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A64611 The summe of Christian religion, delivered by Zacharias Ursinus first, by way of catechism, and then afterwards more enlarged by a sound and judicious exposition, and application of the same : wherein also are debated and resolved the questions of whatsoever points of moment have been, or are controversed in divinitie / first Englished by D. Henry Parry, and now again conferred with the best and last Latine edition of D. David Pareus, sometimes Professour of Divinity in Heidelberge ; whereunto is added a large and full alphabeticall table of such matters as are therein contained ; together with all the Scriptures that are occasionally handled, by way either of controversie, exposition, or reconciliation, neither of which was done before, but now is performed for the readers delight and benefit ; to this work of Ursinus are now at last annexed the Theologicall miscellanies of D. David Pareus in which the orthodoxall tenets are briefly and solidly confirmed, and the contrary errours of the Papists, Ubiquitaries, Antitrinitaries, Eutychians, Socinians, and Arminians fully refuted ; and now translated into English out of the originall Latine copie by A.R. Ursinus, Zacharias, 1534-1583.; Parry, Henry, 1561-1616.; Pareus, David, 1548-1622. Theologicall miscellanies.; A. R. 1645 (1645) Wing U142; ESTC R5982 1,344,322 1,128

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divell hath often professed Christ therefore he doth not oppugne this doctrine The divel professed Christ that for his testimonies sake he might be lesse beleeved Mark 1.25 Acts 16.18 Ans He did this not for any desire of promoting and advancing Christs doctrine but for the hatred he bare unto it that by his testimony he might cause it to be suspected and might mingle therewith his own errours and lies therefore Christ doth command him silence as Paul also doth in the Acts. The faith of miracles is an especiall gift of effecting some extraordinary worke or foretelling some certain event by divine revelation Or What the faith of working miracles is It is a certain perswasion springing from an especiall revelation and peculiar promise of God touching some miraculous effect which he would have done and foretelleth that it shall come to passe For this kinde of faith cannot be drawne simply out of the generall word of God unlesse some singular promise or revelation of God be annexed therewith Of this faith the Apostle saith If I have all faith so that I could remove mountains 1 Cor. 13.2 for although this speech be understood of all the kindes of faith excepting justifying faith yet it is especially referred to the faith of miracles That this faith is diverse from the other kindes is proved by these reasons 1. By that saying of Christ How it differeth from the rest Matt. 17.20 If ye have faith as much as is a graine of mustard seed yee shall say unto this mountain Remove hence to yonder place and it shall remove But many holy men who had a stable faith and both knew the word of God and rejoyced therein and applyed it unto themselves as Abraham David c. yet did not remove mountains Therefore this is a diverse kind of faith from that justifying faith which they had 2. Many Exorcists and the sons of Sceva in the Acts endeavoured to cast out divels Acts 19 1● whereas they had not the gift of it to wit speciall revelation from above and therefore it fell out ill with them the spirit of the possessed man invading disarming and wounding them Acts 8.13 3. Simon Magus is said to have beleeved and yet could hee not work miracles and therefore he would have bought and gotten this power with mony 4. The divell knoweth the story of the Scripture neither yet doth he work miracles because none besides the Creator is able to change the nature of things 5. Judas taught and wrought miracles as did the other Apostles therefore he had an historicall faith yea and perhaps a temporall faith and the faith of miracles yet had he not a justifying faith for hee is called of Christ a divell 6. Many shall say unto Christ John 6.70 Matth. 7.22 23. Lord Lord have not wee by thy name cast out divels but Christ will answer them I never knew you Wherefore the gift of working miracles is given to hypocrites also 7. The other kinds of faith extend to all things that are written in the word and therein proposed to be beleeved but this of miracles is appropriated and restrained to some certain works or extraordinary effects to come therefore it is a distinct kind of faith and different from the rest Justifying or saving faith is properly that which is defined in the Answer to the 21. Question of the Catechism What justifying faith is in which definition the generall or common nature is a knowledge and stedfast assent for of an unknown doctrine there is no faith and it behoveth every man to know the doctrine before he beleeve it 1. The materiall cause thereof whence the Papists implicite faith is refuted 2. The formall The difference or speciall nature is the confidence and applying which every particular man maketh to himselfe of free remission of sins by and through Christ The property and peculiar affection thereof is to rest and rejoyce in God for this so great good 3. The efficient The efficient cause is the holy Ghost The instrumentall cause is the Gospel 4. The instrumentall under which the use also of the Sacraments is comprehended The difference thereof from the rest The subject where it is seated is the will and heart of man Justifying or saving faith differeth from the other kinds of faith in that this onely is the certain confidence whereby we apply Christs merit unto our selves 1. In nature It is a confidence unmoveable and we apply it unto our selves when every one of us do certainly resolve that the righteousnesse or merit of Christ is also given and imputed to us that we may be esteemed just and righteous of God and also may be regenerated and glorified Confidence or trust is a motion of the heart or will following and pursuing some good thing and rejoycing and resting thereon for the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifie beleefe and to beleeve come from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is to be strongly perswaded Whence the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to credit and beleeve even with profane authors is used in this sense to wax confident and to rest on any thing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 145. as wee read in Phocilides Credit not the Commons for the multitude is deceitfull And in Demosthenes Thou art confident on thy selfe or buildest too much on thine owne person Confidence is a motion of the heart because it is a following and pursuing of a good thing and a desire of retaining that good which a man already doth enjoy It is a rejoycing because it is glad of the present grace of God towards every of us of full deliverance from the guilt of sin and from sin it selfe in part and because by that which every one enjoyeth in present hee conceiveth hope of everlasting blessings to come as of everlasting life and full delivery from all evill both of crime and pain and therefore is free from the fear of future evill Matth. 25.29 1 Cor. 1.22 5.5 Ephes 1.13 To him that hath shall be given The holy Spirit given unto us is the earnest and pledge of our full redemption Again Justifying faith differeth from the rest in this also that this justifying faith is concerning all spirituall gifts and whatsoever belong to our salvation 2. In object It only concerneth spirituall things and is properly and simply or absolutely called faith in the Scripture and is proper also and peculiar to the elect and chosen The faith of miracles is a certain gift whereby we are not bettered which we may want without any hindrance to our salvation neither is it given to all the faithfull nor at all times Historicall faith is a part of the justifying and befalleth all the godly and hypocrites but is not sufficient alone to salvation because it applyeth not to it selfe those benefits which are made known unto it out of the word Temporary faith
that had not the Sonne of God revealed it unto us out of his Fathers bosome no wit of men or Angels could have attained unto it In their subjects They vary in their subjects and matter which they handle For the doctrine of the Church comprehendeth the full perfect and entire sense both of the Law and Gospel but Philosophy is quite ignorant of the Gospel and omitteth the principall parts of the Law and rawly and obscurely propoundeth that small portion it retaineth concerning discipline and externall duties drawn but out of some few precepts of the Decalogue It teacherh us also other arts and sciences meete and serviceable for mans life as Logick Physick and the Mathematickes all which are not delivered in Church doctrine but have their proper necessary use in handling and learning the same In their effects They concurre not in their severall effects For the doctrine of the Church alone sheweth us the originall of all evils and mans misery to wit the fall disobedience or sin of our first parents Moreover it ministreth true and lively comfort unto our consciences pointing out the meanes by which wee may wade out of the danger of sin and death and assuring us of life eternall through Christ As for Philosophy it knoweth not the cause of our evils neither yeeldeth it us any sound comfort or consolation Philosophy hath certain comforts common unto her with Divinity Comforts common both to Philosophy and Divinity such are 1. The providence of God 2. The necessity of obeying of God 3. A good conscience 4. The worthinesse of vertue 5. The finall causes or the ends which vertue proposeth 6. The examples of others 7. Hope of reward 8. A comparing of events because a lesse evil compared unto a greater carrieth a shew and shadow of good but true comforts against sinne and death are proper to the Church Comforts proper to Gods Church such as are 1. Free remission of sins by and for Christ 2. The grace and presence of God in our very miseries 3. Our finall delivery and life everlasting Wherefore Philosophy though in respect of Divinity it be unperfect and faile in these premisses yet it never impugneth Divinity Whatsoever erroneous opinions contrary to the true doctrine of the Church occurre in the writings of Philosophers or are cited out of Philosophy to overthrow Scripture all these are either no way Philosophicall but the vaine sleights of mans wit and very biles and sores of true Philosophy such as was the opinion of Aristotle concerning the eternity of the world and of Epicurus touching the mortality of the soule and such like or else they are indeed Philosophicall opinions but unfitly applyed to Divinity The use of these differences in doctrine These maine differences between Christian doctrine and other Religions and Philosophy also are very worthy observation for these ends 1. That Gods glory be no way impaired of us but reserved wholly unto himselfe which cannot be unlesse wee acknowledge and confesse in the face and eye of the world whatsoever he hath precisely commanded us to beleeve either concerning himselfe or his will and that wee adde nothing of our owne braine unto that which hee hath revealed For God cannot be mingled with Idols nor his truth confounded with Satans forgeries without high dishonour to his name 2. That we hazzard not nor endanger our salvation which might happen if erroneously we should imbrace for true Religion any Schismaticall doctrine or heathenish Philosophy 3. That our faith and comfort in Christ Jesus might be strengthened and confirmed which falleth out when wee discerne the perfection of the doctrine of the Church before all other Religions how many important and weighty matters are found in our Religion which are wanting in others What are the causes why they alone are saved who professe this doctrine and other Religions with their Sectaries and adherents are damned and of God rejected Finally that we separate our selves from Epicures and Academicks who either make a mockery of pietie and godlinesse or so rack Religion that they thinke every man in every Religion shall be saved wresting in this sense that saying of the Apostle The just man shall live by HIS faith Now these Epicures are not worthy the answering Rom. 1.17 Hab. 2.4 as for those Academicks they manifestly falsifie the sentence and meaning of the Apostle and are easily refuted For the pronoune HIS in no sort signifieth whatsoever faith every man frameth unto himselfe but the true Catholike faith particularly appropriated unto every man and this word HIS standeth in opposition against any other mans faith though it be a true and good faith and thwarteth and crosseth also the opinion of Justification by works So that the naturall sense of that Text is The just man is justified not by the works of the Law but by faith alone in Christ and that by his owne private faith not by the faith of another man 4 Whence it may appeare that the doctrine of the Church alone was delivered of God 5 By what testimonies the certainty of Christian Religion or Church-doctrine is confirmed GOD in the very creation of the world put this bridle in the mouth of all reasonable creatures that no man without extreame and manifest impudeney such as was the Divell in Paradise durst say that any thing if it were once apparently known to have been spoken or commanded by God might be called into question or that any man might refuse to obey it Here-hence are those things so often inculcated in the Prophets Hearken O heavens and hearken O earth for the Lord hath spoken Thus saith the Lord. The word of the Lord came to Esaias Jeremias c. Sith therefore it appeareth that the bookes of the Old and New Testament are the words of God there is no place left of doubting whether that be the true Religion and Doctrine which is contained in them but whether these books were written by divine instinct and by what proofes and testimonies we are certaine of so great a matter this is a question not to be let passe of us Wherefore this question is necessary For except this above all other things remaine stedfast and immoveable that whatsoever we read in the bookes of the Prophets and Apostles doth as truly declare the will of God unto us as if we did heare God openly speaking tous from heaven it cannot chuse but that the very foundation and whole certainty of Christian Religion must be weakned Wherefore it is a consideration worthy those who are desirous of the glory of God and doe seek for sure comfort to enquire whence it may appeare unto us The first part The authority of the Scripture doth depend on the Church that the holy Scripture is the Word of God To this question now long since answer hath been made by the Papists that forsooth it is not otherwise certaine then because the Church doth confirme it by her testimony But we
as we neither reject nor contemne the testimony of the true Church so we doubt not but their opinion is pestilent and detestable who do often say that the holy Scriptures have not their authority else-where then from the word of the Church 1 Reason The reproach of God For first wicked is it and blasphemous to say that the authority of Gods Word dependeth of the testimony of man And if it be so that the chiefest cause why we beleeve that the Scriptures were delivered from heaven be the witnesse of the Church who seeth not that hereby the authority of a mans voice is made greater then the voice of God For he that yeeldeth his testimony unto another so that he is the only or the chiefe cause why credence is given unto the other out of all doubt greater credit is given unto him then unto the other who receiveth his testimony Wherefore it is a speech most unworthy the majesty of God that the voice of God speaking in his holy Book is not acknowledged except it be confirmed by the witnesse of men 2 Reason Our comfort Faith is grounded on approved witnesse therefore not on mans Secondarily whereas the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles doth preach of so great matters as the certaine knowledge whereof is so greatly desired of all who are well disposed and the conflicts of doubtfulnesse in all mens minds are so great what full assurance of our faith can there be what sure consolation against assaults or temptations if that that voice on which our confidence relieth be no otherwise knowne unto us to be indeed the voice of God but because men say so in whom we see so much ignorance errour and vanity to be that no man scarcely especially in matters of some weight doth attribute much unto their word except other reason concurre with it 3 Reason The confutation of our enemies Thirdly the truth of God and Christian Religion is plainly exposed unto the mocks and scoffes of the wicked if we going about to stop their mouths doe therefore only desire that we should be credited that our Religion is from God because our selves say so For if they be by no other confutation repressed they will with no lesse shew of truth deny it then we affirme it 4 Reason Witnesses Last of all the Scripture it selfe in many places is against this opinion and doth challenge a far higher authority unto it selfe then which hangeth upon mens words For so saith Christ himselfe I receive not the record of man signifying thereby John 5. that his doctrine stood not no not on John Baptists testimony although yet he did alledge it but as of lesse account that he might omit nothing by which men might be moved to beleeve Therefore he addeth But I say these things that you may beleeve I have a greater witnesse then the witnesse of John And if Christ now being humbled said these things of himselfe then surely shall they be no lesse true of him being in glory and sitting in his Throne Paul saith 1 Cor. 2. My word and my preaching stood not in entising speech of mans wisdome but in plaine evidence of spirit and of power that your faith should not be in the wisdome of men but in the power of God If so be then our faith must not rest no not upon reasons wisely framed by men much lesse shall it depend on the bare word of men Ephes 2. The Church her selfe is said to be built upon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles If then the confidence and confession of the Church stayeth on the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles as on the foundation the certainty of Scripture cannot hang on the Churches witnesse for so should not the Church be upheld by the testimony of the Prophets and Apostles but by her owne And it is said 1 John 5. If we receive the witnesse of men the witnesse of God is greater If it be greater then the authority of it hangeth not on the record of man but we are to give more credence unto God witnessing the Prophets and Apostles writings to be indeed his voice then unto the Church affirming the same 1 Object That they are true the Church alone doth witnesse Ans The Minor is false Now that it is said of the contrary That by the Churches record alone it doth appeare unto us that the sacred bookes which wee have were written by the Prophets and Apostles whose names they beare in their fore-head and that even unto us they are come uncorrupt this we grant not For God far more certainly testifieth both in Scripture and in the hearts of his Saints that no feigned or forged thing is in these books then it can be by the Church and all the creatures of the world confirmed They therefore who stand upon the Churches testimony alone in this point shew that themselves have not as yet felt or understood the chiefest testimony 2 Object The discerning of books Ans The Minor is false 1 The working of the holy Ghost Furthermore they say That the bookes authenticke or as they terme them Canonicall of both Testaments are discerned from the Apocryphall by the Churches judgement and therefore that the authority of holy Canon doth depend on the Churches wisdome But that this difference of the bookes is not determined by the Churches judgement but being imprinted into the bookes themselves by the Spirit of God is onely acknowledged and approved by the Church this is easily to be understood if the causes of this difference be considered For either in these which are called Apocryphall the force and majesty of the heavenly Spirit doth lesse evidently appeare in the weight and vehemency of word and matter then in others of which it is cleere that they are the heavenly Oracles 2 The certainty of Authors set down in writing by the divine instinct that they might be the rule of our faith or it cannot be determined neither out of these bookes themselves nor out of others which are Canonicall that they were written either by the Prophets or Apostles because either they were not opened by those whom God by certain testimonies hath warranted unto us to be endued with a Propheticall spirit or themselves doe not shew any certain Authours of them or by their form of speech or other reasons it may be gathered that they were not left of them whose names they beare Now as touching either this evidence of spirit or certainty of the authours we build not our judgement on the testimony of the Church but of the bookes themselves And therefore not for the Churches judgement only do we judge some books to be Canonicall and the foundation and rule of our faith and do therefore accept of the doctrine of other some because they agree with the Canonicall but rather for the very cause of this difference which we find in the bookes themselves 3 Object The Church is more
worshipping of God and thankfulnesse towards him is placed under the third part 4. The reasons why Catechising is necessary in the Church THe diligent exercise of Catechising is necessary in the Church Deut. 4.9 11.19 1. Because of the commandement of God Ye shall teach them your children 2. Because of the glory of God which requireth that God be not onely knowne aright and magnified by those of riper yeares but of children also Thirdly For our owne comfort and salvation for without the true knowledge of God and his Son Christ Jesus that is to say without Faith and Repentance no man of sufficient yeares and able to receive instruction can be saved or have any stable or sure confidence that he pleaseth God John 17.3 Heb. 11.6 For This is life eternall that they know thee to be the onely very God And Without Faith it is impossible to please God Now no man beleeveth on him whom he knoweth not or of whom he never heard How shall they beleeve on him of whom they never heard Rom. 10.17 Faith is by hearing and hearing by the Word of God As many then as will be saved must needs hold the foundation which is the doctrine touching Christ Wherefore all must be instructed and such a summe of doctrine must be delivered in the Church of which the ruder and younger sort also may be capable Fourthly For the maintaining of a Church and Common weale in this life For to the establishing of Church and Common-weale there is need of Religion and the worship of God Christian discipline studies and exercises of godlinesse honesty justice and truth amongst men All which in vaine we seek for amidst the barbarous Nations where there is no practice of piety or vertue at all Now therefore it behoveth that we be instructed herein from our child-hood because the heart of man is evill and perverse from his youth Gen. 1.21 Nay such is the corruption of nature that unlesse there be sudden redresse we then too late take physick when our evill and griefe through long delay hath gathered strength and is become past cure Wherefore except we be instructed aright in the will of God out of his Word in our child-hood and exercised unto godlinesse hardly or never doe wee suffer our selves to be withdrawne from those errours which are in-bred in us and which we drunk in like water in our child-hood scarcely can we endure to be revoked and weaned from those vices in which we have been trained up Wherefore we must betimes meet with and bridle mans depraved nature lest Church and Common-weale go to wracke Fifthly Because the rule of examining opinions and discussing the truth of them must be generally knowne unto all lest they erre and be seduced according to the commandement Beware of false prophets Prove all things Try the spirits whether they be of God Now the rule of this tryall is no other then those chiefe grounds of Catechisme The Decalogue and the Apostles Creed Sixthly Because they who have throughly learned Catechisme better understand Sermons in that they are able easily to reduce whatsoever they heare out of Gods Word to their severall heads of Catechisme which they have learned whereas otherwise Sermons for the most part are heard with little fruit and benefit Seventhly Because Catechisme best fitteth the unskilfull and weak judgement of learners For a copious and vagrant forme of instruction is hard for youth and beginners and very unprofitable therefore the doctrine delivered unto them must be briefe and plaine packstaffe such as is Catechisme Eighthly Because it is necessary that the rude and younger sort be severed from Schismatickes and from the profane Heathen which distinction is no way made but by the knowledge of Catechisme Ninthly Catechisme doctrine is most needfull for Scholars because they ought to be more expert in Christian doctrine then others both in regard of their calling that one day they may instruct others as also in respect of their many occasions which daily occurre of learning this doctrine which after the example of Timothy they may not neglect To these may be added many impulsive causes especially with the people to win them drawne either from the end of our Creation or from the cause of Gods prolonging and preserving our lives untill the time of youth c. Also from the dignity andexcellency of the object of Catechisme doctrine which is the highest and perfectest good even God himselfe and from the effect of Catechisme which is the knowledge of this great good and a community therewith a thing more precious then all the treasures of the world This is that costly Jewell digged and hidden in the field of the Church Mat. 13.44 whereof Christ speaketh and for whose sake in ancient times Christians with their little children suffered martyrdome with cheerfulnesse Let us view with our eyes the example of Origen in Eusebius his sixth book of Ecclesiasticall History Euseb hist Eccles lib. 6. cap. 3. Theod. hist lib. 4. cap. 16. and third chapter Let us read to this purpose Theodoret his fourth booke of History and sixteenth chapter But contrariwise what is it that we will gladly suffer for Christs glory if we be ignorant of this doctrine and how shall we not be ignorant if we learn it not in our child-hood Wherefore the ignorance of Catechisme is not the last and least cause why many now-adaies are carried hither and thither with every winde of doctrine and why many fall from Christ unto Antichrist 5 What is the end of Catechisme and Christian doctrine THE scope of Catechisme-doctrine is our comfort and salvation Salvation consisteth in the fruition and participation of the highest Good The comfort thereof is a certaine hope and expectation of this Good in the life to come together with a fruition in part begun in this life The chiefest Good is that which if we have we are blessed if we want we become most unhappy and miserable Further what and what manner this onely comfort is it is resolved in the first question of this Catechisme whereunto these Prefaces now ended we will proceed A CATECHISME OF CHRISTIAN RELIGION On the first Sabbath Quest 1. What is thy only comfort in life and death Answ That both in soule and body whether I live or dye a Rom. 14.8 I am not mine owne b 1 Cor. 6.19 but belong wholly unto my most faithfull Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ c 1 Cor. 3.23 Tit. 2.14 who by his precious bloud most fully satisfying for all my sins d 1 Pet. 1.18 1 John 1.7 2.2 hath delivered me from all the power of the Divell e Heb. 2.14 1 John 3.8 and to preserve mee f John 6.39 John 10.28 2 Thes 3.3 1 Pet. 1.5 that without the will of my heavenly Father not so much as an haire may fall from my head g Mat. 10.30 Luk. 21.18 yea all things must serve for my safety h Rom.
confirmeth the faithful to yeeld obedience Lastly they cite all other sayings which seem to place conversion and good works in the will of men I have applied my heart to fulfill thy statutes Psal 119. He that is begotten of God keepeth himselfe 1 John 5.18 These and the like sayings attribute the work of God unto men 1. Because they are not only the object but the instrument also of Gods working Two causes why the workes of God are attributed to men which the holy Spirit exerciseth in them 2. Because they are such an instrument which being renewed and moved by the holy Spirit doth also it self work together and move it selfe For there is not one effect ascribed unto the holy Ghost and another to mans will but the same to both unto the holy Ghost as the principall cause unto mans will as a secondary and instrumentall cause The third degree of liberty in man regenerated The third degree of liberty belongeth to man in this life as hee is regenerated but yet not glorified or in whom regeneration is begun but not accomplished or perfected In this state the Will useth her liberty not only to work evill as in the second degree but partly to do ill and partly to do well And this is to be understood two waies 1. That some workes of the regenerate are good and pleasing to God which are done of them according to Gods commandement but some evill and displeasing to God which they doe contrary to the commandement of God which is manifest by the infinite fallings of holy men 2. That even those good works which the converted doe in this life albeit they please God by reason of Christs satisfaction imputed unto them yet are they not perfectly good that is agreeable to Gods Law but unperfect and stained with many sinnes and therefore they cannot if they be beheld without Christ stand in judgement and escape damnation The cause of the renewing and beginning of this liberty in man to good is the Spirit working by the Will The cause for which the Will beginneth to work well is this Because by the singular grace or benefit of the holy Spirit mans nature is renewed by the Word of God there is kindled in the mind a new light and knowledge of God in the heart new affections in the will new inclinations agreeing with the Law of God and the will is forcibly and effectually moved to doe according to these notions and inclinations and so it recovereth both the power of willing that which God approveth and the use of that power and beginneth to be conformed and agreeable to God and to obey him Deut. 30.6 The Lord thy God will circumcise thy heart and the heart of thy seed that thou mayest love the Lord thy God with all thine heart Ezek. 36.26 A new heart will I give you and a new spirit will I put within you and I will take away the stony heart out of your body and I will give you an heart of flesh and I will put my spirit within you and cause you to walk in my statutes Act. 16.14 The Lord opened the heart of Lidia that shee should attend to those things which were spoken of Paul 1 Cor. 3.17 Why the Will in the regenerate useth liberty not only to good but to evill also Where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty The causes for which the will useth her liberty not only to the chusing of good but of evill also are in number two 1. For that in this life the renewing of our nature is not perfect neither as concerning the knowledge of God neither as concerning our inclination to obey God and therefore in the best men while they live here remaine still many and great sinnes both Originall and others 2. For that the regenerate be not alwaies ruled by the holy Spirit but are sometimes forsaken of God either for to try or to chastise and humble them but yet are re-called to repentance that they perish not Of the first cause it is said Rom. 7.18 I know that in mee that is in my flesh dwelleth no good thing for to will is present with me but I find no means to performe that which is good Mar. 9.24 I beleeve Lord but help thou my unbeliefe Of the second cause it is said Psal 51.11 Take not thy holy Spirit from me O Lord why hast thou made us to erre from thy waies and hardened our heart from thy feare Returne for thy servants sake The Lord our God be with us Isa 63.17 1 Kin. 8.57 that he forsake us not neither leave us Therefore the regenerate man in this life doth alwaies go either forward or backward neither continueth in the same state Hence are deduced these two conclusions 1. As man corrupted before he be regenerated cannot begin new obedience pleasing and acceptable unto God so he that is regenerated in this life although he begin to obey God that is hath some inclination and purpose to obey God according to all his commandements and that unfeigned though yet weak and struggling with evill inclinations affections and desires and therefore there shine in his life and manners a desire of piety towards God and his neighbour yet can he not yeeld whole and perfect obedience to God because neither his knowledge nor his love to God is so great and so sincere as the Law of God requireth and therefore is not such righteousnesse as may stand before God according to that saying Psal 143.2 Enter not into judgement with thy servant for in thy sight shall none that liveth be justified 2. They who are converted can no farther retaine good inclinations neither thoughts and affections and a good purpose to persevere and goe forward therein then as the holy Spirit worketh and preserveth these in them For if hee guide and rule them they judge and do aright but if he forsake them they are blind they wander slip and fall away yet so that they perish not but repent and are saved if so be they were ever truly converted 1 Cor. 4.7 Phil. 1.6 2.13 What hast thou that thou hast not received If thou hast received it why rejoycest thou as if thou hadst not received it I am perswaded that he who hath begun this good work in you will performe it untill the day of Jesus Christ It is God that worketh in you both the will and the deed John 15.5 even of his good pleasure Without me you can doe nothing Who shall also confirme you to the end that ye may be blamelesse in the day of our Lord Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 1.8 and 10.13 God is faithfull which will not suffer you to be tempted above that you be able but will even give the issue with the temptation that ye may be able to beare it 1 Pet. 1.5 You are kept by the power of God through faith to salvation This doctrine
fornication That every one of you should know how to possesse his vessell in holinesse and honour c. Levit. 18.24 Ye shall not defile your selves in any of these things for in all these the nations are defiled Mercifull 1. In that hee will that all be saved 2. For that hee deferreth punishment and inviteth all to repentance 3. In that he applyeth himself to our infirmity 4. In that hee delivereth the elect 5. In that hee gave his Son to die for them 6. In that he promiseth and performeth all these things of his own free goodnesse 7. In that he doth good unto the unworthy and his very enemies Object 1. Mercy is a kind of griefe or sorrow Ans It is so in men but not in God Ob. 2. He rejoyceth in revenge Isa 1.24 27.11 Ans As far forth as it is an execution of his justice Ob. 3. He denieth mercy to the wicked Ans to the unrepentant Object 4. He saveth not all when he may Ans To wit that with his mercy he may declare his justice Ob. 5. He receiveth none to mercy without satisfaction Ans No verily but yet of his free mercy bestoweth his Sons satisfaction on us Bountifull 1. Because he createth and governeth all things 2. Because he doth good unto all 3. Yea to the wicked 4. Of his free love towards all creatures 5. But especially towards man 6. And amongst men chiefly to his Church 7. And herein also towards his chosen giving them eternall life and glory Object 1. He is angry Ans True with the corruption of the creature not with the creature it self and the nature and substance thereof Object 2. He afflicteth men Ans Namely the impenitent Most free 1. Free from all fault misery bond subjection constraint 2. In that hee doth will and execute all things most freely and justly when as much and in what manner he will Object 1. Second causes work necessarily and yet work not without God Ans They work by a necessity of consequent and only conditionall Object 2. God is necessarily good Ans Questionlesse but yet by a necessity of unchangeablenesse not of constraint Object 3. What hee hath once decreed hee necessarily willeth Answ He necessarily willeth it because he will not alter his decree not by constraint Obj. 4. His will is not done sometimes as How often would I and thou wouldst not Matth. 23.37 Ans He would that is in his will apparent to the conceit and judgment of man not in his determinate secret counsell Angry with sin Horribly detesting and punishing all sin with temporall and eternall pain 3. Whence it may appear that there is but one God Whence first sprang the multitude of gods ALbeit God in the beginning did as certainly declare unto mankind that he is but one only as what he is yet the world by the guile and deceit of the divell going about to spoile God of his honour and to bear and vaunt himself for God and to destroy mankind for the hatred hee beareth unto God and through their own blindnesse and malice revolting from Gods divine manifestations and from the doctrine of our first fathers have in horrible madnesse forged a multitude of gods yeelding divine honours partly to creatures partly to imaginary gods and forgetting the true God or desiring to joyn and couple other gods with him And whereas there is no greater bond then whereby the creature is bound to honour the Creatour and therefore no more grievous sin then to obscure the glory due unto God or to conveigh it over to any other God that he might meet with this sacriledge hath often testified and witnessed in his word That there is but one God not many that is that there is but one divine Essence eternall of infinite power wisdome and goodnesse Creatour Preserver and Ruler of all things And this is proved 1. By testimonies of Scripture-Deut 6.4 32.39 Isa 44.6 1 Cor. 8.4 Ephes 4.5 1 Tim. 2.5 first by expresse testimonies of Scripture Hear O Israel the Lord our God is Lord only Behold now for I am he and there is no god with me I am the first and I am the last and without me there is no God Wee know that an idol is nothing in the world and that there is no other God but one One Lord one faith one God and Father of all One God one Mediatour between God and man which is the man Christ Jesus The like proofes hereof may be read Deut. 4.35 Psalm 18.31 Isa 37.16 45.21 Hos 13.4 Mal. 2.10 Mat. 12.32 Rom. 3.30 Gal. 3.20 2. By arguments Secondly it is confirmed by reason and argument 1. There is but one only God whom the Church also worshippeth who is manifested unto the world by infallible and undoubted restimonies From the manner of revealing himselfe Isa 44.7 Psal 86.8 namely such miracles prophesies and other works as cannot be done but by an omnipotent nature Who is like mee that shall call that which is past and shall declare it and set it in order c. Among the gods there is none like unto thee O Lord there is not one that can do as thou dost 2 He who alone reigneth over all and alone governeth all things and therefore hath sole supreme soveraignty and majesty can be but one But the majesty of God only is supreme From the natur and kinde of his majestie Isa 42.8 1 Tim. 1.17 Revel 4.11 and so great that no greater can either be or be imagined I am the Lord this is my name and my glory will I not give to another Unto God only wise be honour c. Thou art worthy O Lord to receive glory honour and power for thou hast created all things 3. That which hath greatest perfection can be but one for he who hath the whole From his degree of perfection and all alone is absolutely perfect Now God is most perfect seeing he is the cause of all that is good in nature Therefore nothing is more absurd then to imagine any thing to be God which is not most great and most perfect Lord who is like unto thee Psal 89.7 4. There is but one thing omnipotent for were there many they should have power to hinder one the other and for this cause should become not omnipotent From his omnipotency By this argument the Monarchy of the world is in Daniel restrained unto one God when it is said Dan. 4.35 None can stay his hand or resist his will 5. If we suppose and put moe gods either each of them wil be too weak to rule all and so imperfect and not worthy the name and title of divinity More gods would be either unperfect or superfluous or one will suffice for the guiding of the whole world and so the rest shall be idle superfluous and needlesse But it is absurd to imagine God to be such a one as sufficeth not for the wielding and
managing of all things or such a one as is superfluous and idle Wherefore there must needs be but one God that he alone may suffice for all 6. There can be but one infinite for if there were moe infinites none should be present every where and rule all There can be but one infinite Wherefore there cannot be more but one only God which is infinite 7. There is but one first cause of all things God is that first cause Therefore he is but one But one first cause 8. There can be but one only chief good For if besides that there were another chief good also that should be either greater or lesser or equall to the former chief good if greater the former should not be chief yet should it be God which were contumelious against God if lesser it should not be chief and so no God if equall then neither the one nor the other should be chief or be God The use of this Question is to teach us that whereas God is but one The use of this Question therfore no other besides this one God is to be adored or worshipped neither is any good to be expected from any other save only from him and to him alone all thanks for all blessings are to be rendred Obj. Many are called gods in Scripture Psal 82.6 1 Cor. 8.5 Exod 4.16 7.1 2 Cor. 4.4 I have said ye are gods Many are and are called gods in heaven and in earth Moses is called the god of Aaron and Pharaoh yea the divell is said to be The god of this world Ans Two significations of the word God There is an ambiguity and double signification of this word God which sometimes signifieth him who is by nature God and hath his being not from any thing but from himself and by himself and all other things are from him such a God is but one only Sometimes it betokeneth not the very divine eternall and immense essence but a God either so entituled for some similitude of the divine properties dignity and divine office and function Gods in the latter signification or an imaginary and fained god such gods are many Magistrates Judges and magistrates are entituled and called gods not that they have the divine essence communicated unto them and are by nature God but because of their dignity and divine office which they bear in Gods stead as it is said By me Kings reigne that is Prov. 18.15 because they are the Deputies and Vicegerents of God by whom as by his instruments and servants hee exerciseth his power and judgements here on earth hee therefore doth furnish and arme them with wisdome fortitude power authority and majesty as much as is necessary and sufficient to bridle the mindes of the multitude being desirous of licentiousnesse and to hold and keep them in fear and obedience hee doth also vouchsafe them the honour of his name by calling them gods that the subjects may thereby know that they have to deale not with men but with God himselfe whose Vicegerents they are whether they obey their magistrate or repine against him according to the Scripture Whosoever resisteth the power Rom. 13.2 resisteth the ordinance of God Angels The Angels also are called gods both for the dignity and excellency of their nature and gifts power and wisdome wherein they far surpasse men as also for the divine office and function which God exerciseth by them in this world in defending the godly and punishing the wicked Psalm 8.6 Thou madest him little lower then the gods that is then the Angels The Angels are ministring spirits Heb. 1.14 The divell The divell is called the god of this world for his great potency and power which he hath over men and other creatures by the just judgment of God Idols Lastly Many things are accounted gods in mens fancies and opinion 2. Cor. 4.4 Eph. 2.2 6.12 and are so called by men who worship the creatures as gods So idols are termed gods by a figurative speech of imitation Jer. 10.11 Phil. 3.19 Exod. 20.3 The gods that have not made the heavens and the earth shall perish from the earth and under these heavens Whose god is their belly Thou shalt have no other gods before me But here the question is touching the true God who is by nature God and hath his being and his power not from any thing but from himselfe and by himself and all other things are from him Such a God is but one only 4. What these names Essence Person and Trinity signifie and how they differ The explication of these words serve much for the understanding of the unconceivable mystery of the Trinity and therefore is it not to be read with a running eye ESsence in Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as it is used in this doctrine for substance is a thing subsisting by it self that is a thing having a proper being not sustained in another although it be communicated to moe That is said to be communicable or communicated which is common or may be made common to moe that is said to be incommunicable which is not in moe neither can be affirmed of moe Mans essence is communicable and common to many men but this essence is in generall common not in particular and in number that is the nature and essence of all men is in generall one but not one in number for every man hath his essence distinct from others neither are all one man but many men But the essence of God is communicable in particular because the selfe same Deity in number and that whole and entire is common to the three persons and is the substance of the three persons and therefore the three persons are that one God who created all things not three Gods What a Person is A person is a thing subsisting individuall living understanding incommunicable not sustained in another neither part of another Subsisting By which word is signified that it is not an accident cogitation decree vanishing sound or any created quality or motion Individuall Not any generall but a particular one in number and therefore individuall and called individuall Living No inanimate thing which hath no life as a stone Understanding Not a thing which hath sense only as are brute beasts who are things living and sensible but not understanding and therefore are no persons Incommunicable Not the divine essence which is common to three not the substance of mans nature or any other thing created which is communicated to the thing begotten thereof or thence derived But a person cannot be communicated Not sustained in another Not the humane nature of Christ for this though it be subsisting individuall understanding incommunicable yet is it no person because it is personally sustained of the Word that is so that it together with the Word is the substance of one Christ and except it were subsisting in the Word should not at
his proper function and office Now though the wicked after the Resurrection shall be immortall yet their soul-life shall be no life but everlasting death For with the eternall life in the wicked shall be joyned 1. An eternall rejection from God 2. A privation and want of the knowledge and grace of God 3. A perpetuall and unutterable torment and vexation Their worme shall never dye There shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth The everlasting death of the wicked Hereby is understood what everlasting death is and that it is so called not because the Reprobate by once dying shall fulfill it but because they shall dye perpetually and shall feele perpetuall torment without end 2. Who giveth everlasting life GOD alone giveth eternall life Rom. 6.23 Everlasting life the work of all three persons For Eternall life is the gift of God and the Father as the author and fountaine of all life giveth it by the Sonne and the holy Ghost the Sonne by the holy Ghost the holy Ghost by himselfe which order of working is naturall in the persons of the Divinity Of the Father it is said As the Father raiseth up the dead John 5.21 26. and quickneth them so the Sonne quickneth whom he will In which place the same is affirmed of the Sonne also as in like manner in these following John 1.4 Esay 9.6 John 10.28 John 3.5 Rom. 8.12 In him was life The Father of eternity I give unto them eternall life that is not by merit onely but also by power and working Of the holy Ghost likewise it is said Except a man be borne of water and of the Spirit he cannot enter into the Kingdome of God He that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortall bodies by his Spirit dwelling in you And this testimony is to be observed for the confirmation of the God-head of both Object But the Ministers also give life according to that 1 Cor. 4.15 1 Tim. 4.16 In Christ Jesus I have begot you through the Gospel In doing this thou shalt both save thy selfe and them that heare thee Therefore God onely giveth not life Answ There may be many subordinate causes of one effect Christ and the holy Ghost give life by their own power the Ministers are only instruments by whom Christ worketh through the vertue of his Spirit Let a man so think of us 1 Cor. 4.1 3.5 6. as of the Ministers of Christ and disposers of the secrets of God Who is Paul then And who is Apollos but the Ministers by whom ye beleeved and as the Lord gave to every man I have planted Apollos watered but God gave the increase Repl. But Christ giveth life by a communicated power Therefore not by his proper power Ans He giveth it by a power communicated but communicated from everlasting as he was begotten from everlasting By retortion therefore it followeth thus He giveth life by a power communicated to him of his Father from everlasting John 5.26 Therefore he giveth it by his owne power As the Father hath life in himselfe so likewise hath he given to the Sonne to have life in himselfe 3. To whom everlasting life is given EVerlasting life is given to all and only such as are elect from everlasting or All the Elect and they alone are partakers of everlasting life John 10 28. John 17.9 12. Rom. 11.7 to them that are converted in this life I give unto them eternall life that is to my sheep who are his elect and chosen I pray for them I pray not for the world but for them which thou hast given me for they are thine Those that thou gavest me have I kept and none of them is lost but the child of perdition Againe faith and repentance are proper to the Elect only The Elect have obtained it and the rest have been hardned We must observe in this place whereas the question is To whom everlasting life is given that it is better to answer That eternall life is given to the Elect * As they are elected so they are but chosen to eternall life as they are converted so they are in part admitted unto it and begin to be put in dossession of it then to say It is given unto the converted For Conversion and Faith are the beginning of eternal life And to say eternall life is given to the converted were all one as if you would say life is given to the living Also when the question is To whom the beginning of everlasting life is given we answer rightly Unto the Elect. For if you say It is given to the converted you answer no more then that which is in question and doubt seeing it is demanded who they are whom God converteth 4. For what cause everlasting life is given EVerlasting life is given unto us not for our works either present or fore-seen God of his free mercy giveth us for Christs sake everlasting ●●sief that we might praise and magnifie the same his mercy for ever Rom. 6.23 Ephes 2.8 9 10. but for the alone free mercy of God and his love towards mankind and his will of shewing his mercy in saving the Elect for the alone satisfaction and merit of Christ imputed unto us by faith to this end that God may be magnified of us for ever The gift of God is eternall life through Jesus Christ our Lord. By grace we are saved through faith and that not of our selves it is the gift of God Not of works lest any man should boast For we are his workmanship created in Christ Jesus unto good works which God hath ordained that we should walke in them So God loved the world John 3.16 that he gave his only begotten Sonne that whosoever beleeveth in him should not perish but have everlasting life c. Wherefore the impellent or motive cause of everlasting life given unto us is not any work of us men either present or fore seen in us For before the beginning of eternall life that is before conversion all our works merit eternall death after the beginning thereof that is after conversion they are effects thereof and nothing is cause of it selfe We are indeed brought unto it by many meanes but the meanes by which we are led of God unto eternall life are one thing and the cause for which we are led unto it another The finall cause or end for which eternall life is given us is that the mercy of God might be acknowledged and magnified of us To the praise of the glory of his grace Ephes 1.6 wherewith he hath made us accepted in his beloved For the same cause God giveth us eternall life for which he chose us 5. How everlasting life is given unto us God giveth us everlasting life by ths outward ministery of the Word and the inward ministery of the Spirit EVerlasting life is given us by faith faith by the preaching of the Word and inward efficacy of the
which are not converted is done without faith and is therefore sin and abomination before God First therefore those things which are spoken of Conversion are in few words to be expounded Then ensueth the common place of good works for by them we declare our thankfulnesse towards God and true conversion cannot stand without good works Afterwards is adjoyned the doctrine which intreateth of the law whereby we learn to know good works For those are truly said to be good works by which we worship God aright and shew our selves to be thankfull which are done by faith according to the rule and prescript only of Gods law Because God will chiefly be worshipped of us and magnified by invocation and for this cause we shew our thankfulnesse most of all by prayer and thanksgiving at length the common place of prayer shall be lastly annexed These things we purpose to declare briefly and in order here following ON THE 32. SABBATH Quest 86. When as wee are delivered from all our sins and miseries without any merit of ours by the mercy of God only for Christs sake for what cause are we to doe good works Answ Because after that Christ hath redeemed us with his bloud he reneweth us also by his Spirit to the image of himselfe that we receiving so great benefits should shew our selves all our life time thankfull to God a Rom. 6.13 12.1 2. 1 Pet. 2.5 9. 1 Cor. 6.20 and honour him b Matt. 5.16 1 Pet. 1.12 Secondly that every of us may be assured of his faith by his fruit c 2 Pet. 1.10 Matth. 7.17 18. Galat. 5.6 22. And lastly by our honest and good conversation may win others unto Christ d 1 Pet. 2.12 Romans 14.19 Matthew 5.16 The Explication THis Question concerning the impulsive causes of good works is moved in the first place and before we come to handle the Question of mans conversion not that good works goe before conversion but for the orderly connexion of this latter part of Catechism with the former For out of the doctrine of free satisfaction humane reason thus argueth He is not bound to satisfie for whom another hath already satisfied Christ hath satisfied for us Therefore there is no need that we should do good works Ans The Conclusion containeth more then the premisses enforce that which followeth out of the two former propositions is this Therefore we our selves are not bound to satisfie and thus much we grant 1. In respect of Gods justice which exacteth not a double payment 2. In respect of our salvation for which if wee were bound to satisfie it should be no salvation at all Farther also we are obliged unto obedience and good works in regard of those causes which are in this Question inlarged 1. Because good works are the fruits of our regeneration by the holy Ghost which is perpetually united with free justification For whom hee called them also he justified and glorified Rom. 8.30 Such were some of you but ye are washed but ye are sanctified 1 Cor. 6.11 Therefore they who perform no good works declare themselves to be neither regenerated by the Spirit of God nor redeemed by Christs bloud 2. To testified our thankfulnesse towards God for the benefit of our redemption Rom 6.13 12.1 Give your members weapons of righteousnesse unto God Give up your bodies a living sacrifice holy acceptable unto God which is your reasonable serving of God 3. That God may be honoured by us Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorifie your Father which is in heaven Mat. 5.16 That by your good works which they shall see 1 Pet. 2.12 they may glorifie God in the day of visitation 4. Because good works are fruits of faith by which we judge of our owne faith and of the faith of others Give diligence to make your calling and election sure 1 Pet. 1.10 after which words of Peter certain copies insert these words by good works Matth. 7.17 Every good tree bringeth forth good fruit A good tree cannot bring forth evill frruit Galat. 5.6 22. Faith worketh by love The fruit of the Spirit is love joy peace long-suffering gentlenesse goodnesse faith meeknesse temperance 5. That we may win others unto Christ When thou art converted Luke 22.32 1 Pet. 3.1 strengthen thy brethren Let the wives be subject to their husbands that even they which obey not the word may without the word be won by the conversation of the wives Let us follow those things which concern peace Rom. 14.9 and wherewith one may edifie another These causes are with diligence to be urged and unfolded unto the people in our sermons of exhortation and hereunto tendeth the whole sixth Chapter and part of the eighth Chapter of the Epistle to the Romans as far as the sixteenth Verse Three causes why justification and regeneration have a necessary coherence For farther declaration of the first cause we may observe that the benefit of justification is not given without the benefit of regeneration 1. Because Christ hath merited both to wit remission of sins and the dwelling of God in us by his holy Spirit Now the holy Ghost is never idle but alwaies working and so maketh those men in whom he dwelleth conformable unto God 2. Because by faith the hearts are purified Acts 15.9 For in them to whom Christs merit is by faith applied is kindled a love of God and earnest desire of performing things acceptable unto him 3. Because God imparteth the benefit of justification to none but to them which prove thankfull But no man can prove thankfull but he which receiveth the benefit of regeneration Therefore neither of these can be separated from the other We are farther to note the difference of the first and second cause The first sheweth us What Christ worketh in us by the vertue and power of his death The second teacheth us What things we are bound unto in regard of the benefits we have received Quest 87. Cannot they then be saved which be unthankfull and remain still carelesly in their sins and are not converted from wickednesse unto God Ans By no means For as the Scripture beareth witnesse neither unchaste persons nor idolaters nor adulterers nor theeves nor covetous men nor drunkards nor slanderers nor robbers shall inherit the kingdome of God a 1 Cor. 6.9 Ephes 5 5 6. 1 John 1.14 The Explication THis Question is a collection or consequent issuing out of the former Question and depending thereon For whereas good works are the fruits of our regeneration and are the thanks we owe unto God and evident arguments of true faith which whosoever have they onely are saved on the contrary it followeth that evill works are the fruits of the flesh unthankfulnesse to God and cleer arguments of infidelity wherein whosoever persevere they cannot be saved Therefore they who are not converted from their evill
that either we sin or wholly revolt from thee Ob. Temptations which are good in respect of God are evill in respect of the Divell and yet notwithstanding into them doth God leade us Therefore God is the cause of sin Ans This reason containeth a fallacy of the accident They are sins in respect of the Devill because he will thereby allure us to sinnes in respect of God they are not sinnes because they are a triall and a reclaiming of us from sinnes as also because they are a confirmation and strengthening of our faith Wherefore as temptations are trials chastisements martyrdomes they are sent of God but as they are evill and sinnes God will them not to wit as To will them is to approve and worke them but onely permitteth them 3. What is To deliver us from evill BY the name of Evill some understand here the Divell some sinne some death but the best is to comprehend in it all evils both of crime and paine whether they be present or to come yea and the Divell himselfe the author and Grandcomplotter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 John 2.14 Mat. 5.37 or Arch-contriver of all mischiefes who is called that wicked one by a significant propriety of speech I write unto you young men because yee have overcome the wicked Whatsoever is more then these commeth of Evill Cyprian understandeth this petition of evils that is of all adversities and afflictions which the enemie attempteth against us from which we can have no sure guard except God protect and deliver us When as then we desire that God will deliver us from evill we desire 1. That he will send no evill on us What here we pray for but deliver us from all evils present and to come both of crime and paine 2. That if he send on us any evils that he would mitigate them in this life and turne them unto our salvation that they may be good and profitable unto us 3. That he will at length in the life to come fulfill and perfectly deliver us and wipe away every teare from our eyes 4 Why this petition is necessary THis petition is necessary 1. In respect of the multitude and power of our enemies and the greatnesse of evils and our owne weakenesse and infirmity 2. In respect of the former petition for the obtaining thereof because our sinnes are not remitted except we persist in faith and repentance If then we will that God remit and pardon us our sinnes we must stand stedfast in faith and repentance but stedfast we shall not stand if we be tempted above our strength if we fall into sinnes if lastly we revolt from God himselfe Object We are not to pray against such things as are good and profitable for us The temptations of God as trials diseases poverty sending false Prophets are good things and profitable unto us We are not therefore to pray against the temptations of God Ans The Minor containeth a fallacy of the accident We are not to pray against such things as are good and profitable that is which are by themselves profitable or good But afflictions trials crosses and other temptations are by themselves evill and unprofitable and not good But yet they are good and profit us only by an accident which accident is the mercy of God accompanying them without which they are not only not profitable but also a part of death and a most present way to death both temporall and eternall Wherefore as afflictions and crosses are evill by themselves and destroy nature so far forth we pray against them but as they are good and profitable unto us that beleeve so we pray not against them or we pray not against that good which concurreth with afflictions and the crosse but against the crosse it selfe and afflictions which are by themselves evill because they destroy nature So also we pray against death as being evill by it selfe and Christ himselfe also prayed against it Mat. 26.39 Let this cup passe from me As then death was a destruction a torment and evill so Christ prayed against it and would it not yea neither would the Father himselfe it as it is so considered But as Christs death on the Crosse was a ransome for the sins of the elect so both Christ and the Father would the same Neverthelesse not as I will but as thou wilt Object 2. What things God will those things ought we not to refuse But God will our temptations Therefore we may not refuse them Answ What things God will those we ought not to refuse that is in such respect as he will that we suffer them with a submitting of our will unto his divine will or such things as he simply will But God willeth not simply temptations neither in this respect as they are a destruction but as they are exercises of faith and prayer or martyrdomes or a tryall of our constancy and in this respect and so far we ought also to wish them but not simply And that we are not simply to will or wish temptations or afflictions it hereby easily appeareth because it is patience to suffer them which it should not be but rather our duty if we ought simply to wish them neither might we pray against them God will not therefore that we wish for evils as evils but as evils are good so will he have us to beare them patiently Object 3. What thou shalt not obtaine that thou desirest in vaine But we shall not obtaine never to fall into temptation Wherefore in vaine do we desire it 2 Tim. 3.12 For all that will live godly in Christ Jesus must suffer persecution Ans This is a fallacy putting that for a cause which is no cause For therefore desire we that we be not led into temptation not because we are wholly to be delivered but 1. Because we are delivered from many things in which we should perish if we should not request deliverance This is a cause sufficient 2. That those evils also into which we fall may be good and profitable unto us And to those which desire in generall deliverance will God grant these two so great blessings But yet notwithstanding by reason of the remaines of sin in us he will have this benefit to be imperfect which neverthelesse we are to aske wholly with submitting of our will unto the will of God and with full perswasion that in the life to come we shall wholly attaine unto it The use of this petition is The uses of this petition Confession of our infirmity Mat. 25.41 A confession of our infirmity in sustaining or bearing the very least temptations that no man insolently and proudly lift up himself as Peter did when he professed that he would die with Christ nor account the glory of his confession and sufferings for his own seeing the Lord himselfe teacheth us humility saying Watch and pray that yee enter not into temptation 1 Cor. 10.12 He that thinketh he standeth let him take
heed lest he fall A declaration of the miseries of this life A declaration of the miseries of this life lest we should wexe secure and love and cleave to the world A confession of Gods providence A confession of Gods providence whereby as Cyprian testifieth is shewed that the Divell can effect nothing against us except God first permit him that so our whole feare and reverence might bend to God-wards seeing in our temptations that wicked one can doe nothing except power be given him of God Now the Divell hath power over us according as our sinnes reigne in us as it is said Who gave Jacob for a spoile Esay 42.24 and Israel to the robbers did not the Lord because we have sinned against him For they would not walke in his wayes neither be obedient unto his Law And this power indeed is given him to a double end either to our punishment when we offend or to our glory when we are tried c. Thus far Cyprian The order and coherence of the petitions Now we are to observe the order and coherence of these petitions 1. The Lord commandeth us to desire the true knowledge of God and his promise which is the cause of all other his blessings 2. He willeth us to desire that God would governe us by his Spirit and so continually preserve and confirme us in this knowledge 3. That every of us may doe and fulfill thereby his duty in his vocation and calling 4. That he would give us those things whereby every one may doe his duty namely corporall blessings The fourth petition then agreeth with the former because if we must at all be in our own vocation and calling we must live and have things necessary for the maintenance of our life 5. He adjoyneth next after the petition of spirituall and corporall blessings a very fit objection of our unworthinesse That thou mayest give us spirituall and corporall blessings forgive us our debts Wherefore the fifth petition is the ground and foundation of the rest which being overthrowne the rest fall to ground For if thou resolve not that thou hast God gracious and favourable unto thee how shalt thou have him to be mercifull How shalt thou continue in that knowledge which thou hast not How shalt thou doe thy duty and the will of God seeing thou art his enemy and endeavourest the contrary How shalt thou ascribe all things to God How shall they turne to thy salvation 6. After the petition of spirituall and corporall blessings there followeth lastly the petition of our deliverance from evils both present and to come And from this last petition we returne againe to the first Deliver us from all evils both of crime and paine both present and to come that we may know thee to be our perfect Saviour and so thy name may be hallowed and sanctified of us Quest 128. How concludest thou this Prayer Answ For thine is the kingdome the power and the glory for ever that is we aske and crave all things of thee because seeing both thou art our King and almighty thou art both willing and able to give them all unto us a Rom. 10.11 12. 2 P●t 2.9 And these things we therefore aske that out of them not to us but unto thy holy Name all glory may redound b John 14.15 J●●●m 33.8 9. Psalme 115.1 The Explication THis last part of prayer serveth to confirme our faith and beliefe or confidence of being heard and obtaining our desire to wit that God will and is able to give us those things which we desire Thine is the kingdome Thine is the kingdome This first reason is drawne from the duty of a King which is to heare his subjects to defend and preserve them Therefore thou O God seeing thou art our King mightier then all our enemies having all things in thy power good and evill evill so that thou art able to represse them good so that there is no good so great which thou canst not give as is agreeing and standing with thy nature and seeing we are thy subjects be present and assist us with thy power and save us as who art loving unto thy subjects and thy protection and safe-guard is alone saving and preserving He is called a King 1. Because he hath power over all creatures 2. Because he is the peculiar King of the Church The power And the power The second reason is drawne from the power of God Heare us O God and give us what we desire because thou art mightier then all our enemies thou art able to give us all things and thou only art able in thee alone resteth this power joyned with exceeding goodnesse The glory And the glory The third reason is taken from the end or finall cause We desire these things for thy glory From thee alone the true God and soveraigne King we desire and expect all good things and professe thee to be the Author and fountaine of all good things And verily because this glory is due unto thee therefore also do we desire them of thee Heare us therefore for thy glory For this petition and expectation of all good things from thee is nothing else but the attributing and yeelding unto thee thy due glory and honour and especially because thou wilt also for thy glory sake give us those things which we desire For what things serve for thy glory the same wilt thou performe and do but those things which we desire serve for thy glory therefore thou wilt give them us Give us therefore these things that we desire and the glory shall returne and redound unto thee if thou deliver us For so shall thy kingdome and power and glory be manifested Object We seeme to bring perswasive and moving arguments unto God whereby we may move him to doe what we desire But in vaine are reasons used to him who is unchangeable God is unchangeable Therefore in vaine use we these reasons unto him Ans This is a fallacy putting that for a cause which is no cause For we grant this argument in respect of God but not in respect of us For we do not when we thus speak use reasons to move God or perswade him to do it but to perswade our selves that God will do this and to confirm and assure us that we shall be heard and to acknowledge our necessity and the goodnesse and truth of God Wherefore these reasons are not adjoyned to our prayers as thereby to move God but only to confirme and assure us that God will doe what we desire because these are the causes why he doth it Thou art a most good King therefore thou wilt give these things to thy subjects Thou art most powerfull and mighty therefore thou wilt shew thy power in giving these gifts which are most great and which can be given of none other but of thee alone It shall be to thy glory therefore thou wilt doe it because thou hast care of
every day more and more deviate from that primitive simplicity But why do I wonder 2 Thes 2.1 Hom. 3. in Rom. Hom. 3. in Tit. 3. seeing God punisheth the world by sending upon it strong delusions in that it loves not the truth But because as Chrysostome saith Errour is various and intricate and hath a restlesse and unstable quality it is no strange thing that of one errour many do arise and that out of one Controversie ten doe proceed At the first the onely Controversie was about the tenth Article concerning Christs body lurking under the bread as also of the orall manducation in the Lords Supper which Controversie was long in agitation amongst the Lutherans but in all the other Articles here set downe by us there was a full consent as the Acts of the Conference at Marpurge Anno 1529. do witnesse yea Divines began to agree in the doctrine of the Lords Supper Anno 1536. but this agreement was quickly broke because after Luthers death some could not handsomely maintainer their opinion of Christs corporall presence in the Bread seeing none of the Evangelists did utter these words of Christ This is my body after this manner This bread is my body or under the bread or under the species of bread lurks my body Besides Christ whom they include in the Wafer or Host according to our Catholick beliefe is not now upon the earth but in heaven sitting at the right hand of God from whence he will come to judge the quick and the dead they were in good hope to shelter their opinion under some other Articles of faith and chiefly under that of the personall union of the two natures in Christ Hence they went about to establish his Ubiquity and Omnipotency hitherto unheard of in the world using this shift If Christs body be every-where it will be also in every Host if it be in every Host then it will be every-where Then they fondly imagined the Article of Christs sitting at the right hand of the Father to be the same with that of the personall union of the two natures as if you would say Christs humanity with the Sonne of God which is that very right hand of God every-where present is personally united and filleth heaven and earth Thirdly because they saw that the Article of Christs Ascension did overthrow the Ubiquity and corporall presence in the Bread by an unheard of and Allegoricall way they expounded Christs Ascension to be meant of nothing else but of his vanishing into the aire of his advancing unto the Divinity and of his Ubiquity To these new monsters of opinions as well the Pontifician Doctors as those of our profession besides divers of the Lutherans did stoutly oppose themselves defending the ancient simplicity and truth of these Articles of our faith which the new Artists of Ubiquity perceiving and finding that they failed here of their purpose they found out new engines and began to accuse those whom they stile Calvinists of other errours to provoke them to Conference and Disputation not onely about the Person of Christ but also about the other Articles of Christianity bragging they could convince them of many fundamentall errours taught in the Reformed Churches Concerning Predestination That all men were not elected but that many were called and few elected Concerning the merit of Christs death That the wicked and incredulous so long as they remained such were not partakers thereof but onely the Elect that beleeved That the promises of the Gospel were universall in respect of the faithful but not of unbeleevers and Epicures Concerning faith That it is the singular gift of God That it is given onely to the Elect in whom onely it is rooted and permanent That the same can never be finally lost because it proceeds of the incorruptible seed of Gods word Concerning the Ministery That Ministers were onely outward dispensers of the word but God wrought inwardly by his Spirit Concerning Sacraments That Christ was yesterday to day and the same for ever and that therefore he was the matter or subject of all Sacraments both of the Old and New Testament Besides that no man either by the word or Sacraments could be partaker of Christ without faith Concerning Baptisme That there was a two-fold washing one outward of water by which the filth of the body is washed away the other inward of the bloud and Spirit of Christ which is the Covenant of a good conscience with God That the Minister baptised onely with water but Christ in the true administration of Baptisme did baptise with the holy Spirit Also that Infidels were not regenerated by Baptisme Also that the children of Christians were children of the promise and of the Covenant even before Baptisme and that for this cause they were to be baptised This doctrine since the yeare 1586. hath beene not onely condemned as Calvinisticall and Hereticall but also reproached and accursed by them who glory in the name of Lutherans And when among the ignorant Vulgar they traduce these Articles as errours of Calvinisme they thinke they have bravely maintained their Cause in defending their fictions of Ubiquity and of a carnall presence in the Lords Supper which now we leave for a while committing our whole cause of God But it is certaine that they have so farre relapsed into the sinke of Pelagianisme and Popery that it is to be feared they will overwhelme the Lutheran Churches with greater darkenesse then ever heretofore and yet alas they stick not to call this the true Evangelicall doctrine and that of the Augustan Confession teaching concerning predestination that in God is no election but that he did promiscuously choose all men Concerning Christs death that he by his death redeemed all men and reconciled them to God that he hath sanctified them and hath received them into favour whether they beleeve or not Concerning remission of sins that a generall pardon is given to all men both faithfull and Infidels Concerning the promises of the Gospell that they belong to all both faithfull and Infidell Concerning Faith that it is the cause of Election that God did first foresee who were to beleeve and persevere that faith is not in our power that notwithstanding it is a worke which God promotes in us and that it may be lost and may be in hypocrites Concerning the Ministery that Ministers may by their preaching conferre divine efficacy and that they are dispensators both outwardly and inwardly Concerning Sacraments that the Sacraments of the Old Testament were onely shadows without Christ the body Concerning Baptisme that there is a mysticall efficacy in the water to wash away sinne and to regenerate that the holy Ghost and his efficacy are annexed to the water that the water and Spirit have the same effect that hypocrites and Infidels in Baptisme are regenerated by the holy Ghost that the Minister doth not onely baptise with water but conferres also the holy Ghost that Christian Infants before Baptisme belong no more to
and in the obedience of faith by the grace of the holy Ghost On the other side what sort of men he hath appointed to condemne to wit such as are not converted Infidels strangers from Christ both which is taught in the Gospell So many good men chiefly Politicians judge of this Article neither do they think it fitting to wade deeper into this Controversie especially seeing it seemes to ascribe all the meanes of salvation fully to God to Christ and to grace And truly here should be no question if the Authors meant onely this that by this Article is explained the popular doctrine of the qualities of those that shall be saved or damned But because in the Conference they professe Coll. Hag. p. 84. That this Article containes the doctrine of predestination to salvation but deny that the qualities of those that shall be saved to wit faith and perseverance proceed from predestination as from their fountaine but contend that these are in order before predestination or election and not obscurely they make them depend upon mans will whence necessarily God must be robbed of the full glory of our salvation man must be puffed up with pride our Christian comfort in life and death must be undermined free justification and the assurance of salvation must be denied whatsoever they pretend in their garnished speeches to the contrary Therefore this Article cannot be simply approved of and it is full of equivocations and dangerous swelling phrases under which Pelagianisme is under-hand brought into the Church which fraud that it might appeare the lesse they purposely abstaine from the word predestination Now in Austines time the Pelagian Heresie was thus 1. That Adams sin hutted no man but himselfe and that man is not borne now in a worse condition then he was created 2. That Christ was seene and died to expiate all sins committed by imitation of Adam 3. That salvation in Christ is so proposed to all men that whosoever will beleeve and be baptised may be saved 4. That God fore-knew before the foundation of the world who were to beleeve and doe good works and who were to continue in the Faith being assisted by grace and that he predestinated for his kingdome whom he fore-saw being freely called would beleeve above others and would be worthy of their calling and should die an happie ●eath 5. That the grace of God was given to all men according to their merit for the better using of their free-will 6. And that in this life so much is given that man may if he will be free from all sin Against this Heresie Hierome and Austine disputed at large and Austine retracted three whole Chapters Tom. 7. in opusculis 1. Concerning originall sin 2. Of grace and the cause of predestination 3. Of the perfection of righteousnesse Pelagius in the Synod of Palestina being condemned did so farre revoke his errour that he wished Anathema to him that thinks or sayes Apud Augustin de grat Christi cap. 2. that the grace of God by which Christ came into this world to save sinners is not necessary not onely every houre or every moment but also to every one of our actions and who goe about to take this away they shall be punished eternally Who would not cleere Pelagius in this case but under the buskin of this word grace he deluded the Palestine Bishops as Austine sheweth he left behinde him two disciples Caelestius and Julianus young men of a sharpe wit and with whom Austine in Africa had much adoe At last this infection flew over the Mediterrane-sea into Sicilie and Marsiles in France not all of it but onely so much as concerned the point of grace and predestination and the death of Christ the Asserters of which were called Semi-pelagians and the remainders of the Pelagians of which points there are extant the Epistles of Prosper Aquitanicus and of Hilarius Arelatensis to Austine whose learned Answer contained in two Books of the predestination of the Saints and of the good of perseverance and in a third concerning correction and grace To which Answer if the Authors of these Articles at this day would stand as they may and should stand for it is altogether S. Pauls doctrine the matter had beene decided ere this For indeed Arminius with his followers have at this day re-assumed the cause of the Marsilians and Syracusians but somewhat more handsomly dressed Neither could he be ignorant of this and therefore he used but little ingenuity in his tergiversation when he wrote in the Articles That he acknowledgeth neither Semi-pelagianisme objected against him nor nine nor five nor foure inches of it But to returne to the Article in it there be divers equivocations as shall appeare 1. The first lofty phrase lieth hid in Gods immutable Decree According to Scripture that is Gods immutable Decree which absolutely is not changed nor by the creatures can be changed for so God pronounceth himselfe immutable and his counsell immutable Mal. 3.6 Isaiah 46.10 I am God and change not My counsell shall stand and I will do all that I have decreed But they understand that God by an immutable Decree indeed hath decreed to save beleevers in regard of the species that is none but beleevers but not by a decree altogether immutable in respect of the individuals to wit of this or that beleever but under a condition if this or that beleever do not cause a change For they thinke as appeares by the fifth Article that they who beleeve to day may be unbeleevers to morrow and againe of unbeleevers may come to beleeve consequently therefore they thinke that God to day may decree not to save which yesterday by his immutable decree he appointed to save and that againe he can decree to save them still changing their condition If this be to give to God an immutable decree let themselves judge sure Jam. 1.17 no shadow can be more changeable then such a decree which the Scripture denieth The Authors Decreti Holland pag. 5. place such a decree in God Mat. 11.21 23.37 denying That any by God are invited to salvation to whom he hath not altogether decreed to give salvation for this being granted we must say that God had altogether decreed to give salvation to the Cities of Judea and Galilee whom Christ by preaching invited to salvation but seeing they beleeved not they were not saved therefore either he before did ●ot decree to save them or afterward he changed his decree 2. The second ●●●●ing phrase and that the chiefest the foundation of the rest containing the ●●●●●e of the whole cause and difference of both parts is in the word appointed This according to the Scripture signifieth to us that God not onely from eternity appo●●●ed to save them who in time beleeve and persevere and are saved but also to elect them in Christ and to predestinate them to salvation and decreed to bestow on them qualities requisite to salvation to wit faith
to and fro to seek the word of the Lord and shall not finde it We now see the nation of the Jewes which the Lord honoured with so many excellent titles and priviledges with so great successe and miracles exalted it far above all other mortall men now to be more abject than the meanest of all men and so grosly strangely grown blind amidst the noone-day-light of the Prophets preaching that the example thereof duly considereed may not to say move laughter or anger strike a terrour into us The cause of this so great an evill we heare the words of the Prophets and of Christ himself to averre to have bin their contempt and neglect of the sound doctrine concerning God our salvation Joh. 5.43 I come in my Fathers name and yee receive me not If another shall come in his own name him will ye receive I forbeare the recitall of other examples only one will I touch which is of the kingdom of England which a little before was most flourishing and happy Englands Manian persecution and that not only because it is a very sad example but also because there is not one in this our assembly that is such a youth but that it fell out in his daies For in this our age the knowledge of the divine truth was given to England and in the reigne of Edward the sixt the Church and Schooles were excellently constituted in a flourishing estate And when the King was seventeen yeare old hee was beautified with piety vertue and learning far above the modell of that age so that nothing in the most glorious kingdome was more glorious than the King so that this kingdome came behind no part of the whole world in happines But on a suddain this Edward a Prince of great hope being taken out of this life the Papal tyranny soon again surprised his kingdom the most glorious Churches were cruelly wasted with imprisonments banishments fire sword and men of eminent learning holines without any respect of age sexe or dignity some of them haled to the fire and other most cruell punishments and others cast out into all corners of the world It was now onward in the fift yeare whiles these calamities continued there But I rather acknowledge and bewaile our owne sins than take upon me the judging of others The cries of the English banished which I heard with these eares are not out of my hearing wherewith they complained of the unthankfulnesse security and surfeit of the Gospel that had seized upon their Nation But doe wee looke to it better to manage our condition would God we did When Pilate mingled the bloud of the Galileans with their sacrifices saith Christ Luke 13.3 Vnlesse yee repent yee shall all likewise perish The tumults and ruines of Empires by which the Church is shaken are before our eyes threatning us the theevish Turkes gape after us endeavouring with might and main to take Christ from us and to obtrude upon us their Mahomet and we heare that daily they prey upon our neer bloud drawing away Christian youths to their filthy and blasphemous society and to make a breach in upon us The abomination of the kingdome of Antichrist curseth us and crieth out that we are to be destroyed And there are more heresies and depravations of the truth hatched and increased within without the Church like Hydraes heads than can be numbred Isay 1.2 Rom. 9.10 And now verily is that fulfilled that unless the Lord preserve unto us a seed we shal be like to Sodom Gommorrah nothing of us remaining Let us not be now so stupid or such haters of our selvs as not to be moved with these things Let us seek the Lord whiles he may be found Isay 55.6 Let every one enter into a serious consideration of his own salvation to hold fast in our hearts those things which we collect and are fitted pertinently unto the same that if the world broken to peeces should fail yet the ruines thereof should not affright us These things we have spoken of do concern al men but chiefly our order of Scholars For all that ever instructed or governed schooles or have bin imployed in those things or would have others to be imployed have agreeed upon this That they that are brought up in the schools should be not only more learned but also more godly Which being so let men acknowledge that a school is a company according to Gods ordinance Scholars should have learned godlinesse or godly learning teaching and learning the doctrine necessary for mankind concerning God and other good things that the knowledge of God among men may not be extinguished but the Church may be preserved 8. Motive that doctrine 〈◊〉 be the ma●k of the Church chiefly of the Schooles many may be made heirs of eternall life discipline may be upheld and men may have other honest benefits by the arts Therefore we swerve far from too far from our scope or marke unlesse we be setled in this purpose that we ought to be busily imployed in these Ant-hils and Bee-hives of Christ not only to be more skilled in learning but also more adorned with a good and holy conversation that we may be more acceptable to God and men And it is apparent in the Church that all instruction without the doctrine of godlines is nothing else but an erring and a withdrawing from God from true good true righteousnes true salvation For whatsoever we do not to the glory of God whatsoever we do not in the name of Christ Jesus whatsoever we do not of faith the holy spirit pronounceth as sinfull vile and condemned of God When therefore this doctrine is put out of the Schooles of the Church then not only nothing can be taught concerning true perfect vertue such as God requires but also those other few and obscure doctrines left behind of bad would make us far worse not by reason of their being amongst us but the want of those things without which nothing is holy and sound And although the consent of all men of sound judgement should satisfie us in this matter yet the divine Commandement John 5.35 2 Tim. 2.15 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 commanding us to search the Scriptures to attend to reading and rightly to divide the Word of God should be of more weight unto us And because none can orderly and plainly distinguish and lay open the speeches of the Prophets and Apostles and the parts of Religion without the instructions and exercises of the Schooles who doth not see with how neere a tye the study of godlines is knit unto the Schooles That therefore which is the chiefe work amongst men and cannot be performed of us without the help of the Schooles we judge to be chief in the Schooles namely the understanding interpretation of the Prophets Apostles And seeing there is afforded unto us Scholars more ability and opportunity of more exact knowledge of Religion than
perswade not move the mind to assent without the inward testimony of the holy Ghost But the Spirit of God when he once breedeth this most assured perswasion in our minds that the doctrine which is contained in the holy Bible is of a truth the will of God and worketh that comfort and change of our minds and hearts which is promised and taught in this book by our experience and feeling it is so confirmed that while this remaineth within us though all Angels and men should say contrary yet we would beleeve this to be the voice of God but if that remaine not or be not in us though all should say it yet we would not beleeve it Neither doth not the Spirit therefore establish the authority of the Scripture Object The Scripture beareth witnesse of the Spirit therefore the Spirit not of it Answer because we are to examine what the Spirit speaketh within us by the rule of the Scripture for before that this is done of us the Spirit himselfe declareth unto us that the Scripture is the word of God and inspired by him and that he will teach us nothing in our hearts which is not agreeable unto that testimony before set down of him in the Scripture And if this be not first most certainly perswaded us of the Spirit himselfe we will never re-call our opinions of God and his worship to the Scripture as the only rule to try them by Now then after it is declared unto us by divine inspiration that the Scripture is a sufficient witnesse of that divine revelation in our hearts then at length do we find our selves to be confirmed by the mutuall testimony of the same Spirit in the Scripture and in our hearts and we beleeve the Scripture affirming of it self 2 Tim. 3. 2 Pet. 1. That it was delivered by divine inspiration to the holy men of God 6 For what cause no doctrine besides the holy Scripture is to be received in the Church The Scripture is of God therefore the rule of faith Whereas it appeareth unto us that it is the word of God which the Prophets and Apostles have left in writing there is no man which doth not see that the Scripture must be the rule square by which all things which are taught done in the Church must be tried Now all things of which there useth to rise questions in the Christian Church do appertain either unto doctrine or unto discipline and ceremonies That the word of God ought to be the rule unto both sorts it is out of doubt But in this place we speak of the doctrine of the Church which consisteth in the sentences and decrees which we are bound by the commandement of god to beleeve or obey and therefore they cannot be changed by the authority of any creature and they are become obnoxious unto the wrath of God whosoever submit not themselves in faith and obedience unto them To these decrees and precepts the Papists adde many sentences which not only are no where delivered in Scripture but are repugnant unto it and they contend That the Church or the Bishops have authority of decreeing yea contrary and besides the Scripture what the Church must beleeve or doe and that mens consciences are bound by those decrees no lesse then by the words of the holy Scripture to beleeve or obey Contrariwise we beleeve and confesse That no doctrine is to be proposed unto the Church not only if it be repugnant unto the holy Scripture but if it be not contained in it And whatsoever either is not by the expresse testimony of the holy Scripture delivered or doth not consequently follow out of the words of the Scripture rightly understood that we hold may be without hurt of conscience beleeved or not beleeved changed abrogated and omitted The difference of the Scripture and of other mens opinions For we must ever hold a necessary difference between the bookes of the Prophets and Apostles and the writings and doctrine of others in the Church The Scripture only is of it selfe to be beleeved the rule of faith That the Scripture onely neither hath nor can have any errour in any matter other teachers both may erre and oftentimes also doe erre when they depart from the written word of God Againe that the Scriptures are beleeved on their own word because we know that God speaketh with us in them others have credit not because themselves say so but because the Scripture witnesseth so neither a whit more then they can prove by the Scripture Wherefore we do not reject others doctrine and labours in the Church but only setting them in their owne place we submit them unto the rule of Gods word This doctrine first is delivered of God himselfe and that not in one place only of the Scripture as You shall not adde unto the word which I spake unto you neither shall you take away from it And I protest unto every man that heareth the words of the prophecie of this booke Dent. 4. Revel 22. if any man shall adde unto th●se things God shall adde unto him the plagues that are written in this booke And if any man shall diminish of the words c. Neither only by these words is forbidden that no false things and openly repugnant to the written word be added to the doctrine of the Church but also that no uncertaine things or things not appertaining unto it be mingled therewith For it is not in the power of any creature to pronounce what we are to thinke of God and his will but this is onely to be learned out of that which is disclosed in his word And therefore the men of Beraea are commended Who searched the Scriptures daily Acts 17. whether these things were so 2 Faith is grounded only on the Word Secondly faith which is spoken of in the Church is a part of divine worship that is the sure assent by which we embrace every word of God delivered unto us because it is impossible for us to be deceived by it if we understand it aright Further also that it may breed in us a true worshipping of God and comfort of our soules it must stand sure and immoveable against temptations But there is no certain doctrine concerning God and Religion besides that which is knowne to be revealed in his word We may not therefore give the honour which is due unto God unto men neither may we go from certaine things to uncertaine but cleave only to the word of God in the doctrine concerning Religion and therefore humane decrees must not be accounted amongst those which we are to imbrace by faith Faith cometh by hearing hearing by the word of God c. 3 Things necessary to be beleeved or done are part of divine worship But things not prescribed are no part of divine worship Therefore they are not necessary Thirdly for so much as the worship of God is a worke commanded of God performed
by faith to this end principally that God may be honoured it is manifest that to beleeve and doe those things which cannot be denied or omitted without offending of God is the worship of God and contrariwise that God cannot be worshipped but by the prescript of his will both the consciences of all men and God himselfe in his holy word doth testifie as In vain doe they worship me who teach the doctrines and commandements of men It is as wicked therefore to number those things which are not expressed in the word of God Isa 29. Matth. 15. amongst those which are necessary to be beleeved and done in matters of Religion as it is unlawfull for any creature to thrust upon God that worship which himselfe never required 4. The Scripture is sufficient Fourthly there cannot be any thing added of men unto this doctrine without great injury and contumely done unto the holy Scripture For if other things besides these that are written are necessary to the perfection of true Religion then doth not the Scripture shew the perfect manner of worshipping God and of attaining to salvation which fighteth with the plain words of Scripture which affirme that God hath opened unto us in his Word as much as he would have us know in this life concerning his will towards us John 15. as Christ saith All things which I have heard of my Father I have made knowne unto you And Paul I have kept nothing backe but have shewed you all the counsell of God Acts 20. And Knowing that thou hast knowne the holy Scriptures from a child 2 Tim. 3. which are able to make thee wise unto salvation through the faith which is in Christ Jesus For the whole Scripture is given by inspiration of God and is profitable to teach to improve to correct and to instruct in righteousnesse 5. Other Doctors may erre the Prophets and Apostles cannot therefore they are tied to these Fifthly we are to consider the degrees of them who teach in the Church For therefore is the authority of the Prophets and Apostles far higher then of other Ministers of the Church because God called them immediatly to declare his will unto other men and adorned them with testimonies of miracles and other things by which he witnessed that he did so lighten and guide their minds with his Spirit that hee suffered them to erre in no one point of doctrine our Ministers are called by men and may erre and doe erre when they depart from the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles Wherefore the Apostle Paul saith Ephes 2. 1 Cor. 3. That the Church is builded upon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles And That hee had laid the foundation and other then that could no man lay others build upon it gold silver precious stones wood hay stubble Now it is manifest that they who may erre ought to be tied unto their doctrine who are warranted by the testimonies of God that they cannot erre Wherefore all other teachers in the Church must not bring any new point of doctrine but onely propound and expound those things unto the Church which are delivered by the Prophets and Apostles The consent of Fathers in this point For these causes therefore doth the whole ancient Church with great consent submit it selfe unto the rule of the sacred Scriptures whose authority yet ought of right to be greater then these mens who both in words and deeds fight against this opinion Basil serm de confess fidei Basil saith That it is a falling from the faith and a fault of pride either not to admit those things which are written in the holy Scriptures or to adde any thing unto them Agust Epist 3. And Augustine For neither ought wee to account of every ones discourses though they be catholike and worthy men as of the Canonicall Scriptures that it may not be lawfull for us without impairing the reverence which we owe to those men to dislike and refuse any thing in their writings if peradventure wee shall find that they have thought otherwise then the Scripture hath as it is by Gods assistance understood either of others Epist 112. or of our selves And If ought be confirmed by the plain authority of the divine Scriptures of those which are called in the Church Canonicall wee must without any doubting beleeve it as for other testimonies by which any thing is moved to be beleeved thou mayest chuse whether thou wilt beleeve them or no. But against these testimonies of the Scriptures and the ancient Church the adversaries of the truth contend that besides the doctrine which is comprised in the holy Bible other decrees also made by the authority of the Church are no lesse unchangeable and necessary to salvation then the Oracles Propheticall and Apostolike And that they may not without some shew and pretence take upon them this authority of decreeing what they list Objections of the Papists 1 Object The Scripture doth not remaine perfect Numb 21. Joshua 10. 1 Kin. 14.19 Jude 9. 14. 1 Cor. 5. Ephes 3. John 21.25 besides and contrary unto the Scripture they alledge places of Scripture in which some writings of the Prophets and Apostles are mentioned which are not come to our hands as The booke of the wars of the Lord The book of the just The booke of the Chronicles of the Kings of Judah The prophecie of Enoch and the story of the body of Moses And lastly the Apostle Paul maketh mention of his Epistles which now the Church hath not Hence therefore these men will conclude That the doctrine of the sacred Scripture is maimed and that therefore the defect hereof must be supplied by the Church But first of all concerning the holy Scripture we are to know that so much thereof hath been preserved of God for us as was necessary and profitable for the doctrine and consolation of the Church Furthermore concerning points of Religion though some holy books are wanting as those Epistles of Paul yet it is manifest that all necessary doctrine is contained in those which are extant They alledge That many things were delivered by word of mouth 2 Object Some things delivered by word of mouth Answer both before there were any Scriptures and afterward also by Christ and the Apostles as John 16.12 1 Corinth 11.34 2 Thessal 2.15 and elsewhere But those things which they delivered by word of mouth are the selfe same which they put in writing except some matters of ceremonies as Act. 15.20 1 Cor. 11.34 which maketh not for the adversaries whose traditions most of them repugne the Scriptures They alledge farther the practice and examples of the Apostles 3 Object That the Apostles have decreed against and besides the Scripture Titus 1. 1 Timothy 1 Cor. 11. 1 Cor. 14. 1 Cor. 7. 1 Cor. 6. Answer as if they did make any ordinances or lawes either besides or against the Scripture as when Paul ordaineth many
misery is his wretched estate since the fall consisting of two great evils 1. That mans nature through sin is corrupted and averted from God 2. That for this corruption it is guilty of an eternall malediction and rejected of God 2 Whence our misery is known Rom. 3.20 Deut. 27.26 We have a knowledge of this misery out of the Law of God By the Law cometh the knowledge of sin saith Saint Paul And it is the voice of the Law Cursed is he that fulfilleth not all the words of this Law Now by what meanes the Law yeeldeth us the knowledge of our misery the two next Questions which follow in order shall declare Quest 4. What doth the Law of God require of us Answ That doth Christ summarily teach us Matth. 23. Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart with all thy soule with all thy mind and with all thy strength This is the first and the great Commandement and the second is like unto this Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy selfe On these two Commandements hangeth the whole Law and the Prophets a Deut. 6.5 Levit. 19.18 Mar. 12.30 Luk. 10.27 The Explication THis summe of the Law Christ rehearseth Mat. 22.37 and Luke 10. out of Deut. 6.5 Levit. 19.18 And he expresseth what is meant by that Cursed is he that fulfilleth not the whole Law that is to say who loveth not God with all his heart with all his soul with all his mind and with all his strength and his neighbour as himselfe The which severall clauses are particularly to be unfolded more at large Thou shalt love the Lord thy God To love God with all the heart c. is on due acknowledgement of his infinite goodnesse reverently to regard him and to account him our principall and chiefest blisse and for this cause to love him above all things to rejoyce in him to relye on him to preferre his glory before all things that there be not found in us not so much as the least thought inclination or appetite of any thing that may displease him and rather to part from that which is dearest unto us and partake of any grievous calamity whatsoever then suffer our selves to be separated from communion with him or any way offend him Lastly to direct all our actions to this end that he alone may be glorified by us The Lord thy God As if hee should say Thou shalt love that God who is the Lord and thy God who is revealed unto thee who conferreth his manifold benefits upon thee and whom thou art bound to serve It is therefore an Antithesis or opposition of the true God against false gods With all thy heart By the Heart in this place is understood all the affections inclinations and appetites or desires Whereas then God requireth our whole heart his meaning is that he will have himselfe alone to be acknowledged and reckoned our soveraign and supreme God and to be loved above all things that our whole heart rest on him and not part thereof to be yeelded unto him and part unto another Nay his will is that we match and compare nothing with him much lesse preferre and admit to share or partake one jot in his love This the Scripture calleth to walk before God with a perfect heart whose contrary is Not to walk before God with a perfect heart to wit to halt and yeeld himself by halfes unto God Object God alone is to be loved therefore we ought not to love our neighbours parents and kinsfolkes Answ It is a Sophisme which Logicians call a fallacy of accident when we argue from the deniall of the manner of any thing to the simple and absolute deniall of the thing it selfe As in this present example God is chiefly to be loved and above all things that is in such manner that there be nothing at all which we either prefer or equall with him and which for his sake we are not ready presently to forgo We ought to love our neighbour our parents and other things also but not chiefly not above God not so that we rather chuse to offend God then our parents but after God and for God With all thy soule By the Soule he comprehendeth that part which is willing to any thing or the motions of the will therefore he meaneth with thy whole will and purpose With all thy cogitations By the Cogitations he understandeth the mind and understanding as if he should say So much as thou knowest of God so much also shalt thou love him But thou shalt bend all thy cogitations and thoughts to know God perfectly and aright and so shalt thou love him For so much as we know of God so much also doe we love him Now we love him imperfectly 1 Cor. 13.10 because we know him but in part in the life to come we shall know him perfectly therefore wee shall love him perfectly and that which is in part shall be abolished With all thy strength He meaneth all actions both inward and outward that they be agreeable to the Law of God Why the love of God is called the first Commandement This is the first and greatest Commandement The love of God is called the first Commandement because it is the spring and fountaine of all the rest that is the impulsive efficient and finall cause of obedience in all the rest For we therefore love our neighbour because we love God and that we may declare in the love of our neighbour that we love God In like manner it is called the greatest Commandement 1. Because the object which it immediately respecteth and considereth is the greatest object Why it is called the greatest Commandement even God himselfe 2. Because it is the end whereunto all the other Commandements are directed For our whole obedience hath this onely end that we shew our love towards God and honour his name 3. Because that is the principall worship of God whereunto the ceremoniall worship was to yeeld and give place For the Pharisees extolled the Ceremoniall law above the Morall Contrariwise Christ calleth love the greatest Commandement and preferreth the Morall law before the Ceremoniall because Ceremonies were appointed for love and are to vaile and submit themselves unto it Object Love is the greatest Commandement therefore love is greater then faith therefore love justifieth rather then faith Answ Love is here taken in generall for our whole obedience which we owe unto God A distinction of love and faith under which Faith is comprehended which faith justifieth not of it selfe as it is a vertue in man but with relation and reference to her object I meane the merit of Christ as it appeareth and applieth to it selfe that merit But that love which in speciall is properly called love is not the same with faith neither justifieth it because Christs justice is applied unto us nor by love but by faith alone The second is like unto this Thou shalt love thy neighbour
that God plagueth and scourgeth sin with sin and the sins which follow are the punishments of sins which went before Actuall sin Wherefore also God gave them up to their hearts lust unto uncleannesse they wrought filthinesse and received in themselves such recompence of their errour as was meet Objects of sin Rom. 24 27. 2 Thes 2.1 Therefore God shall send them strong delusions that they should beleeve lies c. But whereas the wit of man to such a height of insolency it is grown is accustomed to frame the like arguments for the excusing of it selfe and shifting and posting it from it selfe unto God we must here enter some large discourse of the causes of sin and shake off mans frivolous pretences in his owne behalfe Destiny Some derive the originall cause of sin from the destiny of the Stars saying Foure pretended causes of sin I have sinned because I was borne under an unluckie Planet The Divell Others when they sin and are rebuked for their sinne they make answer Not I but the Divell was in fault that committed this deed Gods will Others leaving excuses directly cast the fault upon God saying God would have it so for if he would not I should not have sinned Gods permission Others When God say they might have hindered me and yet did not himselfe is the authour of my sin With these and the like pretences it is no new thing for men to sharpen their blasphemous tongues against God For our first Parents when they had sinned and were accused of their sin by God they translate and passe over the fault committed from themselves to others neither ingenuously confesse the truth Adam returneth the fault not so much upon his wife as upon God himselfe The woman saith he which thou gavest to be with me she gave me of the tree Gen 3.12 13. and I did eate as if he should say Except thou hadst joyned her to me I had not sinned The woman simply imputeth the fault to the Divell saying The Serpent beguiled me and I did eate These are the false impious and detestable judgements concerning the originall of sinne whereby the majesty truth and justice of God is grievously offended For the nature of man is not the cause of sinne for God created it good and perfect according as it is said And God saw all things which he had made and lo they were very good Sin is an accessary quality which took possession of man after the fall and no substantiall property although after the fall it became naturall and is fitly so termed by Augustine because now we are all borne in sinne Ephes 2.3 and are by nature the children of wrath as well as others But this point would be more amplified and enlarged 1. They who make Destiny a cloak for sinne define Destiny to be a linked order through all eternity and a certaine perpetuall necessity of intents and workes according to the counsell of God or according to the evill Planets Now if you aske them Who made the Planets God say they Therefore these men lay their evill to Gods charge but such a destiny did not all the sounder Philosophers maintaine Destiny is not the cause of sin Lib. 2. cap. 6. much lesse Christians Saint Augustine against two Epistles of the Pelagians unto Boniface They saith he who hold destiny maintaine that not only actions and events but also our wils themselves depend on the position of the Planets at the time of every ones conception or nativity which they call constellations But the grace of God surpasseth not onely all the stars and all the heavens but also the Angels Let us conclude these things with the word of the Lord by his Prophet Jeremy pronouncing to this sense Jer. 10.2 3. Thus saith the Lord Learne not the way of the Heathen and be not affraid for the signes of heaven though the Heathen be affraid of such for the customes of the people are vaine Wherefore that the Astrologers call the Planet of Saturn unmercifull sharp and cruell and the Planet of Venus favourable and gentle it is the vanity of vanities for the stars have no force of doing good or ill and therefore the fault of sinners ought not to be imputed unto them 2. That the Divell is not the onely authour of sin who when as wee commit sin The Divell not the only author of sin should beare alone the blame of the sin and our selves be free from fault it is most of all declared in this that he is able to induce and entice a man to evill but not to compell him For God keepeth under the Divell by his power that he cannot doe what he will but only what and so much as God permitteth him Nay hee hath not so much as power over filthy Swine much lesse over the most noble Soules of men He hath indeed a subtilty great force in perswading but God is stronger who also never ceaseth himself to put good motions into mans mind neither permitteth he more to Sathan then he maketh profitable for man Which wee may see in that most holy man Job in the example of Paul and in his words 1 Cor. 10.13 God is faithfull which will not suffer you to be tempted above that you be able Wherefore they are vain men who unload the blame of their wickednesse on the Divels shoulders 3. It remaineth that we shew also that God is not the authour of sin God is no cause of sin God say these miscreants would have it so for if hee would not I should not have sinned Againe When he might have hindered me and yet did not himselfe is the author of my sin These are meere cavils and foisty Sophismes of the impious rout God might by his absolute power hinder evill but he will not corrupt his creature man being just and righteous Wherefore he dealeth with man after the order of man he proposeth lawes unto him he proposeth rewards and punishments he willeth him to imbrace good and flye evill To the doing of which thing neither denieth he his grace without which we can do nothing neither refuseth he our diligence and labour Here if a man cease and give over the sinne and negligence is ascribed to man not to God though he could have hindred it and did not because he ought not to hinder it lest he should trouble his appointed and settled order and destroy his owne work Wherefore God is not author of evill or sin Now in the processe of this our discourse wee will gather in one the testimonies of Scripture resolve certain doubts and discover the very fountain and originall of sin Many are the testimonies of Scripture which teach us that God is not the author of sin of which it shall suffice to propose only some few God made not death Wisd 1.13 Ezek. 13.11 Psal 5.4 5. neither hath he pleasure in the destruction of the living I desire not
they are sins For all sinnes of what quality soever they be are punished either with eternall pain as in the Reprobate or with equivalent paine to eternall as in the Son of God This death doth begin in the Reprobate even in this world that is anxiety and torment of conscience which we also should feele except we were delivered by the grace of God Now by the name of eternall death is not understood the destruction of the soule or body or the separation of them but the abandoning and banishing of the soule and body living from the face of God a continuall horrour and torment and a feeling and flying of Gods wrath and judgement a horrible murmuring against God taking vengeance of their sins If they object That the sinnes of those who beleeve in Christ are not punished with eternall death We answer that those were punished in Christ with a punishment which both for the grievousnesse of the punishment and for the dignity of the person who suffered it is equivalent to those eternall punishments which were to be inflicted upon us for our sins As it is said Isa 53.6 He hath laid upon him the iniquity of us all Against that which we affirm That eternall death is the effect of all sins yea even of the least some thus dispute Ob. Like is not to be given to things unlike but sins are not like Therefore all ought not to be punished with eternall death Answ There is more in the conclusion of this reason The regenerate though they sin are not punished with this death because Christ hath suffered an equivalent punishment for them Why the during of punishment ought to be alike to all sins but not the degree of punishment Luke 12.47 Mat. 11.24 All sins are not equall then was in the premisses for only this followeth to be concluded Therefore all sins ought not to be punished with like punishment For all sinnes even the least deserve eternall punishment because all sins offend against the eternall and infinite good Wherefore as concerning the durance and lasting of the punishment all sins are punished with like punishment but not as concerning the degrees of punishment All sins are punished with eternall torments yet so as not with equall torments The servant who knoweth the will of his Master and doth it not shall be beaten with many stripes It shall be easier for them of the land of Sodome in the day of judgement then for thee Greater sins shall be punished with more grievous torments and lesser sins with lighter but both for ever Here the Stoicks object That all sins or vices are joyned with any one vice and therefore all are like and equall But neither is this consequence of force whereas also things unlike unequall may be joyned together neither is the Antecedent granted that seemeth to be proved by the saying of James He that faileth in one Jam. 2.10 is guilty of all But James saith not that all sins or vices concurre and are joyned with one but first that in the breach of one point the whole Law is violated as the whole body is said to be hurt when one part is harmed Then that there concurreth with every sin the fountain or cause of all other sins that is the contempt of God And this evill being seated in the heart doth violate the love of God and so all other parts of our obedience towards God For no worke which proceedeth not from the perfect love dread reverence of God can agree with the Law of God or please God And yet have we experience that this hindreth not but that which is infected with one vice may be propense and prone to some sins more and to some lesse especially since vices themselves also are one opposite to another by the one of which contraries and not by both at one time every man violateth vertue Neither are those principles also of the Stoicall Philosophers to be granted That how farre soever thou goe in sinning after thou hast once past the line or middle which is vertue it is not materiall for the increasing or augmenting the fault of passing beyond the line and that all vertues are alike and equall one to another so that no man is stronger then a strong man For whereas sin is a swerving from the middle it is manifest that how much greater the swerving is so much is the sin more grievous And that vertues are both in the same and in divers men other-whiles greater other-whiles lesser even as much as the qualities of the body are different in degrees experience doth witnesse Wherefore in the judgement of God also there are degrees put as well of punishments as of sins The use of this doctrine of sin in the Church It is requisite that this doctrine be knowne in the Church 1. That knowing how great an evill sin is we may yeeld the praise of justice unto God who doth most severely punish it 2. That we may abhorre all sins with our whole heart and desire the more earnestly to be fenced and defended of God against all sin 3. That by extenuating or lessning any wee flatter not our selves in a conceit of our owne righteousnesse or in hope of escaping 4. That measuring our sin by the Law of God neither esteeming evill for good or good evill we loose not our consciences when God bindeth them nor bind them when God looseth them and acknowledging the remnant of sin in us and our manifold fallings wee should not despaire of pardon flying to God the Mediatour with boldnesse 5. That also wee may be able to discerne our selves from the wicked and profane men in whom sin reigneth and from all those that sin against the holy Ghost and that wee may conceive in our mind hope and confidence of Gods mercy 6. That wee lay not the cause or fault of our sins and destruction on God but remember that it is to be sought in our selves 7. That knowing there are degrees of punishments and sins we adde not sins to sins but consider that lesser sins shall be punished with lesser punishments and greater with greater 8. That remembring the sins of Parents are punished also in their posterity we spare not only our selves but our posterity also in avoiding sins 9. That we may give and render thankes unto God for this benefit that he for his owne glory and the gathering and salvation of his Church doth maintain and continue also amongst the wicked some order of vertue and discipline 10. That true and perpetuall thankfulnesse may be kindled in us towards God and his Son our Lord Jesus Christ in that he hath delivered us from these great evils sin and the paines and punishment of sin Quest 8. Are wee so corrupt that wee are not all apt to doe well and are prone to all vice Answ Indeed we are a Gen. 8.19 and 6.5 Job 14.4 and 15.14 16 35. John 3.6 Isa 53.6 except we be regenerated by the
Law causeth wrath c. and The letter killeth By the letter is understood the outward preaching and bare knowledge of those things which we ought to do for it teacheth indeed our duty and that righteousnesse which God requireth at our hands but it doth not make us able to performe that righteousnesse neither doth it shew us any hope to attain thereunto by another but rather accuseth and condemneth our righteousnesse The Gospel is the ministery of life The Gospel is the ministery of life and of the Spirit that is it hath the forcible operation of the holy Ghost adjoyned and doth quicken because by it the holy Ghost as by an instrument worketh faith and life in the elect Rom. 1.15 The Gospel is the power of God unto salvation to every one that beleeveth The Gospel is the preaching of repentance It was said in the definition of the Gospel and in the third difference between the Law and the Gospel that the Gospel requireth both faith and repentance or new obedience and so is the preaching both of remission of sins and of repentance Against this Flaccius Sectaries keep a stir and reason after this sort Ob. There is no precept or commandement belonging to the Gospel but to the Law The preaching of repentance is a precept or commandement Therefore the preaching of repentance belongeth not to the Gospel but to the Law Ans We deny the Major if it be generally meant for this precept is proper unto the Gospel that it commandeth us to beleeve it to imbrace the benefit of Christ and now being justified to begin new obedience or that righteousnesse which the law requireth of us Repl. Yea but the law also willeth us to beleeve God Therefore it is not proper unto the Gospel to command us to beleeve Ans Both the Law and the Gospel require faith The Law exhorteth in generall unto faith and unto such and such works in speciall Both the Law and the Gospel commandeth faith and conversion to God but diversly The Law only in generall commandeth us to beleeve God or to give credit to all his promises commandements and threatnings and that with a denouncing of punishment except we do it the Law saith Beleeve every word of God it willeth therefore that we beleeve and obey this commandement also by which God in the Gospel commandeth us to return unto him and to beleeve in Christ The Gospel exhorteth in speciall unto faith and in generall unto works But the Gospel in speciall and expresly willeth us to imbrace by faith the promise of grace by Christ and to return unto God that is saith not in generall Beleeve all the promises and denouncings of God c. for that it leaveth unto the Law but it saith plainly and expresly Beleeve this promise to wit that thy sins are pardoned thee and that thou art received of God into favour by and for Christ and return unto God Further it exhorteth us both inwardly and outwardly by the holy Spirit and by the word That we walk worthy of the Gospel that is do such works as are pleasing to God but this it doth only in generall not prescribing in particular Thou shalt do this or that but leaveth this unto the Law as contrariwise it saith not in generall beleeve all Gods promises leaving this to the Law but in speciall saith Beleeve this promise Fly unto Christ and thy sins shall be forgiven thee 4. What are the proper effects of the Gospel THe proper effects of the Gospel are 1. Faith because Faith is by hearing Rom. 10.17 2 Cor. 3.8 Rom. 1.16 and hearing by the word of God The Gospel is the ministration of the Spirit the power of God unto salvation 2. Through faith our whole conversion unto God justification regeneration and salvation for by faith as by the instrument whole Christ together with all his benefits is received 5. Whence the truth and certainty of the Gospel may appear THe truth and certainty of the Gospel appeareth 1. By the testimony of the holy Ghost 2. By the prophesies which have been uttered by the Prophets and other holy men 3. By the fulfilling of those prophesies which were accomplished in the new Testament 4. By the miracles whereby the doctrine of the Gospel was confirmed 5. By the end or property of the doctrine of the Gospel because that alone sheweth the way how to escape sin and death and ministreth sound comfort unto afflicted consciences ON THE 7. SABBATH Quest 20. Is then salvation restored by Christ to all men who perished in Adam Ans Not to all a Matt. 7.14 22.14 but to those only who by a true faith are engraffed into him and receive his benefits b Mark 16.16 Joh. 1.12 3.16 18 36. Isa 53.11 Psal 2.12 Rom. 3.22 11.20 Heb. 4.3 5.9 10.39 11.6 The Explication HAving declared the doctrine concerning the means of our delivery through Christ the question Who and By what means they are made partakers of this delivery whether all or only some orderly followeth This twentieth Question therefore is a preparation to the doctrine of faith without which neither the Mediatour nor the preaching of the Gospel profiteth any man Hereby also carnall security is prevented or met withall Gal. 2.17 and that opprobrious contumely that Christ is the minister of sin The answer to this question consisteth of two parts 1. Salvation is not restored by Christ to all that perished in Adam 2. But to those onely who by true faith are ingraffed into Christ and imbrace his benefits The former part is too too evident by daily experience John 3.36 John 3.5 Mat. 7.21 He which beleeveth not in the Son shall not see life but the wrath of God abideth on him Except a man be born from above he cannot enter into the kingdom of God Not every one that saith unto me Lord Lord shall enter into the kingdome of heaven The cause why all are not saved by Christ Why all are not saved by Christ is not the insufficiency of the merit and grace of Christ for Christ is the full propitiatory sacrifice for the sinnes of the whole world as concerning the worth and sufficiency of the ransome and price which he paid but it is the infidelity of men whereby they refuse the benefits of Christ offered in the Gospel and therefore perish not through any defect of Christs merit but through their own fault The other part also is proved by Scripture As many as received him John 1.12 Isa 53.11 to them he gave power to be the sons of God By his knowledge my righteous servant shall justifie many Now the reason why beleevers only are saved is Why the faithfull only are saved by Christ because they only lay hold on and imbrace the benefits of Christ and because in them alone God obtaineth the end for which he delivered up his Son unto death for the faithfull only
wit as touching their accomplishment and consummation Some reconcile the difference of these two in this manner Faith apprehendeth the promises proposed in the Creed concerning things to come Hope the things themselves promised which are to come But this reconcilement is not so popular and easie to be conceived by the vulgar fort as is the other Object 2. Faith is the evidence of things which are not seen Therefore not of things present Answ It is the evidence of things which are not seen to wit by the outward sense but they are seen by the eyes of the mind even as if they did lie open to the eyes of the body Again they are not seen as is afore-shewed in respect of their accomplishment and consummation 5. What are the causes of faith How the H. Ghost is the principall efficient cause of faith Ephes 2.8 THe first and principall efficient cause of faith both historicall temporary and of working miracles is the holy Ghost howbeit hee is cause of these by his divine generall working only but he is cause of justifying faith by a speciall kinde of working By the grace of God ye are saved through faith and that not of your selves it is the gift of God who enlightneth the minde that it may understand the word and moveth the will that it may assent unto the word once understood Object The divell hath historicall faith It is therefore wrought in him by the holy Ghost Ans Yea even whatsoever faith is in the divell is wrought by the Spirit of God but that by a generall and universall working only as hath been said whereby he worketh in all not by a speciall and proper action because by such a kind of working the holy Ghost fashioneth and frameth a justifying faith in the elect alone For verily whatsoever knowledge and understanding is in divels and hypocrites God effecteth it by his Spirit but not so as to regenerate or justifie them that they might rightly acknowledge him to be the authour of this gift and magnifie him therefore for after this manner hee worketh faith in the elect alone The divels therefore and hypocrites have faith from the Spirit of God but the elect from the Spirit of God sanctifying them The word of God preached the instrumentall cause of faith Rom. 1.16 Rom 10 17. 1 Cor 4.15 The instrumentall cause of faith in generall is the whole word of God comprehended in the books of the old and new Testament in which writings also are contained many works and miracles of God besides the word But the chief and proper instrument of justifying faith is the preaching of the Gospel The Gosel is the power of God unto salvation to every one that beleeveth Faith cometh by hearing and hearing by the word of God This instrument doth the holy Ghost use yet not as necessary in regard of his working but arbitrary and at his own good pleasure both to stir up faith in us and to nourish strengthen and increase the same Wherefore ordinarily justifying faith is never engendered in those who are of yeers to receive it without the preaching of the Gospel Speciall revelation the cause of faith of miracles The formall cause of faith The object of faith The subject of faith The ends of faith The cause of that faith which worketh miracles is not simply the word of God but there must necessarily come thereto an especiall or immediate revelation from God The formall cause of justifying faith is a certain knowledge and confidence in Christ The object of it is whole Christ and his benefits promised in the word The subject or part of man wherein it remaineth is the understanding will and heart of man The end or finall cause 1. The glory of God to wit the celebration of his truth justice bounty mercy which hee hath shewed in the sending of his Son and in the giving of faith in him 2. Our salvation that wee may receive the blessings which are promised in the word 6. What are the effects of faith The effects of faith THe effects of justifying faith are 1. The justifying of us before God 2. Joy resting on God and peace of conscience Being justified by faith we have peace with God 3. Our whole conversion regeneration and all our obedience which followeth faith and beginneth at the same time with faith For by faith God purifieth our hearts Rom. 5.1 To the effects of faith appertaine also the consequents thereof that is increase of spirituall and corporall gifts and the receiving of the things themselves which faith aimeth at Acts 15.9 The first then and immediate effect of justifying faith is justification from this afterwards flow all other benefits purchased by the bloud of Christ which all we beleeve to be given us by faith faith it selfe being the cause of them for That which is the cause unto any cause of any effect is likewise a cause of that effect If thererefore faith be the next cause of our justification in respect of us it is also a cause of those things which necessarily follow justification Thy faith hath saved thee Luke 8.48 In a word The effects of faith are justification and regeneration which is begun here and is to be perfected in the life to come Rom. 3.28 10.10 Acts 13.39 7. Unto whom faith is given Justifying faith is given to all the elect and to them only Joh. 6.44 10.26 Matth. 13.11 Acts 13.48 Rom. 8.30 Ephes 2.8 Rom. 10.16 2 Thes 3.2 Mat. 7.22 JUstifying faith is only proper to the elect and that to all of them for it is given to the elect alone and to all the elect even to infants as concerning some inclination No man can come to mee except the Father which hath sent mee draw him Ye beleeve not for ye are not of my sheep It is given to you to know the secrets of heaven but unto them it is not given And they beleeved as many as were ordained to everlasting life Whom he predestinated them also he called and whom hee called them also hee justified Faith is the gift of God All have not hearkened to the Gospel For all men have not faith Temporary faith and the faith of miracles is given to those who are members of the visible Church only that is hypocrites Have wee not by thy Name done many great works Cast out divels But now neverthelesse this faith of miracles ceaseth which flourished in the primitive Church for that now the doctrine is sufficiently confirmed Historicall faith all they have who are by profession of the Church whether they be of the godly or reprobates yea and they also who are not members of the Church but enemies as divels and tyrants Historicall is a part of justifying faith because there can be no assent or perswasion of a thing which is not first known Object Historicall faith is a good work The divels have historicall faith Therefore they have good works Answ Historicall
imparted by the Apostles and every one of them did bestow some part thereof but that cannot be proved This reason may be rendred thereof more probable that it was called a Symbole for that the Articles of faith are the square and rule whereunto the faith and doctrine of all orthodox or right beleeving Christians ought to agree and be conferred The Symbole is called Apostolick Two reasons why the Creed is called Apostolick Because it containeth the summe of the Apostolick doctrine which the Catechumenes were enforced to hold and professe Because the Apostles delivered that summe of doctrine to their Schollers and Disciples which the Church afterwards held as received from them This selfe same Symbole is called also Catholick because there is but one faith of all Christians Why it is called Catholick An answer to a question moved touching other Creeds Here some demand a reason Why after the Apostles Creed other Creeds as the Creed of the Councell of Nice Ephesus and Chalcedon with Athanasius his Creed were compiled and received in the Church Answ These Creeds properly are not others that is quite different in substance from the Apostolick Symbole but are onely a repetition and more ample declaration of this in all which certain words are added as an explication thereof by reason of Hereticks by whom because of the shortnesse thereof this was depraved there is no change either of the matter or of the doctrine but only of the form of declaring it as easily appeareth by comparing them together Other important and weighty causes there were which might compell the Bishops and Doctors of ancient Churches to compose and draw out these briefe compendious formes of confession especially the Church then increasing Four causes why other Creeds were made and received in the Church and heresies growing with and in the Church For instance in few That all both young and old might with more ease bear in minde the main and entire foundation of Christianity comprised in briefe That all might alwayes have in their sight and view the confession of their faith and consolation reaped thence knowing what that doctrine is for which persecution is to be sustained So God in times past made a short summary abstract of his law and promises that all might have it as a rule of life and ground of consolation obvious to their eyes That the faithfull might have a peculiar badge and cognisan whereby to be distinguished both then and in all future ages from infidels and hereticks which with wily glosing sophismes corrupt the writings of the Prophets and Apostles for which very cause also these Confessions were intituled Symboles 4. That there might be some perpetuall rule extant in publike plain briefe and easie to be known whereby to examine all manner of doctrine and interpretation of Scripture to approve and ratifie whatsoever accordeth therewith and refuse and disanull the contrary The Apostolick Creed preferred above other Creeds because 1. The phrase of it is most proper 2. The time most ancient 3. The copy most authenticall Notwithstanding the Apostles Creed far surpasseth the rest in authority 1. Because for the most part it literally consisteth of the proper words and phrases of Scripture 2. Because it is of greater antiquity then other Creeds and was delivered first unto the Church by the Apostles themselves or by their disciples and schollers and since them successively from hand to hand transferred unto us their posterity 3. Because it is the fountaine and originall draught even an authenticall rule of direction to other Creeds which for illustration of this to prevent the fraudulent sleights and forged corruption of hereticks have in universall and generall Synods or Councels been published and authorised by the whole joint-consent of the Church The certainty of this Creed dependeth not on the authority and arbitrement of men or definitive sentence of Councels but on the perpetuall concordance of holy Scripture with them and of the whole Church since the Apostles time retaining and holding fast the Apostles doctrine and testifying to all posterity that they received this doctrine at the Apostles mouthes and the mouthes of their hearers which consent is obvious to any man that daigneth to view it with both eyes and weigh it considerately For certain it is that no Congregation of Angels nor conventicle of men hath any power of instituting new lawes touching the worship of God or new Articles of faith binding the conscience for this is a work proper unto God Neither may we beleeve God for the testimony of the Church but the Church for the testimony of God This doctrine touching the causes and authority of divers Creeds is borrowed out of Ursinus Admonit Neustad de Concordia Burgens written Anno Dom. 1581. where young Divines may if they list reade a large discourse touching the truth and authority of Ecclesiasticall Writers learnedly discussed from 117. page unto the 142. page of the said Tract a briefe Type and Table whereof I have here decyphered THE TABLE The writings touching the doctrine of the Church are 1. Divine that is inspired immediately by God into the hearts of the Prophets and Apostles such as are the Canonicall books of the old and new Testament These alone are simply in their sentences and words full of divine in●piration and worthy credit and therefore are the sole rule of tryall unto all others 2. Ecclesiasticall that is written by the Doctors of the Church these are 1. Publick to wit written in the common name of the whole Church which again are subdivided into writings 1. Catholick I meane Creeds and Confessions written in the name and with the full consent of the whole orthodox right beleeving Church received and allowed by the authority thereof such as are The Apostles Creed The Creeds of the Councels of Nice Constātinople Chalcedon Athanasius his Creed 2. Particular namely the Confessions of certain Churches and Councels as divers Catechismes and the Augustan● Confession 2. Private that is written in the name and by the advice of some one private man or more as Common places Commentaries and such like ON THE 8. SABBATH Quest 24. Into how many parts is the Creed divided Answ Into three parts The first is of God the eternall Father and our Creation The second of God the Son and our Redemption The third of God the holy Ghost and our Sanctification The Explication THe principall parts of the Apostolick Creed are three 1. Of God the Father and our Creation 2. Of God the Son and our Redemption 3. Of God the holy Ghost and our Sanctification that is of the works of our Creation Redemption and Sanctification Ob. 1. Unto the Father is ascribed the Creation of heaven and earth unto the Son the Redemption of mankind unto the holy Ghost Sanctification Therefore the Son and the holy Ghost did not create heaven and earth How our Creation Redemption Sanctification are each appropriated to some one person of the
Trinity and yet all three persons have their joynt-working in them neither did the Father and the holy Ghost redeem mankind neither do the Father and the Son sanctifie the faithfull Ans It is a fallacie grounding upon that which is affirmed but in respect as if it were simply affirmed For the Creation is given to the Father Redemption to the Son Sanctification to the holy Ghost not as they are simply an operation or work for so should the other two persons be excluded from it but in respect of the order and manner of working which is peculiar and proper to every of them in producing and bringing forth the same externall work A more open declaration hereof may be this The works of our creation redemption and sanctification are the operations of the Godhead outwardly that is externall operations which God worketh on his creatures and they are undivided that is common to the three persons which they by common will and power work in the creatures by reason of that one and the same essence and nature of the Godhead which they have For the Scripture attributeth the Creation not onely to the Father but to the Sonne also and the holy Ghost All things were made by it John 1.3 Genes 1.2 Matth. 1.20 Psal 33.6 The Spirit of the Lord moved upon the waters That which is conceived in her is of the holy Ghost By the Word of the Lord were the heavens made and all the hosts of them by the breath of his mouth Likewise our Redemption is attributed to the Father and the holy Ghost John 3.17 Titus 3.5 6. God sent his Sonne into the world that the world might be saved by him Hee saved us by the renewing of the holy Ghost which hee shed on us abundantly And Sanctification both to the Father and to the Son God hath sent the Spirit of his Sonne into our hearts crying Gal. 4.6 1 Thess 5.23 1 Cor. 1.30 Ephes 5.26 Abba Father The very God of peace sanctifie you throughout Christ is made sanctification unto us Christ sanctifieth the Church All the persons therefore create redeem and sanctifie Why distinct operations or workings are attributed to the three persons Neverthelesse yet in respect of that order of working which is between them Creation is ascribed unto the Father not excluding the other persons but because hee is the fountain as of the Divinity of the Son and the holy Ghost so also of those divine operations which hee worketh and performeth by the Sonne and the holy Ghost Redemption is ascribed unto the Sonne not excluding the other two persons but because he is that person which executeth the Fathers will concerning the redeeming of mankind and doth immediatly perform the work of our redemption for the Son only was sent into the flesh and hath paid the ransome or price for our sins not the Father nor the Spirit To the holy Ghost is ascribed Sanctification not excluding the other two persons from this action but because it doth immediatly sanctifie us Object 2. The externall workes of the Godhead that is such as the whole three persons exercise not mutually one towards another but execute in the creatures are indivisible or cannot be divided that is they are not appropriated unto any one of the three persons without respect unto the other But Creation Redemption and Sanctification are externall workes of the Godhead Therefore they are indivisible and by force of good consequent there needeth no such distinction of them as is proposed Answer to the Major The works of the Trinitie are indivisible but with retaining to each person his proper and peculiar manner of working All three persons therefore work on the creatures but yet that order still is inviolably kept as that the Father still is the fountaine of the operations of the Sonne and the holy Ghost and doth all things not of any other but of himselfe by the Sonne and the holy Ghost the Sonne doth all things of the Father by the holy Ghost the holy Ghost doth all things of the Father and the Sonne by himselfe For The Father createth but mediately by the Sonne and the holy Ghost the Sonne from the Father and the holy Ghost from the Father and the Sonne The Father and the holy Ghost redeeme us but mediately by the Sonne but the Sonne immediately from the Father by the holy Ghost The Father and the Sonne sanctifie us but mediately by the holy Ghost but the holy Ghost immediately from the Father and the Sonne But as concerning the works of the Trinitie which are called outward and inward works it shall be more fully enlarged when wee come to handle the last Question save one of the doctrine touching GOD. a Deut. 6.4 Isa 44.6 45.5 1 Cor. 8.4 6. Ephes 4.6 Quest 25. Seeing there is but one only substance of God why namest thou these three the Father the Son and the holy Ghost Answ Because God hath so manifested himself in his word b Gen. 1.2 3. Psalm 33.6 Isa 6.1 3. 48.16 61.1 Mat. 3.16 17. 28.19 John 12.40 14.26 15.26 2 Cor. 13.13 Gal. 4.6 Ephes 2.18 Tit. 3.5 6. 1 John 5.7 that these three distinct persons are that one true and everlasting God The Explication IN this Question is contained the doctrine of the Church concerning one God Questions concerning God and the three persons of the Godhead The principall questions therein are 1. Whence it may appeare that there is a God 2. What hee is or what manner of God the God of the Church is whom wee worship and in what hee differeth from idols 3. Whether he be One only and in what sense there are said to be many gods 4. What the name of Essence Person and Trinity signifie and how they differ 5. Whether these names are to be used in the Church and whether they are had in the Scripture 6. How many persons there be of the God-head 7. How they differ and are to be distinguished one from another 8. For what cause it is necessary that the Doctrine of the Trinity bee held in the Church 1. Whether there be a God and whence it appeareth THe great misery of mans nature cannot be sufficiently thought upon that whereas it was created to the bright knowledge and even the very image of God it is fallen so far as not only it is ignorant who and what God is but also maketh disputation Three causes which have made men to doubt whether there be a God whether there be any God in heaven or no. The causes of this evill the Church alone doth understand the first whereof is The blindnesse and corruption of mans nature after his fall the next The instigation of the divell who would have the whole opinion of God razed out of the minds of men unto which cometh the horrible confusion of mans life and humane affairs in that oftentimes the wicked flourish and the godly either are oppressed by them
like unto our affections but are used to signifie these two things of God Two things means by the Scriptures attributing humane passions to God 1. That it is not a fained or dissembled but an earnest eternall unchangeable nature all will in God a shadow and image whereof hee would have the affections and motions created in men to be yet is it without all trouble or hindrance or diminishing of his blessednesse and joy 2. That he doth those things which men are wont to go being stirred up by those affections which are attributed to God not that he as men being moved by a present or suddain affection of the minde doth now first take counsell but doth now at the length execute and doe things which he decreed and appointed from all eternity Object 2. The promises and threatnings of God of tentimes are not fulfilled Answ The promises of God are alwayes to be understood with an exception of the crosse of the godly Gods promises threathings conditionall with an exception and of the punishments and chastisements of such as depart from God and sin or with a condition of perseverance in faith and godlinesse and also contrarily his threatnings with an exception of conversion and prayer or with a condition of perseverance in sin And these conditions are sometimes expressed as Jer. 18 and 28. where plainly is set down this rule of understanding Gods promises and threatnings as That God will punish them who depart from him unto whom hee had promised blessings and will spare those who repent to whom hee had threatned punishment And sometimes they are closely understood especially in the threatnings and comminations thereby even to wrest repentance and more timely and earnest prayers from us by which as means interposed and coming between hee hath decreed to save and deliver us Repl. But these conditions are uncertain and changeable Therefore the will of God is also changeable Answ In respect of the nature will and judgement of man they are changeable but in respect of the counsell and providence of God unchangeable and most certain for God hath decreed from everlasting the means and ends of things as also he hath decreed in whom he will and in whom he will not work conversion Ob. 3. He changeth many his precepts and observances and works as the Mosaicall laws and government Ans He changeth them indeed but so as he would also from everlasting that change neither are all things appointed of God for perpetuity but he decreed from everlasting some things to last only for a time Wherefore be it to us out of all controversie that God is unchangeable For Gods unchangeablenesse one of his speciall differences wherby he is distinguished from all creatures Matt. 24.35 This is amongst those especiall differences whereby the Creatour will be discerned from all creatures That he only can by no means be changed whereas all other things both are diversly changed and may at the only pleasure of God be changed infinitely howsoever for a while so long as it is his pleasure they are and seem arm and immutable according as it is said Heaven and earth shall passe but my word shall not passe It is an assurance unto us that all things are governed by his providence Hence we may understand and are assured That all things in the world are governed by the everlasting providence of God For seeing no mutation happeneth to God it must needs be that an his counsels were purposed from everlasting And seeing God both foreseeth all things unchangeably and his counsels concerning the event and end of things are certain and unchangeable it must needs be also that the second causes and means or antecedents without which those events were not to follow must be certain and unchangeable And because in things created especially in humane affaires there is a great uncertainty and mutability neither is there any cause of unchangeablenesse but the will of God God could not have appointed any thing certain or unchangeable concerning the event and end except he had also made all the means by which the end is attained unto and which as concerning their own nature are most certaine and unchangeable by his everlasting counsell and decree certain and unchangeable Isa 14.27 Wherefore it is said The Lord of hosts hath determined it and who shall disanull it It is a mean to Keep 〈◊〉 in our duty The whole use and force and declaration of the promises threatnings and examples of Gods goodnesse power justice mercy and wrath both old and new to teach us and to erect us with comfort or by fear to hold and keep us in our duty and the fear of God dependeth on Gods unchangeable nature for all those doe then affect us when wee think that the same nature and will of God which was in times past is now also and will be such to us repenting or persisting in our sinnes as wee see it was in times past and now is towards others And then do wee truly relie upon the promises of God when wee know that his counsell shall never be changed It teacheth us to submit our will to Gods will This doctrine inclineth mens mindes to obedience and subjection which is necessary in asking things at Gods hands that we desire not God to doe those things for us or others which he hath before-time assuredly told us that he will not do and further that we submit and leave with reverence those things to his pleasure whereof he would not as yet have known unto us what he hath decreed It is the ground of the comfort of the godly in this life The unchangeablenesse of Gods will is the ground and foundation of the hope and comfort of the godly in this life for it is most absurd to conceive of God that now he loveth and now he hateth us now hee will assuredly give unto us everlasting life and a little after again he will not And therefore when once true faith and conversion unto God is begun in our hearts and the Spirit of God hath begun to witnesse to our spirit that we are the sons of God and heirs of everlasting life God will have us certainly to resolve that as hee had this his will towards us from everlasting so to everlasting hee will not change it but will assuredly bring us at his pleasure out of this wicked and miserable life through all tentations and dangers whatsoever to eternall and everlasting life according to that article of our faith I beleeve life everlasting Three things signifie● by Gods omnipotencie Omnipotent When as Omnipotency is attributed to God thereby is understood 1. That whatsoever he will or whatsoever not impairing his nature and majesty he is able to will he is also able to perform 2. That he is able to perform all those things without any difficulty and labour even with his onely beck and will 3. That all the force and power of
aid and assistance of God then by mans reason and counsell Heroicall instincts The vertues and singular gifts or heroicall instincts and the excellency of Artificers which God bestoweth for the universall good and preservation of mans society And these things are far greater then that they can proceed from a thing meerly sensible without understanding and more excellent then that they should be given of nothing or gotten by men nay rather when God will do things for the preserving of mans society hee giveth us men indued with heroicall and noble vertues inventers of arts and sciences Princes valiant good and wise and other the like fit and able instruments and contrary when he will punish us for our deserts he taketh away again such profitable and preserving instruments from us Therefore there is some disposer of these good things and so the governour of humane affairs The Lord stirred up the spirit of Cyrus Esdras 1.1 Isa 3.2 Dan. 2.21 The Lord taketh away the strong man and the man of war the judge and the prophets He giveth wisdome to the wise and understanding to those that understand Fore-telling of things to come The prediction and signification of events or of things to come and the excecution or accomplishment thereof He that of himself doth fore-shew certainly unto men things to come doth not only fore-see those things but also causeth them and hath the whole nature of things so in his power that nothing can be done without his will and pleasure But God alone doth of himself certainly fore-shew things to come Therefore he doth not only fore-see them but also causeth them either by his own proper effecting them or permitting them to be effected by others and therefore governeth humane affairs ●m 23.19 De Divinat Hath he said and shall he not do it And Tully saith Are there gods and do they not signifie or fore-tell things The ends or finall causes of all things All things in the whole world both great and small are not onely ordained but are also done and tend to their certain and appointed ends Therefore it is God who by his wisdome and power as hee destineth all things to their ends so also doth bring them thereunto Matth. 4.4 Man liveth not by bread onely but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God Reasons drawn from the properties or nature of God 1. Because there is a God THere is a God Therefore there is providence For that God should not rule and govern the world created by him hath flat repugnancy with the nature of God for the world can no more consist without God then be created without him and they who deny providence deny God to be God and take away all religion From his omnipotency He is omnipotent who hath all things so in his own power that with every thing he may do what he will and without his wil nothing can be done But God is omnipotent Therefore he hath the whole nature of things in his power and effectually moveth and governeth all things at his own pleasure From his infinite wisdome It is the property of a wise governour to let nothing of that which hee hath in his power to be done without his will and counsell God is most wise and hath all things in his power and is present with them Nothing therefore is done in the world without Gods providence From his exceeding justice God is most just and Judge of the world Therefore hee in ruling the world giveth rewards unto the good and inflicteth punishments upon the wicked From his perfect goodnesse God is most good But that which is most good is most communicable Therefore as God of his infinite goodnesse created the world to the end he might communicate himselfe unto it so by the same his goodnesse doth hee preserve administer and rule the world created Because hee is the authour of all good Every positive thing and all good is from God as the first cause and chief good and not only substances but all their motions and actions are a certain positive thing and good Therefore all motions also have God their first cause and are done by his will Because he is the maker and disposer of the meanes which bring to every end He that willeth the end or consequent of any event willeth also the mean or event which goeth before But God willeth the ends of all things which are done Therefore he willeth also all precedent events either simply and absolutely or in some sort and respect Because hee is the first cause God is the first cause of all things Therefore all things depend on him From his unchangeable fore-knowledge of all things An unchangeable prescience or fore-knowledge dependeth of an unchangeable cause God fore-knoweth all things unchangeably from everlasting Therefore this his fore-knowledge must depend of an unchangeable cause But there is no unchangeable cause beside the will of God Therefore all things depend and are governed of the will of God The summe of all is this God is almighty most wise most just and most good Therefore he ordained and created nothing without some especiall end and purpose neither ceaseth he to guide and direct his works unto those ends for which he hath appointed them neither suffereth he those things to be wrought by chance which he hath made and ordained to the manifestation of his glory These things hast thou done and I held my tongue Psa 50 21. 77.9 and thou thoughtest wickedly that I am even such a one as thy selfe c. Hath God forgotten to be gracious My counsell shall stand and I will doe whatsoever I will Isa 46. 10. 2. What the Providence of God is PRescience or fore-knowledge and providence and predestination differ each from other Prescience is the knowledge of God whereby he fore-saw from all eternity not only what himselfe would doe but also what other his creatures by his permission would also do as namely that they would sin Providence and predestination although they both concern the things which God himselfe would work and accomplish yet herein they vary in that providence extendeth it self unto all the works and creatures of God but predestination properly respecteth reasonable creatures For What predestination is Predestination is the most wise eternall and unchangeable decree of God whereby he deputed and destined every man before he was created to his certain use and end as hereafter in its due place shall be more copiously declared But providence is the eternall most free unchangeable What providence is most just wise and good counsell of God whereby he worketh all good things whatsoever are found in all creatures and permitteth also evill things to be done and directeth all things both evill and good to his glory and the safety of his chosen 1. Counsell Psal 33.11 Isa 46.10 Heb. 6 17. Isa 14.26 19.17 28.29
punishing them his justice and partly to shew in pardoning them his mercy Gal. 3.22 Rom. 9.17 The Scripture hath concluded all under sin c. For the same purpose have I stirred thee up c. But in the mean season the forsaking of his creature or depriving him of divine light and rightnesse and the action it selfe which divels and men sinning doe against the law and will of God hee notwithstanding by his generall providence and efficacy willeth and moveth but to such an end as doth best agree with his nature law justice and goodnesse whether it be known or unknown to us Therefore sins are truly said to be done not by the will or working but by the permission of God The word permission in this place is to be retained because both it and others of the same force are sometimes found in the Scripture Gen. 20.6 31.7 Judg. 3.1 Psam 105.14 Acts 14.16 as Therefore suffered I thee not to touch her God suffered him not to hurt mee He suffered no man to do them wrong These now are the nations which the Lord left that hee might prove Israel by them Who in times past suffered all the Gentiles to walk in their own wayes But yet wee must expound it aright out of the Scriptures lest wee detract from God a great part of the government of the world and humance affairs For God neither willeth nor willeth not sins simply but in some respect hee willeth and in some respect he willeth not but only permitteth them Which that it may the better be understood Sin is alwayes both in a good subject and to a good end directed by God we must know that in every sin or evill of crime are two things namely The materiall or subject and the formall that is the corruption it selfe or defect of rightnesse sticking and inherent in the subject The subject is a thing positive or a thing in nature as an inclination action and therefore doth it partake of the nature of good and is wrought and moved by God But corruption is not wrought by God but came unto the subject by the will of divels and men forsaking God Wherefore no sin can be or be imagined which is not in some good thing and had adjoyned unto it some consideration and respect of good Otherwise God for his infinite goodnesse would not suffer it to be done neither should it be desired of any neither should at all be so that it is truly said That there cannot be put any thing which is the chief and extreme evill that is such as doth take away good wholly for it should not be desired but under some shew and apparency that it had of good neither should it have a subject wherein to be and so should destroy it self But albeit evill is alwayes joyned with good Sin alwayes is to be discerned from good and doth concurre with it in the same actions or inclinations yet these two things are diligently to be severed and discerned neither is the work of the Creatour to be confounded with the work of the creature sinning lest either God thereby be made the cause of sin or the greatest part of the government of the world and humane affairs be taken from him In sin God effectually willeth Hereby may we understand How far forth God willeth sin and how hee willeth not but permitteth it The subject or matter He willeth therefore sins As concerning their matter that is the actions themselves of men sinning motions and inclinations to objects as they are only such God willeth worketh and directeth them for both they partake of the nature of good and if God simply would them not they should not at all be done The ends As concerning the ends whereunto God destineth those actions which are sins that is he willeth the actions of sinners as they are the punishments of the wicked or chastisements or tryals or martyrdomes of the godly or the sacrifice of the Son of God for the sins of men But these ends are most good and most agreeing with the nature justice and goodnesse of God Therefore God the first cause of all good willeth intendeth and worketh these in the sins or actions of the wicked and by a consequent also the actions themselves which the wicked doe in sinning and by which as means God attaineth to those ends The forsaking of his creatures As concerning the withdrawing of his grace that is his divine light and rightnesse This withdrawing is an action proper to God namely his eternall and forcible working will destining whom it will to be forsaken It is also just and holy because God is bound to none and because it is either the exploration tryall of the creature or the punishment of sinne And this withdrawing once being put the inclinations motions and actions of the creature cannot but erre and swerve from the law of God and be sins Now as the inclinations The corruption of the action or inclination God will not but permitteth motions and actions of sinners are sins that is are repugnant to order and nature and swerve from the law of God because they are done without the knowledge of Gods will purpose of obeying him so God neither willeth nor ordaineth nor alloweth nor commandeth nor worketh nor furthereth them but forbiddeth condemneth punisheth and suffereth them to be committed of his creatures and to concurre with his most just decrees judgments and works thereby to shew how necessary and needfull for the creature is the grace of the holy Ghost to flye sin and to manifest his justice and power in punishing sin Wherefore the permission of sin is no idle permission or a cessation ceasing of Gods providence and working in the actions of the wicked as if they did depend only upon the will of the creature but this permission is of efficacy and worketh It is permission as concerning the formall cause of sin that is corruption it selfe which the creature hath of it selfe not by any affection or working of God but it is of efficacy and working as concerning the motion and actions of the creature sinning which God effectually willeth and moveth as also concerning the withdrawing of his grace and the ends whereunto he destineth directeth and bringeth the actions of them that sin Three causes why God is said to permit sinne God then is said to permit sin 1. Because his will whereby he will have some one worke done by a reasonable creature hee doth not make knowne unto him 2. Because he doth not correct and incline the will of the creature to obey in that worke his divine will that is to doe it to that end which God will by either generall or speciall commandement These two are signified when God is said to withdraw from his creature his grace or speciall working to forsake him to deprive him of light or rightnesse or of conformity with the law to leave him in naturall blindnesse
him by contemning these to our own perill and danger 2. That we may obtain those blessings decreed for us according to his promise and that to our salvation 3. That we may retain a good conscience in using the means although the expected events do not alwaies follow either in our selves or others The sixth Sophisme of the merit of good and evill WHatsoever is necessary doth not merit rewards or punishments But all morall good and evill is done necessarily Therefore neither the good meriteth reward nor the evill punishment Answ This argument is handled by Aristotle in his Ethicks Lib. 3. cap 5. No good work of the creature meriteth reward But the answer thereto is easie First The Major is either particular and so there is no consequence or sequel or being generally taken is false and that even in morall or civill consideration to wit in respect of those things which are necessary by supposition and yet are done freely as the actions of men Secondly Wee grant the reason in respect of the judgement of God concerning good works For the creature cannot merit any thing no not by his best works of God Rom. 4.1 because both they are due and are the effects of God in us And therefore the more good things God worketh in us so much the more hee bindeth and indebteth us to him Wherefore in the godly God crowneth and rewardeth of his free bountifulnesse not their merits but his owne gifts But as touching evill works we deny the reason For they merit punishment and that most justly Evill works merit punishment justly for although men forsaken of God cannot but sin yet the necessity of finning both was purchased by their own fault as who freely and willingly departed from God and remaineth in them joyned and accompanied with great desire and delight Wherefore to this that they should merit punishment their own will sufficeth whereas especially the punishment was before denounced This solution or answer Aristotle himself giveth us Ibid. when as he sheweth That men are deservedly reprehended and punished for vices either of mind or body though they cannot avoid them or leave them because themselves are the cause of their own vices and have purchased them unto themselves of their own accord and voluntarily Last of all Certain places of Scripture wrested against Gods providence John 8.44 James 1.13 Syrac 15.20 they wrest also certain places of Scripture by false interpretations against Gods universall providence As When the divell speaketh a lie then he speaketh of his own God tempteth no man He hath commanded no man to do ungodly as also other the like places which deny God to be the author of sin But those places attribute unto the wicked and remove from God the sinnes as lies and temptations to s●n but the actions themselves of the wicked as they are not sins but operations and motions serving for the exercising and manifesting of Gods goodnesse or justice the whole Scripture sheweth to be done by the will of God and also as they are sins by his just permission as Of Sathan deceiving the Prophets of Achab Of the false Prophets by whom God tryeth and openeth the hypocrisie or constancie of men in true religion Acts 5.3 2 Cor. 4.4 Sathan filled the heart of Ananias The god of this world hath blinded the hearts of unbeleevers In these and the like sayings also is discerned the work of the Divell unjustly blinding men to destroy them and of God justly blinding them by the Divell Acts 5.38 Isa 31. to punish them If this counsell be of men it will come to nought Woe be to the rebellious children that take counsell but not of mee The counsels of men are said to be not of God but of themselves in respect of the ends which men letting passe the will of God revealed unto them respect not and attain not unto but not in respect of the ends which God doth respect and attaineth unto as well by the wicked not knowing or contemning his will as by the godly or which is in effect the same the counsels of men are said to be of them not of God as they are sins that is as they swerve from the known will of God but not as they are the execution of Gods either secret or known will 2 Cor. 9.9 God doth not take care for oxen Not principally or not in such sort as for men For he giveth also to beasts their meat Those words then Thou shalt not muzzle the mouth of the oxe that treadeth out the corn were therefore spoken especially that God might thereby shew what hee would have by men unto men to be performed So the wicked are often said to be cast out of the sight of God not that the providence of God is not extended to them but that he doth not tender them with his mercy and bounty as he doth the godly For the godly also complain That they are neglected of God when they are afflicted not that God is not present with them in affliction but that humane sense and judgment suggesteth this unto us Levit. 20 5. And God is said to set his face against the wicked to cut them off Quest 28. What doth this knowledge of the Creation and Providence of God profit us Answ That in adversity we may be patient a Rom. 5.3 James 1.3 Job 1.21 22. Psal 39.10 and thankfull in prosperity b D●●● 8 1● 1 Thess 5.18 and have hereafter our chiefest hope reposed in God our most faithfull Father c Psal 55 2● Rom. 5.4 being sure that there is nothing which may withdraw us from his love d Rom. 8.38 ●9 forasmuch as all creatures are so in his power that without his will they are not able not only to do any thing but not so much as once to move e Job 1.12 2.6 Prov. 21.1 Acts 17.25 The Explication The causes why this doctrine is to be known THis doctrine of Gods providence is necessary to be known The glory of God For the glory of God for he will have us to ascribe to him most great liberty goodnesse wisdome power and justice and this he will have us to acknowledge and professe against the dreams and dotings of Epicures Manichees and Stoicks But if the providence of God in moving and guiding all things even the least both good and bad be denied these also his properties are denied and if these be denied God is not worshipped and magnified of us but denied Our own comfort salvation 1. Patience in adversity For our own comfort and salvation that by this means there may be stirred up in us first Patience in adversity because all things come to passe by the most wise just and available counsell and will of our heavenly Father and whatsoever either good or bad God sendeth us in them we consider the fatherly will of God towards us Whatsoever cometh unto us by the counsell
the God-head signifieth not the person which hath both names but only the divine nature it selfe But of God which is the concrete name the properties not of the God-head only but of the man-hood also may be affirmed because God signifieth not the divine nature but the person which hath both the divine nature and the humane Object 3. There is no proportion between temporall punishment and eternall Christ suffered onely temporall paines and punishments therefore he could not satisfie for eternall punishment Answ There is no proportion between temporall and eternall punishment if they be considered as being both in the same subject but in diverse subjects there may be The temporall punishment of the Son of God is of more value and worth than the eternall punishment of the whole world for divers causes heretofore alledged Object 4. If Christ satisfied perfectly for all then all must be saved But all are not saved Therefore he satisfied not perfectly for all Answ Christ satisfied for all men as concerning the application of his merit and satisfaction True it is that Christ fulfilled the Law two wayes 1. By his owne righteousnesse 2. By satisfying for our unrighteousnesse and both these he performed most perfectly But the satisfaction is made outs by our private application which is two-fold the former is wrought by God when he justifieth us for his Sons merit and causeth us to cease from sin the latter is effected by us through faith For we then apply unto our selves the merit of Christ when by a true faith we are perswaded that God remitteth our sins for his Sons sacrifice and satisfaction and without this application Christs satisfaction availeth us nothing Object 5. There were also propitiatory sacrifices in Moses Law Answ There were no sacrifices which might properly be termed expiatory but those that were were shadowes onely of Christs sacrifice which onely is propitiatory Hebr 10.4 1 John 1.7 1 John 2.2 For it is impossible that the bloud of Buls and Goates should take away sinnes The bloud of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sinne He is the propitiation for the sinnes of the whole world 2. Whether Christ suffered according to both natures CHrist suffered not according to both natures neither according to his God-head but according to his humane nature onely both in body and soule For his divine nature is immutable impassible immortall and very life it selfe which cannot die Now he so suffered according to his humanity that by his death and passion he made satisfaction for infinite sinnes of men And the divinity sustained and upheld the humanity in the griefes and paines thereof and raised it againe to life when it had been dead Christ was put to death concerning the flesh but was quickned in the spirit 1 Pet. 3.18 4.2 John 2.19 Rev. 1.18 John 10.18 For Christ also hath once suffered for sinnes the just for the unjust that he might bring us unto God Destroy this Temple and I will raise it up againe in three dayes I was dead and loe I am alive I have power to lay downe my life and to take it up againe These testimonies prove that there was another nature in Christ besides his flesh which other nature neither suffered nor died Irenaeus saith As Christ was man that so he might be tempted Lib. 3. cont hares so he was the Word that so he might be glorified The Word indeed and Deity so resting in him that he might be tempted crucified and suffer death and yet united to his humanity that so he might overcome temptation death c. Object God purchased the Church with his owne bloud therefore the God-head suffered Ans It doth not follow Acts 20.28 because an argument from the concrete which is God to the abstract which is the God head is of no consequence Againe the kind of affirmation is altered God is said to have dyed by a figurative speech which is Synecdoche use when we signifie the whole by a part as whole Christ by God and by a communicating of the properties But when it is said The God head died this affirmation admitteth no figure seeing the subject in it is a meer abstract The concrete signifieth the subject or person having the nature or forme but the abstract signifieth the bare nature and forme onely Wherefore as the argument doth not follow A man is compounded of the clements and is corporeall Therefore his soule also is corporeall this cannot follow because all things agree not to the forme which agree to the subject the soule is the forme of man man is the essentiall subject of the soule So neither doth it follow Christ-God died therefore Christs God-head died For from the concrete to the abstract the reason doth not follow 3. The causes impellent or motives of Christs Passion John 3.16 1. THE love of God towards mankind So God loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son 2. The mercy of God towards man fallen into sin Of his mercy he saved us Titus 3.5 3. The will of God to revenge the injury of the Devill who in reproach and despight of God averted us from him and maimed the image of God in us in despight of the Creatour 4. The finall causes or ends of the Passion THE finall causes and fruits of Christs Passion are all one save that they differ in divers respects For in respect of Christ who suffered they are termed finall causes in respect of us they are called fruits The finall causes or ends of his Passion are 1. The manifesting of the love goodnesse mercy righteousnesse of God while he punisheth his Sonne for us 2. That his Passion might be a sufficient ransome of our sins or the redeeming of us The chiefe finall causes then are The glory of God and our salvation To the former finall cause belongeth the knowledge of the greatnesse of sinne that we may know how great an evill sinne is and what it deserveth To the latter belongeth our justification wherein all the benefits are comprehended which Christ merited by dying and by his freeing himselfe from death Hence know we that death is not now pernicious and hurtfull to the godly and therefore not to be feared Quest 38. For what cause should he suffer under Pilate as being his Judge Answ That he being innocent and condemned before a civill Judge a John 18.38 Mat. 27.24 Luk. 23.14 15. John 19.4 might deliver us from the severe judgement of God which remained for all men b Psal 69 5. Esay 53.45 2 Cor. 5.21 Gal. 3.13 The Explication MEntion is made of Pilate in Christs Passion 1. Because Christ did receive from him a testimony of his innocency that thereby we might know that he was pronounced innocent by the voyce of the Judge himself 2. That we might know that he though innocent was notwithstanding solemnely condemned 3. That we might be advertised of the fulfilling of the prophecy E●ck ●1 27 I will over-turne
speake and give sentence and that in his humane nature And when hee speaketh God shall speake and when he judgeth God shall judge not only because he himself is God but because the Father shall speak and judge by him The judgement then shall belong unto all the three persons of the God-head as concerning their consent and authority but unto Christ as touching the publishing and executing of the judgement For Christ shall visibly give sentence of all The Son by visible pronouncing of sentence The Church by approbation Luke 21.30 Foure causes why Christ-man shall judge the world which sentence he shall also together execute The Church also shall judge as touching the approbation and allowing of his judgement as Christ saith that the Apostles shall sit on twelve seats and shall judge the twelve tribes of Israel that is that they shall subscribe unto Christs judgement and shall approve his sentence Furthermore the causes why Jesus Christ man shall be Judge are these 1. Because he must judge men therefore he must be beheld of men as a Judge But God is invisible 2. Because God will have the Church glorified by the same Mediatour by whom and for whom it was justified God will judge the world in righteousnesse Acts 17.31 Mat. 24.30 John 5.27 by that man whom hee hath appointed They shall see the Sonne of Man come in the clouds of heaven with power and great glory The Father hath given power to the Sonne to execute judgement in that hee is the Sonne of Man 3. That wee may have this comfort to wit that this Judge whereas he is our Redeemer Heb. 2.11 Ephes 5.30 Brother and Head will be gracious unto us and will not condemne those whom he hath redeemed and purchased with his bloud nay whom he hath vouchsafed to make his brethren and members These are the three things then which comfort us 1. The person of the Judge for he is our brother and our flesh 2. The promise of the Judge for he hath promised and said He that beleeveth in the Sonne John 3.36 and 5.24 hath eternall life Verily verily I say unto you he that heareth my word and beleeveth in him that sent mee hath everlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but hath passed from death unto life 3. The finall cause or end of his coming to judgement For he shall come to set his Church at liberty and to cast the wicked into eternall destruction 4. The fourth cause why Christ-man shall be Judge is the justice of God Because the world hath contumeliously dealt with Christ refusing his benefits Zach. 12.10 John 19.37 therefore They shall looke on him whom they have pierced that hee may the more confound his wicked enemies who shall be forced to behold him their Judge John 12.47 and 3.17 whom they have so much withstood Object Christ saith that he came not to judge or condemne the world How then should hee be our judge Answ Christ in these places speaketh of his first coming which was not to judge the world but to save it but at his second coming hee shall come to be the Judge of the quick and the dead 4. Whence and whither Christ shall come WE look for our judge Christ from heaven For whither the Apostle saw him ascend from thence shall he come 1 Thess 1.7 Mat. 26.64 Phil. 3.10 The Lord Jesus shall shew himself from heaven with his mighty Angels Hereafter shall yee see the Sonne of man sitting at the right hand of the power of God and come in the clouds of the heaven From heaven then where hee sitteth at Gods right hand not out of the aire or the sea or the earth Acts 1.11 For as ye have seen him goe into heaven so shall he come Hee shall descend into the clouds that is he shall descend from heaven visibly into this region of the aire as hee did indeed visibly ascend These things are necessarily proposed that the Church may know whence to expect their Judge and Redeemer For as he will have it known whither he ascended so also will he have it known whence he shall come againe that he might thereby signifie that he hath not laid away that humane nature which hee took 5. How Christ shall come to Judgement HEe shall come 1. Truly visibly and locally not imaginarily Mat. 24.30 They shall see the Son of man coming in the clouds of the heaven and so shall know him to be God by his visible majesty As yee have seen him goe into heaven so shall hee come Acts 1.11 But he ascended visibly and locally therefore hee shall descend also visibly and locally They shall look upon him whom they have pierced 2. Hee shall come furnished and prepared with glory and divine majesty with all the Angels Zach. 12.10 with voice and trump of the Archangel with divine power to raise the dead and to separate the godly from the wicked and to cast these into everlasting torments but to glorifie them for ever The Son of man shall come in the glory of the Father that is he shall come furnished with a heavenly multitude of Angels and full of majesty and that not by necessity but by his power and authority shewing himselfe to be Lord over all creatures and that with such glory as only agreeth and is proper unto the Father Whereupon withall is gathered that Christ is not a secondary God but the second person of the God-head equall with the Father For God will not give his glory to another 3. He shall come suddenly when the wicked lookt not for him When they say Peace 1 Thess 5.2 3. peace he shall come as a thiefe in the night 6. Whom Christ shall judge HEe shall judge all men both quick and dead and also the wicked Angels Now men are called quick or dead in respect of the state which goeth before this judgement As they which shall remaine alive untill the day of judgement are called the quick and living all the rest except these are called the dead and these at the day of Judgement shall rise the other which remain then alive shall be changed Which change shall be unto them instead of death and so We shall appeare before the judgement seat of Christ. Object But hee that beleeveth in the Sonne 1 Cor. 15.51 Rom. 14.10 shall not come into judgement and so it followeth that all shall not be judged Ans He that beleeveth shall not come into the judgement of condemnation but shall come into the judgement of absolution Wherefore we shall be judged as the word judgement is more largely taken for both condemnation and absolution The Divels shall not then be judged that is condemned but they shall be judged in respect of the publishing of the judgment already passed on them as also in respect of aggravating of the judgement Object The Prince of this world saith Christ is already judged and condemned John
in some sort made ours even by application The subject indeed wherein this justice is inherent is Christ we are the object to which this justice is directed sith it is imputed unto us 2. That the word Imputation is more strict than Application The former is spoken of God only the latter of God and us 3. That God otherwise applieth Christs justice unto us than we doe God applyeth it by imputation and we apply it by faith and acceptation 4. That this phrase of the Church To justifie The signification of the phrase To justifie proved by the Grammaticall derivation of it in divers languages In hip●●● signifieth not legally that is To make one just who is unjust by infusing the quality of justice but evangelically that is To repute him which is unjust for just and righteous and to absolve him from all guilt and not to punish him and this for anothers justice and satisfaction imputed unto him So the Scripture useth this word and almost in all tongues it beareth no other signification for the Hebrew word Hadzdik Exod. 23. ● Prov. 17.15 signifieth To absolve a guilty person To pronounce him guiltlesse I will not justifie a wicked person He that justifieth the wicked and he that condemneth the just even they both are abomination to the Lord. The Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth sometime To pronounce a man just and righteous and sometimes To punish an offender and both on good knowledge of his cause by due examination and judiciall processe as Suidas well observeth Mat. 12.37 So saith Christ By thy words thou shalt be justified The former signification is used two waies in Scripture For either it signifies not to condemne but To absolve in judgement Rom. 8.33 as Who shall condemne the Elect of God it is God that justifieth Hee departed justified rather than the other or it signifieth To pronounce and proclaime just Luke 18.14 As Wisedome is justified of her children That thou mayest be justified in thy sayings Howbeit both significations in this Question come to one end But that to justifie should be used for to make just or to infuse an habit of justice is no where found amongst the Latines and were it read in Latine Authours yet in Scripture and in the Church it is otherwise used as the alledged places apparently prove which can be understood no other way than of the absolution and free accepting a sinner to grace and favour Who shall accuse Gods Elect it is God that justifieth The Publicane departed justified that is absolved and more accepted of God than the Pharisee Acts 13.39 For from all things from which yee could not be justified by the Law of Moses by him every one that beleeveth is justified Here To be justified doth evidently signifie to be absolved Rom. 3.24 26 28. 4.5 5.9 10. to receive remission of sins All are justified freely by his grace A justifier of him which is of the faith of Jesus A man is justified by faith without the workes of the law To him that worketh not but beleeveth in him that justifieth the ungodly his faith is counted for righteousnesse Being now justified by his bloud Reconciled to God by the death of his Son 6. Why Christs satisfaction is made ours or in what sort God imputeth it unto us for righteousnesse The cause of Christs satisfaction applyed and imputed is in God only not in us THe perfect fulfilling of the law performed by Christ for us is made ours or applyed unto us through the alone and free mercy of God as who from everlasting did predestinate us to this grace and freely chose us in Christ to whom he might apply of his meere grace of faith that justice and righteousnesse at his appointed time according to the good pleasure of his will as the Apostle speaketh that is according to his meere good pleasure not being moved with any holinesse which hee foresaw would be in us The reason is because there can be no good thing in us except God first worke in us Wherefore all imagination and affirmation of merit is to be taken away as which fighteth with the grace of God and is a deniall of his divine grace For the grace and mercy of God is the only cause of both applications He of his goodnes infinite and passing measure applyeth Christs merit unto us and maketh that we also may apply the same unto us The cause therefore why this application is wrought is in God alone but not at all in us that is it is neither any thing foreseen in us neither also our apprehension and receiving of this justice for all the gifts and graces which are in us are effects of the application of Christs merit and therefore that merit of Christ is no way applied unto us for the works sake which wee doe but this is done as the Apostle teacheth Ephes 1.5 According to the good pleasure of his will Whereupon also it is said What hast thou that thou hast not received 1 Cor. 4.7 By grace are yee saved through faith and that not of your selves it is the gift of God Ephes 2.8 Christ is then in respect of our justification 1. As the subject and matter wherein our justice is 2. As the impellent cause because he obtaineth it 3. As the chief efficient because he together with his Father doth justifie us and giveth us faith whereby wee beleeve and apprehend it The mercy of God is as the impellent cause thereof in God Christs satisfaction is the formall cause of our justification giving the very life and being unto it Our faith is the instrumentall cause apprehending and applying unto us the justice or righteousnesse of Christ We must note therefore How we are justified by the grace of God how by Christs merit and how by faith that we are justified by the grace of God by the merit of Christ and by faith but by each of these in a severall sense and meaning The first position is understood of the impulsive cause which is in God the second of the formall cause in Christ the third of the instrumentall cause in us We are justified by the mercy or grace of God as a principall impellent cause wherewith God being urged and moved justifieth and saveth us We are justified by the merit of Christ partly as by the formall cause of our justification inasmuch as by Christs obedience applied unto us we are accepted of God and being clothed as it were with this raiment are reputed just partly as by an impulsive and meritorious cause inasmuch as God absolveth us for his sake Wee are justified by faith as by an instrumentall cause whereby we apprehend Christs righteousnesse imputed unto us The common received opinion saith We are justified by faith correlatively that is we are justified by that whereunto faith hath relation to wit the merit of Christ which faith apprehendeth For faith and the
satisfaction of Christ are correlatives that is have a mutuall respect each to other the one being that which receiveth and the other that which is received This kind of speech is well and probably used because hereby faith is understood of the formall cause of justification that so the sense may be Christs merit justifieth us and not faith it selfe that which is apprehended doth justifie us and not the instrument which doth apprehend Neverthelesse this proposition We are justified by faith may be understood also without relation to wit we are justified by faith as a meane But this proposition of the Apostle Faith was imputed to him for righteousnesse and other the like Rom. 4.3 are necessarily to be understood with a relation to Christs merit and justice Faith was imputed unto him for righteousnesse as faith is the apprehending instrument of righteousnesse apprehended faith being as it were the hand wherewith the justice of Christ is received Quest 61. Why affirmest thou that thou art made righteous by faith only Answ Not for that I please God through the worthinesse of meere faith but because onely the satisfaction righteousnesse and holinesse of Christ is my righteousnesse before God a 1 Cor. 1.30 2.2 and I cannot take hold of it or apply it unto my selfe and other way than by faith b 1 Joh. 5.20 The Explication Three causes why faith alone justifieth WE say we are justified by faith alone 1. Because we are justified by the object of faith onely to wit by the merit of Christ alone besides which there is no justice of ours nor any part thereof For we are justified freely for Christs sake without works There is nothing which can be our justice and righteousnesse before God either in whole or in part besides Christs merit only by receiving and beleeving anothers justice we are justified not by working nor by meriting but by an apprehension and acceptation only we are just and righteous All works are excluded yea faith it selfe as it is a vertue or work 2. Because the proper act and operation of faith is for a man to apprehend and apply unto himself Christs righteousnesse yea faith is nothing else than the acceptation it self or apprehension of anothers justice or of the merit of Christ 3. Because faith only is the instrument which apprehendeth Christs satisfaction Hence it is evident for what causes we are to retain the exclusive particle Onely Foure causes why we are to maintaine against Papists that faith only justifieth Rom. 3 24 28. Marke 5 36. and to maintaine it against the Papists namely 1. For declaration of that which Paul speaketh Wee are justified freely by grace without works likewise of that which Christ saith Onely beleeve 2. That whatsoever works and merits of ours or of others may be excluded from being causes of justification and faith may be understood only with relation and respect to Christs merit which is our justice 3. That not only our merits but even faith it self may be wholly excluded from that which is received by faith and the sense may be we are justified by faith alone that is not by meriting but only by receiving as when wee say This poor man is enriched only by receiving the almes of charitable disposed people where all works and merits yea the very receiving of almes if it be considered as a merit are excluded Therefore Paul saith alwaies that we are justified a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by faith and b 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 through faith as by an instrument but no where faith c 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for faith as the Papists say who will admit both these manners of speaking as if faith were not indeed the application whereby we apply unto our selves Christs justice but were also besides a certain work or merit whereby we deserve to be just which is quite repugnant to the nature of faith For if for faith we were just and righteous then faith were now no longer an acceptation of anothers righteousnesse but were a merit and cause of our own justice neither should it receive anothers satisfaction which now it should have no need of 4. That we may know what necessity there is of faith unto justification and may understand that we are not justified by the merit of faith and yet are not justified without faith apprehending the justice of Christ because it is the proper act of faith to lay hold on his righteousnesse 5. The Orthodoxall or right beleeving Fathers oft-times urge the exclusive particle Origen in Rom. libro tertio capite tertio Ambr. in Rom. 3. In cap. 10. by faith only Origen The Apostle saith that the justification of faith only is sufficient so that if a man beleeve onely hee may be justified yea though hee performe no work Ambrose They are justified freely who working nothing and rendring no recompence are justified by faith onely through the gift of God Again Ambrose How then may the Jewes thinke themselves to be justified by the works of the law with the justification of Abraham where they see that Abraham was not justified by the works of the law but by faith onely The law therefore needeth not when a sinner is justified before God by faith only In cap. 10. In 1. ad Cor. 1.4 And in the same place the exclusive particle Only is often reiterated The same Ambrose saith Because this is decreed by God that hee which beleeveth in Christ should be saved without any work receiving freely by faith only remission of sins Wee are therefore justified by faith onely that is by Christs merit onely received by faith This we must constantly maintain and defend 1. For Gods glory that Christs sacrifice be not extenuated 2. For our owne comfort that we may be assured that our righteousnesse dependeth not on our works for so should wee lose it many thousand times but only on the sacrifice and merit of Christ ON THE 24. SABBATH Quest 62. Why cannot our good workes be righteousnesse or some part of righteousnesse before God Ans Because that righteousnesse which must stand fast before the judgement of God must be in all points perfect and agreeable to the law of God a Gal. 3.10 Deut. 27.36 Now our workes even the best of them are imperfect in this life and defiled with sin b Esay 64.6 The Explication IN the former Questions the true doctrine of Justification hath been made manifest and confirmed It followeth that we proceed to the confutation of the Popish doctrine affirming that we are justified by workes or partly by faith and partly by works The argument is thus framed The justice which may stand in Gods judgement must be perfectly absolute and agreeable on all parts with Gods Law But our very best workes in this life are imperfect and stained with sin Therefore our very best workes cannot be our justice in the judgment of God neither in part nor wholly The Major
respecteth and as an instrument apprehendeth Object 5. Evill workes condemne Therefore good workes justifie Ans 1. These contraries are not matches For our evill workes are perfectly evill our good workes are imperfectly good 2. Although our good workes were perfectly good yet should they not deserve eternall life because they are debts Unto evill workes a reward is due by order of justice unto good works not so because wee are obliged and bound to do them For the creature is obliged to his Creator neither may hee of the contrary binde God unto him by any workes or meanes to benefit him And evill workes in their very intent despight God but good works yield him no profit or delight Object 6. Hee that doth righteousnesse is righteous Therefore not hee that beleeveth Answ 1. Hee is righteous before men that is by doing righteousnesse 1 John 3.7 hee declareth himselfe righteous to others but before God wee are righteous not by doing righteousnesse but by beleeving as it is written Rom. 3.20 By the workes of the Law shall no flesh be justified in his sight 2. John sheweth there not how wee are righteous but what the righteous are as if he should say that he that is regenerated is also justified because by doing righteousnesse he testifieth to the world that he is justified So then in this reason the fallacy is a taking that which is no cause of justification instead of the true cause thereof Object 7. Christ saith Many sins are forgiven her because shee loved much Luke 7.47 Therefore good workes are the cause of justification Ans 1. Christ here reasoneth from the latter to the former from the effect which cometh after to the cause which goeth before In that the woman loved Christ much Christ thence gathereth that many sins were forgiven her and because there was a great feeling in that woman of the benefit it must needs therefore be that the benefit is great and many sins are forgiven her That this is the meaning of Christs words appeareth by the parable which he there useth 2. Not every thing that is the cause of Consequence in reason is also the cause of the Consequent or thing it selfe which followeth in that consequence of reason Wherefore it is a fallacy of the Consequent if it be concluded Therefore for her love many sins are forgiven her For the particle because which Christ useth doth no● alwaies signifie the cause of the thing following It followeth not The Sun is risen because it is day Therefore the day is the cause of the rising of the Sun The contrary rather is true Quest 64. But doth not this doctrine make men carelesse and profane Ans No For neither can it be but they which are incorporated into Christ through faith should bring forth the fruits of thankfulnesse a Mat. 7.18 John 15.5 The Explication THis Question of the Catechisme is a prevention of the Papists slander against the doctrine of Justification by faith Ob. 1. Doctrine which maketh men secure and profane is not true and therefore not to be delivered But this doctrine of free justification by faith maketh men secure and profane Therefore it is not true nor to be taught or delivered in the Church Ans Here is a fallacy of accident If the doctrine of free justification by faith make men secure this happeneth by accident The naturall effect of this doctrine is an earnest desire of shewing our thankfulnesse towards God But this accident objected by the adversaries of this truth falleth out not because men doe apply but because men doe not apply to themselves the doctrine of grace Repl. 1. Even those things which fall out to be evill by an accident are to be eschewed But this doctrine maketh men by an accident evill Therefore it is to be eschewed Ans Those things which fall out to be evils by an accident are to be eschewed if there remaine no greater and weightier cause for which they are not to be omitted which become evill to men through their owne default But wee have necessarie and weighty cause why this doctrine ought to be delivered and by no meanes to be omitted namely the commandement and glory of God and the salvation of the Elect. Repl. 2. That which cannot hart wee need not to eschew But according to the doctrine of justification by faith sinnes to come cannot hurt us because Christ hath satisfied for all both which are past and which are to come Therefore wee need not to beware of sinnes to come Now this is apparently absurd Therefore the doctrine whence this Consequent ariseth is likewise absurd Ans 1. We answer to the Major of this reason that we need not beware and take heed of that which cannot hurt namely whether it be taken heed of or no. But sins to come hurt not that is hurt not them which are heedfull and penitent yet they hurt them who are carelesse and unrepentant 2. Therefore we also deny the Minor for God is alwaies offended with sins and his displeasure is the greatest hurt that can befall man Further sins bereave us of conformity with God and purchase bodily pains unto the faithfull howsoever eternall paines be remitted unto them Hither belong other arguments of the Papists wherewith they oppugne this doctrine of Justification by faith such as are these following Object 2. That which is not in the Scripture is not to be taught or retained That wee are justified by faith only is not in the Scripture Therefore it is not to be retained Ans To the Major we say that which is not in the Scripture neither in words nor in sense is not to be retained But that we are justified by faith only is contained in Scripture as touching the sense thereof for we are said to be justified freely by grace without the works of the law Rom. 3 2● 28. Gal. 2.15 Ephes 2.8 9. Titus 3.5 1 John 1.7 without the law not of works not of our selves not of any righteousnesse which wee have done by faith without merit Also the bloud of Christ is said to cleanse us from all sin And these are all one To be justified by faith alone and To be justified by the bloud and merit of Christ apprehended by faith only by receiving and beleeving deserving nothing by faith or other works Now the reasons why we are to retain against the Papists the exclusive particle only have been heretofore declared and inlarged Object 3. That which is not alone doth not justifie alone Faith is not alone Therefore faith doth not justifie alone Ans If the conclusion be so understood as it followeth out of the premisses on this wise Faith therefore doth not justifie alone that is being alone the argument is of force For justifying faith is never alone without works as her effects Faith justifieth alone but is not alone when it justifieth having works accompanying it as effects of it but not as joynt causes with it of justification But if
grounds of Consubstantiation 1. The Vbiquity 2. The words of Christ. The Ubiquity hath beene at large discoursed of before in expounding the Articles of the personall union of the two natures in Christ of his ascension into heaven and of his sitting at the right hands of God the Father and the difficulties therein discussed fully resolved and Ubiquity it selfe confuted Christs words witnesse the Papists themselves neither intimate Consubstantiation neither can beare that interpretation Which the Ubiquitaries also in their writings dissemble not and have therefore devised and invented the Ubiquity because they saw that the ground and foundation of their opinion if it were laid on Christs words only were too ruinous and like to have a speedy down-fall Christ said This is my body which is given for you which words the Consubstantials retaine not Consubstantiation over browne by Christs very words neither literally nor according to their sense and meaning We need not therefore any argument to refute Consubstantiation but Christs very words whereunto we recall them and thus reason against them Christ said not In this bread is my body but This is my body neither is the sense of both these propositions all one seeing the former declareth what is in the bread and where Christs body is the later what the bread it selfe is in the Eucharist Therefore the Consubstantials who teach that in the bread is Christs body retaine neither the letter nor the meaning of Christs words A refutation of objections framed to confirme Consubstantiation Schmidline his argument in the conference at Mulbr La● Pag. 159. OBject 1. It is an usuall kind of speech when two things are joyntly given the one apparent the other in covert that that onely be named which appeared not as we say of purses fraught with money This is money of a caske of wine This is wine But Christ in his Supper delivering in the same manner two things joyntly at once namely the bread and his body named that onely which appeared not under the bread saying Take this is my body Therefore Christs manner of speech is most usuall and proper neither needeth it any explication at all Answ To the Major we answer that it is a forme of speech most usuall c. but with this limitation when it is certaine that the thing which is named though it be not apparent yet it is contained in that thing which is apparent as it is certaine that money is in the purse and wine in the caske Otherwise it is no usuall plaine or true forme of speech to say of an empty purse This is money But hitherto it is not cleere neither have the Consubstantials as yet proved that Christs body lay hid in the bread when Christ said thereof This is my body as it ought to be evident that money is in the purse and wine in the vessell when it is said This is money This is wine Yea and we avouch the contrary to wit that Christs body in the first Supper lay not hid in the bread but sate at table and now is in heaven untill it thence returne in judgement Therefore this forme of reasoning is a begging of that which is in controversie betwixt us Answ 2. The Minor also is false For Christ delivering unto his Disciples not his body but bread taken from the table and broken said Take cate This that is this bread is my body Which exposition is proved 1. Because it is said of the cup This cup is the New Testament 2. Paul expoundeth the particle This of the bread saying The bread which we break is the communion of Christs body 3. Because the bread and body of Christ both together are neither properly not figuratively Christs very body and hereby a Tautologie or a vaine and childish iteration of the same thing should be fathered on Christ in saying My body is my body 4. We deny also the consequence because their conclusion compriseth more then their premisses in force For they conclude that it is a most usuall and proper speech But these two usuall and proper are not in force and signification alike For the most usuall form of speech may be figurative as those very triviall and yet Synecdochicall speeches urged by them This is money This is wine who is so mad as to think the purse alone or the purse with the mony is properly money So was that Sacramentall speech of the Passeover frequent and well knowne unto the Disciples of Christ Where wilt thou that we provide the Passeover Yet spake they not properly but figuratively attributing to the signe the name of the thing signified by a sacramentall Metonymie or change of names That which followeth therefore out of the premisses is only this That Christs words were triviall plaine and known to the Disciples but not that they were understood properly literally and without all Trope or Figure Object 2. Christ said This is my body But Christ is true Therefore we must beleeve him setting apart all Philosophicall subtilty and sharpnesse and so by consequent bread is not a signe of his body but his body as the words lie which are simply and literally to be understood Ans Here they alledge us that for a cause which is indeed no cause of the matter in hand For Christs truth is a cause onely that his words are true yea most true to which we ought to give credence setting apart all Philosophicall subtilty but it is no cause why his words should be proper and literally taken For he which speaketh figuratively may also speak truly as Christ him selfe was no lesse true yea truth it selfe when he said I am the light of the world the doore of the sheepfold the good Shepheard the true Vine my Father is an Husbandman ye are the branches then when he said This is my body And they deserve to be hissed out of Schooles who presume to terme figurative speeches by the name of lies 2. We retort their Minor thus Christ is true Therefore he said not that his body lay hid in the bread when all his Disciples saw that it sate at Table 3. We retort their conclusion on them thus Christs words must be understood simply Therefore yee may not cloake and colour them with your glosse which perverteth the letter when ye say that In With Vnder the bread is Christs body or that the bread is the closet of Christs body Object 3. Christ is omnipotent Therefore he can effect that his body should be really in the bread Ans The reason is of no force which will conclude a thing to be done because it may be done The question is not What Christ can doe but what he will He no where promised the presence of his body in the bread or in the presence of the bread Therefore we derogate nothing at all from his omnipotency when we beleeve no such presence Repl. Bread is present in place of the Supper Bread is Christs body Therefore Christs body is present in
The furthering causes of conversion are The crosse and chastisements whether our own or others also the punishments benefits and examples of others The helping causes Jerem. 31.8 Psal 119.71 Mat. 5.16 Thou hast corrected mee c. The subject or matter wherein conversion is placed is the will minde heart and all mans affections wherein there is an alteration by means of conversion The forme of conversion is conversion it selfe with all the properties and circumstances thereof which are 1. In the minde and understanding The materiall cause The form of conversion a right judgement concerning God his will and works 2. In the will an earnest and ready desire and purpose of avoiding our former falls and a declining of Gods displeasure with a resolution to obey God according to all his commandements 3. In the heart new motions with good and reformed affections conformable with Gods law 4. Uprightnesse in our outward actions and whole course of life with obedience begun after Gods law The Object of conversion is 1. Sin or disobedience The object which is the thing from which we are converted 2. Righteousnesse or new obedience which is the thing whereunto we are converted The chief finall cause of conversion is Gods glory The finall causes Luke 22.51 Mat. 5.16 the next and subordinate end is our good even our blessednesse and fruition of everlasting life There is another end also of conversion lesse principall to wit the conversion of others To this place of conversion belong those questions of Pelagianism Whether a man be able to convert himself without the grace of Gods Spirit and Whether by free-will a man be able to prepare himself unto the receit of grace The former was maintained by Pelagius contrary to these expresse testimonies of Scripture Turne thou mee and I shall be turned God worketh in as both the will and the deed An evill tree cannot bring forth good fruit The later the Schoole-men and the Papists at this day defend contrary to the same words of Scripture and contrary to that direct proof against their opinion No man cometh unto mee except my Father draw him Thomas Aquinas attributeth preparation unto free-will Vid. Su●● Theolog Partis primae parte secunda quaest 109 Art 6. but not conversion Now this preparation he thus coloureth that it is indeeda furtherance to the habituall grace of conversion but yet through the free assistance of God moving us inwardly 5. What are the effects of mans conversion THe effects of conversion are 1. A true and ardent love of God and our neighbour 2. An earnest desire to obey God according to all his commandements without exception 3. All good works even our whole new obedience Vid. Cal. Institur lib. 3. cap. 3. Paragraph 16. 4. A desire of converting others and re-calling them into the way of salvation In a word the fruits of true repentance are all the duties of piety towards God and charity towards our neighbour 6. Whether mans conversion be perfect in this life OUr conversion unto God is never perfected and accomplished in this life but is here in perpetuall motion untill it attaine unto perfection in the life to come Wee know in part Hereunto beare witnesse all the complaints and prayers of the Saints 1. Cor 13 9. P●al 19.12 Rom. ● 2 Mat. ● 10 Rom. ● G●● ● leanse thou mee from my secret faults O wretched man that I am who shall deliver mee c. Forgive us our trespasses The wrestling also and conflicts between the flesh and the spirit in the converted testifie hereof The flesh lusteth against the spirit The exhortations also of the Prophets and Apostles that the converted should yet be more converted confirme this position Hee that is righteous c. Wee may thus make evident demonstrance hereof Revel ●2 11 Neither the mortification of the flesh Both parts of co●ve●sion are imperfect in this life nor the quickning of the spirit is absolute and perfect in the Saints in this life Therefore mans whole conversion cannot be absolute and pe●fect Concerning the imperfection of man in the mortification of the flesh there can be no question or doubt thereof it is so apparent because the Saints of God doe not onely continually wrestle with the concupiscence of the flesh but oftentimes also yield and give over in the conflict oftentimes they sinne and slip and displease God though they defend not their sins but detest bewaile and study and endeavour more and more to shun and avoid them Touching mans imperfection in the quickning of the spirit the same combate giveth testimony and verity sith our knowledge is but in part only the renuing of our will and heart is even such for our will followeth our knowledge Two causes of this imperfection in man Now there are two evident causes why the will of the converted tendeth imperfectly to good in this life 1. Because the renewing of our nature in this life is never made perfect either concerning our knowledge of God or concerning our inclination to obey God whereof Saint Pauls onely complaint maketh sufficient proofe I know that in mee that is in my flesh dwelleth no good thing 2. Because the converted are not alwaies ruled by the holy Ghost Rom. 7.18 19. but sometimes forsaken by God for a season either to examine or try them or to chastise and humble them notwithstanding at length they are re-called to repentance so that they perish not Muke ● 24 The 〈◊〉 why God 〈◊〉 r●th 〈◊〉 m●●rfe●tio● to be ●●man P●●●●●3 Ma. ● 12 I beleeve Lord Lord helpe mine unbeliefe But the causes why God finisheth not as hee might mans conversion in this life are these 1. That his Saints may be humbled exercised in saith patience prayers and skirmishing with the flesh and not wex proud with an opinion of perfection but daily pray Enter not into judgement with thy servant O Lord. Forgive us our trespasses 2. That they may more and more goe forward unto perfection and covet it more earnestly 3. That contemning this world they may the more aspire and hasten to the heavenly life as knowing that their perfection is reserved untill then Set your affectio●s on things which are above Col 3 2 3 4. 1 Joh● 3.2 Your life is hid with Christ in God Mortifie therefore your members which are on the earth It doth not appeare what we shall be and we know that when he shall appeare we shall be like him Of this imperfection Calvin hath a notable saying In tit 5. 3. parag ● This reparation or restoring faith he is not finished in one moment day or yeer but God b● continuall and sometimes slow proceedings abolisheth the corruption of the flesh in his Elect. hee cleanseth them from their filth and consecrateth them temples unto himselfe b●renuing according unto true purity all their senses that they may exercise themselves in repentance their whole life time and they know that of
this warfare there is no end but in death You may to this purpose reade the Sections immediatly following as farte as to the fifteenth in which the whole disputation touching the remn●nts of sin in the Saints is learnedly maintained against the Cathari and Anabaptists 7. In what the conversion of the godly differeth from the repentance of the wicked THe name of Repentance is attributed as well to the wicked as to the godly because they both agree in some things to wit in the knowledge of sinne and the griefe for sinne but in the rest there is great difference Their griefe is divers In the impulsive cause of repentance which is Grief The wicked are grieved onely for the punishment and torment ensuing not for that they offend and displease God So was Cain grieved onely in respect of his punishment Gen. 4.13 My iniquity that is the punishment of mine iniquity is greater than I can beare Behold thou hast cast mee out this day from the earth Now the godly hate indeed the punishment but they are grieved especially for that God is offended and for their sin So David Psal 51.4 Against thee against thee onely have I sinnned my sin is ever before mee The good hate to sin for the love they beare to vertue the wicked for the feare they stand in of punishment So in Peter was a sorrow and griefe for that he had offended God in Judas for his torment ensuing not for the Sin it self This difference hath the Heathen Poet Horace described in this his Poem Horat. lib. 1. Epist 16. The good avoide offence for vertues sake The wicked to abstaine base feare doth make The cause of their griefe is divers In the cause which breedeth repentance in both The wicked repent by reason of a despaire distrust and diffidency so that they run more and more into desperation murmuring and hatred against God But the Godly repent by reason of faith and a confidence which they have of the grace of God and reconciliation through Christ The manner of their repentance is diverse In the forme and manner of their repentance For the repentance of the godly is a returning unto God from the Divell from their sins and from their old nature because they doe not only grieve but also comfort and erect themselves againe by confidence in the Mediatour they trust in God and rejoyce in him and relye on him with David Purge mee with Hysope and I shall be cleane The repentance of the wicked is a back-sliding from God unto the Divell a hatred of God a flight from him and a murmuring or repining against him and a beginning of desperation The effect of their griefe is diverse In the effect which their repentance worketh in them In the wicked new obedience doth not follow repentance but they goe forward in their sins and returne to their vomit though they counterfeit repentance for a time as Achab did They are mortified in feed themselves and quite destroyed but the old corruption of their nature that is sin is not crucified in them and how much the more they give them selves to repentance so much the more is in them a hatred of God murmuring flying and turning away from God and an approaching unto the Divell But in the godly new obedience followeth and accompanieth repentance and how much the more they repent so much the more dieth the old man in them and the study and desire of righteousnesse and living well is in them so much the more increased Quest 91. What are good workes Answ Those onely which are done by a true faith a Rom. 14 23. according to Gods law b Levit. 18.4 1 Sam. 5.22 Ephes 2.10 and are referred only to his glory c 1 Cor. 10.31 and not those which are imagined by us as seeming to us to be right and good or which are delivered and commanded by men d Ezek. 20.18 19. Esay 29.13 M●tthew 15.7 8 The Explication UNder this Question is contained the Doctrine of good works the chief questions whereof are 1. What good workes are 2. How they may be done 3. Whether the workes of Saints be pure and perfectly good 4. How our workes though not perfectly good please God 5. Why wee are to doe good workes 6. Whether good works merit any thing in the sight of God 1. What good works are GOod workes are such as are done according to the prescript rule of Gods law with a true faith to the glory of God only Three things are here to be considered 1. The conditions and circumstances required for the making a good work 2. The difference between the works of the regenerate and the unregenerate 3. In what sort the morall works of the wicked are sins 1. That a work which we doe Three things required to a good work may be good and acceptable to God these conditions are required necessarily unto it Gods commandement Mat. 15.9 How morall and naturall good differ That it be commanded of God In vaine they worship me teaching for doctrine mens precepts No creature hath the right or wisdome and understanding to institute and ordaine the worship of God But good workes we speak of morall good and the worship of God are all one Now morall good is far different from naturall good inasmuch as all actions as they are actions even those of the wicked are good naturally that is they are some-thing framed by God in nature but all actions are not good morally that is agreeing with the justice of God And thus is excluded by this condition all will-worship and that coyned device of good intentions when as namely men doe evill things that good things may come thereof Likewise when they devise and imagine workes which they thrust upon God instead of worship Neither doth it suffice if a work be not evill or not forbidden 1 Sam. 15.22 Fizek 20.19 Mat. 15.9 Esay 29.12 but it must also be commanded if it shall serve for Gods worship according to the Scripture Obedience is better than sacrifice Ye shall walk in my statutes Object But you will say Things of indifferency that is things in themselves neither good nor evill and such as may be done or left undone by men at their pleasure are not commanded of God and yet many of them please God Answ They please him not of their owne nature but by accident inasmuch as they are contained under the generall of love that is they are done in respect and regard of charity and to avoid offence and to further the salvation of the weaker brethren For in this regard they are in generall though not in speciall commanded by God True faith That the worke have his originall from a true faith which faith must be grounded and depending on the merit and intercession of the Mediatour and by which thou mayest know both thy person and thy work to be accepted of God for the Mediatours sake For
Ghost whereof none repent and therefore it is not forgiven neither in this life nor in the life to come The other deniall is speciall and particular 2. Speciall which is the deniall of weaklings and is committed either through errour not voluntarily neither purposed or through feare of affliction when as not withstanding there remaineth still in the heart an inclination and griefe detesting that weaknesse and deniall and some purpose also to struggle out of it and to obey God by applying unto himselfe the promise of grace and by giving himselfe unto repentance Into this deniall may the Elect and Regenerate fall but they get out of it againe and returne unto the confession of the truth in this life as it is shewed and exemplified in Peter Matth. 26. thrice denying his Master through infirmity but at length repenting Dissembling of the truth Dissimulation or dissembling and hiding of the truth when as Gods glory and our neighbours safety requireth a confession of the truth which then requireth it when false opinions concerning God and his will or word or concerning the Church seeme to be confirmed and strengthened by our silence in the minds of men or when those things remaine secret and hidden which God will have knowne and manifest for the maintenance of his glory against the reproaches of the wicked for the convincing of the obstinate and for the instructing of those which are desirous to learn or lastly when our silence maketh us suspected to be approvers and abetters of the wicked So did the parents of the blind man dissemble and those chiefe Rulers also who would not confesse Christ for feare of the Jewes John 9.22 12.42 43. lest they should be cast out of the Synagogue Untimoly confession An unseasonable and untimely confession that is whereby without any advancing of Gods glory and without the furtherance of any ones safety and without any necessity of discharging his calling or duty there is stirred up either a derision and evill entertainment of the truth or the fiercenesse and cruelty of the enemies against the godly Such a confession whereas it doth rather darken then set forth the glory of God and rather hindereth then furthereth the safety of the Church swerveth plainly from the scope and end of true and lawfull confession and therefore is not a right using but an abusing of Gods Name Therefore Christ for biddeth it Give not that which is holy to dogges And Paul Matth. 7.6 Titus 3.10 Object 1 Pet. 3.15 Reject him that is an heretick after once or twice admonition c. Neither doth that crosse this which is said Be ready alwayes to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you with meeknesse and reverence For Peter willeth us to be alwayes in a readinesse or furnished to make answer concerning the summe and grounds of Christian doctrine and to repulse all slanders and cavils whereby the doctrine of the Gospel is traduced and defamed by the adversaries thereof yet so as that it is not necessary to utter and expound to every one but unto all those which require a reason and an account of our faith thereby either to learne it or know it or to judge of it But whom we see once to scoffe at the true doctrine which hath been expounded and confirmed unto them sufficiently if they againe require a reason and account of our faith we are not to make further answer For so Christ himselfe after he had sufficiently confessed and confirmed his doctrine by testimonies answereth nothing unto the High-Priest and Pilate touching the false witnesses And himselfe rendereth a reason of his silence If I shall tell you you will not beleeve me Matth. 26.63 and 27.14 Another reason is given by Esaiah He was oppressed and was afflicted and did not open his mouth that is because Christ knew he was to suffer according to his Fathers will after his cause was sufficiently defended he is not carefull of delivering his person from injuries contumelies and punishments for he knew that this obedience did tend to his fathers glory But contrariwise when the High-Priest adjureth him he confesseth himselfe to be Christ because then his silence would have given suspicion of contempt of the Name of God whereby he was adjured Object We doe not perceive who are swine and dogges wherefore we are to render a reason of our faith to all without putting any difference Answ Christ doth not call all wicked men swine or dogs but those only who contemne and make a mock of the doctrine confirmed which they have heard and which hath been expounded unto them 2. Christ willeth us not to judge of dogs and swine by the secrets of their hearts but by their present words and deeds If againe it be replyed In matters of difficulty and such as are hard to be judged except there be delivered some certaine and exact rule to judge and deale mens consciences are left wavering and in doubt But if also we are to judge of the outward shew of swine and dogs it is hard to pronounce who are to accounted for swine and dogs Therefore mens consciences are left in doubt unto whom and when confession must be made The Minor is false for Christ will have none to be counted for dogs and swine but such as shew manifest stubbornnesse and obstinacy in their words and deeds of whom it is no hard thing to judge out of the word of God And further the holy Ghost is promised unto all that aske him by whom their judgements and actions may be directed that they erre not And lastly seeing in this life we attaine not unto the perfection of Gods law neither in other things neither in this point they who joyne the desire of Gods direction with an earnest care of Gods glory and love of their neighbour may and ought to be certaine and assured either that their counsels are so ruled by the holy Ghost that they erre not or if they erre that yet their error is pardoned and forgiven them And this certainly sufficeth for the retaining of a good conscience If lastly it be objected that Tyrants and many Magistrates which persecute the Church are swine and dogges and therefore we according to Christs commandement are not to make answer unto them if they demand our Religion We answer that this reason is a fallacy of the accident For if the Magistrate demand our Religion or any other by their commission and in their name we are necessarily to make answer of our confession unto them both in respect of their office whereunto we owe obedience and also in respect of Gods glory according as it is said of Christ Marke 8 3● Whosoever shall be ashamed of me and of my words among this adulterous and sinfull generation Matth. 10. Luke 12. of him shall the Sonne of man be ashamed also when he cometh in the glory of his Father with
our selves because No man ever hated his owne flesh 3. The greatnesse of the price and ransome wherewith Christ purchased all the members of the Church 4. The conjunction of Christs members And seeing these causes are found in our selves also it followeth that by this Law every one is forbidden to hurt or neglect his owne life or body III Why the defence of our neighbour is here commanded The defence of our neighbour is commanded For whereas the Law not onely commandeth us to avoid sinnes but also to imbrace and practise the contrary unto them it is manifest that God here doth not onely forbid us to endanger any mans life and safety but farther also commandeth us as far forth as we may to defend and preserve it Therefore this negative Commandement Thou shalt doe no murther includeth the affirmative Thou shalt preserve the life of thy neighbour The substance and summe of the Commandement is That we neither harme by any externall work either our own life or the life of an other or any mans safety and wel are of body either by force or by deceit or by neglecting neither wish in affection or will an impairing thereof or signifie by any tokens any such affection or will but on the contrary endeavour to defend and preserve the same to the utmost of our power Wherefore Thou shalt doe no murther signifieth The meaning of the Commandement 1. Thou shalt not desire to murther either thy selfe or others For what God will have not to be done of us that doth he not grant to be wished or desired 2. Neither shalt thou intimate or signifie any desire of murthering either thy selfe or others For the desire and wishing whereof God forbiddeth he forbiddeth also any inkling or signification thereof to be given either in words or behaviour or countenance 3. Neither shalt thou put this desire in execution For the desire and signification whereof God forbiddeth he verily much more forbiddeth the practice and execution thereof The contrary then is Thou shalt love and help thy selfe and others 1. In heart and desire 2. In signification 3. In practice and execution Hence spring and arise all the vertues of this Commandement and likewise the contrary vices unto them The vices which are here forbidden tend to the ruine and destruction of men the vertues that are here commanded tend to the preservation of the life or safety of men And the safety of men is preserved either by not hurting or by helping them Two kinds of vertues prescribed in this Commandement 1. Not hurting vertues 2. Helping vertues Whereby are made two divers kinds of vertues of this Commandement the former whereof containeth the vertues which tend to the not hurting of mens safety the other compriseth the vertues which tend to the helping and furthering of mens safety The vertues not hurting the safety of men are of three so●s For we are said Not to hurt three waies to wit either being not hurt or provoked or being provoked or both waies In the first manner of not hurting consisteth particular justice hurting no man In the second Mildnesse and Equability In the third Peaceablenesse Againe the vertues helping and furthering mens safety are two-fold For we are said To help 1. By repelling evils dangers and injuries 2. By doing good or bone fitting our selves or others In the first manner of helping consisteth Commutative justice in punishments Fortitude and Indignation In the second Humanity Mercy and Amity The vertues not hurting the safety of men I Particular justice PArticular Justice not hurting any man is a vertue which neither by endeavour nor by neglect hurteth the life or body of any of whom we are not hurt except God command it Or A vertue shunning all harmings which are done either by violence or by deceit or by neglect of our owne and others safety This is expressed in the words Thou shalt do no murther Unto particular justice hurting no man is opposed 1. All unlawfull harming of our owne or any others life and body whether of purpose or of negligence 2. Remissnesse when they are not hurt who are to be hurt by them unto whom the execution belongeth II Mildnesse Mildnesse or placability or easinesse in forgiving which is a vertue moderatresse and governesse of anger which neither is angry for no cause neither upon a light cause neither where is cause of just anger wisheth the destruction of the person that hurteth but is displeased onely at the reproach of Gods name or for unjustice or for the hurt of our neighbour and admitteth not in minde the desire of revenging any injury be it never so great but heartily wisheth the safety and good estate of enemies and il-willers and endeavoureth to maintaine the same according to our ability and their necessity Or it is a vertue moderatresse and governesse of anger which shunneth all unjust anger and doth so moderate just anger as that it is not angry beyond measure or passeth the bounds and limits by God prescribed neither burneth with a desire of revenge but pardoneth offences and also grievous injuries even to enemies so that the anger conceived neither aimeth at nor lighteth on the persons but on the vices of offenders and that with this regard that it wisheth the safety of them who most heinously offend Blessed are the meeke Mat. 5.5 The contrary vices for they shall inherit the earth Unto Mildnesse is repugnant Remissnesse when a man is not moved for grievous injuries nor represseth and punisheth them or is too slack in forbidding them 2. Vnjust or immoderate anger 3. Desire of revenge grudging hatred and spight III Equity Equability or equity which is a vertue of neer affinity with mildnesse which is a moderatresse of strict justice which equalleth punishments with faults upon good and reasonable cause as when in respect of the crime it selfe or our owne duty or the publique safety or the private safety of them which transgresse or for the avoiding of offence or for any other good cause we yeeld somewhat of our right in punishing offences Gal. 5.1 Phil 4.5 or in punishing of injuries Brethren if a man be fallen yee which are spirituall restore such a one with the spirit of meekenesse considering thy selfe lest thou also be tempted Let your patient minde be knowne unto all men Unto equability or equity is repugnant The contrary vices First Immoderate rigour cruelty and unjust severity when there is had no regard of circumstances whereof it is said Extreme right is extreme wrong Secondly Remissenesse that is not to be moved at such things whereat we ought to be moved as when God commandeth c. Thirdly Partiality and accepting of persons IV Peaceablenes Peaceablenesse or study of peace and concord which is a diligence both in avoiding unnecessary causes and occasions of offences discords contentions and hatreds and also in reconciling those which are offended either with us or with others and lastly
the law condemned us and the Spirit of regeneration bending and inclining our hearts not to an hatred of the law wherewith they first did burn but to the study and desire of obedience and righteousnesse Therefore he addeth Rom. 7.4 That ●ee should be unto another who is raised up from the dead that yee should bring forth fruit unto God Againe Wee are delivered from the law being dead unto it Rom. 7.6 wherein wee were holden that wee should serve in newnesse of spirit and not in the oldnesse of the letter In the other place this is the Apostles meaning I through the law to wit which accuseth us of sin and terrifieth the consciences of men am dead to the law that is cease to seek for righteousnesse in the law and begin to seek for it in Christ For this is it which he addeth I am crucified with Christ namely by the participation of Christs merit and the mortification of sin that I might live to God according to the will of God expressed in the law For hee liveth to God who obeyeth God and honoureth him through his obedience But this the doctrine of the law doth not work in nature now corrupted except we passe from the law to Christ by faith that he may live in us and we in him that is that he may be effectuall in us through the working of his holy Spirit 1. By suggesting and speaking comfort in our hearts of the remission of our sins then by making us like unto himselfe by regeneration that the law may no longer condemne us and cause wrath but we may delight in the law of God concerning the inner man Rom. 7. So then we are delivered from the law and die to the law so Christ liveth in us that we begin to delight in the law and to order our life according to the prescript thereof For Christ doth not restore any other righteousnesse or any other image of God in us by his Spirit than which was created in our nature darkned and eclipsed by sin and described in the law neither is there another spirit authour of Gods law and worker of our conformity with God in our nature uncorrupted and restored Object 11. I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel not according to the covenant that I made with their Fathers Jerem. 31.31 Here they say That God promiseth not to renew ehe old covenant which is the law but to make a new which is the Gospel Wherefore not the law but the Gospel only is to be taught in the Church of Christ But it is manifest that the new covenant is not diverse from the old as touching the substantiall but only as touching the accidentall parts or conditions and circumstances thereof For although the old shadowes and dark types are taken away and a most cleere doctrine of the prophecies and figures fulfilled by Christ hath succeeded and the grace of the holy Ghost is shed more plentifully on men in the New Testament than in the Old yet notwithstanding there was one and the same manner and way both of obtaining salvation and of Gods spirituall worship in times past that now is Unto this beare witnesse the words themselves of the Prophet Jeremy Jerem. 31.33 I will write in their hearts my law hee saith not another law but the same which in times past I gave them Jerem. 31.34 I will be their God and they shall be my people I will forgive their iniquity and will remember their sins no more For these conditions of the covenant are found as well in the Old as in the New The difference only is that these are not the proper benefits of the law but of the Gospel which two parts of the Old and New Testament the Prophet here opposeth one to the other calling the law the old covenant and the Gospel the new covenant as being the principall part of the covenant and therefore he ascribeth these blessings to the new covenant because thereon dependeth whatsoever grace of Christ befell unto the old Church and therein are those blessings more fully manifested and exhibited by Christ which were also promised and granted in the old for Christ If then God will write the law which was first written in tables of stone in the hearts of men in his new covenant he doth not abolish but establish the law by the preaching of the Gospel whereby the hearts of men are regenerated that they may begin to obey the law and therefore he delivering here a difference between the law and the Gospel doth so substitute the new covenant to the old as that he saith that that part of the covenant which is the Morall law must be retained and written in our hearts Now if they urge these words which the Prophet addeth They shall teach no more every man his neighbour for they shall all know me That hereby they may conclude Jerem. 31.34 That men are not in the New testament to be willed to know God for that they shall of themselves know and obey him they erre too grosly going about to remove the instrumentall cause by reason that the effect in the N. Testament is greater and more plentifull for that men may know God and of their own accord obey him the holy Ghost worketh by the doctrine of the law and the Gospel Neither doth it follow that they are not bound neither are to be urged by incitements of exhortation because they doe their duty of themselves For binding and exhorting is a far other thing than constraining Wherefore in two respects hath the law place in instructing the regenerate namely that they may learne of the law the will of God and may also by the law be more and more incited willingly to obey God Object 12. The law is not necessary unto salvation Therefore it is not to be taught in the Church Ans This reason is a fallacy reasoning that not to be simply so which is not in some respect so For albeit the law is not necessary to this that wee should through our obedience to it be saved yet it is necessary unto other things as hath been taught already in the doctrine concerning the use of the law Object 13. In Christ are hid all the treasures of wisedome and knowledge Againe Col. 2.3.10 John 1.16 Yee are complete in him Of his fulnesse have all wee received Therefore wee must not goe back from Christ to Moses and there is no need of the law in the Church of Christ. Answ This reason deceiveth by inferring a false consequent because it proceedeth from the putting of the whole to the deniall of a part The whole wisedome and knowledge that is the doctrine of Christ delivered by him unto us is sufficient and necessary for the Church but a part of that doctrine is the Morall law also because Christ commandeth not Faith onely but Repentance also and amendment of life to be preached in his Name and hee himselfe delivered
minde to God himself the Creatour of all things and the fountaine of all benefits or gifts 2. If we desire that he will give to the bread obtained and received from him Levit. 26.26 a force and vertue of nourishing and sustaining our bodies that is if we ask not only the bread but the blessing also of the bread at Gods hands For unlesse he blesse all our cares and labours are b●t vaine and the very gifts of God become unprofitable yea hurtfull unto us according to that his commination I will breake the staffe of bread Hereby now it is plainly cleere what we desire when we desire bread namely 1. Not great riches but only things necessary 2. That they be bread to us that is that they may be good and saving to us through Gods benediction and blessing wherewith if they be not accompanied the bread shall not be bread but it shall be as a stone or poyson to us For he that giveth bread that it may be to him that receiveth it no better then a stone giveth a stone not bread And such are the blessings which the wicked receive of God and snatch as it were unto themselves 4. Wherefore Christ calleth it our bread CHrist willeth us to desire our Bread not mine thine or any other mans Bread 1. That we should desire those things which God giveth us For the bread is made ours which is given us of God necessary for the sustenance of our life Therefore give us our bread signifieth Give us bread O God assigned unto us by thee which thou wilt have to be ours God as an house-holder doth distribute to every one his portion which we desire for our selves of him 2. That we should desire things necessary gotten of us by lawfull labour in a kinde and trade of life pleasing to God and honest and profitable to the common society that is which we may receive through ordinary meanes and by lawfull waies the hand of God from heaven reaching them out unto us He that will not worke let him not eate 2 Thes 3.10 3. That we may use them with a good conscience and thankesgiving For God will have us assured that when he giveth us these blessings he giveth us with them the power of enjoying them yet so that he will not have us use his gifts as ravenous robbers but freely and with thanksgiving 5. Wherefore Christ calleth it daily bread CHrist calleth the bread which we must desire of God daily 1. Because he will have us daily to desire as much as may for every day suffice us 2. Because he will bridle our raging and endlesse lusts and desires Mat. 6.31 Your Father knoweth what ye have need of A small thing unto the just man Ps 37.16 34.9 is better then great riches to the wicked and mighty Nothing wanteth to them that feare the Lord that is no profitable and necessary thing Therefore give us daily bread that is give us bread sufficient give us so much of things necessary for our life as shall be needfull for every of us in his vocation and calling to serve God and our neighbour 6. Why Christ addeth This day CHrist addeth it 1. To meet with our distrustfulnesse and covetousnesse and to reclaime us from these vices 2. That we should depend on him only as yesterday so this day and to morrow that namely we alwaies looke for the necessaries of this life at the hands of God that we know them to be given us of God not to be gotten by our own hands or labours or diligence that also we know that they being received profit not our body except Gods blessing do accompany them 3. That the exercise of faith and prayer may alwaies be continued in us For as long as it is said This day so long will he have prayer to be continued that so we may yeeld due obedience to that commandement 2 Thes 5.17 Pray alwaies 7. Whether it be lawfull to desire riches THis question together with the next ensuing ariseth out of the former questions For when we are willed to desire onely daily bread and that this day it seemeth at the first sight that it is not lawfull either to desire riches or to put up any thing for the morrow But it is verily lawfull to desire riches if taking away all ambiguity and doubtfulnesse of the word we understand by the name of riches things necessary for the sustenance of life What Epicurus took riches to be As the Epicure defined riches to be a poverty agreeable to the law of Nature This definition is good For they are to be accounted truly rich who have things necessary sufficient to maintaine life and who live content here-with And if we so take the name of riches riches are doubtlesse to be desired of God in as much as we ought to desire such things as are necessary for nature and our place and function whereunto God hath called us The reason hereof is because these necessary things or riches are the daily bread which we ought to desire They are also otherwise defined To be an abundance and plenty over and above things necessary So Crassus surnamed the Rich said that no man was rich but he who was able to maintaine an Army with his revenues If we take riches in this sense riches are not at all to be desired of God For this we are not to aske our daily bread And Salomon in the person of all the godly saith Prov. 30.8 Give me not poverty nor riches by which words the Spirit of God also by Salomon teacheth us to pray against riches that is abundance above things necessary 2 Tim. 6.9 Hither belongeth also that of Paul They which will be rich fall into tentations and snares and into many foolish and noysome lusts which drowne men in perdition and destruction for which causes riches are called Thornes by Christ which cannot be handled without danger of pricking 1 Tim. 6.6 But contrariwise godlinesse is great gaine if a man be content with that he hath But notwithstanding if God hath given us any thing besides those things which are necessary for us let us doe our diligence to use them well or reserve them to good uses For Christ commanded his Disciples to gather up the broken meate which remained that nothing bee lost And famous and notable is the example of Joseph John 6.12 who by the fore-warning of the Oracle Gen. 41. gathered and laid up food in the time of plenty for the yeares of dearth to come But here we must take heede 1. That we repose not our confidence in them 2. We must avoid luxury and all abuse of them 3. We must consider that we are Gods stewards who hath committed these riches unto us to imploy and bestow well Three things to be weighed in our treasuring up of riches and that by this meanes he hath laid a burthen upon us and therefore shall we one
de veritate mat Art 26. q. 7. An. Christi 1270. The sufficiency of Christs merit is equally extended to all but not the efficacy thereof which comes to passe partly by free-will partly by Divine election by which the effect of Christs merits is conferred in mercy on some and in Gods just judgement it is with-drawn from some Idem in cap. 5. Apocal. We may speake two wayes of that Redemption which was performed by the suffering of God Either according to sufficiency and so his suffering redeemed all because he delivered all so far as concerned him for he is sufficient to save and redeeme all although there were infinite worlds as Anselme saith lib. 2. Cur Deus homo c. c. 14. or according to efficacy and so he redeemed not all by his suffering because all do not adhere to the Redeemer and therefore all have not the efficacy of redemption Peter Lombard l. 3. dist 22. Christ offered himselfe for all to God the Trinity in respect of the sufficency of the price but only for the Elect in respect of efficacy because he effected salvation only for the predestinated Peter Galatinus de arcanis Cathol veritatis l. 8. c. 14. on that place of Esay cap. 53. My just Servant shall justifie many Though the suffering of Christ is sufficient to blot away the sins of all men yet it was not to blot them all away but of those only who were to beleeve in him and were to repent for that cause he saith And he tooke away or ●are the sins of many IX Thus besides the Schoole-men the Orthodox Fathers also teach So Prosper Aquitanicus in the yeare of Christ 460. Resp ad object Vincent object 1. Whereas it is rightly said that our Saviour was crucified for the redemption of all the world for undertaking the affaires of humane nature and for the common losse in Adam yet it may be said that he died only for these to whom his death was profitable And Cyril on John l. 11. c. 19. saith That Christ is an Advocate for the sins of all the world that is not only for the Jews but also for other Nations or for all who being called by faith attaine to righteousnesse and sanctification so that the benefit of a Mediatour not without cause belongs only to them whose Mediatour and High-Priest he is X. But of all men Austin speakes most clearely whose opinion because it is altogether ours I thought to set in opposition to some Sycophants Thus he speaks If we consider * Tom. 1. ad Art falsò imp Art 1. the greatnesse and power of the price and that it belongs to the only cause of mankinde the bloud of Christ is the redemption of the whole world but they that passe out of this life without faith and the Sacrament of regeneration they are not partakers of redemption Whereas then by reason of that one nature of all and the one cause of all undertaken by our Lord truly all are said to be redeemed and yet not all are delivered from captivity doubtlesse the propertie of redemption is in them out of whom the Prince of this world is ejected and now they are no more the vessels of Satan but the members of Christ Whose death is not so spent upon mankinde that they also who are not regenerated should appertaine to his redemption but so that what by one example is done for all by a particular Sacrament should be celebrated in each one for that cup of immortality which was composed of our infirmity and of our verity and of divine verity it hath in it selfe that which may benefit all but if it be not drunke it doth not cure A monition of PHILIP PARRY to the Reader THis doctrine of the efficacy of Christs death D. Parry handled more at large in the first part of the golden Ladder of salvation where he wrote a particular Exercise of it As also in the Epitome of Arminianisme or The examination of the five Articles of the Remonstrants in the Netherlands As also in the Body of Christian doctrine to the 40. Question Edit posthumae Also Collegio 18. disp 23. of Christs death for all And lastly in that peculiar Speech which we placed among the Orations declaimed in the University Tom. 2. oper Theol. D. Parry In which Writings he defends and retaines that distinction of the Schoole-men and Ancient Fathers of sufficiency and efficacy with other Orthodox Divines But the good old man a little before his death when he understood that in the Provinciall Synod of Dort this was called into question unwisely by some brethren under Parries name and authority he began to think more seriously of it supposing that it was not altogether so necessary whereas without it these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or seeming contradictions of Scripture may seeme to be fitly reconciled XI We therefore with all our heart reject the Epicurean blasphemies of the late Pelagians namely Huberus Puccius and such like by which the foundation of Christian faith is utterly overthrowne as 1. That Christ so died for all men that by his death truly and undoubtedly all men are freed from all sin and condemnation whether they beleeve or not 2. That by Christs death God was reconciled to all mankind and that he hath truly received into his favour the whole race of mankinde whether they be Turks Jews or Epicures 3. And that he hath also received them to mercy who before his death were in hell For Huberus in his 66. These saith That Christ died effectually for them 4. That remission of sins is given equally to all Idem Thes 270. Puccius de ●ffi● pag. 7. Idem l●b MS. cap. 24. 5. That the pardon of sin is generall 6. That the Reprobates were as well saved by Christ as others 7. That all and every one by the bounty and universall grace of God the Father in Christ are saved 8. That as Christ was the Creator so he is the Redeemer of all and every one One Egge is not liker to another then Huberus is to Puccius they both build upon one foundation to wit upon the generall redemption pardon and salvation by Christs death without any particular faith from which notwithstanding Infidels fall away here is only the difference that what is covertly and sophistically spoken by Huberus is roundly professed by Puccius to wit Pelagianisme necessarily resulting thence as is shewed in Margarita Aurea that there is no originall sin seeing that by the power of Christs death all men and every one are borne as they are men according to Huberus as they are redeemed men according to Puccius in the state of grace and salvation saith he in the bosome and grace of God saith this and therefore in the state of blessednesse so they procure not their owne destruction by infidelity Let the Church yea let God judge betweene these two and betweene Osiander with what conscience he can deny that there is any controversie about this to wit
Old He is minister of God to thee for good Rom. 13.4 IX In that saying of Luke 22.25 Christ doth not debarre such kings from the Church but he onely forbids the Apostles and Ministers of the Church to meddle with riotousnesse preheminence and civill dominion But Paul Gal. 6.15 doth not speak of the externall habit of Christians of whom some were circumcised as the faithfull Jewes and some were uncircumcised as the Christians who had been Gentiles To which saying answereth that Galat. 3.28 There is neither Jew nor Greeke there is neither bond nor free there is neither male nor female Which words if they understand literally surely they must also be separated from Christ seeing they are either servants or free either males or females The sense then of the Apostle is this That the outward differences of men doe nothing hinder or promote eternall salvation and that onely the new creature in Christ Jesus is necessary to salvation X. Lastly by that saying of Mat. 5.39 Christ doth not take away punishments due to the wicked but only private revenge for otherwise no Christian neither father nor mother nor school-masters nor any minister of the Church could be suffered the dutie of all which is to resist evill and wicked men and to maintain discipline every one in his place without which an horrible ataxie and confusion would ensue too much libertie would be brought in and at length would follow the subversion both of humane societie and of the Church it selfe Surely Christ and his Apostles did very often resist evill Neither doe wee reade any where in the Scripture that they who were appointed for politicall functions did after their conversion to Christianitie desert their province or calling or that ever they were commanded to forsake it So that Ruler in the fourth of John ver 33. beleeved himselfe and all his house Sergius Paulus the Deputie Act. 13.12 beleeved So the Keeper of the prison Act. 16.33 was baptised he and all his houshold XI Concerning the divers formes of Common-wealths which of them is best let Politicians dispute In the Scripture we reade of Cesars Kings Princes Governours Presidents Pretors Consuls Captaines Dukes and in a word both of inferiour and superiour Magistrates Of whom is this generall saying of Paul the Apostle There is no power but of God Rom. 13.1 1 Pet. 2.13 14 17. The powers that be are ordained of God And of S. Peter Submit your selves to every ordinance of man for the Lords sake whether it be to the King as supreme or unto Governours as being sent by him Also Feare God Honour the King Where we may note that when the Magistrates office by Peter is called an humane ordinance this is not repugnant to Paul who calls it a divine ordinance For God only ordained the Magistrate but as for the forms of Common-weathls and their distinct degrees to wit that in them should be Emperours Kings Princes superiours inferiours this depends from humane ordination and politicall sanction yet all are alike governed by God therefore wee must be subject to humane ordinance for the Lords sake saith S. Peter XII Of the right of Magistrates thus saith Paul For this cause pay you tribute also for they are Gods ministers Rom. 13.6 7. attending continually upon this very thing Render therefore to all their dues tribute to whom tribute is due custome to whom custome feare to whom feare honour to whom honour Againe Give to Cesar what is Cesars Whence we gather that the right of Magistrates consisteth of three things First that hee may be knowne as the minister of God to whom therefore honour and reverence is due because hee is in stead of God for this cause as it said Magistrates are called gods Secondly that for the authoritie of so great a function they should be reverenced honoured and feared by their subjects no lesse then parents are by their children for Magistrates should be to subjects in stead of parents Thirdly that customes and tributes due to Magistrates should be paid them that out of them they may be able to sustaine the heavie burthen of their function preserve their lives and dignitie and exercise their bountie towards others Yet the Magistrate must be as far from riotousnesse as the subjects themselves as it is in Jer. 22.14 15. and every-where else in Scripture XIII God hath furnished the Magistrate with chiefe power that hee may command some and may governe others and use the sword also if need require against the disobedient and maintaine and defend his owne authoritie For so it is written Dan. 4.22 The most High ruleth in the kingdome of men and giveth it to whomsoever hee will Againe The princes of the Gentiles exercise dominion over them Mat. 20.25 and they that are great exercise authority upon them Againe Rom. 13.4 He beareth not the sword in vaine XIV God also for this cause laid upon the magistrate this carefull and troublesome burthen that he might urge promote and preserve among men the obedience due to Gods Law chiefly among Christians For first hee ought entirely to maintaine the honour and worship of God according to the prescript of the first Table and to propagate pietie with the true worship of God amongst his subjects according to Gods will and word For so God commanded Josuah Jos 1.8 This book of the law shall not depart out of thy mouth but thou shalt meditate therein day and night that thou mayest observe to doe according to all that is written therein So Paul Rom. 13.4 He is the minister of God to thee for good Now the chiefe happinesse of subjects consisteth in true religion and the true worship of God XV. Againe the office of the Magistrate is to maintaine right and justice and to preserve honestie peace and concord to love the good to afright and punish the wicked to maintaine and defend their subjects and territories even with the sword against domestick and forraigne enemies As it is written Jer. 22.3 Psal 82.3 Thus saith the Lord Execute ye judgement and righteousnesse and deliver the spoiled out of the hand of the oppressour and doe no wrong doe no violence to the stranger the fatherlesse nor the widow neither shed innocent bloud in this place Againe Magistrates are not a terrour to good workes but to the evill Wilt thou then not be afraid of the power doe that which is good but if thou doe that which is evill be afraid for he beareth not the sword in vaine for he is the minister of God a revenger to execute wrath upon him that doth evill XVI Both offices of the Magistrate are usually impugned by Pontificians Anabaptists and other fanaticall persons XVII In Popery the Pontificians confesse Bellarm l. 4. de Laicis c. 17 18. that the Magistrate ought not only to have a care of the civill government and to promote the publick peace but also by all meanes to defend Gods worship as it
exempted himselfe but also the whole Clergy who with his shaved troope make up almost the third part of Christendome Neither hath he only withdrawne himself and his whole Clergy from the Emperours obedience but he hath also violently wrung out of Cesars hands all his Territories Cities Goods Revenues Tithes Tributes Toles and other innumerable revenues which anciently belonged to the Emperour but now exceed doubly the in-comes of all secular Princes and not only hath he done so but which is more he hath put under his feet Cesar himselfe with all Kings Princes and whatsoever secular Magistrates belong to Christianity and so he hath wickedly inverted the sence of the Apostles saying thus That the Emperour must sweare fealty to the Pope Dist 63. C. Tibi Domino Dist 93. C. Duo Dist 93. C. Caerim Eccl. Rom. l. 1. sect 3. Gloss et Dd. in C. Ad Apostolicae De sentent ●t re judicata in 6. That the Emperour should be subject to the Popes judgement and not the Pope to the Emperours That the Emperour ought to bow himselfe to the Pope and hold his stirrop while he takes horse That the Pope can Excommunicate yea Depose the Emperour Here Christian Emperours Kings and Princes should be watchfull and consider with themselves with whom they have to do whether with Christs Vicar and Peters Successour or whether not rather with the sworne enemies of Christ of Paul and Peter for Peter hath left this injunction to all Christians both Lay and Clergy 1 Pet. 2.13 14. Be subject to every humane Ordinance for the Lords sake whether to the King as to the supreme or to Governours who are sent by him both for the punishment of wicked men and for the praise of those that do well XXXV To the other question this is the briefe and solid answer Subjects ought to looke not so much upon the person as upon the Office of the Magistrate Nero Cesar was a most flagitious man who did prostitute himselfe to all naughtinesse and impiety in which respect he deserved punishment rather then honour as Historians record yet because he was Emperour Peter and Paul warne Christians to honour the King He is then to be honoured by reason of Gods Ordinance as all others likewise who administer this divine Ordinance and have power over us although they were most wicked and blasphemous if it were but for the dignity of their Office which they sustaine as for their blemishes and vices they must be left to God XXXVI To the third question we may answer distinctly out of Gods Word Pharaoh King of Egypt used the Israelites tyrannically by laying upon them insupportable burthens yet he was to be honoured by them till such time as God should ease them of their yoke Nebuchadnezzar was a most cruell tyrant and robber grievously afflicting the Jews yet Daniel speakes to him in this manner Dan. 2.37 Jer. 19.7 God hath conferred on thee power strength and glory Jeremy exhorts the captive Jews to obedience and to pray for the City of Babel though it was Idolatrous We must then not only obey good Magistrates but Tyrants also yea we must rather beare with any injuries then resist their power or Gods Ordinance and we must practise Peters rule Be subject with all feare of the Lord 1 Pet. 2.18 not onely to those that are good and just but also to the evill thinking with our selves that all Powers as well good as bad are set over us by God good that in them he may shew his grace and mercy but Tyrants that in them we may acknowledge Gods anger against our sinnes Therefore it is not lawfull for any subject or private man except it be in his owne just defence to invade a Tyrant even though he have occasion David could have killed Saul whom notwithstanding he let goe because as yet he was not driven to extreme necessity 1 Sam. 24.11 I will not saith he put out mine hand against my Lord because he is the Lords Annointed For God knows how to punish Tyrants either by the ordinary power of some other Kingdome or else by some miraculous way XXXVII Although this obedience hath certaine limits for when Tyrants go about to force their Subjects to manifest Idolatry or to some wickednesse against the expresse Word of God in this case the Scripture commands us that in no wayes we obey such tyrannicall Edicts but that every man according to the condition of his calling make resistance and rather indure any thing For when Nebuchadnezzer would have his Idol to be worshipped by all men under paine of the hot firie furnace Daniels three fellowes stoutly refused it telling the King Dan. 3.16 We must not in this thing obey thee behold our God whom we worship can deliver us out of the hot firie Furnace and he can rescue us out of thine hand O King But if he will not rescue us be it knowne to thee O King that we will not worship thy god nor will we adore thy statue which thou hast set up So Daniel did not obey King Darius Dan. 6.16 who commanded that he alone should be worshipped and not God for which cause he was cast into the Lions den That wicked King Zedekias forbad the Prophet Jeremiah to make knowne to the people Gods command that he should deliver himselfe into the hands of the Chaldees but for this cause he was imprisoned The Apostles Peter and John being forbid by the Magistrate to preach in the Name of Jesus answer thus Whether this be just in the sight of God to obey you rather then God Acts 4.19 judge ye XXXVIII Therefore that saying is good The Magistrate must be obeyed as far as the Altars and Hierome saith We must obey Judges in the things that are true Comment in Rom. 13. but not in such things as are contrary to Religion even for this reason because it were great injustice so to serve the King in this world as to dishonour the King of heaven Hence Thomas saith well Every humane power is subordinate to the power of God and no humane power is to be obeyed against God according to that Acts 4.19 We must obey God rather then man So Chrysost in Mat. 22.22 If Cesar will take upon him that which is Gods to command wicked Acts it will not be Cesars tribute but the Devils service This is the Orthodox doctrine of Magistracie and Civill power and of the Subjects dutie to the Magistrate which out of Gods Word and Ecclesiasticall Writers is wont to be taught openly in all Churches and Schooles of the Evangelicall Princes as well within the Romane Empire as without The end of the doctrinall Aphorismes of the Reformed CHURCHES D. David Parrie's secular Theme concerning the causes why an hundred yeers ago Popery which is still to be avoided was by Gods great blessing driven out of the Reformed Churches of GERMANIE Being proposed in a solemne disquisition in the famous Universitie of the
Arch-Palatinate of Heidelberge Andrew Pragai an Hungarian then answering Novem. 1. 1617. Also his Assertion or Defence against the foolish scoffes of Maximilian Sandaeus Priest and Jesuite of Herbipolis WHereas one Maximilian a Jesuite Conzio-Sandaeus or Sandaeo-Conzius hath lately in a satyricall wanton straine boldly canvised and with lies torne and defiled the secular Theme concerning the causes why an hundred yeers since Popery which is alwaies to be avoided was driven out of our Evangelicall Churches which Theme was the former yeere the first of November proposed and divulged at Heidelberge by publick authoritie D. David Parrie Professor of Divinitie being President and Andrew Pragai an Hungarian a Candidate or Student in Divinitie at that time Respondent But the Jesuite doth nothing in this unusuall to his Sect which hath from the cradle resolved to restore with all the lies they can the decayed condition of the Roman Antichrist and to keep under the doctrine of the Gospel of Christ with their calumnies and sophistrie But wee must look for nothing else from them who if they dare belye the sacred Name of our Saviour JESUS what wonder if they lye in every thing else But because he hath made no scruple to direct by writing and obtrude to us his lies we thought it was our part not to reject altogether his provocation not yet to answer a foole according to his folly therefore we thought it best to divulge againe the whole secular Theme with a short Defence of those passages which we find depraved by his lies and sophistrie whence the ingenuous Reader may easily judge that the causes demonstrated in the secular Theme are no waies shaken or weakned by that thick close joyned heap of lies reproaches and calumnies which the folly malice and impudence of Sandaeo-Conzius hath so incredibly complicated He makes shew as if he did not deny but that an Apostolicall Synagogue an Idolatrous profanation and Tyrannicall crueltie ought to be avoided and exterminated but hee denies that any of these is to be found in Poperie I warrant you as that servant in Terence excusing his masters naughtinesse Eunuch 5.4 Who quoth he ever saw in a whores house any man apprehended for an adulterer Will you exspect that the Beast will confesse himselfe to be the Beast Or that the whore will professe her selfe to be the great Whore Or that her worshippers will not deny what they doe The contumelies of ancient Christians belong nothing to them in that they were called Asinarii Sarmentitii Semissii These do no more belong to Poperie then the praises of the Virgin to Bacchus these were so many badges of the Christians innocencie That these men doe not worship the Whore who sits upon the seven-hilled Citie that they are not the ministers of Antichristian tyrannie and that they doe not sacrifice to Idols the Christian world will then beleeve when they give over to practise such vanities Your fornication is too naked and apparent God by the light of his word hath detected your filthy pollutions that for the covering thereof this Sandaeo-Conzius doth in vaine crack of the Protestantick Synagogue calling our Assemblies so in scoffe In vaine doth he goe about to paint the Whore and to hide her filthinesse from us by casting a cloak patched up of so many calumnies and of old torne and rotten complaints upon us of purpose to blind-fold us All which are either apparently false or reproachfull or frivolous and ridiculous and indeed documents of Jesuiticall falshood ignorance and impudence of purpose devised to avoid open plea in the Court of Justice in which the guilty partie convented ought first to put in his answer to the interrogatories before he can have libertie to sue his accuser Now whereas there are above two hundred Positions he hath scarce snapt at and gnawn the fourth part of them and that cursorily or like that little curre Lycisca hee hath barked at the Moon But though wee give him leave to bark yet our cause remaines unconquered But it is sufficient that we have pointed at this As for his Corybantick Scheme or cloak fit for the Corybantes Cybelles Priests which he calls the Protestantick Synagogue hee should rather have named it The Jesuiticall sink of lies reproaches and pratling whereas his filth belongs not to us we returne it to the authors of it by the postliminian right or that law whereby things unlawfully taken away were lawfully recovered The secular Theme or Argument of the causes why an hundred yeers ago by Gods great mercy Popery still to be avoided was driven out of the Evangelicall CHURCHES Against the wranglings subtle shifts and calumnies of Maximilian Sands Jesuite briefly asserted 1. Whosoever will be saved above all things 't is needfull that he avoid Popery 2. For Popery is the overthrow of the whole Christian Religion under the name of Christ which cannot stand with salvation 3. Christian Religion consisteth in Faith and Evangelicall obedience obedience in worship and discipline 4. Popery hath turned Faith into Apostasie worship into Idolatrie discipline into Tyrannie 5. So the many causes of abandoning by Gods assistance Popery of old being by others handled at large we will briefly reduce to three First the damnable apostasie from faith Secondly horrible Idolatrie in stead of Gods worship Thirdly Antichristian tyrannie for Evangelicall discipline I. The damnable apostasie of Popery from the faith which we beleeve and by which we beleeve 6. Concerning the apostasie of Poperie from the faith wee will not handle a past but a present history 7. To shake first the principle of faith which is beleeved and into which Christian faith is lastly resolved is to fall off from the faith to overthrow faith and salvation 8. The principle of faith which is beleeved and lastly terminating Christian faith is the holy Scripture contained in the bookes of the Prophets and Apostles and that alone 9. For The Scripture is given by inspiration of God and is profitable for doctrine for reproofe 2 Tim. 2.16 for correction for instruction in righteousnesse that the man of God may be perfect thorowly furnished unto all good workes 10. This principle of faith which is beleeved Poperie hath many waies and at this day is still pulling at it 11. It teacheth that in the holy Scripture there is no Divinitie but what it receiveth from the Church The Assertion The Jesuite in a whispering way hath allowed of these ten Positions therefore they need no defence but by the way we must note that the distinction of faith Lib. 12. de Trinit c. 2. which we beleeve and by which we beleeve is extant in Austine and is delivered by Lombard l. 3. distinct 23. C. Against the eleventh he exclaimes Parrie lies What if the Jesuite lie Parrie wrote truth out of Andradius the Portugall Doctor Lib. 11. defensionis pag. 257. the authentick Defender of the Councell of Trent whose words are these Neither is there in the bookes themselves in which the
ancient then the Scripture 1 Ans The Minor is false As for that which some men say that the Church is ancienter then the Scriptures and therefore of greater authority it is too trifling For the Word of God is the everlasting wisdome in God himselfe Neither was the knowledge of it then first manifested unto the Church when it was committed to writing but the manifesting of it began together with the creation of mankind and the first beginnings of the Church in Paradise yea the Word is that immortall seed of which the Church was borne The Church therefore could not be except the word were first delivered Now when we name the holy Scripture The Scripture is first in nature as the cause we mean not so much the characters of the letters and the volumes but rather the sentences which are contained in them which they shall never be able to prove to be of lesse antiquity then the Church For albeit they were repeated and declared often after the beginning of the gathering of the Church 2 Ans The Minor is false yet the summe of the Law and Gospel was the same for ever To conclude neither is that which they assume alwayes true That the authority of the ancienter witnesse is greater then of the younger A younger workman may be more skilfull then an elder for such may be the condition and quality of the younger witnesse that he may deserve greater credit then the ancienter Christ being man bare witnesse of himselfe Moses also and the Prophets had long time before borne witnesse of him yet neither his nor all other witnesses authority is therefore greater then Christs alone In like sort the Church witnesseth that the holy Scripture which wee have is the Word of God The Scripture it selfe also doth witnesse of it self the same but with that kind of witnesse that is more certaine and sure then all the others of Angels and men There is alledged also to this purpose a place 4 Object The pillar of truth 1 Tim 3. where the Church is called the pillar and ground of the truth But sith the Scripture doth teach other-where and that not once that the foundation of the Church is Christ and his word it is manifest enough that the Church is the pillar of the truth not a fundamentall or upholding pillar but a ministeriall that is a keeper and spreader of it abroad and as it were a mansion place or sure seat which might carry the truth left with her and committed unto her in the open face of all mankind Acts 9. Galat. 2. 1 Thes 2. 2 Thes 1. Titus 1. Galat. 2. even as the holy Apostle Paul was called an elect vessell to beare the Name of God before the Gentiles and Kings neither yet did Paul get credit unto the Gospel but the Gospel unto Paul So likewise are the Apostles termed pillars not that the Church rested on their persons but that they were the chiefe teachers of the Gospel and as it were the Chieftaines and Masters of doctrine for a man is not bound to beleeve those that teach on their bare word but for the proofes which they bring of their doctrine Furthermore they alledge a sentence of Austine out of his book entituled 5 Object Chap. 5. A place of Augustine 1 Ans An Example maketh no rule Against the Epistle of the foundation I saith Austine would not beleeve the Gospel except the authority of the Catholike Church did move mee thereunto But first if it were true that either Austine or some others did give credence unto the Gospel onely for the Churches authority yet might there not be fashioned a rule hence of that which all men either did or ought to doe But that this is not the meaning of Austine which these men would have they doe easily perceive who weigh both the whole course of this place and the phrase of speech which is usuall unto Austine For Austine going about to shew that the Manichees were destitute of all proofe of their doctrine first hee opposeth one who as yet beleeveth not the Gospel 2 Ans He speaketh of himselfe as yet not converted or not sufficiently confirmed and denieth that such a one is able any way to be convicted by the Manicheans for he were to be convicted either by arguments drawne out of the doctrine it selfe of which themselves were departed for example sake he proposeth himselfe who should not have beleeved the Gospel except the authority of the Catholike Church had moved him thereunto Austine therefore speaketh this not of himselfe as he was then when he writ these things against the Manicheans but of himselfe before he was yet converted or not sufficiently confirmed And that he speaketh not of the present but of the time past the words that follow doe manifestly declare Whom then I beleeved when they said Believe the Gospel why should I not beleeve them when they say Beleeve not a Manichean For hence it appeareth that when he saith he was moved especially by the authority of the Church hee meanes it of that time at which he obeyed the Churches voice that is departed from the Manicheans unto the true Church But after that once he was converted and had perceived the truth of doctrine that his faith was not now any more builded on the authority of the Church but on a farre other foundation himselfe is a most sufficient witnesse for us whereas in the selfe same booke hee saith on this wise Chap. 14. Therefore he did beleeve the Church especially before he was able to perceive it Thou hast proposed nothing else but to commend that thy selfe beleevest and to laugh at that which I beleeve And when as I of the other side shall commend that which my selfe beleeve and laugh at that which thou beleevest what dost thou thinke we must determine or doe but even to shake hands with them who bid us to know certaine things afterward will us to beleeve things that are uncertaine and Let us follow them who bid us first to beleeve that which as yet we are not able to perceive that being more enabled by faith it selfe we may discerne to understand that which wee beleeve not men now but God himselfe inwardly strengthening and enlightening our mind Wherefore they doe manifest injury unto Austine who draw that which himselfe confesseth of himselfe when he was not yet converted or was but weake unto that time when he affirmeth farre otherwise both of himselfe and all the godly For so reverent a regard ought wee to have of the word of God The application of the answer and such also is the force and efficacie of the holy Spirit in confirming the hearts of beleevers that we beleeve God yea without any creatures testimonie even as Elias forsooke not God no not when hee thought 1 Kings 19. That followeth not which they would 1 Because there is more in the consequent than in the antecedent 2 Because there is