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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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compulsion nor by this necessity proceeding from God but from the voluntary corruption of man for no man is an offence to another against his will or through inconsideration but of purpose with deliberation Therefore though it be necessary that offēces come yet woe vnto the world because of offences VVhat are the ioint causes or by how manie meanes is an offence giuen Foure First By false doctrine and false worship such be heresies errors worshipping of idoles superstitions the traditions of men whereby the weake are withdrawne from the simplicity of the word 2 By word or speach and that either filthy cursed or blasphemous 3 By life and behauiours repugnant to the law of god such are filthy gestures hainous offences and euill examples in the abuse of Christian libertie whereby the weake are discouraged from christianity but for the most part the offences giuen by doctrine do more harme then the offences by manners because they worke more closely presently assault the faith but these other doe sooner appeare and doe lesse hinder our faith as in the beginning the deuill gaue Eue a deadly wound putting into her a false perswatiō a Gen. 3.2 And Solomons idolatrie brought forth the worshipping of idols for a long time after VVhat punishment is appointed for the authors of this scandall Christ Math. 18.17 doth threaten that lamentable sentence or horrible woe against them woe be vnto the world because of offences and. verse 6. he pronounceth that it is better for that man by whome the offence is giuen that a milstone being hanged about his necke hee should be cast into the bottom of the sea VVhat is an offence taken That which men take vnto themselues from the doeings or sayings of other men either from true doctrine and the outward forme of the Church or else in generall from any other things whatsoeuer But in speciall some speach of ours purpose or deede which is godly iust and of it selfe honest or at least not done wickedly and vnseasonably By meanes whereof notwithstanding some mā doth iudge ill of vs but without cause either of some frowardnesse ill will or a certaine sinister spitefulnesse of the minde or else vpon error and taketh it as an occasion of offence How manifold is an offence taken Double either from man or from the deuill from man which also by deuision of Accidents into the subiects is double of the wicked and of the godly The scandall of the wicked is of worldlie men as of the wise men of this world and of hypocrites who are offended 1. at the poore estate humility and crosse of Christ in our flesh assumed 2 At the absurdity imprudently conceiued of the nouelty simplicity of the doctrine of the gospell and preaching of grace whereby we are taught that all men being by nature sinners subiect to the wrath of god are iustified and saued thorow grace or by faith alone in Iesus Christ and by the article of election predestination and the mortifying of the old man 3 By the life and actions of the godly whereby they imagine themselues to be controlled in the free vse of the thinges of the worlde 4 Lastly by the crosses and persecutions which goe hand in hand with the profession of the gospel which offence because it springeth from the malice of them that are offended and from their spite it is called the offence of the Pharises of which Math. 15.12 The discples said to Christ dost thou not know that the pharises are offended hearing this speach of thine So Christ and the gospell were to the Iewes an offence taken and to the Grecians foolishnesse 1. Cor. 1.23 And the stone of offence And the rocke of offence to the twoe houses of Israel a. Esa 8.19 Luk. 2.34 1 Pet. 2.7.8 to witt by accident and priuatiuely as Christ being despised and reiected is the author of iust condemnation whereas in truth and by himselfe but to the elect he is the way the truth and the life and the fountaine of all good Concerning this we must obserue the warning of Christ Blessed is he that is not offended in me Math. 11.5 So the sermon of Christ concerning the eating of his flesh was a scandall to the Capernaites b Ioh 6.41 57 60 So the Iewes were offended with Peters going in to the Gentiles c gal 2.12 So the righteous actions of the godly are an offence to the wicked d Psal 56.6 7 So the disciples of Christ pulling the eares of corne are an offence to the Pharises e Math. 12.2 So many are offended by reason of the iarres which follow the preaching of the Gospell to condemne it VVhat are the causes of this offence taken The principall efficient cause is the iust prouidence of God which doth decree and execute this although men stumble through their owne malice as it is written Behold I put in Sion a stumbling stone and a rocke of offence The second cause is Satan who prouoketh the wicked to take all things in the worst parte The instrumental cause are the men themselues who are offended at the godlinesse of others The causes assisting are the blindnes of mans reason the corrupt iudgment of the world the affections of the flesh enuy malice rash curiosity the neglect of the holy scripture bad opinions conceiued the perswasion of a mans owne righteousnesse the desire of gaine and keeping credite hating to be instructed occasions are the confessing and preaching of sound doctrine the behauiours life deeds and crosses of the godly the condition of the truth As for the forme or manner it is expressed in diuers examples Is this kinde of Scandall to be auoided No but not to be regarded according to the comaundement of god Deut. 33.9 He that shall say to his father or to his mother I know you not he that shall not acknowledge his brethren and his sonnes these do keepe thy law o Lord. And according to the rule of Christ concerning the Pharises which were offended at his word Math 15.14 Let them alone they are blinde and the leaders of the blinde that is neglect them neither take care for offending them and of the Apostles Acts. 5 29. we must obey god rather then men And of Bernard It is better an offence should come then that the truth should be forsaken Besides we must preferre the first and second commaundement before all the duties to men according to the example of Elias against Achab a. 1. King 18 18 and of Paule against Peter those which plaid the Iewes b Gal. 2 3.4 5 11.14 What is the offence of the Godly taken Which is taken only of such as be yet weake in the Church or not wicked but is greedily taken of them that be more malicious that they may make the doctrine of the gospell doubtfull and vncertaine to the simple sort either by the calamities of the church the punishments of the innocents the heresies dissentions which
denying the holy Scriptures to be indited by the holy Ghost and of others reiecting certaine writings of holy Scripture 4 The errour of the Papists which is manifold for they holde that the authoritie and certaintie of Scripture dependeth vpon the determination of the Church that the Scripture is not authenticall but by the authoritie of the Church and that it is not manifest that the Scriptures proceede from God but by the testimonie of the Church which error is most absurd For if truth be subiect to the pleasure and iudgement of men the consciences are made doubtful of their saluation and the same errour is confuted by the testimonie of the Apostle Ephes 2.20 where the Apostle affirmeth that the Church leaneth vpon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets which foundation he cals not the very persons of the Apostles but their doctrine For although the Church should by her iudgement approue the scripture yet doth she not make of that which is vncertaine and doubtfull certaine and authentical but doth by her iudgment subscribe to the truth of God and doth embrace it as proceeding from God Moreouer they account the Apocrypha bookes for Canonicall They prattle that the Scripture is imperfect and obscure that the reading of the Scriptures is hurtful to the Church that it is the matter of contention that matters of controuersie cannot be decided by Scripture alone that it hath a nose of waxe They affirme that power to interprete and giue the sense of Scriptures belongs to the Bishop of Rome They match the writings of Fathers Bishops and Counsels with the Scripture They take away from the common people the writings of their fathers last will and testament and post them ouer to dumbe idols as to lay-mens bookes cleane contrary to the commaundement of Christ Ioh. 5.39 Search the Scriptures Lastly they account the old Latine translation as authenticall The fifth common Place of Creation What is the signification of this word to Create in the Scriptures IT is peculiar because the reason of man knoweth not how any thing should be created of nothing For Dauid Kimchi affirmeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that this word to create most properly is affirmed for euery thing which is brought from no being to a being as Gen. 1.1 But secundarily and yet properly it signifieth to bring a forme created of nothing to a matter preexisting without alteration a Gen. 1.21.27 Whereupon Damascene saith lib. 2. cap. 5. that God made all things of nothing some things indeed immedidiatly but other some by meanes which is a part of diuine omnipotence Therefore the word to create is attributed to God alone in the Scriptures either in the workes of creation or else by a borrowed speech in things that be of no lesse vertue and power then the very worke of creation b Esa 41.20 Ier. 31.22 Psal 51.12 For this cause these words differ to beget to create to make For to beget is to bring forth something of his owne substance like vnto it selfe according to the essence but to create is to make something of nothing diuerse from the substance of the Creator And this word to make is applied to those things which be made of some matter but yet it is restrained by the circumstance of the text to the propertie of creation c Gen. 1.25.31 Rom. 1.20 What is Creation It is an external and indiuisible worke of Iehouah Elohim alone that is of the Father Sonne and holy Ghost whereby by his word power and commandement alone he hath created all things out of himselfe that is the substance of all things being seuered from his owne Essence to the end that his infinite wisedome goodnesse and power might be made manifest d Act. 17.24 Rom. 1.20 Proue it by some testimonies 1 The very historie of the creation as it is set downe by Moses Gen. 1. is a most ample witnesse of it 2. Psal 33.6 By the word of the Lord were the heauens created and by the spirit of his mouth all the power and hoast of them And in the same Psalme vers 9. He spake and they were made he commanded and they were all created Againe Psal 19.1 The heauens declare the glorie of God and the firmament soundeth foorth or celebrateth the work of his hands Mal. 2.10 Hath not one God created vs Iob. 9.8 Who alone doth stretch out the heauens 1. Cor. 8.6 We haue but one God the Father of whom are all things Why is the creation ascribed in the Creed to the Father alone Not that the Sonne and the holy Ghost shold be excluded from the effect and praise of that worke who in that same worke manifestly not as instruments but as efficients equally and inseparably wrought together a Iob 1 3. Col. 1.16 Gen. 1.1.2 but by way of excellencie that the decree of this worke and first beginning of it might be giuen to the Father because the Father is the fountaine and beginning not temporall but originall of the whole Deitie by whom all things were made Further that there might appeare in the Church some externall difference whereby the Father might be distinguished from the Sonne and the holy Ghost for as Basill saith in his booke intreating of the holy Ghost cap. 16. The Father is the first principall cause of those things that be made the Sonne the instrumentall cause the holy Ghost the perfecting cause What was the mouing or impellent cause of the creation of all things The infinite goodnesse of God ioyned with infinite wisedome which it pleased him to communicate and by communicating to reueale it because a good thing is apt to communicate it selfe And when did God begin to create In the very beginning of all things and in the vety beginning of time that is then when the things which now be began to be For though all things in the world were made in the Sonne b Col. 1.16 yet in this place this word beginning signifieth not the Sonne but some certaine beginning of time as also Ioh. 1.1 But whereof and whence were all things made and produced Of Nothing this word being vnderstood negatiuely that is of no other matter that was before For this word Of in this place signifieth not the materiall cause whereof any thing is made but the order As if a man should say When as there was nothing before after that there was any thing it was made or else it signifieth the habitude or disposition of the materiall cause which is simply denyed How proue you that 1. Because there was nothing from eternitie excepting and besides God himselfe and whatsoeuer there is it is either the Creator or else the creature but things were not created out of the substance of God for then they should be God or gods wh●ch is very absurd therefore they were made of nothing 2. God is almightie and therefore doth not stand in need of some matter going before For this cause Psal 33.9
in the word and sacraments or faith is the organ instrumēt or meane whereby man being a sinner apprehendeth and applyeth to himselfe Christ wholy with all his benefits and is vnited vnto Christ and liueth in him The Apostle Heb. 11.1 describing faith saith thus Faith is the substance of things which are hoped for the euidence of things that are not seen And Paul Ro. 4.20.21 painting out faith as in a map bringeth in the example of Abraham the father of the faithfull and saith Hee doubted not of the promise of God through vnbeleef but was strengthened in the faith gaue glory to god being fully assured that hee which had promised was also able to doe it Is that discription of faith Heb. 11.1 differing from the rest No forasmuch as therein there is exact mention made both of the forme of faith which is declared in the words Substance and Euidence also of the obiects namely things hoped for and things not seene For by the word Substance hee meaneth not a person as in the article of the Trinitie a Heb. 1.3 but the ground and as it were the prop whereupon a godly minde must stay and relie it selfe to signifie that faith is a certain sure safe possession of those things which are promised vnto vs by God As Psal 39.8 My Hypostasis or substance that is to say My hope is euen in thee And Heb. 3.14 We are made partakers of Christ if we keepe sure vnto the end 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the beginning wherewith wee are vpholden or vnderpropped Some translate the word Hypostasis existence or subsistēce because faith in some respect causeth things to haue a beeing as if they were which in trueth are not that is to say it setteth things before vs as if they were present which onely are in expectation Budaeus translateth it Strength or Courage In which signification it is vsed 2. Corinth 9.4 Least wee should bee ashamed 〈…〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. In this constant boasting Cha. 11.17 By a word deriued from the verbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is to sustaine to except not to giue placc to violence Hereupon it is that a souldier is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is bolde and hardie and turneth not his backe to his enemie but goeth to meete him and resists him and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 boldnes whereby a man standeth stoutly to it and without stirring his foote receiueth his aduersarie that inuadeth him And surely this notable signification doth well agree with faith For in the act of beleeuing wee haue neede of strength and patience we must resist the flesh we must conquer reason we must withstand our owne conscience sinne the wrath of God and all other things whereby the consent of faith is hindered and oppugned Wee had neede to be armed with such a strong shield that wee may receiue and quench all the fyrie darts of the diuell Ephe. 6.16 and ouercome the world 1. Iohn 5.4 As for the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is translated Euidence it is not a refutation or a reproofe but an argument demonstration that is an assurance wherby the minde being conuinced by diuine testimonies doth most stedfastly embrace the diuine promises But by the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which are hoped for and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which are not seene is vnderstood the Gospel those things which are offered in the Gospel namely fellowship with Christ forgiuenesse of sins iustification Resurrection and life eternall For these are the things we hope for and which doe not appeare and of themselues are not conformable vnto our reason and so are they the misteries of saluation in themselues and in their owne nature inuisible But those things which we see with our minde and in hope we do behold them in the word of God and doe accompt them as if they were done accomplished and present before vs. How many sorts of Faith are there Not many sorts but only one faith Ephe. 4.5 One Lord one Faith one Baptisme Now faith is one not in respect of the subiects for after that sort there are as many faiths that is to say giftes of faith as there are beleeuers but faith is and alwaies hath been one in Specie that is in respect of the thing beleeued and of the obiect whereupon it rests And this is the only obiect of faith namely the grace and mercie purposed and ordained for all beleeuers in Christ from the beginning of the world What is the efficient cause of Faith God himsefe working freely and giuing faith to whome hee will euen of his owne free good will Iohn 6.29 This is the worke of God that yee beleeue in him whom he hath sent Act. 16.14 God opened the heart of Lydia so that shee attended vnto the things which Paule spake Rom. 12.3 God hath dealt to euerie man the measure of faith Phil. 1.29 It is freely giuen vnto you for Christs cause not onely to beleeue in him but also to suffer for his sake The causes together with God the father are the son and the holy Ghost for as it is said in another place The workes of the Trinitie without are diuided Luk. 24.32 Christ opened the minde of his disciples that they might vnderstand the Scriptures And Heb. 12.2 Looking vnto Iesus the author and finisher of our faith 2. Cor. 4 13. We haue the spirit of faith that is to say we haue faith by the inspiration and gift of the same holy spirit The workmen together with God are the ministers of the worde 1. Cor. 3.5 Who is Apollo and vvho is Paule but the Ministers by vvhome that is by vvhose preaching ye beleeued The instrumentall cause of faith is the hearing of the word of God by the which word the holy Ghost vttereth his power Ro. 10.17 Faith is by hearing hearing by the word of God Esa 57.19 And Act. 10.44 VVhile Peter spake these vvords the holy Ghost fell on alll them which heard the vvord Furthermore another instrumentall cause is the beholding and vse of the Sacraments And to this end God ordained a ministerie in his Church yet so as no force is to be attributed either to the Ministers that speake or vnto the words themselues or to the Sacraments forasmuch as they haue no other effect but only to represent vnto our minds those things for the declaring whereof they are applyed by the ordinance of God but the force and power of them a Mark 16 20 1 Cor 12 6 commeth onely from God and there is but one and the same installer of man into life eternall who was the Creator of him vnto this life temporall 1. Cor. 3.7 Neither hee that planteth is any thing neither he that watereth but God vvhich giueth the increase And Cha. 15.19 I haue laboured more then they all yet not I but the grace of God which is with mee or which vvas present vvith mee And so the voice of
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
remnant of the Elect. And the holy Ghost foretold of a generall Apostacie from the faith b 2. The. 2.3 1. Tim. 4 1 and Reuel 13.3.7 the whole earth followed the beast and wondred and power was giuen him ouer euerie kinred nation and all the inhabitants of the earth saith Iohn worshipped him All saith he whose names were not written in the booke of life that is all sauing the Elect. Where then was the Church Tertullian in his booke de poeniten saith that the Church may bee in one or two Wherefore if in those desperate times of the Church there were but one or two faithfull seruants of God it sufficeth that it may be called a Church Therefore it is not our part to determine at what certaine time the Church began to fall away but to labour rather by what meanes it may be freed from this calamitie What are the causes of a Church The principal cause is God the Father who hath chosen a church and at length calleth and gathereth it vnto himselfe Ephe. 1.4 Iohn 1.13 The faithfull are not borne of bloud nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God And 6.44 No man commeth to me except the father draw him a Exod. 13.21 Mat 18.18 The second or helping cause is the sonne of God himselfe Iohn 14.6 No man commeth to the father but by mee who also hath purchased a Church with his owne blood Act. 20.28 The fellow labourers are the preachers of the word the Prophets and Apostles and their true successours who are therfore called builders b Ro 15 20 1. Pet. 2.7 and maister builders c 1 Cor 3.10 but in respect of the ministerie onely The outward instrumentall cause is the preaching of the word whereby God gathereth himselfe a Church The inward and verie efficient cause is the holy Spirit The formall cause is the syncere profession both of faith and of true Doctrine likewise The Materiall cause whereof are men chosen out of the whole world according to the commaundement of Christ Goe into all the vvorld Preach yee the Gospell to euerie Creature Marke 16.15 16. Are not the blessed Angels likewise a Materiall part of the true Church They are surely and so are the soules of the blessed and that the most beautifullest part d Psal 103 20. Hebr. 1.6.7 12.23 The Apostle acknowledgeth a companie of innumerable Angels and an assemblie and congregation or Church of the spirits or soules And Christ also as he is man is head and Lord of euerie creature and so of the Angels also e Col. 1.17.18 But we speake of the Church insomuch as God hath purchased it by his bloud and doth gather it together by his word but God redeemed not the blessed Angels who neuer fell as neither did he take their nature on him Hebr. 2.16 Neither doth he call them to the cōmunion of this Church by the ministery of his word but onely established them in their first blessed beginning Therfore we affirme that the Church is to be reckoned of men onely according to the promise of the father made to the sonne Psa 2.8 Hath the Church an head Seeing the Church is a bodie not naturall or mathematicall but mysticall a 1 Cor. 10 17. 12.12 Col. 1.18 it must needs haue a head of whom it may be gouerned nourished and cherished and of whom it may depend for euerie liuing bodie hath it head to which it is subiected by the Creator himselfe and from whom it draweth life The Church therfore hath her head not many heads but one onely for it is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 headlesse nor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a beast of many heads succeeding one another by deaths preuention because it must haue died as often as it should be depriued of it head by death and must haue reuiued as often as it got any new head which were altogether monstrous but it hath one onely head to wit Christ who is the head of his Church as the man is of the woman b Eph. 5 27 1 23. 1 By perfection because he is the only true God and verie man that in all things he may haue the preheminence Col. 1.18 2.10 2 By office Because Christ onely is King Prophet and High Priest who hath rule dominion and excellencie ouer the Church as the head hath ouer the bodie c Reue. 1.6 3 By efficacie because he onely inspireth vigour sense motion spirituall life and all goodnesse into his members d Ioh 6 5 7 15 1 2 and he onely being fastened to the bodie by the bond of the spirit giueth to the whole Church his reedifying coniunction ioyning or fastening together and communion of the members betweene God and themselues e 1. Ioh 1 3 Ioh 17.22 Eph 4 12 he alone is neuer absent but euer present with his Church by his spirit f Mat 28 20 and he onely giueth life to the bodie g Eph 5 24 and neuer dieth Death shall haue power ouer him no more Rom. 6.9 So that hee needeth no head by deputation as one Bride receiueth not two heads nor two Bride-groomes 4 By Decree because he alone is the shepheard of one sheepfold h Ioh. 10.16 and the chiefe shepheard as Peter himselfe affirmeth 1. Pet. 5.4 Neither is the condition of any of the Pastors of the Christian Church equall to that of the high Priest long agoe vnder the Lawe for that one high Priest was a true type of Christ a Psal 101.4 Heb. 7.17 7.9.11 but none of the Pastors of the christian Church is a type of Christ Besides hee had charge but ouer one small quarter and but ouer one Temple and ouer one people by the ordinance of God but none can haue charge ouer the whole world through which the Church is dispersed for this were to desire to include the world in one Citie saith Hierome Therefore is not the Pope the Ministeriall head of the Catholicke Church because it cannot be prooued by any testimony of Scripture and seeing Christs kingdome is not of this world he hath no need of a Vice-Roy or Vicar and the Ecclesiasticall ministerie which consisteth in the administration of the Gospell and Sacraments cannot be performed through the whole world by 〈◊〉 any one man But concerning Constantines Donation made to Pope Syluester that voyce which Syluester heard from heauen This day is poyson entered into the Church doth sufficiently testifie what we must thinke of it Finally he that calleth himselfe the Vniuersall Bishop Lib. 4. Epist 76 is the most true forerunner of Antichrist as witnesseth Gregorius Magnus who was himselfe Bishoppe of Rome Hath the Church any foundation Seeing it is a Spirituall house b 1. pet 2 5 it hath a foundation which is twofolde 1 Ministeriall in respect whereof the Church is said To bee built vpon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles to witt euen on
should come to passe foure hundred yeares after c Gen. 15.13.14.15 Act. 7.6.7 The promise made of the erecting of the Empire and kingdome in the tribe of Iudah d Gen. 49.8 The foretelling that the Gentiles should a long while after be called to the gracious couenant of God e Esa 45.22 of the destruction of Ierusalem f Esa 22.1 Ezec. 15.6 2. King 24.14 Dan. 9.26 Mat. 24.2 of the returne of the people out of the captiuitie of Babylon g Ier. 12.15 25.11.12 of the acts of Cyrus for the good of the Iewes which are set downe Esa 45.1.2 The foretelling that Iosias king of Iudah should slay the Priests and should burne mens bones vpon the altar of Bethel which was foretold 333. yeares before Iosias was borne and 359. yeares before it was performed h 1. King 13.2 2. King 23.15 Those famous Prophecies of Daniel concerning the foure Monarchies and the succession of them of Antichrist and his doctrine of the end of the world i Dan. 7.17 12.2 and such like of the comming and death of Christ k Dan. 9.24.25.26.27 All which could neuer be forseene by the wit of man nor be gathered by naturall causes and yet they were all proued most true by the certaine euent of them 3. That maiestie of the Spirit to be adored which euery where shineth clearely in the Scriptures vnder that rude and plaine simplicitie and humilitie of words l 1. Cor. 2.4 4. The power of the Scripture that it hath in the minds of men 1. in the conuersion of a man when as the Scripture sendeth foorth a certaine secret force wherby a man is affected and inwardly moued and so transformed into a new man m Heb. 4.12 Psal 119.111 Act. 13.12 2. In time of affliction when it doth enkindle in our hearts a liuely and firme consolation that at length men should preferre the holy Scripture before all they do enioy neither will they suffer themselues by any kind of affliction no not by death it selfe to be withdrawne from the same as we haue plaine example in the Martyrs by whose bloud it was sealed 5. That deadly and irreconciliable hatred wherewith the diuell and the world do persecute the doctrine of the Scripture wheras they can brooke other doctrines though neuer so absurd and impious 6. The inuincible certaintie thereof that against so many stratagemes of the diuell and so many outrages of the world it abideth firme and by a wonderfull successe gets the victorie To which purpose is that we reade 1. Machab. 1.59 That when Antiochus had giuen in charge that all the holy Scriptures should be burned yet continually after that they peeped foorth of their dennes and not long after being translated into the Greeke tongue were spread ouer the whole world 7. That most sweet harmonie and wonderfull consent betweene all the parts of doctrine taught by Moses the Prophets Christ the Euangelists and the Apostles 8. The wonderfull calling of Moses n Exo 2.7.10 3.2 Act. 7.20 of the Prophets o Amos 7.14 of the Apostles of whom the most were vnlearned and simple men which had not bene brought vp in the schooles of men and learned that there which they taught to others who did so skilfully dispute of heauenly mysteries vpon the sodaine c Act. 2 11. 4.13 The wonderfull conuersion of Paule being before a professed cruell and bloudie enemie to a new man d Act. 9.3 c and that all these had no regard of their owne honor and profit but onely the glorie of God and of Christ and of the saluation of men 9. The perpetuall consent of the whole Church and of all the godly the space of so many ages ouer the face of the whole world farre and neare in imbracing and keeping the Scripture 10. So many and so famous miracles as well of the old Testament which Satan was neuer able to imitate no not in anie resemblance as the raising vp of the dead e 1. Kin. 17.22 2. King 14.33 13.21 the deuiding of the sea and of the riuers f Exod. 14.21 Ios 3.15.16 the staying and going backe of the Sunne g Ios 10.13 2. King 20.11 as of the new Testament which the Iewes themselues cannot denie as Iosephus beareth witnesse li. 18. cap. 4. although the Iewes at this day affirme that the miracles of Christ were done by I know not what superstition of the word Schem hamphoras least they should be constrained to confesse the truth and to acknowledge Iesus the sonne of Marie to be the Christ 11. The matter of the Scriptures which containeth doctrine euery where heauenly and fauoring of no earthly thing In it alone is propounded the pure and perfect law of God h Deu. 4.6 7.8 Psal 19.9 that alone shewes that meanes of saluation which doth not resist the glorie and most perfect iustice of God and satisfieth the consciences of men 12. The forme because there doth appeare manifestly the dispensation of the wisedome of God ordered and disposed 13. The most lamentable ruine of the persecutors and haters thereof What is the true vnfallible note wherby all men of sound iudgemēt do acknowledge that doctrine to be the doctrine of the true God Because that doctrine which doth teach vs to seeke the glorie of one God and of him alone in whole and euery where and to cleaue vnto him out of all doubt that doctrine is the doctrine of the true God i Prou. 16.14 1. Cor. 10.31 Jerem. 9.31 1. Timot. 1.17 Ioh. 7.18 8.49.50 5.43 44. 12.43 Gal. 1.10 Phil. 1.9.11 But onely the regenerate do rest in it as that that bringeth saluation and the doctrine of God with full assurance of their heart But how shall we answer them who aske how we know that Moses the Prophets and the Apostles were the authors of those writings which are published vnder their names and whether there was euer any such Moses or no That such a question is not to be vouchsafed an answer but rather to be punished for it is as much as if any man should aske whether there were euer any Plato Tullie Aristotle whose writings are daily conuersant in the hands of all men Seeing that before Moses his time we reade not that there was any word of God written how did God all that time reueale his will vnto men Either by oracles pronounced by the mouth and voice of God himselfe to his seruants a Num. 12.8 or else by Vrim and Thummim that is light and perfection which God gaue to Moses to put it into the breast-plate of the high priest b Exod. 28.20 but what they were and of what fashion no man knoweth Or else by visions and resemblances which the Lord offred to the eyes or mind of them that were waking c Ier. 1.10.11 or else in dreames sent of God to them that were asleepe
The other is by words de praesenti for the present as I do betroth thee to be my wife which present and actual promise is called simple absolute consent although the mariage be not yet celebrated Thus she is accounted betrothed named a wife VVho so defileth anothers mans betrothed wife or spouse let him be stoned to death for he hath hūbled his neighbours wife b Deut. 22.23 And Iacob speaking of Rachel who was only betrothed vnto him Giue me my wife c Gen. 29.21 The Angel saith vnto Ioseph Fear not to take Mary thy wife d Mat. 1.20 when she was but betrothed vnto him but she that was betrothed was now by determination accounted a wife vnlesse some thing fell out which might frustrate the contract Is the bond alike in both contracts No for in the contracts de futuro indeed touching the promise and to free the faith plighted they may be admonished but they can not be cōpelled especially if they bring probable reasons why they wil change But the cōtracts de praesenti induce an effectual obligation which ought not to be dissolued by mutuall consēt for it is a truly ratified mariage e Math. 19.6 although not wholy consūmated without adding the duties of mariage Also contracts de futuro if they be confirmed with copulation following ought to be ratified VVhy are contracts instituted and why is there a certaine time obserued betweene it and the celebration of mariage There are diuers causes first that the bridegroome and bride may first consent in minde before they cōioyne in body or as Austine saith lest the husband easily obtaining make light account of that which he longed for being deferred Secōdly that in the mean time the cōtracts may be published in the Church to the end that if any iust cause ly hid for which the mariage begū may not be cōsummated it may be manifested in due time Thirdly naturall honestie that mē might not presently after the contract be caried violently like beasts with the sway of their sensuall desires Which three causes appeare in the contract of Ioseph and Marie a Mat. 1.18 Deut. 21.12 Which is the other degree of mariage The consummation which is done by consecrating or blessing and by celebration of the mariage What is consecration of mariage It is a holy actiō wherein the bride groome bride being brought into the church before the congregation are taught by the minister touching the institutiō ends of mariage there expresly witnes their consēt either by signes if they be dūb or deaf or by words if they can speake For the Canons say that mariage is of no force except consent be declared by words so i● their mariage publikly confirmed and they themselues consecrated vnto God by prayer From whence is this custome taken From the example of God himselfe who as soone as he had giuē Adam a wise blessed them like a Minister in these words Increase and multiplyb Also from a general rule which commandeth That all things be done in the Church decently and in good order c 1. Cor. 14 40. Further it maketh for the dignitie of mariage and freeth the new maried of all ill suspition least they should be thought to liue together like harlots Lastly it cannot but be approued by God who will both be called vpon and is alwayes at hand to them that call vpon his name What is the celebration of mariage All the other whole politicke action by which the couenants of mariage are confirmed and the bride is honestly and modestly brought into the bridegromes house Ought a Christian to obserue this festiuitie and celebration Yea and that according to the custome of the country where he dwelleth and that rule which Paul commandeth Whatsoeuer things are true honest iust holy of good report c. do them d Philip. 4.8.9 Thinke you the mariage feast lawfull Yea it is vsed almost amongst all nations and also confirmed by many examples of Scripture as we reade that Laban made a great feast at the mariage of Iacob and Rachel e Gen. 29.22 and Christ both with his presence and present of 6. galons of excellent good wine confirmed this custom f Ioh. 2.1.2.7.8 But yet in such bankets we must remember that which is recorded concerning Tobias his mariage that they feasted in the feare of the Lord g Tob. 7.17 8.20 As also that at King Ashuerus his great and solemne feast such modestie and honest●e was obserued as that no man was compelled to drink more then himself pleased h Hest 1.8 Wherfore mariages celebrated with riot pride gluttonie drunkennes vnchast playes al kind of wantonnes are solemnized to the diuel and not vnto God these are not the least cause of euils which make mariage troblesome vnpleasant vnto many withall rob many parents of their children What is the forme of mariage A iust coniunction of one man and of one woman into one flesh for they which were two before mariage are after marrying made one flesh that is one man by the coniunction and vnion both of soule and bodie What positions do you gather out of this formall cause of mariage First that the bond of mariage is most straight far exceeding that which is betweene the parents and the children as God saith a man shall leaue his father and his mother and shall cleaue vnto his wife i Gen. 2.24 2. That it is not only most strait but indissoluble because that two are made one flesh therefore Christ saith Whom God hath ioyned together let no man separate a Math. 19.6 Thirdly that it is mutuall and reciprocall in one ouer anothers bodie for the Apostle gathereth hereout in that they are one flesh that neither of both hath power ouer their owne bodie b 1. Corin. 4.7 Fourthly an argument of mutuall loue betweene them The husband must loue his wife as his own flesh and as Christ loueth h●s Church c Ephes 5.28 Fiftly that there ought to be a communion of all things both spirituall and corporall betweene maried couples What and how many are the ends of mariage Three if thou respect the persons themselues first that they mutually helpe one another both in heauenly and humane things This God expressed Let vs make Adam a helper like vnto himselfe d Genes 2.20 that humane societie may be familiar and friendly yet so as that the husband may appeare to be the wiues head e 1. Corin. 11.3 The second is procreation of children which may succeed their parents both in name and goods which end the Lord hath likewise expressed Increase and multiply f Gen. 1.28 Thirdly that it may be a remedie against all wandring lusts as Paul noteth For auoiding fornication let euery one haue his owne wife and euery woman her owne husband g 1. Cor. 7.2.3 But if you respect either the church or common wealth
appointment of God whence commeth such confusion and disorder in the world that for the most part it goeth well with the wicked and ill with the good I denie that is Disorder But it is the most wise ordinance of God whereby he suffereth the wicked to florish thereby to make them inexcusable but the godly to be scourged that their saluation may so much the better be furthered thereby a Pro. 3i 12. Heb. 12.10 And so the Doctrine of the iudgement which is to come is more confirmed Also this life is short neyther are the punishments in this life of great continuance nor the pleasures of this life but eternall good and euill things are no vading shadowes Moreouer hainous sinnes for the most part are punished with grieuous plagues in this life eyther in the bodie of the sinner himselfe or in his posteritie There is no doubt but all the actions of the godly are directed by God but doth God also worke in the hearts of the wicked as Augustine speaketh in the booke of Grace and Freewill and doth he decree and gouerne their works He that receiueth and alloweth the holy Scripture can in no sort denie it namely that nothing can be done but which he decreeth For Exod. 4.21 7.3.9.12 10.1 God speaketh thus I will harden the heart of Pharaoh that he shall not let my people go Deut. 2.30 The Lord hardened the spirit of Sehon King of Hesbon and made his heart obstinate And Paule saith thus Rom. 9.18 God hardeneth whom he will An example hereof is in Semei 2. Sam. 16.10 To whom God spoke that he should reuile Dauid In the booke of grace and free will chap. 20. not by commaunding that he should obey saith Augustine but in his iust iudgement enclining and disposing his will in it selfe wicked and his euill minde by such punishment to exercise Dauid So the Medes and Persians are termed to be sanctified of God and instrumentes of Gods wrath The King of the Assyrians is said to be in the hand of God as a rod a staffe a hatchet and a saw Isa 13.3 5.3.5 10.5.15 Yet doth he also set limits to their malyce that they extende not their crueltie further then him pleaseth yea he turneth euen the wicked things which the vngodly doe to verie good endes seruing for his glorie and the saluation of the elect But doe we not make God the Author of euill by this meanes Farre be it from vs for the wicked are so set on worke by God that they also play their owne parts to wit by their depraued counsell purpose and will for the euill which they will they will it voluntarily freely and without compulsion or violent constraint as also doe the euill Angels Againe God doth not infuse malice into the willes of the wicked as he infuseth goodnesse into the hearts of the godly neyther doth he compell or allure their willes to sinne but he onely mooueth euill or sinning willes such as hee findeth them become by the corruption which hath ensued the falling away of diuels and men from God such I say he mooueth enclyneth turneth and directeth wisely iustly mightily where when how and as farre as he pleaseth either mediately or immediatly to follow or auoide obiects that they who purpose no such thing may fulfill that which the hand and Counsell of God hath decreed a Act. 4.28 Moreouer good writers haue vsed thus to speake that God indeede worketh in the Godly and by the godly but say they he worketh by the wicked but not simply in the wicked But are not they which commit euill deedes excused hereby No. 1. First because they are reprooued by their owne conscience And the actions of God and of wicked men differ in that which is willed that is in that end which he and they properly aime at neither do they that they do to obey God but to satisfie their owne lusts a Isa 10.5.6.7 and they are the instruments of God not meerely passiue as the hatchet in the hand of the artificer but actiue neither vnreasonable as a horse and a dog but reasonable that is endoued with reason and such as haue in themselues the inward voluntarie and electiue beginning of their actions So that the whole euill remaineth in themselues alone and in God there is no more to be found but the lawfull vse of their malice who executeth iustly by the euill wils of the wicked those things which he willeth well as it is to be seene in the selling of Ioseph b Gen. 5.20 Likewise in the reuolting of the ten tribes from the familie and house of Dauid c 1. King 11.31.35 c. 12.15.16 and in the betraying of the Sonne of God d Act. 4.27 13.27 2 In one and the same worke of the wicked the good and iust action which is the proper action of God is to be discerned from the defectiue and faulty action of the wicked For in tha the wicked sinne it is in themselues but their doing of this or that in sinning is from the power of God who diuideth darknesse as he thinketh good as Augustine hath well written And so saith the same author in the same worke God is found to be iust but man guiltie because that in one and the same thing done by both the cause wherefore either of them did it is not the same Which thing the Learned declare by these similitudes 1 Of an Executioner who putteth to death the offender though by the iust commaundement of the Magistrate yet in his owne wicked desire of doing it he sinneth 2 Also by that of one who rideth vpon a lame horse who neyther himselfe halteth with the horse nor is cause of the horses halting Likewise by example of the soule which moueth the bodie in a diseased and lame bodie 4. Of the thiefe who killeth a man whom God in his iust iudgement wil haue slaine Where note this rule When there are many causes of the same effect and some of them good some bad that effect in respect of the good causes is good in respect of the euill euill VVere it not better to referre these things to Prescience whereby God foreknoweth all things indeed before they come to passe but doth not decree them No because when the Scripture saith that God blindeth a Isa 6 9.10 Ioh 12 40 hardeneth b Deut 8 2 13 3 tempteth c Rom. 1 28 giueth ouer vnto a reprobate sense it noteth somewhat more then a foreknowledge or a bare and idle permission to wit an effectuall operation which God performeth not by working that obstinacie as a most iust Iudge two waies c Rom. 1 28 1 Whereas they are alreadie corrupt by forsaking them more more by depriuing them of his grace or deniing them his spirit or also by taking it from men and leauing them to their owne malice 2 By deliuering the wicked to Sathan the minister of his wrath and in
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
the throne of iudgement chaseth away all euill with his eies And of the gouernment of the Messiah Isa 16.5 In mercie shall the throne be prepared and he shall sit vpon it in stedfastnesse in the tabernacle of Dauid And in this sense sitting doth signifie a Royall or Iudiciall dignitie and authoritie But what doth it it signifie ioyntly Mat. 20● 2 or together to sit or to stand at the right hand of any man 1 In humane affaires by the figure Metonymia it signifieth to obtaine the next place of honor dignity to any man as Psa 45 9 Vpon thy right hand the Queene standeth in a vesture of gold siluer 2 To be a fellow and companion or copartner of the rule and Empyre 3 To giue helpe and aid as Psal 142.4 I looked on my right hand and beheld whether any stood by me that is to say to helpe me Metaphorically it is attributed to God to the Church to Christ himselfe As for God he is said to stand at the right hand of men when he doth helpe and succour them and protecteth them against their enemies and dangers as Psal 16.8 I haue set the Lord alwaies in my sight for he is at my right hand that I may not he moued-So is God the father in this sence said to stand at the right hand of Christ that is to say that he is in degree of honour and dignitie next vnto himselfe· Psal 45.10 The Queene 1. The Church doth stand at thy right hand namely at the right hand of Christ that is it standeth in the next degree of dignitie 3 Christ is said to b Mark 16.19 sit c Act. 7.55 stand and d Rom. 8.34 be at the right hand of God the father Is Christ said to sit at the right hand of the father properly or Metaphorically Not properly for it no way agreeth with his Deitie and although it may in the proper signification be attributed and applied vnto his other nature which is bodily yet it must not be imagined that that glorious body in heauen doth either continually sit or is moued or standeth although it be indeed limited and locall and as for the right hand of God much lesse is that to be taken properly seeing God is without a bodie as is alreadie said Seeing then Christ sitteth at the right hand of the father doth it therupon follow that the father sitteth on the leaft hand No indeed for the father is not limited and in euerlasting happines all is the right hand because there is there no miserie VVhat is therefore meant by this kind of speach In his exposition of the Creed Augustine taketh it for resting with the father in that euerlasting blessednes for this was conueniēt for Christ saith he after so many labours sustained after the crosse and after death to rest blessed in heauen not indeed idle for hee gouernes the Church and makes intercession for vs but yet without labour The same Augustine also calleth the right hand of the father that eternall and vnspeakable felicity Against the Sermon as Arius c 12. whereunto the sonne of man is attained hauing receiued immortalitie euen of the flesh 2 Damascen saith that Christ hath togither with his father equal glory of the diuinity which he had before all beginnings And in this sence the transitiue preposition to doth note only a personal distinction Lib. 4. cap. 2 and order of beginning but not any degree of nature or dignity for there is no such matter in the persons of the deity 3 But we say also that it is meant thereby that Christ hath obtained all power in heauen and in earth as he himselfe who is his owne best interpreter expoundeth it Mat. 28.18 by a phrase borrowed from a King or a Prince which hath a sonne and that an onely begotten sonne or a first begotten sonne whom at length he appointeth to be his heire and successor maketh to sit at his right hand that he may reigne with him may exercise the right of dominion ouer all things which appertaine vnto the kingdom of the cceed Chap. 4. Whereupon Saint Augustine saith thus By the right hand vnderstand the power which that man that was taken from God did receiue that he might come to be a Iudge who before came to be iudged For the father iudgeth no man but hath giuen all iudgement to the sonne that all men might honour the sonne as they honour the father Ioh. 5 22 What is then the sitting of Christ at the right hand of the father It is his exceeding glorious estate or the great high degree of Christs exaltation wherein he is placed by his father the truth of both natures still reserued in which estate Christ doth not only rest from labour and enioy vnspeakable glory and vnmatchable felicity but especially he is placed not only the head of the church but the king and gouernour of heauen and earth that togither with his father he may gouerne all things both in heauen and in earth all things created being subiect vnto him Whence doe you confirme this Exposition Out of the Psal 110.1 Sit saith the father to Christ on my right hand till I make thine enemies thy footstoole which Paul 1. Cor. 15.25 expounding saith He must raigne till he haue put all his enemies vnder his feet Therefore to sit is to raigne And Eph. 1.21 after the Apostle had said that Christ sitteth at the right hand of God in heauenly places he addeth for expositions sake that he is exalted aboue all principalities and powers and that all things are made subiect vnder his feet and that he is appointed head of the Church VVhat is the cause efficient The father by whose will and ordinance he sitteth at the right hand of the father Psal 110.1 Sit at my right hand And Ephe. 1.20 And God hath set him at his right hand in the heauenly places This sitting then is it of the whole person or onely of one of the natures namely of the humane Words phrases are to be taken according to the matter about which they are vsed For to sit at the right hand of the father doth declare two things For sometime it sheweth the great equalilitie of the diuine glorie maiestie power and honour sometime it signifieth the qualitie that is the high perfection and felicity of the flesh of Christ now that it is exalted vnto the right hand of God which the schoolemen call Habituall grace In the later signification therefore sitting is to be applied vnto the humane nature wherein the humane nature in Christ is more blessed then the rest of the creatures hath royal iudicial power ouer all creatures a Iohn 5.27 but in the former which is the chiefe and principal of the whole person because as the whole person was broght low so the whole also was exalted in the Resurrection ascending into heauen and sitting at the right hand of the father
Iron of sinne and being affrighted with the terrour of Gods wrath sticketh so fast in that trouble of mind that he cannot winde himselfe out of it This they call the accusation of sinne which commeth by the lawe Rom. 3.20 The Apostle 2. Cor. 17.7 calleth it worldly sorrow and sorrow vnto death whereby a man grieueth and sorroweth for his sinnes and being terrified with the feare of the punishment hanging ouer his head which is the certaine and direct way to desperation vnlesse the Lord put to his helping hand Examples hereof are Cain a Gen. 4.13 Saule b 1 Sam. 15 30. 31.4 Achitophell 2. Sam. 17.23 and Iudas c Mat. 27.3 4.5 But in the elect it is a kinde of preparation to the repentance of the Gospell Now the contrition of the Gospell is that whereby the sinner being grieuously afflicted within himselfe yet riseth higher and through the preaching of the Gospell doth apprehend Christ the salue for his sore the comfor of his feare and the hauen for his miserie This is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sorrow according to God or godly sorrow which proceedeth from the spirit of God and is acceptable vnto God and proper vnto that man that sorroweth for his sinnes not for feare of any punishment but in that he taketh this exceeding grieuously that he hath offended God a most gentle father and it causeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Repentaunce as the Apostle declareth 2 Cor. 7.10 Examples there are of Ezekiah Esa 38.13 Hee brake all my bones like a Lion of Dauid d 2. Sam. 12 13. 24.10 of Peter who wept bitterly but left not of hoping Mathew 26.75 And of them that were pricked in their heart at the preaching of Peter but yet trusting in the goodnesse of God they added further Men and brethren what shall we doe Act. 2.37 of this Repentance the Psalmist Psal 51.8 saith Let the bones which thou hast broken reioyce and verse 17. The Sacrifice of God is a contrite Spirit a broken heart O God thou wilt not despise And Esay 57 15. God dwelleth with the contrite and humble spirit also chap. 66.2 To whom should I looke but to him that is poore and of a contrite spirit and trembleth at my words And Christ saith Math. 5.3 Blessed are the poore in spirit i. the humble who doe of their owne accord submit themselues vnto God being touched with a feeling of their sinnes and voide of all pride in themselues VVhat signifieth this word Repentance secundarily It signifieth generally the whole conuersion of man vnto God as Luke 15.7 There is more ioy in heauen among the Angels for one sinner that repenteth then for 99. iust men which neede not amendment of life Which must be vnderstood 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 namely in respect of them that are vtterly turned away from God And Act. 2.38 Repent and be baptised euerie one of you c. And thus they define it Repentance is a true sorrow for our offence toward God with a desire and hope of pardon and a will and especiall endeuour from henceforth to auoid all sinne and to approue all our life vnto God How many are the parts of this generall Repentance Three 1 Contrition whereby a man acknowledgeth his sinne and that he hath deserued the iust wrath of God and his curse for sinne and doth earnestly lament for the sinne committed and loatheth the same vnder which are comprehended Humilitie Modestie such as was in Peter who being touched with a consideration of the diuine power in Christ fell at his knees crying Go from me Lord for I am a sinfull man Luk. 5.8 And in Dauid who vsing daily to shed teares made account that he had need of a multitude of mercies Psal 6.7 and 51.3 2 Faith which acknowledgeth Christ the mediator and intercessor with his father and holdeth that sinne is forgiuen for the mediators sake and that the righteousnesse of the mediator is imputed vnto him 3 New obedience which consisteth of iust dealing toward our neighbour holinesse and puritie in the whole course of our liues and diligence in performing the duties of our calling Of which parts we haue an example Luk. 7.37 In the woman that was a sinner whose teares were a witnesse of her contrition i. of her feare and griefe of conscience according to God in regard of sinne her comming to Christ was a testimonie of the confidence which she had conceiued of him and her obedience that she yeeldes vnto Christ in washing his feete with her teares wiping them with the haires of her head and kissing them did testifie her new obedience which is a fruit of faith What thinke you of this Diuision I hold it to be true but to speake properly faith is no part of Repentance but the mother and fountaine thereof For faith must needes shine before Repentance and such faith such repentance For no man saith Ambrose can repent but hee that hopeth for pardon And therefore the cause of Repenting is drawne from the verie promise of saluation Mat. 3.2 Repent for the kingdome of God is at hand as if he should say Because the kingdome of God is at hand therefore repent And Psal 130.4 With thee is mercie that thou maist be feared Moreouer the Scripture doth not make mention of faith as vnder Repentance that is to say not as if repentance should bee the genus or generall and Faith the Species or speciall but reckoneth them as two diuers things Repentance and Faith Mark 1.15 Repent and beleeue the Gospell Luk. 24.47 Preach in my name repentance and forgiuenesse of sinnes And Paul Act. 20.21 saith That hee had witnessed both to Iewes and Graecians the repentance toward God and faith toward our Lord Iesus Christ Not that true repentance can stand without faith for they are vnseparable in the saints but because although they cannot bee separated yet they ought to be distinguished as hope and faith are as in the sinfull woman the theefe Dauid Manasseh and other repentant sinners Finally new life or new obedience to speake properly is not a part of repentance but an effect and fruite thereof Mat. 3.8 Iohn Baptist saith Bring forth fruites worthy repentance So Act. 26.20 Paule shewed vnto the Gentiles That they should repent and turne to God and do workes worthy amendment of life which are called the fruites and works of sanctification Whether of these goeth before Faith or repentance Whereas we haue saide before that repentance is sometimes vsed by a Synecdoche for that which they call Contrition and haue shewed that contrition is legall or euangelicall wee haue placed faith as it were in the middle betweene the former of those sorrowes which commeth of the acknowledgement of our sinnes and the accusations of the conscience or which proceedeth from the Law and the latter which proceedeth from the Gospell For godly sorrow is an effect of faith aswell as ioy and gladnesse of conscience Which is the third signification of
He renounceth his owne righteousnesse which is by the Law resteth vpon the righteousnesse which is by the faith of Iesus Christ or from God by faith Why is the exclusiue particle alone added in this proposition We are iustified by faith alone That it might be vnderstood that the promise of saluation is receiued by faith alone and doth not depend vpon any worthinesse or merit of our worke Can this exclusiue particle alone bee prooued by Scripture Yes it may for Mar. 5.36 it is in expresse words where Christ comforting Iairus saith vnto him Feare not only beleeue In which words Christ doth plainely declare that hee looketh for nothing but faith alone without which it is impossible to please God Heb. 11.6 2. There is asmuch in effect Gal. 2.16 Where Paul saith that men are not iustified but by faith adding expresly not by works R● 3.28 without works for he that taketh away righteousnesse from works doth soundly enough ascribe it vnto faith alone The same thing the word freely Rom. 3.24 confirmeth For this word excludeth all maner of merit and desert from him to whome is done either good or euill as Ps 35.19 They hated mee freely vvithout a cause that is without any cause of hatred proceeding from me 3. The Apostle Rom. 10.3 pronounceth that the Iewes were therefore not subiect to the righteousnesse a Gal. 3 2. of God because they would establish their owne righteousnes together with the righteousnesse of faith And Phil. 3.7.8 hee affirmeth that although hee were vnrebukeable concerning the Lawe before men yet he did account it as dung that hee might obtaine that righteousnesse which is of God through faith shewing that it is not posible that faith and workes should be set together as parts or causes of righteousnesse 4. The necessitie of maintaining the honour of Christ and of comforting an afflicted conscience in the combat doth require the exclusiue particle onely 5. To the Scripture may bee added the opinion of the fathers for Gennadius the interpreter of Paule saith In his exposition vpon the 3. chapter of the Epistle to the Rom. For righteousnesse is euen to beleeue onely And Ambrose They are iustified freely because working nothing neither doing asmuch againe they are iustified by faith alone VVhat then is it that the particle onely or alone doth exclude in that sentence wherein wee are said to be iustified only by faith or by faith alone Not the causes concurring which are without vs but onely the causes of the same kinde and rancke with it selfe which are within vs that is to say not the grace or mercie of God that iustifieth nor the merit of Christs death which is imputed vnto vs for righteousnesse but only the workes or qualities of vs our selues and of the saints Wel therfore is it said that faith alone iustifieth because it is the onely instrument sole facultie in vs by which we receiue the righteousnesse of Christ So God iustifieth as the efficient cause Christ by his obedience as the meritorious cause faith alone as the instrumentall cause But vvhy doth Paule adde Rom. 4.6 VVithout the vvorkes of the Lavve Not because hee would not haue them perswaded but as denying them to be causes of mans Iustification But what vvorkes are they that Paule doth here exclude 1. Not onely ceremoniall workes as our aduersaries would haue it but euen morall workes also as appeareth by those sentences which hee alledgeth for the proofe of his assertion By the workes of the Lavv shall no flesh be iustified because by the Law came the knowledge of sinne Rom. 3.20 and therefore not righteousnesse And. Rom. 4.15 The Law causeth wrath inasmuch as no man is able to performe it and therefore it causeth not righteousnesse And Rom. 7.7 out of the Decalogue or morall Law hee citeth the tenth commaundement I had not knowne lust to be sinne if the Law had not said Thou shalt not lust Gal. 3.10 Cursed is euery one that abideth not in all things that are written in the booke of the Law to doe them And vers 12. The man which doth these things shall liue in them 2. The Apostle doth not only exclude those morall workes as the same our aduersaries would make vs beleeue which men as yet not regenerate do performe literally or by the meere light of nature without the grace of Christ inasmuch as the man vnregenerate being out of Christ can neuer do any thing well but the Apostle excludeth also euen the good works of the very regenerate men or the works of grace or those that proceed from faith For Abraham who is registred as an vniuersall patterne of all Iustified men was both iustified and regenerate when he performed those good workes for the which he obtained praise with men But with God he was not iustified but when he had many yeares excelled in holinesse of life God imputed only his faith vnto him for righteousnes Rom. 4.2.3 Neither doth the Prophet Habacuck speake of the faithles but of the faithful when he saith Chap. 2. vers 4. The iust shall liue by his faith And Dauid after he was regenerate cryeth out of himselfe and of other godly men Psal 32.1 Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiuen And Psal 143.2 Enter not into iudgement vvith thy seruant O Lord for in thy sight shall no man liuing be iustified Yea and the Apostle himselfe 1. Cor. 4.4 I know nothing by my selfe yet am I not thereby iustified And no maruell for that indeede good workes are the effectes of Iustification and not the causes thereof 3. Our good workes are fewe imperfect and alwaies polluted and stained with some blemishes and spots that they receiue from vs. Esay 64.6 And 1. King 8.46 There is no iust man vvhich doth good and sinneth not For seing the forme of inherent righteousnesse is not thoroughly let in because after the sence of our aduersaries Iustification consisteth in motion it followeth that the contrarie qualitie which is sinne is not thoroughly let out and shaken off and so in that which is imperfect the reliques of sin do stil remaine And whereas Bellarmine maketh inherent righteousnesse to be perfect in respect of the habite and imperfect in respect of the action it is but a fond deuise of his owne braine for in truthe the perfection and imperfection of the action dependeth vpon the perfection and imperfection of the habite according to that of the Philosopher The best habit hath the best action Yea euen our former righteousnesse is put out of remembrance by our later sinnes Ezek. 18.24 4 Saint Iames saith Chap. 2. verse 10. He that faileth in one point is guiltie of all that is to say he is iustlie and worthily condēned of the breach of the lawe in generall for that he that breaketh one title hath offended against the Maiestie of the law giuer Whereupon commeth this rule The whole law is one copulatiue and that the breach of one commaundement draweth with it the
neglect and contempt of both tables yea and of the lawgiuer himselfe because there is but one and the same lawgiuer of all the precepts and the bodie of the law is entire and vnseperable 5 The person is not accepted and taken into Gods fauour for the workes sake but on the contrarie the works doe then please god when the person hath firste found grace and fauour in Gods sight And for this cause it is that it is written Gen. 4.4 that god had respect vnto Abell and his sacrifice And Hebrevv 11.4 By faith Abell offered vnto God a greater Sacrifice then Cain 6 Saint Paul 2. Cor. 5.18 testifieth that the preaching of free reconciliation with god is perpetuall in the Church so that the faithfull to the end of this life haue no other righteousnesse then that which is there described VVhy then doth Saint Iames Chap. 2 verse 21. say that Abraham vvas Iustified by vvorkes Because he speaketh not there of the cause but of the effect whereby iustification may be discerned For when Abraham had offered Isack his sonne vpon the alter he was Iustified through workes saith he that is he was found to be iustified euen before that time by faith that by his works as testimonies of his iustification And so a man is iustified by workes that is by the holinesse of his life he is approued to be such a person as is iustified by the obediēce of Christ which holinesse doth follow iustificatiō as an effect therfore is also a testimonie witnesse of the same After this sort also god is said at the latter day that he wil iustifie his elect by their workes For whereas there are two beginnings of things one of existence the other of knowledge Faith as the beginning of Existence causeth vs to bee iust and workes as the beginning of knovvledge make vs to be knowne to bee iust And therefore the Lord at the last day will propound the beginning of knowledge of the righteousnesse by faith which shall appeare in the eyes of all creatures Mat. 25.34 Come yee blessed of my father c. For I was an hungred and yee gaue mee meat c. VVhat vvas the state of the Question concerning Iustification in Saint Paules time or vvhereof was the controuersie in old time Of the efficient and meritorious cause of Iustification namely whether it were the satisfaction of Christ apprehended by faith or else our workes And the reliques of that controuersie remaine yet in poperie For although the subtiller sort of Papists doe ascribe the beginning of iustification that is the first iustification as they call it onely to the merit of Christ yet the progresse and proceeding in iustification which they call the second iustification that they attribute to the merit of workes But now by the subtiltie of the diuill the whole nature of iustification is called into question For indeede in the Apostles time the question was not whether iustification were a naturall motion as it were from inherent vnrighteousnesse to inheren● righteousnesse or whether iustifycation were seated in the sentence of the Iudge pronounced which is the question at this day but the state of the question thē was whether iustifycation placed in the sentence of the iudge pronounced vpon the guiltie person were in regard of workes or by reason of Christ By vvhat arguments or reasons doth the Apostle Paule take avvay from workes the cause of Iustification 1. Because wee are all sinners and from an impure nature it cannot be that there should proceede pure and perfect obedience toward God to whom nothing is acceptable vnlesse it be euery way sound absolute not spotted or stained with any corruption which neuer yet could nor euer shal be found in any man 2. Because the Scripture pronounceth that there is no man righteous by the works of the Law no not one And this sentence remaineth euer firme and stedfast Cursed is euerie one that abideth not in all things that are vvritten in the booke of the Law to doe them Gal. 3.10 But there is no man no not the holiest man that euer was that could satisfie the whole law of God as appeareth by the complaint of the Apostle Paule Rom. 7. 3. Because if righteousnesse be by the Law then Christ dyed in vaine Gal. 2.21 and. 5.2 4. Because God will haue no man to glorie in himselfe Least anie man should boast Eph. 2.8.9 Rom. 3.26.27 5. Because by the Law came the knowledge of sinne and the Law causeth wrath that is to say it denounceth death and Iudgement against them that doe not performe perfect obedience in their works and actions a Rom. 4.15 6. Bec use the law was giuen after the promise of iustification and life eternall b Gal. 3.17 7. Because the inheritance or life euerlasting is of free gift and not of merit c Ro. 6 23 Gal. 3.18 Eph. 2 8 8. Because all our sufferings are not worthy of the glorie which shal be reuealed shewed vnto vs therfore our actions are not worthy of it Rom. 8.18 And 2. Cor. 4.20 Our light affliction which is but for a moment causeth vnto vs a farre more excellent and an eternall weight of glorie By what arguments doth the Apostle confirme the righousnesse of faith 1. Because it alone hath the witnesse of the Law Prophets d Ro. 3 21 Gen 3.15 22 28 the end of the Law was Christ Ro. 10.4 Circumcision was the Seale of the righteousnes of Faith Ro 4.11 The Sacrifices Ceremonies did prefigure Christ the righteousnesse which is by faith Haba 2.4 The iust shall liue by his Faith Psa 32.1 Blessed are they vvhose iniquities are forgiuen And on the contrarie Psal 132.2 In thy sight shall no flesh be iustified namely by the obedience of the Law Act. 10.43 To Christ giue all the Prophets vvitnesse that through his name all that beleeue in him shall receiue remission of sinnes 2. From the comparison of like and equall things because Abraham the father of the faithfull in the example and excellencie of faith was iustified by faith e Gen 15 6. Ro. 4.13 14. and not by the Law Now God is alwaies like himself and the case is alwaies alike of the beleeuing father and the beleeuing children 3. Because saluation is not promised vnto him that fulfilleth the Law for that were a vaine promise and so our saluation alwaies doubtfull and vncertaine because no man doth fulfill the law and wee our selues should be also vncertaine whether wee had sufficient good workes for the attaining of this righteousnesse but it is promised to the beleeuer Therefore the inheritance is by faith that it might come by grace and the promise might be sure as relying wholy vpon mercie for that which proceedeth from the grace and fauour of God through Christ is firme and stedfast but so is not that which proceedeth from vs and from our workes Rom. 4.16 4. By an argument of the like
them which dwell in houses of clay 3. In the multitude and greatnesse of his owne sins Psal 130.3 If thou Lord straightly markest our iniquities who shall bee able to abide it For being thus seriously cast downe and humbled with the sence and feeling of our owne miserie and want and beeing deiected and discomforted in our selues wee doe then thirst after the grace of Christ and fly thereunto for succour For to this end he saith he was sent Esay 61.1 That he might preach glad tidings to the poore binde vp the broken hearted preach libertie to the captiues and to them that are bound the opening of the prison Comfort to those that mourne that hee might giue beautie for ashes the oyle of ioy for mourning the garment of gladnesse for the spirit of heauinesse and he calleth none to bee partakers of his bounty but onely those that labour and are heauie loaden Mat. 11.28 And chap. 9.13 I came not saith hee to call the righteous but sinners to repentance Examples whereof wee haue in the Publicane and the Pharisee Luk. 18.10 and so forward What things are there repugnant and contrarie to this Doctrine of iustification by faith 1. The error of the Papists who first teach that workes of congruitie that is workes preparatorie are the efficient impulsiue cause of Iustification Secondly that Sacraments doe iustifie ex opere operato by the verie worke wrought Thirdly that we are not iustified by faith alone because say they it is common to many wicked men but yet it doth iustifie as it it guided by charitie and that onely as in respect of the beginning of Iustification 4. that charitie is the forme of righteousnesse 5. That the doctrine of free iustification by faith giueth libertie to sinne and weakeneth the desire of well doing 6. That we must stand in doubt of the forgiuenesse of our sinnes 7. That men may satisfie the Iustice of God by gay shews of there owne works 8. Distrusting the merites of Christ they flie vnto the merits of good works and the helpe and succor of the saints 9. They attribute vnto the virgine Marie the aucthoritie and power of iustifieng .. 10. They ascribe vnto the Pope power to sell forgiuenesse of sinnes 11. the gift of the righteousnesse of Christ imputed through faith they make a mocke of 12. They teach that a man is iustifyed principally for Christs sake and lesse principally for euery mans owne workes and merits 13 that wee are iustified by an Euangelicall faith which commaundeth doe this and ye shall liue Luk. 10.28 by the fulfilling of the lawe the ministery and absolution of the Priests and the obseruation of mens traditions 14. That christian righteousnesse consisteth of faith and workes together 15. That Christ hath satisfied onely for the fault and offence and not for the punishment due vnto our sinnes 16. that men regenerate doe in this life by their owne obedience fully satisfie the law that they may oppose their workes before Gods Iudgment seat and that they may doe many workes of supererogation more then duety more then the law requireth of them 2 The error also of the iustitiaries who hold 1. that Iustification is not onely the pardoning and forgiuing of sinnes but also the sanctifying and renewing of the inner man 2. that Iustification according to Aristotle is a motion toward the atteyning of righteousnesse 3. that to Iustifie is nothing els but to powre into a man inherent righteousnesse or newnesse of life the former whereby beleeuers are indued with charitie and other vertues the later whereby a man being furnished with these qualities doth merite and deserue more and more righteousnesse and euerlasting life and that iustification is consummated and perfected by good works 4. that Christ by his death o●●ained this of his father that wee should be indued with inherent righteousnesse and charitie by the merite whereof we do obtaine life and saluation Fiftly they confound as one sanctification with iustification 3. The error of Osiander who affirmeth that men are made iust by the essentiall iustice of God that is by that iustice which is the v●rie diuine essence 4. The error of the Libertines who teach carnall securitie as if any thing were lawful for a man to doe who is iustified freely by grace The two and thirtieth common place Of good workes What are workes properly EIther the accomplishing of actions that is the effects of actions ordained for some speciall end 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as an house is the worke of him that buildeth it or else the verie actions themselues as the building of the house calling vpon god loue of our neighbour giuing of almes c. To omit sundry distinctions of workes what is a good worke To speake according to the word of god not Philosophically or ciuilie it is an action whether outward or inward conformable to the law and will of god Mat. 19.17 If you will enter into life keepe the commaundements And Rom. 12.2 Proue ye what that good acceptable and perfect will of God is By what names are they called Of the efficient or working cause the fruites of the Spirit of the instrumentall the fruites of faith from the fourme the workes of the lawe of their qualities good works good fruites Why doth the Scripture oftener vse the title of good workes then of vertue Because the name of vertue is verie glorious amonge the Philosophers whereby they vnderstand a voluntarie habite and a great and strong inclination and a naturall disposition to doe well but the name of good workes is more cleare because it signifieth not onely externall actions but also the inward of the will agreable to the word of god although the inclinatiōs be very weak How many kindes of good workes are there Two one which requireth our duetie towards God Another which requireth our duety towards our neighbour What is the efficient cause of good workes The proper efficient cause of them is the Holie Ghost in respect of Christ laid hold on by faith working in vs vnderstanding and will and by the word illuminating changing renewing bowing our members which are cleane turned away from God to the end that we may obey the will of God made knowne vnto vs. For he worketh in vs both to wil to doe Philip. 2.13 And without me ye can doe nothing saith Christ Iohn 15.5 whereupon Dauid Psalm 51.12 Saith create in me a cleane heart o God and renue a cōstant spirit in my bowels hēce they are called the fruites of the spirit not of free will vnlesse it be so farr forth as it is made free by grace a Gal. 5.22 The nearest efficient or the immediate cause and the beginning of good workes are the humane and naturall powers of the soule the vnderstanding will and affections but yet so farre as they are in parte or in some measure regenerate or become spirituall For neither the spirit that is the new qualitie begunne by the inspiration of
the holie ghost which is called the Spirit of Christ nor the flesh that is whatsoeuer reliques of corruption remaines in vs or the new and the old mā haue indeed either their distinct seates in our soule or seuerall operations but are mingled together one with another in all those faculties neither yet doe these qualities so contrarie one to another so well agree together that with mutuall consent they should produce a mixt work but doe so wrastle together in one and the selfe same work striuing one against another that one penetrating the other then proceedeth a mixt action from them both from theire mutual not consēt but conflict which of the qualitie preuailing is accompted either the fruite of the spirit or of the flesh The instrumentall cause is faith not by her owne vertue efficacie or operation but so farre forth as shee doth as an instrument apprehend that her obiect to which shee is caried namely Christ in respect of whom alone the holy Ghost doth renue vs creating in vs both the will and the deed and therefore whereas faith is termed the mother or the fountaine of good works by a Metonymie that is attributed to the instrumentall cause which doth properly belong to the principal efficient cause as Rom. 1.16 The Gospell that is the preaching of the doctrine of the Gospell is called The power of God to saluation that is spoken both because of the vnseparable coniunction common dependance of faith and good works For without faith it is impossible to please God Hebr. 11.6 And VVhatsoeuer is not done of faith is sinne Rom 14.23 Therefore Hebr. 11.4 and so forward all the worthie acts in th Olde Testament are ascribed to faith By faith Abell c. VVhat is the matter of good workes The things themselues where about such works are conuersant and which the moral law of God doth intreat of and prescribeth VVhatsoeuer things are true honest iust pure to be loued of good report if there be any vertue If there be any praise thinke of such things Phil. 4.8 VVhat is the forme of good workes As the essence and forme of sin and an euill work is Anomie and * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 swaruing from the law so conformitie of our actions vnto the commaundement of God is the forme of a good worke And therefore not the traditions or commaundements of the Church but the word of God wherunto to add any thing or to detract is an horrible sinne is the onely square and rule of good workes a psa 119.4 Deut. 4.2 Neyther are any of those things to be esteemed in the number of good works in the sight of God which are grounded on the bare will of man Math. 15.9 In vaine doe they worship mee with the doctrines of men And Ezech. 20.18 VValke ye not in the precepts of your fathers but in my precepts walke ye Whether is it sufficient that some worke should be good and agreeable to the law of God if that it be done according to the law of God in outward shew No but 1. There is also required the inward synceritie of the minde which proceedeth from faith whereby the heart is purified a Act. 15.9 2 That we be certainely perswaded in our mindes out of his word that that which we doe pleaseth God For Rom. 14.23 whatsoeuer is done without faith that is whatsoeuer we take in hand with a doubting conscience whether it please God and therefore whether it be commaunded of God or not it is a sinn 3 It is required that we haue respect vnto god and to his glorie alone as the cheefe end of a good worke For the pharisaicall Hypocrite giueth almes the publican not iustified geueth also but his is abominable in the sight of God because he desires to be seene of men b mat 6.1 But this mans almes is a good worke not onely because it is commaunded but also because it is done with sinceritye of the heart and in faith to the glorie of God And therfore vertues are to be discerned from vices not so much by the skill mouing them as by the ends VVhat then are good workes Such as are done in true faith according to the law of god are referred to his glory alone c Tim 1.5 Deut. 4.2 1. Cor. 10.31 Colos 3.17 VVho are they that doe good workes Onely the Regenerate For whereas the law of God doth especially require that fountaine of syncerity in the heart d Mat. 3.33 and from thence the respect of Gods glory truly the worke of the vnregenerate although it appeare verie glorious yet cannot simply and properly be called by the name of a good worke because that which is good is not well done of them that is in faith to the glory of God And therefore the worke is not liuing but dead as a figge leafe a Gen. 3.7 couering onely the inward vices for an euill tree cannot bring forth good fruite Math. 7.18 and Cap 12.33 whatsoeuer is done by the impure is impure b Iob. 14 4 Tit. 1.15 yet it may be called good but in vse not in worship But a man now already regenerate to wit who hath recouered some parte of the synceritie of his heart by faith according to the measure of integrity and sinceritie of his heart which he hath recouered is fitte in part to performe good workes Are not Cornelius his workes praised before he vvas baptised and belieued in Christ Act. 10.4 He is called a deuout man and one that feard God verse 22 Therefore now before he receiued the Sacrament of Baptisme he was conuerted vnto the acknowledging of the true God neither was he vtterly without faith in the Messias Besides he is said to pray continually and his almes were accepted and his prayers are said to be heard of God But it is impossible for any man or for any mans worke to please God without faith Heb. 11.6 Therfore hee had the beginnings of faith in Christ and therefore was now iustified and regenerate although as yet hee was not instructed in the full cleere knowledge of Christ and yet knew not that he was come For which cause Peter was sent vnto him who should more fully teach him Are the good workes of the regenerate pure and perfectly good and blemished with no fault No 1 Because the Scripture speaketh to the contrarie c Esa 64.5 Ia. 3.2 2 That any worke be pure and in euery respect good it is not sufficient that that which is done be not done without the holy Ghost and without faith but also it is further required that the first beginnings of a good worke in man to wit the vnderstanding will and affections doe most fully obey the spirit of God which is granted to no mortall man Christ alone excepted But there doth euer remaine in vs and in euery facultie of our soule the new and and the old man spirit and flesh the law of the mind as it is
the Church hath borrowed the name of scandall to signifie layings in waite wherewith men are intrapped euen as beastes in the gins d Esa 8.14 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is properly when something in the way hindreth the feet whereupon a man lighting doth stumble deriued of the verbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies to stumble Rom. 14.13 to put a stumbling block or scandall before his brother hence it is called the stone of stumbling e Rom. 9.32 33 1 Pet 2.8 For euill examples of sinnes are like vnto certaine stones on which men lighting do stumble yea doe fall downe flatt Whereupon is that 1. Cor. 10.12 he that standeth let him take heed least he fall And 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 deriued of the verbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth to hitte against a thing to disturb or break of it is the very offence it selfe or the dashing against any thing in latine they call offence when in the way there lies some stone or logge against which men as they walke doe stumble so as they hurte their feete or else fall downe headlong whereupon Leuit. 19.14 it is said put not a stumbling block before the blinde Now this word scandall is in the perdicament of relation wherby it comes to passe that it signifieth sometimes the matter that is to say the very obiect or impediment offending any man and sometimes the manner or forme that is the very offence it selfe VVhat is the scandall Whatsoeuer is the cause or occasion to any man of offence whether it be word deed or example or counsell whereby our neighbour is either grieued or troubled or offended so as he is either hindered in the streight course of saluation or turned out of the way or is induced to any errour or sin Rom. 14.15 1 Cor 8.9 or else is confirmed in some euill a How many are the kindes of Scandalls Bernard maketh twoo Inward and outward Inward is when the old man giueth offence to the new man touching which Mat. 5.20 If thy right eye offend thee plucke it out cast it from thee where by the ey hand and foot he vnderstandeth the lustes of the flesh or of the olde man which doe often annoy the new man all impediments although neuer so deare which hinder a man so as he cannot walke in the continuall obedience of the law of god Outward which cometh from without and giues any man the cause or the occasion of falle This externall scandall how many folde is it Threefold Actiue either giuen or afforded passiue or taken and mixt of them both VVhat is a scandal giuen Whose fault proceedeth from the author of the thing or action it selfe either when a man doth giue another an effectuall cause of falling or else some word or deede that is euill in it selfe because it is repugnant to the loue of God and our neighbour and therefore such a thing as of it owne nature and of it selfe doth either confirme the liberty of sinning in others or else either greiueth the godly or doth carie them into error sinn a Math. 18.6 7 whereof Christ speaketh to Peter Math. 16.23 Get thee behinde me Satan thou art an offence vnto me For though Christ himselfe did not stumble yet there was noe let in Peter but that Christ being astonished with thinking of the crosse should haue broken off the course of his calling and Peters speach in very deed did greeue him and might haue giuen an occasion of falling to the weake How manifold is a Scandall giuen Double by deuiding the subiect into the accidents priuate publick Priuate which may also be called Domestical whereby one or some few are offended as children seruants husbands wiues as when the child seruant Husband or wife see the parents Maisters wiues or husbands abstaine from the worship of God heare them sweare to doe any thing or to speake vnchastly whereby it presently commeth to passe that they are either greeued or else ready to imitate their examples Against which Christ speaketh whosoeuer shall offend one of these litle ones which beleeue in me it had beene good for him rather that a Milstone should be hanged about his necke and he should be cast into the sea Mark 9.4 Publick is whereby some whole multitude is offended or else that which giueth an occasion of falling to many weake ones as coueteous men doe whoremaisters drunkards and such like which by their bad manners offend the Church and doe cast both themselues many others headlong into ruine 2 A scandall giuen is distinguished by the distribution of it from the adiuncts or from the difference of the persons that cause it and hereby it comes to passe that one is farre more greuous and pernicious then another for that which is giuen by a person placed in some great dignity is more dangerous and his example hurteth more then that which is giuen by some priuate person or otherwaies obscure So the adultery of Dauid the king is more greeuous a. Sam. 12 12. c. then of some obscure Citizen and therefore a scandall is more seuerely punished both in regad of the person himselfe who doth disgrace that place into which he is exalted by god as also in respect of other men to whome he hath giuen a more effectuall cause of falling by his euill example So that scandall is most greuous which is giuen of the ministers of the Churches and the students of diuinity when they either by false doctrine or impure liuing giue occasion to many to speake ill of the gospell As the sinne of the sonnes of Helie is said to be exceeding greeuous in the sighte of the Lord a 1 Sam. 2 17 And they sinne more hainously which be in the communion of the Church then they which be without So the gouernour of a familie being a drunkard sinnes much more greuously then a seruant VVhat is the cause of offence giuen The remote cause is the iudgment of God 1. Against the wicked as was the scandall and impediment which the wise men of Egypt gaue vnto Pharoh b Exod 7 22 And the false prophets in whome was the lying spirit gaue to King Achab c 1. King 22 22 and the lying signes of Antichriste wherewith those which receiued not the loue of the truth were deceiuedd. a 2. Thess 9 10.11 2. The iudgment of God for the godly or the good of the elect whereof 1. Cor. 11.19 There must be deuisions that those which are approued that is whome experience hath shewed to be of faith vnfained and sincere pietie might be made manifest The nearest cause is Satan whoe moueth men to all euill The helping cause is the naughtinesse and corruption of mans nature false teachers the vnskillfullnesse pride coueteousnesse impatiency of teachers In respect of which causes Christ saith Math. 18.7 It must needs be that offences come that is by necessity not by
For the ministers of the worde and teachers of the church 3 For friends brethren and the whole church c 1 Cor 1 2 one for another d Ier 42.2 20 1 Thess 5 15 Iam. 5 16 2 Cor 1 11 4 For enemies e Numb 16 22. Math 5 44 Acts. 7.60 5 For sinners and vnbeleeuers as Abraham for the Sodomites f Gen. 18 23.24 Lot also for zoar g Chap. 19 20 21 Moses for the people when they had most greuously sinned setting vp a calfe h Exod 32 11 so Samuell for Saul 1. Namely that of enemies he would make them friends that he would conuert them and frustrate their attempts 6 For the afflicted and sicke but for these whiles they liue with vs in this life i 1. Sam. 15 35 How must we pray for our enemies k Iam 5.13 15 2 Sam. 12 16. If they be aduersaries to a iust cause as to true doctrine wee must pray that god would maintaine his owne cause and either conuert them if they be curable or confound them if incurable if we haue wronged them we must aske them forgiuenesse and requite them if we neuer hurt them we must pray that they may become our ftiends or freed ftom the enemies both to a good cause and our person by Christs example we may pray for such as are curable and for vengence vpon the desperate For whom must we not pray 1 For the dead 1. because whatsoeuer is done without faith is sinne Rom. 14.23 But of that matter in the canonicall scriptures we haue neither commaundement nor example and therefore is not of faith For that which is reported of Iudas Machabeus 2. Machab. 12.40 sending to Ierusalem an offering for the slaine Iewes which had priuily taken thinges consecrate to the idols of the Iamnites it is not canonicall but Apocriphall and of suspected credit seeing that the author of the discourse doth craue pardon in the end of the booke which thing agreeth not to the scriptures inspired of god a 2 Tim. 3 16 nor to the writers which haue written as they were mooued by the holy ghost b 2 Pet. 2 21. and noe such sacrifice was commaunded of God to be done yea rather it was done against the law which did forbid sacrifices to be done for them who had polluted themselues with an excomunicate thing 2 Because such prayers are vnprofitable For whosoeuer doe departe from hence either they departe in faith and are blessed and therefore haue no neede of prayers or doe want faith and are damned c Ioh 3.18 36 1 Ioh. 5 16 1 Sam 16 1 and therefore cannot be holpen 2 Nor for the indurate enemies of God or them whome the lord as it were with the finger hath shewed vs to sinne against the holy ghost d but against them rather 1 That they may not make a proceeding but that they may be letted and stopped e 2 Sam. 15 31 Acts 4.29 which is a point of charity 2. That they may be cut of if with a deuilish furie they goe forward to resist god the Church the truth and are vncurable which thing belōgeth not to priuate reuēge but commeth of a singuler zeale of god So Dauid f Psal 5 10 Psal 59 5 Psal 14 13 psal 110.9 10.11 And Paul 2. Tim. 4 14. Alexander the Coppersmith hath done me much euil the lord rewarde him according to his workes So Moses against Korah Dathan and Abiram Num. 16.15 VVhat is the forme of inuocation Although there be many formes of praying as are the psalmes of Dauid and the prayers of other holy men both olde and new written well and profitablie by the spirit of Christ yet notwithstanding the shorte forme which God of his great goodnes prescribed vnto vs g Mat 6 9 Luk 9 11 2 which is called the Lords praier is to be preferred before all the rest both for the maiestie of the author the order of the things to be requested and also because it containeth in briefe all things which belong to the glorie of god and our good and what we may aske of the best god whatsoeuer is needfull to desire and what he will graciously bestowe vpon vs whereupon great fruite of comforte doth redound vnto vs because we who doe in a manner aske out of his mouth know to aske nothing absurd nothing vnmeete or vnseasonable vnto him Yet we are not tyed to euery word of this forme but it is lawfull to take no other matter of praiers and al the prayers of the faithfull ought to accord in respect of the sense to this most perfect and truly lawfull patterne but they which goe further doe add of there owne to the wisdome of God and doe despise his will and euer obtaine nothing seing that they pray without faith What are the conditions of prayer or the adiuncts and circumstances Some are inward proper and perpetuall but others are outward indifferent and changeable Which are inward 1 A minde well ordered that a man being about to pray may come with a minde voide of other cares and of fleshly wandering thoughts wherewith it may be caried about hither and thither or pressed downe from heauen towards the earth and with conuenient attention and reuerence towards the maiestie of that god to whose conference he doth goe a dan 9 3.4 5 Math 14 23 2 The sincerity of the heart or a pure heart b 2 Tim 2.22 of Daniell that he which is about to pray may lay aside all opinion of worthines and merit and may feele not feignedly but truly his owne want after the example of Iacob Gen. 32 10. I am lesse then the least of Gods mercies of Daniel Chap. 9.18 we doe not present our supplications before thee for our owne righteousnesse but for thy great tender mercies c. of Dauid Psal 14 32 Esay 64 6 and of the publcan d Luk. 18 13 I am not worthy to lift vp my eyes to heauen 3 A misliking and humiliation of a mans selfe that he may prostrate himselfe before God with an humble and free confession of his sinnes and requesting of pardon e Dan. 9 4.5 Psal 51.5 1. Ioh. 1.9 4 True repentance and a godly purpose Psal 26.6 I will wash mine handes in innocency O lord and compasse thine altar For god heareth not sinners f Ioh. 9.31 Psal 109 7 Esay 1.15 VVhen ye shall make many praiers I will not heare you because your handes are full of bloud g Rom. 10 14 Heb. 10.22 Iam. 1.6 1 Ioh. 5.14 Contrariwise If we shall aske any thing we shall receiue it of him because we keepe his commaundements 1. Iohn 5.22 And if any man be a worshiper of God and doth his will him heareth he Iohn 9.37 5 A stedfast trust of mercie and of the fauour of God for Christs sake and a sure hope of audience that he will liberallie and freely helpe them which aske according to
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 〈◊〉
of Election c. Rom. 8.30 But the Scripture teacheth the contrary d. 2. Tim. 1.9 To Titus 3.5 He hath called vs with an holy calling not according to our workes but according to his purpose and Rom. 4.6 God imputeth righteousnes without workes Is the Election of all men common or generall that is doth God ordeine all men to Saluation No but special because all are not elected nor blessed in Christ a. Eph. 1.3.4 neither haue all men faith b. 2. Thess 3.2 2. Because he which receiueth all maketh no choyce But all election eyther of some one or some few must needs be out of a number of some remaining nay it is an vnsauorie contradiction and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a monstrous speech to say the Election of all men were generall 3. The Scripture declareth that there is a certaine crew of Reprobates both Iohn 6.44 No man commeth vnto me but whom the father shall draw And Rom. 9.18 Whom he will he receiueth to mercie and whom he will he hardeneth And 11.7 The Elect haue obtained it but the rest haue beene blinded Of what sort of men is Election Of such as are vncleane and vngodly in the sight of God For he hath chosen vs that we might be holy without blame Eph. 1.4 But whereas he chose vs before the world was made it is effected that God set before his eyes all men that euer should be and for as much as they would be vngodly and accursed hee likewise so considered them and so chose some out of the common lumpe and filth of men and those freely according to the good pleasure of his will leauing others in their sinne and curse VVherefore hath not God elected all Let vs not be too curious in enquiring if wee be vnwilling to fall into errour saith Augustine Neuerthelesse wee must not doubt that the reasons of this his secret counsell are most sufficient although they are vnsearchable c Ro. 11.33 Is not Christ the Redeemer of all men No for he is a Redeemer neither to Pharao nor Iudas neyther vnto Caiphas nor Herod neither vnto Iulian nor in briefe to all those that are damned or without hope for whom neyther he died Died not Christ for all men His death was sufficient for all say the Schoolemen but effectual onely for the Elect and them that are faithfull If we respect the vertue and force of Christs blood it is sufficient for the redemption of all but if we looke vpon the purpose and eternall counsell of God and the good will of the Mediator he died for the elect onely Ioh. 10.15 I lay downe my life for my sheepe saith Christ and 17.9 I pray not for the world but I pray for them whom thou hast giuen me Therefore hee neyther offered sacrifice for it neither did he redeeme it And vers 19. For their sakes who beleeue and whom the father hath giuen me sanctifie I my selfe And Matth. 26.28 My blood which is shedde for many for the remission of sinnes Is not the calling and promise generall Matth. 11.28 Come vnto me all ye that are weary and laden It is indefinite rather and that truely in respect of certaine circumstances as of nation and condition of age sexe and the like whereby God is moued not to choose some one Moreouer neyther doth God generally call all outwardly by the preaching of the Gospell for that it hath neuer been knowne vnto many much lesse doth hee call all inwardly by an effectuall calling And although the voyce of the Gospell speake to all men generally yet faith is rare and singular because the arme of the Lord is not reuealed vnto all Isa 53.1 a. Ioh. 12.13 How doth it then accord that God calleth them to him whom he knoweth will not come Austen answereth out of the Apostles wordes Serm 11. Wilt thou dispute with me Maruell with me and cry out O the depth Let vs both agree in feare least we perish in errour But so the kingdome of grace shall not be very large Yea very large simply in respect of the citizens members and parts of that kingdome though in regard of them that are let passe and of those that refuse the Gospell many are said to be called but few chosen Matth. 22.14 By this meanes then shall not God be an accepter of Persons Not at all for else the fault 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of hauing respect of Persons would be in euery benefite wherein one is preferred before an other which is false for we may benefite whom we wil with our owne this man rather then that Moreouer respect of Persons is committed when we bestow somewhat or giue our iudgement being thereunto moued by circumstances and conditions inherent in any person which make not to the cause as if of two men alike offenders the Iudge doth free the one because he is rich or because hee is his kinseman or countryman which thing cannot fall out in God for hee findeth no such conditions in men but setteth downe what he will himselfe But God would haue 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all men to be saued come to the knowledge of the trueth 1. Tim. 2.4 He lets them not for this is meant of all sorts of men but not of all of euery sort God therefore would haue some of euery sort and order of men to bee saued namely those who come to the knowledge of trueth that is to say all which beleeue on the Sonne of God a Mark 16 16 Ioh. 3.18 2. Generall experience it selfe whereunto the will of God agreeth conuinceth that faithfull men onely are saued 3. All that the Lord would haue done that doth he b Psal 115.3 But he saueth not all men but onely his faithfull seruants Therefore without question he would not haue all men to be saued 4. Of like things a like iudgement But in these words concerning them that shall be saued the generall experience is restrained to the faithfull Iohn 3.15.16 That euery one which beleeueth on him should not perish but haue euerlasting life And cap. 1.16 Of his fulnesse haue all we receiued 1. Cor. 15.22 In Christ shall all be made aliue And vers 28 God shall be all in all And chap. 10.13 All things are lawfull for me but all things are not expedient And vers 33. I please all men in all things 1. Tim 4.10 VVee trust in the liuing God which is the Sauiour of all men specially of them that beleeue In like sort therefore in saying Who would haue all men to be saued let vs vnderstand all beleeuers as well Iewes as Graecians priuate men as magistrates both men and women both bondmen and free as well those that are guiltie of many sinnes as those that are guilty of few but yet not all men altogether So he would not haue any to perish but would haue all men come to repentance that is the elect to whō Peter ioyneth himselfe whē he declareth that God
Act. 15.3.4 and in the Ecclesiasticall assemblie made by the people where in all one among another doe meete religiously to performe the seruice of God a or in the Pastors and Ecclesiasticall assemblie which consisteth of the principall and sit members of the Church and is gathered togither in the name of the whole Church whereof it hath charge to consult of Church matters in which sense Christ saith say vnto the Church Math. 18.18 c. But is there any visible Church seeing we say in the Creed I beleeue the Church and faith is of things which are not seene Heb. 11.2 2. Cor. 5.7 and Augustine saith it is an action of faith to beleeue what thou seest not for if thou seest it is not faith That which is said in the Creede is not meant of any one Church this or that but of the Catholicke Church that is of the whole bodie of the Church at what time soeuer it hath beene on the earth which for that it consisteth of the godly Elect which haue beene heeretofore from the beginning of the world which are at this present and which shall be heereafter vntill the worlds end being gathered together at once whom no man in this life can euer behold with his eies surely there is a Church beleeued and not seene because it is not of the fashion that it may be here wholy seene but onely in part 1 Because the glorie of the Catholike Church is inward Psal 45.13 The Kings daughter is all glorious within 2 Because it commeth not with obseruation b Luk 17 20 3 Because it worshippeth God in spirit and truth c Ioh. 4 23 4 Because the sense cannot iudge surely who they be that belong to the Catholicke Church 5 Because the principallest and greatest part thereof is in Heauen 6 Because it is a spirituall house d 1. Pet. 2 5 But the Church taken Synecdochically that is The particuler Churches are visible 1 Because the men whereof they consist are visible 2 Because the outward forme of them is visible and concerning the particuler Church or the Pastors thereof it is said Math. 5. Vers 14. A Citie that is set on a hill cannot be hid but it ought to be well knowne and excellent for pietie and life least it be an offence but at length after the resurrection all the whole Church shall be seene in heauen where she shall be knit together with her head Reuel 14.4 Is there or hath there beene alwaies a glorious visible state of Gods Church on Earth among all men and all the world ouer No surely for that being sometime oppressed by tyrannie as in the time of the tenne persecutions and after that vnder Antichrist it was hid in heresies errours as a sparke vnder the ashes as in the time of Arrius when as Ierome saith the whole world mourned exceedingly and wondered that it selfe was turned Arrian and it may often come to passe through the iust iudgement of God that there be none assemblie of men apparant which worship God publikely and visibly according to his word onely a Psal 74.3 Isa 49.21 as happened in the time of Elias the Prophet 1 King 19.10 when he said I onely am left that is not onely not a Prophet more but euen not one that worshippeth God and God answered I haue reserved vnto mee seuen thousand men that haue not bowed their knees to Baall And Reuel 12.6 when the Church of God is said to haue fled into the wildernes that is to haue lurked or laine hid from the sight of men by reason of the furies of Antichrist Therefore the state of the Church is at sometime more visible at sometime lesse neither is it visible vnto all nor alwaies after one fashion The inuisible Church doth eyther openly professe the faith or not professe it at all If she professe it then is she not the inuisible Church if she do not then is she not the true Church because she confesseth not the faith It is not requisite ●hat we should alwaies euerie where confesse our faith for that were to betray our selues vnto our enemies but when the cause occasion time and Gods glorie doe require Neyther did Elias make any such argument when God answered him I haue reserued vnto me seuen thousand men which haue not bowed their knees to Baall though they were vnknowne to him But where and how was the Church so many ages past in Popery seeing Popery is not the Church In that manner it was as Iohn foretold it should be Reuel 12.6 namely in the wildernes and in that manner as the Church of Israell was after the falling away of Ieroboam especially in the daies of Achab in the Apostaticall and false Church which worshipped Calues in Dan and Bethel whereunto the popish Church is altogether like As then Elias Elizaeus and seuen thousand men which bent not their knees to Baall were and lay hid in the wildernes so also euen many in the time of Poperie bent not their knees to Antichrist which verie argument Paule applieth to the Church of the Iewes in his time Rom. 11.3 May the Catholicke Church fall away By no meanes because there shall be no end of Christs kingdome a Luke 1.33 because the Catholicke Church is builded on a rocke And the gates of Hell shall not preuaile against it Math. 16.18 But some particuler Church may fall away and fall away in such sort that where there was a true Church there may appeare no true Church at all but a false and Sathan may preuaile against it as many examples teach to wit the Churches of the Ephesians Galathians and the like which haue ceased vtterly to bee nay particuler Churches may be brought to that smallnes that there may not bee any particuler Christian visible Church on the Earth publikely knowne And there is euer some number on Earth which worship Christ with an honest affection but this number is not euer visible ful of people glorious established in some visible place seat or succession but scattered heere and there obscure and vnknowne to men as Isaiah saith 1.9 and 10.20.21 The Lord hath reserued to himselfe a seed and remnant When began the Church to fall from the truth It is one thing for the Church to haue failed in some points and an other to haue falne away so as it should be vtterly abolished while the Apostles liued heretickes began to sow darnell in the Lords field to worke the mysterie of iniquitie and many Antichrists began to hee 2. Thess 2.7 1. Iohn 2 18. 2 The holy Bishops after the Apostles times through lacke of heede taking mingled many falshoods with the truth and left their errours to posteritie neyther did all faile at once and at one time This plague began by little and little to creepe farre and wide vntill at length it spread the whole world ouer But in the meane while the Church fell not vtterly away because God reserued to himselfe a
Christ himselfe or Metonymically and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in some sort namely that which belongeth to the publishing open declaring and testimonie of Doctrine or because the Propheticall and Apostolicall Doctrine onely whereunto the Prophets and Apostles giue testimonie or both the Olde and New Testament as saith Ambrose is the foundation of the Church Heereupon Gods Citie is said to haue had not one but twelue foundations wherein were written the Names of the Lambes twelue Apostles Reuel 21.14 Heereupon Iames Peter and Iohn seeme to bee Pillers of the Church Galat. 2.9 namely Metaphorically and after a sort because they sustayned the Church and Religion but Iesus himselfe being the corner stone who alone sust●ineth the whole building Ephes 2.21.23 A foundation of strength and power in respect whereof the Church is said to be built on Christ God and man which belongeth to the Author foundation and merit of saluation the fountaine and efficacie of doctrine and the Church is founded vpon Christ when he alone is accounted for Wisedome Iustice Sanctification Redemption Life and Eternall glorie of the faithfull For this cause 1. Cor. 3.11 Other foundation can no man lay then that which is laid which is Iesus Christ And Isay 28.16 Christ is called the foundation stone Which is so proper vnto Christ that it communicateth in no participation with any other But in Christs words Thou art Peter and vpon this Rocke will I build my Church the Euanglist who interpreteth them saith not Thou art Petra a Rocke but thou art Petrus Peter neither doth he say vpon thee Peter but vpon this Rocke distinguishing manifestly Peter who is a part of the building from the Rocke whereon the building chiefely doth stay by changing of name person and by different termes Wherefore the Church is built vpon Christ the Rocke not on Peter the Apostle who eftsoone and often erred for the Rocke was Christ 1. Cor. 10.4 which Peter confessed in the name of all the apostles a Mat. 16.16.18 And he gaue the keyes not of fulnesse of power but of knowledge which in verse 19. he promised to al vnder the name of Peter who answered for all to all the Apostles equaltie and without difference b Mat. 18.18 Iohn 20.21 and in the person of them vnto all the ministers of the Church That speech also Feed my sheepe being thrice inioyned vno Peter for his three denials together Iohn 21. vers 17. ordaineth him a Pastor indeed ouer the flocke but not an vniuersall Pastor for it was also said vnto others Teach ye all nations Math. 28. vers 19. and it was spoken alike to all As the Father hath sent me euen so send I you Iohn 20.21 Finally neither was Noe who in the Arke was the head of his sonnes a type of the Bishop of Rome but of Christ c Gen. 7.13 1. Pet. 3.20 like as Baptisme is an Antitype of that deliuerance which befell vnto the Church in the Deluge What are the true and inward properties of the Church 1 Consent of the Doctrine of the Gospell 2 The inhabiting of God by the holy Spirit whereupon 2. Corinth 6.16 the Church is called the Temple of God and they vvho are led by Gods Spirit are called the sonnes of God Rom. 8.14 3 A right Faith Hope and Charitie True Religion according to Gods word Repentance Confession and a true calling vpon the true God all which doe as it were fourme a true Church The Apostles Creed is a token thereof although when the outward and vsuall Ministerie of the word is often for a season interrupted the Church is extraordinarily nourished by God as it were in the wildernes the same God raising vp teachers knowne vnto his small flocke after such a sort as himselfe according to his vnsearchable wisedome knoweth requisite and necessarie a Reue. 12.6 For as there may be a Church and yet lie hid so may there be teachers in a Church albeit not apparent to all What are the manifest tokens of a visible Church whereunto we may safely ioy●● our selues They are two The first and ch●efe note is the pure preaching and professing of Gods word comprehended in the writings of the Prophets Apostles because wheresoeuer the word is truly preached it is not without profit at all b Isai 55.11 Rom. 1.16 2 A lawfull administring of the Sacraments of Baptisme and the Lords Supper according to Christs institution with pure preaching conioyned thereunto as a part thereof if there shall be no iust impediment to the contrarie c Iosu 5.5 Iohn 10.4 5 27. 8.47 Act. 2.42 1 Cor 11.20 23 Mat. 28.19 20 Mark 16.15 Luk. 16.29 Rom 10.14 which notes doe neuerthelesse admit a more and a lesse and doe presuppose a lawfull calling of Pastors d Rom 10.15 Ephe. 4 11. And although holy discipline is also requisite in Gods Church yet if the Church gouernours faile of their dutie it must not presently be denied to be a Church as long as those two fundamentall and essentiall notes of a visible Church are remayning e Mat. 18.17 1 Cor. 5 5 Neyther is it material if other sects chalenge to themselues these notes but we must search diligently whether they doe so truly or falsly Also the preaching of the word is a cause of the Church and therefore by nature is more excellent and more famous then the Church it selfe Whether are 1. Antiquitie 2. Multitude of followers of some one doctrine 3. Succession in some one companie of Bishops chiefly of Rome 4. Miracles 5. Continuance 6. Vnitie and concord 7. Efficacie of doctrine 8. Holines of life in the Authors and Fathers of the religion 9. The gift of prophesy 10. Temporall felicitie 11. The title of Church Apostolicall or that it is one holy Catholicke Apostolicke Church these the notes of a true Church No 1 Because the names without the substance are not of force 2 From names proceed not a true and Apodeicticall but a false demonstration of the matter 3 These Notes are common vnto Turkes and Heretikes also for they may vsurpe these titles by which they may confirme that their rowts are and haue beene the true Churches of God which is absurd 4 Neither haue all those notes begun with the Church 5 Neyther are they perpetuall and proper euerie way nor Essentiall which are alwaies naturally in the thing it selfe being vnchangeable and the causes of that thing whereof they are notes but the most part seperable accidents and these notes themselues ought to bee examined according to the word of God Moreouer 1 The Church which now is ancient in time past was new And Ezech. 20.18.19 VValke ye not in the ordinances of your fathers I am the Lord vvalke in my Statutes And Tertull. Lib. de praescriptionibus Euerie first thing truest And Ignatius 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Christ is to mee the old Church whom not to obey is manifest destruction and Cyprian custome vvithout truth is the
antiquitie of errour 2 The broad way leadeth to destruction and many there bee which goe in thereat Math. 7.13 3 Hierome saith They are not the sonnes of the Saints which possesse their places but which doe their workes And succession auaileth not where there is no succession of faith and doctrine neither is succession to be tied vnto one seate vnto one place or vnto one Church for God can raise vp Pastors diuers waies and in diuers places as shal seeme best to himself Moreouer they succeed the Apostles who being lawfully thereunto called doe discharge their dutie in the Church faithfully although not in a continuall succession from the Apostles Besides God is wont when the Church is in a desperate estate to raise vp ministers after an extraordinarie manner And Tertul. lib. de praescriptionibus saith that faith ought not to be tried by the persons but the persons by faith And Ambrose de poenit lib. 1. cap. 1. They haue not Peters inheritance which haue not the faith of Peter 4 Miracles are to be iudged by Doctrine not Doctrine by miracles also there are some to be throwen into hell which haue wrought miracles in Christ name Math. 7.23 5 Also the diuel hath a Church euen frō Cain to the worlds end 6 Neither is vnitie of it selfe a note of the Church except it be ioined with faith and true doctrine a Eph. 4.3 for as there is one Church of God so is there one Babylon of the diuels saith Augustine the godly also may in some points disagree b Act. 11 2 7 The Apostle 2. Thess 2.9 saith that Antichrist shall come by the effectuall working of Sathan and that God will send an effectuall working of errour to those that loue not the truth that they should beleeue lies 8 Doctrine is the onely witnesse of holinsse Euen Sathan can transforme himselfe into an Angell of light and true holinesse floweth from a true faith 2. Cor. 11.14 Act. 15.9 Although an Angell or a Saint come downe from heauen and bring not true Doctrine he is to be reiected Gal. 1.8 And that saying of Christ by their fruits ye shall know them Math 7.20 The fathers will not haue to be vnderstood of manners but of false opinions and false interpretations 9 But the gife of prophecying is not perpetuall in the Church for that place of Ioel cap. 2.18 Doth describe the state of the Church what it should be in the time of the Apostles and of the Primitiue Church onely Act. 2.17.18 And diuels also and false Prophets may foretell some things to come c 1. Sam. 18 19 Deut. 13.2 Num. 33 7 24.3 Ioh. 11.51 10 Temporall felicitie was rather woont to bee contrarie vnto the Church d 2 Tim. 3 12 11 True Doctrine is the cause that there is one holy Apostolicke and Catholicke Church 12 Christ shewed no signe of them but said said expresly My sheepe heare my voyce Iohn 10.27 Doth the Church cease to be a Church by reason of some blemish or fault in doctrine and administration of Sacraments No as long as it keepeth the foundation which is Christ or saluation by Christ and the truth in the chiefe especiall and principall articles of faith a 1. Cor. 3.11 12.13 And the errour which a few in the Church doe hold is not the errour of the whole Church b 1. Cor. 15 12 Is euerie one bound to ioyne himselfe to the assembly of that Church which hath those true notes He is bound to this or that congregation as farre foorth as lieth in him if it be knowne to him if he can to adioine himself therunto and to professe himselfe a member thereof indeed and finally to reuerence the holy communion of it and to loue and frequent the meeting together therof c psa 27.48 42.2.5 84.1 Esai 60.8 Heb. 10.25 35 39 1. Cor. 11 21 22. For such a meeting together is the Schoole of the holy Ghost wherein is taught the word of God which is the phisicke of the soule a cleare glasse wherein appeareth the face of God the Epistle of Almightie God to his Creature wherein he hath declared vnto vs his will The meanes whereby the way of saluation is knowne by which saluation is obtained faith is nourished and kept neyther is it sufficient to haue the Scripture at home and there to read it for when Paule Ephes 4.11 saith He gaue some to be Apostles some Pastors and some teachers c he saith not he left the Scripture that euerie one might read it priuately but hee ordained a ministerie whereby some certaine men might teach others true religion But from other companies of men wherein heresie or manifest idolatrie is publikely receiued and taught and the foundation and principall point of saluation is not maintained namely Iesus Christ a good man ought to separate himselfe as hee would flie from Babylon d Isa 48.20 Ier 51.6 45 Reu. 18.4 1 Ioh. 5.21 Iohn 10.5 1 Because the Apostle 1. Cor. 5.11 Forbiddeth vs to be consorted with fornicatours or idolatours or couetous persons with drunckards or raylers or extortioners so as that we must not so much as eate with them much lesse be partakers of their euill works 2 Because there is no fellowship betweene Christ and Beliall betweene light and darknes 2. Cor. 6.15.16.17 3 Because the promises of God and benefits of Christ doe belong to Gods Church onely chap. 7.1 and therefore without the Church there is no saluation But this is to be vnderstood of the Catholicke Church because that we may obtaine saluation it is necessarie that we be ioyned with Christ but the meaning is not that those which are out of this or that particuler Church cannot be saued For although we liue among Turkes yet are we the members of Christ and of the Catholicke Church if wee haue faith 4 The same is confirmed by the example of the godly fathers who sequestred themselues from the congregation euen of the Idolatrous Israelites ordained congregations peculiar to themselues where they might worship God purelie a Gen 12.7 13 18 26 25. c. 33 20 1 King 3.2 c. 18 24 2. King 4 38 Psa 16.4 Hereupon saith Nazianzen most sweetly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I seeke Noahs Arke that I may eschew the wofull destinies Can the Church erre from the truth or fall away there from If the Church be vniuersally and in that sort as we haue before said considered as the inuisible company of the Elect triumphant in heauen and militant on earth the Church triumphant surely without doubt cannot erre because she is vtterly freed from sinne and errour the Church Militant also in the Prophets and Apostles through a singuler priuiledge in doctrine erred not and as long as she cleaueth fast vnto Christ her Sauiour and Teacher by faith and is gouerned by his Spirit and as long as she heareth the Bridegroomes voyce and followeth the written word of God as a Lampe
h 2. Cor. 2.11 1 Iohn 3.29 of which mariage the bridemen are the ministers of the word the friendes of the bridegroome are they i Iohu 3.29 that according to the world allure the bride betroath her and bring her dressed and adorned vnto the bridegroome k 2. Cor 2.11 l Exod 19 6. Reu 1.6 1 Pet. 2 5 9 11 The Elect stocke the royall Priesthood the holie People the People whome God challengeth as peculier to himselfe 12 The communion of saints by reason of the spirituall participation of Christ and all his benefites m 1. Ioh 1 8 1 Cor 1 9 Ephes 4 4 Rom. 12 5 13 Col 3 and of the mutuall communion of the giftes of the same Christ among the faithfull being one heart and one soule n Acts. 4 32 13 A flock of sheep and the sheepfold of Christ because it heareth and followeth his voice 14 The world taken in the better parte o Luk 12 32 Iohn 10 16 because it is the most noblest parte of the world and that the whole state thereof might be opposed to one people p Iohn 3 16 1 Iohn 2 2 2 Cor 5 19 15 A floare q Luk. 3 17 because as in a floare the sheafes are gathered with the straw and chaffe togither and after the threshing the wheat is discerned from the chaffe in the vanne So there are as well godly men as hypocrites assembled in the outward society of the church but straight way they are seuered by the outward preaching of the Gospell as with a vanne 16 The new Ierusalem r Gal. 4 26 Reu 3 12 and Sion ſ psalm 2 6 the kingdome of heauen or of Christ or of God 1. t Mat 5 19 20. because it is gouerned by God after an heauenly manner 2 because the Citizens thereof conteminng worldly thinges aspire vnto heauenly Last of all it is also compared to a Candlestick a Reu. 1.20 to a douehouse b Esa 60.8 to a Doue c Cant 2 2 14. 6.8 namely because these verses of the doue doe fittly belong thereunto No gall she hath yet groneth much nor hurts she with her bill Her tallents harmeles and her crop with cleane corne doth she fill To a small ship or boate d Luke 8 22 because while it is on earth it is like to a boate which one while is caried on the sea with a calme prosperous gale by and by the windes rising the waues swelling it is in danger whose Pilot is Christ whose watermē or mariners are the ministers To a field e Math. 13.24 and to a Plowed Land f 1 Cor. 3.9 to a drag net conteining fishes good and bad g math 13 47. to one singuler man h Ephes 4.13 to declare the vnitie thereof Lastly to a glasse in beholding whereof the very Angells doe good acknowledging the manifold wisedome of God in the agreement and repugnant concord of so manifold a multitude i Ephes 3 10 Why is it called an holie church 1 Because it is redeemed cleansed iustified and sanctified by the blood of Christ k 1. Iohn 1 7 Ephes 5.25 26. Heb 91 2 Because receiuing that benefite by faith through the holy Ghost it studieth holines and righteousnes by the which study the imperfect holines thereof is daily encreased but shall be perfected afterward in an other life l Rom 8.1 Ephes 5 26 27 Phil 3.12 All which are attributed to the church for the Elects sake onely m Rom 1,7 8 1. 1 Cor. 1.2 6.11 What is the finall cause of the church The true worship of God for it is elected chosen and ordained for the true seruice of God and to glorifie god both in this life and in the life eternall also n 1. Pet. 2 9 But the end whereto the church endeauoureth is God in whose presence there is fullnes of ioyes namely that heauenly inheritance which can neither perish nor be defiled nor corrupted o Psal 16.20 1 Pet 1 4 2 The verie perfection and absolute finishing of the church in that last day when all the elect shall be gathered togither from the foure windes and then at last we shall all grow vp in the vnity of faith and acknowledgment of the sonne of God vnto a perfect man and vnto the measure of the age of the fullnes of Christ Ephes 4.13 VVhat is the Effect or office of the church To heare the voice of her shepeheard to flie from the voice of a stranger to belieue gods word and to obaie it to vse the sacraments lawfully to acknowledge to receiue and to imbrace only Christ for the shephearde for the teacher for the head for the spouse and for the sauiour lastly to exercise the keies receaued from Christ that is to keep diligētly the ministery of gods word a Iohn 10.5 1 Cor 11 23 mat 16.19 18.18 Iohn 20.23 Heb. 13 17 What is the fruite and vse of the article of the church 1 That we should desire nothing more then to abide in it without which there is no saluation 2 That we being assuredly perswaded we be the citizens thereof should nothing doubt of our saluatiō grounded in christ frō whōe we cā no more be plukt thē his mēbers may be torne rēt a sūder 3 That we may perceiue that those promises perteine vnto vs saluation shal be in Sion God will for euer abide in the midst of Ierusalē that is in the church whereof mount Sion Ierusalem were tipes in times past least at any time it should be remoued b Ioel. 2.32 Addi 5.17 Psal 46.6 VVhat be the contraries to this doctrine 1 The enemies of the church which now then from Satās cāpe breaks out who like tyrāts by manifest strengh like Sophisters by corruptiō of doctrine like hipocrites by superstition like Epicures by leudnes of life do assault and fight against the church 2 The error of the prelates which exclude frō the church thē that are newly instructed infāts that are not yet entred in the sacramēts 2. which transforme the church into a ciuil kingdome that requireth a secular arme and into the greatest monarchy of the world wherin the Pope is chiefe ruler gouernour ouer all persons as well laymen as clergymen ouer Emperors Kings who hath authority in heauē in earth who is the vniuersal B. of the whole world 3. which teach that the church hath many heads that Christ indeed is the head of the church triūphāt but the Pope of the church militant which say that it is necessary to saluation to beleiue that the Bishop of Rome is ouer all churches or as it is in the article of Boniface the. 8. The greatest lord ouer all 4. which ty the catholick church not to the word onely but to a certaine place namely to the city of Rome to the Pope to the Bishops which make
personal succession to be an absolute sure marke of the church by the church they vnderstād the pastors only and they cal it heresie to referre the name of the church to the number of the faithfull contrary to the saing of Christ super hanc petram i. vpon my selfe will I build my church contrary to the article of our creede which commaunds vs to beleeue the catholike church 5 which make the word of God subiect to the church and not the church subiect to the word of God 6 which make the doctrine and precepts of men the foundation vpon the which the church is built 7. which place the vnity of the church not in faith not in spirit but in the vse and similitude of such ceremonies and which teach that multitude visibility perpetuity antiquity and such like for the marke of the true church 3 The Romane clergie or that rabblement of Monks and Priests which depraue the naturall sence and meaning of the scripture and doe in very deede deny the office of Christ while they doe attribute to the worke of their owne or other that the most proper and peculier vnto Christ and their sectes whereof some are named after one teacher some after another whose rule they haue made choise of to follow and to liue thereafter 4 The assembly of all infidels which doe persecute and reiect the doctrine of the prophets and Apostles and Christ himselfe 5 The error of those men that are of opinion that euery one shal be saued in his owne religion when without that one alone catholicke church their is no saluation 6 Of the Academicks which haue brought into the church 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 incomprehensibility 7 Of the Platonicks which make the church to be altogether inuisible and on the contrary of them that thinke the church is and hath alwaies bin visible on earth 8 Of donatists Anabaptists and schismaticks which because of the wicked make a departure from the true church in which the true gospell is preached and the sacraments rightly administred which asmuch as in them lyeth deuide the vnity of Christs body breake the band of peace that is Charity wherewith Christ knits the church to himselfe these proudly contemne the church and indanger there owne saluation for he cannot haue any communion with Christ which will not haue communion with the church 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 schisme not such whereat a wicked vnity is deuided like as the vnitie of the Iewes who hearing of Christ raised adissention among themselues whereby their vnity brake and was deuided a Iohn ● 16 10.9 neither such by which good Men seperate themselues from wicked men but factions whereby the society of the faithfull is deuided into contrary partes and studies as when the Corinthians were deuided into partes b 1 Cor. 10 11.12 3 3 either when they did disagre one from the other not onely in opinion and will but in the verie communitie of holy things and in rites and customes so that one anothers community and fellowship they auoided as damnable an heresie declares properly some certaine faction and sect about doctrine e Act. 5.37 and so heretickes are called which in such sort depart from the true and sound doctrine that contemning the judgement of God and the iudgement of the Church continue in their opinions and violate the concord and agreement of the Church 10 The contempt of Ecclesiasticall assemblies namely of them which seeme vnto themselues to knowe all things or which keepe themselues busied at home or which misliking the meanenesse of the preachers person or finding some other occasion of absence neglect Sermons or which for feare of the crosse or for the fauour of great men or of their friends contemne and set light by them Also the abuse of those men which either through some foolish deuotion or accustomed ostentation or to beguile the tediousnes of time frequent holy assemblyes either seldome or at them trifle the time away or let their minde raunge abroad or else after they haue heard a word or two depart out or in a word they heare indeed Sermos but yet liue wickedly The two and fortieth common Place Of the Ministerie VVhence comes this word Ministerie OF the Lattin word Ministre to minister or ferue The greeke name for Ministery is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 deriued of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying dust whēce is this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to serue 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to minister 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Minister 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or seruant who labours til he be as of a dusty sweat a Math. 20 26.27 hence is it that in the new Testament this word is takē for any person labouring b Rom. 16 11. painfully earnestly in any seruice c Rom. 13.4 for the common-wealth family or Church d Mat. 22 15 And 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is all one with this word Ministerie signifiing both the office of e Act. 6.4 2 Cor. 6 3 Ephe. 4.12 ●eaching and also the performance of any Ecclesiasticall function There are diuersities of Ministeries but the same Lord. 1. Cor. 16. Not vnlike to this is the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Liturgia comming of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to doe minister or doe ones duety so it is vsed Acts. 13 2. f 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whilest they ministred that is as Chrisostome expounds it preached not sacrificed except as the words Liturgia and sacrifice are vsed for the publick functions of the Church As Phil. 2 17. Though I be offered vp vpon the sacrifice and seruice of your faith And for this cause the Fathers called the Lords Supper a Liturgy and Sacrifice whence came that execrable errour of such as will haue the sonne of God daily in the Church to bee offered and sacrificed Hence also was it that publick officers both g Rom. 15.16 ministers and Magistrates were called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ministers and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Deacōs Rom. 13.4 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Yea Heb. 1.7 Angells are called Ministers and ministring spirits Hence also was the publick seruice of the Church called a Leiturgie as Luk. 1.23 Yea and the verie execution of that seruice was so called as if a man should haue giuen that name to the Leuiticall sacrifices Heb. 10.11 euery high Priest standeth daily to Minister So that this action of his were it of preaching 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or performing holy mysteries might be called a Liturgie Furthermore this name of Liturgie Oblation and sacrifice began to bee giuen Metaphorically to Almes h Rom. 15.27 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Gentiles ought to Minister carnall things to the Saints at Ierusalem By the like reason all Christians may be called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ministers as Paul called Epaphroditus Phil. 2.25 To conclude in the Ecclesiasticall storie certain formes of seruice at the Church were called Liturgies as
He that shewes mercie let him doe it with cheerefulnesse The vse of which office if for the weaknesse of that sex and other discommodities and inconueniences it may not well be restored yet it may be supplied by the bountie and godly care of holy women towards the poore whether they be Noble or of meaner estate Doe you denie that the Pastors had any care of the poore imposed vpon them In no wise For this care is twofold The former consisted in the charge of gathering distributing the holy beneuolēce which is proper to deacons 2 The other was only both in exhorting of the Churches to shew themselues bountifull to the poore and also in the ouerlooking of the Deacons which things did onely pertaine to the Pastors m 1 Cor. 16.2 2 Cor. 9.1 23 VVho is the Author of the Ministerie The principall cause is God himselfe who first immediately preached vnto our first parents in Paradise giuing the promise of the blessed seed n Gen. 3.15 which promise it was his pleasure should bee propagated successiuely by the Patriarches o Gen. 18.18 19 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Afterward he instituted Priests among the people of Israell choosing the Tribe of Leui for that office yea further it is God which both cals himselfe the Lord of the haruest and also thrusteth forth labourers into his haruest a Mat. 9.38 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And 1. Cor. 12.28 God hath ordained some in the Church as first Apostles secondly Prophets thirdly Teachers 2 The helping cause is Christ as being the Sonne and Lord of his Fathers house by full right who also called Apostles and set them ouer the Ecclasiasticall ministerie Iohn 20.21 As the Father hath sent mee so send I you also And Marke 16.15 Goe saith hee into all the world preach the Gospell to euerie creature and baptise them And Ephe. 4.11 And he Christ gaue some to bee Apostles others to be Prophets c. Gaue I say not onely in in that he chose them Athanasius but also in that he made them to be such as they ought to be 3 The holy Ghost in respect of his necessarie gifts for the happie execution of the Ministerie 1. Cor. 12.11 All these thinges worketh ond anh the same Spirit distributing vnto euerie one as he pleaseth For all thinges ate common to the holy and blessed Trinitie And is not the ministerie of teaching taken away in the church of the new testament by the saying of Ieremie chap. 31.34 A man shall not any more teach his neighbour Ioh 6 45 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but all shal be taught of God No. 1. because Oratione Ecliptica by this defectiue speech as is that also Gen. 32.28 Not Iacob shall thy name be called but Israell is signified that the Elect shall not only be taught outwardly by the ministery of the word spoken but also inwardly of God by the holy ghost as it is said 1. Iohn 2.27 Ye haue noe need that any should teach you but the annointing that is the holy spirit doth teach you all things Non 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sed Comparate to wit by Pastors and Doctors 2 Because the prophet speaks not simply but by way of comparison For in the old Testament by Moses and the prophets were most things propounded obscurely and vnder shadows and Types and ●ccording to the letter onely so that it was needfull to demaund what those Ceremonies meant and when Christ shall come But in the new testament Christ being already exhibited is plainely preached and the vaile of the temple being rent the way into the holiest of all being opened all these tipycall things are made manifest Heb. 9.8 And they that haue the spirit of Christ do know all things insomuch that now a childe of ten yeares old to whome it is giuen to here and learne doth more clearely vnderstand those things then many priests did in times past because the earth is full of the knowledge of the lord Isa 11 9 What is the forme of the ministerie A lawfull calling and also a faithfull execution of the function What doth calling signifie Not actiuely the very action of calling but passiuely that kinde of life and function as well priuate as publick vnto which any one is appointed of God because in the Hebrew phrase he is said to call those whome he makes to be and in like sorte they are said to be called of the Lord Adipsam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who doe begin to bee whether that be referred to the verie substance and subsistance c Rom. 4 11 or to the manifestation of the thing alreadie being d luke 1.32.35 or to the publike and reall nomination which agrees with the thing it selfe e Mat. 5.9 1. Iohn 3.1 or to the qualitie and attributes or conditions of life f 1. Cor. 7 20.21.22 or vnto the gracious adoption or vnto the publike declaration of the eternall counsell of God whereby when when we are ordained to a certaine office and as it were a scope or marke in this world wee are put inro the possession therof This borrowed speech comes I from hence that when any one begins to be then he receiues his name and when he puts on a new qualitie then also he takes a new surname Secondly from Princes who call such vnto them whose seruice they purpose to vse vnto whom it is inough onely to haue commaunded How manifold is Vocation or Calling Twofold The one Generall which is done commonly by the outward preaching of the word And this is eyther Effectuall of which Rom. 8.30 or ineffectuall by mens fault which will not heare the word of God of which Mat. 22.24 The other Speciall which respects a peculiar function and it is eyther Ecclesiasticall or politicall or Domesticall Is the Calling to the Ministerie necessarie Yes verily 1 For the glorie of God the honour of the Ministerie the securitie and comfort of the consciences of the Ministers and also to the end that the people may know that they haue lawfull Ministers and that they may obey their Minister 2 Because none must thrust in or choose himselfe to the Ecclesiasticall ministerie but ought to be called of another that hath power to call him For none must vsurpe vnto himselfe that honour but hee that is called of God as Aaron was Hebr. 5.5 And he that hath either no calling at all in the Church or no lawfull calling cannot execute any Ecclesiasticall office in the Church lawfully with a good conscience Therefore saith Paule Rom. 10 14. How shall they preach vnlesse they be sent And the Lord himselfe standes against such as were not sent of himselfe Ierem. 23.21 They did runne and I had not sent them And for this end Paul that he might approue his Apostleship doth so oft in his Epistles alleage his calling And whereas it is said 1. Cor. 16.15 That the family of Stephana and Fortunatus ordained them selues for
the Ministerie of the Saints whereupon Ecclesiasticall callings began to be called Orders It is not meant that they did of their owne mindes call themselues and so began to serue in the Ministerie but that after they were lawfully called then they did willingly giue themselues to the Ministerie of the Saints whether by preaching or by helping What is lawfull calling That which is done by Right and Law that is which is done by such a one which hath power to cal to constitute another in a place and office as is the Lord of that place or he that hath right and power from him to make choyse But God alone is the Lord of his true Church b Isa 54.5 as also Christ alone is the head a 1. Cor. 11.1 Ep. 1 22 5 23 and redeemer or defender thereof Wherefore it belongs to God alone and to Christ to set Ministers ouer his Church And therefore they onely that are called of him are to be accounted lawfull but whosoeuer are not called of him are all vnlawfull How many sorts are there of lawfull calling Two The one Internall or secret which is done by the holy Ghost and of this euerie Minister ought to be priuie to himselfe before God that neither Ambition Auarice or any other sinfull desire but the syncere feare of God and endeauour to edifie his Church mooued him to enter into this Office offered vnto him The other Externall and solemne which belongs to publicke order which againe is twofold Mediate which is also called Ordinarie and Immediate which is termed Extraordinarie and Speciall Which is the Mediate or Ordinarie Calling Ordinarie is said to be two waies eyther properly and then it signifies that which is done by lawfull course and order and which hath his dependance of God or else * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 abusedly as that which consisteth in fashion vse and custome After the first maner therefore Ordinarie Calling is that which is administred of God by man that is whereby any man according to the order instituted of Christ after he hath beene exactly examined and approoued both for life and doctrine is chosen by the voyces of the godly whom God commaunds to be vsed herein after due inuocation of the name of God with all simplicitie and synceritie as it were by the voyce of the holy Ghost himselfe speaking by the mouth of the godly and also confirmed and ordained to exercise Ecclesiasticall Office in some certaine place and is accepted of the flock vnto which he is appointed and behaues himselfe in his place as it is prescribed in the word of God What manner of men are to be called and Elected Bishops or Pastors and also Doctors which are first of sound doctrine or sound in the faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and which firmely hold that faithfull word which makes for doctrine that they may be able both to exhort with sound doctrine and also to conuince the gainesayers 2 Of irreprehensible life that is not notorious for any fault that may eyther diminish their authority or be a blot to their Ministerie thereby 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3 Which are meete and apt to teach and which haue knowledg rightly to deuide the word of Truth a 1. Tim. 3.2.3.4.6 Tit. 1.6.7.8 2 Tim. 2.15 Deacons also and Elders in like sorte who are not only adorned with holy life but also doe hold the Mysterie of faith and are furnished with wisedome necessarie for the execution of their office b Act. 6.5 1 Tim. 3.8 9 How or after what manner are they to be chosen With a religious feare which the faithfull in times past did testifie by laying aside all priuate affections with fasting and prayers in which they desired of God the Spirit of Councell and discretion c Act. 1.22 6.6 13 2.3 14.23 and with examination afore-hand of their life and doctrine Of whom ought they to be chosen Of the Bishop and gouernours of the Church 1 And first they ought to be examined not of all and singuler the inhabitants of the Church for the which he is to be prouided for the auoyding of confusion and ambition but of the Doctours and Pastours of the Church adioyning to witt both leaders of the flocke and also in all probabilitie of more graue iudgment in discerning of Doctrine And whereas in the beginning the whole congregation was called together and their voices also taken d Act 6 6 that was accidentall namely because that then was the order of Deacons first constituted in the Church and it was expedient that the cause thereof should be once ioyntly vnderstood of all and because that otherwise that murmuring of the Greekes against the Hebrewes could hardly haue beene pacified by any other course 2 They ought to be approued of the chiefe men which do excell others both in piety and in dignity in the Church as of the Magistrate if he bee godly Christian or an allower of the Christian Religion yet not excluding the consent of the people but giuing them power if they haue any reason to dissent to declare the causes of their lawfull refusall so that none be admitted to Ecclesiasticall functions without the priuity open notice giuen and the acceptance of the whole Church 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So Paul and Barnabas are said to haue appointed Elders in the Churches not according to their owne priuate pleasures but by aduisement of the people first by wholsome counsell and yet the people declaring their voices or consent by holding vp of their hands And when they had ordayned them Elders by voices or holding vp of hands in the Church saith Luk. Act. 14.23 And. 2. Cor. 8.19 Luke himselfe is said to haue beene chosen by voices of the Churches to be a fellow to S. Paul in his iourney a 1. Tim. 4.14 2. Tim. 1.6 And the laying on of handes by which the whole election is signified was not done of one but of many So vpon those seuen men whome we call the first deacons not one onely of the Apostles but all the Apostles laid their hands Act. 6 6. So the gouernours of the Church of Antioch laid their hands vpon Paul and Barnabas Act. 13.3 So not Paule alone but also the company of Elders laid their hands vpon Timothie And in this sence Tit. 1 5. For this cause saith he haue I left thee in Creta that thou mightest ordaine Elders in euery towne as I haue commaunded thee And. I. Tim. 5.22 Tripart Histor lib. 7. cap. 8 Lay hands sodainly on no man In the person of Timothie he admonisheth all Ecclesiasticall gouernours that they ordain only such as farr as lies in them which are fit for so great an office as neere as may be but yet alwaies making the Election with the consent of the Church So in the Election of Ambrose respect is had first of the people that desired him vnto whose iudgment the Emperour Valentinianus yelded as
the inward inspiration of God alone is he therfore presently to be heard No but that wee may discerne that true and lawfull extraordinary calling from the counterfait three rules are to be obserued 1. First that there only it must haue place where there is no vsing of lawful ordinary vocation which any such teacher may seeme to haue contemned The second that the spirit of such a man be proued before it be admitted f 1. Iohn 4.1 that is that both his doctrine be tryed by the rule of gods word as neere as may be which Christ commaunded to be done in himselfe g Iohn 5.39 and which is commended in them of Beraea h act 17.10 and also that his manners and disposition be diligently looked into as Christ admonisheth Mat. 7 20. And that they be not such as are described Rom. 16.18 vvhich by faire speech and flattering do deceiue the hartes of the simple i 1. Tim. 6.3.4.5 2. Tim. 3 6. 2. Pet. 2.14 Iud. 12. 3 The third that being thus tryed they be lawfully ordeined of that church of which themselues haue laid the foundation And within these lists doe we inclose that extraordinary calling and otherwise must we neuer approue it What when ordinarie calling ceaseth ought euerie christian that hath skill in the scriptures to impugne false doctrine and to deliuer the true for that cause goe vp into the Pulpit God forbid for this were to open a dore to euerie one euerie where which esteemes himselfe a wise man vnder pretence true or false of withstanding corrupt doctrine to haue priuate conuenticles which is the practise of the Anabaptists and Libertines following the bad example of them which priuily crept in and made so great stirres first at Antioch and after that in Galatia elsewhere of whome the Apostles write thus We haue heard that certaine which departed from vs haue troubled you with wordes and combred your mindes commaunding you to be circumcised and to keepe the law to whome we gaue no such commaundement Act. 15.24 Which be the testimonies or notes of extraordinarie calling Not the gift of miracles For Iohn Baptist being extraordinarily called did no miracle a Iohn 10.41 for although he was the sonne of a Priest yet in the Temple did he not exercise the priesthood but his propheticall office without the temple So also neither Oseas nor Zephany nor Aggeus nor other prophets albeit they were extraordinarily called of God were euer famous for miracles Neither is it necessary that a vocation or succession extraordinary in respect of the order publickly receiued should be confirmed with miracles For Antichrist is not to be killed with miracles but with the spirit of Christ that is with the voice of the Gospell 2 Thess 2.8 And as for the faith which wee teach Christ and his Apostles did sufficently confirme it by miracles because they were sent by a new order instituted of God to change the gouernment of the Church Neither do we now bring forth any other bookes or any other writings then of the law of the Prophets and of the Apostles And Christ hath tolde vs that false teachers must be discerned from true ones not by miracles but by their fruites to wit of learning and of life Mat. 7.16 But these three are the signes of lawfull extraordinary calling 1. That he that doth alledge it do plainely preach the word of God b Ier. 23.21 22.27.28 27. 29 9 2. That he who is sent of God extraordinarily haue the necessarie and manifest extraordinary gifts of the holy Ghost for the execution of that his office as first of all the gift of the true wisdome of God and the knowledge of his heauenly Doctrine Secondly the gift of speaking and teaching Thirdly the gift of vndaunted constancy in the true Doctrine of the true God after the example of Esay c Is 3.8 5.8 6.1 2.3 of Christ d Mat 7.29 Luk. 4.18.22 and of Paul e Eph. 4.9 3 Gods incredible vnexpected and right maruellous blessing of the labours of such a calling the manifest successe fruite and effect of it shining in the miraculous reformation of life the most plentifull profit of the Churches and the propagation therof encreasing daily although the Diuell and the whole world doe set themselues against it f Ier. 1.8.10 19. Luk. 21.15 Rom. 15.18 19. 2. Cor. 3 3.10.3 8 1 Thes 1.5 May not they that are sent extraordinarily of God erre and slide in their doctrine They may for Aaron erred g Ex. 32.4 21 Num 12.1 and Peter in the beginning did not know that there should be a calling of the Gentiles but was to be taught this same by a heauenly vision h Act. 10 11 Of what sort is the calling of the Preachers of the Gospell in our age The calling of the first reformers of the Church if wee take the order 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for the common manner and vse was ordinarie For they were Doctors Pastos and Elders from the institution of the Church of Rome But when the filthinesse of that Church was wipt away it was also lawfull although extraordinarie as might easily be gathered from the former rules signs namely excellencie might and also example of right Christian life And because their Pastours were both acknowledged and ordained of their people of their flockes and of the lawfull Magistrate therefore were they lawfull Pastors The calling of the later men and of such who haue and do succeed the former is also of God lawful but yet ordinary because they are called by the ordinary way and that same maner which is prescribed in the word of God are receiued of those congregations which as is apparant by manifest signes are the true Churches of God which haue the right of choosing Pastors Therfore the Antichristians who when they cannot conuince the Doctrine of the Gospell restored of our men of any falshood doe aske vs of our calling are by the example of Christ a Luk. 20.2 to bee sent back againe of vs to the Doctrine of Christ and his Apostles VVhat if the Romish Bishops should free themselues and their Churches from the Tyranny of the Pope and should purge them from all Idolatry and would purely preach the word of God in their Churches thus reformed haue they need of any other calling saue that which they haue already Yea verily because the Papisticall Ordinations in which there was no examination first vsed either of life or learning neither any conditions obserued in their elections which are prescribed out of the heauenly lawe and in which moreuer all pure Canons haue beene violated are nothing else but most filthy profanations And if any shall truely detest Popery from his heart verily he will renounce his most disorderly Ordination neither will hee from the right thereof chalenge vnto himselfe any authoritie Neither yet do I deny but that of the false bishops
dependeth this power Not vpon the person or worthines of the ministers for indeed they cannot properly eyther bind or loose any man or open or shut the kingdome of heauen vnto any man at their pleasure but it dependeth vpon their lawfull ministerie or rather vpon God himselfe who by the holy ghost is powerfull in the ministerie of the word as often as the minister doth duely execute his office a heb 4.12 In which sense those sayings Marke 2.7 Who can forgiue sinnes but God alone namely in his owne right and by his owne authoritie and that Iohn 20 23. Whose sinnes ye remit namely instrumētally or by preaching in the name of Christ they are remitted must be reconciled To whom are these keyes giuen Not to Peter alone but equally to all the Apostles and to the faithfull Pastors of all ages to whom Christ saith Receiue the holy Ghost if you remit the sinnes of anie they are remitted vnto them if you retaine the sinnes of any they are retayned Iohn 20.23 Which is the other part of Ecclesiasticall power It is called the power of Order because it hath a certaine and set rule namely the word of God which it must alwaies follow And it is rhar power of the Church whereby it is occupied both about doctrine and the principles of faith and is callled 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Doctrinall and also about the making of lawes in the Church for the outward gouernment thereof and is specially called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is ordained or appointed VVhat is the power of the Church concerning Doctrine It is of two sorts Common and Speciall Common is the common right belonging to the whole Church not to the Pastors onely but to euerie member thereof 1 To keepe and preserue the scriptures with verie great faithfulnesse like a Notarie or Register diligently to read them and not by way of authority to iudge of the scriptures for the Church it selfe is subiect to the scriptures but to iudge according to the scriptures and to distinguish and discerne like a Moderator the true naturall and right scriptures from the false imaginarie and counterfeit the spirit of God being their guide for the sheepe know the voyce of the shepheard Iohn 10.4 2. To know admit and approoue true Doctrine out of the scriptures Iohn 5.39 Search the Scriptures And to reproue false doctrine Mat 7.15 Beware of false Prophets And Luke 12.1 Take heede of the leauen of the Pharises And Galat. 1.8 If any man teach another doctrine let him be accursed Whereupon Augustine lib. 11. Contra Faustum cap. 5. The scripture is set in a seat on high whereunto euerie faithfull and godly vnderstanding must stoope And in another place lib. de Religione cap. 31. It is lawfull with pure hearts to know the eternall Law but to iudge it is altogether vnlawfull and wicked Speciall power the Church hath none to frame new Articles of faith or to teach any thing beside the word of God written but like a Cryer to publish and preach the scriptures to propound onely the word of the Prophets and Apostles to omit nothing 〈◊〉 alter nothing to adde or inuent nothing of their owne a Deut. 4.2 12 32 Reue. 22.18 19 and to referre all things according to the word to Gods glorie and the edification of the Church Furthermore so to expound and prooue the Principles out of the Canonicall scriptures and to interptete the same Scriptures not out of any preiudicate opinion or the priuate sense of any one man but out of the fountaines and originals by examination of euerie seuerall word by obseruation of the style and phrase of the scripture by consideration of the state of the question and matter in hand and of the things going before and comming after and by conference of one scripture with another that they may agree with the Analogie rule and square of faith briefly comprehended in the Apostles Creed a Mat. 23.8 28.20 Rom. 12.6 1 Pet. 4.11 Lastly to take away all ordinances or rather phantasies of all men of what degree soeuer they bee that the decrees of God alone may remaine firme and established 2. Cor. 4.7 These are those spirituall weapons mightie b 2 Cor. 10 4.5 through God to cast downe strong holds whereby the faithfull souldiers of God may cast downe the imaginations and euerie high thing which is exalted against the knowledge of God wherby they may build the house of Christ ouerthrow Sathan feed the sheep driue away the Wolues instruct them that are apt to learne to proue them that are stubborne and froward lastly whereby they may lighten and if neede be thunder and resting themselues vpon the power of Christ may rule and gouerne all from the highest to the lowest but all things according to the word of God and so as no man must take vnto himselfe any authoritie to teach in the Church eyther by writing or word without a lawfull calling where indeede Order preuaileth which no man with a good conscience can despise for this were to open a window to the Anabaptistical furie and that The Spirits of the Prophets may be subiect to the Prophets 1. Cor. 14.30.31 Albeit that all Christians ought mutually to teach exhort reprehend and comfort one another in the Lord and that all housholds should so be gouerned of the maisters and mistresses of the family that they should beare a representation of so many priuate Churches no man will denie Are we simply to heare the voyce of the Church to receiue whatsoeuer it teacheth No but whatsoeuer it is taught of God and commaunded to teach and is able to approoue by the authoritie of the word of God Is it in the Churches power to consigne the Canon of Scripture The Church cannot make Bookes not Canonicall to be Canonicall but onely is a meanes that such Bookes be receiued as Canonicall which in truth and of themselues are such The Church I say doth not make Scripture to be Authenticall but declareth it to be so For that onely is called Authenticall which is of it selfe sufficient which commendeth supporteth and prooueth it selfe and from it selfe hath credit and authoritie May not yet the Church be a meanes to beleeue that there is a word written and other thinges which pertaine to saluation It is indeede a meanes not a principall meanes but onely an externall and ministeriall meanes but the principall cause of beleeuing is the spirit of God and the Church is a lesse principall instrument that is by which not for which we beleeue Paule doth plant and Apollo doth water but God giueth the increase 1 Cor. 3.6 The church hath no efficacie to reueale without the spirit neither can the Church make that true thinges in themselues be beleeued of vs for true but by the testimonie of the holy Ghost shee doth commend the Scripture which is her chiefe office Truely the Church sometimes may compell men by her authoritie and perpetuall testimonie that they
a brother We must not therefore cease from admonition from instruction from correction nor leaue off to eate or drinke with him if necessitie shall constraine vs but wee must try all meanes whereby if it bee possible hee may bee a new man Wee must not I say seuer our selues in brotherly charitie from him who is seioyned from vs in external societie for this correction must bee stretched no further then charitie and other Diuine precepts do permit For excommunication is not a sword of an enemie which goeth about to kill vs but it is the sword of the Physitian which goeth about to heale vs as the antient haue taught As for denying them buriall being dead in the Churchyards the Scripture doth say nothing How long doth excommunication last So long as the party excommunicate doth estrange himselfe manifestly from the Doctrine and life of Christ a Rom. 16.17 but when hee shall repent and shewe in his words and actions some testimony of a better life then forthwith he is to be receiued into the Church againe for loosing and binding consisteth of contrarie causes of the same persons b 2. Cor. 2 5. c. As then the Church hath authority to cast out semblably it hath power to receiue sinners againe whose repentance is sufficiently detected What is the scope and end of excommunication 1. That wicked men bee corrected scandals be taken away and the Church kept pure as it is when the Sacraments so farre as possibly may bee remaine vndefiled and it is not defamed by the contumelie of God and the offence of many as if it were a receptacle of vncleane persons c Mat. 7 6 Rom. 2.2 ●4 1 Cor. 5 12 2. That no contagion bee deriued to other citizens of the Church for as it is commonly said Morbida facta pecus totum corrumpit ●uile Ne perdat reliquas est separanda grege One scabbed sheepe infects the rest Such to remoue I thinke it best And a little leuen doth leuen the whole lumpe 1. Cor 5.6 Gal. 5.9 3. That the partie excommunicated being at the least somewhat ashamed may returne home againe repent and desist from euill and to be saued This Paule calleth to deliuer to Sathan for the mortification of the flesh that his soule may bee safe that is this punishment being inflicted on him such sorrow and contrition such a remorse shame being begun in him that the flesh or old man which led him headlong into this sin may be tamed crucified and killed and the soule that is the inward man or new man which altogether seemed to yeeld in the combate may reuiue raise vp it selfe goe on and increase and so bee saued that so the sinne may die and the man may liue saith Augustine Sermon 32. vpon the words of the Apostle a 1 Cor. 5.5 1 Tim. 1.20 according to the prouerbe after correction insumeth amendment b 2 Thess 3 14 and so hee that repenteth may be saued as it is expounded 2. Tim. 2.25 26. that hee recouering soundnesse of iudgement may passe out of the Diuels snare wherein hee was captiuated and 1. Pet. 4. that his flesh beeing mortified hee may liue vnto God that is in spirit and may dy to sinne and liue to righteousnesse 4. That other citizens of the Church may feare and be kept in order 5. That the punishments which for the sinnes of the Church are threatned by God may be auoided VVhat is the effect of Excommunication It is not a brutish thunder bolt or a lightning out of a basen as it is in the Prouerbe that is it is not an idle scarcrowe or bugbear to feare children for God hath ratified that in heauen the which for iust causes is truely bound on earth by his true Church d Mat. 18.18 Ioh. 20.20 but a iudgement most fearefull in Gods church yet so as if those who are censurers shal become Gods instruments that is if any one be condemned by the lawfull sentence of the true Church out of the word of God otherwise it is better to be secluded from the societie of the wicked then to be reputed as one of them e for an vniust excommunication is a blessing f Gen. 12.3 Mat. 5.11 psa 109 28 Further the party excommunicate is deliuered to Sathan that is he is effectually declared to be vnder the power and kingdom of Sathan and that he hath no title to Christ his kingdome but is giuen ouer to destruction vntill such time as hee hath testified his true repentance g 1 Cor. 5.4 2 Cor. 2.6 7.8 for during the time of of Excommunication hee is bound out of the Church who is deliuered to Sathan whose bands are after loosed by repentance VVhat examples haue you of this Excommunication 1. In Adam and Eue h Gen 3 24 1● 4 11 and Caine i 2. In those leprous persons k Nu. 5 1.2.3 and Miriam Moses sister God himselfe being the author thereof m Leu. 5.2 6 she beeing secluded seauen daies out of the tents and afterwards restored againe In the separation of the vncleane till expiation were made o ●u● 9 6 11 12 In the prohibition of the polluted from the eating of the Sacrament c Chr. 30 2.15 vnder paine of cutting off n Leu 7 20. Wherupon wee reade that those who were defiled celebrated the Passeouer not the first moneth with the rest but the moneth following their expiation 3 In that incestuous Corinthian a 1 Cor. 5.3.4 6 4. In Hymeneus and Alexander b 1 Tim. 1.20 as also in the Emperour Theodosius whom Ambrose did excommunicate for the vniust slaughter committed at Thessalonica VVhat is Anathema The Graecians so call things giuen or dedicated for the benefit and treasure of the Church because they were wont to bee consecrated and hanged on the walles and pillers of the Temple Whereupon the Temple of Ierusalem was said to bee adorned 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with donations c L●● 21.5 but the word Anathema 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 although it be deriued from the same word yet it hath diuerse significations and is all one with that which the Hebrewes call Herem that is execrable or deuoted to perdition as Rom. 9.3 In this other signification Anathema is when hee who is incorrigible and desperate whether hee be an hereticke or blasphemer or any other way notoriously wicked is addicted and deuoted to perpetuall death and destruction Gal. 1.8 If any preach vnto you any other thing then wee haue preached let him be accursed Anathema and 1. Cor. 16.22 If any doe not loue that is if any do hate and persecute the name of Christ let him be Anathema Maranatha which was the last execration the reason wherof as we hardly knowe so the vse of it ought to bee very rare So in the old Testament Chore Dathan and Abiron were excommunicated or Anathematized and as it were bound to eternall destruction being swallowed vp
among themselues one from another For by reason of the twofold circumcision the one outward the other inward it comes to passe that Paule makes two kindes of Iewes i Rom. 2.28 And Stephen called the Iewes men of vncircumcised hearts and eares which yet stucke plunged in the vice of nature corrupted which would not indure to heare the voice of God as we are all by nature k Act. 7.51 3 That the circumcised might be put in minde of their dutie know that the good things promised did belong vnto them might stand to their couenant and promise and might confirme themselues in aduersity by calling vpon God in prosperity by the signe of the promises of GOD l 1 Sam. 17 26 and of the couenant as we may see in the example of Ionathan and Dauid encountering with Goliah l. 4. That they might be instructed concerning the corruption of nature which could not bee amended but by the effusion of bloud and also of the blessed seed which should come into the world 5 That it might be a seale vnto them that beleeue of righteousnesse and faith that is of that righteousnesse which is brought vnto vs by faith in Iesus Christ a Rom. 4.11 6 That they might bee put in minde of the spirituall circumcision of the heart mouth eare eyes and of the rest of the members nnd might labour for it and of the restipulation and binding themselues to keepe the law and so might be a Sacrament of Repentance 7 Of the continuall bearing of the Crosse and of the first fruits of our bloud to be offered to him who should shed all his bloud vpon the Crosse for vs. Wherefore were those Infants to be cut off which were not circumcised the eight day Eyther because as some thinke in them being taken away out of this temporall life by the sword or by sicknesse or by some other casualtie or else as others think being excluded from the societie of Gods people their parents migh the punished for their impietie that is for the neglect of the seale of the couenant of God For as God doth in the person of the father adopt the infant of the beleeuers So also when the father doth contemne so great a benefit the infant is truly said to be barred out of the Church which beareth not about him the marke and badge of adoption Neyther is there any cause why we should complaine of the seueritie of God seeing all are borne the children of wrath and of condemnation b Eph. 2.3 Or else because if the Infants themselues being come to age had neglected circumcision or else approoued of the neglect of it by their parents they should be excluded from the communion of saints here in the world to come that all the Church might receiue profit by such a judgement as carieth with it a manifest testimonie against all contemners of the Sacraments For this cause he would haue slaine Moses because he tooke not order to haue his sonne Gerson circumcised c Exod 4.24 so those which were borne in the wildernesse vnder Moses were not admitted the inioying of the promised land before that they were first circumcised d Ios 5.3 How long must it continue In deed the inward and spirituall Circumcision for euer whereupon it is called the couenant of the world that is perpetuall e Gen. 17.7 13 as touching the substance of it to be continued for euer in Christ although in signes it may be chaunged And the mysticall as concerning the externall vse vntill the first comming of Christ 1 Because seeing Christ is the end of the law f that continuall time which was prescribed to the Ceremonies of the law as the Temple g Psal 132 14 and the Sabbath h Exod 31 16 at the time of Christ his appearing and all the blood of the Ceremonies ought to cease in the blood of Christ and because that which was signified to be exhibited by circumcision was exhibited namely the seed of the woman which is Christ the Lord borne of a most chast virgin 2 Because by him the truth of Circumcision was accomplished in the Crosse 1. and that wall broken downe whereby Israell was deuided from the Gentiles so that if any man be now circumcised he denies Christ to be come makes him vnprofitable to himselfe 1 Ioh 1 17 Gal. 5.2 Behold I Paule say vnto you if ye be circumcised Christ shall doe you no good 3 Because the Lord promised by Ieremias 31.31 To make a new couenant not as touching the substance and the scope of it for Christ is the substance and the scope of both the couenants but in respect of the signes which are changed Lib. 32 Cap 9 contra Manich Therefore that which the Iewes say Whatsoeuer is once well done ought in no case to be changed is not true For the occasion of the time being changed that which was well done before good aduise often requireth to be changed saith Augustine The word Holam doth not alwaies signifie a time hauing none end but eyther a long time or else a certaine space of time and limited for a certaine continuance Therefore the Apostles a A●t 15.24 determined that Circumcision was not to be imposed vpō the Gentiles Gal. 2.11 12 and Paule doth ordaine Baptisme by name in the steed of Circumcision Now in that he himselfe did circumcise Timothie he did it not of necessitie but of fauour to maintaine peace and the better to further the course of the Gospell vntill the libertie which is brought by Christ was better knowne c Act. 16.3 Why was Christ who was conceiued and borne without sinne in whom also the couenant of the promised seed was fulfilled and who came also to abolish circumcision he himselfe that circumciseth other mens hearts why was hee circumcised 1 To the intent that hee might testif●e that hee was true man of the stocke of Abraham our brother and fellow of the same couenant with vs for which cause it pleased him to be bound with the signe of the new couenant also that he might shew that he was the keeper of both the Testaments 2 That he might be made subiect to the law and we might be deliuered from the curse of the Law by him d Gal. 4.4 3 That he might ratifie and sanctifie the Circumcision of the fathers in his owne flesh as our Baptisme receiueth vertue from his Baptisme 4 To commend vnto vs the discipline of the law and the vse of the Sacraments 5 Because the truth of Circumcision to wit the taking away of the old birth was not fully compleat in the birth of Christ but in his passion and resurrection And therefore we need not carnall Circumcision in the flesh because as we died with him in his death and rose againe with him when he rose againe So also in him are we circumcised with circumcision not made with hands putting off the bodie of sinne
b 1 Cor. 11 27.29 As for example Abraham and his household c Gen. 17 23 Absalon Achitophel the people d Sam. 15.12 Iudas e Luk. 22.21 Simon Magus f Act. 8.13 But they belong to thē only for whō they are appointed and such as be conteined in the couenant of God according to his words But not to them that be without which doe not professe the name of Christ and to such too as bee liuing and present but not to the deade and such as bee absent Wherein doe the word and Sacraments agree In the Efficient cause for the same person is the Authour of the promise of grace and of the Sacraments to wit the sonne of God the head King Doctor and Priest of the Church and in the instrumentall causes for the selfe same ministers of the word be also the disposers of the Sacraments g Mat. 28.1 1 Cor. 4.19 2 In the matter intelligible or the principall subiect for the same thing is promised in the word and the lawfull vse of the Sacraments the same Christ with his benefits of saluation Therfore as the Gospell testifieth those which turne to God are washed and sanctified by the name of the Lord Iesus and by the spirit of our God 1. Cor. 6.11 And that they are begotten by the Gospell and borne anewe by the worde of the liuing God 1. Corinth 4.15 h 1 Pet 1.23 1 Rom. 6.3 Tit 3.5 And that Iesus Christ is that breade of life Iohn 6.35 So the sacramentes doe testifie that those which are baptised into Iesus Christ are baptised into his death k Ioh. 3.33 36 R●● ●4 23 He● 11 6 Habac 2 4 and are saued by the washing of the new birth 1. And the bread which wee breake is the communion of the body of Christ 1. Cor. 10.16 3 In the forme manner and Instrument wherby we receiue the thing to saluation for the word and sacraments profit none but those which haue or shall haue faith k Ioh. 3.33 36 4 In the end common to them both For both the word and the sacraments are meanes whereby the sonne of God dooth teach and gather the Church vnto himselfe and doth in this life communicate himselfe and all his benefits to them that shall be saued yet so as he is able without eyther of them to worke in the hearts of the godly so often and when it pleaseth him 5 In the effects For as the word of life is to the godly the sauour of life vnto life to the vngodly the sauour of death vnto death 2. Cor. 2.16 So the Sacraments in themselues are to saluation to them that beleeue but vnto the vnbeleeuers they turne into iudgment and condemnation a 1. Cor. 11.29 Euen as a sweet oyntment is healthfull to the doue but it is present death to the flye And as the seed of the word preached so the vse of the sacrament doth not presently bring forth his fruit but in that time which is appointed of God 6 Lastly as the holy Ghost doth begin and strengthen faith by the word so also by the sacraments he doth stirre vp and confirme the same Out of all which followeth that there is such a coniunction and agreement of the outward and inward word as there is of the earthly signes and heauenly things Wherein do the word and Sacraments differ 1 In nature Because the word of the Gospell doth in expresse words declare to wit that we by faith are made partakers of Christ Iesus and of all his merits the sacraments doe represent them by signes or that doctrine which the word doth deliuer cleare and more manifest the Sacraments doe propound the same in a mysterie and not so expresly 2 In the instruments The word is deliuered with the mouth receiued with the eares but the rites of the sacraments are administred with the hands and they are subiect to the eyes and the other senses and doe lead vs as it were vnto the thing present as though wee should nowe in some sort touch Christ himselfe with our handes see him with our eyes perceiue him with our taste and feele him with our whole heart 3 In the subiect to whom The promises of the word are generally and in common pronounced to all alike as well to the vnbeleeuers as to the beleeuers For the word must be preached euen to the vnbeleeuers But the sacramēts are to be communicated seuerally to them which be probably known to be members of the Church and they doe apply and restraine the promises in a speciall manner to euerie one that doth rightly vse these rites that as certainely as thou doest vse the visible Ceremonie according to Christ his institution So certainely thou mayest and oughtest to conclude that Christ also and all his benefits do belong vnto thee 4 In the measure of signifying for the word doth especially teach but the speciall office of the Sacraments is to seale and further the word doth signifie and apply spirituall things but the Sacraments doe rather and more especially represent and applie 5 In order for whereas the Sacraments are the appendices of the word which doe confirme faith it is meet that in such as bee of yeares the preaching of the word should goe before to begin and to increase faith together with a manifest profession of faith before they be rightly administred to any 6 The word is auailable euen without the sacraments as may be seene in Cornelius a Act. 10.2 3.4.44.45 But sacraments without the word are of no force For a seale without a Charter is nothing worth 7 The preaching of the word and that effectuall is required in those that be of yeares that they may bee saued For Faith comes by hearing and hearing by the word of God Rom. 10.17 Except it please GOD extraordinarily to worke in their hearts But the Sacraments are not altogether expresly nor absolutely so necessarie that without exception whosoeuer inioyes them not should therefore despaire of the certaine hope of saluation For that saying of Bernard is most true Not the want but the contempt of the Sacraments is damnable 8 Lastly the word considered by it selfe alone if it bee compared with the sacrament considered by it selfe alone is better and more excellent then it Although if the sacrament bee added to it it doth yet become more excellent and powerfull and more effectuall for the confirmation of faith Therefore we may not ascribe the greater honour to the sacraments then to the preaching of the gospell that is to say we may not attribute more to the seales then to the written Testament of Iesus Christ What ought they to doe who are depriued of libertie to come to the holy assemblies of the Church wherein the ordinarie dispensation of the word and sacraments is performed They ought to inquire for them but if they cannot find them they must then exercise themselues in daily meditation at home both because the kingdom
beleeuer righteousnes or the washing away of his sins obtained by Christ his bloud to testify his adoption into the couenant of grace his engrafting into Christ the regeneration renuing of his nature or repentance vnto amendmēt by the grace of the holy ghost procured vnto him by the same bloud his communion or fellowship with Christ in all his goodnes and heauenly inheritance ioynt free denization among the citizens of the visible Church of the kingdom of heauen to be held of them in the number of the children of God to enioy the same priuiledges which they do To witnes also that being in like maner baptised he promiseth himselfe to be willing to be reckoned among the people of God to defie Sathan sin the world the flesh al false sects promiseth professeth that he wil liue to Christ to the glory of God Or thus baptisme is a sacrament or seale of the righteousnes of faith that is of our entrance or beginning of our incorporation with Christ of the forgiuenes of our sins of the gift of the holy ghost of regeneration whereby we are seale● vnto Christ incorporated buried with Christ that we die vnto sin by the power of the death of Christ that we rise againe to newnesse of life by the vertue of his resurrection a Rom. 6.3 4.5 1 Pet. 3.22 that we are bound to the true worship of God alone to innocency of life and vnity of the Church wheof it is called the stipulation of a good conscience b that is a mutuall obligation of God of man baptised of God witnessing that he receiueth the person baptised into grace and of the person baptised couenanting with God that he will duly worship and loue him wherof it commeth that none are admitted to the holy supper of the Lord but such as are first baptised because he must first be admitted into the church before he be nourished in the same c Mat. 28.19 Act. 2.41 Ioh. 4.1.2 Mat. 3.11 Ioh 3.5 7 Gal 3 27 1 Cor 6 11 10.2 Tit 3.5 Eph 5.26 How many fold is Baptismes Baptisme in specie or kind is one One Lord one faith one baptisme But seeing in baptisme not the water external actiō is to be considered only but also the inward operation of God in this respect Baptisme is twofold External which is also called the baptisme of water wherwith the minister of the word doth baptise and Internal which is also of the spirit wherby Christ only doth clense our hearts by his blood and giueth his holy spirit and yet the one is not to be separated from the other For the externall is a testimony of the internall that is the Baptisme of water is a pledg of spirituall baptisme and of inward washing and clensing which is done by the blood and spirit of Christ And therefore Christ is said 1. Iohn 5.6 to come in water in the spirit in blood VVho is the author or instituent cause of Baptisme God the father the sonne and the holie ghost 1. by the ministery of Iohn Baptist for it is certaine that Iohn was called of God and sent to baptise and preach repentance amongst the Iewes and therefore Christ saith the baptisme of Iohn was by a metonymie from heauen d Luk. 3.2.3 Ioh. 1.38 that is of God and not of men 2 Further Christ by his owne example confirmed baptisme when he suffered himselfe to be baptised of Iohn e Mat. 21.25 Mat. 3.15 And the whole trinity with most plaine and euident testimonie allowed the same in the baptisme of Christ 3 Besides Christ before his passion sent his disciples to baptise a Ioh. 4.1.2 againe after his resurrection he instructed the same his disciples their successors how to teach and baptise among all nations by this commandement Go thorough the world preach the gospell to euerie creature baptizing them in the name of the father and of the sonne and of the holy ghost Mat. 28.19 whereby it appeareth how greate the dignitie of Baptisme is with what reuerence it should be vsed What is the efficient cause The primarie and true efficient cause is Christ himselfe for he indeede it is who baptiseth vs properly truly into himselfe into his death and resurrection Ephes 5.18 It is Christ that clenseth his church with the washing of water in his word The secundary and instrumentall causes are the ministers for so saith Iohn I baptise you with water b Mat. 3 11 Christ commanded them saying baptise c Mat. 28.19 VVhether may ministers be truly said to baptise that is to clense from sinn and to regenerate No doubt they may for Christ did not restraine his commandement to the washing of water but in general termes said baptise them and Iohn 20.23 they are said to remit sins to beget againe or regenerat 1 Cor. 4.15 I haue begotten you againe in Christ by the Gospell And 1. Cor. 3.6 the Apostle saith that he ministred vnto them the spirit not the Letter but yet sacramentally that is so farre forth as he hath administred those sacraments by which as by instruments Christ himselfe doth wash and regenerate Whose office is it properly to administer Baptisme Theirs to whom the Ministerie of the word is commttted for to whom Christ said Preach the Gospell to them also hee said Baptise And Ephes 5.26 the Apostle conioyneth the washing of water with the word of the Gospell So Iohn Baptist and the Disciples of Christ Baptised who also preached the Gospell Whether may many Ministers baptise any one together They may not for none is said perfectly to baptise but hee who vseth these words saying I baptise thee and therefore that he may speake truly the same men must also administer water VVherin differ the Baptisme of Iohn Baptist and of Christ or his Apostles or those Ministers that followed them Not in the Author in substance in doctrine in signe or ceremonie neither yet in effect or signification For the same sacrament is instituted of God and the same forgiuenesse of sinnes and grace of the holy Ghost is signified offered and sealed whether it bee Iohn that administer or the Apostles or the suceeding Ministers a Luk. 1.3 2.3 The onely difference is touching the verie circumstance and maner of the manifesting of Christ for the same baptisme ia called Iohns because he baptised first and Christs because baptisme hath respect vnto him Again Iohn baptised into him which came immediatly after him that is into Christ who should shortly suffer rise again b Act. 19. ● But the Apostles after thē all Minsters now baptise into Christ that hath suffered and is risen againe VVhy doth Iohn say then Mat. 3.11 I baptise you with water and attributeth onely vnto Christ that he baptiseth with the holy Ghost and and fire Not that he denieth that forgiuenes of sins is giuen by his ministerie and the holy Ghost also for
good 1 Thess 5.21 1 Cor. 14.34 And seeing the office of preaching is not permitted to women as neither the administration of the Lords Supper Why should they take vpon them to baptise Also the ancient Church appointed that baptisme should onely be celebrated in the Church or congregation of the faithfull in which place the Apostle plainly chargeth women to be altogither silent much lesse then would he that they should administer the Sacraments Therfore do they twise offend when they administer baptisme in that feined case of necessitie in that they baptise without any commandement nay against the commandement of God and besides they tye to the externall action eternall saluation which is to be sought in the death of Christ that couenant of his grace onely As for that example of Zephora who circumcised her sonne it is eyther to be held as a rash vnlawful act of a foolish and angry woman or as a singular action not to be followed For the Angell was well pleased that the child was circumcised not because she did circumcise him The same may be iudged if any priuate or lay man as they call it should take to himselfe the administration of Baptisme Heb. 5.4 No man taketh that honour vpon him but hee that is called of God as Aaron was Neither doe wee admit that case of necessitie if it compell vs to violate the orders prescribed of God For wee hold this Theoreme Not the priuation but the contempt of Baptisme doth condemne Besides the baptisme of weomen was not long since absolutely condemned in the fourth Councill of Carthage Can. 100. Neither is Augustine to bee allowed in his writing that If a Lay man vpon vrgent necessitie do baptise it is either no sinne at all or a veniall sin No doubt but care should bee had that the Infant may bee baptized by the lawfull and fit Minister but if that may not bee obtained it is to be commended to God that he may Baptise it with the baptisme of his spirit For wee must beleeue that the childrē of faithful Parents be alreadie baptized with the baptisme of the ✿ Flaminis spirit being within the Couenant VVhether forasmuch as Peter Act 10.34.48 preached the Gospell to Cornelius but baptized him not and Paule also did the same as we read 1. Cor. 1.16 Doth it follow therefore that they whose helpe the Apostles vsed in bapzing the faithfull were Lay men No indeede but they were either Euangelists or Elders or Deacons whom for the most part the Apostles tooke with them who sometimes also administred the word of whom at that time there was a great companie Moreouer they did it not of themselues but by the commaundement of the Apostles therefore it was not they but the Apostles that baptized by their hands For he that doth any thing by the ministery of others may be said in a sort to doe it himselfe And whereas Paule in the place before alledged saith that he was sent not to baptise but to preach the Gospell it is to bee taken 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Comparatiuely For it signifieth that hee had not receiued of God peculiarly or principally the office of baptizing but of preaching the Gospell which manner of speaking we find Ier. 7.22 I spake not c. Neither doth he extenuate the dignitie and fruite of baptisme that whereas few had in Charge the office of teaching many might baptize and many might bee taught at once together but baptisme could not bee administred but in order by one and one therefore Paul who excelled in the gift of preaching was instant intēded vpon the most necessary work leauing that to others which they could more easily performe Whether may that baptisme be allowed which is administred by Hereticks or Papists If it bee meant of such hereticks as denie the principles of heauenly Doctrine and vtterly corrupt the essentiall forme of baptisme as the Arrians Somosatenians Manichaeans and Macedonians which are not sincere in the Doctrine of the Trinitie baptizing so in the name of the Father of the Sonne and of the Holie Ghost that they denie neuerthelesse that the sonne and holie Ghost are coeternall coessentiall of equal honour with the Father or that the sonne of God did truely assume the humane nature then such baptisme is not to hee ratified but to be accursed For the essentiall forme being once taken away the matter it selfe is also taken away And therfore it is to bee thought that such are not so much to be rebaptised but as that indeede they should rather be first consecrated with true baptisme who being conuerted to the knowledge of the trueth desire to bee ingraffed into the Orthodoxall Church And this agreeth with the decree of the Nicen Councill But we must iudge otherwise of the baptisme of some other hereticks as the Nouatians and Donatists who deliuered the true doctrine of the Trinitie or of Papists who are out of the way of truth in some part of doctrin who possesse the place of pastors vse the publick ministerie either by cōmon error by long sufferance or by force though they be not to bee accounted as truly called Wherein although there be many things needlesse and superstitious yet stil Christ is retained held at least in title to be the matter it selfe the chiefe head and essentiall forme of the institution and the natiue meaning without idolatry of the words of Baptisme I baptize thee in the name of the Father of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost is retained Moreouer it pleased God in mercie to conserue a remnant of his Church in the middest of Popery it selfe euen as the Israelites continued the vse of Circumcision though they embraced a false and impious seruice of God and the vowes are made in the name of Christ and not of Anti-christ or of any Idoll Therefore that baptisme is not void but of value force for it is the Ministerie of those person but of the Church as yet couerd or hidden in popery They I graunt did sprinkle the head or body but Christ baptized inwardly And therefore such Baptisme is neither to be annihilated neither doth it require Anabaptisticall rebaptizing But forasmuch as they teach wickedly in other matters they giue iust cause why the faithfull should necessarily depart from them as it is written 1. Iohn 5.21 Fly Idols VVhether may they that are truely instructed in Christian Religion with good conscience bring their children to bee baptized of Popish Priests No. 1. It is one thing the validitie of a thing receiued another thing to seeke that is falsly and many waies superstitiously administred 2. Because we should giue no occasion by our example to approue and confirme the corruptions both of the Doctrine and of the Sacraments as also of the superstitious worship of the false and vnlawfull calling of the Ministers of Antichrist for that wee must abstaine from all appearance of euill and from communicating with the sins
1. Cor. 10.3 VVhat is the same but that which also wee haue saith Augustine Therefore the same meat and the same drink but to the vnderstanding and beleeuing But to the not vnderstanding that Manna alone Book de Vti lit paenitent vpon Ioh. tract 21 that water alone but to the beleeuers the same which now for then Christ was to come now he is come was to come and is come are diuers words but the same Christ 5 Because it could not be that Christ locally sitting at the table and communicating with the disciples as it is Mat. 26.29 I will not drinke henceforth of this fruit of the vine should himselfe eate himselfe really and corporally Did Christ Iesus take part of the same signes Truly no lesse then of the Paschall Lambe Concerning which let him which doubteth thinke 1 That the Lord Iesus sanctified the ordinarie Sacraments of both the Testaments in the vse thereof 2 And in instituting of the supper by his example went before in sayings doings that the whole Church may know that the first paterne is to be respected of her in that regard that it was the greatest cause why he did not abstaine whereupon Hierome saith ipse conuiua conuiuium ipse comedens qui comeditur that is Epist ad Hed. biam he is the guest and the feast he is eating and that which is eaten Is there that vertue and that sense of the words of Christ wherewith he instituted this Sacrament that as often as vpon the bread and wine they are recited by the Priest who hath a purpose to consecrate then the substance of bread and wine eyther by Analysis is resolued into the first matter or euen into nothing so that in steed thereof doe succeed the bodie and bloud of Christ or by a simple mutation is turned into the substance of the true bodie and of the true bloud of Christ so that the substance of bread is formed into the flesh of of Christ the bare accidents of breas and wine remayning hanging without a subiect God forbid 1 Because it were magicall to attribute the power of changing the substance of the signes to certaine words mumbled ouer 2 Because in expresse words of the Apostles and Euangelists the true natural substance of bread and wine is affirmed before and after consecration as they call it 1. Cor. 10.16.17 and 11.26 27.28 The bread which we breake is it not the communion of the bodie of Christ And wee that are many are one bread and one bodie because we all are partakers of one bread and As often as yee shall eate this bread ye shew forth the Lords death till he come And Whosoeuer shall eate this bread and drinke this cup of the Lord vnworthily shall be guiltie of the bodie and bloud of the Lord. And Let a man examine himselfe and so let him eate of this bread and drinke of this cup. For whereas they say that it is called bread not which is now but which was before it is confirmed by no testimonie of Scripture or iudgement of sense and besides Math. 26.29 I will not drinke saith hee henceforth of this fruit of the Vine Thus spake Christ after consecration 3 Because the kingdome or God is not corporall meate and drinke Rom. 14.17 4 Because in the proposition the pronoune hoc this demonstratiue doth not demonstrate the bodie of Christ For the transubstantiation saith Thomas is not accomplished but in the last instāt of the pronouncing of the words neither doth it demonstrate the accidēts alone of the bread For the accidētes are not the body of Christ neither doth it demōstrate any wandring thing or singular thing vncertainly determined For there is no Indiuiduum or singular thing which is not something And therefore certaine not wandering vndetermined or indefinite and especially the Demonstratiue Hoc this doth signifie some certaine thing 5 Because it is a wicked thing to be thought and spoken that the bread it selfe is properly and substantially the bodie of Christ 6 Because of this conuersion neither doth the Scripture giue sentence nor sense or reason iudge as of the rod of Moses turned into a Serpent a Exod 4.3 and of the water turned into wine Iohn 2.9 Where the Euangelist said not simply Water but Made wine For the accidents of bread doe plainely shew that bread doth remaine and they which partake of those holy signes doe feele in themselues a taste of wine and the power of the bread and wine This is an vnanswerable reason Framed thus euerie miracle is sensible transubstantiation is not sensible therefore it is no miracle 7 Because the substance the accidents thereof remayning cannot perish neyther can the accidents subsist without a subiect nor be the accidents of bread which are not the accidents of bread 8 Because the substance being remooued and the nature of the signes the similitude affinitie habit relation and Analogie of the signes to the thing signified come to nothing For the bread signifieth the bodie of Christ because it nourisheth strengtheneth and sustaineth which accidents cannot doe 9 Because heere is no word of Christ which may signifie a conuersion or transubstantiation For the verb Est doth not signifie to be made to be changed to be turned And note that which is said to be made cannot properly be said to be for Esse to be and Fieri to be made are said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is to say contradictorily 10 Because a carnall eating of the bodie of Christ is no where prooued in the Scriptures 11 Because it should follow that both the faithfull and vnbeleuers doe receiue the bodie of the Lord and his quickening spirit which neuer can be feuered from his bodie And Augustine saith that They doe not eate the bodie of Christ but which are in the bodie of Christ Because that bodie cannot be spoyled of quantitie nor in an instant and without locall motion be together in heauen in earth vnlesse vpon necessitie we should make an vbiquitie of Christs bodie which the verie transubstantiators do refuse to doe and the Fathers denie and they doe determine contrarie things which say that a bodie and the quantitie are truely present and yet not by meanes of the quantitie 13 Because now the bodie of Christ cannot be separated from the bloud nor the soule from his bodie and concerning Concomitancie there is nothing extant is the word of God 14 Because they write that Victor the third Bishop of Rome died hauing drunk poyson out of a chalice giuē him by his Subdeacon and that Henrie the seuenth Emperour of Lucelburge tooke poyson from the bread taken in the Eucharist by a Monke of Senens one of the preachers order 15 Because infinite discommodities doe follow this Transubstantiation as that the accidents must remaine without a subiect that if it happen that Mice do gnaw the bread they shal be said to gnaw accidēces or that if worms do breed of the bread it
fulnesse of Christ Ephes 5.30 and 4.13 Of which place Zanchius in his comment vpon it discourseth most learnedly What therefore is that which is conioyned vnto vs Christ according to himselfe and according to his effect and grace that is Christ himselfe whole but yet spiritually and to bee considered in minde together with all his merits How is this vnion made whether by a reall actuall and corporall inuisible falling downe of Christs flesh into vs and by a naturall touching with ours or by a connexion contiguitie locall indistance orall perception or by an essentiall commixtion of the flesh of Christ and ours or by an ingresse of his bodie and soule or by a corporall coniunction By none of these For the veritie of the flesh of Christ and his ascension into heauen doe not suffer this Besides also out of so many substances of diuers bodies there should grow a most monstrous bodie but by a copulation or connexion altogether spirituall and supernaturall yet reall and true altogether after a diuine and heauenly manner For if the things which are vnited be respected it is an Essentiall vnion If the truth of the vnion it is reall But if the manner whereby this vnion is made it is spirituall That there is such an vnion it is truly manifest vnto vs out of the both simple sacramentall word of God but for the forme which may containe the exact definition thereof the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the very being of it how it is which some doe importunately require of vs the Apostle by the best right calleth a great mysterie Ephes 5.32 They shall be two in one flesh The reason whereof is such that we cannot in our mindes comprehend it For it is spoken Contradictorily that any thing is accuratelie declared eyther that the forme therof or formal cause is accuratly knowne and is secret For now wee see through a glasse darkely but then shall wee see face to face Now I know in part but then shall I know euen as I am knowne And wee walke by faith not by sight 1. Cor. 13.9.12 and 2. Cor. 5.7 And it is enough in this mysterie to know the efficient cause with the finall and adiuuant causes For also in actions wee then know chiefely when wee see the beginning of the motion saith the chiefe of the Phylosophers booke third that is when wee haue knowen the efficient cause Which is the proper cause or the meanes and the Energeticall that is efficient cause of this our communion with Christ The operation efficacie and working of the holy Ghost doth cause that a man receiueth Christ together with his merits For as the sinewes comming from the braine are scattered into the integrall parts of the liuing bodie and doe ioyne the middle low panch armes hands feet both to the head also to the members by a conueniēt situation function of euery part remaining safe So one the same spirit of Christ comprehending vs a Phi. 3.12 doth so make vs partakers of him that cleauing fast both to Christ the head to his members more straightly and more strongly then the members of the naturall bodie to the bodie wee may neuer be separated from him and from them as Paule teacheth 1. Cor. 12.12 As the bodie is one and hath many members and all the member of the bodie which is one though they be many yet are but one bodie euen so is Christ For so collectiuely by a word taken from the head he calleth both Christ who is the head and the mysticall bodie of that head which is the Church Whereby it commeth to passe from that great bounty of our Sauiour that Christ also himselfe becommeth so neerely ours and we likewise his that before the fathers iudgement seat Christ and the Church not by a hypostaticall ioyning of substances but by a mysticall belonging to this communion are as it were one and the same subsistence and wee are taken to be one Christ most effectually For by one spirit wee all are baptized into one bodie saith the same Apostle that is that we should be gathered into one bodie of Christ and haue beene all made to drinke into one spirit that is with one liuely draught of the Lords bloud b 3.19 Wee are made partakers of his one spirit 1. Corinth 12.13 And Irenaeus saith like as of drie wheat one lumpe cannot bee made without moysture nor one bread So neyther we being many could not haue beene made one in Christ Iesus without the water which is from heauē Therefore Paule 1. Cor. 6.17 He that is ioyned to the Lord is one Spirit with him whereupon also it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is The communion of the holy Ghost a 2 Cor. 13 13 And 1. Iohn 3.24 Heereby we know that Christ abideth in vs euen by the spirit which he hath giuen vs. And Rom. 8.9 If any man hath not the spirit of Christ the same is not his Therefore like as by one and the same soule all the members of the bodie are vnited with the head and are quickened so all the faithfull although they be in earth and their head in heauen yet in verie deed by one and the same spirit issuing from the head and by euerie ioynt of the mysticall bodie yeelding nourishment are vnited with him and being knit together doe abide liue and receiue increase according to the measure of euerie part Ephes 4.16 Gal. 3.5 By what meanes doe wee in like manner communicate with the flesh of Christ Not by nature as wee communicate with the flesh of Adam nor yet by a naturall and corporall instrument but by one supernaturall and spirituall that is by faith alone created in vs by that selfe same spirit whereby Christ doth comprehend vs a Phil. 3.12 by which we doe receiue lay hold vpon and as it were by an instrumentall cause possesse Christ himselfe Concerning which manner Ephes 3.17 the Apostle saith That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith Therfore wee are vnited to Christ by faith Therefore this vnion is made by the Spirit in respect of Christ and by faith in respect of vs. Neyther is their any other manner of vnion with Christ deliuered in the scriptures They erre therefore which say that faith is the formall cause of our vnion with Christ or of our iustification seeing that it is as it were a spirituall hand which receiueth Christ and his merits applied vnto it selfe by the holy Ghost Which are the outward instruments of this communion The Gospell and the Sacraments whereupon it is called the communion or fellowship of the Gospell b Phil. 1.5 because by the preaching of the Gospell and vse of the sacraments wee haue fellowship with Christ and his Church 1. Iohn 1.3 Is this sacramentall coniunction of vs with Christ necessarie It is being as it were the cause of all things which we haue in Chist and no other besides this for as the
〈◊〉 Regencie Burgesship ciuill conuersation a Philip. 3.20 And they are said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to practise policie who are in publicke office or about the common good Whence also Basill calleth the Lyturgie that is that policie which is in the Church according to God and the Gospell Ecclesiasticall policie What is Respublica or the Commonwealth It is a companie of many people vsing the same lawes and that by common consent whether they inhabite one or seuerall Cities What is the Originall cause of Commonwealthes God himselfe that author of mankind who instituted the first societie to wit the band of mariage betwixt Adam and Heuah whence by Gods blessing vpon that mariage and his reall confirmation of that word increase and multiply came an house or priuate congregation out of which anone came first children after that Families and they diuers and distinct one from another The head and chiefe of which house or family was called the Maister or Mistres of the house in Latine Pater or Mater familias These inhabiting neere together by reason both that mans nature is sociable and that they might afford each other mutuall ayde did of those diuers families collected together make Villages in Latine called vici a via of the way and Pagi of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by the doricke dialect a fountaine whereupon they were called Pagani Pagans who came to one fountaine or spring for water but these Villages were built in the fieldes without such walles as now Cities haue After villages walled Cities were erected to preserue the inhabitants from carnall men and wild beasts These were enuironed with a wall or ditch and were called in Latine Vrbes of Orbis a circle because as Varro saith they with ploughes made a rounde circle about that ground which they meant to wall in a Gen. 4.17 Out of one or diuers of the Cities came that societie which wee call the Commonweale But many Cities and townes hauing the same vniforme administration were called in Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Latine Gens in English a Nation But the first Monarchie in which the gouernment was partly Herus a master then Rex a King was established at Babylon in Caldaea after the floud and diuision of languages b Gen. 10 8 By Nimrod a Giant or mightie man the Nephew of Cham by his sonne Cush who to make himselfe great abused his might and tyrannized ouer men as his vassals Some thinke he was after called Belus This Monarchie was both of the Caldaeans Babylonians and Assyrians For Ninus translated it to the Assyrians who made rather Niniue then Babylon the seate of his kingdome which Niniue was founded by Assur the sonne of Sem Noahs sonne c Gen. 10.11 After this Monarchie was that first of the Persians after it of the Graecians and last of the Romans Should there if Adam had continued in his innocencie haue beene vse of Ciuill gouernment There should and such as one as is fully distinguished from domesticall least diuers distinct families should remaine without an head but yet should that commonwealth haue beene guided with greatest equitie iustice and clemencie euen as there is a pollicie and certaine order amongst the companie of the blessed Angels and therefore it should haue beene farre different from these Empires which nowe wee haue after the fall Did subiects goe before and constitute them Princes or Princes goe before and create vnto them subiectes Although Princes and subiectes are Relatiues yet in nature and time subiectes were first But Princes except tyrantes were not as Fathers made by nature but by the subiectes suffragies and consentes and that vpon certaine conditions for the good of subiects Whence is that Daniell the 4.32 Know that the most high gouernes the kingdomes of men and giues them to whom he will By this it appears that subiects are not so much borne for Princes as that Princes ought to rule for the good of subiects How manifold is politicke gouernment Twofold the one lawfull which is appointed and approoued by the word of God and the generall consent of all mankinde the other vnlawfull which is condemned by the same word and by the generall voice of all men How many formes are there of lawfull gouernment Three the first in which one commaundeth by iust lawes which is called a Monarchie Regnum a kingdome or the gouernment of one the second in which Optimates or the best sort doe rule by good lawes and haue chiefe commaund this is called Aristocratia or the gouernment of the best in Latine it is called especially Respublica the Commonwealth and Politia a pollicie the third in which all that is the people themselues doe by themselues beare rule and it is called Democratia or a popular state Which is the best kinde of lawfull gouernment That which is eyther composed of all those three or at the least of two of them such as was the gouernment of the people of Israell as is plaine in the olde testament for one of these doe temper the other so as neyther one Prince or diuers great ones or the people it selfe can abuse their gouernment to tyrannize But yet that gouernment is best vnto euerie people or nation which is most agreeable to the manners nature place commerce and other circumstances of that people and nation What formes of gouernment are contrarie to these three Three other 1 To a Monarchie tyrannie which is when one ruleth vniustly and contrarie to the prescript of holy lawes 2 To Aristocratie Oligarchie that is the rule of a few and it is called faction and in Latine Duumuiratus when two rule or Triumuiratus when three rule Now this is when a few rich men dominere vniustly and besides the lawes thirdly to Democratie that is the right gouernment of the whole people is opposed Ochlocratia that is the power of the tumult or that confusion which causeth mostlye vprore and sedition whilst one will not yeeld to another and this is when the people doe vniustly rule Which are the parts of politicke gouernment Three the Magistrate the Lawes and the people or Subiectes Whence is this word Magistrate deriued Eyther of Magister a Maister which word is deriued of Magis rather as saith Pompeius whence in all things those Offices saith hee are called Magisteria Maisterships which rather cōmaund then others as the Maistership of the horse of villages townes cities whence this word Burgi-magister and magistrare in Festus is for to rule and moderate expences or else it comes of the Greeke word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the greatest whence they who in Greeke are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and in Latine Magistratus are by Suetonius keeping the Greeke word called Megistanes that is peeres or Maximates the greatest in the life of Caligula where he saith that Germanicus would not ioyne with the Megistanes now although there be diuers sortes Magistrorum of maisters yet vse hath obtained that
esteeme it as a doctrine of men not of God as a priuate conceipt not a publike assertion We haue no such doctrine neither haue the Churches of God As for the truth of this in practise looke we but to the daies of Queene Mary when more suffered for religion in 5. years then haue done for treason in 45. since did any thē rebel against the life of that Queen did they not suffer the losse of goods liberty country lands and life praied rather that their soueraigns eies might be opened thē her years diminished And though diuers amongst vs who cannot conforme thēselues are by the sentence of our consistories depriued of their liuings do any of them lay hands vpon the Lords annointed do not the Protestants in France the like at this time And surely if we well consider amongst many arguments to perswade the truth of our religion the falsity of popery this is not the least that our religion without equiuocation is an obedient merciful cōpassionate religion though our aduersaries preferre Turks before vs theirs is a cruel merciles bloudy religion burning al such as denie their breaden God murdering such gouernors as do but fauour of our true Catholicke Christian faith As for this auctor because the auctor of the protestāts Apology for Catholicks may bring him in an enemy to magistracy I wish in some points he had written more sparingly He saith if a gouernour come vpon a subiect to spoyle him and kill him by the law of nature he may defend himselfe We say with Tertullian it is better to be killed then to kill and to answer them defence and offence are not a like He saith Dauid might haue killed Saule we lay with Dauid God forbid I should lay hands vpon the Lords annointed and Dauid being annointed king had another gates warrant than they can shew He saith in publike and notorious tyrannie subiects may craue aide from forrain Princes we say Blessed are they that suffer And blessed be God our gouernors are such as we need not to seeke aid against them He saith the Heluetians did wel in shaking of the yoake of Austria we say a particular is no generall rule He saith that the Iewes did well to rise against Antiochus we say the fact was extraordinary In a word there is nothing in him nor I hope in any Protestant writer which will warrant conspiracies against Princes which doctrine was deuised by the diuell nourced by the Pope learned in Seminaries practised more of late by Iesuites then euer it was before written as Dracoes lawes by the fauor of God in their own bloud And if we read diligētly this cōmon place of magistracie we shall see that the author was no enemy to gouernment who doubtles thinketh that the king is to be honored as a second from God only inferiour to God alone as Tertullian saith You haue added to your author 8. questions answers returne againe vnto him what is the generall end of politicke admistration and magistracie or magistrates Publike peace the preseruation of pietie and Religion or that right lawfull worship of God Vnto which two heads we may referre all lawes ciuill For hence commeth vengeance to the bad defence of the good safegard of goods rewards of vertues discipline of maners execution of malefactors and robbers and in a word the safetie of mans life To conclude by this means the Eutaxie good order of all things yea of religion it selfe is preserued or as Agapetus writeth to Iustinian by this all men being assembled together instructed in Gods word may vnfainedly adore safely keepe without feare practise his vpright righteousnes To which purpose Stigelius hath these two golden verses Vtque alios alij de relligione docerent Contiguas pietas iussit habere Domos That one might teach an other pietie God houses ioyn'd with contiguitie To this end Paule saith pray ye for kings and for all set in authority I say set in authority that vnder them we may liue a quiet and peaceable life in all godlines and honesty What vse make you of this doctrine of mgistracy Surely in regard of the magistrates 1. that they labour to recognize their dignity vse it with good conscience that they maintaine adorne it with the greatest piety to God integrity of life equity towards men care of their charge diligēce in their calling that possibly they can Deut. 1.16 2 Cron. 19 6 7. c. 2. That they may comfort thēselues and hope of Gods aide being indeed in a most troublesome but yet a most holy calling in that they are Gods Ambassadors or viceroys vpon earth yea that they may know that God cares for them according to that of the Psalmist I wil sing vnto thee O lord a new song who giueth saluatiō to kings But in regard of subiects that they with thanks to god acknowledge so great a benefit with good cōscience submit thēselues to Gods ordinance giuing Caesars to Caesar tribute to whō tribute praying for the life of their gouernors maintaine it by the hazard of their own both life liuelyhood if need require What now is cōtrary to this doctrine of magistracie 1 The heresy of the Donatists who tooke away the authority of magistrates in hatred to this order doe reckon vp many persecutions which some magistrates haue made against the Church of God 2. The error of the Anabaptists Libertines who were so called because they seek liberty in outward things for which in the memory of our forfathers they moued the common people to take arms against their gouernors these deny i. that magistracy is to be exercised amongst ●hose christiā spirituall people whom the truth to wit Christ hath made free b Ioh 8.32 2. They admit of no suits in law seats or sentences of Iustice or any defence of a mans selfe wheras the internal liberty of cōscience which God by his spirit worketh in the harts of his elect takes not away the subiection of the outward man due to gouernors c Gal 5 1 2 Cor 7 21 3. They are of opinion that God would not haue Christians at all to become soldiers in warr because Paule saith speaking of spirituall not corporall warfare 2. Cor. 10.7 The weapons of our warfare are not carnall but spirituall But Paule speakes not heere of politicke magistrates but of the Pastors of the Church armed on all sides with the word of truth the weapons of righteousnesse 2. Cor. 6.7.4 They speake euill of such as are in authoritie d Iude 8. 3 The seditious rebellions of the Pope all his papall Cleargy who vpon certaine forged immu●●ties presume to take the sword of authority out of the magistrates hand and to make all Princes vassals to them yet Peter himselfe whose successors they would be commaunds Bishops in plaine termes that they should not be Lords ouer Gods inheritance e 1. Pet. 5 3 yea bids all men to honour the King f 1. Pet. 2.17 But saith a papist Persona praecipientis non continetur in persona loquentis Peter commaunds this in his owne person therfore is not bounden to it in his owne person Well then Peter saith before Feare God is he by this comm●undement excluded from Gods feare It seemeth surely his successors are who because they will not honor gouernors shew to the world that they feare not God for he that feareth the king of kings will honor and obey his vicegerents and Ambassadors 3 The flatteries of such as so either extol the power of princes that they derogate from Gods power or denie that princes in causes both Ecclesiasticall ciuill haue supreme authority headship ouer subiects wher as the princes of Israel are oftē in the scripturs called heads of the people not as the Pope wold be to giue life to the church for so only is Christ the head but to cōmand direct that people ouer whō it pleaseth god to place kings in suprem authority 4 All such maners rites edicts consultations which are not agreeable to that eternall rule of honouring God and louing our neighbour permitting thefts robberies vnbridled and promiscuous lusts or any other monsters of the like nature 5 Seditious cōmotions of turbulēt rebels against their magistrats 6 Anarchy or want of gouernors which is worse then either the excesse or defect of any magistrate a Iudg 17 6 〈◊〉 21.25 〈◊〉 made Chrysostome in his sermon to the people of Antioch to say It were better to haue a Tyrant king then no king and Cornelius Tacitus to say in the first booke of his history It is better to liue vnder a bad prince than vnder none Laus Christo nescia finis 1. Pet. 2.17 Feare God honour the King To feare God is the beginning of this Booke To honour the King is the end of it FINIS
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 appointed vnto wrath as Paul speaketh 1. Thess 5.6 What is Election It is the Predestination of certaine men in Christ to eternal life namely wherby God willing to manifest the glory of his grace hath of his only goodnes mercie determined out of the whole race of mankind being subiect to sinne death freely to adopt in Christ some certain men to cal them effectually to iustifie them that through him they may be partakers of the heauēly inheritāce and of eternall life And this Election is eternall in the purpose of God although in respect of our selues we may thē be said to be elected when God doth execute his purpose in vs. Or electiō is the execution of Gods wil or the act in separating from the rest of the worlde through effectuall calling Iustification Sanctification those on whom he hath appointed from the beginning to bestow euerlasting life What is the principall cause of Election God is the principall cause All that the father giueth mee shall come vnto me No man can come vnto me except the father draw him Iohn 6.37.44 17.9 I pray not for the world but for these whome thou hast giuen me for they are thine Ephes 1.4 God hath elected vs. And Christ because he is the same God with the father sayth that hee hath chosen vs. Ioh 15.16 And the holy Ghost sayd Act. 13.2 Separate me Saul Barnabas for the work wherūto I haue called thē What is the efficient inforciue or precedent cause thereof The inward cause is only in god that is to say his meere Charitie the only goodnes of the wil of God Eph. 1.4.5 He hath chosen vs saieth he before the foundations of the world were laid according to the good pleasure of his wil. And his free loue Ioh. 3.6 Ro. 9.13 In which place saith he Iacob haue I loued the only grace mercy loue of God b Iohn 4.10 19. 2 Tim. 1.9 he hath called vs with an holy calling not according to our works but acording to his own purpose grace which was giuē to vs through Christ Iesus before the world was I say the meer good pleasure of god only respecting it self but excluding al other outward cause which is or can be in mē a Rom. 9.16 So then electiō is neither in him that willeth nor in him that runneth but in god that sheweth mercy where he calleth the thought indeauor of the mind a will the exercise of good works a race that by suppositiō for no mā willeth or runneth of himself but it is god which worketh in you both to wil to do according to his own free goodwill Phi. 2.13 So. Ephe. 1.9 According to the purpose of his good pleasure which he had purposed in himself as if it should be said that god considered nothing without himself wherof he might haue respect in determining or choosing cap. 2. to Tit. 3.5 Doth our election consist of our owne faith holines worthines linage or works foreseen of God or no In no wise 1. because our sure certain saluation is euidently in the singular freely bestowed grace of the merciful god acording to that It is not in him that willeth nor in him that runneth but in god that sheweth mercy Ro. 9.16 2 Because the praise glorie of our electiō is wholy due to god alone he chose vs to the praise of the glory of his grace Eph. 1.6 Moreouer if works foreseen faith or worthines might moue god to choose some the elect might haue wherof they might boast 3. Because god could foresee no worthinesse or good at all in men but what he had determined now already freely to bestow on thē by the benefit of his election who not by custom imitation but by nature are the enimies of god b Rom. 5.10 and sonnes of wrath c Ephes 2.3 dead in sin d Rom. 7.10 Ephes 2.1 vnapt euen to think a good thought as of thēselues e 1. Cor. 3.5 Finallie in whome by nature there is nothing but matter of eternall death damnation f Iob. 15.16 Psal 14.3 Ierem. 10.23 7. Because then there should be no cause why the Apostle should say O man vvho art thou vvhich pleadest against god Ro. 9.20 For he might haue answered that god foresaw the desert of the one of the other yet doth he not say so but flyeth to the iudgments mercie of god Neither the exclamation of the same Apostle Ro. 11.32 of the deapth c. should take place For he might haue declared in a word that some are e●ected others reiected for the workes which he foresaw would be in either 5 Because our saluation is more safe and sure by gods election then by our owne workes which euermore haue a doubt annexed to them a. Rom. 4.16 6 Because then it would follow that faith is of our selues not of god or that we first loued chose god which the scripture pointeth out to be false absurd b. Ioh. 3.5 6.37 8.47 15.10 ye haue not chosen me but I haue chosen you 7 Because that place Rom. 9.11 For yer the children Esau and Iacob were borne and when they had neither done good nor euill that the purpose of god might remaine according to election not by workes but by him that calleth it wat said the elder shall serue the yonger Where the Apostle drawing forth the reiection of Esau For that he was condemned to be his brothers bond seruant as also the election of Iacob because hee was made lord ouer his brother euen ouer the first borne that Esau his seruitude was ioyned with Gods hatred Iacobs rule with Gods loue out of Malachy the best interpreter of Moses chap. 3.e. As it is written I haue loued Iacob and hated Esau So that neyther any goodnes in Iacob nor any other thing in Esau may be accounted the cause eyther of the chusing of the one or reiecting of the other doth euidently impugne this foresight of faith 8. Because there can be no goodnesse in the world vnlesse God had placed and ordeined it 9. Because naturally the efficient cause cannot bee after his effect but Election is the cause of faith and good works for wee are called Elect that we might be holy Ephes 1.4 and without blame not contrary because he foresaw that we would be such for these two are contrary that the godly haue frō their election this that they should be holy and that they should attaine the same election by meanes of their workes And Paul writeth plainely 1. Corinth 7.25 that he had obtained mercie of the Lord that he might be faithfull 10. Because the Logicians rule is manifest VVhatsoeuer is the cause of the cause is also the cause of the thing caused If then faith and workes foreseene were the cause of Election they should also be the cause of Vocation and Iustification which are the effectes