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A69010 Institutions of Christian religion framed out of Gods word, and the writings of the best diuines, methodically handled by questions and answers, fit for all such as desire to know, or practise the will of God. Written in Latin by William Bucanus Professor of Diuinitie in the Vniuersitie of Lausanna. And published in English by Robert Hill, Bachelor in Diuinitie, and Fellow of Saint Iohns Colledge in Cambridge, for the benefit of our English nation, to which is added in the end the practise of papists against Protestant princes.; Institutiones theologicae. English Bucanus, Guillaume. 1606 (1606) STC 3961; ESTC S106002 729,267 922

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respect of that morall kinde of Lawes which takes order that the disturbers of humane societie may be punished that honest and lawfull peace be maintained that the publike safetie and quiet be preserued and that iudgement and iustice preuaile What things are Disparata i. disagreeing or of other nature then the Law The Gospell is of another nature of which we will speake in next place What opinions do oppose this doctrine of the Law 1 The error of the Manichees who say the Law is euill because it worketh wrath Rom. 4.15 whereas it doth not worke this effect properly but through the transgression of him that breaketh it 2 Of the Pelagians who thought themselues to be so disposed and able by nature as to performe it 3 Of the Antinomi and Libertines who thinke that Christians haue no more need of the morall Law and that the ten commandemens are not to be preached in the Christian Church because the faithfull are borne againe of the spirit 4 Of the Pharisees who thought the fulfilling of the law to be easie possible c Mat. 19.20 and that some of the commaundements were great commaundements as those which concerned more grosse sinnes murder adultery periurie some they thought were the least commaundements the transgressing whereof God did not regard as the inward affections wandring from the law of God d Matt. 5.19 Also that error of the same Pharisees and of the Ebionites who taught that the obseruation of the ceremoniall law was to be ioyned with the Gospell 5 Of the Papists who affirme that perfect obedience to the law may be performed by a regenerate man pro statu viatoris as he is in the estate of a pilgrime that the scripture doth ascribe to the godly diuers seuerall works whereof some are good and such as satisfie the law some euill and resisting the law that the law doth not require of men any more perfect obedience then that which may be performed in this life yea moreouer that a man may doe more then he ought if he will which workes they call Workes of supererogation and that therefore men become iust before God through the obseruation of the law and doe deserue by it eternall life 6 The same Papists foolish and peruerse imitation who bring into the Church the Leuiticall ceremonies 7 Of those brainsicke heads who will haue Christian common weales to be gouerned onely by the politicke lawes of the Iewes 8 Of the Anabaptists who faine that the Patriarches beleeued nothing of the Gospell or promises of eternall life but that they were onely fed with the outward and corporall promises because they are said to haue beene in the law a Rom. 3.19 and vnder the law b Gal. 4.3.5 as also because it is written Math. 11.13 that the law was vntill Iohn came To conclude all errors concerning the true meaning of the law as also all sins which are against euerie of the ten commandements The twentieth common Place Of the Gospell What doth the word Euangelium signifie IT properly signifyeth a good ioyfull happie and glad tidings or message in which sense Aristophanes vseth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I told them good tidings So in Appians writing of the murder of Cicero 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 carrying the good newes to Anthonie 2 It signifieth a reward giuen to them who brought good tidings Hom. odyss 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That is Let this be my reward for my good newes that when he shall returne to his house you cloath me with good apparell Ierkin and Coat 3 It signifieth a Sacrifice offered for good newes receiued Xenophon 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he offered Sacrifice vpon receipt of his good newes But in what signification doth the Scripture vse this word Euangelium or Gospell 1 As the verbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth to report ioyfull things Isa 52.7 How beautifull vpon the mountaines are the feete of them who bring the glad tidings of peace and tidings of good for which word the Prophets vse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth to report good newes so the Apostles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 haue termed Euangelium or Gospell a Marc. 1.15 that notable and ioyfull report of saluation procured by Christ to them that beleeue or a solemne preaching of the grace of God manifested and exhibited in Christ Luk. 2.10 I bring you tidings of great ioy that shall be to all people for this day is borne vnto you a Sauiour which is Christ the Lord. 2 By Metonymie it is taken for the historie concerning Christ concerning things which he taught and did b Act. 1.1 And in this sense we reckon foure Gospels Sometimes also it signifieth the publication of the doctrine of the Gospell the preaching and notifying of the same as 1. Cor. 9.14 Liue of the Gospell that is of the preaching of the Gospell and 2. Cor. 8.18 Whose praise is in the Gospell But what is the reason of this name Because as to malefactors condemned to a most grieuous and ignominious punishment for their offences nothing can happen more ioyfull and acceptable then that being freed from the sentence of condemnation they should enioy the libertie and glorie of kings so likewise to men cursed for their sins and condemned eternally nothing can happen better or more welcome then to heare that being free from the sentence of him that condemned them that they are reckoned and are indeed in the number of the sonnes of God What is the Gospell It is a heauenly doctrine brought out of the secret bosome of God the Father by the Sonne preached by the Apostles and comprehended in the bookes of the new Testament bringing a a good and ioyfull message to all the world namely that mankinde is redeemed by the death of Christ the onely begotten sonne of God so this remission of sinnes saluation and eternall life is prepared for all men if so be they repent and beleeue in Iesus Christ VVho is the author or efficient cause of the Gospell God who hath vouchsafed to reueale his hidden purpose and good pleasure concerning our redemption whereupon it is called the Gospell of God Rom. 1.1 A fellow cause or ioynt cause is the word that is the Sonne of God who comming out of the fathers bosome hath declared it to vs as he first pronounced the promise of the Gospell in Paradise Gen. 3.5 The seed of the woman shall breake the Serpents head By what instrumentall cause or by whose meanes was the Gospell made knowne to the world 1 By an Angell of God who soone after Christ was borne said Luke 2.10 I bring you tidings of great ioy c. For this day is borne vnto you a Sauiour c. 2 By Iohn who preached the summe of the Gospell shewing Christ and calling him the Lambe of God that is a Sacrifice appointed by God to make satisfaction for the sins of the world In which
in contraries for as by one mans disobedience many were made sinners so by the obedience of Christ many are made righteous Rom. 5.19 5. By the effect because from iustification by faith alone ariseth peace with God that is to say securitie and tranquillitie of conscience or that ioy which commeth from a conscience excusing and acquiting vs from sinne and death peace toward God confidence and hope of the glorie of god that is of life eternall f Rom. 1.5 8 35. Tit. 3 7. 1. Ioh. 3.21 6. Because the glorie both of the exceeding iustice and mercie of God cannot stand safe and fyrme nor the merit of Christ remaine whole and sound vnlesse wee bee iustifyed onely by faith in Christ Iesus and not by workes or if we should bee iustifyed partly by faith and partly by works g Rom. 3.19.25.26.27 What is the end of our Iustification The fyrst and chiefe end in respect of God is his glorie Eph. 1.6 To the praise of the glorie of his grace and to the praise of his glorie namely that the praise thereof might not bee giuen to any man but might redound wholy and absolutely to god alone so that hee alone might bee acknowledged to bee iust and mercifull to be the iustifyer of him which is of the faith of Iesus Ro. 3.26 In which place there is mention made of a double or twofolde glorie of GOD the one which proceedeth from his iustice that hee might bee iust the second that which proceedeth from his mercie And iustifying him which is of the faith of Iesus For from the alone benefit of Iustification ariseth the manifestation of that admirable temperament of the iustice and mercie of God and from thence Gods glorie both of his iustice towarde his sonne in punishing of sinne who spared not his owne sonne being made sinne for vs and likewise of his mercie toward vs imputing vnto vs that beleeue in Christ though we be wicked and vnrighteous by nature our faith for righteousnesse 2. The declaration of his goodnesse 1. Pet. 2.9 That ye should shew forth the vertues of him that hath called you out of darknesse into his maruellous light The next end in respect of vs is that wee being made righteous by imputation might be accepted of God and iust that is might bee set free from the guilt excelling through the gift of Christs righteousnesse Furthermore that the righteousnesse of the Law might bee fulfilled in vs and that wee might enioy the fruite of righteousnesse which is life eternall Rom. 8.7 Tit. 3.7 That being iustified wee might bee made heires of euerlasting life Lastly that wee our selues might bee bettered and made righteous Gal. 2.17 If then while wee seeke to bee made righteous by Christ we our selues are found sinners is Christ therefore the minister of sinne God forbid For to this end are we iustified by faith through Christ that the old man being abolished by the power and efficacie of Christ crucified Christ might liue in vs and that wee should by our studie and labour endeauour to bring forth good workes shewe our selues thankfull to god for so great a benefit And therefore it is that the Apostle Paule almost in all his Epistles deriueth the Doctrine of sanctifycation or good workes from the Doctrine of faith or iustifycation as the cause from the effect or the necessarie consequent from the antecedent What are the adiuncts of Iustification If you respect the actions of God therein election and effectuall vocation doe goe before it a Rom. 8 31 but if ye respect man surelie not workes foreseene neither merits of congruitie or condignity For saith Augustine good workes doe follow a man alreadie iustified and doe not goe before a man that is to bee iustified as good fruites are not before a good tree but sinnes and wickednesse and the workes of the flesh b Ro. 3 23 4.5 The workes accompanying or following it are peace of conscience or tranquillitie and quiet of minde and conscience Rom. 5.1 Being iustified by faith wee haue peace toward God through our Lord Iesus Christ Moreouer the adopting of vs to bee sonnes of God our sanctification or newnesse of life the fruites wherof are described Gal. 5.22 For they that are made partakers of Christ through faith they doe with him receiue the holie Ghost the author of all holinesse from whence it is that these two benefits are indeede distinguished one from another but yet so linked together by an vnseparable bond that they can neuer bee plucked asunder and the latter is the testimony of the former both in the soule of the faithfull man himselfe and to other men also What is the effect of Iustification Free entrance and accesse to God c Rom. 5 2. our glorification d Ro 6.22.23.20 which is begun in this life and perfected in the life to come Is our Iustification perfected in this life In Iustification as wee are iudged and accounted righteous by God so wee are adiudged vnto life eternall So that in respect of Gods decree and of the sentence it selfe of life eternall pronounced by God the Iudge also in respect of righteousnes which the heauenly Iudge imputeth vnto vs our Iustification is alreadie perfected in this life sauing that in the life to come this imputed righteousnes is to be reuealed and made more manifest and to be more neerely applyed and appropriated vnto vs. But yet our whole iustification is perfected in this life in which a man may be said to bee fully and perfectly iustified Wee are the sonnes of God therefore iust●fied but it doth not yet appeare what we shall be 1. Iohn 3.2 But if you respect the execution of Gods decree and looke vnto the life and glorie which is adiudged vnto vs and which is to cleaue and stick vnto vs because that in this life is not perfected in vs our iustification therefore may bee accounted also imperfect in this life Can the benefis of iustification perish by reason of our sinnes No by no meanes for the purpose of god cannot bee depriued of his end And 1. Ioh. 3.9 Whosoeuer is borne of GOD sinneth not that is not vnto death because his seede that is the holy Ghost abideth in him Besides the gifts and callings of God are without repentance Rom. 11.29 When is the vse and necessitie of the Doctrine of iustification felt and perceiued 1. In the serious examination of the conscience when a man presenteth himselfe as guiltie not before an earthly but the heauenly Iudge for then being carefull and pensiue for his deliuerance he doth willingly prostrate and make himselfe of no reputation hauing first considered the great maiestie and iustice of God before which nothing is accepted vnlesse it be euery way perfect and absolute a Esa. 4 5 2. In the imperfection of his owne righteousnes Iob 4.7 18. Behold they that serue him are not faithfull and hee hath found iniquitie in his Angels how much more in
whereinto they fall of their owne inclination that in those the mercie of the creator but in these his iustice in either his glorie might be declared Or it is the aeternall purpose of god whereby according to the good pleasure of his will before the foundations of the world were laid he hath c Act. i 25 Iohn 17 12 Apoc 17 8 Ephes 1.4 2. Tîm 1.9 Rom 1 9.2● c determined to glorifie himselfe by ordeining some men to grace saluation others to displeasure and eternall destruction Is praedestination but of mankinde onely It is of Angells also for Paul calleth the Angells which stood steedfast in their integritie Elect ones 1. Tim. 5.21 But if their stedfastnesse was grounded in gods good pleasure it argueth that the fall of others was vtterly abandoned Whereof their can no other cause be brought but reprobation which is hid in the secret counsell of God But our purpose is in this place to speake of the praedestination of mankinde How manie degrees or parts of predestination are there Three 1. the very decree in the wisdome of God for sauing or casting men away 2 The execution or proceeding of the very decree of that aeternall God by outward meanes 3 The most excellent end of the Maister builder namely the glorie of God himselfe who doth so lay open both his power mercie What is the decree of praedestination Whereby God determining to what end he would create men before he created them hath according to his power and meere goodwill decreed so to further his owne glorie that some of them should be vessells and examples of his goodnesse mercie but others vessells and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 matter for his wrath that is of his power and iust reuenge on sinne a Rom 9.22 1. Pet. 2.8 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to which they were appointed 1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as it is said Rom. 9.17 I haue stirred thee vp saith the Lord to Pharao that I might shew my power vpon thee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 were fitted V. 22. And this decree is such as that it disposeth the causes of the execution cōsisteth not of thē But because the Apostle treating of the vessells of mercie vseth the actiue verbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ro 9.23 speaking of the vessells of wrath or the reprobate hath the passiue participle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. fitted 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 prepared doth it therefore follow that the reprobate are the cause of their owne reprobation No because Luk. Act. 13 48. treating also of the elect vseth the passiue participle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 appointed who neuerthelesse are not ordayned of themselues but rather of the meere grace of God Moreouer if question be made of the ordinarie meanes whereby the vessells of wrath are caried to destruction they alone are the cause of their owne vtter decaie But when we mention the decree of election and Reprobation the Reprobates can no more be said to haue cast away themselues then the elect to haue elected themselues no more I say then if one should say that a pott was not made by the potter but of it selfe VVhat is the primordiall efficient cause of this great decree 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The pleasure of God to doe with his owne what it shall please him b Mat. 10 25.20.16 For S. Paul saith Rom 9.21 Hath not the potter free povver and authority how much more then the most iust God and wisest workeman ouer clay that out of the same lump that is out of a substance as yet vnwrought and onely prepared to a future worke he may make some vessels for honor and others for dishonor c. Ier. 18.1.2 5.14 Isa 64.8 and the will of God or his good pleasure because he bringeth all things most wisely to passe after the counsell of his owne will Ephes 1.11 d. Ioh. 6.39 Act. 2.23 and Rom. 9.18 He hath mercie on whom he will and whom he will he hardeneth This one cause we know that so the most mercifull and most iust lord will be glorified for the Scripture setteth forth vnto vs no other cause besides this faith biddeth vs in this cause onely to rest likewise on the Scripture so that to seeke out the cause of this cause why it so pleased him were a point of rash boldnesse and vngodly curiositie a. Ro. 9.20.14 11.33 VVhen began this Decree Not onely then after men were created or began to sinne but before the foundations of the world were laid that is God had this purpose from eternitie b. Matt. 25.34 Ephe. 1.4 What kind of Decree is this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The deepe and wonderfull gulfe of his riches 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vnsearchable c. Roet 1.32 33. 3. Eternall in respect of the beginning d. Eph. 1.4 but it is also eternall in regard of the end 4. And therefore immoueable immutable vnrepentable and irreuocable because those whom the father hath giuen to the Sonne no man can plucke out of his hand Ioh. 10.28 and because it is the fathers wil that not one of these little ones should perish Math. 18.14 Here Paul crieth out that nothing is able to separate vs from the loue of God namely wherewith hee hath loued vs in Christ Rom. 8.35 How many kindes are there of this Decree of Predestination Two 1. The first is called an Election or Predestination to life 2 The other is called a Reprobation or Refusing or Casting off or Decree or Predestination to death for some he chooseth to eternall life but neglecteth and reiecteth others e. Rom. 9.13.18.21.22 But these two kinds of Predestination doe concurre as well in the ende as in the beginning for God his decree is the beginning of each now both the wayes which are diuided as it were from this beginn●ng meete againe together in the extreame namely in the glory of 〈◊〉 Whether Reprobation be also subiect to God his Decree as Election is Yea verily for he that chooseth taketh not al because he chooseth somwhat among two or three he is said necessarily to refuse those things which he choseth not therfore whom God doth not receiue him he reiecteth and whō he neglecteth or chooseth not him he casteth out of fauour 2. Reprobation is vnderstood in Election by the rule 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Relation that if Reprobation be nor neither should there be Election 3. The Scripture doth manifestly confirme God his Decree concerning reprobating a. Rom. 9.22 1. Pet. 2.8 And the Apostle subiecteth both of thē to the Decree of God 1. Thess 5.9 God hath not saith he apointed vs vnto wrath but to obtaine Saluation through our Lord Iesus Christ Neither is it a harder speech to say some are predestinated to destruction then that some are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ordeined before of old to this condemnatio as Iude speaketh vers 4. Iude 4. or 〈◊〉
c. To all which he gaue power to beget their like in kind by the coniunction of the male and female of the same kind which were created the sixt day f Gen. 1.24.24 And the same day was man created distinctly from them all of whom we will speake in a speciall place How manifold is the procreation of liuing creatures Twofold Extraordinarie and diuine with perfect bodie and soule without male or female without egges or seed whereof God speaketh Let the waters bring foorth Let the earth bring foorth The other is naturall and ordinarie which hath God for the principall cause for Christ saith of himselfe and his Father my Father worketh hitherto and I worke Ioh. 5.17 and the second cause not so much the water or the earth as the liuing creatures going before by their seeds through the coniunction of the male and female for the knitting together of greater loue betweene the liuing creatures either by the egges as those which lay egges or else by the fruite as those which bring foorth young that be aliue by the blessing of God whereof Moses speaketh vers 22. And he blessed them saying Increase and multiply What is the end and vse of fishes and birds For meate medicine and delight and many other vses which no man can vtter as also for the example of vertues which we should follow and of vices which we should shunne being set before our eyes in their natures As namely of humnnitie and * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 loue to man in the Dolphine of flatterie in the fish Polypus of the resurrection in the Phoenix of pietie and * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 remuneration in the Storkes of simplicitie and matrimoniall fidelitie in the Turtles of * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vnnaturall affection in the Rauens and of crying vnto God And therefore it is well said Aske the beast and he shall tell thee and the bird of the ayre and she will declare vnto thee b Ier. 8 7. Mat. 10.16 Iob 39.3 Psal 147.9 Luk. 12.24 Iob 12.7.8 And what is the vse of those liuing creatures which liue vpon the earth They are profitable to cloth nourish and to carrie men and for sundrie other vses yea to till the ground moreouer also they may serue for to direct the life of men in manners Psal 32.9 Be ye not like the horse and mule in whom there is no vnderstanding Prou. 6.6 Go vnto the Pismire ô sluggard Mat. 10.16 Be ye wise as serpents Ioh. 10.3.4 The sheepe heare the voice of the shepheard and follow it For which respect it is very behoouefull to know the natures of beasts For what cause were those beasts that liue vpon the earth created the sixt day Because they differ in kind from the former and were to dwell with man and were more like to man as wel in bodie as in wit then either fishes or birds and because many of them should be an helpe for man and that there might be an order kept beginning with those which are more imperfect and after with them which be more perfect Seeing that it is written God saw all that he had made and they were exceeding good how commeth it to passe that there be hurtfull things as Scorpions venimous Serpents death sicknesse and such like 1. We must put a difference betweene the euill of the fault and the euill of the punishment for the diuell is the author of the former but God of the latter c Esa 45.7 2. Some things after the fall and therefore by accident by reason of mans sinne began to be hurtfull Gen. 3.17 Cursed is the earth in thy labour thornes and thistles shall it bring foorth vnto thee And Rom. 8.20 Euery creature is now subiect vnto vanitie But as for death and sicknesses although they were not created of God at the beginning yet they are ordained of God as of a righteous Iudge as things that must go before death a VVis 1.13 2.24 1. Cor. 15.21 Ro. 5..12 Iam. 1.15 3. All things are good and profitable for the whole and the conseruation of the world and the adorning thereof and that which is hurtfull for one it is b Gen. 2.17 Amos 3.6 Eccles 11.14 profitable for another and one poyson is cured by another What is the difference betweene the producing of the soule of brute beasts and of man Because that although both be and are tearmed spirits yet the soules of beasts are brought foorth by God partly of the waters and partly of the earth but now in the ordinarie procreation of the substance of their Sires as Moses teacheth when he saith that God created euery liuing soule speaking of the whole liuing creature which the waters brought foorth and therefore are mortall But touching the soules of men he sheweth that they were breathed into vs by God immediatly and therefore are incorruptible and immortall and for that cause they returne to God againe who gaue them Eccles 12.7 and are called a breath not of life as beasts haue but of * Nephesh Hachaijm liues in the plurall number Gen. 2.7 Haue brute beasts the facultie of vnderstanding and reason We do easily grant that they haue indeed sense not so much the externall as sight hearing smelling tasting touching as also the inward namely phantasie imagination memorie a certaine naturall wittinesse and prudence in some more in some lesse Moreouer some birds do well perceiue of whom they are brought vp and nourished yea they can learne certaine words of men and can tell how to imitate them as the Parrat and the Thrush And Bees do declare a singular skill in making of hony But we denie that they haue the true facultie of vnderstanding and reason For Dauid saith Psal 32.9 that there is no vnderstanding in the horse and the mule both which are seene to go farre in imitation c Gen. 2.23 Why is God said to rest the seuenth day from all his workes To wit of Creation because in the seuenth day he ceassed to create new creatures For he made not any thing afterward which in some manner did not go before in his former workes for after his workes finished he rested in himselfe because he satisfieth himselfe and fulfilleth his owne desire Againe he worketh still by conseruing sustaining and vpholding the things made without any labour by his meere prouidence alone a Ioh. 5.17 But whence come those things which haue their beginning of putrifaction or which be altogether vnprofitable or are onely hurtfull as Flies Waspes and such like They proceed of putrifaction by vertue of the Sunne or heate but yet after the fall of man as testimonies of Gods anger but yet euer by vertue of that word of God which still continueth Let the waters bring foorth Let the earth bring foorth Neither are they thought to belong vnto the workes of Creation within the compasse of the sixe dayes whereof we speake here What things are we principally
happen to returne againe which was thought dead The later mariage contracted by meere ignorance shal be dissolued the fault being thus foūd to haue bin eithers shal not be imputed vnto either of them Doth barrennesse breake off Matrimonie No for that defect is commonly hidden vnknowne God hath often holpen it when as it hath bin coūted desperate a. 2. Seeing that God giueth children who shutteth openeth the womb according to his own good pleasure he seemeth after a sorr to lay violent hands vpon God who reiecteth the wife giuen him by God because she beareth him no children Is diuorcement to be permitted for offences or for ciuil death as to be condemned to the Gallies or mines or banishment or els perpetuall imprisonmēt or els by reason of some disease fallen into after the consummation of mariage or for any other the like causes Herein the iudgements of Doctors do differ for some denie Diuorcemēt for any such cause because god hath said Whom god hath conioyned let no man separate b Mat. 6. but man separateth when he doth it without Gods word But God hath not granted Diu●rcement in his word for such causes But this question were superfluous if the magistrate did his dutie for he should cut off such offendors and so should the innocent party be prouided for Now as concerning ciuill death the Canons teach that the wife is to follow the husband either in banishment or imprisonment As touching diseases caught after lawfull mariage the rule is to be obserued Ill accidents are patiently to bee borne in mariage where there is no fault committed But yet Leprosie is wont to be reckoned amongst the causes of Diuorce for seeing there is a law concerning the Leprous that they dwel apart by themselues that it is incurable that the clean person ought not to be infected with that disease yea the law hath also a caution for the children that contagious children be not procreated of infected parents to the certaine destruction of the whole common weale it is very conuenient that the sound person be not compelled to cōpany with the infected yoak-fellow Hitherto belongeth madnesse which breaketh out into manifest and incurable rage which is to be restrained with bonds least they hurt their owne children or wise or else whomsoeuer they can come by Concerning crueltie ill vsage of one toward the other Theodosius his law the Canon law also the iudgement of the best Diuines do permit in such cases after reconciliation hath bin often tryed in vaine and domesticall separation for a time diuorcement to be made least the innocent party being too much broken with griefe attempt some vnlawful thing For patience being too much hurt turneth into furie But let the innocent party c 1 Cor. 10.13 Mat. 19.8 in the meane time make account that he is called to single life in faith craue victorie of him who suffereth not his to be tempted aboue their strength Therefore as Christ accused not but excused Moses for granting Diuorcement for the hardnesse of their hearts so many at this day thinke that the Christian Magistrate is to be excused in helping by diuorcemēt those who are miserably vniustly tyrannously and cruelly oppressed for they thinke it better for them to liue apart angelically than together diuelishly but yet if both of them doe one rage against another with words or stripes they thinke separation ought so to be made so as that all hope of new mariage againe be taken from them that yet by this meanes whatsoeuer before this be admitted they may bee reconciled Cod. l. 8. de repud But our consistorie laws do very wel appoint to try al means whatsoeuer before this be admitted Wherein they agree with Iustinian who saith Euen as wee forbid the dissolution of mariage without iust cause so we desire to haue those that are oppressed with aduerse necessitie to bee freed with a necessarie though an vnhappie helpe What is to be done thinke you if either of them being become an vngodly Apostate or obstinate heretike endeuour to draw and compell the other into the same Apostacie and impietie or into any other crime Heere the Magistrate is to make diuorcement with the sword according to Gods commaundement That whosoeuer teacheth Apostasie or turning away from the Lord God he should be slaine and so euill might be taken from the midst of the people a Deut. 13 6 VVhat if the Magistrate neglect his dutie Let the Apostles precept bee of force Auoid an Hereticke after once or twice admonition b Tit. 3.16 Luke 14.26 And so also the Atheist Apostate and Blasphemer Also that of our Sauiour If any come vnto me and hateth not his father mother wife c. is not worthy of me And againe If thine eye offend thee plucke it out c Math. 5.29 And againe whosoeuer forsaketh house field or wife c. shall receiue an hundred fold d 19.29 Hath the wife the like right against her husband that he hath against her in suing for diuorcement If you respect the right which the one hath in the others bodie the bond is equall Wherefore e Cor 7 4 in an equall Obligation it is meet that the same right be granted vnto the one as to the other prouided that modestie be obserued which becommeth the woman towards her husband being agent By whome ought the diuorcement to be made By no priuate person or by the innocent partie or of their owne priuate authority for no man may bee iudge in his owne cause but by lawfull Iudges as well Ecclesiasticall as ciuill if they may be had because mariage consisteth of the Diuine f Mat. 18.15 16 17. humane law mixt not rashly but after reconcilement hath beene sought and the cause lawfully knowne and iudged by alleaging and prouing on both sides For Abrahaam did not put away Hugar vpon his owne priuate iudgement but by the manifest commandement of God g Gen. 21.12 What contrarieth this Doctrine The errour of the Romanists who affirme that there may bee a lawfull separation of mariages for the attaining of Euangelicall perfection as they call it expounding that place of Mathew amisse e Mat 19.12 For they are said to castrate themselues for the Kingdome of Heauen which abstaine from mariage and by the gift of God liue continently that they may serue God more freely as if they wanted their virill parts such as is the cutting off the foote hand and the pulling out of the eye Secondly that it may be broken for the profession of a monasticall life yea though one of the maried couple be against it and that only by the Popes authoritie 3. Lastly this is against the peruerse opinion of such which thinke that that law of Moses concerning Diuorce which is Deu. 24.2 ought now to be of force in the Church of Christ The fourteenth common place of the gouernment of the world or Gods
are ignorant of the true causes and looke onely vpon the inexpected euents a thing may be said to come to passe by fortune So Numb 35.29 There is a law of murthers by chaunce which that they come not by chaunce to passe it may be gathered out of Exod. 21.13 Where GOD is saide to giue him into the hands of the slayer who is slaine in this manner Yet are they said to be by fortune in the iudgement of men because they are not done of vs by premeditate aduise Where notwithstanding we must remember the saying of Basil that Chaunce and Fortune are words of Heathens and as of Augustine It repented mee that I haue vsed the word Fortune Is not Free-will taken away by this vnchaungeable prouidence of God and administration of all things No in no sort because God ruleth and gouerneth mans will according to the nature thereof But it is the nature of mens wil that whatsoeuet it willeth eyther good or euill it willeth it freely and of it owne accord not against the will and by constraint otherwise it should be no will but a Nilling For example Matth. 27.1 Herode Pilate and the Iewes condemned Christ of their owne free-will and of set purpose yet the Apostles say they did nothing but tbat which the hand and counsell of God had decreed to be done Actes 4.27.28 Doe not these places of Scripture seeme to make against Gods prouidence where it is said It repented God Gen. 6.6 1. Sam. 15.11 and those abrogations of his decrees which are recorded Ioan. 3.4.10 Isai 38.1.5 No because in those places the Scripture descendeth and applyeth it selfe to our capacitie and describeth God not such as hee is in himselfe but such as we vnderstand him euen as when the same Scripture saith of God that he is angrie But those denuntiations of iudgement doe containe a condition not expressed Gen. 20.3.7 Is it not vnseemely for the highest Maiestie of God to abase it selfe euen to take care of these lowest things No for as it was no disgrace to create them no more it is to take care of them being created What is the peculiar prouidence of God That whereby God by his grace or holy Spirit liueth and raigneth in his Church gouerneth and cherisheth the godly worketh in them both the will and the deed he maketh them to walke in his precepts a Ezech. 36 27 defendeth them terrifieth restraineth and vanquisheth their enemies Shew me some testimonies of this Psal 1.7 God knoweth the way of the righteous Psal 34.16 The eyes of the Lord are vpon the righteous And the whole Psalm 91. He that dwelleth in the secret of the most high c. To this purpose serueth that place Math. 10.30 Euen all your haires are numbred Math. 16.18 The gates of hell shall not preuaile against the Church 1. Tim. 4.10 God is the Sauiour of all men especially of the faithfall And innumerable others like to these Doth God gouerne all things by himselfe alone without meanes or by meanes and second causes Neyther simply but partly by himselfe without meanes yea often against or besides ordinarie means he bringeth things to passe As without meanes he sustained Moses fortie daies in the mount b Exod 34.28 and the Prophet Elias c 1 Reg 19.8 But against meanes and naturall causes he deuided the red Sea d Exod 14.16 as likewise by his power the waters of Iordan stood e Iosue 3.19 and the waters were deuided into two parts f 2 King 2 8 He made the Sunne to go backe g 2 King 20.11 He restrained the force of the fire in the Babylonian furnace that it could not burne the young men h Dan. 3.21.91 He turned the rocke into pooles of waters and the crag into fountaines of waters i Psa 114.8 He made the Iron to swim in the water k 2 King 6.6 Partly also he ruleth and administreth by himselfe and with meanes or second causes yet so as God is alwaies present with them and in them sheweth his speciall power according to that Deut. 8.3 Man liueth not by bread onely but by all that which proceedeth out of the mouth of God So with fiue loaues he feedeth a great multitude l Iohn 6.9.11.12 From second causes he produceth another effect then their nature and disposition affordeth and when the second causes are in action actually he hindereth their effect changeth mitigateth or maketh it more grieuous As in Elias his time it rained not for the whole space of three yeares m 1 Kings 17 1.7 Isay 5.6 I will commaund the clouds that they shall not raine Why doth God ordinarily vse middle or second causes seeing he can do all things by himselfe without meanes 1 He doth it for our cause that we may more easily perceiue God helpeth vs in them or by them for seeing we are carnall we need visible things that our faith may be the better confirmed and rest assured in Gods promises And also that he may declare his goodnes to vs whilest he maketh vs as it were fellow-workers with himselfe in ruling our selues or others 2 That he may shew himselfe Lord of all things which vseth creatures and means as he pleaseth to his glory and our saluation 3 That we should not abuse meanes as being ordained of God 4 Least in the pretense of Gods prouidence we should neglect meanes or second causes odained by God for who so neglecteth them despiseth the ordinance of God For God hath not onely decreed the ends of actions but their meanes also which meanes are therefore subiect and subordinate to prouidence as the drinking of a potion belongeth to the sicke man and bread to him that is hungrie So God promised victorie to Dauid but thus if he fought and laied ambush a 2. Sam. 5.19.24 he hath promised to nourish man but with condition if he labour b Psa 128 2 If therefore the determination of God be vnchangeable and all things come to passe infallibly by the counsell and will of God is there anie place left for our deliberations counsels comaunds prayers teaching cautions and endeuors It is certaine that to euents certaine and decred by God it is in vaine to vse and applie those meanes without which God hath decreed or hath said that he will effect such things but those meanes which both himselfe hath decreed to vse and which he hath shewed both in his word and the course of nature them he will vse and also hath commaunded vs to vse them it can not be said of these without a wicked contempt of Gods word and the order by him appointed that they are vsed in vaine For where the first cause is granted we ought not remoue or take away the second nor contrarily And as God hath made the ends so likewise hath he created and prescribed vnto vs the means wherby it pleaseth him to bring vs vnto them which meanes to neglect is to tempt
forgiue vs our debts because of the likenesse for by sinne a man becommeth debter vnto God to vndergoe punishment and also oweth recompence to be made to his neighbour For as debts do ciuilly binde to satisfie the punishment vnlesse they be remitted so sin doth ciuilly binde to satisfaction of punishmēt except it be forgiuen Likewise it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a defect As 1. Cor. 6.7 Now therefore there is a weakenesse or defect amongst you Which word commeth of the verbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth to be ouercome to faint or yeld Also it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wickednesse naughtinesse lewdnesse sinne scelus a 1 Cor. 5.8 Also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 transgression a Rom 4.15 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 breaking of the lawe b Heb 1.9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vnrighteousnesse c 2 Tim. 2.19 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vngodlinesse which is referred to the first table against God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vnrigteousnesse to the second against men d Rom. 1.18 What is sinne 1. Iohn 3.4 It is there defined 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by taking away of the contrarie to it That is a transgression of the Lawe or a priuation of the Lawe to wit of the conformitie of our actions both of soule and bodie with Gods lawe for the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 containeth the value of two words because it consisteth of the priuatiue particle ae and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or as Ambrose briefly expressed it Peccatum est legis diuine praeuaricatio Sinne is a Praeuarication or going beyond the Lawe of God Augustine saith thus Peccatum est dictum vel factum vel concupitum contra Legem dei Sinne is whatsoeuer is said done or coueted against Gods Lawe Wee define it thus Sin is a rouolting a declyning or wandring from the Law or will of God binding the sinner to suffer eternall death But sometime it is vsed Metonymically for the whole man being corrupted as also for all his actions which oppose the lawe of God also for a sinne offering and sacrifice for sinne Exod. 29.36 And thou shalt offer a calfe for sinne i. a sinne offering euerie day for attonement thou shalt sprinkle the Altar with the sinne that is with the bloud of the sacrifice for sinne Leu. 8.15 2. Cor. 5.21 For he made him who knewe no sinne to become sinne for vs that is a sacrifice for sinne or a sinner not in himselfe but by the guilte of all our sinnes imputed vnto him as the opposition added in that place requireth this interpretation That we might bee made the righteousnes of God that is righteous with God and that by no inherent righteousnesse or properly our owne but that which being in Christ is imputed to vs. What be the causes of sinne They are of two sorts Outward and Inward The outward are diuerse 1. Sathan by his poysoned suggestions e Gen. 3.1.4 2. Men by their euill examples words and flattering f Gen. 3.6 Especially the fal of our first parents as it is described in that place 3. But by accident the obiects wherwith our senses meete enticing vs to the abuse of them and so to sinne g Gen. 3 6 1 Iohn 2.16 2 Sam 11.1 4. By accident also the Lawe of God it selfe which is holy iust becommeth cause of sin by forbidding those things which please the flesh commanding those which displease according to the verse The thing forbidden we most couet And that 's denyed we most loue it a Rom 3.20 4.15 5.20 7.7.8 All which are confirmed by the example of Adams first fall Gen. 3. 5 The cherishers of Sinne Idlenesse and Delicacie b Ezech. 16.49 But seeing nothing commeth to passe in the world or can come to passe without the most wise and iust prouidence of God may not hee be called thc Author and cause of sinne God forbid for hee hateth forbiddeth and punisheth it as a thing most disagreeing with his greatest goodnes According as Iohn saith in his first Epistle 2.16 Concupiscence by which name he vnderstandeth all sinnes is not of the father but of the world And Iames. 1.14.15 Euerie man is tempted whilest he is drawne away and enticed by his owne concupiscence Then concupiscence after it hath conceiued bringeth forth sinne And Ecclesiastes 7.30 This I know that God made man righteous but they haue sought to themselues many inuentions Although he suffereth sinne in his certaine counsell as we haue said in the Place of Gods prouidence What is the inward cause of sinne This likewise is of diuers kindes 1. The corruption of our nature which also is called vsually by the Apostles concupiscence Ephes 2.3 Wee haue had our conuersation in the lusts of our flesh in doing the will of our flesh and our owne thoughts 2. The consent of the will Mat. 5.28 Hee that looketh on a woman to lust after her hath alreadie committed adulterie with her in his heart 3. Ignorance by which the will is oft deceiued of which also the Apostle speaketh 1. Tim. 1.13 I thank Christ who hath set me in the Ministery who before was a persecuter and a blasphemer and an oppressor but be had mercie on me for I did it ignorantly through vnbeliefe 4. Weaknesse of minde and feeblenesse of faith whereby it commeth to passe that wee cannot alwaies resist the temptations of Sathan and the flesh but though we see that which is better and approue it yet in the meane while being ouercome we followe the worse as it came to passe in Peter a Mat. v 6.69 the verses following when hee denyed Christ and to Dauid when he committed adulterie b 2. Sam. 11.2.4..5 5. The wilfull and set malice of man of which Ieremie speaketh The heart of man is euill and vnsearchable who can knowe it Ierem. 17.9 Such was the sinne of the diuell 1. Iohn 3.8 Hee that committeth sinne is of the Diuell for the Diuell sinneth from the beginning In which place to commit sinne signifieth not simply to sin but of purposed malice to endeauour to sinne and to be led with a desire of sinning As Iudas the traitor who heareth that said to him That thou doest doe quickly In such maner the faithfull commit not sinne 1. Iohn 3.9 VVhosoeuer is borne of God sinneth not or committeth not sinne that is doth not favour sinne otherwise If we say we haue no sinne wee deceiue our selues and the trueth is not in vs. 1. Iohn 1.8 6. A habit or custome of sinning is not the least cause of sinne as Ephes 2.2 Yee walked in your sinnes according to the course of this world 7. Sinne it selfe is the cause of sinne according to that Iohn 8.34 He that committeth sinne is the seruant of sinne How many waies commeth it to passe that one sinne is cause of another sinne Fiue waies 1. When as one sinne being committed the grace of the holie
image in the place hereof namely of blindnesse impotencie vncleannesse vanitie and vnrighteousnesse so that since that came to passe man can doe nothing but sinne b Rom. 6.16 17. 7.23 How manie sorts are there of this corruption Two Originall and Actuall The first is the parent the last the miserable issue of the first The first a loathsome pudle and filthy Camarina the second a most grieuous plague the first is called Original or that which is borne and propagated together with vs c Ehes 2.3 Psal 51.7 The second is called actuall sinne or the same which our selues haue brought vpon vs and committed our selues These two notwithstanding are species subalternatae inter se Kindes subordinate one to another rather then opposing one another For the one of them is as it were a cause and roote whence the other as a fruite effect proceedeth which distinction of them is gathered out of Rom. 5.14 What vnderstand you by the name of Originall Sin It is that blemish and staine which is deriued from the first parent of all men according to the flesh vnto all his posteritie descended of him But what is deriued from Adam to his posteritie Both the formall and the materiall part also of sinne that is as the Apostle teacheth manifestly Rom. 5. from the xii verse to the end of the chapter not onely a depriuing of original righteousnesse a corruption of mās whole nature but also a guilt and obliging of them to eternall punishment in which Adam entangled himself all his posteritie that is The verie disobedience of Adam insomuch as it is imputed to vs all and hath therefore spred it selfe vpon al men though not by act yet by guilt imputation As Rom. 5.12 We are all pronounced to haue sinned in Adam as in the roote or a masse whereout all mankinde was framed we all being at that time in his loynes And verse 16. and 18. By one mans fall the guilt came vpon all to condemnation And vers 19 By one mans disobedience all are made vniust that is guilty of gods anger and eternall death Seeing Leuie is said to pay Tithes in Abraham because hee was in the loynes of Abraham Heb. 7.9 Why also is not Christ said to haue sinned in Adam Because hee was not borne in ordinarie manner of the seede of man but conceiued of the Holy Ghost therefore he became free and exempted from Originall sinne and from the guilt therof as also he did not pay tithes in Abrahams loynes but was represented in Melchisedecks person as being an eternall Priest not giuing but receiuing tithes VVhat is the cause that sinne is deriued and propagated from the father to the children The cause is the Law which God hath iustly made that man should be borne in such estate if man sinned euen as of a leprous father is borne a leprous sonne of a base father a base sonne of a poysonous serpent a serpent But is it righteous that the whole ofspring should be partakers of the punishment deserued by one It is most iust with God Yea amongst all nation it is receiued that what the heade doth in respect it is heade that is imputed to the whole bodie worthilie and children are spoyled of all their fathers goods because of their fathers rebellion For as the Lord of a Fee iustly taketh away from his vngratefull vassall and his posteritie the fee which before was graunted to him vpon certaine conditions so it is a deede of Gods Iustice in that he taketh from Adam and all his posteritie those good things which before were giuen to mankinde in their first parent Moreouer that which Christ hath done as heade of the Church and of all the elect is imputed to the Church and we are saide in Christ to haue kept the Lawe to haue beene deade buried and raised againe and to sit in the heauens Ephe. 2.6 and in many other places Therefore that which Adam hath sinned as head of mankinde that is rightly imputed to vs because whatsoeuer was done by him was supposed to bee done by all men and euery particular man and he represented his whole stock Therefore also did hee lose that which was committed to his keeping for his whole stock But by what meanes is this guilt and this blemish and corruption conueied to his posteritie The guilt by imputation as hath beene said but the corruption not by example onely or imitation or onely by ill custome but by propagation and generation Because Gen. 5.3 Adam is saide to haue begot Seth after his owne image that is a sinner a Rom. 15.12 Iob 14.4 15.14 Againe because little infants doe not sinne by example but are conceiued and borne in sinne b Psal 51.7 And the Apostle saith Ephes 2.3 That wee are all by nature the children of wrath by nature not by Imitation But let vs remember that saying We ought rather seeke what way to escape from that euill then search how it came vpon vs as wee must not so much enquire how a fire beganne but how it may bee quenched But why are children borne of Godly parents not sanctified by their puritie as well as they drawe corruption from them Because they descende from them not by spiritual but by carnal generation for their posteritie is borne of them not by grace but by nature For the guilt and corruption commeth from nature but iustification which is opposed to the guilt Sanctification which opposeth corruption is from supernatural grace Ioh. 1.13 The sonnes of God are not of bloud but of God And chap. 3.3 Except a man bee borne againe c. To whom is originall Sinne deriued To all whosoeuer descend of Adam the infants as yet in the mothers wombe not excepted a Psal 51.7 For although they haue not yet brought forth the fruites of iniquitie yet their nature is a certaine seede of sinne and therefore hatefull and abhomin●ble to God Rom. 5.14 Death is come vpon all for so much as al haue sinned But infants haue not sinned actually therefore they haue sinned Originally Is none amongest all mankinde excepted Onely Christ who though hee descended from Adam by a continued line and race b Luc. 3.23 Yet not in a naturall manner as other men and by meanes of mans seede but by the onely power of the holy Ghost hee was conceiued of the virgine Marie and sanctified from his first conception that hee might bee without sinne c Mat. 1.18 Luc. 1.35 Yet the children of the faithfull are holy 1. Cor. 7.14 If the roote bee holy the branches also are holy Rom. 11.16 They are holy in regard of their societie with the Church which we professe in the Creede to bee the communion of Saints Neither is forgiuenesse of sinnes and righteousnesse tied to propagation but to the grace and mercie of God or Gods most free election Secondly they are holy because they are comprehended in Gods couenant of which it is saide I
he is here lo he is there And Paule bids that we shew forth the Lords death till he come 1. Cor. 11.26 What therefore is that which Paule saith Ephes 4.10 that Christ ascended aboue all heauens that he might fulfill all things The meaning is that he might poure out vpon the Church which consisteth both of Iewes and Gentiles his gifts and benefits by the holy Ghost a Ioh. 14.16 For so is the word of fulfilling taken b Isa 33· 5. Ierm 31 25 And this particle answereth to that which he said before out of Psalm 68.19 Hee ascended vp on high and gaue gifts to men the similitude being taken from Princes who after victorie obtained doe shew their liberalitie to all their people 1. Serm. de aduentu eyther by solemne feastes or largesses and gifts Or vnderstand it so as Bernard hath obserued that he might fulfill all things namely which were foretold and which were required to our saluation What witnesses were there of his ascension The Angels for it was fit that he who in his conception natiuite temptation death and resurrection had vsed the ministerie testimonie of Angels should now also vse the same for witnesses when he was to performe the greatest worke pertaining to his diuine maiestie 1 That he might mitigate their griefe which his Disciples tooke at their separation from their meekest Lord and Master by the promise of his future comming 2 That when the sight of the Apostles fayled they might shew the way into heauen as Chrysostome saith homilia de ascension● Domini 3 That they might teach that though he was absent in bodie yet he would defend his seruants by his spirit and protect them by the ministerie of Angels Besides this witnesse of the Angels the Disciples also were witnesses Who were the foretellers of this ascension Dauid a thousand yeares before it fell out saw this triumph in the Spirit and sang a song of victorie to Christ triumphing a Psal 68.5 Enoch the sonne of Iared the seuenth man from Adam a man verie godly and a Prophet was taken vp into heauen and did figure this ascension b Gen 5.24 Heb. 11.5 being suddenly made of mortall immortall and translated into eternall blessednesse c 1. Cor. 15 52. 1. Thes 4 17 But chiefely Elias being caried vp into heauen by a whirle wind on a fierie Chariot and horses that is which shined with light like fire d 2. King 2.11 was a notable testimonie and example not onely of the Lords ascension but also of eternall life For that which the Lord saith Iohn 3.13 No man ascendeth vp into heauen but he that hath descended from heauen the sonne of man which is in heauen is to be vndestood of the proper vertue of his ascension and his aduancement aboue all creatures But how doth the ascension of Elias differ from Christs ascension As a shadow differeth from a bodie or a picture from a quicke man For 1 Elias was translated into heauen without the panges of death that God by this publicke testimonie might auow and ratifie his doctrine and by this meanes might reclaime the Israelites from Idolatrie to sincere religion and pietie But Christ before he ascended suffered and died but he reuiued and manifested the glorie of his resurrection by ascending and confirmed also whatsoeuer was said or done by him 2 Elias ascended by the ministerie of Angels in a fiery chariot In homil ascensionis because as Gregorie saith Pure man needs the helpe of other things neither could he ascend into heauen by himselfe whom the impuritie of his flesh did oppresse and keepe downe Bvt Christ was caried vp into heauen not in a chariot but by his owne power without the ministerie of Angels because he who had made all things was by his owne power caried aboue all things 3 Elias left vnto Eliseus his cloke the gifts of the spirit doubled vpon him but Christ compassed his Disciples with his cloke that is he put vpon them power from aboue filling them with the gifts of the holy Ghost and gaue vnto them power to worke miracles double to his greater then his own a Ioh. 14.12 not in nature but in number and efficacie or with greater effect I say with greater power not of the Disciples but of their maister who wrought in them but especially the conuersion of the Gentiles vnto Christ by the preaching of the Gospell 4 Elias was made a Citizen of heauen but vnto a Christ alone is giuen a name aboue all names and he is become so much more excellent then Angels by how much he hath obtained a more excellent name then they haue Ephes 1.21 Phil. 2.9 Heb. 1.4 What is the end of this Triumph 1 That he might seale vnto vs the worke of our redemption being now complete and perfected and might testifie that eternall righteousnesse was brought vnto vs. For which cause Augustine calleth it the confirmation of the Catholike faith To the same effect is that Ephes 4.10 He ascended that he might fulfill all things namely all the oracles and prophecies which were extant of him such as was the foretelling of his ascension and which it behoued to be fulfilled to accōplish the work of our redemption 2 That he might giue a cleare testimonie of his Godhead by which mans nature was caried on high 3 That hauing ouercome death he might obtaine that glorie in his humanitie which before the foundations of the world were laid was prepared for him a Ioh. 17.5 For then Christs glory was made most apparant when as the new guest who was both God and man was entertained in heauen which then the Angels had not seene from beginning of the world To the same purpose is that which is said Psal 24.7 Ye Princes open your gates that the king of glorie may enter in 4 That he might prouide for vs a mansion and abode in the heauens and might put vs in certaine hope that our soules being separated from our bodies should go vnto him and that we also may ascend into heauen in bodie also at the last day for where the head is there also must the members be Iohn 14.3 What are the effects and fruits of the Lords ascension 1 Captiuitie was led captiue Christ triumphed ouer Sathan death sinne and hell of which it is said Coloss 2.15 And he hath spoiled principalities and powers and hath made a shew of them openly and hath triumphed ouer them in the same crosse 2 The sending of the Comforter that is the holy Ghost and that visibly namely on the fiftieth day after his resurrection Act. 2.1 c. Which the Apostles should not haue receiued vnlesse Christ in his bodie had departed from them Iohn 16.7 Then a visible powring out of diuers giftes of the same spirit vpon the Church Epist ad Dardanum And to this effect is that saying Ephes 4.10 He ascended that he might fulfill all things not in his
Ghost such is the excellency of the Gospell 3 Of those things which are reported as spoken by God some are so indeed but some other are fained like vnto them by those that doe foolishly vnderstand the Scripture When therefore God doth directly affirme a thing we must simply beleeue him but when men speake we must not without all iudgement and enquirie beleeue euery thing bur rather trie all things and examin them according to the analogy of faith Rom. 12.6 and keepe that which is good now good and true are all one 1. Thes 5.21 What is the subiect of faith wherein it is The soule of a man and that both in the minde a knowledge or vnderstanding a luk 24.45 Ephes 4.23 and a iudgement and consent resting in the word and promise of God and likewise also in the will and heart an apprehension or embracing of the same Act. 16.14 The Lord opened the heart of Lydia that she should attend the things which Paule spake and Rom. 10.10 VVith the heart man beleeueth vnto righteousnesse VVhat is the subiect of faith to whom faith is giuen Not all for all men doe not heare the Gospell b act 17.30 neither doe all that heare it receiue it with a pure heart as it is in the parable of the sower Math. 13.3 Neither doe all obey the Gospell c Rom. 10.17 for the Prophet Esay 53.1 saith who hath beleeued our report Faith therfore belongeth not to all but onely to the elect d 2. Thes 3 2 Iohn 8.47 He that is of God heareth Gods word you therefore heare not because you are not of God and Act. 13.48 As manie as vvere ordained to eternall life beleeued 2. Tim. 1.1 Paule an Apostle of Iesus Christ according to the faith of the elect of God From whence wee gather that faith is vnto vs an vndoubted argument of our election And therefore the reprobate although they doe sometimes seeme and are said to beleeue in Christ as those Temporizers Luc. 8.13 Simon Magus Act. 8.13 yea are endued with a temporarie taste of hauenly gifts e Heb. 6.4 yet they haue not a liuely and sauing faith in as much as they haue not the spirit of adoptiō bestowed vpon them that so they might with open mouth and a full confidence crie Abba Father Gal. 4.6 But they haue onely an hypocriticall and temporarie faith Haue infants actuall faith No indeed not that fayth which commeth by hearing seeing to them the Gospell is not preached For it is playne that those little ones which beleeue Math. 18.6 Are so described by Christ not in respect of their age but of their small vnderstanding forasmuch as hee disputeth of them who may be offended in word or in deed which thing cannot befall vnto infants being as yet of no vnderstanding Although it must not be denied that they are gouerned by a certaine peculier prouidence of God and that there is a certaine seede of faith infused into the infants elected Is there one faith without forme and another formed So certaine schoolemen will haue it who call faith without forme such an assent whereby euerie man euen he that despiseth God doth receiue that which is deliuered out of the Scripture without any godly affection of the heart And they call faith formed when to that assent there is added a godly affection of the heart namely Charitie but this is but foolish For faith rather belongeth to the heart then to the braine Rom. 10.10 With the hart a man beleeueth vnto righteousnesse 2 Seeing faith proceedeth from the spirit of adoption it embraceth Christ not onely vnto righteousnesse but to sanctification also and a fountaine of liuing waters a Iohn 4 14 3 Charitie or the affection of Godlinesse doth no lesse accompanie faith then the light doth accompanie the Sunne And as Gregorie saith Looke how much wee beleeue so much we loue And therefore faith is not without forme neyther can be any way seuered from Godly affection vnlesse it be hypocriticall which is not to be called faith vnlesse it be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by aequiuocation and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by abusion but rather a shadow and likenesse of faith But seeing it is said Gal. 5.6 Faith working by Charitie is not Charitie the forms of faith No more then the bodie is the forme of the soule in that the soule worketh by the bodie And this is but fondly spoken inasmuch as one qualitie is not the forme of another qualitie And if it were yet Charitie doth not forme faith but on the contrarie fayth formeth Charitie for that Charitie is an effect of fayth For Charitie fetcheth his ofspring from faith and not on the contrarie faith from charitie 1. Tim. 1 5. Charitie out of a pure heart a good conscience and faith vnfained Now the cause is not said to be formed by the effect And therfore by that speech true liuely faith is distinguished from a dead counterfeit and barren faith by the marke and effect thereof namely that it is an effectuall working and fruitfull faith which bringeth forth good workes And faith Iames. 2.22 is not called perfect whereunto nothing is wanting for as long as Abraham liued he caried about him flesh and therfore stood in need of that prayer Lord increase my faith but it is said to be perfected by works as the first act is said by the Philosophers to be perfected by the second act namely because by working it doth shew and manifest it selfe which before it began to worke lay hid as if the goodnesse of a tree should be said to be perfected when it bringeth forth some excellent fruit For inasmuch as by the effectes we iudge of the cause therefore by the proportion of the effects the force of the cause doth seeme after a sort to be increased or diminished VVhat is the forme of iustifying faith Trust in the mercie of God through Christ or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a firme confidence and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a full perswasion of the grace of God the father towards vs whereby any man doth as it were with a full course striue toward the marke VVhich be the adiuncts or properties of faith 1 That it be certaine and without doubting 2 That it be continuall and neuer faile 3 That it be liuely effectuall and working How prooue you that certainty belongeth vnto faith 1 Iohn 3.2 The faithfull know themselues to be the sonnes of God but being rather confirmed in the perswasion of the truth of God by the holy Ghost then taught by any demonstration of reason 2 By the consideration of the truth of the promises and power of God For Psal 18.31 The word of the Lord is a tried shield to all that trust in him And Rom. 4.20 Abraham did not doubt of the promise of God through vnbeleefe but was strengthned in the faith and gaue glorie to God being fully assured that he which had promised was also able to doe it 3
termes of faith and hope are taken one for the other b 1. Pet. 1.5 Rom. 8.24 And as Luther saith faith beholdeth the word of the matter hope looketh vnto the matter of the word Moreouer faith receiueth Charitie giueth and bestoweth Charitie is begotten of faith and not on the contrarie faith maketh vs the sonnes of God c Gal. 3.26 charitie trieth vs d 1. Ioh. 4.7 Iohn 13.35 whether we be the sonnes of God The obiect of faith is Christ offered in the Gospell with all his benefits the obiect of Charitie is God and our neighbour a Mat. 22 37 39 Furthermore faith endureth in this world and shall passe into a perfect knowledge in the other world but Charitie shall flourish most of all in the world to come 1. Cor. 13 13. The chiefe of those three vertues is Loue In respect of the vse namely toward our neighbour whereas the other two go no farther then the person of the beleeuer and hoper VVhat are the contraries of faith 1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Infidelitie the vnbeleefe of all infidels who say in their heart There is no God Psal 14.1 2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that difficultie to beleeue of the Christians which heare the word and doe not beleeue it and which conceiue a faith of God not according to the Scriptures but according to the imaginations of their owne hearts 3 Security of the flesh and contempt of Gods Iustice wherby sinnes are punished 4 The Iewes confidence in the flesh b Phil. 3.3 5 Presumption and confidence of our owne strength workes merits righteousnesse and worthines such as was in the pharisies Luke 18.11.12 6 Confidence and trust in the helpe of man c Esa 30.2 7 That Academicall distrust and doubting of God of the certaintie of Gods word of the grace of God or the forgiuenesse of sinnes that so that selling of workes of supererogation and suffrages for the dead may the more easily be retained 8 Desperation 9 The errrour of the Papists which say that faith is not onely of those things that are reuealed in the Scripture but likewise also of those that are deliuered by hand without writing Also that there is a beginning or bringing cause of all other vertues for the which we are iustified That there is a habite formed by Charitie vnto righteousnesse Moreouer that faith and doubting are not opposites and that wee can no otherwise determine of the fauour of God towards vs then by morall coniecture Besides what the Church beleeues that is the Catholicke truth That faith may remaine in the wicked and that therefore it doth not iustifie then which nothing can be said more slaunderous against sauing faith of which Christ saith Hee that beleeueth in him shall not perish but shall haue eternall life Iohn 6.40 Furthermore that faith is occupied onely in generall propositions as Hee that keepeth the commaundements shall enter into life And Hee that beleeueth and shall bee baptised shall be saued But not in these Particulars I shall enter into life I shall be saued or My sinnes are forgiuen mee For it were a vaine confidence for hope to applie those generall sentences vnto particulars and seueralles which yet may bee deceiued whereas Paule saith directly contrarie Rom. 5.5 Hope maketh not ashamed Lastly they account it impudencie or presumption to hope any thing without desert 10 The madnesse of certaine fanaticke persons who doe seuer the internall word as they call it from the ministration of the outward word And finally the madnesse of the Anabaptistes who dreame of the perfection of faith ❧ The thirtieth common place Of Repentance where of Regeneration From whence is Repentance deriued THE Latine word poenitentia is deriued from poena punishment because there is a kinde of punishment in those things which are shamefull or loathsome vnto vs. And therefore if we looke vnto the propertie of the Latine word it rather agreeth with contrition or sorrowes which are in our soules through the acknowledgement of our sinnes then it doth with conuersion vnto God In Hebrew it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Teshuba conuersion or reuersion turning backe according to that Ier. 4.1 If thou wilt returne vnto me returne saith the Lord. By a metaphore borrowed from them that haue strayed out of their way and after long wandering doe returne vnto their first high way In Greeke it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 properly afterwit of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth after the deed done to be wise to change our mind and purpose for the better to returne vnto a sound mind and so to grieue for the error by past as to amend it Whereupon some will haue it deriued from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 madnesse and folly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 afterwards as if it should be the correcting and amending of madnes and folly for alwaies with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is ioyned 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 soundnesse of mind And the matter it selfe well agreeth with both these interpretations the summe whereof is this That forsaking our selues we should turne vnto God and laying aside the foolishnesse of sinning we should put on a new minde and become wiser By another Greeke word it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Latine poenitentia of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 after a thing done to be sorie grieued for which the Latines properly say poenitere So 2. Cor. 7.8 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signfyeth to take griefe for any thing that is done Although I made you sorie by a letter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I doe not repent though I did repent And Rom. 11.29 The giftes of God are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. Such as can neuer displease him seeing once they did please him Also it is taken in ill part as it is written of Iudas 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 grieuing not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 repenting 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he brought againe Math. 27.3 signifying sorrow and griefe wherewithall hee was swallowed vp For euerie man doth not repent that is sorrowfull and grieued but oftentimes falleth into a worse case then hee was before whereas 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the holy Scriptures is alwaies taken in good part and signifieth sauing amendment Notwithstanding the Latine interpreter hath translated both the Greeke words by the word Poenitentia How many waies is the terme of Repentance vsed Foure waies 1 Synecdochially 2 Generally for the whole turning and conuersion of man to God 3 Specially for Regeneration 4 For the outward profession of Repentance VVhat is repentance taken Synecdochically It is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the sting of sinne or the prick of conscience and it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a displeasing which the Greeke Diuines call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because it wounds the soule commonly we call it Contrition And they make it double or of two sorts Legall by the preaching of the Law whereby the sinner being wounded with the searing
Cor. 1.10 All the promises in Christ are yea amen that is to say in Christ alone they are propounded to be exhibited and to be performed Doth not the merit of Christ at the least giue the vertue and efficacie thereof to our workes that they may merite and deserue the grace and fauour of God Christ hath merited for vs Iustification Regeneration and life eternall but that we our selues should merit euen any the least benefit much lesse those speciall benefits he hath not merited For then there should be some thing detracted from the meere grace of God and Christs merit if we should in any part come into participation of merit with him Therefore Paule Rom. 4.4 doth so seuer works and grace thar granting workes he denieth grace To him that worketh saith he reward is not imputed of grace And Rom. 11.6 he sheweth such a disagreement betweene works which those men call meritorious and grace that the one of them being granted the other must needs be denied But if it bee of grace then not of workes else grace should be no grace The same is to be said of Christs merit for seeing that the merite of Christ and grace do necessarily stand together Christs merit and ours can by no meanes agree together Doth not Paule in those places speake of workes done by mere naturall men before regeneration Nay but rather he speaks of good workes which cannot be done without faith a Ro. 14.23 And of the works of Abraham the father of the faithfull b Ro. 4.2.3 23. And there was neuer yet any question of the workes of the vnregenerate seeing they are all sinnes though some be more hainous then others For Eph. 2.3 By nature we are all the children of wrath to wit passiuely that is in daunger of the iudgement of God being angrie with vs and Hebr. 11.6 It is impossible vvithout faith to please God Seeing the Scripture doth commend vnto vs this rule of the iudgement to come in these vvords God will giue euerie man according to his workes Psal 62.15 Math. 16.27 Rom. 12.6 Rev. 22.12 shall sentence be giuen according to works as causes deseruing the recompence eyther of life or of death If you speake of the workes of the Reprobate it cannot be denied but they shall bee the cause of the sentence of death which shall be giuen But if we speake of the works of the elect then we affirme that God will giue sentence of life eternall and that he will rewarde the elect according to their workes yet not as causes of life and rewarde but as certaine effectes demonstrations and tokens testifying of the causes themselues But the true and onely causes are the decree of God from all eternity also vocation and iustification in time as that place proueth Math. 25.34 wherein we haue the expresse forme and manner of the iudgement to come Come saith hee ye blessed of my father take possession of the kingdome prepared for you before the foundations of the vvorld vvere laide For this calling of them by name and putting them in possession of the kingdome of heauen doth sufficiently shew the cause why the elect are put in possession of the kingdome of heauen to wit because they be blessed with all spirituall blessing in Christ Ephes 1 1.2 being freed from the curse of the law a Gal 3 14 they are the heires and sonnes of God by his free promise and therefore called and iustified For adoption vocation and iustification are parts of that blessing of God in time Whereupon those whom before verse 34. he had called the blessed of his father verse 37. he calleth iust and calleth the verie kingdome of heauen it selfe an inheritance 2 They prooue the cause of saluation to be laid in the eternall decree of God because before the foundation of the world there was prepared for those blessed ones that is which were called and iustified in time that kingdome into possession whereof he will put them 3 That particle according or euen as in those sayings doth not signifie the cause but the conformitie as in that 1. Corin. 13.12 That I may knowe according to that that is euen as I am knowne So GOD shall giue to euerie one according to his workes that is euen as hee hath done good or euill But the causes of death whereunto the reprobate shal be adiudged are placed out of themselues to wit the malediction of God and the decree of God for the king shall say Math. 25.41 get ye hence ye cursed into euerlasting fire and yet they let not but that their workes also be the cause of damnation Are not then besides those causes of the benediction and decree of God the good vvorkes of the elect in like manner the causes of saluation There is not the like reason of euill workes and of good works For euill workes are our owne and merite vnto vs but good workes are not our owne but workes of the holy ghost in vs such as we owe vnto God a Luk. 17.10 Besides euill workes are perfectly euill and euen the least euill that can be deserueth death but good workes are imperfectly good and there is nothing but that which is in euery respect absolute and perfect can procure life and that also by promise Therefore good workes cannot be numbred among the causes of saluation Adde moreouer that the Apostle doth manifestly attribute the sentence of life to faith imbracing the gospell 1 Thess 1.10 when he shall come saith he to bee made glorious in his saints and to be made wonderfull in them that beleue because faith is esteemed as our witnesse in that day Whether is there in those words Come ye blessed only a calling and adiudging them to life and then after followeth the cause taken from their works for I was hungrie and ye gaue me to eat Yea the compellation or calling and the proposition doth cōtaine the cause of the sentence and the reason is added after from the effects prouing that cause and testifieng of it as though he should say thus Enter ye into heauen because ye are blessed and ordeined vnto the kingdome of heauen For by your good workes ye haue declared that ye are blessed and from all eternity ordeined to the kingdome of heauen VVherfore will he giue sentence according to workes Because workes are better knowne to vs as the effects which be better knowne then the causes themselues now it is the will of GOD that in that Iudgment all thinges should be visible and perceiued by sense that iudgement may bee giuen of true and liuely faith by her naturall properties and true effects least we should boast of the visard of faith or the shadow of it in stead of true faith Againe not to shew the cause of saluation but to the intent wee should be stirred vp to the studie of good workes for so much as wee are certaine wee shall not lose our labour In what respect then is life
eternall as Christ saith Iohn 3.3 vnlesse a man be borne againe c. 3 Because faith without which it is impossible for any man to be saued cannot be without good workes and faith hath charitie euer ioyned with her though not in action yet in possibility a Gal. 5.6 4 Because Bernard saith good workes are the way to the kingdome not the cause of raigning Neither can any man attaine to life eternall but by the way of good workes which God hath prepared that wee should walke in them Ephes 1.4 2.10 What is to be obserued in the sayings of the Scriptures vvherein iustification saluation and life eternall is ascribed to workes 1 Legal sentences are to be vnderstoode of perfect good workes such as none can be found in no creature But euangelicall sentences doe alwaies include faith in our workes And we must vnderstand that by faith in the first place iustification is receiued and acceptation to life eternall afterwarde in the second place and by consequence workes are accepted as the fruites of fairh and life eternall is promised to these for Christes sake 2 In such sayings there are not brought forth arguments from the cause why the person is made partaker of eternall life but it is shewed from the effects or the adiuncts what person is partaker of remission of sinnes life eternall So Luk. 7.47 Christ plainely proueth in way of resolution by this argument that the womans sinnes were pardoned because shee loued much But twoe diuerse questions are at no hand to be confounded The one to whom life eternall is giuen the other for what cause it is giuen To them that doe well and meditate in the law of God is happines and life eternall promised a Psal 1.13 119.1.2 Math. 25.3 but yet it is giuen freely for Christes sake b psal 32 1 3 In this question we must remember to obserue a rule of the Rabbines concerning the holy Scriptures In euery place wherein thou lightest on an obiection for an hereticks thou findest a medicine in the side thereof So the scripture wheresoeuer it ascribeth eternall life to workes as a reward calleth it an inheritance c math 25 35. Colloss 3.24 4 When as diuers effects doe depend alike of one and the selfe same cause the consequence from one effect auaileth to another because of their common dependance as Luk. 7.47 the consequence from loue auailes to proue the remission of sinnes because ech of them dependeth on faith 5 Where there is a subiect there is his proprietie and on the contrarie where there is a propriety there is his subiect So where there is faith there be workes and where there be good works there is faith 6 Seeing good workes doe spring from faith whatsoeuer is attributed to them must needs be ascribed to the roote i. faith whence they spring VVhat is the end and vse of good workes It is three fold 1. The glory of God namely that by them wee should glorifie God before men a Mat. 5.16 2 The testification of our true faith that we may make our calling and election sure to our selues in our owne consciences 2. Pet. 1.10 And also that we may liue sutable to the gospell our calling Ephes 4.1 I beseech you walk worthy of the calling wherwith you are called 3 The edification of our neighbour 2 Cor 9 which is done whilest that we further him by our workes or prouoke him to doe the like b 11. 12. 13 Act. 3.14 VVhat is contrarie to this doctrine 1 Euill workes 2 The error of the papists who teach that good workes may be done without faith as also of them that thinke they are perfect which boast of the perfection and purity of workes and securely rest in them Also their error who bragge of their merits of congruity and condignity and boast of the workes of supererogation which teach that their wilworships Numb 15.39 Ezek 20.18 19 Mat. 15.19 that is worships of there owne deuising are acceptable to god Which accompt these for good workes which are done with good intent and leane only on the will and tradition of men which imagine that the violating of these is more hainous then of the commandements of God As for that which is saide that we must heare the guides euen as Christ himselfe d. Luk. 10.16 Heb. 13.17 it must be vnderstood only of the true pastours of the Church which watch for the saluation of the soules committed to their charge And the error of them who affirme that man is iustified before God by workes as causes sclander vs that we contemne good workes as though this were in controuersy betweene vs and them whether good works are to be done wheras we doe more carefully vrge this then they doe 3 Of the Epicures or libertines which neglect good workes as vnprofitable The three and thirtieth common place Of Christian libertie What doe you vnderstand by this name Christian libertie NOT loosenesse or in generall simply euery libertie but in some respect restrained to some certaine kinde and certaine degrees For this Epithite or title Christian or spirituall puts a difference wherby this speciall kind of libertie is discerned from ciuill and bodily libertie and from the counterfeit liberty of other sects Neyther yet is it contrarie to bodily and ciuil libertie a Eph 6.5 1 Cor. 7 22 or to that seruice that we owe to God and to iustice b 1 pet 2.16 Rom. 6.18 1. Cor. 7.22 Hee that is called being free is the seruant of Christ that is he ought to serue Christ Againe whereas we speake of Christian libertie we must put difference betweene the libertie of the will whereof we haue spoken in the common place of freewill and the libertie of the person wherof here we are to intreat In Greeke it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. Cor. 3.17 for where the spirit of the Lord is there is libertie .. In Latine it is called libertas libertie or setting free not that it it is done by force as in old time when the Lord deliuered the people from Pharaoh vnlesse it be in respect of Sathan whose power and kingdome Christ hath destroyed neither is it obtained with the leaue of our enemies as when the people returned out of Babilon but by the full price paid not to Sathan but to God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the Apostle calleth the price of our redemption whereby vve are made free How manifold is personall libertie Paul sets it downe to be twofold not in the kinds but in respect of the degrees one whereby Christ hauing paide that endlesse price namely his bloud wee are redeemed that wee might be set free from the slauerie of sinne death and the Law c Ephe. 1.7 Rom. 7.6 which for instruction sake we may call the Redemption of libertie Whereof the Apostle maketh mention Rom. 6.22 Now are wee made free from sinne but are the
the common discipline What is peculiar discipline It is proper to the clergie or ministers of the church whereby they are kept in their duety whereof there be three partes the first is 1 Prohibition prescribed by the cannons which the auncient Bishops haue imposed vpon themselues and to their order such are 1 that no clergy man shall spend his time in hunting dicing or bancketing 2. that such shall not be vsurers or Merchants 3 That they be not present at dauncings or such like but in the church each minister shall by preaching prayer and the administration of the sacraments diligently doe his duety The seconde is execution which was especiallie committed to the Bishops who to that purpose did twise or oftner in the yeare call prouinciall synods in which as well Bishops themselues as other clergy men were censured The third is the punishing of Ministers whereof there were those degrees Reprehension Translation deposition and keeping from the communion What vse is there of ecclesiasticall gouernment It is 1. as a bridle to curbe and tame such as spurne against the doctrine of Christ 2 it is a spurre to such as are dull 3. It is a rodd wherewith they that haue more greeuously offended are in compassion and according to the milde spirit of Christ chastised of the church What is contrarie to this doctrine 1 The peeuishnes of the Donatists and Anabaptists who vnder pretence of a more austere discipline acknowledge no congregation of Christ but such an one as is each way conspicuous for Angelicall prefection for want whereof they by an impious scisme doe deuide themselues from the flocke of Christ 2 The abuse of excommunication an example whereof we haue in Diotrephes * 3 Ioh 12 who desired preheminence in the church and cast out such as he liked not 3 That Tirannicall authoritie which Popes and papall prelats do challenge to themselues in their Iurisdiction to wit a iudgment to determine both of the greater and lesse excommunication which is nothing else but a power to excomunicate 4 Their error who either bring into the church an Oligarchie one the one parte or an vniuersalitie for the whole church on the other by which they would haue this Iurisdiction executed and thinke that with euerie thing the whole church should be acquainted abusing for this purpose Math. 18.17 Tell the church and. 1. Cor. 5.4 when ye are gathered c 5 That foolish and ridiculous excommunication vsed by Papists of Locusts mise Eeles flees c. To the apparent abuse of the churches power as also that they excommunicate men for the profession of Christ not paying of debte contempt of the popes decrees or legacies to monkes 6 Their error who doe attribute the partes of this gouernment to the christian magistrate either in binding or loosing As also their error who where there is a christian magistrate will haue him to haue nothing to doe with those ecclesiasticall censures and with these the neglect of such gouernours as punish not offenders 7 Of the papists which bring causes meerely ciuill to the ecclesiasticall courts 8 The superstitious and toyish Popish fasts whereas what dayes we shall fast or not fast as Augustine saith neither Christ nor his Apostles haue determined 9 All lawes for choice of meates forbidding some as flesh butter cheese egs etc. Wherein consisteth the fast of papists For in that the Apostle saith it is good not to eat flesh c. Rom. 14.21 he that is weake eateth hearbes he speaketh not this simplie for thē should he contrarie himselfe and Christ but as it is vsed with offence to the weake He then speaketh of such weake Iewes who for feare least they should in the market light vpon some such meat as Moses had forbidden rather would eat hearbes then buy meat in the shambles yet Christ would not haue his disciples to follow the austerecourse of Iohn Baptists life and diet but sheweth that it belonged to the age of the old testament and in no sorte to be practised in the libertie of the new b. b Mat. 9.15 16 10 These sacrilegious opinions of meriting Gods fauour of appeasing his wrath satisfieing for sinnes and deliuerance from purgatorie by fastings duly obserued All which if they were true doubtles Christ died in vaine Gal. 2.21 For they grant indeed that man of himselfe can not render vnto God any thing equiualent for sins but yet they vrge that it with Gods acceptation and by communication of Christs merit they may 11 The decrees of the ancient hereticks called Esses made vnder colour of wisedome worship and humilitie that men should not taste certaine meates and should vse such immoderate abstinence as would hurt the bodie contratie to that Coloss 2 21. 12 The Heresie of the Marcionites and the Tatians of Encratites in english we may call them continēts which taught men to despise the workes of the creator and Carthusians who will eat no fl●sh The Seuerians who will drinke no wine Montanus his Xerophagie that is eating of dry meat to demerit gods fauour to purg away originall sin increase in vertue to get a great rewarde 13 The error of such as allow no fasts at all but being led on by the gourmandizing spirit of surfetting dronkēnes become belly-gods 14 The dissolute life of the Romish Clergie all which to haue repeated is a sufficient refutation The fiue and fortieth common Place Of Vowes VVhat is called a Vow SOme will haue it called votum that is to say a vow a voluntate that is from the will as it were proceeding from will aduisednes or purpose It is called of the Greecians 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 21.23 VVe haue foure men vvhich haue made 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is a vow And 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is a promise of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is to promise because he which maketh a promise saith Eustathius that is he which hath vowed any thing hath laid a burthen vpon himselfe so that a vow is some voluntary thing which euen vpon a deliberate purpose or free will some man hath vndertaken 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as it were a burthen vpon himselfe As euerie man vvisheth in his heart so let him giue not grudginglie or of necessitie for God loueth a cheerefull giuer 2 Cor. 9.7 And so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth a vowe not onely a prayer and a desire of obtaining something but a promise of offering something to God but yet let the vowe be agreeing with the prescript or rule of the Law For the scripture doth call a vowe not euerie promise which may be made to euerie man but onely that which is made to God and that willingly religiously therefore that which among men is called a promise in respect of god is termed a vowe for a promise made to a man hath not the manner of a vow Sometime metonymicallie it signifieth a thing promised with a vow a Psal 66 13. and
comprehendeth the office of the Magistrate For God will iudge and punish them either immediately without the ministerie of man or mediately by the Magistrate Doth Paule condemne the order of Iudgements and all manner of contending at the Lawe where hee saith 1. Cor. 6.7 There is vtterly a fault amongst you because you goe to Lawe one with another No neither doth he simply deny the lawfulnesse of going to law before a magistrate but onely rebuketh in Christians that goe to lawe with another that same 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is lesse then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth weaknesse or defect and impatiency of minde 1. That they laboured with lust sorrowe hatred and couetousnesse euen for vnprofitable matters and for trifling businesses and would contend in lawe for the most slender iniuries that might be and would deale therin with an obstinate purpose of reuenge and with all the sleights and deuises that could bee 2. In regard of the scandall and offence because they did striue and goe to lawe vnder the heathen and vnbeleeuing Iudges which brought a reproach vpon the whole Church as if Christians should at this day bring their actions before Turkish gouernours 3. Because they did willingly offer iniurie and damage one vnto another euen those that were brethren and partakers in the same Christian Religion 4. Lastly that they neglected to compound their differences by the arbiterment of the faithfull in the Church But that a man may euen before wicked Iudges defend his owne innocencie against the iniuries of wicked men euen himselfe giuing the first onset the Apostle Paule sheweth not onely in words but in deed in practise when he appealed to the lawes of the Romaines when hee was beaten with rods and so also he required helpe of the Romane tribune against the Iewes that lay in wait to kil him again from the vniust Iudge he appealed to the tribunall seate of Caesar a Act. 16 37 23.27 25.10.11 By all with it appeareth that to goe to lawe of it selfe is not euill but the abuse is that that maketh it vicious What doth Christ meane then Math. 5.39 when hee forbiddeth them to resist euill and commaundeth them that to him that will take away their coate they should giue the cloake also and to turne the right cheek to him that shall strike them on the left It is not an aduise and counsell giuen to them that are come to perfection as some expound it but a manifest and expresse commaundement wherein he doth not absolutely enioyne them to turne the other cheeke to him that smites them for Christ himselfe did not so to him that smote him but rather reprehendeth his malapertnes Iohn 18.22 And so Paule Act. 23.2 God will smite thee thou painted wall But the meaning of Christ is that he would haue the mindes of his Disciples to bee so farre from the desire of reuenging of iniuries that they should rather endure the iniurie to be doubled vpon them then they should reuenge the same and that they should rather be willing to suffer wrong then to offer any or requite it being offered to them But it is one thing to defend themselues and their goods which is lawfull for Gods children to doe and it is another thing to hurt another man which the godly may not doe Neyther yet is this patience which Christ prescribeth Luke 21 19. or equitie and moderation of the minde any hinderance but that keeping still sound friendship toward our aduersaries wee may without bitternes of hatred or desire to hurt them vse the remedie granted vnto vs by God that is to say the helpe of the magistrate for the preseruation of our goods and substance and let the causes contend and striue so as still the hearts may be free from contention for according to the old saying Dissidere bonos etiam de rebus iisdem Incolumi licuit semper amicitia The selfesame things may make good men to varie And yet still friendship stand and not miscarie Or they may in a care of the publicke good and in pure and true zeale bring before the magistrate a guiltie stubborne and pestilent fellow and require to haue him punished so as it bee done with an vpright conscience and a minde free from all guile and corrupt affection ayming at the amendement or at leest the bridling and restrayning of the offender the quietnesse of others the preseruation of iustice and Gods glorie What say you to that of Salomon Prou. 10.12 Loue couereth all trespasses Doth that speach commaund the Magistrate to spare those that offend or doth it commaund priuate men that they shall not bring their complaints before the magistrate against those that doe them iniurie No But it teacheth that priuate offences such as vsually fall out among men must be fauourably intepreted forgiuen and forgotten according to that forgiue and ye shall be forgiuen and as Paule saith Loue suffereth all things namely those which are not enormious but may be tolerated and mitigated without breach of discipline or godlinesse 1. Cor. 13.7 In what sort are iudgements to be ordered This point the scripture teacheth Deut. 1.16 First Heare the controuersies betweene your brethren Secondly Iudge rightly betweene euery man and his brother and the stranger that is with him Thirdly Ye shall haue no respect of person in iudgement but shall heare the small aswell as the great ye shall not feare the face of man for the iudgment is Gods And fourthly chap 17.4 If any thing be told thee and thou hast heard it thou shalt inquire of it diligently whether the thing be true and certaine So Leuit. 19.15 Yee shall not doe vniustly in iudgement thou shalt not fauour the person of the poore nor honour the person of the mightie but thou shalt iudge thy neighbour iustly Pro. 17.15 Hee that iustifieth that is acquiteth the wicked and he that condemneth the iust euen they both are abhomination to the Lord. And Pro. 24.24 He that saith to the wicked thou art righteous him shall the people curse and the nations shall abhorre him And Iohn 7.24 Iudge not saith Christ according to the appearance but iudge righteous iudgement as if he should say weigh and consider the fact by it selfe simply without any respect at all to the person And 2. Chron. 19 5. Iosaphat said vnto the Iudges Take heede what you doe for you execute not the iudgements of man but of God That is you doe not in iudgement supply the roome of any man so much as of God himselfe and he will be with you in the cause and iudgement Wherefore now let the feare of the Lord be vpon you take heed and doe it for there is no iniquitie with the Lord our God neither respect of persons nor receiuing of reward And the law of the Athenians was this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Both must be heard and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Giue not thy iudgement any way Till thou hast heard what
both can say Our prouerbe is One tale is good till the other be heard Seeing Christians are by the law of God forbidden to kill and it is prophecied of the Church Isa 11.9 and 65.25 there shall none hurt or destroy in all the mountaine of my holines doth not the Magistrate therefore offend in putting malefactors to death No For he executeth Gods iudgements And it is one of his royall vertues to reuenge the afflictions of the godly according to the commaundement of the Lord to take away the wicked out of the land and to cause all the workers of iniquitie to be destroyed out of the Citie of God a Psal 101 8 Neyther doth he beare the sword in vaine saith Paule Rom. 13.4 for he is the minister of God to take vengeance on him that doth euill But a way with that sauage crueltie Cassian tribunall which was called Reorum scopulus The Rocke of the acused yea precious rather in the eyes of the king must be the bloud of his subiects b Psa 72.14 But those propheticall speeches of the Prophet do signifie that there can be nothing hurtfull to the Church inasmuch as to them that loue God all things worke together for the best Rom. 8.28 Seeing our Sauiour Christ Iohn 8.7 answereth the accusers of the adulterous woman on this manner Let him that is without sinne among you cast the first stone at her may therefore offenders be condemned or punished but by them that are iust and free from sinne Yes for we must not respect the vice of the person but looke vnto his publicke office and the order and course of the lawes which the Iudge must follow in giuing sentence vpon others though himselfe be polluted with some kind of blot Although indeed it is true that it is no small scandall of offenc if the Iudge be guiltie of the same crime for the which he condemneth another man But that answere of our Sauiour Christ is a particular answere appropriate vnto the Pharisees that lay in wait for him to intrap him and thereby he reproueth their hypocrisie who being most seuere censurers of other men were blinde in their owne faultes and did most foully flatter and deceiue themselues May the chiefe magistrate with a good conscience shew fauour or giue pardon vnto malefactors that are lawfully conuicted So farre forth as the offences doe eyther directly concerne God himselfe and are committed against him as blasphemie Idolatrie magicke sacriledge or sorcerie in which God is eyther dishonoured or denied or else are committed against the very nature of mankinde as Sodomitrie or the burning lust of a man toward brute beast or theft these the magistrate should not forgiue for these offences doe as it were extinguish and dash the verie welspring and fountaine of mankinde And therefore in this case the king must beware that he doe not spare the offender with the hinderance and endangering of Gods glorie and of humane societie a Deut. 13 8.9 For in that case It is better as Bernard saith that one should perish then the whole companie Vnus quam Vnitas But so farre forth as the offences that are committed concerne onely some particular persons directly there vpon weightie reasons and wise vnderstanding of the matter hee may forgiue as farre as the safetie and state of the Commonwealth with equitie and iustice will permit the same For as it is lawfull for the Prince to aggrauate and increase the punishment that is appointed by the law vpon a good and iust cause as Dauid 2. Sam. 12.5 when he was questioned withall concerning the rich man that had taken away the poore mans sheepe pronounced him worthie of death so may the same prince vpon iust cause mouing him mitigate and abate the punishment that the lawe hath appointed Moreouer the will and purpose of the offender make a difference in the offence and the diuers and vnlikely circumstances of persons sexes age and the former course of a mans life may be causes that in one and the same fact of one and the same offence in men that are partakers in guiltinesse yet the crime may not be alike and therefore not the like punishment to be inflicted vpon them But if pardon be granted let it be 1 Vpon a iust cause and necessarie for the Commonwealth and not out of the sole fauour of the Prince toward any 2 Let not the offendor that is guiltie of a crime be freed from the whole punishment but onely from some part of the greatnesse of the punishment vpon hope of amendement After the example of Salomon toward Abiathar the Priest who tooke part with Adoniah when he sought to be king And by the example of Dauid toward Simei when he railed vpon him and cursed him b 1. K. 2.26 36 3 The Prince must take heed that the example of his lenitie do not breed libertie of offending and that the people doe not grow worse thereby for the impunitie of sinne when offenders may escape without punishment it makes them the bolder to offend The Magistrate indeed ought to be mooued with pitie toward those that are malefactors and to abstaine as much as may be from the exact torment of their deserued punishment but absolutely to forgiue those that deserue death he ought not For to him especially belongeth that saying which is so much beaten vpon in the law Thou shalt take away euill out of the middest of thee Deut. 19.19 And 1. King 20.42 Because thou hast let go out of thine hands a man whom I appointed to die thy life shall goe for his life Forasmuch as we haue no example or precept in the new Testament for warfare is it vnlawfull therefore for Christians to go to warre No For. 1. It was not the purpose of Christ in the Gospell to frame a politicke gouernement Epist 14. ad Marcell but to erect a spirituall kingdome 2 As Augustine saith They whom Saint Iohn Baptist commaunded to be content with their owne wages he did not surely forbid them to goe to warre And it is vsuall to argue from the Concreets to the abstractes and the consequent followes well where there is no ambiguitie as thus Iohn Baptist intertaineth and approoueth of souldiers that remained in their offices therefore also he approueth of warfare for by the approbation of the example in his proper subiect the thing it selfe in generall is approoued 3 If the Magistrate doe iustly punish those theeues whose offences are onely against a few then by no meanes may hee suffer the whole land to be spoyled wasted with robberies yet the offenders goe vnpunished For Hee beareth not the sword for nought but is the minister of God to take vengeance on him that doth euill Rom. 13.4 And lawfull warres whereof 1. Sam. 25.28 Abigail speaketh to Dauid Thou fightest the Lords battels Are of publicke reuenge 4 It is written Hebr. 11.34 that men that were truly a part Godly did make warres yea and that