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A20766 The summe of sacred diuinitie briefly & methodically propounded : more largly & cleerely handled and explaned / published by John Downame ... Downame, John, d. 1652. 1625 (1625) STC 7148.3; ESTC S5154 448,527 580

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all goodnesse tomorrow may bee altered and so long as this life continueth so long there is a space left for Repentance many are called at the eleuenth houre at the winding and shutting vp of the day in the last act of their life And so was the m Luk. 23. 40. Thiefe vpon the Crosse And our n Math. 21. 31. Sauiour telleth vs that Publicans and Harlots vile and despised persons oftentimes enter into the Kingdome of Heauen before many that carrie a fairer shew Thou oughtest therefore vsing the meanes and setting still at the feete of Christ to esteeme God faithfull that when hee offereth thee grace he meaneth it for thy good and that howsoeuer now thou feele no working of it yet the moments of time are in his hands who calleth how and when he will and still to haue comfort and neuer to despayre Fiftly as Predestination is eyther to Life or Death and giuen vnto him so it is to those subordinate things whereby God hath purposed to bring his determinate Counsell to passe both in the Elect and Reprobate And those are To the Elect an appointment of Christ to be their Mediator and of them to be in Christ which in Gods good time commeth to be wrought by an effectuall calling through faith in him that beeing iustified and sanctified by his Spirit they may so in the end be glorified To the Reprobate hardnesse of heart not to beleeue the Gospell that so they might lye in their sinnes without repentance vntil the wrath of God come vpon them to the vttermost Touching the former the Apostle in one o Rom. 8. 29 30 sentence hath all the lincks of that golden Chaine for whom hee fore-knew and chose vnto life which is Election them also he predestinated to be conformed to the Image of his Son that he might be the first borne among many brethren Here is the first step as if the Apostle should say For them he purposed that his Sonne should die that Christ might be their Head and they through him the adopted sons of God and whom he predestinated thus to be his sonnes This is euerlasting life to know thee the true God and whore thou hast sent ●es●s Christ The perfect distribution of all Diuinity Math. 22. 38 39 40. He diuideth the tenne Commandements into the first and second Table and the whole Scripture then extant that is to say the old Testament into the Law and the Prophets 〈◊〉 6. 33. Seeke first the Kingdome of God and his righteousnesse where he seemeth to abbreuiate the Lords Prayer and that his Sonne should be theirs them he also called effectually to beleeue in him which is the second step and whom he called them he also iustified or made righteous through Christ from whence doth proceed as an effect from the cause Sanctification or holinesse of life the third and the fourth steps and whom hee iustified and made righteous in Christ them hee also glorified which is the end and last step of all Our p Iohn 6. 37. Sauiour as he is q Iohn 17. 3. wont in all his doctrines shortly reduceth them vnto two giuing vnto Christ and comming vnto him But to speake of all these things apart The first and the fundamentall ground of all vnto the Elect hidden in the secret counsell of God is Christ himselfe r 1. Pet. 1. 20. foreknowne or predestinated and ſ Reuel 13. 6. slaine for vs in his eternall purpose before the foundation of the World was layde and we in like sort elect t Eph. 1. 4. in him that is that being by faith vnited vnto Christ we might be saued by the merit of his death and suffrings And againe u Eph. 1. 5. predestinate to be the adopted Sonnes of God by Iesus Christ This is that our Sauiour saith Ioh. 17. 6. I haue manifested my Name to the men whom thou hast giuen me out of the World for that by giuing he doth not meane the manifestation of his Election by an effectual Calling through faith in Christ but the verie purpose of God to adopt vs in him appeareth Ioh. 6. 36. All that my Father giueth me shall come vnto me Where he doth manifestly distinguish betweene these two making Gods giuing vnto Christ the cause why in their time they come vnto him Christ therefore is Mediator nor any thing that God so respects in him is not the first cause of his Election but onely a subordinate meanes vnto it vnlesse which were absurd a man will say that the disease is not in nature to be thought of before the remedie nor the fall before the meanes of raising vp againe Our Sauiour Christ himselfe for this may be our warrant Iohn 17. 6. where hauing said I haue manifested thy name to the men whom thou hast giuen me out of the World that they should be adopted in and through me By and by he riseth vp a degree higher Thine they were in thine euerlasting purpose for causes onely knowne vnto thy selfe higher and aboue any consideration or respect of me written vnto life and then keeping the respect of order and not of time Thou gauest them vnto me The Apostle likewise to the x Ephes 1. 4 5. Ephesians shewing we are elect in Christ in the verie next words doth explaine it to bee meant of predestinating to adoption through Christ in himselfe that is onely for causes resting in God himselfe not in Christ as he is a Mediator This is it which as we haue heard the Apostle teacheth in the Epistle to the Romanes y Rom. 8. 29 30 Whom hee did foreknow or predestinate vnto life them hee did predestinate to be conformed to the Image of his Sonne What is that Verily the same albeit the Apostle specially apply it to afflictions which wee heard before of giuing vnto Christ and so the words following doe import That he might bee the first borne among many brethren through whom by faith which is the next degree and first manifestation of this counsell being incorporate into him and made one together with him wee obtayne Righteousnesse and Sanctification which are the immediate steps whereby we ascend to glorie Now that men are predestinate vnto both these it is verie plaine for so the Apostle telleth the z ● Thes 2. 13. Thessalonians that God had chosen them to Saluation through sanctification of the Spirit and the faith of Truth Of faith particularly our a Iohn 8. 47. Sauiour saith He that is of God heareth the Word of God you therefore doe not heare because you are not of God So it is in the Acts b Acts 13. 48. They beleeued as many as were ordayned vnto life And for this cause faith is said to be c Titus 1. 1. proper to Gods Elect. Concerning Sanctification of life and the fruits therof the place is very euident Ephes 2. 10. Wee are created in Christ to good workes which God hath before prepared that we
the things vpon the Earth And Colos 2. 10. It pleased God to reconcile through him all things vnto himselfe both the things vpon Earth and the things in Heauen 〈◊〉 not to bee vnderstood of the Angels but of the Sa●●●● and blessed Spirits now deceased Mediation as the Apostle doth define it Gal. 3. 20. is to set at one parties that are at variance Wherefore the very point and propertie of Christs Office of Mediator or that wherein it standeth and whereunto all the parts doe tend is the reconciling of the World to bring them againe into fauour with God his Father and to the recouerie of his former loue as it is said 2. Cor. 5. 19. God was in Christ reconciling the World vnto himselfe And Rom. 5. 10. When we were enemies wee were reconciled vnto God by the death of his Sonne This was the foote of the Angels Song Glorie to God in the highest Heauens on Earth Peace Good will towards men Luke 2. 14. It was the t Acts 10. 36. summe of our Sauiour Christs Embassage Comming he preached Peace vnto vs Ephes 2. 17. And thereupon the Gospell is called u 2. Cor. 15. 18 19. The Word or Ministerie of reconciliation x Ephes 6. 15. The Gospell of Peace c. The meanes whereby hee worketh our Peace is by of a couenant making of a Couenant betweene God and vs wherevpon he is called The Mediator of the New Testament Hebrewes 12. 24. and The Angell of the Couenant Malachie 3. 1. In this Couenant I obserue the end and fruit the substance or foundation the meanes or the condition and the extent of the Couenant The end or fruit is the sauing of our soules So the to saue Apostle doth expresse it Heb. 9. 5. Therefore is Christ the Mediator of a new Couenant that through death comming betweene for the redemption of the transgressions that were in the former Couenant they that are called may receiue the promise of an euerlasting Inheritance Christ himselfe is the foundation and ground-worke through faith in him of this Couenant Esay 49. 8. and the substance of all the Gospell as the Apostle defineth Rom. 1. 1 2 3 4. and in 〈…〉 other places The meanes to make the Couenant effectuall vnto vs that is by apprehending of the Couenant is Faith the condition of the Couenant Beleeue in the Lord Iesus Christ and thou shalt bee saued Acts 16. 31. Touching the extent of the Couenant all Mankinde certaine few men whom God his Father hath chosen are not partakers of this benefit but some certaine men onely which certaine men though wee cannot certainly define the number are but a handfull in respect of the great multitude of those that perish being elect before the World was and giuen vnto Christ that in time through faith incorporated into him and becomming one with him they might as members make that Bodie whereof hee is the Head and so bee quickened by his Spirit vnto euerlasting life And this election of some necessarily implyeth the reiecting of other some Wherefore here the whole doctrine of Gods holy Predestination is summarily comprehended A matter aboue all other most religiously and soberly to be dealt in not so much for any hardnesse that is in it which if wee keepe within the bounds and limits of the Word is easie enough to bee conceiued as in regard partly of the curiousnesse of men prying without all reuerence into the secret Counsels of God and climbing vp by other steps then himselfe hath hallowed and partly of their owne corrupt affections who either swelling with Pride or cast downe with feare can hardly keepe along the coast of this Doctrine without wrecking themselues either at the Rockes of Presumption or the Flats of desperation Wherefore to auoyd both these extremes wee are to hold such a middle course as may not be after the randome of our owne wit but at the direction of God in the wisedome of his Word for as for them that thinke this Doctrine is not at all to bee taught vnto the people it is manifest that they erre very grossely this being as the rest one part of the reueiled will of GOD whereof y Deut. 30. 29. Moses speaketh to the people T 〈…〉 things belong to IEHOVAH our God but the reueiled things to vs and our children for euer And as the z Rom. 15. 4. Apostle saith Whatsoeuer things are written are written for our profit that by patience and comfort of the Scriptures which cannot be without knowing of them we might haue hope This being written by the singer of GOD in the Table of his Word must needs haue a place in that number amongst the rest And the speech a Iohn 5. 30. of our Sauiour Christ is generall willing vs to search the Scriptures for whatsoeuer things they beare record of What That the Apostle Paul writing to the b Chap. 9. 10 11 Romanes doubteth not to debate this Argument at large discoursing of all the secrets and mysteries thereof the causes effects c. And in the Epistle to the c Ephes 5. Ephesians he layeth it as the foundation and ground-worke whereupon to build the Doctrine of Faith and Holinesse of life Nay Moses himselfe who for the grosse conceit and rudenesse of the Iewes kept backe the creation of the Angels and their fall and many other Mysteries yet how d Deut. 4. 37. 7 8 9 10. 14. 73. 5. oft doth hee deale with this The Disciples of Christ were not c Iohn 16. 12. able to beare many things which hee was to vtter vnto them yet hee passeth not by this Doctrine when f Luke 10. 20. hee biddeth them to reioyce that their names were written in Heauen yea and both the points of Election and Reprobation hee plainly setteth forth Mat. 25. 34. and 41. This will bee yet more euident if we call to minde the manifold vse of this Doctrine being the Roote of all Pietie and the Base of all our comfort then the which none more highly exalteth the glorie of God in his Mercie and Iustice nor throweth downe the pride of man more lowe as in the processe Christ assisting more fully shall appeare Wherein for a better light of that which followeth it is necessarie I should first define Predestination Predestination is one principall branch of Gods purpose or eternall Decree concerning the finall estate of the most excellent creatures Angels and men The parts whereof are Election and Reprobation Election which is of some certaine ones vnto Saluation of men but few in respect of those that are to perish Reprobation which is of some certaine ones vnto damnation The waight and degree of both aswell of glorie as of shame to some in a lesse to some in a greater measure To explaine this a little better God who onely is eternall the Father Sonne and holy Spirit purposing before all times the glorifying of himselfe as is most meet
and the declaration of those wonderfull things that are in him which by no other way then this could be made knowne appointed first beside the setting forth of his power patience hatred of sinne loue of righteousnesse and other vertues to manifest the riches of his Mercie in certaine both Angels and men knowne vnto himselfe who should be saued and in like sort the greatnesse of his Iustice in certaine both Angels and men to bee condemned wherein in looking to nothing else either present or to come within vs or without vs in Heauen or in Earth but to himselfe alone hee chose vs of his free good-wil and pleasure After which for men themselues the All-wise God much more aduise of nothing but they set the end before them and first the end then the meanes concurring to it After this therefore in order of the causes not in course of time all his purposes being from eternitie and none before or after other hee purposed to create them both holy and righteous like vnto himselfe who hauing free-will to imbrace either good or euill and a nature subiect to temptation should of their owne accord voluntarily fall away thereby subiecting themselues to his wrath and indignation First of the Angels those onely appointed to destruction whom hee neuer would repayre The rest hee did decree to establish by his Grace that they might not lose their standing but abide fast for euer in that integritie which at the first he gaue them Touching Mankinde who were wholy to fall in Adam for those whom he did select and separate to bee saued by his Mercie he purposed in the loue he bare them not to spare his owne onely Sonne the Sonne of his Loue most deare vnto him but to send him into the World to take vpon him our flesh In whom adopting vs for his sonnes being by faith in graffed into him and made one together with him hee would in his good time bestow freely through Grace Wisedome Righteousnesse Sanctification and Redemption The rest hee did decree to leaue in their sinnes and deseruedly to harden and so their destruction to come from themselues the others Saluation from him and from his Mercie So haue you in generall the state and as it we 〈◊〉 the proiect of this Doctrine But before we proceed Those which make the name of Predestination proper to the Elect as though God had not predestinated the Reprobate but onely foreknowne that they should bee such whereas Predestination is spoken of wicked actions Acts 4. 28. and the word equiualent thereunto 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fore-appointed is vsed for reprobation Iuae 4. The word prescience or fore-knowledge is misse-vnderstood of many for a bare knowledge in God of all things that shall be especially of the qualities that God fore-saw would be in men whereby he was led to choose or reiect them as Faith or Infidelitie good or euill workes And so they make it a cause by it selfe seuered from his Decree teaching that the Reprobate are onely fore-knowne not predestinate wherein is a double errour beside the mistaking of the word Predestination for First Prescience or fore-knowledge is neuer separate from the Decree of God but alwayes taken for an ordayning and fore-appointing when it is referred to him and therefore his bare knowledge wherby he vnderstandeth all things that shall bee commeth not within the compasse of this word Secondly It pointeth out the free fauour of God and therefore hath place onely in the Elect. to the further vnfolding of it let vs for our better vnderstāding distinguish these words Purpose Predestination and Prescience or Fore-knowledge a word which in this Argument we often meet withall Purpose is Gods generall Decree of all things for the manifesting of his Glorie Predestination is one branch of this Decree to glorifie himselfe by the saluation of some and destruction of other some in the one to shew his Iustice in the other to set forth his Mercie Prescience or Foreknowledge is restrayned to that part of his Decree which concerneth those that shall bee saued signifying a Decree with a loue and liking and when you apply it to the persons is alwayes spoken of the Elect neuer of the Reprobate as Rom. 8. 30. Whom hee did foreknow he did predestinate to be conformed to the Image of his Sonne Rom. 11. 2. God hath not reiected his people whom hee fore-knew 1. Peter 1. 2. Fore-knowne before the foundation of the World So that where the Apostle Acts 2. 23. telleth the Iewes that by the determinate counsell and foreknowledge of God they had staine and crucified Christ then the which there was neuer a fouler deed nor more hatefull to God committed vpon the Earth hee doth purposely make choice of this word to shew that GOD not onely decreed this Action so foule and detestable in the Iewes which determinate counsell noteth But howsoeuer in Iudas and the Iewes hee hated it yet as it was the meanes of redeeming of the World hee loued and imbraced it and therefore saith He was deliuered or giuen vp of God vnto them in his speciall grace and goodnesse These three words therefore Purpose Predestination and Prescience or Fore-knowledge are euery one more speciall then other for Rom. 8. 29. which may seeme to make Predestination subordinate to Foreknowledge speaketh not of Predestination vnto life which in regard of vs is the extreme and end but of Predestination to bee adopted in Christ that is of Predestination to one subordinate meanes as we shall heare anon The words being cleered let vs now open the particular Doctrines that arise wherein I shall not need to meddle with the Angels hauing spoken of them in the former Booke First That there is a Those which teach that God hath not from euerlasting purposed any such Decree but that it lyeth in the hands of euery one to purchase vnto himselfe life if hee will beleeue or death if he lye in sinne Those which hold that God hath predestinated all vnto saluation but the vnfaithfulnesse of many to bee the cause that God either cannot effect that which he purposed or altereth his counsell Predestinate decree and appointment of GOD both vnto life and vnto death to punishment and to glorie wherein all men are not chosen to life nor all ordayned vnto death but some to the one and some to the other g Acts 13. 24. They beleeued saith the Holy Ghost as many as were ordayned to life This is that Booke of Life so oft spoken of in the Scripture The h Ex. 31. 32 33 Booke of IEHOVAH to be i Psal 69. 28. written amongst the iust and in the k Ezecl 13. 9. writing of the house of Israel Againe of the Reprobate Iude l Iude 4. saith Which were before appointed to this damnation And m 2. Pet. 2. 3. PETER For whom damnation since of old lingreth not and their destruction doth not slumber n 1. Thes 5. 9. PAVL to the
famous examples one in the Family of Abraham who hauing two sons Isack and Ishmael Isack onely was accounted for his Seed and that by Gods owne appointment to make it appeare that the Fountain of Predestinatiō is the pleasure of God not the goodnesse of man The other of two Twins in the Family of Isack Iacob Esau both borne of the same father of the same mother and at the same conception whereas neuerthelesse onely Iacob was chosen Esau reiected and that before their birth that neither any good thing in Iacob could bee the cause of the choosing of him nor any wickednesse in Esau of his reiecting but the onely will and pleasure of God for if men were not more brutish then the beasts themselues their owne sence would teach them that since the Will of God is God himselfe a higher and a further reason then his owne Will cannot be sought for vnlesse there were some higher then hee to goe vnto And when Christ himselfe the Wisdome of GOD resteth in this reason Euen l Mat. 11. 26. so O Father because so is thy good pleasure why should wee wretches enquire any further Worthily therefore doth the Apostle there conclude What m Ro. 9. 2● 23. if God willing to shew forth wrath c. haue suffered the vessels of wrath framed to destruction and to make knowne the riches of his Glorie vpon the Vessels of Mercie which hee hath before prepared vnto Glorie As if hee should say What hast thou O man to doe with it if such bee his pleasure But if cursed men will needes ransacke the secrets of the blessed God and inquire a reason of his most holy counsels let them heare how the Apostle n Rom. 9. 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23. answereth these Cauillers cleering the Lords Iustice First in regard of the subordinate meanes which hee hath appointed to bring those his counsels to passe namely towards the Elect Mercy comprehending an effectuall Calling through faith whereby they attayne Righteousnesse and Sanctification vnto the Reprobate hardening the fruites whereof are Incredulitie and sinne the proper and immediate causes of their Damnation so that no way can the Lord be accused as vnrighteous either in sauing the Elect vpon whom he first bestoweth Faith and Holinesse of life or in destroying the Reprobate whose incredulitie and sinne doth come betweene And if he should deale with all men so who could complaine of wrong Againe if you looke to the end of Gods counsels in the damnation of the wicked the Apostle saith it is not absolutely and simply their destruction as if God were like an vnmercifull and a cruell hard-hearted Tyrant that taketh pleasure in other mens ruines but it is as he setteth out in the example of PHARAOH to shew forth his power and to haue his Name published in all the Earth making his Glorie to shine in their deserued punishment whilest thereby hee doth declare himselfe an Enemie and Reuenger of sinne Mightie in the execution of his Iudgements Wonderfull in the riches of his Mercie towards the Elect as one contrarie doth set forth another Lastly for the thorow iustifying of Gods most righteous Decree especially of Reprobation which prophane Dogges doe most of all barke against hee both alleageth the Will of God as the rule of all Righteousnesse and his Soueraigntie as the Lord and Creatour of all things in whose hands wee bee as Clay in the hands of the Potter to deale with vs as seemeth good in his owne eyes and to conclude his wonderfull lenitie and mildnesse not onely in so long suffering and forbearing of the wicked but besides in the aboundance of blessings wherewith hee loadeth them which bring vpon them a more iust Damnation Wherefore that which some obiect out of the Prophet that God will not that Ezech. 18. and else-where is delighteth not nor taketh pleasure in the death of a Sinner hath a readie answere for God so farre forth as it is the ouerthrow and destruction of his Creature hath no pleasure in it but as it is a punishment of sinne and a meanes to declare his Iustice Neither can God therefore be said first and of himselfe to hate his Creature for he hateth none which haue not in themselues the cause of hatred euen their own sin being that for which alone he actually hateth any thing his Decree to destroy them was not because hee hated them for the cause of this Decree is his owne most holy pleasure that so he might manifest in them the glory of his Iustice Fourthly Predestination is from euerlasting Ephes 1. from eternity 4. Hee hath chosen vs before the foundations of the World were laid And of o Rom. 9. 11. Iacob and Esau it is said that before that they had done good or euill or before they were the one was hated the other loued In the Epistle to TIMOTHIE p 2. Tim. 1. 9. that the purpose and grace of God to saue vs was giuen to vs that is prepared for vs in Christ before the euerlasting times meaning the whole course of yeeres which hath runne on euer since the beginning of the World in one word before the World was Which saith hee is now made manifest vnto vs by the appearance of our Sauiour Iesus Christ Therefore it is called Predestination as if you would say The fore-determinate counsell of God When before Euen before all ages So Paul q Rom. 9. 23. saith Whom he hath before prepared vnto glorie And r Iude v 4. Iude addeth that the Reprobate are before of old euerlastingly ordayned to Damnation ſ 2. Pet. 2. 3. PETER also that Damnation since of olde expecteth for them So then our Election being from Eternity is certaine and immutable so as none of the Elect can euer come to perish no more then a Reprobate can euer come to bee saued the Decrees The Papists make Gods Predestination mutable of God being all vnchangeable as he himselfe is So doth Paul strengthen the t Ephes 1. 4. Ephesians in the assurance of Gods loue towards them in that being eternall it was not subiect to any change Who hath chosen vs saith he before the foundation of the World This Doctrine is plentifully layd downe in the Scripture comfortable is the place u Rom. 9. 12. Before they had done good or euill that the purpose of God might remayne firme according to the election not by workes but by grace it was said The elder should serue the yonger As many words so many Arguments for the vnchangeable hold of our Election first because it was the Decree and Purpose of Whom Of God particularly made of Iacob and Esau For what cause Not of workes but of his owne grace Therfore doth the Lord after a most wise and wonderful manner cause all things to fall out vnto the best to those that loue God which are called according to his purpose by afflictions by diuers lets
to shew from point to point what this Being or Perfection doth include In a word it sheweth that he hath all good and perfect things in a most perfect and incommunicable manner The good and perfect things I meane are of two sorts first those without which the creature cannot bee perfect Of which kind are these three 1. A being which God is f Reuel 1. 4. said to haue that he may be Signifieth a nature knowne to bee a thing truely and indeed subsisting and in that respect is opposed aswell to the imaginary course of nature which some prophane men haue made a god as to the Idols of the Gentiles which the Scripture calleth g Amos 2. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lyes h Ier. 10. 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acts 14. 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vanities and i 1. Cor. 8. 4. things of nothing But principally hee is said to Be because hee both hath his being of himselfe and giueth being to all other things and namely to his Word aswell of promise as of threatning of iudgement as of mercy which hee effecteth and causeth to come to passe This is it he meaneth Exod. 6. 3. I appeared indeed to ABRAHAM ISACK and IACOB in the name of the mighty One all sufficient but by my Name IEHOVAH was I not knowne of them That is I did not make my promises indeed exist vnto them for otherwise both they knew the Name Iehouah k Gen. 15. 8. called vpon it and l Gen. 13. 18 26. 25. built Altars to Iehouah and hee himselfe m Gen. 15. 7. 28. 13. by that Name sealed vp the faith and certaintie of his promises For this cause it is that in n Ezech. 5. 17. Ezechiel threatning the famine the beasts and other plagues hee giueth credit to it by that Name I IEHOVAH haue spoken it and in the seuenth o Ezech. 7. 27. Chapter shutteth That hath all good and perfect things in a most perfect and incommunicable manner The perfect things in God Beside life vp all his threatnings with this That they may finde by experience that I am IEHOVAH But most notable is that of the thirtieth of Ieremy where in one Chapter the Lord three and twenty times repeateth this Name of purpose to assure the peoples hearts of those comfortable and golden promises that he maketh vnto them in that place 2. Life p Eccl 9. 4. for better is a liuing Dogge then a dead Lyon But when wee speake of the life of God wee meane not onely that hee doth truely and properly by himselfe and of his owne nature liue and therefore is called the q Psal 83. 2. in many other places liuing God and that forme of swearing so often vsed as IEHOVAH r Ier. 5. 2. and elsewhere liueth which in ſ Deut. 32. 40. Deuteronomie he himselfe taketh vp For I lift my hands to Heauen and say that I liue for euer And in another t Ier. 12. 16. place maketh it the proper note of his people to sweare by his Name IEHOVAH liueth but that from him proceedeth life vnto all his creatures As it is said u Act. 17. 28. In him we liue and mooue and againe x Act. 17. 25. He giueth to all life and breath through all things that is to all his creatures And in both these respects it is that hee is said to haue life in himselfe Iohn the y Ioh. 5. 26. fifth As the Father liueth by himselfe yea to z Ioh 5. ●0 bee life it selfe and Deut. 30. 20. Hee is thy life and the length of thy dayes Againe in the a Psal 30. 10. Psalmes With thee is the fountaine of life whereby it appeareth that this is proper vnto God 3. Vnderstanding and will for as the b Psal 94. 9. 10 Psalmist maketh Vnderstāding his dispute The Planter of the eare should not he heare or the framer of the eye should not he behold hee that teacheth knowledge should not he vnderstand and of his will we read c Dan. 4. 25. All And wil without which no perfection can bee the inhabitants of the earth are counted as nothing but he doth according to his will in the Host of Heauen c. among the dwellers of the earth neyther is there any that can restraine his hand or say to him What doest thou As if he should say They haue no will at all to speake of in respect of his And d Iam. 4. 13. Iames worthily reprehendeth those that say To day and tomorrow we will goe c. whereas they should say If the Lord will Shewing that vpon his will dependeth the will of all his creatures As the Apostle saith In him e Act. 17. 18. wee liue and mooue So that he only is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 onely hath a most absolute freedome of will moouing the will of all his creatures and his owne moued of none whose will no power nor force can hinder for who saith the Apostle f Rom. 9. 19. hath resisted his will But contrariwise he himselfe doth hinder the wil of euery creature as hee doth of the Angels and Deuils being otherwayes mighty creatures whereof more shall be spoken when we come vnto his prouidence Of the second sort are those two things wherein wee are Holinesse and Blessednesse place the goodnesse and perfection of the most excellent creatures Holinesse and Blessednesse Holinesse comprehendeth both the purity of his whole Holines is the purity of his nature nature and the righteousnesse of all his wayes g Habac. 1. 13. Thou art pure of eyes saith the Prophet so as thou canst not behold iniquity And in h Esay 6. 3. Esay the glorious Soraphins cry Holy holy holy IEHOVAH of Hostes Of the righteousnesse of his wayes louing Holinesse from whence commeth a righteousnesse in al his waies and righteousnesse and whatsoeuer good is and contrariwise hating sinne and vnrighteousnesse and whatsoeuer naught is the Psalmist i Psal 45. 7 8. speaketh coupling them together Thou louest righteousnesse and hatest iniquity of each part he saith k Psal 11. 1● The righteous God loueth righteousnesse and againe l Psal 5. 5 6. Thou art not a God that taketh pleasure in wickednesse with thee no euill shall dwell Thou hatest all the workers of Iniquity Both these parts our Sauiour seemeth to note in God when in one m Ioh. 17. 11. 25 Prayer he calleth him first Holy Father and then Righteous Father And as God is most absolutely good so this goodnesse in all the parts of it is proper vnto him in that hee hath it of himselfe and is the Fountaine from whence it floweth into other Mat. 19. 17. None is good but God onely Therefore in the Law was written vpon the High Priests Bonnet n Exod. 39. 30. Holinesse is IEHOVAHS and it is the voyce o Reuel 15. 4.
before any time Thou art from euerlasting Heb. 1. 2. The Apostle saith he made all Ages and the times and courses of all things Now hee that is the Maker and Beginner of Time must needs himselfe be before all Time for which cause hee is called p 1. Tim. 1. 17. The King of all Ages and courses of Time That he hath no end Moses q Exod. 15. 18. declareth in that Song IEHOVAH shall reigne for euer and euer Therefore he is called r 1. Tim 1. 17. the immortall GOD who neuer perisheth or commeth to any end and is said ſ 1. Tim 6. 16. alone to haue immortalitie of them both Dauid t Psal 90. 2. saith Before the Hi●●s were framed or thou haddest fashioned the earth and inhabited the World to conclude from euerlasting to euerlasting thou art the mighty God The vnchangeablenesse of his nature remayning alwayes one and the same without alteration is set forth Iames 1. 17. when hee saith that with him is neyther change nor shaddow of turning and Malach. 3. 6. I am IEHOVAH and doe not change All this the word Ehieh doth include being as much to say as I am or I will bee When therefore the Lord saith that hee is or will bee hee meaneth that hee is without change and so will continue euer for I am or I will be sheweth that hee is the cause of his owne being and therefore without beginning To which word Iohn u Reuel 1. 8. in the Reuelation alluding calleth him Alpha and Omega that is the first and the last hee that is and that was and that is to come and Esay 44. 6. Thus saith IEHOVAH I am the first and I am the last Yea 1. Sam. 15. 29. he is called Eternity it selfe for he that is the Eternity of Israel will not lye c. In the 102. Psalme all three are ioyned together first propounded in generall Verse 25. Thy yeeres are from generation to generation then distinguished by his parts The being before all time Verse 26. Thou wast before thou diddest found the Earth and the worke of thy hands the Heauens The continuing for euer Verse 27. and the latter end of the 28. They shall perish but thou remaynest they all waxe olde as a garment but thy yeeres shall not faile Last of all his immutable nature in the rest of the 27. and 28. Verses As a vesture shalt thou change them and they shall be changed but thou art or continuest still the same Neyther doth it hinder that which we haue said of the vnchangeable nature of God that hee is said in many places to repent him as Gen. 6. 6. It repented God that he had made man And Ionas 3. 3. hee is said to be such a one that repenteth him of euill for speaking properly that is true which Samuel x 1. Sam. 15. 29. saith The eternity of Israel is not as man that he should repent him And y Rom. 11. 29. PAVL The graces of God are without repentance Repentance therefore is for our vnderstanding improperly attributed vnto GOD in this sence that when GOD destroyeth that which before hee made as in that place of Genesis and 1. Sam. 15. 11. and 16. 1. or bringeth not that iudgement or punishment which he threatneth as in that of Ionas and Exod. 33. 14. and infinite other places he is then termed to repent because men which change their counsell or repent them of that which before they haue done vse the like The same is to bee said of all the passions or affections attributed to God Last of all the Eternitie of God prooueth that hee is of and from himselfe the cause of his owne being and consequently of all good and perfect things that bee To which purpose that of IAMES z Iam. 1. 17. is a most worthy saying Euery good and perfect gift cōmeth from aboue from the Father of Lights Two things he teacheth vs in than speech one that in GOD is all perfection therefore hee calleth him the Father of Light which is as much or more then if hee said Light it selfe As where Christ is called a Esay 9. 6. the Father of Eternity it is most Emphaticall to signifie that hee is Eternity it selfe and the author of it Secondly hee teacheth that this perfection of the God-head is the cause of euery perfect thing in vs. To conclude the saying of Iames is in effect no more but that which the Prophet Dauid b Psal 36. 10. had long before conceiued Because with thee is the fountaine of life in thy Light doe we or let vs see light and that from the wel-spring of Gods infinite perfection doe flow the streames of whatsoeuer perfectnesse is in vs. We need not goe farre to prooue sith c Acts 17. 28. in him we liue and mooue and haue our being From the Infinitenesse and Eternity of God both these two things doe follow First That to speake truely and properly God onely hath whatsoeuer things are good and perfect for he onely hath them from himselfe all other haue from him he onely essentially and of his meere nature in other they be but qualities ouer and besides their nature hee onely infinitely all other but in measure he onely vnchangeably all other haue them subiect vnto change In regard whereof the Scripture saith that all d Dan. 4. 25. the Inhabitants of the Earth are accounted as nothing e Esay 40. 17. before him are nothing yea lesse then nothing that f Acts 17. 18. in him we liue and mooue and haue our being and that g Deut. 30. 10. he is our life as if wee in comparison had no life motion nor being at all Further that hee findeth h Iob 4. 18. no stedfastnesse in his Seruants nor putteth light in his Angels That i Iob. 15. 15. he findeth no stedfastnesse in his Saints and that the Heauens themselues that is to say those heauenly Spirits are not cleane in his eyes meaning if they bee compared with him To conclude that there is none good but God he onely holy onely blessed onely mighty onely wise onely hath immortality As of all these particulars somewhat we heard before Secondly That there is nor can bee but This is it wee meane by Iehonah who vpon all that hath beene said is nor can be but one Pagans heathens men that bring in a multitude of gods and so vpon the matter make no God at all one God for there can bee but one onely thing infinite one onely to exist of and by it selfe and to giue existence vnto all other things Mans nature because it is imperfect doth therefore admit composition and because it is finite may in part communicate it selfe Whence it commeth that Iohn and Peter and euery singular man differ one from another in their essence and nature because the whole humane nature is not nor cannot bee in each of them but is part in one
ſ Gen. 31. 11 13 The Angell of God which appeared to Iacob in a Dreame and bade him to returne into the Countrey of his Natiuitie telleth him I am the mightie God of Bethel where thou anoyntedst a Pillar and there thou vowedst a vow vnto me But Vowes are onely to bee made to Iehouah And Moses in that Story had so called him t Gen. 28. 13. before yea Iacob in the Vow it selfe had said that u Gen. 28. 20 21. IEHOVAH should bee his GOD and in his * Gen. 32. 8. Prayer when he was afraid of his Brother ESAV O God of my Father ABRAHAM and God of my Father ISACK O IEHOVAH which saidst vnto me Returne * Gen. 38. 1. vnto thy Country c. And to him he is afterwards commanded to build an Altar This Angell therefore was Christ the true Iehouah Exodus 3. There appeared vnto Moses in the Mount of God an Angell of IEHOVAH in a fiery flame out of the midst of a Bush and when Moses turned aside to see that great Vision Iehouah seeing him cryed vnto him out of the midst of the Bush and said I am God of thy Father The God of ABRAHAM the God of ISACK and the God of IACOB Anon hee calleth himselfe by the name of Ehieh or I am and IEHOVAH So that Christ is that true Ehieh and IEHOVAH the God of ABRAHAM ISACK and IACOB the proper name of the euer-liuing God as appeareth by many places in the New Testament The comparing of the Olde Testament with the New will make this a great deale playner He that led the people to and fro in the Wildernesse was Christ For so the Prophet y Esay 63. 9. saith The Angell of his face saued them and setting them vpon himselfe carryed them continually And z 1. Cor. 10. 4. PAVL that Christ the spirituall Rocke of his Church figured by the Cloud by Manna and the Rocke that flowed out water to the People went together with them conducting and leading them the way But Moses expresly calleth him IEHOVAH a Exod. 13. 21. IEHOVAH went before them by day in a Piller of Cloud and by night in a Piller of fire And this is that which the Lord himselfe telleth them Exodus 23. 20 21. Behold I send mine Angell before thee to keepe thee in thy way and to lead thee into the place which I haue prepared Take heed to thy selfe of his presence and harken to his voyce Prouoke him not for he will not beare your rebellion for my name is in the middest of him As if hee had said he is Iehouah and not a created Spirit Likewise hee whom they tempted in the Wildernesse was God and Iehouah for so Numb 21. 5. 7. it is recorded That the people speake against God and against MOSES and afterwards pressed with the hand of GODS heauy Iudgement that he sent vpon them by flying Serpents they came to Moses and said We haue sinned in that we haue spoken against IEHOVAH and thee To which Story Paul b 2. Cor. 20. 9. alluding saith Let vs not tempt Christ as some of them tempted him and were destroyed of Serpents In Zachary c Zach. 3. 2. as in Genesis before there is a plaine difference made of two whereof each is IEHOVAH IEHOVAH said IEHOVAH rebuke thee Satan And this Iude d Iude verse 9. expresly noteth to be the voyce of Michael the great Arch-angell which is Christ our Lord the Angell of the Couenant and the Mediatour and Intercessor of his Church So that which Esay e Esay 6. 1. saith I saw IEHOVAH setting vpon a Throne c. IOHN f Iohn 12. 41. referreth vnto Christ These things said ESAY when he saw his glory and spake of him That in the 102. g Psal 102. 26. Psalme Thou JEHOVAH in the beginning madest the Heauens c. the Apostle h Heb. 1. ●0 to the Hebrewes applyeth vnto Christ as pregnant testimony to prooue the excellency of his Person aboue all Creatures yea aboue the Angels themselues Finally the Apostle i Rom. 14. 10. 11 Paul cleereth this Doctrine when to prooue that all of vs shall be presented before the Tribunall Seat of Christ he doubteth not to alleage the place of the Prophet k Esay 45. 23. ESAY As I liue saith the Lord to me shall euery knee bow which are the words of the great Iehouah euen there where he doth protest there is no other God but he Whereby it is most manifest that Christ is Iehouah the true and onely God Secondly The properties incommunicable to any Creature Singlenesse Infinitenesse Eternity are to be found in him wee haue shewed before that to bee called Life Light c. is proper vnto God for that it signifieth as much as to be perfectly so and the cause of it to all other Now these Epithites are giuen vnto Christ As in l Iohn 14. 6. IOHN I am the way the truth in which one his absolute and perfect goodnesse euery way is vnderstood and the life I am m Iohn 11. 25. the resurrection and life Againe this n 1. Iohn 5. 20. Iesus Christ is the true God and life eternall Why life Because he hath it of himselfe and giueth it to others And thereof it is that o Acts 3. 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Peter calleth him the Prince of life Hence it is that the Euangelist Iohn p Iohn 1. 9. calling him the true Light addeth the reason by and by which lighteneth euery man that commeth ●nto the World Hence also it is that in the Prophet Esay he is termed q Esay 9. 6. the Father of Eternity And in the r Pro. 1. 20. Prouerbs not onely Wisdome but Wisedomes in the plurall W●s● armes saith Salomon that is the Wisedome of all Wisedome Wisedome it selfe and the Author of it Iesus Christ the very Wisedome of the most wise God cryeth abroad c. And that this is to be vnderstood not of a flitting and vanishing speech but of Christ the eternall Wisedome of his Father the whole course of the eighth Chapter sheweth so manifestly that it were in vaine to stand vpon it Moreouer he is Infinite and in many places at once ſ Ephes 3. 17. Hee dwelleth in the hearts of all the faithfull Being vpon Earth he was in Heauen as he saith t Iohn 3. 13. The Sonne of man which is in Heauen contrariwise continuing now in Heauen yet he is vpon the Earth Matth. 28. 20. I am with you to the end of the World And as hee is without circumscription of place so also hee is Omnipotent in Power Infinite in Knowledge and Goodnesse it selfe for his Power hee is expresly called u Reuel 1. 8. the Almighty one and of the Infinitenesse of his Knowledge what more honourable testimony can we haue then that of x John 21. 17. PETER Lord thou knowest all things yea things future and to
hee doth whatsoeuer hee pleaseth Therefore hee is not tyed to the second causes nor inforced by any forrain power but alwayes and in all things dealeth according to his owne good pleasure how and which way he will by meanes without meanes adnulling and making voide the meanes and lastly contrarie and against all meanes of all which wee haue many and plentifull testimonies in the Scripture Of the meanes 2. Kings 14. 27. Hee saued them by the hands of IEROBOAM the sonne of IOASH Iudges 2. 16. He raised them vp Iudges which saued them out of the hands of their spoylers And in a thousand other places Therefore the counsels of God and the inferior or second causes stand well together and crosse not one another but to neglect how much more to despise the same when God giueth thee oportunitie is not to rest vpon his Prouidence but to tempt or mistrust his Goodnesse Hee prouideth the meanes for thee to the end thou mayest bee safe thou in contemning of it castest thy selfe away his loue and kindnesse commeth to bee admired thy folly and negligence is iustly to bee condemned Paul k Acts 27. 22. compared with the Verse 31. did not so in the danger of his ship wracke when being assured of the issue that there should bee no losse of any of their liues yet telleth them plainly Except these remaine in the Ship yee cannot be safe MOSES had good experience of the gracious conduct of God himselfe the perfect Iethro of their Voyage Who by his Spirit l Esay 63. 14. and the m Esay 63. 9. Angell of his presence led them gently as a Beast downe a steepe Valley in n Exod. 13. 21. a Pillar of a Cloud by day and in a Pillar of Fire by night By o Numb 9. 18. the note and marke whereof they tooke their iourneyes and by the note and marke whereof they made their stands his p Numb 10. 33 Arke as a Harbinger going before to finde a place of rest for them yet how earnest that holy man of God is with his Father-in-law who knew all the turnes and windings of the vast and huge Wildernesse to be a Guide to conduct them in the way Leaue q Numb 10. 31 vs not saith hee I beseech thee seeing thou knowest our camping Places in the Desart and thou shalt bee as eyes vnto vs. The Phisician is to be honoured for necessarie vses and the Lawyer to be retayned for the pleading of mens Causes Who would not condemne a sonne that in his fathers extremitie lying sicke vnto the death should vnder pretence of Gods Prouidence destitute him of conuenient comforts for the succour of his life And r Acts 5. 38 39. Gamaliels sound and graue aduice of letting the Apostles alone because if that counsell or worke were from men it would come to nothing but if from God it could not be dissolued meant to represse Ryots and disordered tumults if it be applyed to the Magistrates lawfull drawing of the Sword for preuenting of mischieuous plots and purposes would prooue very impious and foolish Logicke for it is no argument that either mens labours and industries should be needlesse or counsell and deliberation of future things friuolous if all be decreed of God The contrarie whereof is rather true for therefore he giueth vnto vs the good things of this life wealth credit and authoritie iudgement to fore-see dangers and wisdome to preuent them reason whereby to gather what may be for our profit by considering of things past comparing of things present and gessing at things to come that all might be as meanes to serue his secret Prouidence It was a worthy Message which Mordecai Å¿ Ester 4. 14. sent vnto Q. Hester Who knoweth whether for such a time as this thou art come vnto the Kingdome And t Pro. 22. 2. SALOMON in his wisedome saith The Wiseman foreseeth the euill and hideth himselfe but fooles passe on and are punished Againe that it may the better appeare how these two the Counsels of God and mens consultations as the meanes that hee hath sanctified are nothing at all repugnant in u Pro. 16. 9. another place he maketh them draw together A mans heart aduiseth his way and IEHOVAH establisheth his peace But heere wee must take heede of another extreme That in presumption of our selues and of the meanes we x Abac. 1. 16. sacrifice not to our owne Net arrogating the prayse and glorie of the Action which God alwayes reserueth vnto himselfe Sharply doth the Lord by his Prophet reproue the proud King of Ashur in this behalfe and checke his insolent and vaine bragges as if his owne arme had gotten him the victorie But y Esay 10. 12. when the Lord hath accomplished all his workes vpon Mount Sion and Ierusalem I will visit the fruit of the heart of the proud King of Ashur and his glorious and proud lookes because hee said By the power of mine owne hand haue I done it because I am wise therefore I haue remooued the borders of the People and haue spoyled their treasures and haue pulled downe the inhabitants like a valiant man and mine hand hath found out as a nest the riches of the People and as one that gathereth Egges that are left so haue I gathered all the Earth and there was none to mooue the wing or to open the mouth or to chirpe Shall the Axe boast himselfe against him that heweth therewith c. In z Esay 31. 1. another place hee denounceth a woe to them that goe downe into Egypt for helpe and leane vpon Horses which trust in Chariots because they be many and in Horsemen because they bee multiplyed and looke not to the holy one of Israel nor seeke after IEHOVAH AS A also a religious and godly Prince is a 2. King 16. 12 taxed that in his sicknesse hee sought not after IEHOVAH but cleaued vnto Phisicians God verily is to haue the prayse whatsoeuer meanes he worketh by But when he vseth vile base and abiect meanes which vpon the matter is no meanes at all when he chooseth b 1. Cor. 1. 27 28 the foolish things of the World to shame the wise and the weake things of the World to shame the strong and the base things of the World and things of none account and which are not to speake of in mens opinions to adnull the things that are then doth his glorie more appeare So he said c Iudge 7. 2. to Gideon comming at the first with a great Army to fight against the Midianites This people that are with thee are too many for mee to deliuer the Midianites into their hands Lest Israel take to himselfe glorie ouer mee saying Mine hand hath brought me saluation Anon d Verse 7. when of all that number a few men were left he telleth him By these three hundred men will I saue you and deliuer the Midianites into thy hands By this perswasion e
Iohn 2. 16. lusts of the flesh The y Ephes 2. 3. will of the flesh The z Gal. 5. 24. affections of the flesh All these parts before reckoned the Apostle comprehendeth Ephes 2. 3. First generally naming the flesh or the whole man vnregenerate which he afterwards deuideth into two kind The flesh so calling by the generall name that part of the soule wherein the lust and will and vnbridled affections are and our discoursing parts or the very strength of the Mind of Knowledge Iudgemēt Memorie Conscience Among whom euen wee all did once conuerse in the lusts of our flesh doing the will of the flesh and of the discoursing parts All which hee calleth not halfe dead but thorowly and wholy a Vers 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dead leauing nothing vnto man which sinne hath not defiled Shewing further that wee haue this by b 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nature not by custome or example as elsewhere c Rom. 5. 13 14. hee prooueth by the death of little Infants which neuer transgressed actually as Adam did dying as soone as they were borne and yet sinners by nature for otherwise they could not dye vntill the Law for sinne was in the World for Death raigned from ADAM vnto MOSES euen vpon them which had not sinned according to the likenesse of the transgression of ADAM for as our Sauiour d Iohn 3. 6. saith That which is borne of the flesh such wee are all by nature is flesh and Who saith IOB e Iob 13. 4. can giue a cleane thing out of that which is vncleane Not one This naturall corruption the Scripture calleth sinne f Rom. 7. 17. because it is the sinke and puddle of all other sinnes and the Law g Rom. 7. 23. of sinne which as vtterly peruerting the whole strength of nature and contrary thereunto hath an elegant addition giuen vnto it Heb. 12. 1. h 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sinne that is so well fitted to gird vs in as a curbe and a bridle holding vs backe that wee are not able to runne the course that is set before vs. Thereof it is that all our actions are corrupted and naught Rom. 3. 12. There is none that doth good no not one Rom. 7. 5. When wee were in the flesh sinfull affections wrought in our members to bring forth fruit to Death which fruits hee setteth downe Titus 3. 3. For euen wee also were foolish disobedient seruing lusts and diuers kinde of pleasures leading our life in malicousnesse and enuie hated and hating one another And how can it otherwise bee chosen but that all our fruits must needes bee vnsauourie and bad when as the whole Tree and all the twigs and branches of it are rotten and naught Thirdly and lastly it is called totall in respect of both the parts of Righteousnesse Pietie and Iustice which with all the powers of our soule and bodie both by nature and in all our actions wee doe nothing else but continually transgresse Therefore PAVL Rom 1. 18. pronounceth of all men that the wrath of God is reuealed from Heauen vpon all impietie and iniustice of men as those that with-hold the truth or those small sparkes of light that God hath left them in vnrighteousnesse meaning that by reason thereof they rush forth vnto all vnrighteousnesse And Ephes 4. 24. hee willeth our renewing to be in both these parts of Holinesse and Iustice as being corrupt in both by nature All men by nature are thus alike sinfull neither doth face more answere vnto face then one mans corruption answereth to another but the fruits of sinne are in some more aboundant for as he that is sicke of the Dropsie the more he drinkes the more he may so men by long custome of sinning come at the length to such an habit that they are not afraid to lash forth openly audaciously and impudently into all euill casting off all feare of God and reuerence of man as he shameth not to professe of himselfe in the i Luke 18. 4. Gospell and so come to bee Monsters and prodigious in all kinde of wickednesse Of these the Apostle speaketh Ephesians 4. 19. Who casting off all griefe haue giuen themselues to wantonnesse to worke all vncleannesse euen with greedinesse So much for their sinfulnesse Touching their miserable and cursed estate albeit For the rest the wrath of God be fully and wholy powred forth vpon 1. The wrath of God vpon them all that sinne yet is it not so presently for being in his wisdome and goodnesse pleased to make a difference betweene Angels and Men offending both for that their state and case doth differ and for the Elects sake whom he meant to take out of the Race of Adam hee purposed with himselfe not to ouer-whelme them at once with the waight of his Iustice as hee would the Angels that did transgresse but in his mercie to spare them for a time that so a way might be made for his to come vnto Repentance This time is the whole course of their life wherein they beare not the full burden of their sinne that presseth downe to Hell but feele onely some light beginning of that heauy Iudgement which hereafter is to seize vpon them if by turning vnto God they doe not repent and turne the same away Therefore the Apostle k Act. 27. 26 27 saith that God hath made of one bloud all Mankinde to dwell vpon the face of the Earth determining the oportunities of times which hee hath fore-set and the set bounds of their habitation that they may seeke the Lord if so be by groping after him they may finde him This is the reason why the whole course of our life is tearmed that Day l Iohn 9. 4. wherein we must doe good before the night come when none shall be able to worke that time of m Gal. 6. 8 10. sowing either to the flesh or Spirit the Haruest whereof shall be death or eternall Life for such as the houre of death findeth vs such shall our doome be and with n Heb. 9. 27. Death the irreuocable sentence commeth None shall rise againe to better the things he hath done in the dayes of his flesh whether they be good or euill No Sacrifice any more for sinne no intercession for the dead no Purgatory to make them cleane But whosoeuer by Christs purgation are not in this life washed from their sinnes shall after this life lye and rotte in their sins foreuer The summe is that albeit God in his mercie for the cause before remembred doe thus forbeare all yet euen during o Iohn 3. 18. this life such as haue no part in Christ that is to say all men in themselues considered are indeed and truly though not fully accursed for so the Scripture speaketh Hee that beleeueth not is alreadie condemned And p Gen. 4. 11. GOD telleth CAIN Cursed art thou euen whilest thou now art aliue In this estate I
Thessalonians comprehendeth both for when hee incourageth them by this Argument that God had not appointed them for wrath but to the purchasing of saluation through IESVS CHRIST he manifestly noteth some ordayned to Saluation other to destruction as many as come not to haue their part in Christ But that to the o Rom. 9. 21 ●2 Romanes is more manifest Hath not the Potter power ouer the clay of the same lumpe to make one Vessell for Honour and another to dishonour And what if God willing to shew forth his wrath and to make knowne his power hath borne with much long suffering the vessels of wrath framed for destruction and that he might make knowne the riches of his Glorie vpon the vessels of Mercie which he hath before ordayned vnto Glorie Behold how he calleth them heere the one Vessels to Honour Vessels of Mercie prepared vnto Glorie the other vessels to dishonour vessels of wrath framed for destruction which selfe-same phrase Vessels to Honour and to shame or dishonour he keepeth also in the Epistle to p 2. Tim. 2. 20. TIMOTHIE Now in a great house there are not onely Vessels of Gold and Vessels of Siluer but of Wood also and of Earth and some verily for Honour some for dishonour This shall yet further appeare if we cast our eye vnto those meanes whereby this predestinate Decree of God is brought vnto effect for sith it is manifest that some beleeue the Gospell and testifie the same by the fruits of their conuersation other are obstinate and stubborne and giuen vp to their lusts blinded with infidelitie and hardnesse of heart thereof we may conclude that some are ordained vnto life other vnto destruction Notable also to this purpose is that vnto the q 2. Thes 2. 9. Thessalonians The comming of Antichrist shall bee with all power to them that are to perish but wee ought alwayes to giue thankes to God who hath chosen vs to Saluation and called vs by the preaching of the Gospell where these two sorts are manifestly distinguished as also Iohn 17. 19. I pray not for the World but for those whom thou hast giuen me out of the World The very scope of the Apostles disputation Rom. 9. 22. driueth heere unto in the person of Ismael and of Isack children one of the flesh the other of the promise And againe in Isacks two sonnes one loued the other hated to set before vs the generall state of all Mankinde yea God hath not onely predestinated men to ioy or to paine but to the measure of it more or lesse according as there be degrees both of glorie and of punishment Mat. 20. 23. vpon the request of the Sonnes of Zebedy our Sauiour Christ granting a difference of Glorie saith It shall be theirs for whom it is prepared of his Father And of the Reprobate the place in IVDE r Iude v. 4. is manifest Which long agoe were appointed to this damnation In saying this he noteth not a common but a rare and as it were an extraordinary Damnation for so I refer the word Damnation to the end aswell as to the meanes to the iudgement it selfe as to the sinne and disobedience which was the cause of it The truth heere of is euident in Iudas the Traitor of whom ſ Acts 1. 25. Peter saith that he turned aside from the lot of his Ministerie whereunto Christ had called him to goe vnto his owne place In the words his owne hee noteth his proper degree of punishment and calling it his place sheweth that it was reserued for him and allotted from Eternitie Secondly Euery particular person is thus predestinate So as both the number how many and the persons who they bee are before all Eternitie most certainly knowne to God Therefore our t Luke 10. 20. Sauiour saith Their names are written in Heauen And in u Iohn 10. 3. IOHN A good Shepheard calleth his sheep by Name And hither belongeth that in x 2. Tim. 2. 19. TIMOTHIE The foundation remayneth firme hauing this seale God knoweth who are his Agreeably whereunto our Sauiour Christ saith I y Iohn 13. 18. know whom I haue chosen This number of Gods Elect in comparison of the Reprobate is but small for z Mat. 20. 16. Many are called but few are chosen If but few euen of those that haue an outward calling how much more few if you consider the rest of the World beside And this may teach vs the rather to admire Gods goodnesse to our selues as nature and reason doe instruct vs to set more by that which is common but with a few Thirdly The cause of this difference is the The Papists teach that those who God foresaw would willingly beleeue the Gospel do good works them hee chose though not by reason of their workes but freely of his Grace yet so as hee had respect to the good things would bee in them Wherby they make Gods free election in some sort to haue his cause in man and in his goodnesse which in truth is but an effect comming from that Election free-will and pleasure of God without any motiue to it but in and of himselfe Which the name of Predestination speaketh that the Will and Decree of GOD not in time onely but in the very order and nature of causes is first and before all other things And the Apostle a Ephes 1. 11. saith plainly Hee worketh all things after the counsell of his Will God therefore notwithstanding any thing that hath beene ●●id is no respecter of persons nor mooued by any qualit● that is in man but by his owne free-will No fore-knowledge of faith or infidelitie good or euill workes were the cause of this Decree for they are but b Ephes 1. 4. Titus 2. 12. consequences that follow and depend vpon it but all here is free the roote it selfe and all the branches Election free therefore the Apostle calleth it c Rom. 11. 5. The election of Grace d 2. Tim. 1. 9. Calling free e Phil. 1. 29. We beleeue freely through Grace Are f Rom. 3. 24. freely iustified through Faith Our g Ezech. 36. 37 Sanctification free and h Titus 3. 5. eternall life the free gift of God through Iesus Christ Election therefore commeth from the onely will and pleasure of God for aboue this or out of this it is impietie Rom. 6. 13. Luke 12 32. for to goe Therefore the Apostle wrappeth vp all in sinne He i Ephes 1. 6. chose vs in himselfe according to the free pleasure of his will And the sole and onely cause both of Election and Reprobation of one rather then another is his own good wil and pleasure for causes vnknown to vs but yet most holy and iust and righteous in themselues So he saith to the Romans Whom k Rom. 9. ●8 he will he pittieth whom he will he hardeneth Exemplifying both the parts of this diuision by two most singular and
giuen to all Christians alike for that all of vs communicate with the Priesthood of Christ and are Priests to God to ſ 1. Pet 2. 5. Reuel 1. 6. offer spirituall Sacrifices First our selues as Paul saith Ro. 12. 1 in the deniall of our owne lusts then the Sacrifice of Prayer and Thankesgiuing Almes and other Christian The parts are Oblation and Intercession Oblation is the offering vp of himselfe for them It standeth first in the sanctification of his humane Nature and Righteousnes then in his suffrings with the glories that did follow The sanctification of his humane Nature is the consecrating of it in all holinesse from the very first moment of his conception duties whereof the Apostle speaketh Heb. 13. 15 c. In the parts of his Priesthood we put first the offering of himselfe to God his Father for vs I say for vs because Christ is to bee considered not as one priuate man but as a publike person representing all men that are to come to life eternall as Adam did all his Posteritie for so the Apostle doth compare them Rom. 5. 14. From the vertue of this Oblation cōmeth the full matter of our peace with God In it we are to consider foure principall heads whereunto all may be referred first is the sanctification of his humane nature to be a fit instrument to worke our reconciliation vnto God wherein two things are comprehended First That the Man-hood or humane Nature by the wonderfull worke of the Holy Ghost was sanctified in the Virgins wombe from all kind of sinfulnesse and indued with an habit of most perfect Sanctimonie and Holinesse in the verie first minute and moment of his conception In which regard the t Luke 1. 35. Angell vnto Marie calleth him That holy thing that shall be borne of thee c. wherein he differeth from all the sonnes of Adam as well as he doth in the manner of his conception Secondly It was made a fit instrument for the whole for the worke of the Mediation worke of the Mediation that is to say not onely for his owne performance of the Priestly Offices but both for our incorporating into himselfe and for the quickening and giuing of Life and Righteousnesse and all good things to those that are incorporate and that by the power of his God-head sanctifying the Man-hood as hee saith Iohn 17. 19. For their sake doe I sanctifie my selfe It is not therefore the God-head onely that quickeneth vs but the humanitie also as an instrument or Conduit whereby he doth it And this is that our Sauiour saith Iohn 5. 26. As the Father hath life in himselfe As if he should haue said With God indeed is the fountaine of Life and Grace and all good things but that which is locked vp and buried in his vnaccessible Light hee hath powred vpon the Sonne manifested in the flesh that from him as from the Head it might flow to euerie member of the Church yea hither driueth the whole tenour of his disputation Iohn 6. 53 57 63. concerning the true cause of our eternall Happinesse After hee had said Vnlesse yee eate the flesh of the Sonne of man and drinke his bloud you haue no life in you hee addeth As I liue by the Father so he that eateth mee hee also shall liue by mee And anon It is the Spirit that quickeneth the flesh profiteth nothing When hee saith himselfe meaning his Man-hood which was it onely which the Iewes beheld in Christ liueth by the Father that is the God-head dwelling in him which for the Iewes sake hee vttereth vnder the name of his Father rather then of himselfe he sheweth the fountaine of his Life that is of his quickening power to be that essentiall vnion of the God-head to his humane Nature in regard whereof the Father was 〈…〉 lled before The Liuing Father Againe where hee 〈◊〉 The flesh profiteth nothing and yet had said before 〈◊〉 ye eate the flesh of the Sonne of man and drinke his bloud ye haue no life in you he distinguisheth two things most manifestly First that his humane Nature whether you consider the essence of his Soule or Bodie or any created vertue or qualitie inherent hath not of it selfe any quickening vertue in it which is onely proper to his God-head then that the same is neuerthelesse not vnprofitable but a most necessarie instrument which being first it selfe quickened by the God-head whereunto it is personally knit doth from the God-head powre life into as many as by faith are vnited to him without whose flesh the Spirit neuer quickeneth no more then the soule maketh a man to vnderstand but by the braine Therefore is the Man-hood aptly compared to a Fountaine which sendeth forth most sweet and comfortable streames of water of life vnto all his members and the Deitie to the Well-head or to a Spring that ministreth continually vnto this Fountaine The second head is the performing of thorow Righteousnesse The Righteousnesse of Christ is his performing of the most excellent measure of obedience to the Law of God that can possibly fall into any Creature and being the Righteousnes of him who is both God and Man consequently it meriteth a like supreme measure of Blessednesse for vs being in all his Actions supernaturally vpholden from all possibilitie of sinning and performing the most exact and perfect obedience of the Law Iohn 8. 29. I doe alwayes the things that are pleasing to my Father Supernaturall I say because being a true Man and hauing all the infirmities of the sonnes of men sinne onely excepted he was as all other in his owne Nature subiect to temptation and of a mutable disposition to imbrace euill as Adam did if it had beene possible for the God-head to the which hee was personally vnited to haue left him In this part I consider the measure First of his Righteousnesse and then of the Blessednesse which hee merited both of them in the highest most supreme excellencie that can bee more then I say not men but all the Angels of heauen are capable of being the righteousn●● of him which is both God and Man therefore 〈◊〉 The u 1. Cor. 4. 21. Righteousnesse of God which notwithstanding as a qualitie inherent to the humane Nature of Christ is to be distinguished from that essentiall Righteousnesse of his that he hath as God which is the verie God-head To the third head are to be referred the sufferings of Suffering one principall part of that obedience is Christ a principall part of his obedience as hee tooke vpon him the Office of Mediator but in nature and consideration of the Doctrine to be distinguished from the former And herein especially standeth that offering of himselfe vp to God his Father for vs. As the Apostle The abomination of the Popish Masse wherein the Priest offereth vp Christ euery day vnto his Father testifieth Hebrewes 9. 14. How much more shall the bloud of CHRIST who by his
that the preaching of Christ is the power of God vnto saluation to euery one that beleeueth And IAMES u Iames 1. 18. Because he would hee begat vs by the Word of Truth for this cause hee calleth x Iames 1. 21. it The ingraffed Word because by the Ministerie thereof God changeth vs anew and the Scripture y Mat. 13. 4. elsewhere compareth it to seed that as no Haruest can be without sowing of the Ground nor no Generation without the seed of our fleshly Parents no more z Mat. 13. 23. can any Faith without hearing of the Word nor any Regeneration without the Seed of the Word of God 1. Pet. 1. 23 24. Being borne againe not of corruptible seed but of incorruptible That is the Word of God who liueth and abideth for euer which maketh much to commend the excellencie and necessitie of GODS holy Ordinance of Preaching Not that preaching hath this fruit and effect by any naturall vertue or power that is in it but by the a Rom. 10. 17. Ordinance and Blessing of God who vseth to hide and conceale his owne supernaturall worke in our conuersion as it is the Glorie of God to hide his counsell Prouerbs 25. 2. Neither in saying so do we tye God vnto the meanes as though without Preaching it could not bee wrought at all for as in the things of nature he is not tyed vnto the meanes being himselfe the Lord of nature no more must we iudge him in this worke aboue nature wherein hee taketh glorie to himselfe to deale how and which way he will in an extraordinarie sort Sometimes in respect of the times sometimes in respect of the persons In the ruinous estate of the CHVRCH when there wanteth a set and stablished forme of gouernment it pleaseth him many times to blesse the very sound of the Word though it bee but read or talked of and sometimes other meanes so farre as to make it effectuall for the planting of faith in the heart as Iohn 4. 39. many of the Samaritanes were brought to beleeue in Christ onely vpon the womans wordes which bare record of him And the b Rom. 10. 18. Apostle to the Romanes sheweth that all the World was without excuse to pretend that they had not heard seeing the sound of the Apostles Doctrine was gone abroad into all the Earth The Wise-men also Mat. 2. were led by a Starre as it were by the hand vnto the true knowledge of Christ And Reuel 12. 6. it is said that the woman which fled into the Wildernesse had a place prepared of God that they should feed her there a thousand two hundred and threescore dayes Of the extraordinarie worke in respect of the persons we haue an example in the course which it pleaseth him to take with Infants that are not come to yeeres of discretion and vnderstanding as also with men of age which haue not capacitie bee it naturall fooles madde men or deafe-borne in whom the Spirit of God worketh immediately without this outward Ministerie To the faithfull this prerogatiue doth belong that wherefore with these God maketh indeed his Couenant God not onely offereth but maketh with them his Couenant In the Scripture it is called A striking smiting or as the word doth signifie c 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A Cutting off a Couenant The phrase seemeth to bee taken from the custome of old-time in making of solemne Couenants which was to cut a beast in twaine and to passe betweene the parts of it Gen. 15. 17 18. Ier. 34. 18 19. The qualities or adioynts of Faith are three First Apprehending Christ now absent onely in his By vertue whereof our Faith albeit apprehending Christ absent it apprehend him weakly Word and Sacraments the knowledge and apprehension must needs be feeble and weake Wherein notwithstanding there are distinct degrees neither are the faithfull that lay hold on Christ endued all with the like measure of Faith for there is a weake and a slender hold as it were by the fingers end there is a strong and a fast hold as it were with the whole hand The first of these is called d Mat. 8. 26. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A little Faith and e Mat. 17. 20. Faith as much as a graine of Mustard Seed But how weake soeuer the Lord accepteth it and promiseth not to quench so much as the f Esay 42. 3. smoking Flax yea hee accepteth the verie desire to beleeue which is the beginning and least step of Faith for faith it selfe And this kinde of Faith is to be seene in the father g Mat. 9. 24. of the childe that cryed with teares I beleeue Lord helpe my vnbeliefe The other by a Metaphore taken from a Ship that commeth into the Hauen with ful Sayles is called Plerophoria or a full assurance whereof we haue h R● 4. 20 21. Abraham for an Example Who was not weake through vnbeliefe but was strengthened in the Faith and gaue glory to God being fully assured that what he had promised he was able also to do Our faith being weake is through the gracious operation yet confirmed by the Word Sacraments Prayer and other holy meanes of the same Spirit that first wrought it strengthened and supported by the Word and Sacraments which are the nourishing and preseruing causes that so long as heere we liue wee haue a continuall need of the Ministerie and all other holy meanes Whereupon Paul bidding the Thessalonians i 1 Thess 5. 19 20. not to quench the Spirit immediately addeth Despise not Prophecies Another thing proper vnto Faith is this that where it neuer letteth goe the hold all other Gifts and Graces of the Spirit if they haue not Faith which is the Roote may wither and come to nothing this neuer can bee lost but groweth to the end Wherefore out of this one Roote two branches as it were doe spring And because they are both worthie of speciall consideration it shall not be amisse distinctly to speake of them One which is the second qualitie of Faith that he which once hath this Faith is sure to haue it still So saith our Sauiour Christ Luke 22. 31. in the person of Peter giuing a perpetuall comfort to all that are his I haue prayed for thee that thy Faith should not faile In another place hee saith k Iohn 6. 35. He that commeth vnto me shall neuer hunger and he that beleeueth in me shall neuer thirst Agreeable whereunto is that of IOHN l 1. Iohn 2. 19. They went out from among vs but they were not of vs for if they had beene of vs they would haue abidden with vs. For this is that sweete and euerlasting promise that God hath made vnto his Church m Ier. 32. 39 40 I will not put my feare into their hearts that they shall neuer depart away from mee all the dayes of their life And excellent to this purpose is the speech of
I write it Answerable hereunto is that of z Ezech. 36. 26 27. 1. Iohn 2. 8. EZECHIEL I will giue you a new heart and a new Spirit I will set in the middest of you and I will take away the heart of stone out of your flesh and I will giue vnto you a heart of flesh and my Spirit will I put in the middest of you and make that yee shall walke in mine Ordinances and obserue and doe my iudgements whereby this Holinesse is distinguished from imputed Righteousnes which is without vs and in another that is to say in Christ And from both these ariseth the third and last consideration of the Law of God as it is qualified and corrected and hath another nature set vpon it by Christ our Sauiour turned now into a 1. Iohn 2. 8. a new Commandement as the Apostle speaketh or a Law Euangelized and of another temper seruing no more for death and condemnation to those that are his but for helpe and direction for b Psal 119. 106 a Lanterne vnto our feet and a light vnto our steps to teach vs how to walke when we are in Christ Therefore c Luke 1. 6. Zacharie and Elizabeth are both commended as righteous before God because they went in all the Commandements of the Lord. d Iam. 1. 25. IAMES also calleth vs hither He that stoopeth downe into the perfect Law of Libertie and abideth in that hee not being a forgetfull hearer but a doer of workes shall be blessed by his doing And our Sauiour Matth. 5. 17. biddeth vs not to thinke that hee came to dissolue the Law and the Prophets I came not to dissolue them but to fulfill them for which cause also the right vnderstanding of the Law is needfull for vnlesse wee know our Masters will how shall we frame our selues to doe it Fourthly The new life put into vs which wee call Viuification or Quickning commeth from the power of Christs Spirit which rayseth vs vp from the sleepe and death of sinne to awake to liue righteously that e Rom. 4. 5. as Christ was raysed from the dead by the glorie of his Father so we might walke in newnesse of life for if wee bee ingraffed into the likenesse of his death verily so shall we also bee vnto the likenesse of his Resurrection Wherefore the f Coloss 3. 1 2. Apostle saith If yee bee risen together with Christ seeke the things which are aboue not the things which are vpon the earth Teaching that it is by the power of his rising that wee are renewed vnto righteousnesse as by his death we obtaine power to mortifie sinne Fiftly Touching the manner of the The Papists say that in Freewill there is a libertie or strength to receiue or reiect the grace that should quicken it which they call Preuenting Grace and so part the slakes betweene Grace and mans Freewill working there is a difference betweene the grace it selfe of Sanctification and the fruits that come from it In the grace it selfe as in the worke of our new birth man standeth meere passiue before God hauing no power or vertue in him to worke with Gods Spirit or to helpe the worke of Grace yet hee is not in this first renewing of his soule as a trunke or a dead stock for that he hath both reason and faculties or powers fit to receiue the Grace of God when his Spirit doth worke vpon them But in the fruits of Sanctification The Papists make not the Holie Ghost but their owne Free-will the principal agent in this second grace which Free-will they say goeth before and disposeth and prepareth vs to a Iustifying Grace in belieuing in hoping in repenting c. the principal Agent is indeed the verie Spirit of Christ who after the first grace and new Creation abideth and dwelleth in vs not idlely but euer working some good in vs and by vs as it is said Rom. 8. 26. The holy Ghost maketh intercession for vs with sighs which cannot be expressed But a second Agent working with Gods holy Spirit is the verie soule of man or rather the new man or new creature in the soule and all the faculties thereof So that in this second Grace which is the action or worke of faith wee stand not as meere passiue but beeing moued by the holie Ghost wee worke our selues by his Spirit working in vs. Whereupon we are called g 1. Cor. 3. 9. The fellow-workers with God 1. Cor. 3. Touching the distinct degrees of Sanctification In wherein there is no more now required but that sinne beare not the rule in vs and our workes of Righteousnesse though all mingled with sinne the estate we now are in there is a difference betweene it and legall Righteousnesse in that perfection is there required without fayling in any iote eyther in matter or manner Whereas our Sanctification in this life is euermore imperfect fayling much and hath alwaies sin mixed with it not as Chaffe or Darnell is mixed with Whear but as water is mingled with wine that there is no drop of wine but it is water also and that is by reason our new birth is imperfect So that Donatists and Nouatians and those heretikes that were wont to bee called Catharises or Puritanes dreame of puritie and perfection in this life albeit by the grace of Regeneration we desire in all things to liue righteously and well yet still we labour vnder the infirmitie of the flesh h Gal. 5. 17. that we cannot doe the things wee would Whereof the Apostle Paul one more then after an ordinarie sort regenerate giueth in his owne person a noble example Rom. 7. 15 c. I approue not that I worke for I doe not that I would but what I hate that doe I for I am delighted with the Law of God as touching the inner man but I see another Law in my members c. and in the end concludeth Therfore I my selfe in the Spirit indeed serue the Law of God but in my flesh the Law of sinne Wherefore in this estate it is enough if sinne i Rom. 6. 12. raigne not in our mortall bodies it is not required which is impossible that it should not at all dwell in vs. And where the Scripture in many places doth call vs perfect as when it saith k Matth. 5. 48. Yee shall therefore be perfect as your Father which is in Heauen is perfect l 1. Cor. 2. 6. We speake wisdome among those that are perfect m 1. Cor. 14. 20. In vnderstanding bee yee perfect n Eph. 4. 13. till wee come to a perfect man o Phil. 3. 12. As many therefore as be perfect let vs bee thus minded p 1. Iohn 2. 5. Whosoeuer keepeth his Word of a truth in him the loue of God is perfected q 1. Ioh. 4. 12. If we loue one another God abideth in vs and his loue is perfited in vs. r 1. Ioh. 4.
as Mat. 10. 42. Whosoeuer shall giue to one of these little ones a cup of cold water onely in the name of a Disciple shall not lose his reward Ephes 6. 8. What good soeuer euery man doth that he shall receiue of the Lord Heb. 6. 10. God is not vniust to forget your workes and the labour of loue which yee shewed towards his Name ministring to the Saints c. But the reward they haue is not for themselues or of their owne desert since there is nothing absolutely good and worthy of reward that commeth from vs and everlasting life with all the parts of it is the free gift of God in Iesus Christ Rom. 6. 23. but because they proceed from Faith that is by the promise of Grace not by the promise of the Law Good works therefore The Popish doctrine that we are iustified by the workes which Christ worketh in vs by his Spirit So ioyning workes together with Christ in the matter of Iustification and their doctrime of Merits reaching that the good works of such as are in the state of Grace doe ex condign● that is of a sufficient worthinesse and desert that is in them merit eternall life auaile no whit to the purchasing or meriting of our Saluation neither in the whole nor in part First Because the best of all our workes in this life is stayned with some pollution and therefore not able to stand before God whose exact Iustice cannot abide the least defect Secondly The Apostle saith expresly Rom. 3. 20. By the workes of the Law none can be iustified Where by the workes of the Law hee meaneth not workes done by our owne strength without Faith and the Grace of God as Papists absurdly teach for whatsoever is not of Faith is sinne Rom. 14. 23. And therefore a question too vnworthy for the Apostle to dispute whether or no works meerly sinfull without any manner of Goodnesse in them may iustifie in the sight of God neither can the Law bee done in any measure at all by our owne strength for the wisdome of the flesh or of the naturall and vnregenerate man destitute of Gods Spirit is enmitie vnto God and neither is nor can be subiect to the Law of God as the Apostle saith Rom. 8. 7. and thereof setteth himselfe in the former Chapter for an example that albeit in his minde or part regenerate hee serued the Law of God yet in his flesh or part not regenerate he serued the law of sinne Rom. 7. 22. Wherefore the very drift of the Apostle appeareth to be to exclude all workes from iustifying euen those that are done by regenerate men in some measure according to the rule and direction of the Law For which purpose hee doth in this Argument apply the doctrine to the best and most righteous Iewes that liued vnder the Law Rom. 3. 19. Whatsoeuer the Law saith it speaketh to those that are within the Law And Gal. 5. 4. 5. not onely to the Galatians that beleeued but to himselfe as one of that number who not by the works of the Law but by Faith waited for the hope or hoped-for reward of Righteousnesse Which he teacheth cleerly Phil. 3. 9. That I might be found in him Christ that is not hauing mine owne Righteousnesse that which is by the Law but that which is through the Faith of Christ the Righteousnesse which is of God through Faith This further appeareth by i Ier. 23. 6. Ieremie calling Christ IEHOVAH our Righteousnesse Therefore Saluation commeth not by our owne And when the k 1. Cor. 1. 30. Apostle saith that Christ is made vnto vs of God both Righteousnes Sanctification if the Popish doctrine of being iustified by the workes which Christ worketh in vs by his Spirit were true it should follow that Iustice and Sanctification which the Apostle distinguisheth should bee one But that to the l Rom. 1. 17. Romanes In the Gospell the Righteousnesse of God is reuealed from Faith to Faith as it is written The righteous by Faith shall liue is notable to this purpose First In that the Apostle calleth it The Righteousnesse of God which is by Faith for seeing Faith apprehendeth not the workes contayned in the Law but Christ alone it must needes follow that Christ whome Faith apprehendeth is our Iustice and not the workes of the Law wrought by the Spirit of Christ which is not the subiect of Faith And thereupon the Apostle teacheth Gal. 3. 12. The Law is not of Faith but the man that doth these things shall liue by them Secondly When hee saith that this Righteousnesse is reuealed from Faith to Faith he declareth that wee are iustified by Faith not onely at the time when wee first beleeue but that our whole and continuall Iustification is by Faith otherwise hee should not haue said From Faith to Faith but From Faith to Workes And if Christ were not our Righteousnesse himselfe but obtayned onely power for vs that wee might haue Righteousnesse in our selues then hee should not be our Sauiour but an instrument of our Saluation As for that which Iames saith that m Iam. 2. 21 25 ABRAHAM was iustified by workes and so of Rahab weighing the circumstances of the Text I suppose hee vnderstandeth by Workes a liuely and a working Faith for Iames opposeth not the Workes of the Law to a true Faith as Paul doth but Workes that is to say an effectuall liuely Faith that sheweth his life and vigor by the fruits to a dead and fruitlesse Faith which is no Faith but a shaddow and carcase of Faith So the semblance of difference betweene the two Apostles may bee conceiued to be not in the word Iustifying which with them both goeth for that ●● is to be made righteous in the sight and iudgement of God but in the terme of Workes Paul taking them literally Iames by a Metonymie for Faith that bringeth them forth ascribing that to the effect which he intendeth proper to the cause from whence of necessitie and vnseparably it commeth And this to bee his meaning may be gathered by n Verse 17 20. many passages but especially Verse 23. where that which he had said o Verse 11. immediately before Was not ABRAHAM iustified by workes he explaineth to be as much as ABRAHAM beleeued God and it was imputed to him for Righteousnesse But albeit good workes doe not iusti●e is there therefore no need to doe good Workes O yes very great for many and those most waightie causes First God is hereby glorified as our Sauiour teacheth vs p Iohn 15. ● Herein is my Father glorified that yee bring forth much fruit q Mat. 5. 16. Let your Light so shine before men that they may see your good Workes and glorifie your Father which is in Heauen Secondly Wee gather from hence assurance that wee are the Children of God and they serue as Testimonies and Pledges both to our selues and others that wee belong to him for which cause