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A14212 A collection of certaine learned discourses, written by that famous man of memory Zachary Ursine; doctor and professor of divinitie in the noble and flourishing schools of Neustad. For explication of divers difficult points, laide downe by that author in his catechisme. Lately put in print in Latin by the last labour of D. David Parry: and now newlie translated into English, by I.H. for the benefit and behoofe of our Christian country-man Ursinus, Zacharias, 1534-1583.; I. H., fl. 1600.; Pareus, David, 1548-1622. aut; Junius, Franciscus, 1545-1602. aut 1600 (1600) STC 24527; ESTC S100227 171,130 346

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other whersoever they can because God hath so commaunded all and themselues may deserue it one of an other And being converted thy selfe remember to cōfirme thy brethren God is bound to none as not to create them of nothing so neither to preser●e them either in their being or in that good innocent and happie being wherin they were created Because whatsoeuer good wee all enioy we haue it from him neyther can he receaue any good fellcitie and commoditie of any man because of his infinite and most absolute all-sufficiencie in himselfe Who hath giuen vnto him first that he should be recompensed Is it not lawfull for me to do with mine owne as pleaseth me Secondlie Gods iustice requireth that being himselfe the cheifest good and author and end of all thinges he should referre all to his owne glory and if need were rather suffer all the creatures of the worlde to perish then any part of his glory should be left vnsatisfied As for the creatures they owe both themselues and all they haue not to themselues nor to others but to God Therefore Paule desired euen to be accursed from Christ if by the saluation and conversion of his brethren he might aduance the glorie of Christ Thirdely God may therefore most iustly permit tolerate the sinnes of his creatures that is not hinder them because by his infi●●te wisdome power iustice and goodnesse he knoweth how to vse this toleration and permission to his owne glory and the saluation of his elect This the creatures can not do and therefore they are subiect to the law of hindering offences as much as in them lieth Fourthly God is the first cause and author of all good in the worlde the creatures are onely instruments of such good thinges as are by them performed whome God in the absolute freedom of his excellent will pleasure vseth by his prouidence preserueth in that nature and manner of doing which he hath prescribed Fiftely God alone is simply immutable I am God and am not changed All creatures are mutable some of their owne nature which worke onely by vncertaintie 〈◊〉 the vnstable action of elements matter and motion of creatures or by vncertaintie or contingency and yet freely to as the wils of angelles an● 〈…〉 are in deede of their owne immutable and therfore necessarie agents in that which they doe yet are as easie to be altered by God as the rest so the motion of the sonne is naturally such as we see yet God at his pleasure can either stop or interrupt the course therof Sixtly God alone is simply absolutely free that is of himselfe moving all things in himselfe moved and depending of none hauing in himselfe the reason cause of al his purposes with greatest power and authority of disposing al things otherwise from eternity if so he had beene pleased imposing necessity or contingence vncertainety vpon al things himselfe not tied to such conditions by any thing Eph. 1. 9. According to his good pleasure which he had purposed in himselfe But the liberty of reasonable creatures is not absolute that is depending of no other for although they moue themselues by some internal cause vnderstandinge offering some obiect and will of his owne accorde without constraint chosing or refusing it yet are they over-ruled by an other agent namely God who both offereth obiects of what nature quality howsoever to whōsoeuer it pleaseth him and also to them and by them affecteth moveth inclineth and boweth the wils of whomsoeuer whensoeuer and how far soever he will himselfe That mans conceipt of God is too contumelious which putteth no difference betweene the liberty which is in God and his creatures Wherefore Gods providence and working in all things doth not destroy but vphold and encrease the libertie of our wils For the more God mooveth or forsaketh them the more violently consequently with more freedome and fervencie of desire they are carried eith●r to good or evill Wherefore thē indeed we shall with greatest freedome will that which is good when God shall so be all in al that wee can will or wish nothing but what is good which shal be with the favor and grace of God in the life to come Fourthly we must distinguish the manner of effects or things done For the same effect proceeding from divers causes may in respect of thē bee diversly taken For as it proceedeth from a good cause so it is good as from an evil so evill as from a cause contingent and mutable or necessary immutable so may it be accounted contingent mutable or necessary and immutable Wherfore in respect of God in whō we haue our being life motion all things which were made are good as well bad as good considering that God is absolutely immutably good and therefore can neither will or do any thing but what is good and agreeable to his nature and the law wherein hee hath revealed vnto vs his nature and ius●ice In respect of creatures all good thinges as they are good are by God vpheld in their goodnesse al evill things as they are evil degenera●e from that goodnes wherein they were cre●ted God suffering and forsaking them and are not therevnto restored by God So in respect of the liberty and freedome of God al things are done cont●●gently and by vncertainety yea even those thinges which seeme to depende most necessarily on second causes as the motion of the heavens but in respect of Gods immutable decree all events are necessary as when the souldiers crucifying Christ did not breake his bones but pierced his side with a speare which in respect of second causes were meerely contingent Fiftly we make distinction of sinnes whereof some in themselues and in their owne nature are sins namely such things as are forbiddē by God not are by special law or exception commanded as the robbing of the Aegyptians the offering of Isaac others by occasiō or accident namely such thinges as are either commaunded or allowed by God but perverted by the creature and not perfourmed in such sort as they were commaunded as are the sacrifices praiers and almes-deeds of wicked men and hypocrites Whether of these two sorts of sinne a mā commit either that which is sin in it selfe or the other which is sin by accidēt and occasion certaine it is that through his owne fault imperfection he committeth it But that which God intendeth in these actions of men is ever good and iust Lastly we must distinguish the necessity of cōstraint and immutability for it were too grosse to confounde them For the former moveth violently and by externall cause the latter naturally some internall cause in the agent moving and being moved as by nature it is apt These thinges when I perceiued GOD opening my eies I did not reckon one ●ote of those foolish fables that GOD was made the cause of sinne that contingence or casualitie and libertie were taken awaie
famous and glorious over all the kingdomes of the earth for the many strange eventes and wonderful miracles shewed amongst them behould wee set this 〈◊〉 natiō now grown base cōtemptible troden vnder foot of the very out casts of the earth and in the very mid-day and noone-light of their prophecies so besti●lly and blockis●ly blind that the consideratiō of this their example is able to moue and stir vp evil men I say not vnto laughter or indignation but rather to st●●ke into their harts a dreadfull horror of the like iudgement Nowe that the contempt and neglect of sound doctrine touching God and our salvation is the cause of so great mischiefes miseries wee haue for testimony the voice of the prophets and of Christ himselfe Ioh. 3. 43. I am come in my Fathers name and yee receiue me not if another shall come in his owne name him will yee receiue I omit the rehearsall of other examples that one of the late most flowrishing and happy kingdome of England I will touch in a word not only because the example is exceedinge lamentable but because also there is none so very a childe in all this Auditory in vvhose time it chaunced not For of late yeares that kingdome and Countrey of Englande beeing endowed and beautified with the profession of the Gospel in the happy Reigne of King Edwarde the VI. the Churches and schooles of learning being nobly ●ounded honorably enriched religiously ordered the king himselfe though but 16. yeares of age yet so farre aboue the hope of his yeares indued with such singular piety ●dmirable learning and all Princely vertues that in all that glorious kingdome nothinge might seeme more glorious then the king and governour himselfe that kingdome of late yeares was inferiour in perfect happinesse to no nation of the earth But ●o on the suddaine through the vntimely decease of that most noble Edward a Prince of so great hope the Popish tyrannicall dominion reentered this kingdome and tooke ful possession thereof wasting and spoiling with imprisonments banishments fire and sword the most famous churches of that Realme taking some of the best renowned for learning and integrity of life without all respect either of age sexe or dignity and torturing them with fiery flames and other punishments of like barbarous cruelty and scattering and dispersing others towardes all partes and corners of the earth It is now the fifth yeere since this scourge these calamities haue leine heauy on this land and oppressed the same I rather acknowledge and bewaile our owne offences then take on me to censure the defaulte● of others Howbeit the report of English exiles is yet 〈◊〉 in mine eares wherin they much complained of and bewailed the ingratitude security loathing of the Gospell which had overtun their whole countrie And do we then seeme to regard our good estate we enioy more thē they I would we did When Pilate had mingled the bloud of the Galileans which he slewe with the sacrifices Vnles yee repent saith Christ yee shall all perish The tumultes and downe falles of Empires and kingdomes wherwith the church is shaken are open conuersant before our eies and threatē and menace vs some bitter scourge The Turkish cut throtes gape on vs ready to d●v●ur vs striuing by mai●e force to take Christ from amōg vs and by ●n●rusion to seate their profane Mahome●● st●ede of Christ in our churches of whome reporte goeth that they daily withdrawing Chritian youth vnto their b●asphemou● filthy Paganism● and sheading and su●king the b●oud of our a●●es and kinsfolke threaten and attempt farther irruptions and inuasions on our bo●ders That execrable sincke the Courte of Rome curseth and banneth vs crying out Away with vs that wee may be rooted out from of the earth heresies d●ily bud and blossome both within and without the Church and the erroures and corruptions of truth crept into the Church are beyond all number And verily nowe is that time when vnles the Lord reserue a ●eede vnto vs nought remaineth but that we should become as Sodom and Gomorrah O then let vs not be so iron harted let vs not be so bitter enemies of our owne soules that we regard not these Gods merciful visitations and threatnings of more sharper iudgements to ensue O let vs seeke the Lord while he may be found let every one take ca●e of his owne salvation and beare in minde whatsoeuer thinges concerne the same so that if the frame of nature should on a suddaine be dissolved we may be ready cheerefully to meet the Lord in the aire this comming in glory These things which I haue hitherto spoken cōcerne all in generall but more particularly vs that professe the studies of learning For it is the common consent of all that ever either founded or governed schooles or euer were conversant in them or would that others should frequent them that they who are here brought vp shoulde become not only more learned but better mānered also then other men Which trueth being so evident they describe a schoole to be A company appointed by GOD of such as teach and learne sciences meete necessarie for mankinde both touching God and other good things that the knowledge of God amōgst men be not cleane abolished that the Church be continued and preserued that manie may be made heares of life eternal that discipline be maintained and that men may enioie other honest commodities issuing out of the artes We therefore shoote wide and misse much of the m●●ke we ai●e at vnlesse we holde it for certaine and true that our earnest and diligent endevour in these schooles and nu●ce●es of Christ Christianity must bee employed not so much for this ende that we may be the more fraught vvith humane and divine learning but rather that being beautified and adorned with all laudable behaviour towards men and holinesse to the Lord may be found acceptable in the sight of God and men And it is a truth apparāt in the Church that all the exhortations vnto civill vertues without the doctrine of piety is nought else but an estraying and swar●ing from God true godlinesse perfect iustice and assured salvation For the holy Ghost hath pronounced this sentence that whatsoever we doe not with intent thereby to glorifie GOD whatsoever vvee doe not in the name of CHRIST whatsoever is not of faith it is all even altog●ther sinne VVherefore vvere the doctrine of the Church secluded from our schooles we should not only not be able to teach or learne any thing that belongeth to true and entire vertue such as GOD requireth of vs But that small portion and remainder we haue should make vs of evill men worse and more impious and that indeed not by the increase thereof so much as by the decrease and defect of those spirituall and supernaturall qualities without which nothing is holy nothing wholsome vnto vs. And heere although the consent of men wise and iudicious may satisfie
not good Eze. 29. Nebuchadnezer my servant caused his armie to serue a great servitude against Cyrus Ezech. 36. And I will giue you a new hearte put a new spirite in the middest of you and I will take awaie this stonie heart from your flesh Compare the 17 of Sirach Ier. 13. Ezech. 58 I will lead thee about put a bridle in thy mouth bring thee forth At that day shall many thinges come to thy minde thou shalt thinke evill thoughtes shalt say I will goe vp to the land c. Compare this with Esai 10. Dan. 4 Hee worketh according to his will both in the armies of heauen also in the habitations of the earth and there is none can staine his hande or say vnto him whi●● hast thou done this Amos 3. There is no evill in the citie which the Lord hath not done which is spoken of the evill of punishment though often times it fall out by accident that there be also an evill of offence which God suffereth to concur Micah 4. Manie nations are gathered togeather but they know not the thoughtes of the Lord. Mat. 7. A good tree cannot bringe forth evill fruit in the same chapter they which are built vpon a rocke shall not fal Read Melancthons commentarie vpon that place Luc. 10. One sparrow falleth not to the ground Math. 11. I thanke thee father for that thou haste hidden these thinges from the wise Mat. 13. To you it is given to know but vnto others it is not given Mat. 16. every where in the Evangelists That Christ ought to goe to Hierusalem and suffer many things Mat. 18. It is necessary that offences should come Mat 20. Is it not lawfull for me to doe with mine owne what I will Many are called but few bee chosen Mat. 24. All thinges must come to passe And in the same place It is not possible that the elect should ●rre finally Ioh. 6. Whatsoever my father hath given mee shall come vnto me and him that commeth to me I vvil not cast forth And No man can come vnto me except the father draw him And This is the will of my father that of al whatsoever he hath given me I should loose nothing Ioh. 10. Other sheepe also I haue which I must bring vnto my flocke And My sheepe no man taketh out of my hand Ioh. 11. Caiphas whē he was high Priest did prophecy Ioh. 12. Therefore they coulde not beleeue because he had blinded their eies Ioh. 13. I knowe them whō I haue chosen Ioh. 14. Which spirit the world cannot receiue Ioh. 15. You haue not chosen me but I you Act. 1. The prophecies concerning Iudas ought to haue beene fulfilled Act. 2. Him haue yee taken by the hands of the wicked being delivered by the determinate counsell and foreknowledge of God and haue crucified slaine Act. 3. Through ignorance yee did it but God so fulfilled the things which he had foretolde Act. 4. They came togither to doe whatsoever thy hand and counsell had before decreed to be done Act. 13. They beleeved as manie as were ordained to eternal life Act. 17. He giveth life motion vnto all things And In him we liue mooue and haue our being Rom. 1. God delivered them over to a reprobrate minde Rom 8 All thinges worke for the good of those that loue God Rom. He hath mercie on whom he will and hardeneth whom he will Reade Pa●●s whole disputation Rom. 11. Election prevailed the rest are hardned And The graces of God are without repentance 1. Cor. 4. What hast thou that thou hast not received Eph. 1. He hath chosen vs in himselfe before the creatiō of the world that we m●y be 〈◊〉 And Predestinated according to his purpose who doth 〈◊〉 the counsell of his owne will Read the chapter it selfe Phil. 1. It is God which worketh in vs both to will and to perfourme of his meere good will 2. Thes 2. H●e c●t strong errors amongst them Pervse the plac 2. Tim 2 The foundation of the Lorde standeth sure 1 Ioh. 2. They went out from amongest vs but were not of vs. 1. Ioh. 4. Herein appeareth his loue in that he loved vs first Revel 17. God wil put into their heartes to do his will But I haue al●eadged too many places purposing to touch onely a f●w for you may of your selfe finde out infinit such l●ke places of scriptu●e Herevnto may be added certaine arguments which no man shall ever be able to ref●●● Gods omnipotencie suffereth nothing to b●e done which he doth not either simply or ●●son sort will For looke what simplie he will not ●hat by no meanes can be done His infinite wisedome doth not suffer●● 〈◊〉 thinge in the world to be done without his advice and couns●ll Whilest he willeth the end which is 〈◊〉 his purpose most excellent he also willeth 〈◊〉 meanes leading to these ends at the least in some respect but not as they are sinnes All thinges in the worlde which are good and positiue haue their being from him and are ruled by his prouidence And therfore al motiues or motions tending to any end as they are motins be ruled and directed by God The counsels of God depend not on the works of creatures but contrarywise the actions motions of creatures depende vpon the counsell of God His foreknowledge even of thinges most mutable is immutable Wherefore it dependeth vpon a cause immutable that is vpon his owne eternal decree All this confirmes a providence vniversall over all things particular As much may be said for Gods eternal and immutable Election There can be no good at al in any thing which God from all eternity hath not decreed to effect or bring to passe Those whom once he loveth he loveth from al eternity and for all eternity we cannot therefore be assured of the present grace of God towarde vs excepte wee bee also assured of his eternall grace and loue vnlesse we wil imagine God to be mutable We must beleeue eternal life Our hope must be certaine Wee must pray for eternall salvation without condition or doubt Christs intercession for the elect is ever sure These amongst a great many others contente me perhaps you Now therfore after al this let vs heare what it is that you obiect First say you this doctrine carrieth men away from Gods revealed will vnto his secret will from the word to impressions or perswasions wroughte by faith before credit or beliefe be given to the word heard What is this If you haue at any time seene this wrighten in our doctrine why doe you not produce or note the places If you thinke it a consequent therevpon why doe you not frame your argumente and drawe your consequence what kind of Logique is this or of whom did you learne it to raile deadly and damnably against innocentes without any shew of proofe but if you cā neither shew where we haue wrighten it
church Sitting at the right hand of his father iudge of quick and dead c. Also that the holy ghost is called a sanctifier that is a person immediately lightning vs regenerating vniting vs to God comforting and confirming vs. OF THE CREATION OF THE WORLD 1 THe order in nature the minde of man the knowledge of principles civill discipline final causes the finite orderly chaine of causes do shew that it was created by some principall creating spirite 2 Yet because of the knowledge of God now obs●ured in men by sin for the continuall change of corruption and generation for the absurditie of imagining the creator to bee idle and for losse of the historie of the creation and originall of the world there is no truth certainety to be found concerning the creation of the worlde but in the doctrine of the church 3 Therefore the sacred scripture teacheth vs that al things begā to be to haue bin created by the only true God the eternall father sonne and holy Ghost according to the eternall purpose and pleasure of this true and eternall God 4 But this eternall father created all thinges of nothing by his sonne and the holy Ghost most freely without any alteration or chaunge of himselfe or any labour so that all was verye good 5 The ende of the creation of the worlde vvas chiefly the glorie of God other ends subordinate vnto this are the manifestation and contemplation of Gods wisedome power and goodnesse in his workes his providence or preservation and perpetuall governing of all things especiallie the goodnesse bountie of God toward his church and to conclude that al other things might seru● for the life and safety of man 6. OF THE SAME 1 VVHatsoeuer is is either the creatour or his creature 2 All other things which haue begun to be besides this one onely eternall and trew God manifested in his church were created by the one trew God 3. In that beginning of time wherein it pleased God to haue it so 4. And that of the eternall father by the sonne and holy Ghost 5. By the most free purpose decree of Gods will 6. With out anie motion change or laboure of the creator 7. And that of nothinge 8. And so that al things were most excellent in their kind 9. Not that the creator might thereby be made better or more perfect 10. But that in the creation he might impart his goodnesse and ioy to reasonable creatures 11. And afterwardes preseruinge ruling and sustaining by his providence al thinges which he had created he might for ever be beneficiall vnto them especially to his church 12. And that being willing that other creatures should serue especially for mans vse and saftie 13. He might declare vnto them his wisedome goodnesse power and ioy 14. And being knowne by his workes ●ee might for euer be praised by reasōable creatures for his wisedome bountie power and ioy 7. OF THE ANGELS 1 IT is certaine that there are angells both good and bad 2. But both good and bad angelles are spirites that is incorporall substances not subiect to sense liuing intelligent excellent in strength and wisedome 3. Finite in nature and proprieties 4. Created by God of nothinge then when other things were created 5. In trew holinesse iustice and blessednesse 6. Wherin the good Angells are by the singular grace of the creator confirmed 7. That they may agnize and praise him for ever 8. And be Gods ministers to finish the saluatiō of the elect and represse and punish the euill 9. But the evill angells by their proper and free will a●d by their owne fault fell from God and are made enemies of God and the good angels and mankind 10. And therefore through hatred against God they force men to sinne practize their destruction 11. And these are immutable evill cast of from God into eternall punishment 12. But God suffered them to fall and saueth them being fallen that he may shewe his anger and iustice in their punishments and by them may punishe chastize and exercise the elect 9 OF GODS PROVIDENCE 1. Not onely the doctrine of the prophets and apostles but also the testimonies of God shininge in nature doe proue that the world is preserued gouerned by Gods prouidence As the order which is seene in the principall partes of nature the minde or soule governing the actions of men with her prouidence the lawe of nature giuen to men that it might be vnto them a rule of their life rewardes and punishments conscience the ordering of politique affaires heroick motions vertues the fore-tellinges of future eventes the ends whereunto things are ordained and lastely the verie nature of the most omnipotēt wise iust and excellent God 2. Gods prouidēce is the eternall counsell of God most free and immutable most wise iust according to which God bringeth to passe all good in all his creatures suffereth sin to be committed and directeth all both good and evill to his glory and the saluarion of the elect 3. This purpose or counsell in God is not onlie a knowledge or science in God but also the forcible decree and will of God wherby he hath determined from all eternitie both what he himselfe will doe what he will haue become of his workes whatsoeuer he hath decreed he also effecteth in fit time order 4. Good thinges are the substaunces of al things the properties faculties giuen vnto thē by God al motions mutatiōs actiōs events of al things as they are naturall motiōs or obedience to Gods wil or benefites and blessinges of God or punnishments of the evill 5. That all these thinges are done by the powerfull will of God as manie most euident testimonies of scripture so also these reasons do confirme 1 Because of Gods omnipotencie nothing can be done in the worlde which God simplie wil not haue done And therfore what soever is done God must needes either simplie or in some sorte be willing that it should be done 2 Because a most wise governour such as God is suffereth nothing of al that is in his power to come to passe besides his will and purpose 3 Because he which is willing the ends of thinges should come to passe is also willing either simplie or in sorte that all thinges and events by which we compasse those ends should come to passe 4 Because Gods purposes decrees depend not on the actions of secōd causes 5 Because the immutable fore knowledge of God cannot be groūded but on an immutable cause that is gods wil decree 6 Because God is the first cause of al naturall good things amongst which also are reckned the motiōs of each thing 6 Wheras evill is of two sorts one of offence the other of punishment and that which is a punishment is an execution of iustice therfore good it ought likewise to be referred vnto Gods will as the principall cause thereof 7 But the evil of offence
or sin as it is a motion or triall or exercise or chastisement of the godly or a punishmēt of the evil so it is from Gods prouidēce effectiuely that is so that God is the author of it but as it is sin not effectiuely but permissiuely 8. Now this permission is not a ceasinge of Gods prouidence and working in the actions of evill men wherby it may come to passe that those actions may seeme not to depend of any other cause then of the creatures which a●●●gents but a withdrawing of his heauenly grace wherby God executinge the decree of his will by reasonable creatures eyther doth not reveale vnto the creature his will which will haue that action done or ells boweth not the will of the creature to obey this diuine will in that action Which so standing the creature sinneth necessarilie in deed but with all voluntarilie and freely by Gods most iust iudgment whiles God by it bringeth to passe the iust good worke of his will prouidence 9. God therfore will haue those actions motions which the Divells men by sinning doe effect to come to passe as they are motions and executions of Gods iust iudgment but as they are sins he neither willeth nor appoueth nor effecteth them though he forbid hate horiblie punnish them yet notwithstanding in Divels men ●e suffereth them to concur with his iust actions whilest for verie good reasons most iust causes he doth not effect in them by his spirit the performance of these actiōs iustely that is according to the prescript of Gods will 10 Neither is God therfore the author of confusion which is in the actions of the evill for what they will do inordinatlie that is against the cōmaundemēt of God that God will haue done in excellent most wise order Lastly euen sinnes themselues as they are sins be done by Gods providence though not effecting yet permitting prescribing them boundes directing thē whither it pleaseth him 11 Neither is God by this doctrine made the author of sin because the sin of the sinfull creature doth by accident concur with the good and iust worke of God which he in his owne coūsel determineth by the sinfull creature executeth And therefore in respect of Gods will those actiōs are iust and right which in respect of the wicked by whom they be done are sinnes 12. And these things are manifest first by the vniversall nature causes effects being such of thēselues naturally or by accidēt For whē the same effect hath many causes some good some badde that same effect in respect of good causes is good in regard of bad causes is bad good causes of thēselues naturally are the causes of good effects but by accidēt of euil effects or sins which is foūd in the effect by some other euill or sinful cause cōtrarywise euil causes are of thēselues the causes of evil but by accidēt they may be causes of that good whith is foūd in the effect 13. Secondly the truth of these matters appeareth by the immutable nature of God the foūtaine and author of all good For Gods wokes are equaly good whether he effect thē by evil or good instruments neither are they battered by good or made worse by evill instruments seeing their iustice and goodnes dependeth not on the nature of the instruments but of God which maketh vse of the instruments but on the other side the creatures can neither be nor continue good nor do anie thing that is good except God make them good vphold thē in goodnes so governing thē that they may work that which is good with God who by thē worketh that good which he will 14 Yet hereby we do not attribute vnto God cōtrary wils For God wil wil not the same actiōs in divers respectes Hee will as they are conformable to his most iust iudgement and order and he will not but rather hateth and detesteth yet permitteth them to be done as they are contrary to his order and law against which they are committed by the wicked 15 Neither doth the necessity of consequence which happeneth to the events by the immutable decree of Gods providence take away that contingēce or casuality which they haue frō the mutable nature of second causes or from the power liberty of God whereby he so decreed from al eternity if we distinguish rightly betweene both as that there is a respect betweene causes working immutablie or mutablie For thereby euerie man may see that the same effect proceeding frō●auses partly mutable partly immutable may wel be called cōtingēt in respect of mutable causes and necessary in respect of causes immutable 16 Neither doth this immutable providence of God derogate ought from the vse of teaching our desire of wel-doing as if these things were in vaine or to no purpose for admitting a first cause it is not necessarie to denie the second causes nor the first admitting the secōd And God hath promised to saue vs not without but by these means and hath for this reason cōmanded vs to vse thē expecting the good successe of them from him 17 But when God in scripture is denied to will the actions of Divels or sinful men that is to bee vnderstood as they are sins or to that end wherevnto they are done by divels mē not as they are actions or done vnto that end which God in the order of providence respecteth For actions are distinguished by their endes 18 The church thus perswaded her selfe and teaching others of Gods providēce doth vtterly cōdemne detest the furies madnes of Epicures and Academiques with the devises of all others which wil haue gods providēce either to be none at al or not to extēd vnto all things in the world or els to be only a certain kinde of fore-knowledg in God not any decree and execution 19 As much it condemneth the blasphemies and errours of the Manichees Stoickes Libertines and others which make GOD the authour of sinne or take from him his libertye whereby from all eternitie hee made his decrees or else abolish the operations and vse or differences of second causes working either necessarily or contingently or voluntarily freely 20 This doctrine is to be retained in the Church for Gods glory that so it may appeare that God is the governour of all things yet not the author of sinne but the most free and excellent effector giver of all good things It is also so necessarie for our instruction and comfort that we may become thankefull vnto God as being the well spring of all goodnes and patiently suffer evils as happening vnto vs by his will perswading our selues that all things shal serue for our salvation that acknowledging God to bee the author of punishments we might amende not despaire of Gods helpe though we be left destitute by second causes that we trust not in our selues but in feare of
the minde in chusing and therfore comprehēdeth both faculties that is to say of vnderstanding and will 3 Free-wil therfore is a facultie or power of willing or nilling chusing or refusing without constraint of its owne proper motion or aptnesse to either of both which the vnderstanding telleth is to be chosen or refused 4 Two things therfore there are which are cōmō to that free wil which is in God that which is in reasonable creatures the first that they doe al things with deliberation and counsel or by helpe of the vnderstanding shewing the obiect the second that the will of its owne accord and naturall force without constraint willeth or nilleth that which the minde hath conceaved 5 But the differences betweene that freedome which is in God that which is in the creatures are three the first is in the vnderstāding because God from al eternity doth most perfectly vnderstand and beholde all things neither can be ever be ignorant of any thing or any way erre in iudgment the second is in the will because Gods wil is ruled bowed or dependeth of no other cause thē of it selfe but the wils of Angels and men are in such sort the causes of their owne actions and motions that neverthelesse by the secret counsell of God and his power and efficacie ever and every-where present they are mooved to the choice or refusal of obiects either immediately by God or by instruments and meanes sometimes good sometimes bad such as it best pleaseth God to vse and it is impossible for them to do any thing without the eternall and immutable counsell of God The thirde is both in the vnderstanding and also in the wil because God as he knoweth all things immutably so also he hath decreed from everlasting willeth immutably all thinges which are done as they are good and permitteth them as they are sins but as in creatures the knowledg iudgmēt of things is mutable so also is their will 6 This liberty in mē is lost by sin but beginneth to be renued in ou● regeneratiō shal be perfectly restored in the life eternal So that the 4. divers estates of mē which are distinguished in time doe make 4. degrees therof 7 The first degree of liberty was in our nature before the fall wherein our will was fit to perfourme her whole obedience to Gods law yet not so confirmed but that being tempted by the divell vvith some shew of good it might fall from that obedience by its owne proper motion 8 Yet because the creatures per●isting in obedience cannot be but by confirmation from God mans will did yeeld vnto temptation in deed willingly but withal necessarily and being fallen into sinne lost that libertie vnto God which it had to make choise of evil or good and being turned from retained only liberty or freedome to evil 9 Therfore the second degree of liberty is least of al which is nature decaied but not as yet regenerat wherin though there be a wil fit to perform the external discipline of the law yet because it cannot so much as begin the internal spirituall obedience without which al external works evē the best in shew are sin condēned by God the wil leaveth not to chuse freely but yet it cā chuse nothing but sin because of inherent corruption and turning away from God 10 The third is in man renued but not as yet glorified in whom the will vseth her libertie freedome partly to wel doing partly to evil doing For because it is regenerate by the holy Ghost it is againe inclined to obey God but because this regeneration is not yet perfect there remaine yet some evil inclinatiōs wherfore it begīneth indeed spiritual obediēce pleasing god but cānot perfit it in this life but then and so farre it doth well and persevereth in that which is good when as far as it is guided and gouerned by the holy Ghost 11. The fourth degree is the chiefest and most perfect in the life eternall or after our glorification wherin our will shall be able to vse her liberty onely to that which is good and not to choose that which is evill because of our perfect knowledge feruent loue of God thorow inclinatiō to righteousenesse and hatred of sinne and perpetuall direction of the holy Ghost 12. This doctrine of free will must needes bee retained in the church that so the cheifest most perfect libertie and immutabilitie effectinge all good in vs may be attributed onely to God as the first cause all excuse may be taken from sinners and to the end that being trewly humbled before God by knowledge of our miserie corruption we may of him alone craue the preseruation and perfiting of our saluation and being cōvicted by testimonies from God himselfe may the rather be mooued to faith and obedience to his worde 12. OF FAITH 1. This worde faith taken in his largest signification doth implie a certaine and sure knowledg by proofe of such witnesses as are thought vnlikly to deceaue 2. In the doctrine of the church there are foure sortes of faith mentioned an historicall a temporary a miraculous and a iustifying faith 3. Historicall faith is a knowledge perswaded of the truth of such thinges as are set downe by the Prophets and Apostles 4. Temporarie faith is a knowledg of the doctrine of the church together with ioy conceaued vpon knowledge of the truth or other true or seeming good things without applying the promise of grace to him that beleeueth and therefore without trew conuersion or final perseuerance 5. Miraculous faith or a faith wherby miracles are wrought is a sure knowledge by special revelation of Gods will of working some miracle at his request or prediction by whome it is to bee wrought 6. Iustifying faith is that knowledge wherby a man doth strongly perswade himselfe of the truth of all Gods word reuealed vnto him assuring himselfe that the promise of Gods grace through Christ pertaineth vnto him and in confidence of this fauour of God towardes him overcommeth all sorrowe and feare 7. For this confidence of iustifying faith is a motion of our will and heart composed of ioy in the certaintie of Gods present grace towards vs hope of future deliverance from all evill 8. There is therfore no faith but that which is grounded on the revealed will of God 9 The holy Ghost worketh all faith is vs either by the voice of heauenly doctrine or by immediate revelation 10. But wheras it is the wil of God ordinarily to kindle cherish confirme faith in vs by the doctrine of the church all are bound to hearken meditate theron 11. Many hypocrites in the church haue hade temporarie faith historicall faith and faith of miracles is common to the good and evill iustifying faith is in this life giuen onely to all these that are elected to eternall life 12. Iustifying faith doth alwaies comprehend in it historicall faith but is not alwaies
idle word out of his mouth all things did streāe frō him so exquisit levelled weighed premeditated What should I speake of his publique discourses his excellēt sermōs first preached by him at Heidelberg were in admiration with all men the variety multiplicity of learning which he vsed in his lectures did refine adorne better make fruitfull the wits of many vvhich now in all parts of the Christian vvorld plant sovv water the garden and fielde of God which build vp the house of the liuing God and lastlie which by their labours of imitatiō do represent this their faithfull maister as it vvere reviued by them recalled frō death Nay his ordinary table which he vsed in the house of wisdome vvas so spread vvith varietie of flowers sweet fruits of that more sacred sort of philosophie so stored with provision new old that it might wel seeme not a table of vulgar philosophie but a sāctuarie of celestial wisdōe There the voice of scripture resounded which is the only messenger and interpreter of vvisdome there vvere her foster-children honesty and modestie and to vse the words of Eustathius in Macrobius with sobriety godlines There was variety of historie natural and morall there sate by all the sciences and one after an other interposing did by entercourse breath louely liuely freshnes into the whole assembly If any mā wil reckon these among his discourses he may for me but I knovve these were ful iust lectures adorned with notes of al sciences beautified with admirable graces And these ar the great vertues of his discourses But who wil not marvel that al these vertues shoulde dailie be polished adorned by wrighting that most excellēt ready maker master of eloquēt discourse For this mirror of mē tooke pleasure to feed the fluencie not only of his tōgue but also of his wit by wrighting which is a thing that Tullie cōmādeth cōmēdeth to as many as desire to excel in speakīg teaching Therfore al his lectures cōmētaties observatiōs notes were wrightē so that frō his own writings he had cōtinuall helpes both for his owne memory also for others directiō But amōgst all these writings I maruell at nothing more thē that he could steale so much vacāt time frō thē as to answere to many those verie weighty questions He opened the vnderstāding of things freely gaue coūsaile to such as requested his advise thē was he most dutiful whē he was supposed to think of nothing lesse thē dutie This the learned vnlearned the poore rich neighbors strāgers friends enemies cā verie wel witnes none of al which cā iustly complaine that he was either not regarded of him or not satisfied by him He endevored so curteously gētlie faithfully to doe good to all that he might win al ioine thē to his L. Christ But some mā wil say these are priuate matters where are those publike proofes of his piety charity these thinges are so opēly witnessed proued that they are indeede cleerer thē the cleere sun-shine at noone-day For those elegāt wrightings heretofore we haue seene at Heidelberg came most out of this store house those which here I say here 5. yeares since vvere spred amōgst vs were al wrightē by the same hād and that hand which here hee guided by his skill God hath now possessed there with vndoubted rest Tell mee thou vpstarte Eutyches what didst thou ever feele more heavy then this hand except the hand of God which doth vex persecute excruciate torment pursue them What Belleraphon did more strongly beate downe thy Chimaera what Hercules thy Hydra Who did ever more couragiouslie confound that thy Cerberian monster of Vbiquitie But that I may not long dwell on a matter vulgar and trivial thou Sarmatian Arius shalt not escape the hand of this heroike chāpion though issuing from vs. This same is he that hath provided filed polished sharpned and fitted vnto vs armour prepared for the destructiō of thy impious opiniō of whose force I haue thought good to fore-warne thee that thou maiest now at length begin to looke backe to God reverētly feare the eternal son of the eternal God which is was and shal be one together with the father for ever and ever which if thou wilt not doe vnderstand then that there is denounced from this mā eviction of thy blasphemie and from God thy downefall ruine and destruction What trust thē vvhat diligence shall we thinke was in this sweet and sacred soule who suffred no hower no moment of the day to passe without some profit The proofes of pietie charitie consist especiallie in these 2. causes first in maintaining true doctrine secondlie in assailing and suppressing that which is false Who thē is there that can addict himselfe more religiouslie learnedlie fitlie presselie vehementlie faithfullie diligentlie stoutlie to true and sound doctrine then he hath done To speak somwhat of his curtesie what greater favor could he do then that whereof before I spake vvhich was his diligence in vnfolding questions and giving advise Which in this man was ever so elaborate that he cleered all doubts most evidently discouered all sophismes most subtilly readilie with passing dexterity and agility not with the words of humane wisedome but by the power of the holy spirit Why thē should any heere obiect that he was a man of churlish and surly disposition In deed as they which are paineful in their studies are somewhat surly to such idle and slouthful children as delight more in childish sportes then manly studies so they that are most diligent are somewhat way warde to men of vanity For to my selfe and other good men that knew him no man was more curteous and affable And if at any time he made it a religiō to stir from any matter which he busily intended I likewise made it as great a religion to cal him away frō it because I would presuppose that either he was very busie or not very wel In my occasions of busines saith Tullie I am very doubtful when having begunne any thing I am called to some other matter neither can I so easilie conioine things interrupted as finish them once purposed Touching health there is none so foolish but if he doe not beleeue me may learne as much by nature experience Wherefore he is but a drone that will be troublesome to a busie bee and he too vnciuil foolish importune vvhich takes such harmeful diligence for a duty Of this sort there are many so foolish and iniurious to good men that they scarce accōpt them men vnlesse they will every waie be as foolish as themselues What shall I here shew that I often see verie greate men complaine of this matter that they are sodainlie called awaie frō those studies that are sacred weightie and required of their place and compelled against their willes to spend most of their time in trifles idle discourses