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A25291 The marrow of sacred divinity drawne out of the Holy Scriptures, and the interpreters thereof, and brought into method / by William Ames ... ; translated out of the Latine ... ; whereunto are annexed certaine tables representing the substance and heads of all in a short view ... as also a table opening the hard words therein contained.; Medulla theologica. English. 1642 Ames, William, 1576-1633. 1642 (1642) Wing A3000; ESTC R23182 239,577 422

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carried unto Christ and by Christ unto God but repentance is carried to God himselfe who was before offended by sin Acts 20. 21. Repentance toward God and Faith toward our Lord Iesus Christ. Secondly they have divers ends for Faith doth properly seeke reconciliation with God but repentance a sutablenesse to the will of God Rom. 3. 25. A reconciliation through Faith in his bloud Acts 26. 20. That they should turne unto God doing workes meete to repentance 31. Repentance in respect of that carefulnesse and anxiety terror arising from the Law which it hath joyned with it doth goe before Faith by order of nature as a preparing and disposing cause but in respect of that effectuall and kindly turning away from sin as God is offended by it so it followes Faith and depends upon it as the effect upon his cause and herein is proper to the faithfull 32. Although this repentance doth alwayes bring griefe with it for sins past and present yet it doth not so properly or essentially consist in griefe as in turning from and hatred of sin and in a firme purpose to follow after good Amos 5. 14. 15. Hate the evill Love the good 33. That repentance is not true and sound which doth not turne a man from all known sin to every known good neither that which doth not virtually continue and is actually renewed as often as need is from the time of conversion to the end of life 34. Repentance is wont to be perceived before Faith because a sinner cannot easily perswade himselfe that he is reconciled to God in Christ before he feele himselfe to have forsaken those sins which did separate him from God CHAPTER XXVII Of Iustification 1. COmmunion of the blessings flowing from Union with Christ is that whereby the faithfull are made partakers of all those things they have need of to live well and blessedly with God Eph. 1. 3. He hath blessed us with all spirituall blessings Rom. 8. 32. He who spared not his own Son c. How shall he not freely with him give us all things also 2. This communion therefore doth bring a translation and change of condition to believers from the state of sin and death to the state of righteousnesse and life eternall 1 Iohn 3. 14. We know that we are translated from death to life 3. This change of state is twofold relative and absolute or reall 4. A relative change of state is that which consists in Gods reputation Rom. 4. 5. And he that worketh not but believeth in him that justifieth the ungodly his faith is imputed to him for righteousnesse 1 Cor. 5. 19. God was in Christ reconciling the World tot himselfe not imputing to them their offences 5. Hence it admits no degrees properly so called but it is together and at once perfect in one only act although in respect of the manifestation sence and effects it hath divers degrees Hitherto pertaines justification and adoption 6. Iustification is a gracious sentence of God whereby for Christs sake apprehended by Faith he doth absolve the believer from sin and death and accounts him righteous unto life Rom. 3. 22 24. The righteousnesse of God by Faith of Iesus Christ in all and upon all that believe as they who are freely justified by his grace through the redemption made by Iesus Christ. 7. It is the pronouncing of a sentence as the use of the word declares which doth norset forth a physicall or reall change in the holy Scriptures but that judiciall or morall change which consists in pronouncing of a sentence and in reputation Prov. 17. 15. He that justifies the wicked Rom. 8. 33. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect It is God that Iustifies 8. Therefore Thomas with his followers doth fowly erre who would have justification as it were a physicall motion by a reall transmutation from a state of unrightousnesse to a state of righteousnesse so as that the terme from which is sin the terme to which is inherent righteousnesse and the motion is partly remission of sin partly infusion of righteousnesse 9. This sentence was 1. As it were conceived in the mind of God by a decree of justifying Gal. 3. 8. The Scripture foreseeing that God would justifie the Gentiles by Faith 2. It was pronounced in Christ our head now rising from the dead 2 Cor. 5. 19. God was in Christ reconciling the world to himselfe not imputing their sins to them 3. It is virtually pronounced upon that first relation which ariseth upon Faith begotten Rom. 8. 1. There is therefore no condemnation to them that are in Christ Iesus 4. It is expresly pronounced by the Spirit of God witnessing unto our spirits our reconciliation with God Rom. 5. 5. The love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Spirit that is given to us In this testimony of the spirit justification itselfe doth not so properly consist as an actuall perceiving of that before granted as it were by a reflected act of Faith 10. It is a gratious sentence because it is not properly given by the Iustice of God but by his grace Rom. 3. 24. Freely by his grace For by the same grace whereby he called Christ to the office of Mediator and did draw the elect to Union with Christ he doth account them being already drawn and believing to be just by that Union 11. It is for Christs sake 2 Cor. 5. 21. That we may be made the righteousnesse of God in him for the obedience of Christ is that righteousnesse in respect whereof the grace of God doth justifie us no otherwise then the disobedience of Adam was that offence in respect whereof the justice of God did condemne us Rom. 5. 18. 12. Therefore the righteousnesse of Christ is imputed to believers in justification Phil. 3. 9. That I may be found in him not having mine own righteousnesse which is of the Law but that which is by Faith of Christ the righteousnesse of God through Faith 13. But because this righteousnesse is ordained of God to that end and by his grace is approved and confirmed so that sinners can stand before him through this righteousnesse therefore it is called the righteousnesse of God Rom. 10. 3. 14. But this justification is for Christ not absolutely considered in which sence Christ is also the cause of vocation but for Christ apprehended by Faith which Faith doth follow Calling as an effect and followeth righteousnesse by which being apprehended justification followes whence also righteousnesse is said to be of Faith Romans 9. vers 30. 10. 16. And Iustification through Faith Chap. 3. 28. 15. This justifying Faith is not that generall Faith whereby in the understanding we yield assent to the truth revealed in the holy Scriptures for that doth neither properly belong to those that are justified neither of it own nature hath it any force in it selfe to justifie neither doth it produce those effects which are every where in the Scripture given to
justifying Faith 16. Neither is it to speake properly that speciall confidence whereby we doe apprehend remission of sins and justification it selfe for justifying Faith goeth before justification it selfe as the cause goeth before the effect but Faith apprehending justification doth necessarily presuppose and follow justification as an act followes the object about which it is exercised 17. That Faith therefore is properly called justifying whereby we rely upon Christ for remission of sins and for salvation For Christ is the adaequate object of Faith as Faith Iustifyeth Faith also doth no otherwise justifie then as it apprehends that righteousnesse by which we are justified but that righteousnesse is not in the truth of some sentence to which we yield assent but in Christ alone who is made sinne for us that wee might bee righteousnesse in him 2 Cor. 5. 21. 18. Hence are those Sermons so often repeated in the new Testament which doe shew that justification is to be fought for in Christ alone Iohn 1. 12. 3. 15. 16. 6. 40. 47. 14. 1. 54. Romans 4. 5. 3. 26. Acts 10. 43. 26. 18. Gal. 3. 26. 19. This justifying Faith of it own nature doth produce and so hath joyned with it a speci●…ll and certaine perswasion of the grace and mercy of God in Christ whence also justifying Faith is oftentimes not amisse described by the orthodox by this perswasion especially when they doe oppose that generall Faith to which the Papists ascribe all things but 1. This perswasion as touching the sence of it is not alwayes present For it may and often doth come to passe either through weakenesse of judgement or through divers tentations and troubles of mind that he who truly believeth and is by Faith justified before God yet for a time may thinke according to that which hee feeles that he neither believeth nor is reconciled to God 2. There be divers degrees of his perswasion so that neither all believers have altogether the same assurance of the grace and favour of God nor the same believers at all times which yet they cannot properly affirme of justifying Faith without a great deale of detriment of that consolation and peace which Christ hath left to believers 20. Iustification absolves from sin and death not immediatly by taking away the blame or staine or all the effects of sin but that oblation and guilt to undergoe eternall death Rom. 8. 1. 33. 34. There is no condemnation who shall lay any thing to their charge who shall condemne 21. Neither yet doth it so take away the guilt as that it takes away the desert of punishment from the sin which the sinne it selfe remayning can in no sort be taken away but it so takes away the guilt that it takes away the revenging pursuit of the desart of it or the deadly effects of it 22. This absolution from sins is called in a divers respect but in the same sence in holy Scriptures Remission Redemption and Reconciliation Eph. 1. 6. 7. For as the state of sin is considered as a bondage or certaine spirituall captivity in respect of the guilt so his justification is called Redemption but as the same state is considered as a subjection to doe punishment so it is called remission as also a passing by a blotting out a disburdening a taking away a casting away a removing a casting behind the back Rom. 4. 7. Col. 2. 13. Mich. 7. 18. Isay 43. 12. 38. 17. Psal. 32. 1 2. And as the same state is considered as a certaine enmity against God so justification is called a reconciliation Romans 5. 10. As also a certaine winking at sin Numb 23. 25. A covering of sin Ps. 32. 1 2. 23. But not only the sins of justified persons that are past are remitted but also in some sort those to come Numb 23. 25. He seeth no iniquity in Iacob nor perversnesse in Israel because justification hath left no place to condemnation Iohn 5. 24. He that believeth hath eternall life and shall not come into condemnation and it doth certainly and immediatly adjudge one to eternall life It also maketh all that remission which was in Christ obtained for us to be actually ours neither can sins past and present be altogether and fully remitted unlesse sins to come be in some sort remitted also 24. But there is this difference that sins past are remitted by a formall application by sins to come onely virtually sins past are remitted in themselves sins to come in the subject or person sinning 25. Yet those that are justified doe daily desire the forgivenesse of sins 1. Because the continuance of this grace is necessary to them 2. That the sence and manifestation of it may be more and more perceived as severall sinnes required 3. That the execution of that sentence which in justification is pronounced might bee matured and furthered 26. Besides the forgivenesse of sinnes there is required also imputation of righteousnesse Rom. 5. 18. Rev. 19. 8. Rom. 8. 3. Because there may be a totall absence of sin where notwithstanding there is not that righteousnesse which must come in place of justification 27. But this righteousnesse is not severally to be sought in the purity of the nature birth and life of Christ but it ariseth out of all the obedience of Christ together with remission of sins as the same disobedience of Adam hath both robbed us of originall righteousnesse made us subject to the guilt of condemnation CHAPTER XXVIII Of Adoption 1. ADoption is the gracious sentence of God whereby he accepts the faithfull for Christs sake unto the dignity of Sons Iohn 1. 12. As many as receive him to them he gave power to be made the Sons of God to those that believe in his Name 2. It is called a gracious sentence of God because it doth manifest the gracious will of God toward men 1 Iohn 3. 1. See what love the Father hath shewed to us that we should be called the Sons of God 3. This sentence is pronounced with the same diversity of degrees as justification for it was first in Gods predestination Eph. 1. 5. He hath predestinated us that he might adopt us to be Sons Afterward it was in Christ. Gal. 4. 4 5. God hath sent forth his Son that we might receive adoption Afterward it was in believers themselves The same Chapter Verse 6. And because yee are Sonnes GOD hath sent forth the Spirit of his Sonne into your hearts crying Abba Father 4. It is properly conversant about the faithfull that are called and justified Iohn 1. 12. For by adoption we are not made just which would necessarily follow if adoption were part of justification it selfe as some would have it neither is it a calling unto Christ but a certaine excellent dignity flowing from the application of him Romans 8. 17. Heires together with Christ 5. Yet calling and justification have the respect of a foundation to this relation of Adoption for the right of Adoption is obtained by Faith and
in this life there ought to be joyned a trembling and feare to transgresse it Pro. 8. 12. 13. 14. 16. I wisdome have with me the feare of the Lord. The wise man feareth and departh for evill Chiefly indeed in respect of offence but also in respect of the anger and punishment most of all as it separates from God Neither ought such feare to be called servile when it respects not punishment only 27. The chiefe end is Gods glory for we tend unto him by obedience upon whom we leane by Faith otherwise obedience should not flow from Faith Seeing also that Faith is our life as it doth joyne us to God in Christ it is necessary that the actions of the same Faith which are contained in the obedience should bee caried also to God that is to his Glory 28. The lesse principall end is our own salvation and blessednesse Rom. 6. 22. Being made servants to God yee have your fruit in holinesse and the end eternall life Heb. 1. 2. 2. For the joy that was set before him he endured the Crosse. 29. For although that obedience which performed onely for feare of punishment or expectation of reward is rightly called mercenary yet that any should be secondarily stirred up to doe his duty by looking on the reward or for feare of punishment also this is not strange from the Sonnes of God neither doth it in any part weaken their solid obedience 30. But our obedience is not the principall or meritorious cause of life eternall For we do both receive the priviledge of this life and also the life it selfe by grace and the gift of God for Christs sake apprehended by Faith Rom. 6. 23. The gift of God is eternall Life in Iesus Christ our Lord. But our obedience is in a certaine manner the Ministring helping and furthering cause toward the possession of this life the right where of we had before in which respect it is called the waywherein we walke to Heaven Eph. 2. 10. 31. But it furthers our life both in its own nature because it is some degree of the life it selfe alway es tending to perfection and also by vertue of the promise of God who hath promised life eternall to those that walke in his precepts Galatians 6. 8. Hee that sowes to the spirit of the spirit shall reape life eternall 32. For although all our obedience whilst wee live here is imperfect and defiled with some mixture of sinne Gala. 5. 17. the flesh lusteth against the spirit yet in Christ it is so acceptable to God that it is crowned with the greatest reward 33. Therefore the promises made to the obedience of the faithfull are not legall but evangelicall although by some they are called mixt Mat. 5. 3. 34. The manner of obedience is in subjection or humility largely taken whereby the creature doth submit himself to God to receive and execute his commands unto which there ought alwayes to be joyned 1. Sincerity whereby all mixture of a strange intention and affection is removed so that the whole man is applied to this duty 1 Thess. 5. 23. 1 Cor. 6. 20. And 2. Zeale that is the highest degree of a pure affection Gal 4. 18. It is a good thing to love servently 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in a good thing alwayes 35. The chiefe subject of obedience as also of lively Faith is the will Phil. 2. 13. It is God that worketh in you both to will and to doe 36. But because the s●…rity of the will approving doth most appeare in readinesse alacrity or cheerfulnesse of mind therefore that cheerfulnesse doth most of all pertaine to the very essence of obedience 2 Cor. 9. 7. Deut. 28. 47. God loves a cheerfull giver because thou didst not serve thy God in joy and cheerfulnesse of heart So as often it is pleasing and acceptable to God although the worke it selfe that is propounded be not performed 2 Cor. 8. 12. For if there be first a ready mind one is accepted according to that he hath 37. And because the zeale of the will doth chiefly consist in love and hatred therefore also there is necessarily required to obedience acceptable to God a love of the good and hatred of evill Ps. 45. 8. Thou hast loved righteousnesse and hated iniquity 38. The effect and fruit is not onely a declaration but also a confirmation of Faith and Hope 2 Tim. 1. 19. Keeping Faith and a good conscience which being put away some have made Shipwrack of Faith 39. An adjunct that accompanies it is a conscience quiet joyfull and glorying Heb. 13. 18. 2 Cor. 1. 12. 1 Iohn 3. 19. 21. For we trust that we have a good conscience desiring to behave our selves well in all things 1. Our glorying is this the testimony of our conscience by this we shall assure our hearts CHAPTER II. Of Vertue 1. THere be two parts of obedience Vertue and the action of Vertue 2. Pet. 1. 5. Ad to your Faith Vertue c. For if these things be with you and abound they will make you that yee shall neither be barren nor unfruitfull in the knowledge of our Lord Iesus Christ. 2. This distribution is of the whole into members for these two are in their own nature joyned together and doe make one and the same obedience 3. Hence both vertues and their actions are set forth by the same name and are explained also by the same definition because they are altogether of the same nature even as arguments of Logicke are of the same name and nature whether they be considered alone and by themselves or in Axioms and Syllogismes 4. Vertue is an habit whereby the will is inclined to doe well 5. It is called an habit not as it is distinguished from disposition and signifieth a confirmed and perfect constitution of mind for such a degree of vertue is scarce granted to men while they live heere but generally as it containes both a perfect and also imperfect degree of Vertue and state of the mind 6. But it is called an habit not onely because it is had but also because it maketh the subject which it is in to have it selfe in a certaine manner that is it determines the faculty to good which otherwise is not determined in which sence this word is found Hebr. 5. 14. Who by reason of habit have their sences exercised to discerne good and evill 7. It is in the will First because the will is the proper subject of the Theology as it is the proper principle of life and of morall and spirituall actions 2. Because the will is that faculty which is properly carried unto good that is honest Rom. 7. 19. 21. 3. Because vertue is an habit that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or elective the proper and immediate operation whereof is voluntary election 4. Because the will doth commend the other faculties and so Vertue doth most agree to it that all may be directed aright 5. Because the will is neither by it selfe nor
Eyes and the Fruit of the Tree to be desired to get knowledge she tooke and eat 7. Therefore the first degree and motion of this disobedience was an inordinate desire of some excellency by the lifting up of the mind which that she might attaine the forbidding of God being laid aside through unbeliefe she would make triall whether the forbidden Fruit had some power to confer such an excellency 8. Hence was the grievousnesse of this sin which did not only containe pride ingratitude and unbeliefe but also by violating of that most solemne Sacrament did make shew of as it were a generall profession of disobedience and contempt of the whole covenant All which also were so much the more foule by how much the condition of the sinner was more perfect 9. In the committing of this transgression two things are to be considered the causes and consequents of it 10. Causes were one principall And others adjuvant 11. The principall cause was man himselfe by the abuse of his free will Eccles. 7. 29. For he had received that righteousnesse and grace by which he might have persisted in obedience if he would That righteousnesse and grace was not taken from him before he had sinned although that strengthning and confirming grace by which the act of sinning should have been actually hindered and the contrary act of obedience brought forth was not granted unto him and that by the certaine wise and just counsell of God God therefore was in no wise the cause of his Fall neither did he lay upon man a necessity of falling but man of his own accord did freely Fall from God 12. The adjuvant causes were the Devill and the Woman 13. The first sin of the Divell was pride From pride did presently follow envy towards God and Gods Image in Man For because he had lost an orderly Excellency by affecting one out of order therefore the Excellency of others grieved him and he was maliciously bent to oppose it But the Devill was not the compelling cause neither the cause of sufficient direct necessary or certaine efficacy in procuring that sin but only the counselling and perswading cause by tempting whence also it is that he hath the name of the tempter Mat. 4. 3. 14. The tempting of the Divell is a fallacy or sophisticall argumentation whereby under a shew of that which is true and good he labours to seduce to that which is false and induce to that which is evill 15. In this tentation the good which he propounded and as it were promised was shewed to be as it were the greatest the way to be used to attaine that good was propounded to be as it were easie and light that greatest evill which did hang over his head was hidden from him 16. The Devill is wont to goe the like way in all his tentations which he doth insnare mankind with yet in this tentation a certaine speciall cunning is to be observed which containes many crafts and those very subtile 17. The first of them was in that he chose a Serpent for his instrument which had a certaine naturall aptnesse which the Devill knew how to abuse 18. The second slight was in that he dealt with the Woman 1. Tim. 1. 13. Whether in the presence or absence of her husband the Scripture is silent 19. The third slight was in that he determined nothing at the first speech but only propounded a certaine question to the Woman as if he were ignorant of those matters Hath God indeed said 20 The fourth was that his question had much ambiguity in it for so might be understood that he should not aske of Gods command but of the sence or meaning of that command peradventure not sufficiently understood by man If the question be understood of the command it selfe then he might seem to have asked whether God had forbidden them that they should not at all eat of the fruit of any Tree or as the Woman her selfe answered whether he had forbidden them the use of that one Tree and so had not simply given them leave for all 21. The fift was that having first called the command of God into doubt by that question he did so artifically extenuat the sanction of it or communication adjoyned in the conceit of the Woman now wavering that she should deny either the truth or at least the necessity of it 22. The sixt was that after he had weakened the Commandement and the sanction of it it doth oppose a prediction quite contrary 23. The seventh was that to confirme that prediction he doth both abuse the Name of God and the Name which God had imposed on the Tree Gen. 3. 5. God knoweth that what day ye shall eat there of your Eyes shall be opened and you shall be as Gods knowing Good and Evill 24. Hence it is that the Divill is called a Serpent a Lyer a Seducer a Man-slayer Revelations 12. 9. Iohn 8. 44. Rev. 20. 10. 25. With this tempting of the Devill there was joyned the tempting of God whereby he did so order that businesse that it might thence be manifest what was in Man But this tempting of God was neither Evill nor tending to Evill 26. A third tempting did follow these namely of Man towards God wherein he did in a certaine manner make triall of the truth and Grace of God namely making triall whether God would preserve him although he did not cleave to him or whether he would certainly doe what he had threatned 27. A fourth temptation of Eve did accompany that namely towards her selfe whereby she received the tentation or suggestion of the Devill into her selfe and applied to her selfe to her own ruine 28. From that arose a fifth whereby the Woman serving the Divill as his instrument did tempt Adam and from that proceeded a sixth whereby Adam tempted himselfe whilst he consented with a certaine purpose to the Woman and the Devill 29. Either all or most of these tentations are found also in every Mans sins 30. And so that sin was consummated as touching the Fall of Man-kind in Adam for Adam was properly the beginning of Man-kind not Eve Unlesse as she was made for him and with him did make one and the same beginning Hence it is that we read in Scripture of a second Adam but not of a second Eve CHAPTER XII Of the consequents of Sinne. In the Former disputation wee treated of the Fall and the causes of it now follow the consequents of the Fall 1. THE consequents of Sinne are 1. Guiltinesse and Filthinesse 2. Punishment properly and distinctly so called 2. Guiltinesse is the binding of the Sinner to undergoe just punishment for his fault Levit. 5. 2 3 4 5. He is guilty Rom. 3. 9. We have proved that all are under Sinne. And Vers. 19. All the world is guilty before God 1. Cor. 15. 17. Ye are in your Sinnes 3. Hence that distinction of Guiltinesse of the fault guiltinesse of punishment as also that distinction of the Papists
is a subjection to the power of darknesse or of spiritually deadly enemies Coloss 1. 13. Hath taken us out of the power of darknesse 2. Pet. 2. 19. Of whom a man is overcome of the same hee is brought in bondage 39. This bondage is bondage of the Devill and those that serve the Devill 40. Bondage of the Devill is a subjection to that power of the Devill whereby he effectually worketh in men in respect of them he hath command of Death Act. 26. 18. 2. Cor. 4. 4. Iohn 12. 31. 16. 11. 2. Tim 2. 26. Eph. 22. 41. Bondage of the servants of the Devill is of the world and Sinne. 42. Bondage of the world is a subjection to the entisements which are found in the world Phil. 3. 19. 1 Iohn 4. 5. 2. 15. 16. 43. Service or bondage of Sinne is that whereby a man is so captivated under Sin that he hath no power to rise out of it Rom. 6. 16. 17. 19. 20. 44. By this bondage it comes to passe that although freedome of will remaine which is essentiall to mans nature yet that freedome which pertaines to the perfection of humane nature the property whereof was that power to exercise acts spiritually good and by that meanes acceptable is not found in his sinfull state unlesse Remote and Dead 45. From this beginning of spirituall Death there followes the multiplying of Sin in this life present 46. Those Sins that follow have some respect of punishment in respect of the first sin Rom. 1. 26. 47. But this respect of punishment is attributed to those Sinnes first by reason of the effects or consequents of them because they further the Death of man and increase his misery Secondly they are said to be punishments in respect of that inward suffering to which man is subjected to in sinning whereby also his nature is pressed down and made more base Thirdly they are said to be punishments of the former sin because that former sinne was a cause for which man is deprived of that righteousnesse and grace or Divine helpe by the absence whereof it comes to passe that man runs into those sins Fourthly they may be said also in a certaine manner punishments of the former sin because that former sin was a cause disposing and preparing man to commit the following sins and in that respect it hath brought upon man all those Sins and whatsoever evills doe either accompany or follow them CHAPTER XIII Of Originall Sinne. In the former dispute Thesi 45. the multiplication of sinne was given as a consequent from the beginning of spirituall Death which we will thus shew forth in the following Theses 1. THe Sinne that followed upon the first Fall is either Originall or Actuall 2. Originall Sinne is an habituall exorbitancy of the whole nature of man or it is a deviation from the Law of God 3. Because it is the corruption of the whole man he●…ce it is called in the holy Scriptures The old man Rom. 6. 6. Eph. 4. 22. Col. 3. 9. The body of Sinne. Rom. 6. 7. 24. A Law of the members Rom. 7. 23. And the members themselves Col. 3. 5. Flesh. Iohn 3. 6. Rom. 7. 5. 18. 25. 4. Hence also it is that in Scripture a homogeneall corruption is attributed not only generally to the whole man but also to every part of it as to the understanding Gen. 6. 5. The imagination and thoughts only evill Rom. 8. 5. 6. 7. They savour the things of the flesh To the conscience Tit. 1. 15. Their mind and conscience is defiled To the will Gen. 8. 21. The imagination of the heart of man is evill from his childhood To the affections of every kind Rom. 1. 24. To uncleannesse in the lusts of their hearts Lastly to the body and all the members of it Rom. 6. 19. Your members servants to uncleannesse and iniquity to commit iniquity 5. This Sinne is said to be an exorbitancy or deviation of man because it is in man an habituall privation of that due conformity to the Law imposed on man by God wherein he ought to walk as in his way 6. Hence it is that that originall depravation is called in the Scriptures Sinne or that Sinne by a certaine speciall appropriation Rom. 6. 12. 7. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 7. 8. 20. The Law of Sinne. 7. 23. Sinne dwelling in us inhering adhering and compassing us about Rom. 7. 17. 20. 7. 21. Heb. 12. 1. 7. This disorder in man hath as it were two parts One formall and the other as it were materiall Ier. 2. 13. My people have done two evills they have forsaken me c. That they might dig to themselves Cisternes The description of actuall Sin doth containe the picture of originall as the daughter doth containe the picture of the mother 8. The formall part is an aversion from good Rom. 3. 12. There is none that doth good no not one 9. The materiall part is a turning and inclining to evill Rom. 7. 23. The Law of Sin 10. By reason of this originall depravation it commeth to passe that although the will of man be free in the state of Sinne as touching all acts which it doth exercise yet it is captive and servile as touching the manner of doing because it is deprived of that power whereby it should will well and that inclination is as it were a forme whereby it commes to passe that it willeth amisse even when that thing is good about which it is exercised inwilling Rom. 3. 12. 7. 14. 2 Cor. 3. 5. Iohn 8. 34. 2 Pet. 2. 19. Rom. 6. 16. CHAPTER XIV Of Actuall Sinne. 1. Thus much of Originall Now followeth Actuall Sinne. 2. ACtuall Sinne is an exorbitancy of mans action or a deviation of it from the Law of God 1 Iohn 3. 4. It flowes from originall Sinne as an act from an habit or as the fault of the person flowes from the fault of nature In which respect also originall Sin is rightly called the fall of Sinne. Fomes peccati 3. Therefore actuall Sinnes although they are often opposite one to another in respect of their objects and their special wayes whereby they are carried towards their objects yet in respect of that beginning or foundation whence they proceed they are indeed tied knit together Ia. 2. 10. 1 Tim. 6. 9. 4. Actuall Sinnes are diversly distinguished among themselves First in respect of degree One Sinne is greater or lesser then another Ezech. 5. 6. 8. Shee hath changed my judgements more then the Gent●…es themselves 8. 15. Thou shalt see yet greater abominations then these Iohn 19. 11. He hath the grearer Sinne whence also punishment is greater or lesser Luke 12. 47. He that knoweth and doth not shall be beaten with many stripes and he that knoweth not and doth shall be beaten with few stripes Mat. 11. 22. 24. 5. But this difference of degrees depends First upon respect of the person by whom it is committed Numb 12. 14.
makes the action so far forth evill 17. Hence our good workes whilest we live here are imperfect and impure in themselves 18. Hence they are not accepted before GOD but in Christ. 19. Hence in the workes of the regenerate there is not that respect of merit whereby any reward is obtained by Iustice. 20. Yet that reward which is imputed not of debt but of grace Rom. 4. 4. is sometime assigned to those imperfect indeavours Mat. 5. 12. Because although all our blessednesse is the meere gift of God Rom. 6. 23. Yet the fruits of grace abounding in us are put upon those accounts whereby we doe get the certainty of that gift Phil. 4. 17. I require that fruit abounding which may be put on your accounts 21. The action of vertue is either inward or outward 2 Cor. 18. 10. 11. To will to doe to performe 22. The internall action is properly of the will it selfe 23. The externall action is of another faculty distinct from the will whether it be of the understanding or of the sensitive appetite which is commonly called internall or of the executive power which is usually called externall 24. The internall action of the will hath goodnesse or evillnesse so intrinsecall that an act cannot remaine the same in the nature of it but it must be the same in manners but an outward act may remaine the same in nature and yet become another in manners namely of good may become evill and of evill good As if any one beginning to walke out of an honest purpose doe persist in his journey for an evill end 25. There is one and the same goodnesse or evillnesse of an internall act and an externall commanded by it for it is the same act in kind of manners For to will to worship God and from that will towards God are not two acts of obedience but two degrees of one and the same act so that the goodnesse of the one is perfited in the other 2 Cor. 8. 11. Performe to doe that very thing that as there was a readinesse to will so there may be a performance 26. The outward act without the inward is not properly good or evill but the inward is good or evill without the externall because the goodnesse of an action depends first and chiefly upon the will which is often accepted with God although the outward work it selfe be absent 2 Cor. 8. 13. If there be first a ready mind one is accepted according to that he hath 27. But as vertue in its own nature tends to an act for it is a disposition to doe well neither is it idle so the internall act of it tends to an externall and produceth it and in it is lead to its end Iames 2. 22. Thou seest that Faith was the helper of his workes and by works Faith was brought to its end 28. Yet the externall act joyned with the internall doth not properly and by it selfe increase the goodnesse or evillnesse of it in respect of the intention only but by accident it doth increase it as it doth continue or increase the act of the will it selfe 29. The goodnesse and evillnesse of any act which depends upon the object and the circumstances of the act is in respect of its nature in the externall act before it be in the internall although in order of existence it is first in the internall For to will to give every one his owne is therefore good because this thing to give every one his own is good yet the goodnesse doth exist in the act of willing before in the act of giving So to will to steale is evill because to steale is evill The reason is because the exterior act is the cause of the inward in order of intention and the inward act is the cause of the outward in order of execution 30. But that goodnesse or evillnesse which depends upon the end is first in the inward act and after in the outward because the very intention of the end is the inward act of the will so-to-forsake the World for righteousnesse sake is good because to will righteousnesse is good and to give almes for vaine glory is evill because it is evill to will vaine Glory 31. Obedience that appeares in outward actions without the inward is hypocrisie and so is not indeed obedience but a certaine shadow of it 32. Yet inward obedience without outward although it be incompleat yet it is true and if there be an effectuall will present so that opportunity or ability of executing is only wanting it is no lesse acceptable to God then if it had an externall act joyned with it 2 Cor. 8. 12. 33. Therefore we must not judge of actions good or evill by the event For although it is equall and God himselfe willeth that he that is judge of offences among men doe incline to the more fovourable side if the event it selfe doe favour Exod. 21. 21. and so forward yet before the tribunall of God the inward sin is as great caeteris paribus other things answerable when neither event not outward act followes as if both should follow Mat. 5. 28. Whosoever lookes on a woman to lust after her hath committed adultery already with her in his heart 34. Yet inward obedience is not of it selfe sufficient because the whole man ought to subject it selfe to God our bodies are to be offered to God Rom. 12. 1. He is to be glorified in our bodies 1 Cor. 6. 20. Neither is that true inward obedience which doth not incline to externall 35. The workes which are called workes of supererogation whereby the Papists doe boast that some of theirs doe performe more excellent workes then are commanded in the Law of God by the obsevation of certaine counsells which they faigne doe not command but counsell only a singular perfection are the dotings of idle men which know neither the Law nor the Gospell 36. Unto the best workes of the faithfull there adhereth that imperfection which hath need of remission yet the workes themselves are not sins CHAPTER IIII. Of Religion 1. OBservance is either Religion or Iustice. 2. This distribution as touching the thing it selfe is made by God in the division of the decalogue as it is enfolded by Christ. Mat. 22. 37. Also the sence of the same distribution is expressed in other words Rom. 1. 18. Where all disobedience of man is distributed into impiety and injustice which could not stand unlesse all obedience also were conversant in Piety and Iustice which is also more plainly opened Tit. 2. 12. Where of those thres thinge propounded Righteousnesse and Piety doe make the parts of new Obedience and Temperance notes the manner or meanes of performing the same namely denying worldly lusts 3. Unto the same also that distribution of a Christian life tends which is more frequently used into holinesse and righteousnesse Luc. 1. 75. Eph. 2. 24. And the same is the meaning of that distribution which is of love towards God and love towards