. 1. ● by the hand of his providence sustain support move and govern all things yea the very ungodly themselves b Acts 17.28 In him saith the Apostle we live and move and have our being To wit such as we are such are we moved by him unless he of his grace do alter and change us DOCT. VII That the secret counsels of God in the governing of the world are by us to be adored with reverence and not with curiositie to be inquired into BUt as concerning the secret and wonderfull counsels of God whereby we see innumerable things to be done whereof we can neither give nor know any reason Let us admire and adore them with what reverence we ought being assured of this That c Matth. 10 29 30 nothing in the world is done without the will of God And that the will of God is a Rom. 9.14 so just that it is the most certain rule of all justice And therefore we must alwayes keep in mind that saying of the Apostle uttered with great admiration b Rom. 11.33 O the depth of the riches both of the wisedome knowledge of God! How unsearchable are his judgements and his wayes past finding out And again c Rom. 9.14 Is there unrighteousness with God God forbid And yet d Rom. 11.36 Of him and through him and to him are all things To whom be glory for ever Amen DOCT. VIII Errours condemned THerefore we condemne all impostors and deceivers and all those Philosophers which either quite take away Gods Providence out of the world or else deny that he looketh after humane affaires and small matters And those also we condemne which abusing Gods Providence contemne and neglect the
as Iews and Turks which deny that the world is redeemed by the benefit of Christs death together with all them which place their salvation in whole or in part in any other thing but Christ onely or blasphemouslly say that sins are expiated and taken away by any other sacrifices beside that of Christs For we acknowledge one onely Redeemer Iesus Christ without whom as there is no God so there is no salvation and we acknowledge but one onely sacrifice by the oblation whereof the elect were once expiated in the Person of Christ but also are daily pardoned unto all believers even to the end of the world CHAP. XII Concerning the true dispensation of redemption salvation and life and therefore the necessitie of our union and communion with Christ DOCTRINE I. That salvation and eternall life is placed onely in Christ that from him it may be communicated unto us WE believe that as the sinne of Adam and death which followed thereupon remained not onely in Adam but also from him as from the head of all mankind a Rom. 5.12 passed upon all men whosoever are by common generation already come from him or are yet to come So also that the righteousnesse of Christ and eternall life which is onely due unto him remained not in him alone but was derived upon all men whosoever are by regeneration of the holy Ghost made one with him and doe as true members cleave fast unto him as being the head of all the Church and that Christ also came in the flesh to this end and that all salvation and life is placed in him to be really and truely dispensed and communicated unto all the elect which are united unto him DOCT. II. That indeed the grace of redemption and salvation is seriously offered unto all but really communicated to none but the elect which are made one with Christ FOr we believe that although a Mark 15.10 redemption salvation and life eternall which are the gifts of God be seriously propounded and offered unto all by the preaching of the Gospell for that many are not made partakers of it it is their own fault Yet they are really communicated unto none but those which being from all eternitie elected and predestinated in Christ as the head of all the elect to be made his members and so partakers of salvation and being afterwards in due time called by the preaching of the Gospell and indued with faith by the holy Ghost are grafted into Christ and so made one with him DOCT. III. To the true participation of salvation how necessarie our union or communion with Christ is AS neither a Iohn 15.1 2 c. the vine branch from the vine nor the bough from the tree can suck sappe and life unlesse both the one and the other be united as a part unto the one and the other And again as the members of the body can neither draw motion nor sense nor life from their head unlesse they be united to the head So neither can men receive life and salvation from Christ in whom they are alone unless they be truely ingrafted into Christ and be united unto him by a true and reall union and being united do also remain and abide in him DOCT. IV. That we cannot be united unto Christ unlesse he do first unite himself unto us SEeing then the participation of true righteousnesse salvation and life depends wholly upon the most necessarie communion of us with Christ and hereunto both the preaching of the Gospell the administration of the Sacraments and all the Ecclesiasticall ministerie is referred For this cause what our faith and belief is concerning this matter briefely and plainly as near as we can we thought good to declare and testifie unto all the Church of Christ in certain Theses or Positions here following And first we believe that as a 1 Iohn 4.10 we love Christ as Iohn speaketh because he first loved us and therefore we come unto him with our Spirit because he first came unto us by his and therefore we embrace him by faith because he first embraced us by the virtue of his Spirit and begate faith in us So neither can we be joyned united unto him unless he first joyne and unite himself unto us For one is the cause of the other the former of the latter Wherefore we are to pray that he would be pleased to a Iohn 14.23 come unto us and make his abode with us DOCT. V. That Christ's union with us and ours with Christ is threefold and what their order is FUrther we acknowledge a threefold union of Christ with us and us with Christ The first in our nature once made the second which is every day made in the Persons of every one of the elect but as yet absent from the presence of the Lord and the last which shall be with the Lord in our own Persons when we shall be personally present with him when God shall be b Coloss 3.11 1 Cor. 15 2● all in all And the first of these is referred unto the second and the second unto the third As nature was ordained unto grace and grace unto glorie For the first was made by the assumption of our nature into the unitie of the Person of the Word The second is made by the assumption of our Persons into grace and into one Mysticall body with him and so unto the a 2 Pet. 1.4 participation of the divine nature as Peter speaketh The third and last shall be made by the assumption of us all into glorie everlasting with Christ And we doubt not but Christs will was to shew unto us before the second by the first and the third by the second that by what is done already we might be confirmed in hope of that which shall be hereafter DOCT. VI. That as the first union was made to expiate and take away sins so likewise the second to make us partakers of that benefit WE believe therefore to omit things that are impertinent to our present purpose and to come nearer to the matter we believe I say that the Son of God according to the eternall will of the Father of himself and of the holy Ghost as to expiate and take away our sins he assumed into the unitie of his Person which was conceived in the wombe of the Virgin by the power of the holy Ghost and in it fulfilled the Law of God perfectly for us and became obedient unto his Father even unto death and by the same flesh offered up for a sacrifice for our sinnes purchased in himself eternall salvation for us So also to make us really partakers of the salvation purchased for us by the sacrifice of his own flesh after another manner of union he takes and kuits us unto himself in such sort that we are united unto him though not into one Person yet into one true mysticall body whereof he is head and all we are members whereby we become partakers of
Christ by vertue of the glory it received after his resurrection received the power of being every where then ours also will by reason of the same glory be every where which seeing it shall not be neither do we believe that the body of Christ however full of glory and majesty is now every where with its substance since it is finite and the glory thereof also finite especially for that he hath said that b Io● 17.24 he will that where he is there we should be also but we shall not be every where with our bodies DOCT. VII Errours FIrst we condemn the wicked dotage both of those Philosophers who taught the humane soul is mortall and 2. of those hereticks who imagin'd that the souls of men separated from their bodies did either sleep in certain secret places that is are deprived of all sense and operations of the mind or that they are awake indeed but rest untill they resume their bodies and then are either to be admitted into heaven or thrust into hell 3. Moreover we condemn those who dream that the souls of many of the godly are purged in a certain purgatory fire from the reliques of their sins and undergoe temporall pains 4. We disapprove their opinion who do not distinguish heaven where the godly shall be from hell where we read the wicked shall be but make the difference to consist only in this that some are made happy and others miserable although all be in the same place 5. But neither can we assent to them who say that the certain time month or year if not the the certain day and hour may be determin'd and known Act. 1.7 in which the Lord will come and put an end to to this world seeing Christ hath said It is not for you to know the times 2 Pet. 3 3. 6. We detest those Scoffers whom St. Peter mentions who think the world shall endure thus for ever and deny deride all life to come 7. We also condemn all those who reject the resurrection of the dead and also those who fancied we shall not have the same but other new bodies 8. We likewise condemn them who taught that bodies after the resurrection shall be so spiritual that like a spirit or ayre they can neither be seen nor felt such as some have attributed to Christ after his resurrection and others also impudently feign to have been changed into the divine nature so that it cannot be any longer termed a Creature CHAP. XXIX Of the glorious coming of the Lord Jesus to judge the living and the dead DOCTRINE I. That the dead being rais'd and the living chang'd at the coming of the Lord Iesus from Heaven Christ will immediately shew himself in the Clouds to be seen by all and all the faithfull shall goe meet him in the aire WE believe that at the coming of the Lord Jesus the resurrection of the dead being performed by the ministry of Angels they that are then alive shall not die but shall be instantly changed into the same condition with them that are raised and then Christ being returned from heaven to the Clouds to judge and passe sentence upon all will exhibit himself to be seen by all men and being attended with his Angels and appearing in his majestie and glory all the godly shall be translated from earth even to the heaven of the Clouds to meet him Mat 24.3 25.31 1 Thes 5.1 c. according as Christ himself and the Apostles have taught and left a recorded DOCT. II. That Christ will visibly move from place to place and so with a visible locall and finite body THerefore we believe that Christ will so return visibly as before he ascended from earth to heaven in the sight of his Apostles and that he will return from that heaven wherein he now is and which is consequently distant from the Clouds to which he shall descend and from the earth and so we believe he will descend with his natural body that it is necessary the same should be local and finite and therefore not ubiquitary seeing such a descending is by the holy Ghost described to the simple people as is not possible to be made without mutation of place DOCT. III. That the reprobate unbelievers shall not go unto Christ sitting in the clouds but remaining upon the earth shall heare the sentence of the Iudge BUt whereas the Scripture pronunces only of the godly that they shall be snatched up into the Clouds and goe meet Christ in the aire we believe that the wicked shall not go unto Christ but remaining under his feet heare the sentence of the Judge 1 Cor. 6.2 3. Goe ye Cursed into eternall fire all the Saints which shall be in the aire with Christ approving the sentence according to the opinion of the Apostle a that the Saints shall judge the world the Angels DOCT. IV. For what Causes that universall judgement is appointed WE believe that that judgement wherein Christ shall judge all being made visible to all is appointed chiefly for two reasons first to the end that those things which are now hid unto men aswell innocence faith and good conscience of the godly as the hypocrisie and crimes of the wicked may be layd open to the whole world and thereby it may most evidently appeare at the last how just the judgements of God have alwaies been whence that day is called by the Apostle a Rom. 2.5 the day of revelation Secondly that the recompense of good works promised to the good and of bad to the bad may be rendred fully to every one according to that of the Apostle We must all appeare before the judgement seat of Christ 2 Cor. 5.10 that every one may receive the things done in his body according to that he hath done whether it be good or bad whence it is called by the same Apostle c Rom. 2.5 The day of the righteous judgement of God DOCT. V. That eternall life which is given to the elect is called and is a reward but al together fully bestowed in no manner due to us saving through Christ FOr although what the elect shall then receive is the meer gift of God obtained by the merits of Christ alone yet we are not ignorant that it is and is truly called a reward seeing the Lord Iesus hath daigned to give it that term namely a free reward seeing even the good works of the godly all the causes from whence they proceed are the free gifts of God free election free redemption free calling faith justification regeneration forgivness of sins lastly the pardoning of the defects and weaknesses wherewith our good works themselves are attended on the other side the free imputation of the perfect obedience of Christ by which our imperfect is cloathed and rendred most acceptable to God so that it followes that if we will speak properly the reward is not due to us for our own works
sake consider'd in themselves but only for the imputed merits of Christ DOCT. VI. That judgement being ended the godly shall immediately be in heaven with Christ and the wicked in hell with the Devil and his Angels MOreover we believe that immediately after that judgement the godly shall follow Christ into heaven and the wicked with the Devils shall be thrust into hell Christ saying unto those Come ye blessed of my Father but to these Goe ye cursed into fire everlasting DOCT. VII That that day shall be most joyfull to the godly and therefore to be desir'd but to the wicked most sad and so intolerable to them even to hear of it SO we believe that last day will be to them who are grafted into Christ most happy and joyfull and that therefore it is beloved wished for by them and so ought to be desired and loved by us but the most unhappy and sad of all to the wicked whence it is no wonder that they hate that day 2 Tim. 4.8 and cannot endure the mention of it DOCT. VIII Errours 1. WE condemn those who deny that Christ is truly and really in his humane body to descend from heaven to the clouds and from thence to return into heaven with the elect but maintain that all this shall be without any mutation of place only by a sort of appearance as they call it and disappearance who are contradicted by sayings of Angels to the Apostles a Acts 1.11 As ye have seen him ascending into heaven so shall he come 2. We dissent from those who teach that works of godlinesse consider'd in themselves are the true cause for which eternall life is given and are the true deserts of the same the Apostle being of the contrary opinion and saying b Rom. 6 2● The gift of God is life eternall Neither do we approve the opinion of the C●iliasts concerning a thousand years wherein after judgement Christ shall converse with his elect in this world who shall live in the delights of the flesh but such as are seemly and shall beget issue but holy and at length be translated into heaven 4. We condemn and abominate their errour who hold that the fire into which the wicked are sent shall be in time extinct so that even all the devils that live happily in the kingdome of God contrary to the expresse words of Christ a Matt. 25.41 Go into eternall fire CHAP XXX Of life Eternall DOCTRINE I. That all shall receive eternall life who by their good works shall have testified that they were truly ingrafted into Christ and believed in Christ THerefore we believe that at last eternall life that is a full and perfect possession of life eternall shall be given in that last day to all who by the evident works of true faith and piety shall be openly declared before all Angels and men most clearly demonstrated and by the sentence of Christ the Iudge be pronounced to have been truly ingrafted into Christ by the holy spirit and so to have believed in God the Father in his Son Iesus Christ and in the holy Ghost to have been living members of the holy Church and to have had communion with all the Saints and to have obained remission of their sins the Lord himself teaching this who saith a Mat. 25 34 c. that he will say unto those that are on his right hand Come ye blessed of my Father enter into the kingdome prepared for you from the foundation of the world For I was an hungred and ye gave me to eat c. DOCT. II. The foregoing doctrine confirmed and that life eternall is given not in consideration of our works but through Christ in whom we are freely elected blessed and made the sons of God FOr in these words the Lord seemeth to have declared unto us that our good works are the evidences of our election blessing adoption and so of right an inheritance but that the cause for which we shall obtain life eternall and the possession of the kingdome of heaven is partly for that even before the foundation of the world that is before we had done any good that kingdome was freely prepared for us through Christ Eph. 1.3 partly for that we a have been blessed by the Father with all spirituall blessing in Christ and so called by grace justified obtained forgivenesse of our sins sanctified and adopted to be the sons of God through the same Christ and regenerated by his spirit whereby we are made coheirs of that kingdome Therefore forasmuch as the Lord will remember works of piety we do not question but he doth the same that it may be manifest to the whole world that we have truly been blessed elected just children of God to whom the inheritance was due according to that of the Apostle If children then heirs but that we are the children of God is declared by regeneration and regeneration by the effects of regeneration which are the works of faith and piety DOCT. III. That as the life of the godly shall be eternall so also the pains and fire of the wicked shall be eternall BUt as we believe that the children of God shall obtain life eternall so also we confesse that hypocrites and all the wicked shall goe into eternall fire never to be extinguish'd Mat. 25.48 and there be tormented for ever when Christ shall openly say Go ye into eternall fire DOCT. IV. That it can neither be express'd nor conceiv'd how happy that eternall life shall be BUt what that life is and after what manner and how great the felicity which is signify'd by the name of the kingdome of heaven we confesse ingenuously with the Apostle that neither eye hath seen it 1 Co● 2.9 nor ear heard it nor hath it entred into the heart of man being a thing greater and of more excellency then that it can be comprehended by human understanding and of such happinesse that greater cannot fall within our desires Therefore we simply believe we who are of Christ we are ruled by his Spirit who depend on his word and who place all our confidence of salvation in him that all shall be most happy and all shine like the Sun in the sight of God Mat. 13.43 1 Cor 11 12. Phil. 1.23 that we shall see God as he is and all live a heavenly and divine life with Christ and his Angels freed from all sin all misery all evil without any more sorrow without fear with out want or desire of any thing because God will be all in all 1 Cor. 15.28 Apoc. 22.3 4 c. and we shall see his face and in that city there shall be no night nor shall there be need of any candle or light of the Sun because the Lord God shall give us light and we shall reign for ever and ever with Christ Iesus our head Spouse Saviour Lord to whom praise honour and glory for evermore Amen FINIS THE CONTENTS OF THE CHAPTERS CHAPTER I. Concerning the Holy Scriptures which are the foundation of all Christian Religion Pag. 1. Chap. II. Concerning God the divine Persons and Properties Pag. 13 Chap. III. Concerning Gods foreknowledge and Pradestination Pag. 19 Chap. IV. Concerning Gods Omnipotency and will Pag. 26 Chap. V. Concerning the Creation of the world the Angels and the first estate of man Pag. 29 Chap. VI. Concerning Gods Providence and his governing the world Pag. 37 Chap. VII Concerning the Fall of man and originall sin and the fruits of it Pag. 44 Chap. VIII What free-will was left unto Man after his Fall Pag. 53 Chap. IX Concerning the Promise of Redemption and Salvation through Christ Pag. 61 Chap. X. Concerning the Law Pag. 65 Chap. XI Concerning Christ our Redeemer Pag. 77 Chap. XII Concerning the true dispensation of redemption salvation and life and therefore the necessitie of our union and communion with Christ Pag. 108 Chap. XIII Concerning the Gospel and the abrogation of the Law by the Gospel Pag. 131 Chap. XIV Concerning the Sacraments of the New Testament Pag. 143 Chap. XV. Concerning Baptisme Pag. 169 Chap. XVI Concerning the Lords Supper Pag. 178 Chap. XVII Concerning Faith Hope and Charitie Pag. 201 Chap. XVIII Concerning Repentance Pag. 209 Chap. XIX Concerning Iustification Pag. ●16 Chap. XX. Concerning the Free-will of a man regenerate and his power unto that which is good Pag. 232 Chap. XXI Concerning good works Pag. 242 Chap. XXII Concerning Invocation and swearing Pag. 252 Chap. XXIII Concerning the Church of Christ in general Pag. 258 Chap. XXIV Concerning the Church Militant Pag. 259 Chap. XXV Of the Government of the Church Militant and of the Ecclesiasticall Ministry Pag. 307 Chap. XXVI Concerning Magistrates Pag. 361 Chap. XXVII Of the perpetuall remission of sins in the Church of Christ Pag. 372 Chap. XXVIII Of the state of souls after death and of the resurrection of the dead Pag. 383 Chap. XXIX Of the glorious coming of the Lord Iesus to judge the living and the dead Pag. 392 Chap. XXX Of life Eternall Pag. 400