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A47629 A treatise of divinity consisting of three bookes : The first of which handling the Scripture or Word of God, treateth of its divine authority, the canonicall bookes, the authenticall edition, and severall versions, the end, properties, and interpretation of Scripture : The second handling God sheweth that there is a God, and what he is, in his essence and several attributes, and likewise the distinction of persons in the divine essence : The third handleth the three principall works of God, decree, creation and providence / by Edward Leigh ... Leigh, Edward, 1602-1671. 1646 (1646) Wing L1011; ESTC R39008 467,641 520

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5. It notes the eternall decree of God separating some men to holinesse and glory for the praise of his rich grace Ephes. 1. 4. 11. Election is the decree of Gods good pleasure according to Counsell whereby he hath from eternity chosen and determined with himselfe to call some men to faith in Christ to justifie adopt sanctifie and endue them with eternall life for the praise of incomprehensible grace and rich mercy Or it is an action of God ordaining some men out of his meere good will and pleasure to eternall life which is to be had by faith in Christ for the manifestation of his grace and mercy 1. The Generall nature of it it is an action of Gods ordaining 2. The impulsive Cause of his meere good will Ephes. 1. 6. Rom. 9. 16. 18. There can be no other reason given when men have wearied themselves out in disputes but onely Gods will Even so Father because it pleaseth thee Matth. 11. God will have mercy on whom hee will have mercy Gods meere free-will makes us differ in naturalls thou art a man and not a Toad how much rather must it make us differ in supernaturalls To flie to a scientia media or a congrua motio divina or to the preparation and use of Free-will is to wander and to say any thing in man makes a difference 3. The object of Election whether man absolutely considered or respectiuely as good by Creation miserable by sinne Some make homo condendus man to be made the object of Election some man made but not fallen some man made and fallen But these opinions may be reconciled for those who hold homo Condendus or massa pura to be the object doe extend Election further than the latter doe even to comprehend in it a decree to make man and to permit him to fall but as for that actuall Election and Separation Calvin and Beza hold it to be from the corrupted Masse of which opinion these reasons may be given 1. We are chosen that we might be holy and unblameable this supposeth that we were considered in Election as finners Ezek. 16. 6. 9. 1. Rom. 2. 9. Election is of God that sheweth mercy and wee are called vessells of mercy mercy presupposeth misery 2. We are elected in Christ as our head and he is a Mediatour and Saviour which presupposeth sinne he came to save sinners Matth. 20. 16. the meanes of salvation are given to few few are holy the effect of Election Matthew 7. 13. 3. Man simply considered is the object of Predestination in respect of the preordination of the end but man corrupted if we respect the ordination of the meanes which tend to that end or man absolutely in respect of the supreame or last end or in respect of this or that subordinate end 4. The end of Election is two-fold 1. neare and immediate eternall life 2. farther off and ultimate the glory of his name Ephes. 1. 3 4 5 6. 5. The meanes to bring about these ends Christs merits apprehended by faith Consider also the adjuncts of this Decree the eternity immutability and certainty of it There is a certaine and determinate number of the Elect which cannot be diminished or augmented Christ prayed to his Father that the Faith of his Elect might not faile Joh. 17. 16. 20. It is impossible they should be deceived Mat. 24. 24. The Papists thinke that the certaintie of immutable election begetts in a man a certaine carnall securitie and prophannesse but Peter thinks farre otherwise 2 Pet. 1. 10. God was not moved by any thing outwardly to choose us to eternall life but it was onely the meere will of God Some of the Papists say God did choose man to eternall life upon the foresight of his good workes and his perseverance in them 2. The Lutherans say for faith foreseene not because of any dignity in faith but for Christ apprehended by it Object If God should not predestinate for some thing in us he is an accepter of persons for all were alike Judas was no more opposite then Peter why then should one bee elected and not another Sol. 1. This makes the Doctrine of Election such a depth that God loveth Jacob and hateth Esau in the Angels some are elected and some fallen 2. To accept of persons is then when we preferre one before another and ought not to doe so now that God chooseth some it is of his meere grace for all deserve eternall damnation Arguments against the Papists and Lutherans That which is the effect and fruit of election that cannot be a cause or condition for then a thing should be a cause to it selfe but these are effects Ephes. 1. 4. It should be according to them he hath chosen us because we were foreseene holy Acts 13. 48. A man is not ordained to eternall life because he beleeveth but he beleeveth because he is ordained to eternall life Secondly then we should choose God and not he us contrary to that John 15. 19. Thirdly Infants are elected who cannot beleeve or doe good workes Fourthly if man were the cause of his owne election he had cause to glorie in himselfe election should not be of grace All the Sons of Adam without exception are not elected for election supposeth a rejection He that chooseth some refuseth others See Esay 41. 9. John 13. 8. Whom God electeth he doth also glorifie Rom. 8. 30. but all are not glorified 2 Thes. 1. 10. 2. 13. 2. Saving faith is a true effect of Gods election peculiar to the elect common to all the elect which live to be of age and discretion but many are destitute of faith for ever therefore they must needs be out of Gods election 3. The Scripture saith expresly that few were chosen Matth. 20. 16. Few saved Luke 13. 23. The elect considered apart by themselves are a numberlesse number and exceeding many in comparison of the wicked they are but few even a handfull Matth. 7. 13. 14. 22. 14. Luke 12. 32. Though some of the places of Scripture may be expounded of the small number of Beleevers in the dayes of our Saviour yet some are more generally spoken shewing plainly that only few do find the way to life At this day if the world were divided into thirty parts 19. of them doe live in Infidelity without the knowledge of the true God The Mahometans possesse other sixe parts of the world Amongst them which professe Christ scarce one part of those five remaining do embrace the true religion And many more do professe with the mouth then do with the heart beleeve unto salvation The Arminians say there is an election axiomaticall not personall they acknowledge that there is a choise of this or that particular meanes to bring men to salvation God say they hath revealed but two wayes to bring men to life either by obedience to the Law or by faith
been an introduction unto him not that his faith rested upon it as a finall stay but that it caused him so farre to respect the word of the Gospell to listen unto it and with a kind of acquisite and humane faith to believe it that he was thereby fitted to a better illumination by force whereof he might more certainly believe it to be of God But that the testimony of one Father in one place in a matter of such consequence should be of that force it is strange We deny not the ministery of the Church as an externall meanes to move us to imbrace the word of God but we deny the authority of the Church to be the principall meanes When we call the Scriptures Canonicall we call them not so passively because they are received into the Canon by men and accepted of but actively because they prescribe a Canon and rule to us The office of the Church in respect of the Scripture stands in foure things 1. To distinguish Canonicall Scripture from that which is not Canonicall although the determination of the Church be not the onely or chiefest cause why the Apocrypha are rejected 2. To be a faithfull keeper of those books which are inspired by God like a notary which keepeth publique writings 3. To publish declare and teach the truth as a cryer with a loud voyce ought to pronounce the Kings edicts but to pretermit adde or alter nothing Matth. 28. 19 20. Acts 8. 35. 1 Tim. 3. 15. This Church here is not that Church which the Papists make to be the Judge of controversies neither the Church representative which is a generall Councell nor the Church virtuall which they imagine to be the Pope but the Church Essentiall the congregation of all faithfull believers the House of God as he calleth it The Apostle here speaks of a pillar not more Architectonico understanding by it some essentiall piece of the building but more forensi such a post or pillar on which Tables and Proclamations use to hang. In old time the Gentiles used to write their Lawes in Tables and so hang them upon pillars of stone that the people might read them as Proclamations are nailed to posts in market Towns The Apostle describing the Church likeneth it to one of these pillars whose use was to shew what hung thereon It is pillar not because it holds up but holds forth the truth 4. To interpret the Scripture by the Scripture Since many things in Scripture are doubtfull and hard to be understood without an Interpreter Acts 8. 31. it doth belong to the Church to expound the same to interpret and give the sence Nehem. 8. 8 9. Luke 24. 27. provided that this exposition be by the Scriptures Some of the Papists say that the Church may condere artioulos fidei facere canonicum quo ad nos and though they talke of Councels and Fathers yet all is as the Pope concludes The testimony and tradition of the Church especially the Primitive Church is necessary to know that the Gospell of Matthew is divine Scripture by an historicall and acquired faith to know this by a divine and infured faith besides the authority of the Church the matter character and contents of every booke and comparing of it with other Scriptures doe serve as an inward cause to produce the said infused faith Ob. We are sent to the Church to determine all controversies 1 Cor. 11. 16. Sol. Controversies are either dogmaticall concerning faith or rituall concerning true order the proposition is about these not the first Secondly from this fundamentall truth that the Scripture is immediately from God the basis indeed of all religion 1 Cor. 15. the wickednesse of the Church of Rome is farther to be condemned which will not suffer the Scriptures to be read in their Churches but in an unknowne tongue nor in private by the common people without speciall leave and certaine cautions from their superiours Of old they would not suffer them to be read at all of late they are forced to give licences to some and they teach them that they should not make the Scripture judge of the doctrine and practice of the Church but the doctrine and practise of the Church must be the interpreter and judge of the meaning of the Scripture that is they must take the Scripture to meane none otherwise whatsoever it seem to say then what is agreeable to that which the Pope doth teach and practice There cannot be a surer signe of a bad cause then that it feares to be tried by the writings which it selfe cannot deny to be written by God for correction for reproofe for instruction in righteousnesse Some Papists are more modest herein as Bellarmine l. 2. de verbo Dei c. 15. Catholica Ecclesia statuit ne passim omnibus concedatur Scripturae lectio some more rigid as Huntly and Hosiua The Papists object the obscursity of Scriptures as an argument to hinder lay-men from reading them and account it a matter of profanation to allow men women and children and all promiscuously the use of the vulgar translation and thinke they will rather be hurt then benefited by them taking occasion of erring from them Hosius urgeth that give not holy things to dogs cast not Pearles before Swine to prove the people must be barred from reading of the Scriptures It is Pope Innocents glosse a beast might not touch the mount a lay-man might not meddle with Scripture Lindan saith nihil noxae inferretur in Ecclesiam salv● traditionis fundamento if there were no Bible and another Scriptura citius faciet Haereticum Lutherarum quam Catholicum Because we will have all proved by Scripture and make that the compleat rule for what we believe or doe in all Theologicall matters they call us Scripturarios Scripturemen and atram entarios Theologos and so to carry or read a Bible is matter of scoffe we may stile them in Tertullians phrase Scripturarum Lucifugae Traditionaries Saint Gregory who is blessed in their Church exhorteth a lay-man to the serious study of the Scriptures that thereby he might learne the will of God alledging that the Scripture is the Epistle of God unto his creature Quid est autem Scriptura sacra nisi Epistola omnipotentis Dei ad Creaturam Greg. lib. 4. epist. 40. ad Theodorum medicum Proving further that obscurity of Scripture is so frothy an argument for perswading any devout Christian not to read them that it should rather incite them to greater diligence therein and therefore he elegantly compares the Scripture to a River wherein saith he there are as well shallow fords for Lambs to wade in as depths and gulphs wherein the Elephant may swim Chrysostome held it a thing necessary for all men daily to read the Scriptures Audite quaeso saeculares comparate vobis Biblia animae pharmaca Saint Jerome did exhort divers women thereto and commended
Church 2. We grant that the Apost●es living and preaching and the Canon of the New Testament being not yet sealed their Gospell delivered viva voce was no lesse a rule of faith and worship then the writings of Moses and the Prophets 3. We doe not reject all the traditions of the Church for we embrace certaine Historicall and Ceremoniall ones but we deny that opinions of faith or precepts of worship can be confirmed by unwritten traditions 4. We call that an opinion of faith to speake properly and strictly when a Proposition is revealed by God which exceeds the capacity of nature and is propounded to be beleeved as necessary to be knowne to salvation Fundamentall opinions are those which by a usuall and proper name are called Articles of faith 5. What is not in respect of the matter an Article of saith may be a Proposition to be beleeved with a Theologicall faith if you looke to the manner of revealing as that the Sunne is a great light the Moone a lesse Gen. 1. 16. that Rachel was beautifull Leah bleare-eyed The Papists doe not cease to accuse the Scripture of imperfection and insufficiency as not containing all things necessary to salvation The Councell of Trent sess 4. decret 1. Saith that the truth and discipline is contained in libris scriptis sine scripto traditionibus The Papists generally divide the word of God into the word written and traditions They affirme that there are many things belonging to Christian faith which are neither contained in the Scriptures openly nor secretly This opinion is maintained by the Papists but it was not first invented by them The Jewish Fathers did use the traditions of the Elders and it hath been said of old Marke 7. 5. Matth. 5. 21. for their errours and superstitions yea at length they affirmed firmed that God gave to Moses in mount Sinai the Scripture and the Cabala or a double Law the one written the other unwritten The Tridentine Fathers session 4th doe command Traditions to be received with the same reverend affection and piety with which we embrace the Scripture and because one Bishop in the Councell of Trent refused this he was excluded In the meane space they explaine not what those traditions are which must be so regarded none of them would ever give us a list and Catalogue of those Ordinances which are to be defended by the authority of unwritten traditions not of the word committed to writing onely they affirme in generall whatsoever they teach or doe which is not in the Scripture that it is to be put into the number of Traditions unwritten The cause of it selfe is manifest that at their pleasure they might thrust what they would upon the Church under the name of Traditions Vide Whitak de Script controviae quaest Sexta c. 5. See also Moulins Buckler of Faith p. 51. Lindan the Papist was not ashamed to say that it had been better for the Church if there had been no Scripture at all but onely Traditions For saith he we may doe well enough with Traditions though we had no Scripture but could not doe well enough with Scripture though we had no Traditions Baldwin saith a Testament may be either scriptum or nuncupativum set downe in writing or uttered by word of mouth But a nuncupative Testament or Will made by word of mouth without writing must be proved by solemne witnesses The solemne witnesses of Christs Testament are the Prophets and Apostles Let Papists if they can prove by them that part of the Testament of Christ is unwritten Because our Adversaries doe contend for Traditions not written hotly and zealously against the totall perfection of the Scripture that they might thrust upon us many points by their owne confession not contained in Scripture and usurpe to themselves irrefragable authority in the Church it shall not be amisse largely to consider of this matter And 1. to enquire of the signification of the words Greek and Latine which are translated Tradition and then to come to the matter which is controverted between us and the Papists The Greeke word signifying Tradition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which in the new Testament is used only in these places Matth. 15. 2. 3. 6. Marke 7. 3. 5. 8. 9. 13. 1 Cor. 11. 2. Gal. 1. 14. Col. 2. 8. 2 Thess. 2. 15. and 3. 6. and in the vulgar Latine is rendred Traditio Matth. 15. 2. 3. 6. Marke 7. 3. 5. 8. 9. 13. Gal. 1. 14. Col. 2. 6. 2 Thess. 2. 15. and 3. 6. and praecepta 1 Cor. 11. 2. Whereto the Rhemists translation which seemeth to be but a bare translation of the vulgar Latine doth wholly agree using the word Tradition every where excepting 1 Cor. 11. 2. where they use the word precepts but set in the margent the word Tradition Arias Montanus in his Interlineall translation doth render it traditio Beza doth commonly expresse it by the word traditio In the English Geneva Bible we translate it by the word instruction tradition calling mens precepts traditions the Apostles doctrine Ordinances or instructions not that we feared the word tradition but because we would not have the simple deceived as though the unwritten verities of the papists were thereby commended or as though we had some honourable conceite of them and what we did herein the signification of the word doth give us free liberty to doe in our last English Translation we use the word tradition as often as the vulgar Latine or the Rhemists have done not that we were driven by feare or shame to alter what was done before but because we would cut off all occasion of carping at our translation though never so unjust First we contend not about the name tradition the word may lawfully be used if the sense affixed thereto be lawfull 2. All traditions unwritten are not simply condemned by us 3. The Apostles delivered by lively voyce many observations dispensable and alterable according to the circumstances of time and persons appertaining to order and comelinesse onely we say that they were not of the substance of Religion that they were not generall concerning all Churches 4. We receive the number and names of the authors of Books Divine and Canonicall as delivered by tradition but the Divine truth of those Books is in it self clear and evident unto us not depending on the Churches authority The Books of Scripture have not their authority quoad nos from the approbation of the Church but winne credit of themselves and yeeld sufficient satisfaction to all men of their divine truth whence we judge the Church that receiveth them to be led by the Spirit of God yet the number authors and integrity of the parts of those Books we receive as delivered by tradition 5. The continued practise of such things as are neither expressely contained in Scripture nor the example of such practise expressely there delivered though the grounds reasons and cause of the necessity of such practise be
for thousands so it should be rendered he spake of Gods mercy in the sixth verse see Ephes. 3. 7. Titus 3. 4. it is called great kindnesse Neh. 9. 17. Marvellous kindnesse Psalm 31. 21. Mercifull kindnesse Psalm 119. 2. Everlasting kindnesse Isa. 54. 8. Excellent loving kindesse Psalm 36. 7. Multitude of loving kindnesse Isa. 63. 74. We should shew loving kindnesse unto Christ and one unto another 2 Pet. 1. 3. 1 Cor. 13. 4. Some mention two other vertues 1 Gods jealousie by which he will have all due glory given to him and suffers not the least part of it to be communicated to the creature This care of his honour and fame is manifest by the grievous punishments inflicted on those who have dared to arrogate part of the Divine glory to themselves as on the builders of Babell Gen. 11. 4. the Bethshemites 1 Sam. 6. 19 Nebuchadne●ar Dan. 4. 29 30. and Herod Acts 21. 22 23. 2 His humility by which God descends to our capacity and graciously provides for our weaknesse examples of which are both Gods familiar conversing and conference with Moses and Abraham interceding for Sodome with David and others and especially the incarnation of Christ. CHAP. XIV SO much be spoken concerning Gods will affections and vertues there followeth Power in God by which God by the bare beck of his wil effecteth all things which he wil and howsoever he will perfectly without labour and difficulty and can doe perfectly all things which he can will this is called Absolute Power by which he can doe more things then either he doth or will Actuall power is when God causeth those things to exist which he will have exist Both Gods Absolute and Actuall power is Active onely and no way Passive This power of God is infinite 1 In respect of the Divine essence since it flowes from the infinite nature of God for it is a most certaine rule that the faculties and powers of the Subject flow from the forme and agree with the forme Secondly in respect of the object and effects for God doth never so many and so great workes but he can doe more and greater although we must hold that God can not make a creature of infinite perfection simply or creatures indeed infinite in number for so they should be Gods for the Divine power is so farre exercised on the object as the passive power of the object extends it selfe but infinite perfection imports a pure act Thirdly in respect of duration which is perpetuall as his essence is therefore this force and power of God is deservedly stiled Omnipotency Job 42. 2. Gods power is not onely potentia or multipotentia but omnipotentia for degree infinite shall ●ny matter be hard for the Lord The Scripture con●irmes the omnipotency of God 1 Affirmatively when it cals God Abbir Job 34. 20. Shaddai Alsufficient Gen. 35. 11. Deut. 10. 17. Psalm 89. 13. Gibbor powerfull Deut. 10. 17. 2 Effectively when it witnesseth that God can doe all things Matth. 3. 9. 19. 16. Marke 14. 36. Luke 18. 26. Ephes. 3. 20. Hitherto belong all the works of the divine power and supernaturall miracles 3 Negatively when it denies any thing to be difficult to him much lesse impossible Gen. 18. 14. Jer. 32. 17 27. Luke 1. 37. Matth. 19. 36. 4 Symbolically when it gives him a strong right hand a stretched out arme 1 Chron. 29. 12. Jer. 32. 17. Ephes. 1. 19. Reason proves it also 1 His essence as was said is infinite therefore his power 2 He is most perfect therefore most powerfull 3 Whatsoever good thing is to be found in any creature the same is perfectly and infinitely in God Some observe that this is expressed seventy times in Scripture that God is Almighty He is the onely Potentate 1 Tim. 6. 15. The Psalmist saith Power belongeth to God the first Article of our faith teacheth us to believe that God is omnipotent God can worke by weake meanes without meanes contrary to meanes Gods power is Essentiall and Independent it is the cause of all power John 19. 8. it reacheth beyond his will Matth. 26. 35. 2 It extends to things that are not nor never will be as to raise up children of stones to Abraham Matth. 3. 9. to give Christ more then ten legions of Angels The object of Divine power are all things simply and in their owne nature possible which neither contradict the nature of God nor the essence of the creatures those which are contrary to these are absolutely impossible such things God can not doe because he can not will them nor can he will and doe contrary things as good and evill or contradictory as to be and not to be that a true thing be false that any thing while it is should not be God cannot sinne lie deny change or destroy himselfe suffer he can not not beget his Sonne from eternity for all these things doe ex diametre oppose the Divine Immutable Simple most true and perfect essence God can not create another God nor cause a man to be unreasonable nor a body to be infinite and every where for these things contradict the essentiall definitions of a creature of a man and a body not to be able to doe all these things is not impotency but power for to be able to doe opposite things is a signe of infirmity being not able to remaine altogether in one and the same state God is therefore omnipotent because he cannot doe these things which argue impotency as if I should say the Sunne is full of light it cannot be darke Yet it is not so proper a speech to say God can not doe these things as to say these are acts too meane base and worthlesse to be effects of Divine power Haec non possunt ●ieri rather then Deus non potest facere saith Thomas Gods omnipotence lies in this that he is able to doe whatsoever is absolutely simply and generally possible A possible things is that the doing of which may be an effect of Gods wisdome and power and which being done would argue power and perfection and impossible that which can not be an effect of wisdome and power but if it should be done would argue weakenesse and imperfection in God 2 In respect of manner he doth it with a word Let there be light said he and there was light 3 He can doe all things of himselfe without any creatures helpe Gods power is ●●iled Might of power Eph●s 1. 19. and it is seen in his workes of creation making all things of nothing therefore that followes the other in the Creed 2 In his workes of providence 3 In his Word Rom. 1. 16. Gods power is limited and restrained 1 By his nature he can not contradict himselfe 2 Regulated by his will he can not doe evill 3 By his glory he can not lie