Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n condition_n faith_n justification_n 3,635 5 9.8445 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A13952 A briefe institution of the common places of sacred divinitie Wherein, the truth of every place is proved, and the sophismes of Bellarmine are reprooved. Written in Latine, by Lucas Trelcatius, and Englished by Iohn Gawen, minister of Gods word.; Scholastica, et methodica, locorum communium s. theologiæ institutio. English Trelcatius, Lucas.; Gawen, John, minister of Gods word. 1610 (1610) STC 24261; ESTC S103024 183,328 620

There are 19 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

cause of salvation Efficient Act. 23.48 Ans There is 〈◊〉 Consequence from the state marke and conditiō of the persons which we● elected to the causes of Election eyth● impulsiue or meritorious Rom. 8.29 Answere The Pres●ence or fore-knowledge of God is n● the Consequent or the Effect of thing but the Antecedent neyther dooth● signifie in the place cited a foreseeing of the beginning but the speciall lo● of God but the fore-knowledge of approbation is one and that of naked science and knowledge is another Heb. 11.6 It is one thing to tre● of the first cause of Election and another thing of the meanes and subordinate causes for faith is the proper and onely Instrument of our Iustification and reconciliation with God of which mention is made in this place Rom. 11.20 It is one thing to treate of the perseverance of the Saints but another thing of the election neyther ought those which are the meanes to bee mingled with the Causes and beginnings Places for good Workes Rom. 8.29 The Conformity of ●●e Image of the Sonne of God is the ●onsequent of Predestination but not ●e Efficient meritorious cause there●f and those words which are to bee ●●pounded according to the sense of the ●postle by the vnderstanding of the ●erbe Substantiue Were ought not to ●e taken in a contrary meaning 1. Tim. 2.20 to treat of the seales of ●aith which of the Apostle are reckoned ●o be two the one Inward the note or ●nowledg of divine approbation the other outward the avoiding of iniquity of which the Apostle speaketh in this ●lace as also to treate of the cause and beginning of our salvation and election are things diverse Apoc. 3.11.4 It is one thing to treate of the crowne of Ministrie and another thing of the crowne of eternall life and the worthinesse which in scripture is attributed to the elect is not 〈◊〉 naturall excellencie but of meerenes o● fitnesse by God given freely also the● is one by inherence in the faithfull and another by imputation of which mention is in this place Distinctions for the matter I. THe matter of Election is called so Equivocally eyther Ex qua out 〈◊〉 which and it is the counsel of God 〈◊〉 Circaquam about which and it is ma● or in which and it is Christ as the Mediator II. MAn is considered eyther Commonly without any considerati●● of the qualities or Singularly as he i● a Sinner after that manner in the f● Act of Election and Reprobation b● after this in the second III. THe number of the Elect and Reprobates the person numbering and numbered is certaine though both be not certainely knowne vnto vs. For the FORME I. THe Forme of Predestination consisteth in two thinges in the Action and manner thereof the Action is Adoption the maner is in Christ in whom as in a bond lying betweene the vnion of vs with him was made II. PVrpose Prescience Predestination are distinguished in God not by time but by order Purpose signifieth the whole counsell of God Prescience the first degree thereof Predestination not only them but also those which depend on them III. DEcree together with the execution therof as they ought neyther to be confounded or mingled together nor plucked asunder so it is needefull they should bee ioyned together and distinguished all which distinction is from that which is the latter from the maner of the thinges effected OF CREATION The Part Confirming CHAP. III. THat sorte of Divine Actions immanent wee haue already declared in the doctrine concerning Predestination now by order wee passe to Gods actions externall Of these according to the double obiect there ought distinctly to be had a double respect and notice for those divine actions which passe over vnto the Creatures doe eyther belong to this common nature the common beginning of things naturall or to speciall grace the speciall beginning of thinges supernaturall vnto the communion whereof Man is to bee advanced Those which concerne Nature men distinctly consider to be eyther that first beginning or springing vp as it is a In fieri in the doing or making or the conservation of the same as b In sacto it was already done or made that wee are wont to expresse by the name of Creation but this by the name of Providence The Worke of Creation is known of vs two wayes the one common according to the common consideration of all thinges which were created even as the generall and every speciall of them haue their proper conditions in nature which were effected since that first vniversall beginning in the very time of Creation the other particular according as there is a singular respect and expresse marke of the same the first maner properly belongeth to Divinity the second to the science of thinges Naturall Creation therefore Theologically is the first bringing foorth of Nature and of thinges in nature done or made by God in the beginning of time and finished in the space of six dayes vnto his owne glory and the salvation of the Elect. The Cause Efficient of Creation is God for the thinges created were not by one vnderstanding conceyved and by another procreated as the Valentinians thought not by another Nature which Cerinthus calleth one while the Wombe another while the Generall Worke not by the Angels as the Symonians deemed not by their peculiar spirites called Daemones as the Philosophers Lastly not by Fortune as Epicures but by God they were produced and disposed c Psal 33.9 Esa 40.28 which beside the Scripture eyther the distinct workings of the three persons or the nature or maner of the Creation or lastly the manner of beginning doth convince The persons working in the Creation are as the Causes first the Primordiall Cause is the Father d Act. 17.24 the working cause is the Sonne e Col. 1.16 Ioh. 1.3 and the perfecting or finishing cause is the holy Ghost f Gen. 1.2 Psal 33.6 The manner of Creation is two-folde the one by the bringing forth of things the other by the most wise setting of them in order g Iob. 9.8 Esa 40.22 both of them is from God eyther immediately or mediately The consideration of beginning is that it should loue singularity and there can bee no vniversall first thing vnlesse it bee one neyther one vnlesse it be God The matter of Creation ought to bee distinguished two wayes according as there is one creation primary immediate another secondary and mediate There was no primary matter of creation neyther with God coeternal nor of God existent or as a materiall cause put or spread vnder the work of this creatiō for God gaue not immediately the beginning of nature by nature but by himselfe for that he is of infinit power he necessarily excludeth all matter wherfore out of nothing as it were the bound God brought forth h Psal 33 9. Rom. 4.17 Heb. 11.3 nature by his owne power Of the second and mediate Creation the
workes whereas these are two divers propositions to bee without workes and to iustifie without workes The third Argument is taken from the removal of the Causes whereas Faith alone Iustifieth which causes are of Bellarmine referred to three heades cap. 16. The first is the authority of the word whervnto the Adversary answereth That it is no where taught in the scripture That wee are iustified by faith onely Answ Though the Particle alone be not expressed in the Scripture yet the signification of that word is expressed by Synonimall formes of speaking which are these 1. Without Workes 2. Of Grace freely by Grace 3. The exclusiue Particles which are two particulars Galat 2.16 but by Faith Luc. 8.30 By beleeving onely by which formes of speaking as all works aswell Ceremoniall as Moral are excluded so faith alone is included as the only Instrument of Iustification The second head is the will of God who will haue vs iustified with the alone condition of faith The Adversary answereth that it contradicteth the Scripture which layeth downe also the condition of Repentance Answere 1. Repentance is the condition of faith and of the person justified but not properly of Iustification 2. It is one thing to treate of the condition of Iustification but another thing of the cause and Instrument therof for a condition noteth a consequent or effect but a cause the Antecedent or Efficient 3. Neyther is our Iustification with the condition of Faith as Faith is a habite in vs but as it apprehendeth Christ out of vs. The third is the nature of faith which alone hath that property that it apprehendeth Iustification The Adversary answereth that Faith doth not properly apprehend Answ There is a double apprehensiō the one of knowledge in the vnderstanding the other of trust in the Will both these Faith includeth which in respect of the vnderstanding and the will apprehendeth Christ but the nature of the Sacramentes is otherwise which were instituted not that they might iustifie but that they might confirme the party iustified in the feeling of his Iustification The fourth Argument is from the maner of Iustifying for we affirme that faith Iustifieth not by the maner of cause worthinesse or merite but by relation onely which Bellarmine denyeth and proveth by three arguments that faith iustifieth by the manner of merite and cause cap. 13. The first is taken from testimonies which teach that faith is the cause of iustification Rom. 3. Rom. 5. Ephes 1. Answer First for Faith is one thing and by Faith is another thing The one is of the cause the other of the Instrument Secondly neyther is the maner of works the same with that of faith in opposition because workes haue the nature of righteousnesse inherent in vs but faith the nature of righteousnesse imputed vnto vs. Thirdly nor doe the places which are alleadged note the cause of Iustification but eyther the Instrument thereof or the quality and state of a man iustified The second is taken from those testimonies which testifie that faith is the beginning of righteousnesse and hereby the formall cause of Iustification Rom. 4. First there is a two-fold imputation as in that very place the Apostle noteth the one of debt the other of grace and the Apostle trea●eth of this and not of that Secondly ●●th Faith is the instrumēt it is no strange ●hing if as it is vsually the manner of ●nstruments the name and the office of the thing whereof it is but the Instrument bee attributed vnto it 1. Cor. 3. First A foundation is vsually considered two wayes properly or by a Metalepsis properly Christ is so but by a Metalepsis Faith which hath respect to Christ For distinctions sake the one may bee called i Primum ad primū the first the other to the first Secondly a foundation is eyther vnderstoode to bee as a part of a building or a ground of a building Christ and Faith are sayd to be the foundation of the Church not properly as they are a part thereof but as they are the Ground and Base of the same Act. 15. First the hearts are justified by faith not as the cause but as the Instrument not by effecting but by affecting or applying Secondly the place it selfe doth manifestly distinguish Faith which is onely the inner instrumētal cause from the cause properly Efficient to witte the Father in the Sonne by the holy Ghost The third is taken from those Testimonies which teach that Remission of sinnes is obtayned by Faith Luke 7. Ans First men are sayde to bee saved both properly of God our onely Saviour and figuratiuely by the meanes which it hath pleased God to vse eyther inward as faith or outward as the voyce of the Gospell and the signes thereof Secondly the efficacy of faith wholy dependeth vpon the object which it apprehendeth and it is sayde to saue for that it is the effectuall and necessary Instrument of Salvation like as the Gospell is called the power to every one that beleeveth vnto salvation Rom. 4. Ans First The Particle wherefore noteth not the cause of the Consequent but of the Consequence Secondly it is there shewed not what the habite of faith deserveth sith faith and merites are opposites but what is the vse and effect of true naturall faith Rom. 10. Answ First the Apostle doth neyther make preaching the cause of faith nor faith the cause of invocation and salvation but teacheth that as that is the Instrument of the one so this is of the other Secōdly the degrees of Salvation are reckoned vppe by the Apostle which are badly confounded with the causes thereof Thirdly those things which Faith obtayneth by Invocation it obtayneth as an Instrument and not as a Cause because all the power of Faith consisteth in Relation Heb. 11. Ans First men please God by faith not for faith Secondly whatsoever examples are cited they note not the merite of Faith but the vse and effect thereof The Fift Argument is fee from two principles the first whereof is the Formal Cause of Iustification which the Adversary affirmeth to bee righteousnesse inherent in vs The second is the merite and necessity of good workes Of the former wee shall treate in the explication of the Formall Cause of the latter in the place concerning good workes DISTINCTIONS IN DEfence of the Materiall Cause I. THere is one Iustice Create and another Increate the one is of God of Christ as hee is God the other of the Creature and of Christ as hee is a creature II. THe Create righteousnesse is eyther of the Person or of the cause by that some person is judged just by this a righteousnesse of the Cause of some controversie is vnderstoode the righteousnesse of the Person to speake properly is in Christ III. OF the person there is one inherent another Imputatiue that was in Christ this is in vs by the worke of the Spirite for Christ IIII. INherent righteousnesse is eyther originall or habituall or else
Rom. 8.30 Iustification and Glorification that is a gratious beginning ●roceeding together with a glorious pe●●ection of divine blessings by the perfect coniunction of Christ or by the perfect ioyning of them together with Christ The End Remote is Gods glory the o Subalterna meane or indefinite indifferent End is that we should be holy the last end is life and glorification p Eph. 1.6 And this is the manner of Predestination in it selfe and the causes therof simply wee must now consider of the opposites and contraries of the same Of these although there bee a diverse respect yet Sinecdochically it is wont to bee signified and shewed by the common name of reprobation in which significatiō it is distinguished both from eternall Predestination which abusiuely is called Reprobation as also from that part of Gods decree which eyther Logically is called Non Election or Theologically a q Preteritio passing by which properly is called Reprobation But forasmuch as being opposite to Predestination whereof wee haue treated it signifieth that whole fore-ordinance and maner of order vnto the end wherevnto the Reprobates are appointed of it we must speake in the first signification Now Reprobation is an Act of Gods pleasure or decree whereby God from everlasting hath purposed in himselfe to passe by the greater part of the Vniversality of Creatures as touching the communion of his healthfull and supernaturall grace and glory and the same also before hand to condemne that were not like to abide or 〈◊〉 in the integrity of their first originall estate according to his iustice for their sinnes to the setting forth of his glory The Cause Efficient of this reprobation first principall is God second impulsiue is his owne pleasure and will r Pro. 6.3 Eph. 1.11 Prou. 16.4 But this act which in God is simple vniforme as touching vs in respect of the order vnto the end ought two waies to be considered and distinguished for there is in God first an act of ſ Preteritionis passing by called of the Schoolemen a Reprobation Passiue and Negatiue before all thinges and causes that were like to be in the thinges or from the thinges whereof no other reason eyther can be giuen or ought to be sought besides the pleasure and will of God t Rom. 9.11.12.13 Mat. 1.23 Then there is an Act of the preparation of punishment or fore-condemnation from everlasting u 2. Thes 2.9 Rom. 6.23 called of the Schoolmen Affirmatiue and Actiue Reprobation before all thinges indeed but not before the causes fore-known and considered to bee like to bee in the thinges or from the thinges but it is a respectiue Act of sinne as the necessary Antecedent because as God in time iustly punisheth and condemneth man for sinne so God also from everlasting hath iustly decreede to punish man and fore-condemned him by or from the x Ex Hypothesi supposition of sinne The matter of Reprobation or rather the right obiect are all and singular Reprobates and the condition of this matter or obiect according to that double respect of the Act ought two wayes to bee considered for as touching that former Act of God and passing by the matter of Reprobation is considered to bee Man in generall without any respect of any quality y Rom. 9.11 but as touching the latter which is of Predamnation or appointment vnto punishment the matter of Reprobation is man in that he is a sinner or for his sinnes to be punished by the necessity of Gods iustice z Eph. 2.3.5 The form special is indeed the not appointment of thē into the adoption of Children but in common it is that whole manner of order vnto the end in respect of both the Acts to wit both of Preterition and Predamnation Of Preterition whereof this is the manner of order Prescience or fore-knowledge not that which is of speciall affection and good wil but that of vnderstanding and knowledge in God which otherwise is also called in the Scriptures the Purpose of God whereby God foreknew them that were to be reiected both who and how many they should be fore-appointment by which hee hath determined the Reprobation of them that were forknown in not choosing them by a speciall loue in Christ but in leaving them to themselues in their owne nature which fore-appointment is wont to bee signified sometime by the name of Preordaining sometimes of coagmention and sometimes of hatred a Rom. 9.22 Of Predamnation and the execution ●ereof this is the order a iust forsa●ng which is eyther of triall God ●ot giving his grace b Rom. 9.21 or of punish●ent God taking away all his saving ●tes and delivering them into the po●er of Sathan c Ioh. 13.2 1. Thes 2.9 10. Hardening and those things which ●se to accompany d Rom. 9.18 the same even vn●o the guilty condemnation of man which of some are called the Effectes of Reprobation but more fitly and truely ●he Consequents or degrees of order vnto the end The end of Reprobation first remote is the setting forth of Gods glory e Rom. 9. second the meane or Indifferent end the declaration of the liberty of God f 2. Rom. 9.21 the last and neerest g Rom. 9 28. the execution of his iustice in the punishment of the Reprobates OF PREDESTINATION The Part Confuting I. SOlutions or distinctions for the cause efficient Predestination signifieth two thinges the determination of th● end and the ordinance of the mean● vnto the end of both the first cause i●pulsiue is the will of God II. PRedestination is eyther taken mo● specially for the Predestination o● the Saints and differeth not onely i● the thing but also in the manner from Election or more generally for every fore-appointment of order vnto the certaine end in which signification the three partes thereof may be put to wit the appointment of the beginning the means and end III. REprobation is taken eyther Negatiuely for not Election or affirmatiuely for the preparation of punishmēt IIII. IT is one thing to treat of the first act of Predestination and Reprobation which is Gods decree of choosing and 〈◊〉 choosing or passing by which is ●solute and another thing to treate 〈◊〉 the second which is respectiue of ●posing indeed vnto the means wher● the cause is in God onely but of ●t choosing vnto sinne whereof the ●use is in man but the ordination from ●od V. THe second Act of Reprobation or the ordination vnto punishment is ●●stinguished into that which is simple ●●d compound or comparatiue the one that whereby one is ordayned vnto ●unishment but the other whereby in 〈◊〉 vnequall condition the one is more ●en the other the cause of that with●ut God supposeth the merite of man ●ut of this without God no reason can ●e given The Places for faith fore-seene 2. Thes 2.13 Ans The conclusion is ●f no force from the cause of salvation ●nstrumentall to the
thereof in it selfe and the manner of the truth thereof in vs. Of the truth in it selfe there are two bounds Righteousnesse and the Imputation thereof between these there is a relation because Christ hath perfect righteousnes for no other end then that hee might impute it nor imputeth any other thing then righteousnesse nor is our righteousnesse any otherwise then by Imputation The manner of the truth thereof in vs is in the Scripture two wayes limitted whereof the former teacheth vs that wee are iust not in our selues not in our owne righteousnesse but by the righteousnesse of Christ which being out of vs is made ours by right of giving Hence wee are sayde to be made the righteousnesse of God in him n Cot. 5.21 the second teacheth vs that we haue righteousnesse as Christ hath our sinne now he hath it not subiectiuely or inherent but by imputation Hence is that o Autithesis oppositiō made by the Apostle in the place already cited to wit of Christ whome God made sinne for vs and of vs who were made the righteousnesse of God in him And according to this forme of Iustification there is one and alike Iustification in all men though in diverse according to the measure of him that apprehendeth it be after a divers maner modified The former ●efore of Iustification is not an ha●●●al sāctity inherent in vs for albeit Iustification Sanctification agree in the Efficient causes as well Gods grace as Christs merit in the Instrumentall cause to wit faith by receyving that of the one and by effecting that of the other Lastly in the scope and end for they tend to one end saue that the one is as the cause the other as the way yet they much differ both as touching the substance and as touching the Adiuncts As touching the substance that is as touching all the causes for the matter of Iustificatiō is the obedience of Christ of Sanctification our owne obedience the one perfect the other vnperfect the forme thereof that is the Imputation of Christs obedience but of this the drawing backe of our minds from vnpure to pure qualities Of Iustification there is no neerest and inward efficient cause but of this Sanctification the wil of man is being the beginning of human actions the end of that is the peace of conscience but of this an open testifying of the reconciling of our selues with God As touching the Adiuncts because they differ first in the maner of effecting for that is effected by right of donation this by maner of alteration secondly by the Effects that absolveth vs in the iudgement of God This doth not Thirdly and lastly in continuance for That shall haue an end with this life This shall endure for ever The Forme of Iustification taken passiuely is the application of Faith Hence it is that wee are sayde to bee saved p Per fidē fide ex fide by faith through faith of faith of which wee haue spoken in the cause Instrumentall q Mar. 5.39 Rom. 3.7 Gal. 1.16 Eph. 2.8.9 Tit 3.5 The End of Iustification taken actiuely is the glory of God in the wonderfull tempering of his Iustice and mercy r Eph. 1.5.6.7 Rom. 3. ●6 Of his iustice that he would haue his Sonne to satisfie it of his mercy that he would impute his sonnes satisfaction vnto vs. ſ Rom. 5.1 Tit. 3.7 The End of Iustification taken passiuely is peace of Conscience and eternall salvation OF MANS IVSTIFICATIon before GOD. The Confuting Part. Distinctions in defence of the Definition of the Name or Word I. IN the searching out of the interpretation of a Word the derivation and composition of the Word is not simply to bee looked vnto but the vse and the propriety of the same II. THe vse of the Word Iustification is vsually two-fold for eyther Iustification is taken properly or in a signification translated from the speciall to the generall by an abuse of speech it importeth all those thinges which follow Iustification III. THere are two orders of Testimonies concerning Iustification the one Legall the other Evangelicall the testimonies of the Legall Iustice do teach what manner of iustice standeth before the Tribunall of God the testimonies of the iustice of faith or those which are Evangelicall doe some pertaine to the causes of Iustification some to the outward signes and testimonies of the person iustified Lastly some to the comprobation of the worke done by faith The Places by which Bellarmine prooveth that to iustifie signifieth to make iust cap. 3. lib. 2. de Iustitia Rom. 5.16.18.19 Ans First there is a manifest opposition of condemnation and justification Now whereas thinges opposite are vnder the same kinde Genere it must needes be that iustification as well as condemnation is a judiciall Act. Secondly as condemnation is never taken out of that signification which belongs to places of judgment and pleading so justification which is made before God is never taken from the effect of infused grace Thirdly the judgement of God is according to truth as well when hee pronounceth vs just for the imputed righteousnesse of Christ as when hee maketh vs just by the power and vertue of his Spirite both truely though diversly the one perfectly the other vnperfectly Dan. 12.3 Ans Iustification in the signification belonging to courts of pleading is two-fold the one immediate the other mediate of this speaketh the Prophet whereby God by his Ministers absolveth sinners as by the same hee bindeth and holdeth sinners and it is a Figure familiar in the Scripture to attribute that to the Instrument which is proper to the cause Esa 53.11 Answ First the Hebrew word in the third conjugation signifieth to pronounce one just as in the first it signifieth to be just positiuely Secondly the Text hath not in his Knowledge but in the knowledge of himselfe whereby is declared not the manner of Iustification but the Instrument or faith expressed by a circumlocution a Per Periphrasm Thirdly it is one thing to treate of Christs righteousnes which in him is inherent subjectiuely and another thing of that which by Grace is imputed vnto vs. Fourthly Christs satisfaction is the meritorious cause of Iustification which is become onely ours by benefite of Imputation Apoc. 22.11 Ans Iustification in the iudicial signification noteth out two things according as there is a two-fold Court the one of Conscience before God the other of holinesse before men for it importeth to bee absolved eyther before God by the righteousnesse of faith or before men by the righteousnesse of workes In the first signification the sense is thus Hee that is iust let him be iustified still to witte by applying vnto himselfe the continuall remission of his sinnes and the imputation of Christs righteousnesse In the second the sense is thus Hee that is iust let him bee iustified still that is he that desireth to bee iust let him bee informed more and more vnto Iustice and
holinesse eyther of both wayes the iudiciall or law signification remayneth 1. Cor. 6.11 Answ First there is a fallacy of conioyning for these three are not ioyned together as if they were b Synonyma of one signification but as subordinate and opposite to the three-folde accusation going before for to those corruptions whereof hee treated he opposeth washing to defiling or vnrighteousnesse fornication covetousnesse hee opposeth Sanctification but to Guilt which hee expresseth in these wordes They shall not inherite the kingdome of God hee opposeth Iustification Secondly hee treateth of Iustification which is made in the name of Christ and not of that which is by a certaine infusion or inherent righteousnesse In defence of the Efficient Cause of Passiue Iustification or the Instrumentall Cause of the Actiue against Bellarmine from the 13. Chap. lib. 1. De Iustificatione to the 19. THat Faith alone doth not iustifie Bellarmine proveth by fiue Arguments First is That the Fathers and Scriptures doe attribute the power of Iustifying not onely to Faith but also to other vertues Chap. 13. Distinctions according to the rancke of his Arguments I. FAITH in the Scriptures and with the Fathers is wont two wayes to be considered one way properly according to the Nature of Faith simply the other may figuratiuely that is by a h Metaleptice transumption correlatiuely whereby faith apprehendeth her obiect after the first manner Faith is sayde not to be alone after the latter it is sayde alone to iustifie II. Iustification which is the actiō of faith is considered two wayes eyther generally for that whole missery of our reconciliation with God or particularly for the principall and speciall part thereof which consisteth in the application and imputation of Christes righteousnesse The ground of the one is Generall the Instrument of the other is particular III FAith is considered one way in the person of him that is iustified another way in iustification it selfe another way in the effect of Iustification In the person of him that is iustified it is the roote and beginning of all vertues In the act of Iustification it is the instrument in the effect it is the dore of life the gate and way into life IIII. THe feare of the Lord in the Scriptures and with the Fathers is taken aequivocally for it signifieth eyther the fore-goer or antecedent of Faith or faith it selfe or the consequent of Faith the Antecedent of Faith because feare is the first degree of faith vnto Iustification First not in time but in order of nature Faith it selfe because the feare of God in Scriptures very often signifieth the whole worship of God knowledge and trust that is Faith it selfe The consequent of Faith because the feare of God or that desire to avoyde sinnes and to performe righteousnesse followeth faith as the fruite the good tree Now whatsoever things are attributed to the feare of God by the Fathers or in the Scripture they are attributed eyther in the second signification by a Synecdoche or in the third by a Metonymy V. THe Word Hope is sometimes taken for trust it selfe according as the same Verbe signifyeth sometime to trust sometime to hope In which signification it is taken of the Fathers and in the Scripture in the places cited by Bellarmine sometimes it is taken oppositely so that faith is of things past and present hope onely of things to come VI. TRue loue which in this world can never be perfect is neyther in time not nature before Iustification seeing that it beeing as it were the effect by issuing forth followeth faith as the neerest cause neyther doe the places of Scripture which are alleadged point out the cause of the remission of sinnes or of Iustification but the Adiunct and the necessary consequent thereof VII THere is a two-fold repentance propounded in the Scriptures a true and an hypocriticall Faith defineth and limitteth the true but the want of faith the hypocriticall and therefore those things which are attributed in the scriptures and by the Fathers to the true repentance they are attributed not in respect of it selfe simply but in respect of faith d Secundū quid after a sort Adde further that by a frequent and vsuall Metonymy in the Scripture that is attributed to the Effect which is proper to the cause VIII THe Purpose and desire truely to receaue the Sacrament as also a purpose and desire of a new life and obedience are excluded from Iustification but not from the person justified for the cause of Iustification is one thing the quality of the person justified is an other thing neyther are the effectes to be confounded with the causes or the causes with their effects The second Argument If Faith cannot be seperated from loue other vertues then it alone cannot Iustifie Cap. 14.15 DISTINCTIONS I. IT is one thing to treate of Faith as it is considered absolutely as a quality but another thing as it is considered relatiuely as an Organ and Instrument being absolutely considered it cannot be separated from good works but considered relatiuely it justifieth without workes because it alone is the Instrument of Iustification and not workes so it is never alone yet it alone worketh in the worke of Iustification II. ANd yet it followeth not that faith justifieth with vices as it justifieth without workes because Faith onely is cōsidered exclusiuely without works as it iustifieth Quae iustificans est and not what it is iustifying III. WHerefore that third point also is in cōsequent that faith if it be alone shall also alone iustifie vs because as Iustification is never separated from faith so neyther is faith from workes As also that is an Inconsequent if the eye alone seeth therefore it shall see although it bee alone IIII. BVt that which the Adversary proveth that true faith may in very deed bee separated from loue and other vertues leaneth vpon no ground and first as touching the places in Iohn 15. there is speech of faith historicall in 1. Cor. 13. Of faith of miracles In Iames 2. Of faith temporall or hypocriticall Secondly as touching the argument taken from the state of the Church hee playeth with the doubtfull signification in the word Faithfull who in the places now cited are so called for the outward profession of faith and the communion of the Churches and not according to the inward truth and formall manner of faith and the Church Thirdly as touching the argument taken from the proper manner of faith and loue it leaneth both vpon a false consequent and a false supposition for this is a false consequent in that albeit there bee two vertues yet they may mutually be separated the one from the other This also is a false supposition in that loue springeth not necessarily from faith for God hath given Faith as the mother begetter of loue Fourthly as touching the absurdity there is none for Iustification shall not therefore depend vpon workes because it is not without
cited as that of the Councell of Carthage and of Milevitum out of Augustine For those Councels doe treate against the Pelagians who at that time denied the baptisme of children and some are suspected as that of the Tridentine Councell and the Testimonies of the Popes III. INfants ought two wayes to bee considered eyther according to common nature or the singular manner of the covenant and grace that way they are conceived in sin but this way they haue obtayned remission of sinnes by the promise In Defence of the Effects of baptisme against the same Cap. 4 and the rest that follow I. SInne dwelling in vs is by baptisme taken away by three meanes and degrees First because it is not imputed Secondlie because by little and little the body thereof is destroyed Thirdly because in death it shall vtterly bee taken away by the power of the same bloud of Christ wherewith wee are washed in Baptisme II. IT is one thing to speake of the cause of Iustification and another thing of the Instrument thereof lastly an other thing of the sealing the cause is the merite of Christ the Instrument is Faith and the sealing is Baptisme III. THe new and vncertaine devise of the Schoolemen concerning the Character or Marke which cannot bee defaced is with the same facility denyed as it is affirmed chiefly whereas neyther Scripture teacheth nor necessary reason sheweth nor authoritie of Fathers proveth any such Character Adde further that the chiefe reason why Baptisme is not iterated is not the impression of the character but Gods onely Institution OF THE LORDES Supper The Part Confirming CHAP. XIII THe other Sacrament of the christian church immediately instituted of Christ for the perpetuall vse thereof is The Lords Supper whereof though there be divers appellations both in Scriptures and with the Fathers for in the Scriptures it is called The body and bloud of the Lord The New Testament The Communion The breaking of bread The Lords Table The bread and the cup The Communicating of the body bloud of Christ a Mat. 26.28 Luc. 22.20 Act. 20.7 1. Cor. 11.25 1. Cor. 10.21 1. Cor. 10.16 which by the Fathers First it is called a gathering together The Eucharist or Thankesgiving Publ●●g Administration Secondly the Lat●●● Offering because of collections and sacrifice for the remēbrance of Christs Sacrifie yet most properly by this appellation Of the Lords Supper the thing it selfe hath most fitly beene expressed and indeed it is called The Supper with respect had both of the thing and of the time because it is a holy banquet of the soule and not of the belly instituted of the Lord and that in the Evening but the Lordes in respect both of the Author who is the Lord and of the End which is the remembrance of the Lord. Now it is defined to be A Sacrament of the New Testament instituted of Christ consisting of the Signe and the thing signified proportionable by an Analogicall Relation and action of themselues betweene themselues whereby the full growne members of Christ and his church are trayned vp and taught in the lawfull vse of the visible signes concerning the true and spirituall communication of the body and bloud of Christ vnto life eternall The Efficient Cause of the Lordes Supper ought to be considered eyther as instituting or as vsing and administring the same that is the principall cause but this is the serving or administring cause The Principall or Instituting cause is the Lord from whome it hath beene customably called the Lordes Supper to wit Christ God and man our onely Redeemer instituting the mystery of his body and bloud by the oblarion whereof hee redeemed vs b Rom. 15 18. 1 Cor. 11.23 Of this mysticall and divine Institution there are two parts Christs Deeds and his Words by the one wherof hee limitted and left an example of Administration by the other a doctrine of Institution Of Christs Deeds wherby the manner of the lawfull publicke office or administratiō is declared there are three partes according as concerning both signes which Christ receyved he orderly vsed holy and ceremoniall actions c Mat. 26.26 Mat. 14.22 Luc. 22.19 1. Cor. 11 24. The first is Blessing and Thankesgiving for the Scripture vseth those two words the one Mathew Marke vseth the other Luke and Paul both signifying the one selfe same thing to witte how Christ by prayers to God by thanksgiving and all that holy action prepared appointed and sanctified the Bread and Wine to a holy vse that they might bee a Sacrament of his Body and Bloud not by their owne nature but by divine Institution and this is that true Consecration or Sanctification of the Sacrament whereof mention is made among the Fathers The Second is The breaking of the Bread and the powring of the wine into the Cuppe which Christ vsed not onely for the cause of dividing and distributing thereof but for the representing of his death for it is an Essentiall and Sacramentall Ceremony of the Lordes Supper pertayning to the end forme thereof d Mat. 26.26 Mar. 14.22 Luc. 22.19 1. Cor. 11.24 The third is the offering and distributing of the Bread broken and the Wine powred in For Christ gaue not the same to his Disciples that they should distribute but that they should receyue that which was distributed e Mat. 26.26.27 Mar. 14.22 Luc. 22.56 because they were in that Supper not the dispensers of Gods Mysteries but the Guestes But Christ as being the Feast-maker with one labour instituted and with his owne hands dispensed the Sacrament of his Grace and withall sanctified the Ministeriall dispensation thereof And all these Actions are Sacramentall and ought diligently to be considered as farre forth as they are vsed for the signifying and sealing of Spirituall things by divine Institution To these Actions that wee may come to the second part of the Institution Christ added Words whereof some include a Commaundement some a Promise and lastly some an Explication These in Schooles haue vsually been tearmed Preceptiue the other Definitiue and Sacramentall Lastly these Expositiue The Words Preceptiue are those by which hee hath injoyned both vpon the dispensers a necessity of their administration and vpon the communicants a necessity of taking and hath prescribed vnto both a forme of both Administration by his deed whereof we haue aboue spoken and by his commaundement of Imitation ioyned therevnto e Mat. 2 6 26. 1. Cor. 11.24 Of Communicating by a double Precept by the one To take by the other To eate and to drinke The Taking is a Sacramentall Rite prescribed to him that commeth to the Lords Table whereby wee receyue with our hand the Bread and Cuppe of Thanksgiving for it cannot bee gathered eyther from the Story of the Institution of the Lordes Supper o● frō the fashion of Christs sitting down and his Apostles that Christ in the first Supper did put those signes into the mouth of every of the Apostles by which
expedient h Rom. 1 7.16.17 Rom. 10.8 Ioh. 3.8 The Matter of Faith ought onely three wayes distinctly to be considered acording as it hath respect vnto the Subject Object or parts The Subiect proper and neerest is the vnderstanding and will of man as both these faculties are regenerate by the supernatural grace and vertue of the Spirite and as the vnderstanding knoweth the supernaturall benefits of faith which are offered in Christ as true and the will applyeth the same to it self with a sure perswasion of the heart as good healthfull i Luc. 24.25 Eph. 4.23 Act. 16.14 Ro. 10.20 The Obiect in respect of the vnderstanding is Gods truth in respect of the will is Gods singular Grace laid open by his promises in Christ Iesus Now both are contained and limitted in the word of God which wholy and soly faith imbraceth as her levell object in the same Christ crucified together with all his benefites as her principall first neerest and proper Object k 1. Cor. 2.2 Heb 10.22 2. Cor. 3.4 Rom. 4.8 8.38 The Parts according to the maner of the Subject or Object are wont diversly to be considered In respect of the divine vnderstanding and will they are both a Knowledge an Assent the Knowledge is wherby we vnderstand the whole word of God as touching the principall heades thereof according to the measure of grace revealed l Esa 53.11 Ioh. 10.38 1 Ioh. 4.16 The assent is whereby wee most firmely resolue with our selues that all thinges which are knowne out of the law and the Gospell are most true and rest our selues perswaded in them m Rom. 7.16 Eph. 3.12 Eph. 1.22 In respect of the will the chiefe and principall part of faith is Trust which is a firm perswasion of the heart whereby every one of them that are truely faithfull do particularly appropriate to themselues the generall promise of Grace Which trust manifesteth it selfe by a double effect to wit by constant Indurance whereby faith opposeth it selfe to all dangers inward and outward and ful Persuasion whereby we surely trust in God concerning our salvation n Rom. 8 15.16 Eph. 1.13 Heb. 10 22. Heb. 11.1 The Forme of faith consisteth in Relation whereby every Elect after a particular manner applyeth to himselfe both the word of Truth and the particular promises of GODS Grace by appropriating vnto himself through a firme perswasion those things which are taught and promised particularly and o In Hypothesi by a Supposition though conceyved in a position and generally p In Thesi Ioh. 17.15 Mat. 9.2 Gal. 2.20 Ioh. 1.12 The Supreame and chiefe End is the glory of God the Author of our Faith and Redeemer q Rom. 11.35 Eph. 1.12 the neerest end is our Salvation which the holy Scripture calleth the end and reward of faith r 1. Pet. 1.9 Ioh. 3.15 16. Ioh. 20.31 By this opening of the Definition through the causes 2. things consequētly follow First that Faith is both one and divers One both in Special kind for faith ſ Species specialissima is a Speciall kind most speciall and in Object because the thing beleeved is one t Eph. 4.5 2. Pet. 1.1 Divers both in number and in degree In Number because every one hath his owne faith distinct from another In Degree because he hath it acording to the measure of Gods grace as it is more or lesse u Heb. 2.4 Mat. 9.22 Rom. 14.1 Secondly that faith is so far firme in all the elect that it can neyther totally nor finally ever at any time be lost to wit because of the certainety and vnchangeablenesse of the Election promise of God of the satisfaction and merite of Christ and of the sealing of the Spirite Wherefore faith after some degree is oftentimes diminished but as touching the forme it cannot perish x Ioh. 3.16 Phil. 1.6 Ioh 6.56 1. Ioh. 2.1 OF FAITH The Part Confuting DISTINCTIONS In Defence of the Obiect of faith against Bellar. cap. 8. Lib. 1. De IVSTIFICATIONE I. THe Testimonies which are alleadged out of the histories of the Gospell doe eyther treate of faith in Christ expresly Mat. 16. Luc. 7. Ioh. 1 Ioh. 6. Ioh. 11. Ioh. 14. Ioh. 20. and so of the speciall mercy of God which God layed open in Christ singularly effectually or of Gods speciall mercie which Christ exhibited by will worke in the example of the Leaper Mat. 1. or they treate onely of an hypocriticall boasting of that speciall mercy of God as in the example of the Pharisie Luc. 18. Or lastly of the outward meanes and extraordinary miracles that further faith which make not a justifying faith but do eyther generally testifie or particularly confirme the same Mar. vlt. II. THose which are alleadged out of the Acts and Epistles are eyther Sermons touching Christ and so Metonymically concerning Gods speciall mercy Act 2.4.10.13.17 18. or do treate of Abrahams faith not in respect of the temporall or earthly but of the spirituall and eternall promises for he saw the day of the Messias by faith and therefore rejoyced Rom. 4. Or lastly they treate of the meane of speciall mercy procured vnto vs and confirmed by the resurrection of Christ Rom 10. 1. Cor. 15. Against Bellarmine cap. 10. I. THe Word of God is two wayes vsually considered eyther as the Word of truth generally or as the Word of promise and grace specially The one Faith respecteth as it is a Knowledge or assent but the other as it is a trusting or beleeving for albeit the promises are generally proposed in the Scriptures yet there is a speciall application of them by faith as the examples of the sicke of the palsie Mat. 9. Of the sinnefull Woman Luc 7. Of the Adulteresse Ioh 8. of Zacheus Luc. 19 and of the Thiefe Lu 23. doe teach II. FAith is the Instrument of Iustification and not the Cause which neither by time nor place can be discerned or separated from the things which it apprehendeth Neyther doth the faith of a speciall mercy follow Iustification because without it there is no Iustification III. IVstifying Faith taketh not away but proposeth the subordinate means of confidence such as are Prayer Sacraments good workes Baptisme and vseth them for the augmenting and confirming of the same IIII. THe confidence or assurance of faith dependeth not vpon the quality of the person beleeving or the quantity of his Faith but vpon the truth of God promising the will of Christ redeeming and the faithfulnes of the spirite sealing Of the Forme of Faith against Bellarmine Lib. 1. De Iustificat Cap. 5. THe Testimonies which are cited out of the 11. to the Hebrewes do not overthrow the forme of Faith but establish the same First the Apostles definition of Faith and the sence and interpretation of the two properties of faith whereof mention is made in that Definition For faith is sayde to be a Ground or substance not
one declared by the effects of both but as concerning the Object are both vniversally all Creatures even the vnreasonable which shall be freed from the servitude of corruption and generally all both Angels and Men and particularly that man of Sinne and Sonne of Perdition Antechrist e Mat. 29.32 1. Thes 4.17 Apoc. 20.12 The Forme is that whole order and proceeding of the most majesticall judgement comprehended in the very preparation both of the Iudge and of the Persons to be judged in the sentēce of the judgement and in the execution of the sentence f Mat. 25.32 1. Thes 4.16.17 The End Supreame is the glory of God himselfe and the accomplishmēt or Christs office Subordinate the iust condemnation of the wicked and the glorious felicity of the faithfull both which the infinitenesse and eternity either of joy or sorrow followeth g 2. Tim. 4 8. Particularly the State of man after this life after the time of that vniversall life resurrection and last judgement is eyther of life or death eternall Life Eternall is the life of glory wherein the Soule ioyned to our body enioyeth God for ever being advanced to the highest toppe and height of her felicity The cause of this life is God to wit the Father the Efficient the Sonne the Meritorious and the holy Ghost the sealing and applying Cause h Ioh. 14 2● Apo. 21.3 1. Cor. 15.45 Rom. 8.11 The Matter which hath the respect of the Subiect are those good things which neyther eye hath seene nor eare heard nor can the mind of man comprehend i 1. Cor. 15 28. That which is of the Obiect are all the blessed and elect k Apo. 21.3 Mat. 25.24 The Forme is the most perfect knowledge vision and fruition of God himselfe and the exceeding felicity blessednesse of man which accompanieth the same which also consisteth both in the separation and absence of all evill things in the participation and presence of all good things both are both perfect and eternall l Apo. 22.4 Psa 7 15 1. Ioh. 3.2 Psa 16.11 The End is the glory of Gods grace and the glorifying of the elect m Apo. 21.3.5.12.11.17 1. Cor. 15.28 Death Eternall is the vnspeakeable and most miserable condition of the reprobates appointed or decreed of God whereby both their Soule and body are most justly adiudged to eternall punishments The Efficient Cause remote is God the most iust iudge the Instrumentall is Sathan the neerest is Sinne n Mat. 25.41 The Matter which hath the respect of the Subiect are Eternall punishments that which is of the Obiect are the Cursed and the Workers of iniquity o Ioh. 5.29 1. Thes 1 9. The Forme is the perpetuity and the infinitenesse of the punishments in Hell p Apo. 20.15.21.8 Esa 66.24 Mat. 4.42 The End Supreame is the glory of Gods Iustice The Neerest is the iust condemnation and punishment of the wicked OF MANS ESTATE after this Life The Part Confuting Touching the Resurrection I. THe Resurrection in the holy Scripture is two wayes taken Figuratiuely or Properly Figuratiuely eyther by a Metonymy it signifieth immortal life or by a Metaphor eyther a deliverance from danger or the regeneration of the Soules which is a spirituall resurrection and is called the First Properly Resurrection signifieth the quickning of the Bodie which shal be done at the last day which also is called the Second II. THere is one Resurrection Vniversall and Finall which no man shall escape an other Particular or foregoing whereof there are particular examples extant in the Scriptures Of the last Iudgement I. IVdgement in the Scriptures signifieth three things eyther the cause of damnation or an vniversall governement or the very Act eyther of condēnation or Iustification II. THere is a two-fold Iudgement of the Lord Particular or Antecedent When God in this life eyther defendeth his people or represseth the wicked Vniversall being the last which shall be done in the last day of the Resurrection III. THe Sonne is sayde to be the iudge of the world not exclusiuely or oppositely but by an appropriation for that by the Sonne in a visible forme the last iudgement shall be executed IIII. THe Sonne is said to be ignorant of the day of iudgement eyther because he would haue vs to be ignorant thereof or as touching his humane nature which by ordinary and naturall knowledge knoweth nothing of this matter or as touching his state of humility which as touching his voluntary dispensation hee hath taken vpon him Of Life Eternall I. THere are 3. kinds or differences of life there is a life of nature which the Apostle calleth Naturall There is a Life of Grace which the Sons of God alone doe enioy in this world there is a life of Glory which consisteth in the vision of God II. LIfe Eternall is two wayes taken Metonymically both for the way to life and for Christ himselfe Properly for the State of the blessed after this life III. THere is one Vision of God Naturall in the thinges created an other Specular or Symbolicall by resemblances and Signes an other of Faith by the doctrine and doings of Christ an other of Present sight or of glory to come when we shall see God face to face Of Death Eternall DEath is fowre-fold First Corporall which in the Scriptures is also called Temporall and the first death in respect of the wicked Secondly Spirituall and that eyther of the faithfull or vnfaithfull that of the faithfull is three-fold of Sinne which is called Mortification of the Law as it is the power of Sin of the world as the world is dead vnto them The death of the vnfaithfull is that which may be called the death of faith or of the soule Thirdly Eternall which is called the second Fourthly Civill death which of the Lawyers is sayde to be of them which are condemned to death FINIS
to the divine truth and with euery part of it selfe the other is the exquisite Phrase of the holy scripture whereby all things are written with a stile fitly tempered both according to the dignity of the speaker and the nature of the word spoken and lastly according to the condition of them to whome it is spoken From both as also from the consideration of the other causes the perfection of the holy Scripture aryseth both as touching it selfe and oppositely against vnwritten traditions As touching it selfe because the scripture doth most perfectly contayne the whole truth which is communicable the perfection springeth from principle subiect and effect From principle for whereas every principle whether of the thing or of knowledge ought to bee perfect and 〈◊〉 f Apod●cticae demonstratiue or true conclusions are drawn from that which is vnperfect it must needes bee that the Scripture is altogether most perfect as being the first only mediat principle of all doctrine concerning the truth g Deut. 4.2 12. ver vlt. From subiect because it hath partes both Essentiall of which wee haue spoken to witte matter and forme and also Integrall which are the law and the gospell and is all or wholy perfect both absolutely and by relation Absolutely because for substance it contayneth eyther expresly or Anologically all that doctrine concerning fayth and manners which is communicable for whereas of divine matters some are communicable and some incommunicable and of those which are communicable it is not expedient that some be communicated vnto vs in this life and yet expedient that some be wee affirme that divine matters are perfectly contayned in the Scripture because they are both to bee known h 2. Tim. 3.16 profitable to bee knowne by relation because as it hath the perfection of the whole so hath it also the perfection of the partes in the whole that is called a perfection according to Essence this according to quantity yet so that considering the seueral bounds of times every part was sufficient for the proper times thereof and all the partes in the whole are for vs. From the Effect for it maketh a man wise vnto Salvation instructeth him to every good worke and maketh him blessed by beginning in this life and by perfection in the other i Ioh. 2. v vlt. Rom 15.4 Ioh. 3.59 Neyther is it onely perfect of it selfe but also as being opposed to vnwritten traditions all which by the perfection thereof it excludeth k Gal. 1.8 By the Name of Traditions we vnderstand not in a generall signification the doctrine delivered both wayes to wit by speech and writing as very often they are taken in the Scripture and with the Fathers but in a more speciall sense for every doctrine not written by the Prophets and Apostles whether it be tearmed Dogmaticall or Hystoricall or Ceremoniall for the perfect matter of Dogmaticall Traditions which pertayne to Faith and Maners is delivered vnto vs by God in the Scriptures and those tye not vs which are delivered without the Scriptures but the generall matter of those which are Hystoricall concerning the thinges eyther spoken or done by Christ or his Apostles is perfectly contayned in the Scriptures which it behooveth vs to know for our salvation those which are delivered without the Scripture are to bee reckoned for humaine writings Of those which are Ceremoniall the Essentiall part is written downe in the word of God according to their owne kinde but the Accidental part of them which is concerning the circumstances is free and changeable The Finall Cause according to the consideration of the double Obiect is twofold the highest and furthest off is the glory of God in the maintenance of his truth The second and the nearest wherof our speech is in this place is the instruction of his Church vnto salvation The necessary means of this instruction are three the plainenesse of the Scripture Reading and interpretation whereof the one hath respect vnto the Scripture the other vnto vs and th● last both vnto it and vs. The first meane is the Plainenesse for the doctrine of a darke and doubtfu● matter neyther ought to be delivered nor can be learned forasmuch as ever● Instruction whether it bee by the o●der of Nature or Doctrine is begu● from thinges more known but whereas there is one thing better known in respect of it owne Nature and anothe● in respect of vs wee consider the plai●nesse of the Scripture both wayes bo●● in respect of it owne Nature as far forth as it is inspired of God and also in respect of our selues as farre forth as we are inspired of God for the vnderstanding of the same Of the playnenesse thereof in it selfe there are two arguments first the matters delivered in the Scriptures secondly the maner of delivering them for albeit they seeme obscure in respect of their dignity and maiesty yet if you respect the truth of them agreeable with their first patterne l 2. Pet. 1 19. if the ●●w and the Gospell wherein as in ●e partes they are contayned m Deu. 30 11. 2. Cor. 4.3 if the ●ceeding great consent of all matters ●d wordes if lastly you respect the ●ory of God the Principall n Prou. 6.21 Effect of ●em from the vnderstanding of Doc●ne and Salvation which is offered vn●o vs in the holy Scriptures it must ●edes be that it is in it selfe most per●ect o Ioh. 20 31. The Manner or Stile of delivering ●he matters is most applyable both 〈◊〉 the thinges themselues of which ●here is speech made and to those per●ons for the instructing of whome the ●cripture was delivered yeelding an ●xceeding great playnenesse both in words as also in sense and signification In Wordes for the Phrases which are proper doe shine in the pro●riety of Wordes and those which are Figuratiue are perspicuous lights of a holy speech In Sense which of it selfe ●s one onely as being that which the ●ntention of the Speaker and the Nature of the thing signified doe import for the Schoole-men say well the p Theologiam Symbolicam non esse Argumentativā Figuratiue Divinity is not fitte for reasoning or disputation yet it may diue●sly be applyed to the vse of the Hearers q Per Anagogas Allegorias Tropologias by Mysticall Allegoricall and M●ralyzing Interpretations that one onely literall and Grammaticall sense 〈◊〉 the holy Scripture neverthelesse remayning whole and entire Of the Playnenesse of the Scripture in respect of our selues there a●● also two reasons the one of absolu● necessity because indeed the Scripture is the onely meanes and Instrument o● Faith for whereas knowledge Asse●● and full assurance are the first beginnings and degrees of Faith these thre● can by no meanes stand without the evident playnenes of the Scripture the other is r Exothesi from a supposition of God Promises concerning the writing of h● Law in our hearts and the spreading abroad or clearenesse of the Doctrine
the Salvation of the Elect. Of CREATION the Part Confuting Distinctions for the Cause Efficient I. CReation is sayed to bee eyther properly concerning the work of the first bringing forth of thinges or Metaphorically of those things or works which are of no lesse vertue and power both wayes it is attributed to God alone II. THose things are created which are made of no substantiall and materiall beginning but those things are generated which are made of a fore-being matter the Creation of God is by himselfe but the generation of nature next after God III. NO things being apt to generation or corruption which are brought forth of God by second causes cōming between are properly sayed to be created because to be created is immediately to be brought forth of God IIII. CReation is two-folde Actiue and Passiue the one sayeth that there is a divine Essence and that the Creature cannot exist vnlesse hee put the case that there is a divine Essence the other sayeth that the Creature was really brought forth by God and noteth withall a creating Essence V. TO Create and to make differ because that more strictly taken signifieth of nothing to make somewhat but this more generally importeth not that onely but also to bring forth somwhat out of a matter lying and being before VI. THe thinges themselues and the nature substance of them ought to be distinguished from the evill that comes vnto them and from the Accidents of the thinges and substances For the MATTER I. THere is one respect or maner of the Primary Creation another of the secondary wherefore that generall u Classicum Alarme of the Philosophers of nothing nothing is made may be fitted or applied to the estate of bodily things but cannot bee opposed to the Creation II. NOthing is sayed to bee eyther privatiuely or Negatiuely Negatiuely of the Primary Creation Privatiuely of the second For the FORME I. THe signification of beginning is threefold for it pertayneth eyther to the time or to the thinges and causes or lastly to the order but it is taken in the first signification when wee treate of the beginning of Creation II. THose thinges which of Moses are written down of the forme and order of things created are not to bee taken Allegorically but Physically or Natural●y OF PROVIDENCE The Part Confirming CHAP. IIII. ANd this is the beginning both Primary Secondary of things created acording to their nature now followeth the powerfull cōservation of the same and the most wise ordering of them vnto their end which by the vse of the Scripture and the Doctors of the Church we call Providence Now whereas a double part of this Providence is wont to bee discerned and distinguished the one of decree according to the eternall fore-knowledge and fore-appointment of all thinges in God the other of Execution according to the externall Administration of the same in time and wheras also the consideration of the former properly pertayneth to Predestination which is a kind of Gods operations Immanent wee in respect of this latter doe here consider and treate of Providence properly so called This Providence then is an outward and temporall action of God whereby he keepeth all and several things which are and disposeth ●ll several things which are done to that end which hee hath determined according to the liberty of his will and that to the end hee might in all and severall things be glorified The Efficient Cause of this Providence or governement is the same which is of Creation sith the one and the self fame beginning is of both from by which all things proceed are conserved to witte God the Father Sonne and holy Ghost a Psal 32.13.15 139.78 Ioh. 12.34 The Father or the loue and goodnes of the Father is the first beginning cause The Sonne in that he is the wisedom and word is the working causes The holy Ghost in that hee is the vertue and power of the Father and the Sonne is the finishing cause The nature of God teacheth this whose presence power operation the scripture cōmendeth in both works b Psal 9 4.8 Mat. 10.29 Ier. 10.23 Prou. 6.19 Esa 45.7 cōmon Nature testifyeth it which as the commō Instrument of God being stirred by that vniversall beginning stirreth and being moved moveth it selfe and al things according to it selfe Our nature together witnesseth and feeleth it because as in himselfe we haue our being so in himselfe also we liue and are moved c Act. 17.28 And the operatiōs of this efficient cause are according to degrees distinguished now they are distinguished by a threefolde order maner The first is of Conservation the second of Governing The third of Ordayning to the end of which more at large in the formall cause of providence The Matter about which Providence is imployed according to the twofold consideration of the things which are subiect vnto it may be distinguished two wayes one way in respect of those things which are another way in respect of those things which are don for after both wayes respects all and severall things are ruled by Gods providēce The things which are ought three wayes to be distinguished first according to their nature secondly according to their Accidents thirdly according to their vse Of the nature of things whether it be that superior or inferior wherof wee treated in the place of creation there is a double knowledge the one common and according to their natural form or kind the other singular acording to the d Individua things thēselues as they are indivisible The Accidents whatsoever they are are either of common nature in its beginning perfection or of singular nature in the defect and condition thereof f Agnata besides the course of nature Of things according to their vse there is a twofold distinction for eyther they are the ends or the means vnto the end but the ends are some furthest off and some intermediate vnto the same the meanes are severally known two waies first after the manner of doing for some are ordinary some extraordinary and both ordained to their proper ends Secondly by the quality and essentiall condition of them for some are necessary and some contingent Of those which are necessary there are two kinds for some are by themselues absolutely necessary by a necessity of the Consequent as they call it and some by the cause from a g Ex Hypothesi Supposition by necessity of the Consequence Those which are absolutely necessary when we treate of things created we distinguish by two degrees The first is in the first and common beginning of nature first by themselues and by all things necessary as when wee say that twice two is foure which vnchangeably and by an infallible necessity are true The other degree of necessity is from nature out of it owne inward beginning whether materiall as when we say that every thing compounded of contraries must necessarily perish
and Charity but properly eyther the action it selfe conjoyned with the holy ceremonies or the things which are offered II. SAcrifices some are Typicall or Signifying other some not Typical or signified and both eyther Pacifying or Propitiatory or else Eucharisticall or of Thanksgiving III. THe word Leholam with the Hebrewes importeth not the Infinitenesse of time but the continuance of the same sometimes longer sometimes shorter according to the subject matter IIII. THe Sacrifice of Christ is considered eyther properly or q Symbolice comparatiuely Properly It is one onely in verity and efficacy even that Sacrifice of Christs body on the crosse comparatiuely with the olde Doctors of the church the Eucharist was sometimes called a Sacrifice V. THe Oblation of Christ is one onely not onely in speciall kind but also in number for there can bee no oblation of Christ but by his comming betweene and therefore that distinction of Sacrifice into a bloudy and vnbloody is false In Defence of his Kingly OFFICE THe Kingdome of Christ is taken eyther Figuratiuely or Properly Figuratiuely then both Instrumentally for the Gospell and subjectiuely for the church properly for that Oeconomicall dominion of Christ which is called the Kingdom of Grace for the beginning thereof in this world and the kingdome of glory for the consummation thereof in the other In Defence of the State of Christs Humiliation I. THere is one Subiection naturall another Oeconomicall and by this latter Equality is not destroyed because the thing equall as Cyril sayeth is sayde to be subiect to the equall by way of dispensation II. OBedience is not an Act naturall of nature but voluntary of the person according to both natures Now the consequence is of no force from one speciall kind vnto the other from the Act of Nature to the Act of Will In Defence of his Exaltation I. THe maiesty of the Essence of the Word is one and of the dispensation another II. DIspensation comprehendeth two things one the mystery of the vnion the other the end of the mystery In respect of the vnion Maiesty hath properly respect vnto the nature assumed in respect of the end it fitly agreeeth with Christ according to both natures III. EXaltation is not the abolishing of ●ature but the perfection and all other power given to Christ is of Office and not of divine Essence OF THE CALLING OF MAN vnto Salvation The Part Confirming CHAP. VIII FOr asmuch as wee haue treated of the Beginning and Dispensation of our Redemption that is of the Person and Office of Christ Wee now are to treate according to our appointed order of the Application therof Now the verity of this Application ought three wayes severally to bee marked by the degrees thereof by the outward meanes and by the Subject the degrees according to which God in time applyeth vnto vs the benefite of Redemption are chiefly two Vocation and Iustification Vocation is the first degree of Application on Gods behalfe called therfore by Augustine The entry vnto salvation and the first passage towardes the end Of this Vocation there is vsually had a divers knowledge according as it is distinguished eyther as touching the manner of calling into an Inward and outward or as touching the divers condition of the cause Efficient into a Generall and Particular or Lastly as touching the effect of calling vnto an Effectuall and not Effectuall Vocation Now of this Vocation whether Inward Particular and Effectuall or outward generall and ineffectuall there is a double respect the one Absolute in it selfe the other Ioynt or conjoyned in an ordinary vocation For God calleth outwardly in generall inwardly in particular and joyntly both wayes ordinarily Of both we are orderly to treate according to the course of the causes The outward and generall Vocation that wee may speake of it in the first place is a gracious action of God wherby he calleth men forth by word signe and worke from vnbeliefe vnto faith that both the faithfull might bee disposed to the communion of salvation and that others being cōvinced of the grace offered vnto them by God might become inexcusable The cause Efficient of this Vocation is God because it is from him properly if you marke the true beginning therof and is from him first or chiefly by himselfe and principally if you haue a respect vnto the meanes which God would haue to be vsed eyther extraordinarily or ordinarily for the calling of men The beginning is that loue of God towards man wherby as a lover of soules and the Saviour of Men a Sap. 11.27 1 Tim. 4.10 hee beareth his good will towardes all men and generally offereth his Grace vnto them Now hee offereth the same that wee may in few wordes speake of the means by word by signes and by workes all which in respect of God that ordayneth them are generall by word eyther extraordinary such as was in the first times of the Church b Numb 12.8 Heb. 1.2 or Ordinary by the vniversall Canon of faith and life which wee call the Scripture c Ephes 2.17 Rom. 10.14 by signs by which added vnto the word the Lord being author his grace is visibly sealed vp d Rom. 4.11 Gen. 17.11 by works eyther Ordinary or Extraordinary eyther within the Church or without the Church The matter or Subiect of this vocation are all men without difference of nations sexes or states vnto whome by name the meanes whereof we haue spoken doe extend For God wil haue all men to bee saved both generally because hee calleth forth out of all whomsoever hee will or e Ex singulis generum genera singulorum out of every one of the generall sorts the generall sortes of every one vnto salvation as also because the grace of God is offered vnto all not by the vniversall efficacy of Christ but by a generall signe and power f Mat. 22.14 1. Tim. 2.4 The Forme is that outward Vocation which God mediately effecteth by the ministery of his word by the vse of the Sacraments and lastly by the communion of the Church and the members thereof in themselues and among themselues all which are ●ceyved by the outward senses g Heb. 4.12 The End is two-fold Proper both the inexcusablenes of the Reprobates and the salvation of the Elect Remote the manifestation of the Grace of God h 1. Cor. 15.28 And this is the outward and generall calling The Internall and particular calling is a gracious action of God whereby the elect from everlasting in their due time according to the good pleasure of God for the merite of Christ by the holy Ghost are inwardly informed vnto the receyving and communion of Gods grace for their owne salvation the glory of Gods mercy The Efficient cause of this Vocation ●s God according to the particular beginning and the ordinary means therof The beginning is the saving grace of God for Christ for two things doe distinguish this particular beginning of inward calling from
II. THe Calling which is common to all by naturall Grace is wrought by God according to the a Esse naturae being of Nature as the Schoole-men speake generally but that which happeneth to those that are called Supernaturally is concluded in two partes for it proceedeth generally from the caller belongeth particularly to the called III. THe Formall of the calling ought to bee distinguished from the Materiall thereof because the Subject of that is particular but the Subject of this belongeth to all men alike OF MANS IVSTIFIcation before GOD. The Part Confirming CHAP. IX THe Second degree of Application which is here made on the behalf of God is Iustification It is needefull that the verity of this Iustification bee declared two wayes by Anotation of Words wherof there is vse in the explication of this doctrine as also by definition of the thing it selfe according to all the causes The Words whose doubtfull signification is to bee taken away lest they should in the doctrine it selfe breed any difficulty are chiefly two Iustice and Iustification Iustice which indeede is of the Person is two wayes vsually considered one way in the manner of quality or Inherence and it is the obedience of the Law which wee performe to it the other in manner of Relation or Imputation and it is a gracious giving of another mans obedience for vs performed that is called the righteousnesse of the law or Works this of the Gospell or Faith that is in the person subjectiuely this of the Person by Grace of Imputation It is needefull that both bee distinguished because there is a diverse vse of both of this in the Private and inward court of the conscience before God of that in the publicke and outward Court of christian profession before men Iustification generally considered is the very application of righteousnes but specially if wee treate of righteousnesse inherent it is the effecting of a certaine habituall holines in man which signification is most vnusuall and vnproper if wee treate of the righteousnesse of Imputation it is a gracious Imputation of another mans righteousnes by faith and so an absolving of a man before God And this signification as most proper and vsuall both the common custome of tonges a Idiotismus the proper phrase of the holy Scriptures doe confirme The common custome of tongues for as with the Grecians to justifie hath two significations besides or without the doctrine of Iustification the one to judge and pronounce one just by publicke judgement the other after the cause is judged judiciously to punish one so that there is the same vse of the word with the Hebrewes two things doe most evidently proue first the direct and most frequent vse of that word in court or pubilcke judgements causes and actions b 2. Kin. 15.4 Deut. 25.1 Esa 43.9 secondly the manifest c Pro. 17 15. Esa 50.8 Rom. 8.33 ●4 opposition of condemnation and justification as being contraries d Antithesis And in this signification the word to Iustifie commonly importeth three thinges To absolue a person accused e Esa 5.23 Exod. 23. Luc. 7.29 to iudge one for righteous to giue a testimony to one already Iustified as also rewardes which are due to the iust and innocent If you respect the proper phrase of the Scripture by iudiciall proceeding it proposeth the whole doctrine of Iustification this the Phrases of speaking which the Scripture vseth as also that whole manner and course of our Salvation which it describeth doe proue The Phrases which in this point the Scripture vseth do proue some by way of deniall that hee which is iustified is not condemned not iudged and that sinnes are not imputed vnto him f some by way of affirmation doe proue that hee is made iust is freede from the accusation and condemnation of the law that righteousnesse is imputed vnto him c. g Rom. 5.18 8.33 The whole course and manner of our Salvation is fully performed as it were by two degrees by the knowledge of our misery and the trust of Gods mercy Of our misery there are three partes the Offence the Guilt and the Punishment Of Gods mercy there are three opposite parts the foregiuenesse of the fault the absolving from the guilt and the freeing from the punishment That whole course or proceeding frō our misery to Gods mercy is caled Iustificatiō by a signification taken from common pleadings h Forensi or from the Lawyers Iustification therefore is properly a free iudiciall action of God whereby hee iudgeth the elect in themselues subiect to the accusation and malediction of the Law to bee iust by faith through Christ by imputation of his righteousnesse vnto the prayse of the glory of his Grace and their owne salvation i Rom. 3.24.25 That this definition might be rightly vnderstoode it is needefull that the Causes which are orderly noted in the same bee two wayes considered according as Iustification is taken eyther Actiuely in respect of God who iustifyeth or Passiuely in respect of man who is iustified The Efficient cause of Iustification taken actiuely is God the Father in the Sonne by the holy Ghost k 2. Cor. 5.19 2. Cor. 6.21 for it is in him to absolue or acquite the guilty person by whose Iustice hee is made guilty in him to pronounce one iust whose will is a rule of Iustice Lastly in him to giue iudgement of life or death who by nature right and office is supreme iudge l Esa 59 1 Psal 5● 4 Esa 43.21 Mar 27. Of this Efficient there is a double Impulsiue cause Outward and Inward the Inward is the onely mercy of the father m Rom. 3.23 both in regard of his good plesure which predestinated vs n Ephe. 1.5 into the adoption of sonnes o Rom. 3.23 as also in regard of the p Oeconomiae disposing and dispensation which both ordained the Sonne for this end and applyed the benefite obtayne● by the Sonne vnto vs q Coloss 1.12 And this is the grace which in Scripture if called the Grace of r Free gifts in Schooles the Grace that maketh one acceptable and among the common sort the Grace that freely giveth and is alwayes opposed vnto workes which are called the gifts by grace or of grace freely givē because God tooke not the first cause of Iustification from vs or our workes but in himselfe and from himselfe for the vnsearchable riches of the glory of his grace Wherefore there can bee from vs no disposition and preparation which of the Popelings is surmised to be necessary for the bringing in of the forme of Iustification ſ Eph. 2.8.9 Tit. 3.5 Eph. 2.4 for albeit there bee two speciall degrees of preparation if not in time at leastwise in nature going before Iustification to witte the feeling of our misery and a confused knowledge of Gods mercy yet none of these maketh for the manner of the Efficient Cause not
onely concerning the condigne but not so much as concerning the congruent The outward impulsiue cause is Christ God-man both in respect of his merit as also of his efficacy and operation Of his merite because both by obeying and suffering in his life and death he purchased for vs the benefite of Iustification t Esa 83.3 1. Tim. 2.6 1. Ioh 1.7 Rom. 8.30 31. Of this Efficacy because he effectually applyeth this purchased benefit both by offering the same by the preaching of the word conferring it by the inward and effectuall operation of his spirite u Rom. 1.16 2. Cor. 5.19 On mans behalfe that which is is called reductiuely the Efficient cause of the Passiue Iustification is wholy Instrumentall and it is saith by which not for which we are sayde to bee iustified both in respect of her Correlatiue as also in respect of her cōtrary the law and good works Of her Correlatiue because the whole forme of saith as it is justifying consisteth in relation neyther is it sayde to justifie vs as it is a quality but as it is occupied relatiuely in the applying of her Correlatiue u Gal. 3.8 Heb. 2.4 Rom. 1.17 Of her contrary because the good workes which are required in the person of him that is justified are excluded from the merit of Iustification as in the place concerning Earth and Workes shall be spoken more at large x Rom. 5.15 11.6 Ephes 2.8.9 The matter of Iustification which on Gods behalfe is considered actiuely is two fold according as there are two parts of Iustificatjon the Remission of sinnes and the obedjence of Christ For because we y Asiequuti sumus procured vnto our selues both the bond of death and the deprjuation of righteousnesse and life both were needful for our Iustificatjon that both our sinne might bee abolished by Remission that wee might be freed from death which is the wages of sinne and that righteousnesse might bee communicated vnto vs to the end we might attaine vnto life z Dan. 9.24 Gal. 3.13 By the name of Remission of sinnes we vnderstand that gratious act of God whereby hee perfectly forgiueth and remitteth the fault and the punishment for the merit and satisfaction of Christ a 2. Cor. 5.19 Rom. 8.1 4.7 The foundatiō hereof is the righteousnesse of Christ not his Essentiall and Diuine b Esa 42.8 nor yet his habituall which was his originall righteousnesse opposite vnto our originall righteousnesse or spot of nature but his actuall righteousnesse which is the effect of both namely a most perfect obedience performed to the Father both by satisfaction for sin and by fulfilling of the Law For the obedience of Christ is two fold opposite to the double bond of man after his fall actiue for the fault passiue for the punishment or both for both The Actiue obedience is a perfect performance of Gods law which Christ fully and perfectly executed even to the vtmost title c 1. Cor. 1.30 Rom 5.19 2. Cor. 5.21 of the law the necessitie hereof in the worke of our Redemption and Iustification three things doe prooue the Iustice of God the office of a Mediatour and our Salvation The iustice of God for if you eyther respect his nature wherby he is infinitly iust he ought not to saue man but by the same manner of iustice d Prou 17 Exod. 20.5 eyther proper to vs or freely imputed or if we respect his will revealed in the law which is an vnmoueable 〈◊〉 of Iustice he hath prescribed none other way vnto life than obedience The office of Christ the Mediatour for wheras he as our surety was bound by a voluntary dispensation to vndergoe and performe those things which we our selues were necessarily bound to vndergoe and performe it was needfull that he should not onely suffer death for vs but also performe the law because we were bound vnto both e Rom. 8.3 Gal. 4 45. Our Saluation for whereas two things are necessary for the same a freeing from death and a giuing of life it was needfull we should obtaine the one by the purging of sinne and the other by the gift of righteousnesse f Rom. 10 4 Rom. 5 19 20. Hence it is that Christ is said to be the end and presection of the law vnto Saluation to every one that beleeveth and the actuall obedience of Christ whereby we are made just is in the Scripture opposed to the actual disobedience of Adam whereby wee are made sinners g Heb. 10.14 Rom. 4.25 1. Pet. 1.19 1. Ioh. 1.7 Gal. 3.13 Adde further that in the very passiue obedience the actiue neverthelesse doth of right challenge vnto it selfe the chiefty for the suffering doth not simply justifie but as it is the suffering of Christ voluntarily presenting himselfe to God the Father by his Eternall Spirit whervpon the same Christ by offering himselfe as a sacrifice suffered as a Sacrificer performed it The Passiue obedience of Christ is the sacrificing or suffering of Christ very necessary in respect of God of Christ the Mediator and of vs. Of God because his justice must haue beene satisfied by punishment Of Christ because he being our surety ought to haue payde our debt Of vs because it was needefull that we should be freed from death by death h Num. 8.33 The Subiect of this righteousnesse is Christ alone in whom subiectiuely that habituall Iustice is inherent and from whom that both actiue passiue obedience proceeded which wee called actuall righteousnesse The matter of Iustification which is considered Passiuely are men elect i Rom. 5.8 10. Tit. 3.3 Eph. 2.12.13 Of this matter there is commonly had a double notion the one according to Nature the other according to Grace supernaturall according to nature they are sinners and therefore subiect to the accusation and malediction of the law k Rom. 8.30 Eph. 5.30 Ioh. 17 20. according to grace supernatural they are beleevers or ingraffed by faith into Christ The forme of Iustificatiō taken actiuely is a feee imputation of Christs actuall righteousnesse whereby the merits and obedience of Christ are applied vnto vs by vertue of that most strait communion whereby hee is in vs and we in him The forme therfore consisteth in Relation in which the vnity that ariseth thereout hath between both boundes the manner of a forme and consisteth rather in the issuing forth and the habite then in the inherence Hence it is also that Relation is sayde m Non esse eius sed esse ad aliad not to bee his but to be in respect of another Now it is receyved by right of the giving and acceptance of the merites of Christes obedience for this imputed righteousnesse is grace and not nature the communicating of a benefite not a Real or habitual possession of the righteousnesse or substance of Christ Lastly an Imputation not a passible quality inherent in vs. In this Imputation we consider two things the truth
actuall both of these were in Christ yet properly he imputeth this onely V. ACtuall righteousnesse is eyther perfect or imperfect this is in vs that in Christ VI. PErfect actual righteousnesse of Christ consisteth in a double obedience whereof the one is called the obedience of the Law the other obedience vnto death VII THe obedience of the law which is truely and properly the effect of the person being the mediator neyther ought nor can bee called eyther a part making the person or a quality pertayning to the making of that person VIII THe places of Scripture which treat of Christes death are not to bee taken exclusiuely or oppositely but figuratiuely or Synecdochically for the last accomplishment of the whole obedience DISTINCTIONS in defence of the Formall Cause The Arguments which Bellarmine bringeth against the truth of this cause are of two sorts for first hee endeavoureth to proue by certaine reasons that our inherent righteousnesse is the formall cause of our righteousnesse Secondly he impugneth the imputation of Christs righteousnesse The first he endeauoureth to perform by 8. Testimonies Cap. 3. Lib. 2. De Iustificatione The first is in Rom. 5. Of which wee haue treated in the explication of those places which were alleadged against the true nature of the name or word The second is in Rom. 3. Answ First the Grace of God is taken in Scripture aequivocally First for the free and eternall favour of God wherby hee made vs acceptable to him selfe in his beloved Sonne and this is the Grace that maketh acceptable Secondly for the giftes by Grace whether outward or inward whether generall or particula and that in the place cited it is taken in that signification and not in this three thinges doe proue First because the Apostle excludeth the righteousnesse of the law which is of works to the end hee might establish the righteousnesse of faith the causes whereof hee reckoneth vp Secondly because what hee called freely hee expounded by grace that not onely the workes that goe before but also those that follow after faith might bee excluded Thirdly because the Apostle opposeth the very same Grace cap. 4.2.4 against Abrahams works howsoever proceeding from the renuing of the Spirite Secondly neyther in deed doth the conjoyning of those two words Freely and by Grace sith the one expoundeth the other according to the Scripturall Phrase of speaking nor doth the force of the Preposition by which is not found in the originall Text and very often in the Scripture noteth the efficient nor doth the Efficacy of Gods grace the effect whereof ought necessarily to be distinguished from the Cause nor lastly doth it because loue in Scripture is called any Grace whereas both the loue of God towards vs is a grace making acceptable and ours towardes God is a grace freely given any way infringe that interpretation The third 1. Cor. 6. To this wee haue aboue answered The fourth Titus 3. Answ First the Effect is badly confounded with the cause to witte Iustification with Regeneration and Renovation for the matter of that is the righteousnesse of Christ but of this our Inherent righteousnesse Secondly neyther doth the Apostle call Renovation Iustification sith hee expresly distinguisheth the one from the other Thirdly the Apostle sheweth not the cause but the vse of Renovation or good workes when he sayeth that being justified by the grace of God wee might bee heyres according to the hope of everlasting life The fift Heb. 11 Ans First there is a two-folde righteousnesse Imputed and Inherent by both they are called Iust or righteous but after a divers manner by that by way of Relation and perfectly before God by this Inchoatiuely Subjectiuely and vnperfectly Secondly the perfection which is ascribed vnto the faithfull in the Scripture hath a three-fold respect the first of Gods councell from everlasting Secondly of the foundation in Christ lastly eyther of comparison and opposition vnto other mēs vnrighteousnes or of the end or tearme of perfection vnto which it tendeth besides these respects there is no perfection of the faithfull in this world Thirdly the nearest cause in deede of a righteous worke is inherent righteousnesse but the chiefe and principall cause is the Spirit of Christ imputing his righteousnes to vs and by the power of that imputed righteousnesse working this inherent righteousnesse in vs. The Sixt Rom. 8. 1. Cor. 15. Ans first our Conformity with the Image of Christ whereof mention is made in the Scripture is threefold the one vnto the image of glory being opposite to that which is vnto the image of Christs afflictions And of this the Apostle treateth in the cited places The second vnto the image of Christs obedience which in deede in this world we performe vnperfectly but Christ applyeth the same to vs as perfectly performed for vs. The third is of the death buriall and resurrection of Christ Secondly of Christs righteousnesse there is a double vse the one principall of satisfaction and merite the other exemplary and of document as touching satisfaction Christs righteousnesse is imputed to vs as touching example it is the rule of our inherent righteousnesse Thirdly the opposition which is made betweene the image of the first Adam and the second according to the sense of the Apostle in both places hath respect vnto the mortality and immortality the earthly and heavenly qualities of the body not properly vnto sinne and Christs imputed righteousnesse The seaventh Rom. 6. Ans The word Iustification is taken two wayes properly and improperly Properly when wee are sayde to bee justified by the cause Improperly when wee are sayde to bee justified by the effects Secondly the Apostle treateth of our Sanctification and the two parts therof the mortifying of the old man and the quickning of the new of both which partes hee giues vs an example in the death and resurrection of Christ Thirdl● to bee justified signifieth to bee freede according to the proper phrase of the Hebrewes who comprehend the Consequent with the Antecedent The eight Rom 8. Answere First the degrees of our Salvation Adoption and Iustification are badly confounded together Secondly of Adoption there are two considerations the one according to the truth and foundation thereof in the eternall counsell of our Election the other according to the fruition and accomplishment thereof in the other life In that signification Adoption goeth before Iustification but in thi Adoption is the bound and end of Iustification Thirdly it is one thing to call Iustification Putatiue and another Imputatiue that as being false is falsely also faigned vnto vs this is no lesse true then if we our selues had it subiectiuely because of the truths sake both of Gods promise and our coniunction with Christ That the FORMAL CAVSE of our Iustification is not the Imputation of Christs righteousnesse Bellarmine proveth by ten Arguments Cap. 7. Lib. 2. de Iustificatione To the FIRST IT is false for whereas there are two sorts of testimonies some expressed and some by
dispensation wherefore they agree in all the causes In the Efficient Cause for there is the same Author even God by his free mercy and the same meritorious cause even the death of Christ r Ier. 31.31 Rom. 9.7 Mar. 1.15 In the Matter for the thinges promised and sealed vp are the same to witte the Grace and Glory of God ſ Rom. 4. ●3 Gal. 3. ●6 In the Forme for in general the maner of administring is the same that is the internall communication of the spirite and the externall communication of the word r Gen. 22.18 Psal 2.22 Mat. 28.19 In the End because the end on both sides is life eternall for the scriptures examples and manner do proue that the Fathers in the olde Testament who were partakers of the same promise with vs had no other end Scripture because the very forme of the covenant and the Prophets the Interpreters thereof make mention of life eternall u Gen. 15 8. Psal 116.15 Esa 51.6 Heb. 11.9 Examples for the Author to the Hebrewes doth testifie that Noah Abraham and the rest that were in the same covenāt atained vnto that end Manner for they abounded both with the same spirit of faith and with the signs of the same signified thing x 2 Co. 4 13. Ier. 15.6 1 Cor. 10.3 The difference is in the manner of administring and in the circumstances of the disposing In the manner of Administration as well on Gods behalfe as on mans behalfe on Gods behalf for both the internall communication of the Spirite and the externall communication of the Doctrine and Signes was farre more evident and effectuall in the New Testament then in the Olde y Act. 15.8 2. Cor. 4.13 Ier 3● 31 On mans behalfe for they who were in the Olde Testament had but the Image for the truth absent the shadow for the body but they who were vnder the New haue both the present truth and the perfect body z Heb. 10.1 Adde further that they had M●ses for the Mediatour of that covenant but we Christ a Heb. 8.6 12.24 In circumstances both of time and place Of Time the Olde Testament endured vnto the first comming of Christ the New shall endure from the first vnto the second Of Place for the Olde Testament from the time of Abraham was inclosed onely in a corner of the world but the New passed over all the world b Mat. 10.5.6 Eph. 2.2 Rom. 3.24 OF GODS COVEnant The Confuting Part. Distinctions in Defence of the Efficient Cause I. THe wordes Covenant and Testament are d Homonyma Equivocall Covenant signifieth three thinges First that bargaine made by God with man whether it bee the whole or the partes thereof Secondly aswell al the lawes and holy promises taken vniversally as any speciall commaundement whatsoever or promise added to the covenant Thirdly by a Metonymy the bookes wherein the covenants are written downe Likewise also the word Testament doth signifie three thinges First the meaning of our will concerning that thing which wee would haue to be performed after our death as touching our goodes the Grecians call it a disposing 2. according to the vse of Scripture a compact betweene God man the Grecians tearme it a composition 3. By a Metonymy the books or distinct parts of the Bible II. THe word Covenant is taken eyther absolutely or oppositely Absolutely for the free Covenant both old and new Oppositely for the Legall covenant or the Law it selfe and in the first sence wee here take it but taken in the second as the olde Testament is called in the Scripture the Killing Letter and the Ministery of death so the new Testament is also called the ministery of the Spirite and life III. THe Foundation Condition and Cause of the Covenant when they are pronounced of Christ are in matter the same but do differ in manner for he is called the foundatiō by way of application the Condition as he is to bee applyed and the cause as he is or was applyed IN DEFENCE OF THE MATTER I. THe Conditions of the covenants on mans behalfe are not Essentiall because both Faith and Workes haue but the nature the one of an instrument the other of a Testimony II. THree distinct kindes of promises doe offer themselues vnto vs in the Scriptures the first is the promise of the covenant of Workes wherein is promised eternall life vnder condition of workes proceeding from the powers of nature the second is of the free covenant vnder condition of Faith the third is of particular promises agreeable to the free covenant vnder condition of the works of Grace IN DEFENCE OF THE FORME I. THe Forme of the Couenant consisteth in Relation for the Relate is God the Correlate is Gods people the foundation is the solemne obligation of the thinges referred each to other II. THere are three principall times before the law vnder the law after the law and there are three notable persons as the captaines of those times Abraham Moses Christ they make not three covenants but onely a three-fold manner of administring one Covenant III. WE must make a difference betweene the thinges substantiall of the Covenant and the thinges accessary those were eternall these temporary IIII. THe dividing of the Covenant into the old and new is not of the generall into the speciall but of the Subject into the accidents and diverse adjunctes make not the substance of the thing divers V. THe new Testament is so called because of a double succession the one of persons for Christ succeeded Moses the other of the dispensation for the Evangelicall Dispensation succeeded the Legall OF THE SACRAments in Generall The parte confirming CHAP. XI THe Second ordinary meane of the execution on Gods behalfe are the seales of the Covenant or the Sacramentes Of these wee vsually and duely holde and expound a two-fold manner the one Generall concerning all the other Speciall concerning each one of the Sacraments Now by the Name of Sacrament which is translated from military affaires to Christian vses wee doe not in the largest signification by a Metalepsis vnderstand every mystery or hidden secret of a holy and divine thing in which sence the Gospell the Incarnation of Christ the calling of the Gentiles are wont to bee expounded in Scriptures Neyther in a lesse generall signification by a Catechresis doe wee vnderstand a divine mystery and vnknowne Symbolicall secret or every such thing as signifieth somewhat else beside the shew which is offered vnto the senses such as are Ceremonies Types Parables Signes and Figures all which because they pertaine to divine matters were called of the old Fathers Sacraments but in a more restrained and most proper signification by the name of Sacrament wee vnderstand a Signe of Grace ordayned of God that hee might both seale vp his benefits in vs and consecrate vs to himselfe for ever for in the signification of Sacrament there is a mutuall respect the one on Gods behalfe offering
of the very Institution Neyther must we referre the words of the Promise in the Supper to Christs Sacrifice but to the Sacrament which hee instituted neyther also in Baptisme is the efficacy of the Sacrament simply expressed but the promise given concerning the efficacy V. THe m Concionale word pertaining to the congregation the word of Institution are not opposite but both in Baptisme and the Supper there is the same worde for that which is n Or of Preaching for the congregation in Baptisme the same is of the Institution and that which is of the Institution in the Supper the same is for the congregation VI. IN every Sacrament two things must needes bee distinguished the Substantiall and the Accidentall thereof the one whereof is properly required for the being the other for the well being of the same Now the Preaching of the same is no part of the Essence of the Sacrament but pertayneth to the manner of Administration VII THe Consecration of Sacraments consisteth in two thinges in the Institution or ordinance blessing sealing of the word and in the promise of God himselfe then in the holy vse thereof which is done by prayers and thanksgiving VIII THe chaunge of the Sacramentall word is twofold Substantiall and Accidentall the one properly pertayneth to the sense the other to the wordes and order of the wordes and yet a conclusion from the change of wordes to the change of the Element is of no force because this cannot bee changed without corruption but those may easily be changed the sense neverthelesse remayning Distinctions in Defence of the Cause Materiall I. SIgnes are eyther of things past or thinges present or things to come and they all eyther pointing out or sealing vp or presenting of all which the Sacramentall signes are mixt II. THe signe signifieth eyther the Element or the Action or both wherefore in a Sacramentall thing all that is called the signe which is perceyved by the fences whether it bee seene or heard for the Element is perceyved by the sight but the action by the sight and hearing III. THe thing signified in the sacrament is both a substance and action the substance is eyther properly whole Christ or Synecdochically the body of Christ delivered vnto death and his bloud shed the Action is Gods alone and is eyther Iustification or Regeneration IIII. THe thing and the signes are both offered eyther joyntly and truely in respect of God who promiseth or distinctly in respect of the faithfull to whome without the sacramentall cōmunion the thing signified is truely and spiritually given or of the vnfaithfull to whome even in the Sacramentall Communion the Signes indeede are offered but the thing signified is not given Distinctions in Defence of the Forme and Effect of a Sacrament Bellarmine proveth by ten reasons that the Sacraments of the New Law are the causes of Iustification by the worke done Cap. 8. Lib. 2. de Sacram. Ex opere operato I. THe Sacramentall Signes are sayde to bee practicke not for that they worke by the deede done but because they are effectuall Instruments whereby the truth of Gods Grace in Christ is sealed vppe vnto vs and because Infantes are baptized the Sacramentes doe not therefore immediately effect Sanctity for in respect of the Infants Baptisme is properly a Sacrament of entrance as in respect of them that are growne to full age it is a Sacrament of Sanctification not by effecting but by binding II. GOds institution or authority hath ●ot put a power of effecting in the Sacraments which is proper to the Principall Agent but of signifying sealing and presenting neyther hath humane instirution any place in divine matters sith the nature of those things which concerne faith and religion lerneth vpon the alone word of God III. THe Institution and vse of a Sacrament consisteth in two things first in the Relation of the Signe vnto the thing signified Secondly in the lawfull administration and receyving the verity and vertue of the Relation doth wholy depend vpon the Institutor of the lawfull administration God is the Author according to his will but man is the Minster of the same according to the rule of Gods will and his owne calling IIII. THe Sacraments depend vpon God and Christs Passion after a divers respect vpon God as the cause vpon Christs death and Passion as the object for the Passion of Christ cannot properly be called the cause of the Sacrament but the object and the thing signified wherevnto it is carried V. WE are made assured of the remission of sins by the Sacraments through an assurance not absolute but relatiue not from the former but from the latter not by the Principall but by the Instrumentall not properly by effecting but by scaling VI. THe Sacraments the word haue reference vnto faith not after a contrary but after a subalternall manner because as faith is begotten by the word so it is nourished by the Sacraments both are Instruments yet distinct by manner of working VII SAcraments profite not except they bee well applyed now there are two meanes of Application the one outward the other inward the outward are the Signes and the Word the vse of the Signes is perceyved by the touching but the vse of the Word by hearing the vnderstanding of both is required because the Signes and the word not beeing vnderstood doe not profite the inward is faith which bringeth the vse of the Signes and the word to the Soule VIII THe subordinate Instruments of the stirring vp of faith is the word of preaching or the Scripture and the visible word of the Sacrament neyther doth the one disanull the other but rather settle and establish each other Adde further that the vse of the picture and outward Signes of Baptisme is one and of the Signe is another whereas that hath neyther the worde nor promise this both IX THe profite of the Sacraments is both Generall and Particular in a diverse respect Generall in respect of the entrance and the whole outward action Particular in respect of the Application the one Generally is performed by the Signes and the word the other particularly by faith X. THe Difference of the Sacraments of the olde and new Testament consisteth not in the thing signified but in the manner of signifying and other outward Adjuncts and circumstances whereof wee haue aboue spoken The same Point doth Bellarmine proue by eight Testimonies of Scripture Cap. 4. The First Place is of Mathew the 3. Answ There is no difference made between the Efficacy of Iohns Baptism and Christs but betweene the Persons whereof the one by the outward Ministery onely giveth the water as the Signe of the Remission of sinnes the other by the Inward Efficacy giveth the Spirite as the earnest of the thinges signified And hee vseth the future Tense speaking of Christs Baptisme because he hath respect to the very Ministery of Christs Preaching which he was about to take in hand neyther doth the Place
same pertaineth to a Divine and to the Principall end of Divinity which is Salvation is generally limitted as it were within 2. boundes of places and times for wee must necessatily know and discerne a double estate of man the one in this life while hee is in the way the other after this life when hee shall attayne to the last Gaole eyther of felicity or eternall death In this life wee are wont ought to consider a double estate of man according to the distinction of the works which indeede passe from God to the creatures by an outward and temporall action the one of nature the other of grace that belonging to man as he is naturall as touching himselfe this as hee is to bee advanced by the grace of God aboue his nature and naturall condition The Former State of man in this life which is according to nature ought to bee discerned and distinguished according to the divers condition and consideration of Nature Now the Nature of man is two wayes considered one way according to his Beginning and first Originall condition and creation the other way according to the Change and Corruption which followed after as man fell from his Naturall goodnesse by his owne mutability and fault into the evill of Nature and guilte or sinne wherevpon there ariseth a double Estate of Man in Nature the one of Integrity the other of Corruption OF THE STATE OF Integrity or first Creation of MAN according to the Image of GOD. The Part Confirming CHAP. II. THe State of Integrity or the first creation of man before his Fall is a singular worke of God in Nature whereby hee made man a Reasonable creature being of a compound or double nature according to his Image for his owne glory and the good of Man himselfe The Efficient Cause is Iehovah Elohim The Lord God or God in the Plurality of Persons and Vnity of Essence for there is but one finishing or perfecting of the worke of one Essence though according to the distinction of the persons the order of working is distinct For the Father created by the Sonne through meanes of the power of the Spirite himselfe Now God effected it both by a cōmon consultation will and consent going before a Gen. 1.27 and by a manner of of effecting or creating partly immediate if you respect the soule which God of nothing created by infusing and infused by creating b Gen. 1.7 partly mediate if you respect the body which was brought forth from a matter pre-existent The Matter or Subject of this first estate is humane nature endued with all perfections which in thēselues might befitte for a thing created according to the condition thereof Now whereas wee call it a matter wee vnderstand not onely that which is incorporeall or the corporeal onely but that which is composed and as it were tempered of both for there are two essentiall partes of this Subject or humane nature whereof wee treate the Body and the Soule the truth whereof ought to be discerned and distinguished by their first Beginning Substance and Qualities By their first beginning because the bodies of our first Parents were created of a matter preexistent or having a fore-being eyther neere as the body of Eue of Adams ribbe and the body of Adam of the dust c Gen. 2.7 22. 1. Cor. 15.45 or remote of the 4. Elements which Synecdochically are vnderstoode by the name of earth as being an Element for substance and quantity predominant but the soules were created of nothing by the vertue of Gods infinite power as after the same manner God createth new soules in every body for they are not brought forth from the body d Per traducem by derivation but are brought into the body by creation e Psal 33.14 Zach. 12.1 Heb. 12.9 nor are they forced out by the power of the matter as other living creatures as well perfect as imperfect for they are simple spirites which are neyther divided nor changed nor corrupted By Substance because the bodies are compound substances furnished with diverse Organes or Instruments by which the soules exercise their powers and faculties but the soules are substances both simple and immateriall for being compared to other materiall thinges they consist of no matter and that they haue not any materiall matter their beginning and originall hath taught as also immortall not absolutely by themselues by the Law of nature or composition for God alone being life it selfe is by himselfe immortall but by the grace of God the creator and his divine will which created the same to be such that though it had a beginning yet it should not haue an end f 1. Tim 6.16 Luc. 16.22 23.43 By Qualities because even their bodies had also an incorruptibility not in their owne nature absolutely for everything composed of contraries is corruptible but by Gods grace whereby man was able as touching his body not to die vnlesse through his g Gen. 3.19 Rom. 5.12 Iac. 1.15 owne fault hee had voluntarily brought on himselfe the first and second death also a Bewty so that there was not any Infirmity or deformity but a convenient proportion and a most godly well ordered constitution but the Soules which are humane and as they are so had two principall faculties the vnderstanding and the will according as the obiect of them is two-fold to witte Being and Goodnesse to which faculties as beeing Subalternall all the other are referred For the vnderstanding apprehendeth Being and Truth the vniversall indeede by it selfe but the particular by sense The Will inclineth forward to good which because it is in the things them selues it doth not properly draw and take vnto it the very things but is drawne of them The Forme of this first Estate of man is limitted in the condition and consideration of the Image of God according to which man was created Now we call the Image of God that likenesse whereby man resembleth the nature of his Creator after a convenient manner of his nature partly in the soule properly partly in the body because of the Soule Last of all partly in the whole and entire person by reason of the vnion of both In the Soule whether you respect the Nature thereof and the faculty of substance or the Faculties or lastly the qualities of the habites wherby they are perfected The Substance of the Soule resembleth the Nature of God according to her condition and the measure of the condition for three causes first because as that so this also is one though it cōsist of many faculties as her essentiall partes For of one singular thing there is but one substantiall forme Secondly because as that is so also is this simple spirituall immateriall Simple in respect of the materiall i Act. 17.26 Spirituall in respect of the bodies k Gen. 2 9 Immateriall in respect of Originall l Gen. 2.7 Thirdly as that is so is this also incorporeal
to be Veniall or pardonable for that it is worthy of pardon but for that God vouchsafeth pardon to the Sinne and the Sinner Not the Third because it is false both that Sinne is Veniall of it own nature and that any the least Sinne should not bee against Charity For it is the transgression of the Law the ende whereof is Loue. Not the Fourth because the Nature or consideration of man offended is one and of God is another for according to the party offended the greatenesse of the offence is esteemed Not the Fift for no sinne is vnperfect because every sinne is a perfect iniquity though there bee degrees of this perfection Not the Sixt because though all sins doe not exclude charity yet they offend Now in that they exclude not or are veniall to the faithfull we must impute it not to sinne it selfe but to Gods mercy in Christ OF FREE WILL. The Part Confirming CAP. V. NOw after the Condition of man vnder Sinne followeth the consideration of humane strength which after Sinne remayned in man and is commonly and vsually expounded and noted by the Name of Free-Will But it is needefull we discerne the nature of this Doctrine three manner of wayes First commonly and absolutely according to the causes thereof Secondly in Particular according to the state and condition of man being a Sinner Thirdly respectiuely and comparatiuely according to the diverse estate of Man out of the State of Sinne whether of his Integrity or redemption or glory Commonly and Absolutely Free-will is defined to bee a naturall power or faculty of the Soule by it owne and proper motion without coaction or forcing to chuse or refuse the good or the evill which is proposed or offered to the will by the mind or vnderstanding to bee chosen or refused The Efficient Cause of this Free-will is vsually two wayes distinguished For one is Primary and another Neerest The Primary or Principall is God the beginning not onely of every good in nature but also of Nature it selfe and of the faculties and functions thereof a Gen. 45.8 Pro. 16.1 Ier. 10.23 Phil. 2.13 The Neerest is Free-will it selfe that is the will of mā which by judgement of reason going before of it owne accord choosing imbraceth or refusing shunneth that which was objected by the mind b Esa 1.19.20 Mat. 23.37 1. Kin. 3.5 Of this will there is vsually had a double consideration the one as touching the Speciall the other as touching the Operation As touching the speciall it is sayed to bee a faculty of willing or nilling as touching the Operation it is sayde to bee a function or action of that faculty eyther improperly occupied about the ends or properly about the meanes that tend to the ends The Matter hath the nature eyther of a Subiect or Obiect That which hath the nature of a Subiect as in this place we consider it is a substance created intelligent indued with reason wherein namely the vnderstanding and will are the essentiall parts proportionally but freedome is sayde to consist or be in these parts as the separable accident in the Subject That which is of the Obiect is generally all that which is put or consisteth in election or choice But specially it is the moral good or evil whervnto the will of the Creature is freely carried or which it freely escheweth And as touching Free-will in the cause of Naturall good the question is more Philosophicall then Divine The Forme of Free-will is the very freedome of the mind or of the Electiue will which for learning sake must three wayes be distinguished known For there is one freedome in the Subject another to the Object and lastly another from the lett that crosseth the same which three it is needefull that wee know for the making of this Forme and for the condition of mans Free-will First there is required freedome in the Subiect that is in the will it selfe which from her inward beginning worketh alwayes freely and that by reason of it owne nature according to which a free necessity of willing is laide vpon it So that it is not to bee called a Will which is bereft of this Freedome For the wil hath such a reciprocacy with Freedome as with it owne Essentiall property Then there is required freedome to the Obiect eyther to both opposite by way of disjunction to witte eyther morall good or morall evill whereof the one is chosen or refused before or rather then the other or to eyther of thē when onely one is offered to be taken or refused Lastly there is required freedome from the let that crosseth For the wil of man is freede from compulsion and from necessity From Compulsion for what it doth it doth the same of it owne accord From Necessity for albeit in respect of the Speciall it be necessarily limited to doe eyther good only or evill onely or both yet by it own inward power it freely limiteth it selfe to the bringing forth of it owne act yet it is needefull that both manners of Freedome be distinguished First from the Freedome of right and secondly from the Freedome of slavery That nature hath denied to man This the corruption of nature He hath not freedome of right who of due is Subject to another and according to the will of the same liueth is moved and worketh c Pro. 21.1 Act. 2.23 Wherefore all selfe power or liberty ought to bee given and assigned to God alone he hath not freedome from slavery who through his owne fault hath made himselfe a slaue to sinne and the tyranny thereof d Ioh. 8.34 The End is the glory of God in his Iustice and mercy and the Salvation or inexcusablenesse of man Particularly in the state of Corruption Free will is defined to be a naturall faculty and power freely and without coaction to chuse and performe the evill which by the mind is offered to the will to be chosen and performed The Efficient Primarie Cause is God both in respect of the Will and the freedome it selfe as being the Author and beginning of both as touching the naturall state thereof The neerest cause are the mind and will of man so farre forth as both by corruption of nature are averted from good and converted to evill and the vnderstanding verily proposeth and iudgeth falshood for truth and the will chuseth and followeth the evill in stead of the good c T it 1.15 1 Cor. 2.14 Rom. 8.7 Rom. 5.6 2. Tim. 2.26 The Matter as it is considered in the Subiect is the naturall or carnal man but as in the obiect it is the evill vnto which the actions of both faculties are carried Now the Evill whether you referre it to the inward or to the outwarde actions wee two wayes consider absolutely and in it selfe or Relatiuely as having reference to another thing The Evill absolutely is that which is strictly forbidden of God Relatiuely is that which is evill in the obiect circumstances and end that is which
inward disposition of the mind namely that we should hold both the truth of Gods worship which is expressed in the first precept the maner of that truth which is expressed in the second or they doe belong to the outward testifying of the body to wit that both in words which is in the Third and in works which is in the Fourth we should giue our selues to all exercises of godlines The good works which belong to humanity are most perfectly expressed in the six precepts of the second Table for first the foundation of them all is laid in the first precept to wit that mutuall relation of obedience duety of the inferiors towards the superiours and the superiors towards the inferiors then the chiefe and speciall kinds of humanity are reckoned vp vnto which all the rest must proportionally be referred The summe of these is not to hurt our neighbour neyther in deede nor word nor thought not in Deed eyther in respect of his person that hee must not kill or in respect of his goods that he must not steale or in respect of the Person which doth most neerely belong vnto him that he must not commit adultery Not in Word for he must beare no false witnesse against him Lastly not in mind and thought for very lust concupiscence is forbidden The Forme of good workes is a full perfect conformity in all the partes thereof with the Law of God both according to the outward shew and the inward truth c 1 Deut. 27.26 Gal 3.10 Rom. 7.14 for two thinges concur for the making of this Forme the outward goodnesse of the workes which the precepts of the Law doe outwardly shew and require and the inward holinesse of the same which the nature of the Law which is spirituall and of the Law-giver who being a spirit and a knower of the heart according to their manner doe declare necessarily presuppose and require And in respect of this double form the manner of good workes as touching themselues is most perfect but as touching vs most imperfect partly because of the reliques of sinne partly because of the continuall fight and wrastling of the old and new man in vs partly also because of the state degrees and increasings of regeneration Wherefore if there be said to be any perfection of workes while we are here That is spoken abusiuely eyther for the merite of Christ and the gratious acceptance of God or by relation vnto those who haue not as yet so proceeded in the Study or exercise of godlinesse and workes Or lastly after a humane manner according to outward discipline There is therefore no merite of good workes sith there is no proportion of equality betweene the reward and the workes sith also whatsoever works are granted for good are from another are due and are vnperfect d Rom. 7 23. 2 Cor. 3.5 Phil. 2.23 Luc 17.10 The End of good works is threefold according to the diversity of the Object to witte of God our selues and our Neighbour On Gods behalfe the supreame end is his owne glory wherevnto both the commaundement and al benefites corporall and spirituall are subordinate e Mat. 5.16 1. Cor 10.31 Phil. 1.11 On the behalfe of our selus the End is the confirmation of our election the outward testifying of our Faith and the due execution of our duty f Mat. 7.16 17. Phil. 1.11 Iac. 2.17 2. Pet. 1.10 Tit. 3 8. In our Neighbours behalfe the end is partly that the vnfaithfull by our good example might be provoked to faith and godlines partly that the faithfull might bee confirmed in godlinesse and faith g Luc. 22. ●2 Rom. 14.19 And this is the consideration of good workes generally but particularly the truth of good works must be discerned and declared chiefly and principally in two things namely in prayer and repentance whereof the one is properly exercised h Circa beneficia impetranda Circa malefi●ia perpetrata for good things which we would obtaine the other for evill things which we haue committed Prayer is a speciall worshippe of God whereby through Faith we craue for the Mediators sake necessary good things of God as being the fountain of all good things i Ioh. 4.24 Luc. 18.1 He. 10.22 Now we craue eyther for others that is Intercession or against others and that is Expostulation or for our selues and that is eyther Deprecation if we craue a deliverance from perils or Supplication if we desire the partaking of a new benefite k Psal 9 30. A Forme of asking or prayer wee haue in the Lords Prayer whereof there are three parts an Entrance a Narration and an Epilogue or Conclusion The Entrance contayneth the places both of will Our Father and of power which art in Heaven The Narration consisteth of 7. Petitions whereof the fowre first require Positiue Graces the three following graces Privatiue as they cal them The Graces Positiue respect eyther the Soule or the Body those which respect the soule doe eyther require the advancement of Gods glory both vniversally among all Hallowed bee thy Name and particularly in the Church Thy Kingdome come or doe expound or lay open the manner of both Thy Will be done Those which belong to the Body are Synechdochically included in that onely Petition of d●yly Bread The Graces Privatiue are three The Remission of sinnes Defence against the Divels Temptations deliverance from all evils Private and publicke The Epilogue contayneth causes Impulsiue and Finall the Causes Impulsiue are two The Kingdome the power The Cause Finall is onely one the Glory of God Repentance is a serious and healthfull changing of our wicked mind and will effected by the holy Ghost by the preaching of the Law and the Gospell l Ezek. 18.31 Ier. 4.1.3 Eph. 4 23 2. Cor. 7.10 Of this there are two entire parts according to the two bounds namely from which this change is made and whereunto the same tendeth which are the mortifying of the old man or the Flesh and the quickning of the new man or of the Spirite for by these true repentance is performed Mortification which is the first part of Repentance hath three properties or degrees the Acknowledgement of Sinne sorrow for sinne and God offended Lastly a Detestation an vtter avoyding of Sinne. The Acknowledgement is in the mind Sorrow in the Passion Avoyding or shunning in the action of the Will The quickning or vivification which is the latter comprehendeth three things contrary to Mortification an Acknowledgement and trust of Gods mercy in Christ Ioy springing from the same Lastly an earnest Desire or indeavour of holinesse righteousnesse and new obedience through our whole life OF GOOD WORKES The Part Confuting DISTINCTIONS That Good Workes are not simply and absolutely necessary to Salvation against Bellarmine Lib. 4. De Iusti. Cap. 7. I. THe Promise of life is sayde to bee conditionall not that the performance of the condition is proposed to be the Cause of