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A25294 The substance of Christian religion, or, A plain and easie draught of the Christian catechisme in LII lectures on chosen texts of Scripture, for each Lords-day of the year, learnedly and perspicuously illustrated with doctrines, reasons, and uses / by that reverend and worthy laborer in the Lord's vineyard, William Ames ... Ames, William, 1576-1633. 1659 (1659) Wing A3003; ESTC R6622 173,739 322

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the sufferings and patience of Jesus Christ so also in the life to come we shall be made partakers of his glory Rom. 8. 17. Doct. 4. Christ together with his highest dignity bath also highest power This the Text evidenceth in as much as God's right hand signifieth his power and sitting down on his right hand signifies the highest communion and society with God in this power that can be Reas. 1. Because dignity and power might so have the same degrees For dignity separated from power is no more but a dead title and therefore seeing Christ hath highest dignity and glory it followes also that he is endued with highest power Reas. 2. Because Christ is constituted Lord as well to correct governe as to preserve glorify his Church He must therefore of necessity both have the power of right and the power of strength fitting and competent for these ends For the Lord hath both a power of right and of might to exercise and put in execution all this as well immediately and by himself as mediately and by instruments or servants And this is that power that Christ professeth was given unto him in Heaven and on earth Mat. 28. 18. Now it is given to Christ and agreeth to him most properly as he is Mediator or as man assumed to the unity of one person with God but not so properly as God and therefore it is said to agree to him as he is the son of man Ioh 5. 27. Use Is of Consolation For though this divine power of Christ be terrible to his enemies yet to believers it brings firm hope and affiance and comfort because as Christ himself saith Ioh. ●…0 24. such an one hath everlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but is passed from death unto life And hither also tendeth Rom. 8. 34 35. when there the Apostle proves that nothing can separate from the love of Christ because he sits on the right hand of God Doct. 5. Christ hath the quiet and unmovable possession of this power For in this sense it is that he is said to sit on the right hand of God Reas. 1. Because he hath overcome all his enemies virtually and shall actually in his own appointed time subdue them all fully and bring them under the yoak Reas. 2. Because there is nothing on earth or under the earth can in the least trouble or molest this his possession Reas. 3. Because this state and condition of Christ is not onely immortal and free from all change by vertue of Covenant and divine Promise but also of its own nature being now accomplished according to free Covenant and such will the happiness of the least Saint be Use This also is of Consolation which though it may strike terror and amazement in the hearts of Christ's enemies yet it raiseth and rouseth up the dejected and drooping spirits of all such as put their trust and confidence in him for he sitteth on the right hand of God in power and majesty there making intercession for us The nineteenth Lords day Mat. 25. from verse 31. to 39. Vers. 31 When the Son of man shall come in his glory and all the holy Angells with him then shall he sit upon the throne of his glory 32 And before him shall be gathered all Nations and he shall separate them one from another as a shepherd divideth his sheep from the goats 33 And he shall set the sheep on his right hand but the goats on the left 34 Then shall the King say to them on his right hand Come ye blessed of my Father inherit the Kingdome prepared for you from the foundation of the world 35 For I was an hungred and ye gave me meat I was thirsty and ye gave me drink I was a stranger and ye took me in 36 Naked and ye clothed me I was sick and ye visited me I was in prison and ye came unto me 37 Then shall the righteous answer him saying Lord when saw we thee an hungred and fed thee or thirsty and gave thee drink 38 When saw we thee a stranger and took thee in or naked and clothed thee IN this place the acts or procedure of the last day are expounded The parts are two Christ's coming and the end of his coming which is the last ●…udgement In this last judgement 1. The preparation thereto is described 2. The execution of the sentence In the preparation Christ's majesty and glory in which he shall then appear is c●…iefly here set down 1. From his train and attendance that shall wait upon him consisting chiefly of the glorious Angells 2. From his glorious Throne 3. From the effect of this coming to wit to the gathering of all mankind together and separating of the good from the bad The sentence to be pronounced is twofold 1. Of salvation to the good 2. Of condemnation to the evill The sentence of salvation is declared 1. From its causes 2. From its adjuncts The principal cause is God's good will which is shewn 1. From the effect of that grace or favour that is the cause of our salvation which is the blessing of God 2. From the relatiou that thence ariseth which is that of a Father giving an inheritance and of a Son 's receiving the same 3. From the adjunct of time that this salvation was not then first appointed for them but prepared for them from the beginning of the world The adjunct signs also whereby this salvation is declared are good works which by the Trope or borrowed manner of speaking called Syne●…doche of the special put for the general by the learned are designed by the works of mercy and are amplified by that relation which these works have to Christ himself whilest they are exercised towards his members The sentence of condemnation is quite contrary to the former handled by the comparison and proportion of like things The execution of the sentence is briefly set down in the last verse of this Chapter Doct. 1. The universal or general judgement is most certainly to come to pass This judgement is called universal that it may be distinguished from that particular one which in some sort is exercised on the greatest part of men even in this life upon every one in particular when they pass out of this life For this comprehends all men together and therefore is called universal It may be also called universal or understood so because in it upon all mens and angels deeds and matters generally without exception sentence shal pass It is also called the last judgement because after it no new judgement is to be looked for but the execution of that judgement only shall follow upon it Reas. 1. Because before that time the judgement of God towards men is not compleated and fully perfected because in this life through God's forbearance and long patience evill men in joy many good things and good men are oppressed with many evills From this consideration many of the very Heathens themselves collected that
man that by no means it can be conceived how God at any time can be the cause of any sin because seeing sin is a defect it can have no other cause but a deficient one and God seeing he is perfection it self can no ways nor ever be deficient Use Of Direction that in all our speeches and thoughts we may keep Gods glory untouched and unspotted and confesse that all the good we have comes alwayes from him but that all the evill that either we doe or suffer ariseth not from him but from our selves Doct. 2. Through Adams first disobedience sin passed upon all his Posterity Nor did this happen onely by way of imitation as the Pelagians teach but also by way of propagation or natural descent This is proved by this Argument If this had onely come to pass by imitation then the Apostle might as properly have said that Adam with all his Posterity sinned in the Angels who first fell from God as to have said that all men sinned in Adam because they as much follow the example of the Angels as of Adam For it is expressely said vers 14. That death and so also sin reigned over them that sinned not after the similitude of Adam that is by the imitation of Adam therefore vers 19. men are said to be made sinners by Adams disobedience it self The manner of this propagation is taken up and understood 1. To stand in imputation because that first transgression was held as the transgression of the whole nature of mankinde For as in the receiving of the benefits and endowments that belonged to all mankinde Adam bore the place and person of all men so also it was but right and reason that he should maintain their place either in their conservation by obedience or losse by disobedience untill they were capable of standing to or falling from their primitive condition in their own persons Herein he was as it were the Surety of all mankinde so that what he did in this businesse was to be held valid by all as done in their names 2. The second degree of this Propagation stands in the derivation or traduction of that corruption which by our first transgression seised upon the person of Adam himself This corruption is usually called the languishing of nature the seed or tinder of sin the law of our members the law of the flesh lust and sin that dwels in us but most usually originall sin because it cleaves unto us even from our first original and is some way natural unto us to wit as in our nature corrupted also it is the original of all other sins for all actuall sins flow from this as from their fountain This corruption first and principally consists in the privation of original righteousness the absence whereof so far as it is penall is inflicted by God but as it is a privation having the nature of a fault to wit the losse of that rectitude or right constitution which we should have kept and preserved entire it depends upon that relation that all men have to Adam and to his first sin Now that such corruption naturally is found in all men is not onely proved from Scriptures but seems also to be confirmed by experience it self Reas. 1. For in all men there appears a manifest perversion of our wils and inward appetite as much as spirituall and truly good things are of no good relish to all animall and naturall men but the contrary evils which of their own nature have no good rellish seem to them most sweet Now as the perversion of the sensitive appetite doth denotate bodily sicknesse so the perversion of the inmost most spiritual appetite doth point forth unto us sicknesse that is inward and in the spirit The same also may be observed of the perversion of the judgement and understanding from whence come so many and shamefull errours whereby good is esteemed evill and evill good Reas. 2. It is manifest that there is in all men a certain rebellion of the inferiour and animall faculties and appetites against the superiour and most spiritual faculties of the soul which shews the ficknesse of the upper part as not having strength enough to govern the lower and again a disorder and confusion of the inferiour faculties whereby they will not be subject to their Superiour For as as every infirmity debility and perturbation in the body so also in the soul hath its cause of sicknesse disease or certain corruption from the depravation of other parts Reas. 3. There may be observed in all a certain natural crouching of our selves to things that are below us and a certain aversion and turning away from those that are above us and for which we were made so that there are few amongst men that live not more like beasts stooping naturally to their belly-food and bowing towards the ground than according to the nature of man whose body was erected to look up to heaven and seek after God Now as a crouching in the constitution and fashioning of the body is a sign of a bodily sicknesse so also this soul crouching of the spirit doth manifestly declare some foul sickness of the spirit Reas. 4. There appears manifestly in all men a certain insensibleness from nature it self in discerning of things truly good and truly evill howbeit there is a far greater sweetness in true spiritual good things than in corporall and a far greater bitterness and sowreness in spiritual than in carnall evils Now this insensibleness and spiritual blockishnes is a manifest defect and vice cleaving to us from our very original even as the want of any outward sense is a great defect and fault of the body Reas. 5. Experience teatheth with how great difficulty and slowness men are stirred up to things that are truly good therefore as it is the definition of a good habit that makes a man ready and quick unto good works so must it be an evill and corrupt habit whereby the contrary comes to passe because slowly and with difficulty men set themselves to any good endeavours Reas. 6. It is well enough known to all that man hath not the power to do so much good as he knows should be done and as he desires to doe Wherefore when one hath not the power to move the members of his body it is a manifest disease that hinders its motion so where one hath not the power to move himself spiritually it is a manifest spiritual disease as when there is difficulty of corporal motion and one moves his body with great pains it discovers a great weaknesse of his body even as this other doth a weaknesse of the spirit Use 1. For Humiliation by reason of this misery 2. Of Exhortation that we rest not till we perceive that by the grace of God we are freed from this misery 3. For Direction that in our Prayers before God and in all parts of our care for amendment of our life we may chiefly go about this that not onely in
every other thing in some manner For that is it which the Apostle teacheth Act. 17 27 Use 2. Is of Admonition that for this cause we take heed to our selves that we sin not against God because we are held up in and by the hand of God If therefore witting and willing we offend God it is even as if a child out of petulancie should hurt his Fathers face while he is held by his Father in his arms and in his bosom Doct. 4. All the glory that can be given by a creature to God is due unto him ●…y reason of his onely creating and ●…ustaining of all things It is out of the Text Thou art worthy c. Where this glory is expounded by three words which designe one and the same thing though in a diverse manner because no one word can be found which can sufficiently mark out the duty of a creature to God its Creator R●…as 1. The reason in general is Because the greatest perfection of all divine power appears in the work of Creation and such things as therefrom depend Now by how much the more the power of the cause appears in the effect by so much the more praise and glory is due to the efficient cause The●… First Gods goodness appears for whose sake chiefly he is ever to be glorified because what ever good is in the creature all this is derived from Gods goodness and it is nothing else as it were but a certain slender scent that is breathed from the infinite goodness of God and flowes from it This is some way pointed at in these words God saw all that 〈◊〉 made and they were very good Secondly His greatest and infinit power appears in the Creation in that by his word and his command he made the whole world suddenly and of nothing or matter praeexistent Thirdly His highest wisdome also appears in that he made all things not confusedly that there should be and remain a Chaos but in all perfection of order and proportion so that to one who attentively considers things so much wisdome appears not onely in the fabrick of the whole but in the disposition of the parts in one man or in one flea as all the wisest men in this world can never be able either to in●…itate or to explicate or by all the diligence they can use sound the bottom of it Use Is of Exhortation that with heart ●…ind and work we study alwayes to give this glory unto God that he deserveth and which justice requireth from us to which we are perpetually called and stirred up by all creatures in heaven and in earth The tenth Lords day Rom. 11. 36. For of him and through him and to him are all things THe Apostle brings an argument here to prove that which he had before put viz. That God ows no man any thing He proves it from the opposition thus the cause ows nothing to its effect but contrarily the effect ows all to the cause Now God is as the cause not as the effect in respect of all things whatsoever that either are or are done in this world But God as a cause comes under a threefold reason or notion as 1. either of a procreating cause 〈◊〉 ●…im are all things or 2. of a conserving and directing cause and through him or by him are all things or 3. of a final cause or for which and to him or for him are all things In the first notion creation is attributed to him in the second susten●…ation and gubernation of all things in which two the providence of God doth properly consist in the third notion perfection and conservation of all things is attributed to God in which the end and accomplishment of creation sustentation and gubernation is seen and consists Doct. 1. God 〈◊〉 a sure providence whereby he takes care for al●… things and directs them to his own glory It is 〈◊〉 from the Text in as much as all things by him and for him are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 directed 〈◊〉 1. Because God is the 〈◊〉 of things from reason and wisdome of the greatest excellency 〈◊〉 from any necessity of his nature nor yet from 〈◊〉 ca●…ualtie or coaction And in such a cause there is alway a regard had to the end and an efficacions willing of it together with an ordering of the means for attaining of that end accordingly Reas. 2. Because if God had onely made the creatures and had no care of them afterwards or did not direct and govern them the work of creation had been but idle vain and as done in jest For workmen use not to take pains to perfect a work and then neglect it unless from too much leisure and sport or pastime they do it which agreeth not to God Reas. 3. Unless God directed and governed all things that he created his work would be imperfect as not bringing it to its destinate end It would also be subordinate to the operation or influence of some other upon it that is not the principal as we see it is among men For he that makes a Ship and directs and governs her not afterwards in her ●…ailing his work about her it is but imperfect and as it were vain and his art and work is subordinated to the art of sailing which doth the other and better sort of the work about that Ship Reas. 4. Common experience teacheth that there is some present and powerfull wisdome every where that is efficacious in its workings and intentions whereby creatures are directed in their operations For without it the kinds of all things could not have been preserved and propagated under the same forms and figures parts and dispositions through all generations Without it also creatures that want reason could not be directed to tend to some certain end unknown to themselves and to possess certain places most convenient for them and to seek the order and preservation of the universe or whole rather than their own particular Without this providence it cannot be understood how some beastshave such instinct as it were some beams of a certain wisdome imparted unto them as they have as may be seen in Ants Bees Spiders Swallows Storks of which the Scripture it self speaks and in many other beasts which are rightly said to be borne as it were with a Law a Book and a Lanthorne with a Law which they follow and observe constantly in all their operations in which Law a certain art and wisdome manifestly appears With a Book wherein they have that Law written down to them because it is ever present with them and indeed written or engraven on their soules With a Lanthorne also because at all times they so radily read therein and perceive all such things as agree to their condition Use 1. Of Information that we may have a care solidly to establish our Faith in this behalf because providence is amongst the first principles of Religion whence the glory of God mainly depends and our affiance patience reverence humility and all the
rewards and punishments were more justly and equally to be distributed where it should be ill with evill men and not well at all and should go well with good men and not ill at all Which reason seems also to be confirmed by our Lord himself Luke 26. 15. and the Apostle Paus 1 Cor. 15. 19. Now after this life while the Soul remaines separate from the body the judgement of God is not compleat nor fully accomplished because it is not passed upon the whole man in his full being as he was in this life while he committed the things that were to be judged Therefore another and fuller ●…udgement than that on the souls departed onely followeth to be looked for which is this last judgement and shall be certainly in its own time Reas. 2. It is most convenient agreeable to Gods glory that God in by Christ in a most glorious manner should make manifest before all as well Angels as men as well his mercy as his justice that he might have the publick and solemne glory of both mercy and justice and this is the thing that at that time is topass come in that universal and last judgement Reas 3. This belongs also to the glory of God the joy of the faithfull and just confusion of the unfaithfull that before their faces they may see the promises and threatenings of God almost perfectly and accurately fulfilled not onely particularly on their own persons now in the body as before death but universally upon all others both men and Angells Which shall then onely be when this last and universal judgement shall be held Use 1. Of Information that we take care to have our faith and hope solidly confirmed and strongly rooted about this article least we be any wayes troubled with prophane blasphemies and mockings of Infidells and Heathens who first cast downe and trample upon the profession of this article by their life and manners and then also by words and speeches fight and dispute against it Concerning whom we are admonished by the Apostle St. Peter 2 Pet. 3. 3 4. c. Use 2. Of Admonition that with all fear and trembling we watch over our wayes as those that certainly mind and look for the day of this judgement 1 Pet. 1. 17. 2 Pet. 3. 11 12. Doct. 2. Our Lord Iesus Christ will be Iudge in this judgement Reas 1. Because it belongs to his Kingly office and power whereby he was made Lord and King and had all judgement committed to him Reas. 2. Because Christ is he from whom and by whom the faithfull have salvation adjud●…ed unto them even in this life and from whom also unbelievers have death adjudged unto them Now it is the same judgement that in this life both wayes is begun and in the last judgement shall be fully manifested and perfected Reas. 3. Because at that time it is that Christ should fully and actually triumph over all enemies and opposite power and crown all his own servants souldiers and adherents And this is most conveniently and gloriously done in forme of publick and solemne judgement Use Is of Consolation chiefly to the faithfull because they shall have him for their Judge whom they received for their Redeemer Justifier Sanctifier and Intercessor or Advocate from whom therefore they may with all confidence expect all good Doct. 3. Christ's glory at that time shall be incomparable It hence appears from the Text that if the Angells so glorious shall then be his Ministers of State and attendants and his Throne with all the rest of that procedure shall be so glorious it mmst needs be that Christ himself be excellent in glory above all that we can think of Reas. 1. Because the exercise of this judgement belongs to the manifestation of Christ's highest exaltation Reas. 2. Because the very end of his coming was to give glory to such as sought God in him It is fit then that Christ appear in greatest glory Reas. 3. The majesty of the supreme Judge of the world and the terror and confusion of his enemies that they must be put to require that he should come clothed in the greatest glory Use Of Consolation to the faithfull against the crosses and contempts they are liable to in this world together with Christ because as now they are partakers of the cross of Christ so then they shall be partakers of his glory Doct. 4. In this judgement the condition of the godly and ungodly shall be quite unlike and opposite one to another This is taught in the Text by the separation of the sheep from the goats by the right hand and the left by ●…ome ye blessed and go ye cursed Reas. 1. Because there is a great unlikeness and opposition in the lives and wayes of the godly and ungodly while they are in this world Reas. 2. Because there is a great dissimilitude or opposition between the promises that belong to the godly and the threatenings that belong to the ungodly Reas. 3. Because there is great disparity and opposition between the manifestation of greatest mercy and of greatest execution of justice Use Of Admonition that we separate our selves from ungodly men as much and in such manner as we can that is if we cannot separate in places yet in internal affections as well as external conversation we should be as unlike unto them as can be in that wherein they are ungodly Doct. 5. The cause of any blessing to the godly is the mercy of God but the cause of any ca●…se to the ungodly is their own sault This is clear in the Text when the godly are called blessed of the Father But the ungodly barely are called ye cursed not of the Father nor from the Father nor from God because though it is God that curseth them yet the first cause of this curse is in their sins Reas. 1. Because all good is from God who is the greatest good and chiefly good in himself But all evill of punishment ariseth from evill of fault and this evill of fault is from the creature it self breaking the Law and Order that God hath set to it Reas. 2. Because the blessing of life is the meer free gift of God but the curse of death is the reward or wages of sin Rom. 6. 23. Reas. 3. Preservation from the curse which is by Gods favour is necessary for our blessing but to incur the curse there is nothing more needfull but onely to neglect or contemne that way that leads unto the blessing Use Of Direction that we may alway give God the glory in every good thing that we either have or seek or look for and alwayes blame our selves for any evill that befalls us Doct. 6. The blessing of the godly consists in the communion that they shall have with God in Christ and the curse of the ungodly in the separation of them from such communion This is plaine in the words come ye blessed and go ye cursed Reas. 1. Because this is the end whereunto all
justifying faith is fruitfull of good works 2. That good works are the end and perfection of faith for faith is said to co-operate with good works because together with the command of God it furnisheth its strength and force of working for producing of good works And that works are called the perfection of faith it is not so to be understood as if they were the internal and formal perfection of faith as the form is the formal and essential perfection of every thing But in that they contain and shew the external perfection of faith in as much as they flow from it and as every effect contains in it self some perfection of its course to wit as it partakes of the force and vertue that comes from the internal perfection of the cause Doct. 1. Our good workes are no wayes the cause of our justification but the effects and fruits of a man justified It is gathered from the Text for as much as workes are the effects of faith And faith and justification according to the nature of relatives are at once or together in nature A true believer and a justified man are the same thing If therefore good works are the effects of a believer then are they the effects of one justified also And that works justify us not is apparent from four reasons Reas. 1. Because believers are not now under the Covenant of workes and therefore cannot be justified by works but are all condemned by them if we stand to them in that point because none of them come up to what the Law requires and so are sinfull and imperfect Reas. 2. Because all our good workes are debts and therefore they can never properly merit or deserve pardon Reas. 3. Because the good works we do came not from our own strength but from the grace of God Reas. 4. Because our best good works are in themselves imperfect and defiled with many uncleannesses Object 1. Our good workes are perfect as they come from the Holy Spirit whose workes are all perfect Ans. 1. If in respect of us they be imperfect they cannot as ours be of force to our justification though in some other respect they may be perfect 2. That perfection which they have in reference to the Holy Spirit doth not redound properly unto our meriting or deserving by them because the holy Ghost is no wayes united unto us into one person which is the onely ground why the works of Christ had a divine merit and worth in them namely because they were divine workes as being his that was as man personally united unto the God-head and person of the Son so as they made but one person The Holy Spirit then though he be the principal cause of our good works yet this is in its own manner as an external efficient as having no personal union with the party working Object 2. Our reward is given according to our works Ans. That reward is not of our merit but of God's free grace and favour For there is a reward of servants and a reward of sons the reward of servants lookes not to the person but to the merit or desert of the work but the reward of sons look●… at the person chiefly and so is given of grace and good will to the person of the worker more than to the merit of the work For the Father in his Sonne crownes that with reward which in it self deserves no such thing for the most part Otherwayes he were unjust not to reward it so in servants likewise Use Of Admonition that we never glory in our selves or our own workes before God but alwayes acknowledge when we have done all that we can that we are but unprofitable servants as our Lord himself teacheth us to do and that we depend wholly on the grace of God putting no trust in our own works Doct 2. Good workes by a necessary coherence follow true faith It is gathered from this that faith is to work together in and with good works and by good works to be brought to its end Now good works are necessary to a believer 1. By necessity of precept because God from that right and power he had to do so was pleased to command us them 2. By necessity of means without which we cannot attain the end And that 1. In respect of God or his glory as the end because without them we cannot attain to the enjoyment of God nor to glorify him as we should and must for that attainment 2. In respect of the Church and others without the Church whose edification without good works we cannot attain and good men are edified by good workes as by examples more and more and to others a hoping light is as it were held out whereby they may discerne their right way Let your light so shine before men c. 3. In respect of our own salvation because good works are necessary to salvation though not as meritorious causes yet as dispositions qualifications and wayes that must be had and insisted in because our election and calling is to them and by them our salvation and these other are made surer to our consciences For in them consists that way of a new obedience and Gospell thankfulnesse which onely leads unto life also as holinesse not onely internal but also external is such an inseparable disposition or qualification from such as are to be saved as that without it none shall ever see God to his comfort or happiness 3. They are necessary by necessity of the end because election redemption vocation tend and look to this end that we may live to God and to Christ in all holinesse and righteousnesse And a necessity as well of thankfulnesse as of covenant lies upon us that with all our vigour and with all our strength we endeavour to attain unto this end 4. Good works are necessary by a certain sort of natural necessity For just as good fruits come of a good tree and sweet waters come from a sweet fountain by a like manner and necessity good works come from true faith Or as our vital operations and motions do alwayes accompany natural life so also spiritual life which is from faith whereby the just man liveth puts forth it self alwayes in good works as the proper operations and acts of a spiritual life It may sometimes happen that as in one in a swound scarce any matter or operation doth appear though yet the ●…fe it self remain so also by some extraordinary ●…entation for some time the seed of faith may remain in the heart of this or that man the fruits whereof can hardly be discovered But this is 1. As much against the nature of faith and of a faithfull man as sicknesse is against health and life 2. It is an extraordinary case by which we must not judge of the ordinary operations and fruits of faith nor of its nature or the necessity of good works 3. In such a case both the degree of faith it self is deminished and the comfort of
rule of our life and as of such a rule as hath no defect but is both perfect in it self and requires all perfection in us Use 2. Of Admoni●…ion that with all reverence we give heed unto this Law and beware of all neglect and contempt of it as we would shun death Doct. 2. The Moral Law is divided into diverse words or precepts It is gathered from this in that God is said to have spoken all these words They are called words because they are short and as it were spoken summarily or in one word The chief division of them is into two Tables the next into ten Precepts or Commands Reas. 1. That we might the more easily understand the will of God by parts delivered which wholly together and at once declared as it were in heaps we could not so well understand For the parts in a distribution or division make much for the declaration and illustration of any whole Reas. 2. That by this meanes our memory may be helped because naturally our memory is strengthened from the order of the parts amongst themselves Reas. 3. That in every part and act of our conversation we may have light of singular direction from some part of this Law Use Of Admonition that we neglect nor contemne no word of this Law because they are all parts of one and the same Law and have the same sanction of authority so that who so stumbles against any one is guilty of them all Iam. 2. 10. Doct. 3. Whatsoever is commanded in any part of the Law we are bound for may causes to perform the same to God This is gathered from that confirmation of the Law I am Iehovah c. Reas. 1. Because God commands us nothing he may not with very good right require from us as well by reason of his absolute power and dominion as of our dependance on him by which we require to be supplied and upheld by him in all things Reas. 2. Because he requires nothing from us the observance whereof he did not deserve at 〈◊〉 hands before as well by spiritual benefits and blessings as temporal and bodily in regard whereof out of thankfulness we owe him all obedience as is plain in the Text I brought thee out of the Land c. Reas. 3. Because God is ready to reward our obedience most abundantly in every point Use Of Direction that by often meditation of the manifold obligations whereby we are bound to performe our obedience to God we may more and more stir up our mindes to a care of observing him in all things Doct. 4. Every command of the Law requires the whole obedience of the whole man That is as well inward as outward of the heart as of the mouth and hand or worke Thou shalt have no other c. Make not unto ●…hy self c. Are formes of speaking whereby formally such an universal obedience is required Reas. 1. Because God the giver of this Law ought to be glorified with obedience of the whole man as well of soule as of body and of both these parts of man Reas. 2. Because this is the excellent perfection of the Law of God whereby it goes beyond all humane Lawes in that it subjects unto it self the heart and the reines and the most inward retirement of of men as God himself alone who is the author of this Law knowes what is in man Reas. 3. Because this Law is the rule of spiritual life and so ought to peirce even to our spirits themselves Use 1. Of Information that for the right understanding of this Law we look not onely to such things or think that they onely are contained under the Law as in express words are there contained but all such things also as belongs to such an head of obedience whether they be outward or inward For in every command as is certain by the summe of entire and whole obedience the words are to be taken not according to the bare letter but in a modification of diverse tropes or borrowed sorts of speaking as agree to the perfection of such a Law of nature The trope of Synecdoche that puts the special for the general to be understood by it is here frequent as when abstinence from some one vice by name is put for the whole obedience whereby we not onely abstain from all faults of that kind but also are bound to the performance of the contrary affirmative good and when some action is put for all of its kind and of affinity of nature with it The trope also of Me●…onymie is every where in these commands whereby all the adjuncts are understood under the name of their objects the effects in their causes and contrarily with which is complicated the trope of Metaphor some way so as all the decalogue is Metaleptick or to be understood by Transsumption And these rules must of necessity be understood in the explication of every precept as our Saviour's exposition of them and other Scriptures make clear Use 2. Of Admonition that we rest not nor please our selves in obedience of any sort done to the Law but that we may aspire to the entire and perfect observance of it and ever acknowledge just matter of our humbling in this that we are so farre from that perfection that it requires Doct. 5. The first and greatest command is that which containes our duty to God Hence is it that it is both put in the first place and hath also the expresse testimony of Christ Mat. 22. 28. Reas. 1. Because God himself being the object of this duty from him a sort of noblenesse and dignity is derived unto the duty it self Reas. 2. Because more and greater things are contained in our duty to God than either can or may be used in duties to man as is clear by that form With ●…he whole minde and the whole heart c. Reas. 3. Because this duty is the foundation and principle of all others in as much as in God and for God onely we ought to perform all other duties and so the duties of the second Table are thus virtually contained in the first Commandment Use Is of Direction that our first and chief care may be taken up in those duties that belong to God Doct. 6. The principall duty to God is that we have him onely for our God And to have God for our God is in general to give God that honour which is due unto his excellent Majesty And to this are required 1. That we seek the true knowledge of him with all care as he hath revealed himself in his word because we cannot honour him rightly whose nature and will we are ignorant of Iohn 4. 12. Rom. 10 14. 2. That from a most humble reverence we subject our selves unto him because the honour that we give to God as to our God is the honour of a Creature towards its Creator of a Son towards his Father of a Servant towards his Master and that such a Master as hath power
his minde which he attained to by this means and of that in the rest of the verses This confirmation is declared by a double reason First By an adhortation which he useth towards his enemies vers 2 3 4 5. Secondly By a profession of his confidence that he had in God from the sixth verse to the end of the Psalm In this profession of his confidence the Royal Prophet sheweth that he places his chief felicity in Gods favour towards him And this profession is first illustrated from a comparison with a very unlike and vanishing care of worldly men that they have concerning their owne happinesse or felicity verse 6. Secondly From the effect of Gods favour to wit that it brings with its self wonderfull gladnesse to the mindes and consciences of those that have received it verse 7. In which words the reason and cause is given of the former confession And then this gladness is illustrated by a comparison of a less joy or gladness which yet by the world is taken for a full joy and that is the joy that arises from the plenty and abundance of the goods of this life verse 7. Lastly this profession of the Prophet is illustrated from another effect that it brings with it to wit security and safety from fear and all cause of fear the true cause whereof is placed in Gods protection ver●… 8. That all these things may be the better understood we must know and observe for the explication of the words that by many in this place all are understood because what is here attributed to many 〈◊〉 to all Secondly That by the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is not heer understood properly an externall and vocall sp●…ech but the inward affections desire and endeavour because this saying is affirmed of such also as abstain from outward speech and perhaps cannot speak Thirdly That by this exclamation Who will shew us any good a vehement desire is imported Fourthly That by good all and every thing is understood which appeares delectable whether it seem profitable pleasant or any other way desirable Fifthly That by lifting up of Gods countenance upon us by a constant phrase of Scripture is understood the communication and manifestation of Gods gratious presence and favour for it is a metaphor or speech that seems to be borrowed from the Sun arising and spreading abroad the beams of his light whereby he brings a certain lif●… and gladness to all creatures here below Doctrines from hence arising Doct. 1. Our chief felicity and happiness ought above all other things to be regarded and sought after and that throughout our whole life This Doctrine is thus raised and gathered In that David proposeth this as his onely comfort which he regarded in the time of his affliction and which he would regard all his life time Now by the chief good that properly is to be understood wherein our felicity consists in which felicity is contained an affluence or fulness of all desirable good things And this chief good as it is imperfectly here attained to and possessed in this life is properly called our consolation or comfort It is called Comfort because it is that which as it were strengthens and comforts the minde and makes it strong and firm against all oppressing pains griefs and terrours for consolation or comfort is properly a mitigation of pain and grief or a remedy against sorrow and fear Reason 1. The first reason of this Doctrine is because in this chief good the end of our life doth consist and the end in all things is chiefly to be looked on because whosoever doth any thing not in order to a fixed end he doth it but rashly and without reason So he also who lives without having his eye still fixed upon his chief good lives but rashly and at randome and like unto a brute and unreasonable creature Reas. 2. Is because from the regard we have to this end all our actions are to be governed whereof these onely can be called right which as it were in a right or streight line tend to this end and all others are wrong and like crooked lines or by-pathes turning out of the right and streight way He therefore that lives without regard to this chief and last end doth just as he that intending to shoot at a Butte would not yet look at the mark but let his Arrow loose at randome or as he that would commit his Ship to the wind and waves never looking to the load-starre or having any care of the haven whereunto he would arrive Reas. 3. Because the chief good is of chief excellency and worth and therefore also deserves to have the chief place in our thoughts studies and cares Whoso therefore neglecting this suffer themselves to be taken up with other things are like unto children who misregarding commonly things of 〈◊〉 worth busy themselves altogether with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The use of this Doctrine is for reproof against such as seldome or never think of the end and mark whereunto their life should tend and are not carefull about that perfection and chief good whereunto they ought mainly to contend and such mens lives are neither Christian nor rational but rather brutish and bestial Doct. 2. Is this That a mans chief good or happiness cannot be found in the goods of this life And this is gathered from verse 6. where this opinion of worldly men that it may be found in such things is rejected as vain The meaning of the Doctrine is that a mans happiness consisteth not either in riches or in honours or in renown or in power or in any goods of the body nor yet in pleasure nor in any perfection of the minde nor in any other the like created good Reas. 1. Because such goods do not make the man himself good and therefore neither can they make him happy but they are common to the worst of men as well as to good men 2. Because such goods are oftentimes the instruments and means of sin and misery 3. Because there is none of them which ought not to be referred to a further good therefore in them cannot consist the last chief and perfectest good 4. Because none of them can perfect the soul and spirit of man 5. Because most of these goods are common to beasts with men and yet beasts are not capable of happiness 6. Because oftentimes it is a mans vertue and perfection to neglect and contemne such goods so that such are the best and perfectest men that make least account of these outward and worldly goods Use. The use is of reproof against such who esteem as much of these goods seek after them as lawfully keep them with as great care when acquired and are as loath to leave them as if they placed their true and onely bliss and happiness in them Doct. 3. Is That our true and chief good consists in our union and communion that we have with God This is gathered from these words Lift up the light of thy countenance
that there is no joy nor gladness in the practice of godliness and so they shun godliness and the care of it as that which is full of sadness and melancholy But the Scriptures teach otherwayes that the godly are called to this that they may alwayes rejoyce Phil. 4. 4. and that they alwayes are as it were feasting with all gladness according to that of Solomon Prov. 15. 15. The proper cause of this errour is ignorance a depraved sense of their sins 〈◊〉 in this like unto an herd of swine who make it their greatest pleasure and delight to wallow in the 〈◊〉 Use 3. Of Consolation for the godly in that 〈◊〉 their outward condition is yet they have 〈◊〉 of more true joy than can be either felt or understood by worldly men Use 4. Of Exhortation that striving with our utmost indeavour we must labour more and more to receive and be sensible of this joy Now the mean●… which we ought chiefly to use for attaining and 〈◊〉 thereof are these 1. We must in good 〈◊〉 remove all hinderances of this joy that is that by repentance a real amendment of life we 〈◊〉 cleanse and disburthen our selves of our sins 〈◊〉 We ought to have a true care that we daily make more sure and constant to our selves our union and communion with God by diligent examination and confirmation of our faith and hope 3. That we 〈◊〉 much and often exercised in the religious meditation of Gods Promises which promise all good things to such as have God for their God 4. I●…●…duceth much to this purpose if in our selves we exercise and excite this joy in and by the daily praise of Gods name that is as well in private as publick thanksgiving coming from the bottom of our heart for all those blessings with which God hath blessed us in Christ Jesus Doct. 5. That this joy●… and this comfort brings a certain holy security to the consciences of believers This is gathered from the last verse of the Psalm And this is that security wherein the Apostle ●…oasts and glories Rom. 8. If God be for 〈◊〉 who 〈◊〉 be against us c. For I am perswaded that nothing can separate me c. And David every where in the 〈◊〉 Why do I fear God is my rock c. This security differs much from carnall security wherein men of this world lye and sleep 1. Because true and prais-worthy security is grounded upon true faith and not upon vain imagination 2. Because it is bred in us by the Word and Promises and by the preaching and knowledge of the word of God It doth not proceed from traditions or mens dreams and customes in sin as that doth 3. Because this security relies alwayes upon Gods protection as it is in the Text Thou onely makest me c. it doth not rely on outward means or on our own strength and wisdome 4. Because this security is fed cherished and advanced by diligent use of calling upon Gods name and of all other means that God hath prescribed and appointed us Reas 1. Because Gods protection secureth believers from all evill at least from the sting of it by reason whereof it is onely truly evill for God hath all things both evill and good in his own power Reas 2. Because Gods presence brings all other good things with it for God is so good in himself that in himself virtually and eminently he contains all things that can be called good Reas. 3. Because Gods goodness towards believers is unchangeable so that there can be no danger of the changing of this happiness into misery Use The use of this Doctrine is for consolation to the faithfull to wit that from this ground they 〈◊〉 and ought to depend upon God and lay aside all those anxieties whereby they may be discouraged from adhering to God with joy and gladness The second Lords day Rom. 7. vers 7. What shall we say then Is the Law sin God forbid Yea I had not known sin but by the Law For I had not 〈◊〉 that concupiscence or lust was a sin unless the Law had said Thou shalt not covet THe Apostle that he might stir up the faithfull to a new obedience had proposed to them the difference of their condition that are under the Law and of them that are under Grace to wit that such as are under the law of the flesh and sin bring forth fruits unto death but such as are under the grace of the Spirit bring forth fruits in a new obedience unto life eternall But because of this opposition between the Law and Grace some might gather that there was then a very great agreement between the Law and sin therefore in this seventh verse this objection is preoccupated by the Apostle 1. Then the Objection is proposed What shall we say Is the Law sin 2. It is rejected with a certain kinde of detestation God forbid 3. The case is plainly set down and resolved in these words I had not known sin c. Where the singular effect and use of the Law is declared to wit that by forbidding and reproving is begotten in man a sense and acknowledgement of sin as of that which is contrary to its self and therefore it cannot be the cause of sin The Explication By the Law is understood in common a way and rule of walking Now this way and rule is imposed upon reasonable creatures by divine authority and the greatest obligations that can be And this is the Law to wit of God which the Apostle heer understands especially the moral Law By sin here is not onely understood the transgression of Gods will but also all those things that follow upon such a transgression which in this Chapter is defined by the name of Death and is called sometimes misery Sin is either known confusedly and speculatively onely or more exactly and practically Now the accurate and practicall knowledge of sin is here understood whereby it is efficaciously concluded in our consciences that sin is a detestable thing and by all means to be avoided Doct. 1. Men of their own nature are so blinded that although they be altogether drowned in sin and death yet of themselves they cannot know it This is gathered from these words I had not known sin Reas. 1. Because the very mind and conscience of man which is his eye and light is corrupted after a twofold manner 1. Privitively In that it is deprived of that light whereby it might rightly judge of it self and of such things as belong unto its spiritual life a. Positively In as much as it is possessed with a certain perverse disposition whence it often calls evill good and good evill For as the eye being put quite out feeleth nothing and as the eye infected with humours and depraved by the indispositions of the organe sees all things otherwise than they are presented so is it with the eye of the soul. Reas. 2. Because the whole man is possessed with a certain
spiritual distemper and as it were with a drunkennesse and lethargick stupidity whereby he is sensible of nothing rightly and spiritually Reas 3 Because we are so borne in sin that in a manner it becomes natural to us nor ever have had we experience of any other condition As those that are borne with deformed and crooked limbs and never saw aright and well proportioned disposition of all the members do not know that their own limbs are deformed and ill proportioned but esteem their distortion and disproportion to be the right proportion it self even so is it in this case of sin and corruption of nature Use 1. Of Admonition that for this cause we might more and more humble our selves before God seeing that we are so miserable that of our selves we can never know our own misery Use 2. Is of Direction to deny all our natural wisdome that so we may flie to God and seek wisdome from him that we may know our selves and him aright Doctr. 2. The onely way to know sin aright and the cause of our mysery is by the law of God It is gathered from these words For unlesse the law had said c. Reas. 1. Because the law of God doth in some way enlinghten the eyes of our minde Psal. 19. Reas. 2. Because the law of God is the rule of our life and is therefore the touchstone not onely of the straightness but also of all the obliquity and crookedness of it Reas. 3. Because the law of God is set before us as a glasse wherein we may clearly see our faces and quality Iames 1. 23. Now it performs this use of a glass to us by a comparison made between the perfection which the Law requires of us and the manifold defects and deformities that are found in our life Questions hence arising Quest. 1. Whether did not some wise men at least among the Heathen know sin without this Law of God I answer 1. That they were not altogether without this law of God because in part they had it written and ingraven in their hearts But yet 2. They knew not many sins which by the Law might easily have been known 3. They knew not sin under the first and most proper reason of it to wit as it was an offence against God but onely as it was repugnant to reason in man himself 4. They knew not those spiritual miseries which accompanie sin 5. They did not know sin practically and efficaciously so as to be by that knowledge driven to a spiritual humbling of themselves before God Quest. 2. In what manner doth this Law of God shew us our sin I answer 1. It sheweth us our duty or the will of God that we should do 2. It shews us our fault in transgressing of this will 3. It shewes us our guilt whereby for this guiltiness we are bound over unto punishment 4. It shewes also the punishment it self for the threatenings of the Law wherein the punishments are contained and denounced are parts of the Law and belong unto its sanctification or ratification Use 1. Of Direction that in passing judgement upon our lives we follow not either our own fancies nor the tenets and opinions of the vulgar but the law of God alone Use 2. Of Admonition that we often make trial of our life according to that law and that as well for time past for our greater humiliation as for the time to come for our caution and better direction in every part of our conversation The Third Lords Day Rom. 5. vers 12. Wherefore as by one man sin entered into the world and death by sin and so death passed upon all men in whom all have sinned THe Apostles purpose in this place is to illustrate that Doctrine which he had before taught concerning justification by Iesus Christ for which end he makes a comparison of the likeness between this grace of our Lord Iesus Christ and the sin of Adam our first Father after the flesh And the comparison runs upon the efficacy and effects of each of them The Proposition of the Comparison is in ●… 12. and the Reddition to that is after explicated by way of Parenthesis In the Proposition Adam is set forth as the cause of a twofold effect to wit of the bringing in of sin and of the bringing in of Death And the reason of the Connexion of these effects with that cause is given in the last words of this verse to wit from the conjunction that all had with Adam in that first sin in these words In whom all men c. Doct. 1. Sin entered into the world not by Gods creation but by mans defection This is manifest in the Text by man not by God c. Reas. 1. Because God made man upright and after his own image that is not onely free from all sin which may in some sort also be said of all other Creatures but also adorned him with all those endowments and faculties whereby Gods nature might as it were in a pourtrait be expressed and represented and by help whereof in keeping of the law he might have attained unto a certain sort of divine blessedness or felicity For as there is no fault in a pourtrait so it be well drawn or made by a perfect workman unless the fault be in the Original from whence the pourtait is taken so also no fault could be in man created according to Gods Image and that by God himself unlesse some fault be attributed to God himself whose Image man is Reas. 2. Is because God did not onely prescribe a law unto man in the Creation but also engraved it upon his heart by which means it was that man had in himself a most certain Testimony of his uprightness in which and to which he was created and withall a most sufficient and ready means of living well and unblameably to God For the law of God perfectly purely written in the heart of man is as it were a solemn Testimony registred in a Table or Book that man was made fit and able to keep that Law It is as it were the voice of God sent down from Heaven whereby man was called and stirred up to observe that way of living which is taught thereby Reas. 3. Because God added thereunto a pledge and Sacrament in the Tree of Life whereby he would have that Covenant of the Law written in the heart more clearly confirmed also outwardly to wit that he would by the observation of his Law first perpetuate mans life in this world unto the solemn justification of him at his appointed time and then advance him to a further and heavenly Felicity And on the other side he threatens Death unto him in case he should depart from that Will and Law of God all which had been done to no purpose if man had been at first made by God himself in any measure or manner sinfull and perverse Reas. 4. So far was God from being the cause of sin in the first creation of
our outward words and works as being but the rivulets and branches of our sin we be reformed but that in the fountain and root of this sin dwelling in us we may be cleansed and renewed The Fourth Lords Day Ephes. 5. 6. Let no man deceive you with vain words for because of these things the wrath of God comes upon the children of disobedience IN these words is contained an argument whereby the Apostle labours to perswade all the faithfull that they may keep themselves from those sinnes whereof he had made mention a little before The Argument is drawn from an adjunct that follows upon sin to wit the wrath of God of which sinnes are not onely the antecedents but also meritory causes certainly procuring it as is intimated in these words For these things The connexion of this effect with its cause is limited and confirmed 1. It is limited by a description of the subject wherein Gods wrath doth alway pursue sin in these words upon the children of disobedience 2. It is confirmed by rejecting of all vain shifts in these words Let no man deceive you The Explication by the wrath of God 1. Is understood Gods vindicative justice 2. His will to inflict punishment according to that justice 3. The punishment it self that is so inflicted And in this place most properly the punishment is understood which in other places is often called death distress severities hot anger and the like This wrath of God is said to come against or upon men because as it were coming down from Heaven it suddenly fals upon and overwhelms and holds as intangled in a net the sinners so that by no means they can escape it In the same sense that not unlike phrase is used Rom. 1. 18. by the expression of the children of contumacie or stubbornness upon whom this wrath comes those sinners are understood which can by no means be perswaded to leave their sins and seek God by true faith and repentance where this is to be marked that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 may be turned both children of incredulity and children of disobedience but it agrees better to this place to be turned children of disobedience and of rebellion because we read not this phrase the children of saith but of obedience 1 Pet. 1. 14. Doct. 1. Such mens condition is most desperate because they are not onely sinners but also stubborn in their sins It s gathered out of these words Upon the children of disobedience or stubbornnesse So they are named here as men whose condition is much to be abhorred and whose example and company is most to be shunned as appears from vers 7. be not therefore partakers c. Reas. 1. Because such men serve a most miserable servitude to a very base Master that is to sin for sin exercises a spiritual Kingly power and dominion over them because they do all that the lusts of sin commands them and can by no means be perswaded to shake off that slavish yoke and so much the lesse as they perceive that slavery by so much are they the more fully under its command because by this means it comes to passe that their very will it selfe and the spirit of their minde is possessed by this slavery and oppressed For as a brute or a man that comes neer to a brute serving some cruell Master takes no thought for that his condition because of his stupidity neither cares nor wishes for a better is a more full and perfect slave than some free-born and free-minded man who is by force constrained to serve one but yet under such servitude and force keeps a free minde even so it fares in this matter Reas. 2. Because such men are furthest off from repentance and so from the kingdome of God and from salvation For repentance doth most consist in the turning of the heart from sin to God by perswasion of the Word and holy Spirit And to this temper the obstinacy and unperswasibleness of such men is flat opposite who are not onely not perswaded to turn to God but are perswaded to the contrary that such perswasion of converting is not to be embraced or regarded for such are properly called the children of rebellion or disobedience As therefore those diseases are most mortal which admit of no cure and are but the more exasperated the more they are dealt with even so also is it with such kinde of men Reas. 3. Because these men do most grievously encrease their guilt in this that they withstand the means that God hath sanctified for procuring their salvation For while they will not suffer themselves to be perswaded to that conversion unto Faith and Repentance they directly fight against God and not onely so but in this very thing that he would and is some way striving as it were to save them Use Of Adm●…nition That most of all we be carefull of this stubbornnesse or rebellion which is not onely to be understood in common of that con●…umacy whereby men refuse altogether to be converted but also specially and in every part of obedience For if we perceive that God calls us to this or that special duty t is then our part mainly to take care that even in that we present our hearts to God flexible and perswasible whereunto we are invited Doct. 2. Upon the children of disobedience certainly and unevitably the horrible wrath of God comes This is clear in the Text without any collection made from it That this wrath is horrible and altogether intolerable the Scripture every were testifies as Heb. 10. 27. Apoc. 6. 16 17. and elswhere And the thing it self doth sufficiently shew it if we consider Gods anger as to its intensness extensness and duration as to its intensnesse it is called in Scripture a consuming fire Heb. 12. 29. Now this fire of the wrath of God consumes not lightly or light things onely as in the superficies but as it is said Deutro 32. 22. Gods wrath set on fire will burn down to the grave c. Nah●…m 1. 6. Where there is a most likely pithy description By all which descriptions is signified that the wrath of God doth throughly peirce not onely into the body but into the soul and inward part of the spirit for which reason in many places of Scripture it is compared unto sharpe arrows peircing into the heart its self and consuming the spirit and life As to the extension this wrath of God contains in it all sort of evils whether corporal or spiritual whether in this life or at the end of it and in death or at death ●…ither belong those catalogues or inventories of curses that are found Deutr. 28. and Levit. 26. 3. As to the duration it remaineth upon impe●…ient sinners Iohn 3. 36. not for some short space but unto all eternity and without end For as that obligation whereby we are bound to render God all obedienees without end so consequently the transgression whereby sinners break that obligation is in a
termination or resting is made by the Father For thus through the Holy Spirit his teaching and assisting or helping us we begin to pray that is conceive and make our prayers here and our prayers so conceived or made ascend and enter into Heaven by Jesus Christ and lastly they are ultimately heard and accepted by the Father The ninth Lords day Rev. 4. 11. Thou art worthy O Lord that thou shouldst have glory and honour and power because thou didst create all things and for thy pleasure they are and were created A Reason is given in these words why all glory should be given to God and it is taken from the effects For that is more praise-worthy that it be taken from the effects because the power and virtue of the cause whereunto the praise is due exists and is properly seen in its effects The effect of God is creation which in this place is illustrated First By his effects which are declared by the universality conjoyned with them in these words because thou didst create all things Secondly From his manner of creating that God out of a wise purpose created all things and for thy pleasure c. Thirdly From the adjunct of duration or lasting and for thy pleasure they are and were created For one thing is understood by the words they are and another by thou createdst c. as might be evident from the tense thou createdst in the preter-tense they now are in the present-tense by which the duration of things is evident Doct. 1. All things that now are in the world were produced and made out of nothing by God Reas. 1. Scriptures evidenceth this truth Reas. 2. Partly also all nations testify it because there is no Nation which believeth not and tells us not something concerning its beginning Reas. 3. The world it self witnesseth this of it self for as much as in all creatures almost there appeareth such imperfection in their power and mutability whereunto they are subject that of themselves they could not have their own act and first existence but of necessity they must depend upon some pure and perfect act and that is God Reas. 4. The world also witnesseth this same for as much as in its parts a certain perfection appeareth which is such as that it cannot be the first and yet it is such as must needs be from the first perfection Such are these perfections that use to be observed in this sentence whereby all things are said to be made in number weight and measure Where by measure is meant the perfection that each thing hath in it self and number that which is referred to others as to defect or excess and weight that of motion and inclination that all have to their own ends and uses as well particular to themselves as common to others and the whole Reas. 5. Lastly all right reason confirmes the same because in all order of causes and things existent common reason brings us to one first cause and to one first existence Besides it implies a manifest contradiction to conceive the world to have been eternal For if the world was from eternity then infinite dayes were before this day and so these dayes are not yet ended and consequently this day exists not because it cannot exist but after the other dayes before it were ended and gone Also if the world was from eternity there was no one day of the world before there was a thousand years of the same world because in eternity no point or moment of time can be defined before which there were not many thousand of years But this is a manifest contradiction that one year of the world that is made up of many dayes should be together at once with the first day or that there is no day of any year before which there was not a thousand years or lastly that there were as many thousands of years already as there were dayes in the world Use 1. Is of Instruction that in this part of our faith we study more and more solidity to ground and strengthen our selves because this ground being well laid our faith and affiance doth much more easily freely make progress about all such things as God hath revealed in his Word that either he hath done or will do about this world or some parts of it or other things that require the like might and power to that which was snewed in the creation of the world Use 2. Is of Admonition That we suffer not our mindes to cleave to this world or stick there but that we lift them up higher and adhere to him that made the world For it were a very great folly and perverseness if after we know that all these things were made by God we love the world better than God and for the love of the world should forsake God Doct. 2. God of his wise purpose and good pleasure created all things not out of any necessity It is gathered from these words and for or by thy pleasure or will c. There be some Philosophers that have said that all created things do come from God by way of emanation as little rivulets come and flow from their Fountain But that which doth proceed in this kinde must be part of that River from whence it flows which cannot properly be affirmed of things created if we reflect on God the Creatour Others are of opinion that the universe came from the Creatour even as the forme or fashion of him that looketh into a glass passeth from him into the glass Neither is this fitting to be affirmed because the universe is in no other subject as the shape is represented in a glass or mirrour Others have said that the universe went from God as a shadow from its body But this is altogether impertinent because a shadow goes not out of its body but followes it by a privation of light and by reason of the interposition of the opacous or gross body between the light and that place Others have said that the universe went forth from the Creatour like 〈◊〉 the footstep is made by the print of the foot of one that walkes But God had nothing without himself upon which by his walking he could imprint such a footstep All these had a good intention though they spake not accurately and properly enough For even as these comparisons are otherwise profitable to raise the minde of man in the contemplation of the eminency and majesty of God the Creatour For they point out the eminency of the Creatour to be incomparably greater than that of the whole universe it self and the vanity or at lest littleness of all things even such as seem greatest in the world if they be compared with Gods perfection For they are in respect of God as little streams or as little droppings are in respect of an ever and over-flowing Fountain or of the whole Sea or as a light resemblance of ones feature appearing in a glass is in respect of the solid substance or party
himself and as dark and vanishing shadows in respect of a most firm body Lastly also as the footstep of a man imprinted on the sand is in respect of the living man himself These same comparisons shew also that the world and all its parts or all things in this universe are certain tokens and way-markes ●…s it were leading us to the Creatour as the streams leads to the fountain the image in the glass shews the mans face and the shadow respects the body or brings one to find it out as the footstep of the foot doth to the man But the holy Scripture leaving these comparisons is wont to make use of a truer and fitter one when it sayes that the world so came from the Creatour as the workmanship from the workman and every building from its builder Heb. 11. 10. Now every workman doth what he doth of a determinate reason purpose and will in as much as he is a workman And in this sense it is said both in our Text and every where else i●… Scripture That God made all things by his word of his determinate purpose of minde and will Yet there is this difference between other Artists and God that all other artificers bring to perfection their works by divers motions For so soon as they have taken up a purpose with themseves to make some work first they move their own members secondly by their members they move other external instruments thirdly by these instruments they move the matter unto the form or act which they intend to imprint upon it But God perfects his work with saying and willing And this is it that the Scripture every where inculcates to us Psal. 33. 6 9 c. Reas. 1. Because there is nothing in the world that hath a necessary connexion with the divine essence and so nothing external comes from God by any necessity of his nature but from his wisdome and free-will Reas. 2. Because this is the noblest and perfectest way of working to work advisedly and with a free-will Reas. 3. In the beginning of the Creation there was nothing that could have the place either of matter or of instrument nor can we conceive in God any other power really distinct from his understanding and will This therefore is of necessity to be granted and believed that God created all things out of his own free wisdome and will alone Use 1. Is of Instruction for by this foundation we may forearm our faith against the curious queries of some men who are used to ask or wonder why the world was not created before that time in which it was indeed created or why such a part of it was not in such and such a manner The Scripture answers that God created all things by his own free choice wisdome and will so that in this work he was neither subject to any necessity neither should any other reason be enquired for beyond or above his free will Use 2. Is of Direction that from this consolation we establish our Faith about all things that he hath revealed in his Word that he will do For howbeit they may seem very improbable or impossible to our staggering reason yet seeing God doth whatsoever he wills and he made the whole world onely with saying and willing it is not to be doubted of but that he will most truly perform all such things as he hath said that he will do Doct. 3. By the same efficiency whereby God created all things he sustains also and preserves all things in being From these words in the Text and for thy pleasure or by thy will they are Heb. 1. 3. Acts 17. 28. In him we are or have our being For as in the beginning when God cherished the world of waters or the waters the spirit moved upon them and so did sustain conserve and cherish them even so also perpetually the same spirit sustains governs and cherisheth all created things Now God is said to sustain and conserve created things not onely indirectly as he removes and hinders from them causes that would corrupt or destroy them but also directly as he gives a conserving power for continuance of their existence Neither doth he this alone by means as he sustains an infant by its nurse and a building by its pillars but also immediately in as much as being most inwardly present to all things he furnisheth the means themselves with all their efficacy when at his will they concur and doth also many things himself for their conservation for the doing whereof there is found no virtue at all in any means This sustaining of all things is rightly by some called maintenance because thereby God ●…olds as it were in his hand the creature that it fall not back to that nothing from which it was at first brought by that same hand For as if one with his hand lift up something from the ground unless he hold it also after it is lifted up in his hand of its own accord it will fall again to the ground so also after that God by his omnipotent hand lifted up the creature from nothing with the same hand he upheld it also otherwise it would fall back and return to nothing again Reas. 1. Because sustentation is a sort of continued creation For creation brings it to pass that a thing first is and sustentation brings this about that the same thing yet is So that creation hath almost nothing in it beyond sustentation but onely a newness of being wherein it is terminated The same omnipotencie therefore and power of God is required unto sustentation of things which was required at first to their creation Reas. 2. Because to be or to exist agreeth so imperfectly to the creature that if it were removed or separated from the first being whence the beginning of its being was it would presently cease to be For as in the enlightening of the aire the light is so received by the aire that so soon as ever the Sun is removed from it whence this illumination dependeth the air presently ceaseth to be illuminated so is it in this busiess Reas. 3. Because God is so universally and inwardly the cause of the creature that he is not onely in place of an external efficient cause but also of an internal and doth no whit less communica●…e to things their being than matter and form which are other internal causes and essential too which being taken away the essence and being of such things is taken away it self Although therefore many effects consist or keep their being when their efficient causes are remov'd or ceas'd as a building remains after the death of its builder yet without the presence and power of God the creature can no more consist and keep its being than without its matter and form Use 1 Is of Direction that we may strive to open the eyes of our mind and may pray that by the grace of God they may be more and more opened that we may see both God in our selves and in
rest that belong to the real practice of religion Use 2. Of Direction that we lean not to our own or to other mens wisdome and providence but to apply our selves alwayes to lay hold on the providence of God that we may rely on it in all things Doct. 2. The providence of God includes in it self not onely the intention but also the attainment of its end For all things are no less certainly for him than they are either by him or from him Reas. 1. Because divine providence is most perfect and therefore alwayes attains what it intends properly For that is the imperfection of mans providence that it often attains not its end but is hindered by some other causes Reas. 2. Because if God attained not his purposed end then would he suffer some change in his blessedness and happiness of condition because it is a more blessed thing to have all ones desires and purposes fulfilled than to fall beside some of them Reas. 3. Because thence also would follow diminution of Gods eternal knowledge For no wise man proposes that to himself to be attained which from the beginning he knows that he shall never attain Use 1. Is of Refutation against such that turn divine providence into a humane providence Use 2. Of Consolation to all believers to whom God hath promised that he will provide and see for them so as all things at last shall turn to their good and eternal happiness Doct. 2. This providence of God extends it self to all things This is clear in the Text. Reas. 1. It is as much extended to all in the world as a good and wise master of a family hath a care as much as in him lieth of all things that are done in his house Reas. 2. It is extended to every thing that was created of God For in the same manner providence follows upon creation as the Apostle teacheth that provision doth upon procreation and seeing to children and others in the family 1 Tim. 5. 8. For God in some sort is called the Father of all things that he created Reas. 3. He hath a care of all noble and great things because the direction of such makes evidently for his glory Reas. 4. He cares also for the least and vilest things as the haires of our head and the like Mat. 10. 29. Because his wisdome being infinite these cannot escape it As from the greatness of them his being is not helped so from the littleness of them he is not hindered to care for them Oftentimes also from least things very great things depend and from vile or base things a noble change followeth either for the better or for the worse Reas 5 This providence is extended not onely to things that of necessity are or must be but to contingents also or things voluntary because contingents they are mutable and subject to many casualties coming from the course of many causes do most of all require the government of a superior power that they may be rightly ordered left all should run into confusion And voluntary things are of a most noble operation and of a higher nature than any natural things are and therefore most of all do depend upon Gods care for them and over them And these things are so cared for of God that their nature is not thereby overthrown but established and governed For it is rightly said of divine providence that though it attains to its end with strength yet even in doing so it disposeth all things sweetly that is according to the nature of all and each that he himself put into them in the Creation and yet conserves and governs by his providence For there is nothing in Gods providence that brings a necessity upon any thing properly so called but onely a certainty which no wayes withstand the nature of contingency and liberty Reas. 6. This providence is extended not onely to things good but also to evill nor yet onely to evills of punishment but also to evils of sin because though evill was not created of God and in this respect is not properly and in it self the subject of divine providence yet because it comes from the creature of God and of its owne nature disorders the work of God and is contrary to the order that God appointed and therefore ought of necessity to be ordered and limited of God otherwise the most noble work of God if he had no care to the contrary would run into great disorder and because there is in sins the greatest confusion and disorder therefore it is mo●…t of all required here that God exercise the power of his providence in regard of whom onely evill hath some kinde of good in it to wit as far as it is ordered by him and turned to good Use 1. Is of Exhortation that we may alwayes have our affiance firm and immovable and fixed on God because If God be for us who can be against us seeing all things are directed and governed of God Use 2. Is of Admonition that we depend upon no creature but upon God alone because all things are governed of God And then that we learn to reverence and fear God in all things seeing his providence that is to be reverenced and feared hath a hand in all things The eleventh Lords day Act. 4. 12. Neither is there salvation in any other For there is no other name under heaven given amongst men whereby we must be saved IN these words is contained the reason of the answer that Peter gave to the multitude being come together to the question they made about the good work done to the impotent man verse 9. The question was How he was healed and delivered from his sickness The answer was that he was made whole by the name of Jesus Christ that is by that divine authority and power whereof Jesus Christ was the author The reason of this answer and deed is taken from the nature and power of Jesus Christ which is shown declared in this verse from its effect to wit that it brings salvation as well spiritual as corporal to men And this effect is so affirmed of this cause that is of Christ that it is denied of all others So that there are two assertions contained in these words whereof the first is that Jesus Christ offereth salvation to men The second that no other can bring salvation The reason of both assertions is given because the name that is the power and authority of saving signified by the name Iesus is given to him and to none else For by name in this place as it is referred to Christ Christ himself is understood as signified by that name of Jesus or Saviour as by the name of God God himself is oft thus understood in Scripture but withall the power and authority of Christ to save is made known in more illustrious persons titles and solemn stiles whereby is declared their quality and what they import For the signification of the name Iesus is here
Lord who gave himself to the death for them Use 3. Is of Admonition that we subject our selves wholly to this Lord and his will and do him all honour in all and every part of our life and conversation The fourteenth Lords day Mat. 1. 20. But while he thought on these things behold the Angell of the Lord appeared to him in a dream saying Joseph thou son of David fear not to take unto thee Mary thy wife for that which is conceived in her is of the Holy Ghost THese words contain a reason given by the Angell of the Lord why Ioseph should receive his wife Mary And the reason is from removing the cause for which Ioseph might have been induced to put her away Now the cause was that she appeared to be with child by another than her own husband This cause is removed by putting another unblamable cause in its place and this cause is determined by the Angell to be the Holy Ghost The effect then is placed with its causes in this enunciation The effect then is Jesus Christ as to his humane nature The causes are two to wit the Holy Ghost and the Virgin Mary Mary is the efficient cause less principal and supplier also of the material cause but the Holy Ghost is the most principal and first cause which brings the less principal efficient and the material together into acting for the production of this effect Doct. 1. Christ the Son of God took unto himself into the unity of his person the nature of man truly such together with the conditions of humane weakness This is taught in the Text. When it is said In time a man born and begotten of a woman it is but the same expressed in these words of the Creed conceived of the Holy Ghost and born of the Virgin Mary c. He might have assumed the nature of another creature as of Angells he might also have assumed mans nature in its greatest perfection as Adam was made who was never in propriety of speech either conceived or born an infant But it was his pleasure to assume the nature of man truly such and in this manner of sinless imperfections and not of Angells Reas. 1. That he might do mans businesse and work that is make satisfaction for them and save them Reas. 2. He would also take this our nature in its weak and low condition First Because he would come down as farre as could be without sin into the same very place and condition out of which he intended to lift us up higher Secondly That by this means he might some way sanctify all the states and conditions of humane life least any might imagine that any such low estate separateth a man from communion with Christ. Thirdly That he might leave this to us in his own experience as a pledge of his knowledge and like sufferings and affections with us from whence he might look upon our infirmities Use 1. Is of Information for establishing our Faith on this behalf that we give no place to phantastical imaginations of Hereticks who impugne directly or indirectly and fight against the humane nature of Christ which sort of errours are some way countenanced by Papists in their Doctrine of Transubstantiation and by Ubiquitaries in theirs of Consubstantiation in as much as they attribute omnipresence and other the like divine attributes to the humane nature which is no way agreeable unto the same Use 2. Is of Exhortation to extoll and solemnly to praise the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ with all admiration and thanksgiving who not only vouchsafes to become man for us but also in the nature of man disdained not to become an infant to be conceived and born after our manner and to undergo other the like infirmities and humiliations for our sake it is that the Apostle points at Heb. 2. 16 17. Use 3. Is of Consolation that we should make no difference between an infant newly conceived or born and a perfect man or one of age or between any other conditions of the nature and life of man as to our interest in Christ as if any sinless condition of nature could make us less regardable by him 〈◊〉 exclude us from him For Christ descended to the lowest and imperfectest sinless degree and condition of the life of man in that he was 1. conceived and 2. shut up in his mothers womb the ordinary time of other births and 3. born Doct. 2. Christ assumed this humane nature from Mary as from his Mother For though he is said in the Text to be begotten in her yet elswhere he is said to be made after the flesh of the seed of a woman and a woman is said to have conceived him and to have born him as her son hence also he is called the son of Mary the son of David the son of Abraham and the like whereby that phrase is expounded and the truth of it confirmed Reas. 1. He should have been born of a woman as of his mother to the end that that first Evangelicall promise of the seed of the woman that was to tread down the serpent's head might be fulfilled Reas. 2. It was according to right that he was born of Mary that so it might be certain how he descended of the Tribe of Iudah and of the Family of David according to the promises and prophesies that went before of him Use 1. Is of Refutation against Anabaptists and such like who phantastically think that the humanity of Christ onely passed through Mary and was not assumed from her nature Of which imagination the first reason seems to have been that some simple men could not conceive how any could without sin be born of a woman after the fall But the Anabaptists afterwards though they took away this ground of their errour of denying original sin yet they adhered to this conclusion of meer wilfulness without any reason Use 2. Is of Information for directing our Faith about Christs son-ship For he is the Son of God and the son of man both yet so as he is not two sons but in a certain way twice one son in one person The first from eternity the next in time and consequently two wayes a son as both by generation eternal and by generation in time yet but one son of God and of man because but one person who according to his divine nature is the Son of God and according to his humane nature is the son of man So is every man twice a Son in essence first to father and paternal generation and then to mother and maternal generation Doct. 3. Christ was born of Mary remaining still a virgin after he was born This is gathered from the scope of the words the question being about this whether Mary were a virgin or no and the words of the Angell were to assure him that she was Reas. 1. Is that this might be a singular and miraculous signe to the whole house of Israel and this is it that is pointed
at in Isa 1. 14. Reas. 2. That the prophesies going before of this thing might be fulfilled Reas. 3. That Gods omnipotency in this so divine a mystery and principal a work of God might be evidently shewn Now it was not difficult to the power of God that a son should be born of a virgin For seeing all second causes act by their vertue which they received from God it is not to be doubted but that God can produce all these effects without this o●… that cause co-operating which otherwayes use to exist by them Yet not onely the power of God appeared in that work but also his wisdome to which it was most agreeable that so singular a substance of humane nature should in as singular a manner be brought to pass that differed from all others For in three manners all men were made before 1. Without the concurrence of either man or woman as in the creation of Adom 2. Without the concurrence of woman as in the production of Eve 3. By the concurrence of man and woman as in all ordinary generation afterwards And this onely is the proper and peculiar one of Christ by and of a woman without concurrence of a man Reas. 4. That it might easily appear how the contagion of sin might be removed from the humane nature of Christ. Use Is of Confirmation for strengthening of our Faith about the person of Christ to wit that he was both the Messias of old promised and the promised seed of the woman in that peculiar manner as that promise seems to have intended to wit the son of man that is of a woman descending of Adam and other men in ordinary way but made mother of a son not vulgarly or after the common manner but miraculously and without the company of a man begotten and born so that from his first conception all things were in him supernatural about which our mindes being busied ought alwayes to be lifted up to supernatural contemplations laying aside carnal and worldly thoughts Doct. 4. The Holy Ghost was the principal efficient cause of this generation It is from these words in the Text is of the holy Ghost the particle of denotes not any material cause but the efficient so that of the Holy Ghost signifies as much as if it had been said by the power of the Holy Ghost and his operation Now this is attributed to the Holy Spirit for these reasons Reas. 1. Because it was a miracle and all miracles by appropriation are attributed to the Holy Spirit Reas. 2. Because the principal work here was of Sanctification forasmuch as the lump of the humane nature which was to be assumed by Christ was in a singular manner sanctified and cleansed from all spot of sin and all Sanctification peculiarly attributed to the Holy Spirit Reas 3. Because the Holy Spirit was without measure to rest on to dwell in Christ. It 〈◊〉 but reason therefore that the Holy Spirit should prepare and make such a dwelling for himself as he also prepares his dwelling in the sons of God by adoption Quest. It may be th●…n questioned whether Christ may be called the Son of the Holy Ghost Ans It cannot be said 1. Because it would bring some confusion of relations and proprieties personal in God and in the persons 2. Because the Holy Spirit neither produced a new person when he made Christ to be begotten or generated neither produced the nature which he produced after his own nature or of the same essence with his own Use 1. Is of Direction in our Faith and in all our thoughts that we have of Christ that we admit of all that is in him to be spiritual holy and full of mystery nor that we ever doubt of any part of this mystery because all this as it is above common order so is it above the reach of common nature Yet we may always receive and conceive this that none of all these things are above the divine power of the Holy Spirit nor any thing impertinent or unfitting in that thing which is wholly mannaged by the Holy Ghost Use 2. Is of Direction in our practice as to the certainty of our salvation which depends upon this if we be sure that we are conformable to Christ in his nativity life death and resurrection And from thence is the beginning of this conformity to be taken if we be spiritually regenerated by the Holy Spirit as Christ was borne of Mary through the efficiencie and operation of the holy Ghost And this is the self same thing which the Apostle Peter admonisheth us to that we study to make our vocation and election sure The fifteenth Lords day 1 Pet. 3. 18. For Christ also hath once suffered for sinners the just for the unjust that he might bring us to God being put to death in the flesh but quickened by the Spirit AN argument is brought in these words whereby all Christians may be perswaded that undeserved afflictions are patiently to be born The argument is taken from the greater to the less in which also is contained the force and nature of a simily or example and also of some dissimilitude For such Logical assertions are oft joyned together in the same thing as they make to the same purpose The argumeat is this If Christ that was just hath suffered for sinnes and for unjust men then much more ought we to suffer afflictions imposed upon us but the first is true and therefore the latter also Christ considered in himself is the greater and his sufferings are the greater and so the argument is from the greater But considered as our head and Saviour he hath the place and nature of a simily or example to be imitated by us in tolerating afflictions so it is an argument from a like or from an example Lastly considered as just suffering for the sinnes of others that are uniust he is altogether unlike unto us and so also some force and emphaticalness of this argument is from the unlikeness They are ordered in this enunciation in which as the assumption of the Syllogism the cause is contained with the effect to wit Christ with his suffering For though suffering of its own nature be an adjunct of the sufferer yet as it 's voluntarily admitted and undertaken it is an effect Yet these arguments are so ordered that they have mixed with them the affection or property of the argument so called from diversit For Christ and his passions of their own nature are dissentaneous When therefore it is said Christ suffered it is as if he had said Though Christ were the Son of God yet was he not fr●…e from 〈◊〉 That this may be the better understood it is to be known that suffering in this place and in such others is attributed to Christ by the 〈◊〉 of Synecdoche of the more general for the special and that it signifies the special suffering of a grievous evill Then are these two very dissentaneous between themselves that Christ should
the godly look desiring nothing more than still to apprach nearer and nearer unto God The ungodly on the contrary shunne nothing more than God and such things wherein God hath appointed to shew and impart his gracious and singular presence Reas. 2. Because man's happiness not coming of man himself is therefore to be sought from without himself and that from his union or conjunction with the greatest good and that is the cause and fountain of all good Therefore of necessity it consists in communion with God and from deprivation of this communion greatest misery must needs follow Reas. 3. Because the perfectest act of our life is that which is most closely and intimately carried towards God as all that we do well consists in this that therein we live unto God and the privation of such acting its want and absence all misery must accompany Use Of Direction that even in this life we may wholly be taken up with this to seek communion with God and shun and take heed of all separation from him Doct. 7. The certaine signes and tokens of this blessing are good workes and of this curse are evill workes This is largely and clearly laid open in the Text. Reas. 1. Because good works came from the same grace or favour of God from which the blessing it self comes upon them and evill workes joyned with obstinacy and impenitency comes from that same malice and malignancy which God hath cursed and adjudged Reas. 2. Because God of his free grace hath promised the blessing unto good workes and of his unspotted justice hath appointed the curse unto evill workes Reas. 3. Because in good works there is a certain disposal and preparation of the way to obtain the blessing and in evill workes there is not onely the proportion of a way but of deserving or a mertitorious cause even unto the curse Use Of Admonition that we have great care of our actions through every part of our life because according to them men are either condemned or saved For such as the life is such is the end The twentieth Lords day 1 Cor. 6. 19. What know you not that your body is the Temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you which ye have of God and ye are not your own IN the words of the Text are contained a most powerfull argument against Fornication and the like sinnes and it is taken from the contrary end because the end of Christian's bodies is quite opposite to this sin And that end is declared from the subject possessed and possessor and indweller of it the Holy Ghost The subject is again explained by a Metaphor of a Temple because namely our bodies are as it were houses consecrated to him And that this argument may be made the clearer and stronger the Apostle ads that so the holy Ghost is the possessor of this Temple or house that he himself also is the indweller of it And both these relations that we have to the Holy Ghost are illustrated from their efficient cause to wit that they are of God and from their consequent effect and adjunct to wit faith and certain knowledge of these relations between our bodies and the Holy Spirit in these words Know ye not brethren c. Doct 1. The Holy Ghost is true and coeternal God with the Father and eternal Son The Text doth give many reasons for this Doctrine Reas. 1. Because to have one and the same spirit with God is all one as to be glewed or joyned to God vers 17. Reas. 2. Because a Temple is not lawfully consecrated to any but to God much less could it be lawfull that a man in stead of or for a Temple should be consecrated to that which is not God But here such a Temple which is most sacred is said to be consecrated to the Holy Ghost Reas. 3. Because the Holy Ghost is so said to be in us as that we become his of right and of duty that is God's rightfull possession as the scope of the words clearly demonstrate Use 1. Of Information for directing our faith arightly not onely unto the Father and Son but also unto the Holy Ghost as the same one and true God Use 2. Of Admonition that we diligently take heed to our selves that we neither contemne nor neglect any holy thing that comes or is breathed from the Holy Spirit as the whole Scripture is said to have come from the inbreathing or inspiration of the Holy Spirit and all the motions of godliness are onely attributed to the Holy Spirit as to their Author Likewise all the gifts of grace are bred in us from and by this Spirit of grace In these all therefore we must take heed that in no wise we resist the Holy Ghost or wittingly and willingly sin against him Doct 2. The Holy Ghost himself is given unto the faithfull This appears in the Text. Reas. 1. In that our bodyes are called the Temples of the Holy Ghost Reas. 2. In that he is said to be in us Reas. 3. In that we are said to have him or to get him from God Now the Holy Ghost is said to be given unto us when he hath a singular relation unto us and that for our good that is for our sanctification salvation of our soules moreover because he powerfully works these things in us that are agreable to his most holy nature and which can no way be derived to us from flesh and blood And hence it is also that the gifts of the Holy Ghost are called the Holy Ghost also by that trope or borrowed kinde of speech whereby the cause is put for the effect which Schollers call a Metonymie Use 1. Of Exhortation as well to thanksgiving to God that gives so divine a gift as to religious prayers and calling upon God's name that he would keep unto us and more and more communicate to us this divine gift Luk 11. 13. Use 2 Of Admonition to take heed of all such things whereby the Holy Spirit is said either to be grieved or extinguished that is from the grievousness of all such sin as fights against the holiness of this divine Spirit so that he cannot delight to dwell in us but wholly or in great measure withdrawes himself from us Doct. 3. The Holy Spirit is not communicated to our soules onely but to our bodies also It is in the Text when our bodies are also called the Temples of the Spirit Reas. 1. Because as Christ redeemed not our soules onely but the whole man so also the Holy Spirit ought to bring into subjection and possession the whole man to God and to Christ. Reas. 2. Because many duties of a spiritual life must be performed by the body also and therefore the body ought to be subject to the Holy Spirit and as a vessell or instrument be wholly in his power Reas. 3. Because our bodies are made liable to sin and by sin to death from which we must be freed by the Holy Spirit dwelling
the soule cannot come to its perfect and compleat glory by its reunion with the body because it would be as it were maimed as to such faculties the operations whereof it exerciseth by the body and so in some sort it should remain as it were blind deaf dumb c. Reas. 3. Because the equity of divine dispensation requireth this that those bodies which had their own share in the labours and workes that belong unto this life should also have their share in such rewards as belong unto the end of this life Use Is to establish our faith about this truth which is one of the principal articles of the Christian faith Doct. 2. The same bodies that we had as to their essences and natures shall arise again though not the same as to their dispositions and qualities This is hence gather'd that in the Text our bodies are not onely said that they shall be transfigured by which phrase we are to understand that the substance of our bodies shall remain the same and that the outward figure or fashion or manner of its disposition and complexion shall onely be changed But also that they are said that they shall be transfigured after the manner of Christs body For Christ had the same flesh and bones which he had before and this he made manifest unto his Disciples Reas 1. Because neither reward nor punishment would have any place in the body after its resurrection unless the very same bodies were restored to men whereof they made use here upon earth before either for doing evill or doing good Reas. 2. Because otherwayes after the resurrection the party should not remain the same man determinately this man that man or that he was before Reas. 3. Because it is as easie to God to glorifie the same bodily substance that he had before as any other Use Of Resutation against such Hereticks who having almost blended their own dogmatical fictions and phancies with the true Doctrine would also have our bodies after the resurrection not to be the same but new ones even as to their substance Doct. 3. Perfection glory and eternal happinesse shall be given to believers after that in the resurrection they shall be clothed with their bodies again It is in the Text. This glory is partly in the soul and partly in the body but in both there shall be a removal of all imperfection and a communication of all perfection which shall be thought fit for every one to receive In the soul shall be the fruition of God whereby all desire of desirable things shall be in a certain eminent way satisfied There shall be also an abundantly heaped perfection of all gifts and virtues as is in the blessed Angells This glory shall also so stream forth unto the bodies that they shall be like unto heavenly bodies which is the point chiefly expounded in the Text Our body shall be made conformable c. Reas. 1. Because it is God's purpose singularly to glorify himself in that supernaturall blessednesse that is to be given unto us Reas. 2. Because Christ already glorified is not onely the efficient cause but the pattern of our glory We shall not therefore have onely such a likenesse to Christ as is between any effect and its cause according to that maxime as the cause is such is the effect But also that proportion which is between the pattern and its pourtraict Reas. 3. In order of dignity by the bountiful appointment of God believers shall next after Christ have their place together with the blessed Angells Use Of Direction that we may often set before our eyes in our meditation the greatnesse of this glory unto which we are called that so we may both stirre up thankfulnesse in our selves to God and a certaine holy contempt and neglect of all things in this world Doct. 4. This resurrection of our bodies from the dead and the glorification of them shall be by the most powerfull operation of Christ. From these words According to that mighty power of working he should transforme c. And this agrees to Christ as he is one and the self same God with the Father Reas. 1. Because it is the work of that supereminent greatnesse of power that is proper unto God 〈◊〉 1. 19. Reas. 2. Because that most wonderfull quickening of our bodies should come from the living and alive-making God who is the fountain and source of all life Therefore in the same manner it is not attributed onely to the Father but also to the Son and Holy Spirit Rom. 8. 11. This agreeth also to Christ as he is Mediator but still as united unto God essentially also as he submits himself together with the humane nature in one person to be mediator Ioh. 5. 26. and 6. 40. Reas. 1. Because it belongs to the Mediatory office of Christ not onely that by his merit he should procure life eternal to us but also by his powerfull working actually bring the same to pass Reas. 2. Because Christ as Mediator is the head of his Church from whom is derived and communicated to us the Spirit of life whereby as well our soules as our bodies are quickened our soules especially in this life and our bodies in the day of the resurrection Reas. 3. Because Christ as Mediator and as the Son of man but as united pesonally in the Godhead in the Son of God shall judge the world Ioh. 5. 27. Now this belongs to the power of the Judge that he can bring before himself and make the parties to be judged to appear Use Of Direction that by all meanes we do this as in our prayers so in our meditations and other our spiritual exercises to wit that we may behold this supereminent power and greatnesse of Christ's might as the Apostle wisheth to the Ephesians and to us as one of the greatest gifts of God Ephes. 1. 17 18 19 20. For by this meanes 1. Our faith and confidence in Christ is established 2. We will be forearmed against all terrours of this world and of Hell it self 3. With all cherefulnesse we shall recommend our soules to Christ in well-doing because he is able to performe all that he hath promised all that we seek of him and above all that can come into our thoughts Doct. 5. We should so look for this glory to come in this present life as that we lead in some sort an heavenly life ●…ven here upon earth This is it which is said in the beginning of the Text We behave our selves as Burgesses or Citizens of Heaven Reas. 1. Because where our treasure or chief good is there will our hearts be also and where the ●…cart is there will the whole man be if therefore we have our treasure and chief good in Heaven our heart will be in Heaven also and our conversation will be heavenly Reas. 2. Because all these worldly things whereabout men are busied and most are drowned in can never come in competition with the blisse of Heaven
this prayer Reas. 2. Because God according to his infinite wisedome hath so ordered things in Christ that he can with safety to his justice of his free mercy forgive us our sins Reas. 3. Because this mercy being infinite farre surpasseth our sins though in themselves they be horrible Use Of Exhortation that with all our hearts we fly to this mercy and rest in it and on it Doct. 4. Unto remission of sins together with ●…aith is required a confession of them and repentance or a change of minde and amendment This followes from the nature of the petition Reas. 1 Because none can earnestly desire the blotting out of his sins unless he both confess and also hate and detest them Reas. 2. Because otherwise he can by no meanes rightly magnify the mercy of God whereunto he flies but rather goes about to prostitute it and make it a Pander or Baud to his sins Reas. 3. Because without these none is fitted for receiving comfort from the mercy of God in remission of his sins Use Of Reproof against such as presume on the mercy of God though they never thus seriously repent of their sins nor can be brought to confess or acknowledge their cruell dispositious to men Doct. 5. Mercy and love to our brethren is a signe of the mercy and love of God to our selves From these words As we forgive our debtors Reas. 1. Because the mercy and love of God shed abroad in our hearts begets mercy in us to our bretheren as heat begets heat Reas. 2. Because this mercy and love towards men is for its conformity thereto and suitableness to it a special condition of obtaining the mercy of God and so is declared to be tied to it Mat. 6. 14. If ye forgive men their trespasses your Father also that is in Heaven will forgive you Reas. 3. Because this forgiving of all injuries and wrongs done to us by others is taken of the special and free mercy of God communicated unto us and this grace is the effect of Gods mercy forgiving us our sins Use Of Admonition that we deceive not our selves and promise to our selves the mercy of God whilst we nourish in our own hearts hatred and ran●…our against our brethren The fifty second Lords day On the sixth petition of the Lords prayer 〈◊〉 u●… not into temptation c. IN this petition the business is about the evill of sin in respect of its dominion which it uses to have over men concerning which we have first the petition and secondly its declaration or opposition In the petition we pray against this evill in its twofold cause whereof the first is the proper cause of sin intending it which is the temptation of the Devill or the Devill tempting us to sin Now temptation is nothing else but an argument propos●…d to us whereby we are induced to be perswaded and drawne into sin The other cause that is looked at in this petition is not properly the cause of the sin nor any efficient or author of it but a governour and orderer as well of the sin it self as of the tempting to sin and of the effects of both but the true cause of the evill of punishment that followes sin And this is Gods effectual and powerfull way of working about sin or exercising of his providence which usually is called Gods permission although it be more than a bare and an idle permitting The explication of this petition is in praying for the contrary to this evill that we prayed against in the words going before which is prayed against from Gods gracious acting towards us contrary to that which before was called a leading into temptation For it is called a delivering or plucking of us out of temptation Doct. 1. The guilt of former sins committed deserveth altogether at gods hands that we should be quite given over to temptations and sins This is gathered from the connexion wherein first forgivenesse of sins is sought and then deliverance from temptations and evill for sin Reas. 1. Because sin being an aversion or turning away from God therefore it deserves that he should turne away himself and his grace from us Reas. 2. Because for sin we both give our selves up as it were servants to sin and to him that tempts to sin We deserve therefore directly and very rightly that we should be given to such masters as we our selves have chosen Reas. 3 When we rush into sin we neglect that grace of God by which we might have been preserved from sin and therefore we deserve to be deserted by him Use 1. Of Admonition that we so much the more take care to keep our selves from sin Use 2. Of Direction that we daily seek from God the forgivenesse of our sins even for this end that we be not further given up to sin and to temptation but that we may be preserved from both Doct. 2. Whosoever have forgivenesse of sins or seriously se●…k after it they have a desire and true purpose to abstain and keep themselves from sinning in time to come This is also clear from the connexion of these two petitions Reas. 1. Because otherwayes they would not truly abhor sin and so would shew themselves altogegether indisposed and not qualified for remission of sins Reas. 2. Because else they would not be thankfull to God that forgave them their sins Reas. 3. Because else that forgivenesse would be in vain if they should again purpose to themselves to returne to the like condition wherein they were before Use Of Reproof of such as seem to wish for forgivenesse of sin but in the mean time have no care to fly from sin Doct. 3. Who so desires to keep himself from sin ought also to keep himself from all temptations and occasions that lead into sin It is clear from the petition which prayes against temptations to sins Reas. 1. Because the end of such temptations is sin and the misery that followes upon sin Reas. 2. Temptations are so many so subtile and so powerfull that unless with great care we take heed to our selves it cannot be but they lead us into sin Reas. 3. Because of our selves we are carried that way and incline unto this that by giving place to temptations we may betray our owne soules to the tempter Use Of Admonition to such as from too much security and boldness rashly expose themselves to the danger of diverse temptations and inticements to sin for temptation is not to be desired and sought after but as wisely as we can to be shunn'd and where that cannot be stoutly and couragiously to be repulsed Doct. 4. Our Father that is in Heaven disposeth also of our temptations according to his owne good pleasure For thus it is here held out to us that it is he that either leads us into temptation or causes us not to be brought into it but kept from it Reas. 1. Because he exercises his providence in guiding and measuring of every temptation Reas 2. From him depends the