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A47629 A treatise of divinity consisting of three bookes : The first of which handling the Scripture or Word of God, treateth of its divine authority, the canonicall bookes, the authenticall edition, and severall versions, the end, properties, and interpretation of Scripture : The second handling God sheweth that there is a God, and what he is, in his essence and several attributes, and likewise the distinction of persons in the divine essence : The third handleth the three principall works of God, decree, creation and providence / by Edward Leigh ... Leigh, Edward, 1602-1671. 1646 (1646) Wing L1011; ESTC R39008 467,641 520

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King of glory Psalm 24 8. Father of glory Ephes. 1. 17. 2 Efficaciously when it affirmeth that all the earth is full of the glory of God Esay 6. 3. and propounds the glorious and wonderfull workes of God to be considered by us Exod. 32. 18. He meanes he will shew him so much of his glory as it is possible for a creature to behold and live we can not behold the fulnesse of it God is glorious in his nature 1 Cor. 11. 7. his glory obscureth all other glory Esay 6. 2. Gen. 18. 17. 1 King 10. 13. His glory is manifested 1 Extraordinarily in the cloud in apparitions and visions 2 Ordinarily in his word and workes The Law sets forth the glory of his justice and the Gospell that of his mercy 2 Cor. 3. 8. it is called his glorious Gospel Luke 2. 14. All his workes set forth his glory both those of creation and preservation or providence Psalm 19. the whole creation must needs shew forth his glorious power and wisdome the souud is said to goe over all the world that is al● creatures must needs gather that if the Heavens be such glorious Heavens the Sunne so glorious a Sunne how much more must that God be a glorious God who is the authour and worker of them God is glorious in all his workes upon the hearts of believers he puts a glory upon them so that in this sence he is effectually glorious Ephes. 5. a glorious Church and Psalm 43. The Kings daughter is all glorious within this glory is grace when God makes one holy heavenly-minded meeke zealous hereafter we shall have glorious bodies and soules God made all things for his glory for of him and to him are all things Rom. 11. All the unreasonable creatures are for Gods glory 1 In that they are serviceable to man for herein God is glorified in that they can accomplish those ends for which they were made and that is for man Gen. 1. the Sunne and Starres are for him as well as creeping things these creatures are for a twofold use 1 To give him habitation and to be meanes of his corporeal life 2 To be continuall quickners of him to praise Gods glorious power and wisdome God is said Acts 4. not to leave himselfe without witnesse the reasonable creatures are made chiefly for his glory because they know and love him That God is Glorious appeares 1 God hath made many of his creatures glorious Dan. 10. 8. so there is one glory of the Sunne another of the Moone the King clad with gorgeous attire and being arrayed with the Ensignes of his Soveraignty is glorious so Salomon 2 This glory shall continue for ever because God hath it from himselfe and derived it not from another He is a perfect being independent all things are under him the inferiour can not worke without the superiour There is a double glory in things 1 Inherent in themselves which is partly visible as that of the Sunne partly intelligible an excellency in a thing which affects the understanding 2 From without given by others so there is a kinde of glory and excellency in some precious stones which affect a man with a kind of wondering so in an Angell a great shining as in that which appeared to Zachary so in the vision that Paul saw and when God appeared to Moses There is an inward glory standing in being worthy of highest esteeme and an outward glory standing in being highly accounted of God is worthy to be esteemed above all and is so by the holy The chiefest and highest cause of any benefit shewd to us is not our selves but the name of God even his glory and the cleare declaration of his owne excellencies Ezek. 20 9. 14. 22. Psalm 25. 1. Ezek. 36. 22. Reas. 1 The thing which induced God to make all things must needs be the cause of all other benefits bestowed after the creation now he made all things for himselfe and his owne name for neither had they any being nor could they have any before and therefore could not be any moving cause to their owne creation therefore neither to doe any other thing 2 All creatures are nothing and lesse then nothing in comparison of God therefore he could not by them be moved to worke any thing but doth it for his owne names sake Things meane and triflng are not fit to be the highest end of an excellent worke God is most high and glorious and all creatures are lesse then nothing before him therefore himselfe must be moved by himselfe not by them chiefly to doe any thing for them For as God hath no efficient materiall or formall cause at all but is to himselfe instead of all these because he is of himselfe so neither can he have any finall cause but himselfe For if he have any other end then himselfe that is his own glory he were some way dependent upon some other thing which is impossible If it be objected how is it said then that God doth this or that for Abraham Isaac and Jacobs sake as often Moses presseth him in his prayers The answer is he lookes upon them still in subordination to his owne name so that they are motives but in reference to his name and no otherwise He glorifieth himselfe and aimeth at his own glory in keeping covenant and promise with them Gods glory is the end of predestination both reprobation Prov. 16. 1. and election Ephes. 1. 5 6. of the creation and administration of all things Rom. 11. 36. of all benefits obtained in Christ 2 Cor. 1. 20. and should be of all our actions 1 Cor 10. 35. Quest. Whether the infinite glory which God hath as God be communicated to Christs humane nature Answ. That being a creature can not have that glory which is due to the Creator It is true Christ is infinitely to be glorified because he is God and man but not therefore his humane nature Our Divines distinguish between a glory meerely divine and a Mediators glory which is next to divine far above all creatures Ob. Christ prayed for the glory which he had before the beginning Sol. Christ had it in decree and predestination and that was not Gods essentiall glory which is a property for he requires he may have it now which could not be if he had it from eternity We glorifie God not by putting any excellency into him but by taking notice of his excellency and esteeming him accordingly and making manifest this our high esteem of him There is a twofold glory 1 Essentiall infinite everlasting this is called gloria it receives neither addition nor diminution by any created power 2 Accidentall finite temporary called glorificatio this ebs or flowes shines or is overshadowed as goodnesse or gracelesnesse prevailes in the world It serves 1 To shew the vilenesse and basenesse of all wicked men which oppose Gods glory and strive to obscure it dishonour this glorious God setting light by him in their
excellent is he that hath made and governes all Why do I not esteem him more and more The more we can lift up our hearts to exalt God the more we shall grow in all holinesse and righteousnesse 3. His friends and servants shall also be exalted at last though for a time despised and set light by We should often and seriously consider of this great perfection of Gods nature authority and works The very Saints and Angels have a Negative imperfection though not a privative they are not deprived of that which should be in them but there are many perfections which they have not God is simply and universally Perfect and he onely hath all kind of perfection according to his essence God is a Necessary Essence Contingency is found in the essence of every creature it might not have been as well as have been it may not be as well as be there was a possibility of its not being as there is a possibility of its not being yea there was an equall or greater possibility of its not being then its being God is a necessary essence it is absolutely necessary that he should be and he cannot but be and be as he is and his actions upon himself are altogether and simply necessary they must be as they be and cannot but be so God is Independent Esay 44. 6. Rev. 1. 8. and 21. 6. and 22. 13. Rom. 11. 35. 36. Every Creature as a Creature is Dependent and hangs upon some other thing then it self and owes its being and continuance to another Nehem. 9. 6. It hath causes of its being from which of which by which and for which it is and further then these causes did and do contribute to its being it cannot be The Angels have an efficient cause and end and they do as much stand indebted to God for their being and continuance as the poorest worm and would no more have been without God nor continue to be then the silliest gnat but God is altogether independent of himself by himself for himself he hath no causes but is to himself instead of all causes He is what he is without any help from any other thing as himself shewes in his name I am that I am There are many things which have a beginning from some other thing there must be something therefore that is of it self or else we should wander infinitely a selfe-essence and subsistence Gods being is neither ab alio ex alio per aliud nor propter aliud We should acknowledge God to be a necessary and Independent essence 3. God is wholly one Deut. 6. 4. Gal. 3. 20. 1 Tim. 2. 5. Hos. 13. 4. Mal. 2. 10. All creatures are subject to multiplication there may be many of them and are many many Angels men starres and so in the rest Not one of them is singular and onely one so but one might conceive that there should be more for he that made one of them can make another and another and as many as he pleaseth but God is simply one singular and sole essence there neither is nor can be more then one God because he is ths first and best essence and there can be but one first and one best He is Infinite and there cannot be but one Infinite because either one of them should include the other and so the included must needs be finite or not extend to the other and so it self not be Infinite There was a first man and a first in every kind of creature but not any absolute first save God one Eternall and one Incomprehensible saith Athanasius in his Creed There can be but one chiefe Good which we desire for it self and all other things for it say the Morall Philosophers and this must needs be God for no Infinite good can be conceived but He. Some places of Scripture simply deny other Gods and others exclude all but this one God Though there be Gods many and Lords many that is that are so called and reputed by men who deceive themselves in their own imaginations yet to us in the Church there is but one God Zach. 14. 9. after Christ shall come the Gentiles with the Jewes shall all worship one and the same true God That which is perfect in the highest degree can be but one because that one must contain all perfections that which is omnipotent can be but one if one can do all things what need is there of many Gods If there were more Gods then one we might and ought to do service to more then one to acknowledge them praise and love them and be at least in mind ready to obey them if they should command us any thing and we might lawfully seek to them for what we need and give thanks to them for what we received But the Lord professeth himself to be a jealous God and cannot endure any Copartner in worship The Romans refused Christ because they would have had their Gods with him and he would be worshipped alone without them He is one God Not numerically as one is a beginning of number for that is a quantity but transcendently as Ens and unum are counted onely one solely and alone God there cannot be two Infinites in essence for then one should not have all the other hath in it God is Infinite for of his Greatnesse there is no end Secondly others would be imperfect or superfluous he being Infinite and Perfect Thirdly From his absolute Lordship and dominion over all he is King of Kings and Lord of Lords My God said Luther to the Pope will make your God know that you are too weak for him if there were two Gods there would be a strife between them as between Caesar and Pompey who should be the Greater and chiefest of all God may be said in a speciall manner to be one two severall wayes 1. For the purity and simplicity of his substance which is not compounded with any thing else For that is most truly and properly one which is nothing but it self and hath no other thing mixed with it God is so pure and simple an essence that he is not compounded so much as of parts 2. From his singularity because there are no more Gods but one God is not onely one but he is also the onely one He is such a one as hath no Copartners in worship Both which Titles are expresly ascribed unto God in the Scriptures Both that he is one and that he is the onely one God is not only unus but also unicus or to use Saint Bernards word unissimus If that word may be used he is of all things the onest Socrates and Plato in their definition of God ascribe to him unity with particular respect unto his singularity Pythogoras his advice to his Schollers was to search the unity There is a threefold unity first of persons in one nature so there is
fall of the Devill and mans fall 10. Either the world was eternall or had a beginning it could not be eternall 1. Because it is compounded of divers parts those in nature contrary one to another which could not meete together in that order themselves therefore it was made by some-what and then either by it selfe which could not be for that which maks is before that which is made and the same thing cannot be before it selfe or by some creature which could not be because that is but a part of the whole and therefore meaner then it considered as whole and not able to make it 2. The world could not be eternall because it is limited in respect of place quantity power therefore it is not infinite in time That which is eternall is the first thing consequently the best therefore God is only so having no parts nor being subject to corruption By these reasons it is evinced that the world is not eternal but was created by the chiefe work-man of all things in time But concerning the time of the yeare when the world was made whether in Summer Autumn or the Spring wee will not raise any curious and unprofitable questions See Sarsons Chronologia vapulans page 123. Let it suffice to know that it was created by God in the beginning Gen. 1. 1. that is in the beginning of time or rather together with time then in time for the instant and moment of Creation was the beginning of all following but not the end of precedent time Hitherto concerning the efficient cause there followeth the matter of Creation Of the first and immediate Creati●n there was no matter at all the Divine power drew out nature it selfe not out of any pre-existent matter but out of meer nothing Materiam noli quaerere nulla fuit N●thing but nothing had the Lord Almighty Whereof wherwith whereby to build this Citie Thus were created all incorporeall and immateriall substances the Angels the reasonable soule and the highest Heaven as some say for those things which are void of matter cannot be framed out of matter 2. The mediate Creation is when a thing is brought forth of a praexistent matter yet so rude and indisposed that it may be accounted for nothing so Adams body was created of the Dust or Slime of the earth Gen. 2. 7. Beasts and Birds out of the earth Gen. 1. 19. which yet God did meerely of his good pleasure no necessity compelling him nor the matter he took any way helping him in working it was nothing privatively as they call it Divines observe foure things in Gods Creation 1. His command whereby he said Let there be light and there was light Gods words are things 2. His approbation whereby all things are acknowledged as good God saw they were good That is apt for the end for which they were made free from all defect and deformity or punishment Gen. 1. 31. 3 Ordination and appointment whereby He assigned unto all creatures their use Jeremy 52. 1● He made nothing in vaine 4 A sanction of a Law and Decree which the creatures must alwayes observe called a Covenant with day and night Hitherto of the efficient cause and the matter there followeth the forme of Creation which may be considered either in respect of God or in respect of the things created 1 The manner of Creation in respect of God is this He did not create the World by a necessity of nature but according to the Eternall and Immutable yet most free decree of his will 2 By his word and b●ck alone without any change wearinesse or toyle He made and established all things 2 The forme of Creation in respect of the things created is two fold 1. Internall viz. the very force and power of nature imprinted by God both in all things in a common manner and respect and in the severall kinds according to the particular essence and condition of every thing by which they are made powerfull to proper or common operations 2. The externall forme is two-fold partly a suddaine and momentary production of all things partly a most beautifull disposing and excellent order of all things produced both in themselves and among one another The world hath its name in Greek from beauty God could have created them all at once but he made them in the space of si●e daies that he might shew 1. His power in producing whatsoever effects he would without their generall causes while he enlightned the world made the earth fruitfull and brought plants out of it before the Sun and Moone were created 2. His goodnesse and liberality while he provides for his creatures not yet made and brings the living creatures into the earth filled with plants and nourishment men into a world abundantly furnished withall things for necessity and delight 3. That we might thereby more easily conceive that the world was not made confusedly or by chance but orderly and by counsell and might not perfunctorily but diligently consider the works of Creation How should we deliberate in our actions which are subject to imperfection 〈◊〉 it pleased God not out of need to take leasure So much for the forme of Creation there remaines in the last place the end which is two-fold 1. The last and chiefest the glory of God the Creator in manifesting his goodnesse power and wisedome which excellencies of God shining forth in the existence order and wonderfull workmanship of all creatures and in the wise government and administration of them God would have acknowledged and praised by reasonable creatures Psal. 19. 1. and 10. 24. Prov. 16. 4. Rom. 1. 20. 36. 2. The next end for the worke it selfe that all things should serve man and be usefull to him especially to further the salvation of the Elect. Genesis 1. 20. Psalme 8. 4 5 6. 1 Corinth 3. 21. 22. It serves to confute sundry errors 1. The Arrians which said the world was made by Christ as the instrument and secondary cause that place Rom. 11. 36. doth not prove an inequality of persons 2. The Manichees which held two beginnings contrary to themselves God the authour of good things and the devil the authour of evil this is blasphemy against God and is contrary to what Moses saith Gen. 1. 31. 3. Aristotle that held the world was eternall though some say he did not Democritus who held that the world was made by a casuall concourse of atomes and that there were infinite worlds when the Scripture speaketh but of one God sent his Sonne into the world not worlds See the discovery of the world in the Moon Proposit. 2. Galene who having read the fifth Chapter of Genesis said that Moses said much but proved little 2. It condemes 1. Those which set their affections on the creature if there be beauty in that what is in the Creatour 2. Those that abuse the creatures by cruelty or pretended Lordship 3. Those which mock
15. 1. Heb. 8. 11. I●hn 14. 26. and by intell●ctuall visions Num. 12. 6. to the phantasie God revealed his will by imaginary visions to Prophets awake and by dreames to Prophets asleepe Gen. 40. 8. 41. 8 9. Acts 16. 10 10. 3. Num. 14. 4. to the senses God revealed his will and that either by vision to the eye or lively voyce to the Eare Gen. 3 9. 4. 6. 15. 4 5. Exod. 20. 1 2. 3. 1 2 3 33. 17. And Lastly by writing This Revelation was sometimes immediate by God himselfe after an unspeakable manner or by meanes viz. Angels Vrim Thummim Prophets Christ himselfe and his Apostles The written word forthematter contained in it is called the word of God Rom 9. 6. for the manner of Record the Scripture John 10. 35. 2 Tim. 3. 16. 1 Pet. 2. 6. or Scriptures Matthew 22. 29. John 5. 39. Romans 15. 4. 2. Pet. 3. 16. By an Antonomasie or an excellency of phrase as the most worthy writings that ever saw the light Sometimes with an Epithite the holy Scriptures Rom. 1. 2. 2 Tim. 3. 15. the S●riptures of the Prophets Rom. 16. 26 Some thinke th●t Enoch the seventh from Al●m wrote but Jude 6. 14. speak●th onely of his prophesying which might rather be by word of mouth then writing because our Saviour citing Scripture ever gives the first place to Moses and undertaking by the Scriptures to prove himselfe to be the Messiah that he ought to suffer began at Moses Luke 24. 27. No doubt if there had beene any more ancient then Moses our Saviour would have alleadged it because all the Scripture that was before him was to give testimony of him Of the authority of the Scripture The Author of the Scriptures was God himselfe they came from him in a speciall and peculiar manner commonly called inspiration which is an act of Gods Spirit immediately imprinting or infusing those notions into their braines and those phrases and words by which the notions were uttered 2 Tim. 4. 16. All Scripture is given by Divine inspiration or by inspiration of God Prophesie came not of old time by the will of men but holy men of God spake as they were moved or carried by the Holy Ghost 2 Pet. 1. 21. They did not write these things of their own heads but the Spirit of God did move and worke them to it and in it 2 Sam. 23. 2. The Spirit of the Lord spake by me that is did immediately guide me and tell me what matter to utter and in what words Stephen saith they resisted the Holy Ghost when they did disobey the Scriptures The Holy Ghost by the mouth of David and the mouth of Esay spake Acts 1. 16. 28. 25. The Inscriptions of many Propheticall bookes and Epistles Apostolicall run thus The word of the Lord which ●ame to Hosea Amos Joel Paul Peter JAmes a servant of God and an Apostle of Christ. The proeme that is set before divers prophecies is this Thus saith the Lord and the Prophets inculcate that speech the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it because they would take off the thoughts of the people from their own persons and lift them up to consideration of God the chiefe author It is all one to say the Scripture saith Rom. 4. 3. 10. 11. 11. 2. Gal. 4. 30. 1 Tim. 5. 10. and God saith Rom 9. 25. Heb. 4. 3. 8. 5. 13. 5. and the word Scripture is put for God speaking in the Scripture the Scripture saith to Pharaoh Rom. 9. 7. and the Scripture hath shut up all men under sinne Galat. 3. 22. for which in another place God hath shut up Rom. 11. 32. All other disciplines were from God and every truth whosoever speaks it is from the holy Ghost but the Scripture in a singular manner is attributed to the Holy Ghost he immediately dictated it to the holy men of God The efficient principall cause then of the Scripture was God the ten Commandements of which most of the rest is an exposition were writen after a secret and unutterable manner by God himselfe therefore they are called the writings of God Exod. 32. 16. Secondly all the rest which was written though men were the instruments was done by his appoinment and assistance Exo. 17. 14. Esay 8. 1. Jer. 30. 2. The Scripture is often attributed to the holy Ghost as the Author and no mention is made of the Pen-men Heb. 10 15. The Prophets and Apostles were the Pen-men of the Scripture whose calling sending and inspiration was certainly divine for whatsoever they taught the Church of God or left in writing they learned not before in the Schooles 1 Cor. 2. 13. The Divine authority of th● word may be defined a certain dignity and excellency of the Scripture above all other sayings or writings whatsoever whereby it is perfectly true in word and sence it deserves credit in all sayings narrations of things past present and to come threatnings and promises and as superiour doth binde to obedience if it either forbid or command any thing 1 Tim. 1. 15. 2 Pet. 1. 19. John 5. 39. Heb. 6. 18. Rom. 1. 5. 2 Cor. 10. 5 6. 13. 3. 12. 12. Gal. 1. 1 12 13. though the things in mans judgement seem unlike or incredible or the Commandements hard and foolish to the carnall minde Hereticks have laboured to prove their corrupt and damnable opinions out of the Scripture and have received some bookes if not all as Divine The Turkes at this day so esteem the five books of Moses as they will kisse such patches of Paper as they finde having any part thereof written in the same Aristaeus an Heathen when he had determined to have disputed against Scripture confesseth that he was forbidden by God in a dreame Plato is termed Moses Atticus Moses speaking Greeke The holy Scripture in it sel●e is Divine and Authenticall though no man in the world should so acknowledge it as the Sunne in it selfe were light though all the men in the world were blind and could not or would not see it but in respect of us it is Divine and Authenticall when it is acknowledged and esteemed so to be The Scripture is the word of God written by holy men as they were inspired by the holy Ghost divinely containing all Divine truth necessary to salvation for the edification and instruction of Gods Church thereunto and for the glory of God That the Scriptures were from God may appeare by reasons contained in or cleaving to the Scripture 1. From the excellency of their matter which is Heavenly the divine and supernaturall matter contained in it It telleth us of such things as doe farre exceed the reach of mans reason and which it was impossible for any man to counterfeit and faine and which being told are so correspondent to reason
he praised God Joseph was no King aud therefore had no Scepter to fall down before In the Hebrew Gen. 47. for top we read head which by a Metaphor signifies the top because the head is the end and highest part of man and consequently of any thing else And for staffe we now read in the Hebrew bed which fell out because the word mittah there extant pricked with other Vowels signifies a staffe for in the Hebrew matteh is a staffe and mitteh a bed The Septuagint whom the Apostle followes read it matteh and so translated it staffe otherwise th●n w● now read it in the Hebrew Text. If we follow the Hebrew Text as it is now extant the sence will be That Jacob because he could not raise his body out of his bed therefore he bowed his head forward upon his beds head and so worshipped God Bez● speaking of the divers Latine translations of the New Testament onely he saith of the v●lgar Latine that he followeth it for the most part and preferreth it before all the rest Maxim● ex parte amplector claeeris omnibus antepono He speakes of the new Testament onely and of that Latine translation of the new Testament in comparison of all other Latine translations which were before him as Erasmus Castalion and such like These plac●s may serve to shew that the vulgar Latine is corrupt no Book being entire or free fron errour Isidore Clarius Brixianus praef●●t in Biblia a great learned man of their own affirmeth that it hath 8000 places in which the sense of the Holy Ghost is changed Since the Councell of Trent 2 Popes have set forth this vulgar Edition diversly which of these shall be received as authenticall How often doe the Papists leave the vulgar in all their controversies when it is for their advantage so to doe it is a matter ordinary with them and needlesse to be proved There is no Edition Ancienter then the Hebrew if the Latine have been used a 1000 yeares in the Church the Hebrew hath been used almost 3000 yeares the Chaldee Arbicke Syriacke and Greeke Editions also have beene used above a 1000 yeares and so should be authentique by the Papists argument Having spoken of the authority of the Scriptures the Canonicall Books and the Authenticall Editions I now goe on to treate of the end of the Scripture its adjuncts or properties fitted to that end and the Interpretation of Scripture The end of the Scripture comes next to be considered of this I have spoken somewhat afore but shall now inlarge my selfe The end of the Scripture is considered 1. In respect of God 2. In respect of us In respect of God the end of the Scripture is a glorifying of him by it we may learne to know love and feare him and so be blessed The glory of God is the chiefe end of all things Prov. 16. 4. In respect of us The end of the Scripture is 1. Intermediate temporall edification which is fitly referred to 5 principall uses the two first respect the mind the other three the heart will and affection It is profitable for Doctrine it serves to direct to all saving truth nothing is to be received as a truth necessary to salvation but what is proved out of Scripture Where that hath not a tongue to speake I must not have an eare to heare Hoc quia de scrip●uris non habet autoritatem eadem facilitate contemuitur qua probatur Hieron 2. Reproofe or Confutation to refute all errours and heterodoxe opinions in Divinity By this sword of the Spirit Christ vanquished Satan Matth. 4. 4. 7. 10. by the Scripture he opposed the Jewes John 5. 45. 46. 47. and 10. 34. by this he refuted the Scribes and Pharisees Matth. 9. 13. and 12. 1. Luke 10. 25. 26. 27. Matth. 19. 34. and 21. 12. 13. the Sadducees Matth. 22 29. By this Austin refuted the Pelagians Irenaeus the Valentinians Tertullian the M●rcionites Athanasius the Arrians In comitijs Vindelicorum cum episcopus Albertus aliquando legeret Biblia referente Luthero in Sermon Convival interrogasset quidam è consiliarijs quid libri hic ●sset nescio equidem respondet qualis sit liber sed omnia quae in eo lego nostrae religioni planè sunt contraria 3. Correction of iniquity setting streight that which is amisse in manners and life 4. Instruction to righteousnesse Instruunt Patriarchae etiam errantes Basil saith the Psalmes are a common Store house and Treasury of good Instruction The Title of the 32 and some other Psalmes is Maschil that is a Psalme of instruction 5. Comfort in all troubles Psal. 19. 8 and 119. 50. and 92. the Greek word for Gospell signifieth glad-tidings The Promises are the Christians best Cordials as Gods Promises are the rule of what we must pray for in faith so they are the ground of what we must expect in comfort 2. Ultimate and chiefest our Salvation and life Eternall John 5. 39. and 20. 31. 2 Tim. 3. 15. It will shew us the right way of escaping hell and attaining Heaven It will shew us what to beleeve and practise for our present and eternall happinesse This was Gods aime in causing the Scripture to be written and we shall find it fully availeable and effectuall for the ends for which it was ordained by God CHAP. VIII THe properties of the Scripture fitted to that end The properties which the Scripture must have for the former end are these It is 1. Of Divine Authority 2. True and Certaine 3. The rule of faith and manners 4. Necessary 5. Pure and Holy 6. Sufficient and Perfect 7. Perspicuous and Plaine 1. It is of Divine Authority and so greater then all exception It is Divine 1. In its efficient cause and Originall which is God the Father dictating in his Sonne declaring and publishing by his holy Spirit confirming and sealing it in the hearts of the faithfull He wrote the Decalogue immediately with his own finger and Commanded the whole Systeme and all the parts of Scripture to be written by his servants the Prophets and Apostles as the publike Actuaries and Pen-men thereof therefore the authority of the Scripture is as great as that of the holy Ghost who did dictate both the matter and words those speeches are frequent the Lord said and the mouth of the Lord hath spoken 2. In the subject matter which is truth according to godlinesse certaine powerfull of venerable antiquity joyned with a sensible demonstration of the Spirit and Divine presence and with many other things atte●●ing its divine authority Whence it follows that the authority of the Holy Scriptures is 1. Infallible which expresseth the minde and will of God to whom truth is essentiall and necessary 2. Supreame and Independent into which at last all faith is resolved from whi●h it is not lawfull to appeale By which singular authority the Scripture is distinguished
mensura infallibilis quae nullam vel additionem vel detractionem patitur 3. It is a ●ust rule Lastly It is an universall and perpetuall rule both in regard of time and person ever since the Scripture hath beene it hath been the onely rule in the old Testament to the Law and the Testimony in the new they confirmed all things by the old it directs in every case 2 To all persons this is able to make a Minister yea a Councell a Church wise to salvation to reforme a young man whose lusts are unbridled 119. 9. to order a King 17 Deut. 29. 30. Ob. Faith was before the Scripture therefore the Scripture is not the rule of faith Sol. The word of God is twofold 1. Revealed that preceded faith 2. Written that did not Though it be a rule yet fir●t it doth not exclude other Ministeriall helps as Prayer Preaching the knowledge of the tongues and the Ministry of the Church these are meanes to use the rule and subordinate to it we need no more rules Therefore it is a vaine and absurd question of the Papists let a man be lockt up in a Study with a Bible what good will he get by it if he cannot read 2. There must be reason and judgement to make use of it and apply it judge what I say saith Paul 1 Cor. 10. 15. The Scripture should rule our hearts thoughts and inward cogitations our words and actions we should pray heare receive the Sacrament according to the directions of it buy sell cloath our selves and carry our selves toward all as that bids us 2 Sam. 22. 23. the people of God wrote after this Copy followed this rule Psal. 119. 5. 59. 111. because they desired in all which they did to please God now God is pleased when his own will is done and to glorifie him in their lives and therefore they framed themselves according to his statutes We cannot better expresse an high esteeme of God and his excellencies then by following him in all things Every one esteems that person most excellent to whom he gives up himself most to be ruled and ordered 4. The Scripture is necessary In respect of the substance thereof it was alwayes necessary in respect of the manner of revealing it is necessary since the time that it pleased God after that manner to deliver his word and shall be to the worlds end It is not then absolutely and simply necessary that the word of God should be delivered to us in writing but onely conditionally and upon supposition God for a long time for the space of 2400 yeares unto the time of Moses did instruct his Church with an immediate living voyce and had he pleased still to goe on in that way there had beene no necessity of Scripture now more then in that age there was a continuall presence of God with them but now there is a perpetuall absence in that way and the word of God was written 1. For the brevity of mans life See the 5. the 11. Ch. of Gen. The Patriarks were long lived before and after the Floud to the times of Moses they lived some centuries of yeares therefore afterward the purity of the word could not fitly be preserved without writing By writing we have the comfort of the holy word of God which from writing receiveth his denomination in being called Scripture which is nothing else but writing 2. That the Church might have a certaine and true rule and Canon whereby it might judge of all questions doubts and controversies of Religion Luke 1. 4. Every mans opinion else would have been a Bible and every mans lust a Law 3. That the faith of men in Christ which was to come might the better be confirmed when they should see that written before their eyes which was done by the Mess●as and see all things that were fore-told of him verified in the event 4. That the purity of Gods worship might be preserved from corruption and the truth propagated among all Nations 5. To take off excuses from men that they did not know Rom. 10. 18. civill Lawes are written and published that offenders may be excusable The Pen-men had a command from God 1. A publike and outward command as Jeremie 30. 2. and 36. 2 Moses Exod. 17. 14. and 34. 17. and John was commanded 12 times in the Revelation to write Rev. 1. 11. and 2. 1. 8. 12. 18. and 3. Ch. 1. 7. and 14. and 14. 13. and 19. v. 9. 21. 5. 2 an inward command by private inspiration and instinct 2 Pet. 1. 21. 5. The Scripture is Pure and Holy It commands all good and forbids reproves and condemnes all sinne and filthinesse it restraines not onely from evill words and actions but thoughts glances Those are frequent adjuncts of the word of God holy pure and cleane Psal. 12. 6. and 18. 31. and 119. 40 Prov. 30. 5. It is pure in its narrations it speakes purely of things evill and uncleane It is termed holy Rom. 1. 2. and 2 Tim. 3. 15. 1. From its efficient principall cause God who is the holy of holies holinesse it selfe Esay 6. 3. Dan. 9. 24. he is the author and inditer of it Luke 1. 67. 2 In regard of the instrumentall cause the Pen-men of it were holy men 2 Pet. 1. 21. Prophets and Apostles 3. From its matter the holy will of God A●t 20. 27. the Scripture containes holy and Divine mysteries holy precepts of life holy promises Psal 105. 42. holy Histories 4. From its end or effect the holy Ghost by the reading and meditation of the Scripture sanctifieth us John 17. 17. it sanctifieth likewise all the creatures to our use so as we may use them with a good conscience 1 Tim. 4. 5. From the purity of it the Scripture is compared to a glasse Jam. 1. 23. to fire Jer. 23. 29. to light Psal. 119. 105. The reason of it is because God himselfe is pure most pure Psal. 92. ult Hab 1. 13. It is pure 1. Formally in it selfe there is no mixture of falshood or error no corruption or unsoundnesse at all in it Prov. 8. 6. 7. 8. 2. Virtually so as to make others pure John 15. 3. and 17. 17. Act. 20. 32. It begets grace Jam. 1. 18. 1 Pet. 1. 23. and preserves and increaseth it Act. 20. 32. Eph●s 4. 11. 12. The assertory part is pure what it affirmes to be is and what it d●nyes to be is not Psal 19. 7. and 93. 5. Jam. 1. 18. 2 What it promiseth shall be performed and what it threateneth shall be executed Numb 23. 19. 1 Sam. 2. 30. Zach. 1. 6. 3. What it commandeth is good and what it forbiddeth is evill Deut. 4. 8. Psal. 119. 108. and 19. 8. 9. Rom. 7. 12. In other Bookes some truth is taught some good commended some kinde or part of happinesse promised But in the Inspired Oracles of God all truth is taught all goodnesse commanded
our election sure by our calling Rom. 8. 29 30. and our effectuall calling by two things 1. by a new light 2. a new life 2 Cor. 4. 5. 1 Pet. 2. 9. John 12. 36. Ephes. 5. 8. We have a new knowledge wrought in us of our selves we see our miserie by sin and our inability to help our selves Rom. 2. 23. 2 of God God in Jesus Christ is discovered to us 2 Pet. 1. 3. We see our need of Christ and know him to be a mediatour who must reconcile God and us 2. a new life is wrought in us Ephes. 2. 1. We now die to sin and live to God 1. By faith Rev. 17. 14. These three are put together faithfull chosen and called 2. By new obedience CHAP. II. 2. The Execution of Gods Decree GOD executes his Decree by Actions Creation and Providence Gods workes are in time 1. Past Creation of all things 2. Present Governement and preservation Creation is taken 1. Strictly when God makes any Creature of nothing meerly of nothing not as if nothing were the matter but the terme so the souls of men and Angels are created of nothing 2. Largely when of some prejasent matter but very unfit and indisposed a creature is made as Adam of the earth Creation is the action of God whereby out of nothing he brought forth nature it selfe and all things in nature both substances and accidents in and with the substances and finished them in the space of sixe dayes both to his owne glory and the salvation of the Elect. Or it is an action whereby God the Father by his word and holy Spirit made all things exceeding good for the glory of his name Or thus Creation is a transient or externall action of God whereby in the beginning He made the world by a meere command out of his owne free will in sixe dayes space to the glory of his name 1. An action not a motion or change motion argueth some succession but in the things created the fieri factum esse is all one nor is it a change because that supposeth some alteration in the Agent 2. Transient it passeth from the Agent to the thing created whereas in immanent actions as Gods will decrees and personall actions they abide in himselfe 3. Of God The efficient cause of Creation is God the Father Son and Holy Ghost Creation is the proper worke of God alone so that He is God which created the world and he created the world who is God Jer. 10. 11. It is without controversie that the worke of creation agrees to God the Father the same is expressely given to the Sonne John 1 3. Col. 1. 16. and to the Holy Ghost also Psal. 33. 6. 4. In the beginning By the Scripture it is a matter of faith to hold that the world was not from all eternity in the beginning that notes not that there was time first and then God created the world for time is a creature and concreated but it denotes orde that is at first 5. The world that is the Heaven and Earth and all things contained in them Acts 4. 4. and 17. 24. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that well ordered decent beautifull and comely frame of heaven and earth 6. By his meere command as appeares Gen. 1. Let there be light let there be heavens w●ich argues his omnipotencie 7. Out of his owne free will for God did not need the world and therefore he created it no sooner 8. The finall cause to the glorie of his name Rom. 2. 20. Three Attrbiutes especially manifest themselves in this work of Creation Gods power wisedome goodnesse his power in that he made all thing● by a word and of nothing his wisedome is seene in the order and exceeding wonderfull and particular uses all creatures have his goodnesse in that he would communicate being to the creatures He needed not the world but was happie enough in himselfe without men or Angels The worke of Creation say some set out generally in a generall proposition In the beginning God created the Heavens and the Earth Which proposition He after explains by its parts That the world was not from eternity but was made by God these arguments may perswade First and principally Faith Heb. 11. 3. which is grounded upon divers places of Scripture as the first and second chapters of Genesis 38 and 39 chapters of Job and some Psalmes almost whole as 104. and 136. this also is the first Article of our Creede that the world was created in time by God The Apostle Paul Acts 14. 15. and 17. 24. doth point out God to the Heathen by this worke above others Secondly and probably the light of nature shining in these reasons 1. The originall of Nations laid downe by Moses Gen. 10. and else where which could not be fained by him since some memorie of them was then extant among many which yet in progresse of time was extinguished 2. The beginning of Arts the first inventers whereof are known and in what time they flourished for it is not probable that so many ages before mankind lived without arts and that in these last times they were all both invented perfected 3. The newnesse of all Heathenish histories the ancientest of which tell of nothing before Noah's flood or the beginning of the Assyrian Empire under Ninus The holy history it selfe is only of 4000. yeares or thereabout which neverthelesse i● the greatest monument of antiquity Now it would be a most unworthy reproach and contumelie cast upon all those men who had lived so many infinite ages agoe to say that they were so ignorant that they could not or so sloathfull that they would not deliver in writing what was done in their times 4. The decay of mans bodie and age which from a great strength quantity bignesse and time of life is now come down to a narrow scantling which if had decreased so alwais in infinite ages it would by this time have been brought almost to nothing The certaine series and order of causes and impossibility of their proceeding in infinitum for it must needs be that there should be one first which is the universall cause but first it is not unlesse it be one nor one except it be God 6. As a thing is so it workes but God doth not depend upon another in his being therefore neither in working doth he require a pre-existent matter 7. Art presupposeth nature and nature matter but God in working is a more excellent cause then art or nature therefore presupposeth nothing in working 8. The first cause viz. God is infinite therefore he can do whatsoever implyeth not a contradiction but the Creation of things in time implyeth it not 9. Whatsoever perisheth hath a beginning the world doth perish because all its parts decay and are subject to corruption therefore the whole The Angels and soules of men are changeable by nature as appears by the
aloft in the aire Zanchius saith there are foure sorts of Meteors others make but 3. sorts 1. Fiery which in the Supreame Region of the aire are so enflamed by the fire that they are of a fiery nature as Comets Thunder 2. Airy which being begotten of dry vapours of the earth come neare the nature of aire as winds 3. Waterie which retaine the nature of the water as snow and raine 4. Earthly which being begot of earthly vapours are also digged out of the Earth as metals stones The efficient cause is God according to that of the Psalmist haile snow ice winde and storme doe his will The remote matter of the Meteors are Elements the next matter are exhalations which are two-fold fumus et vapor smoake is of a middle nature between earth and fire vapour betweene water and aire If it come from the earth or some sandy place it is fumus a fume or kind of smoak if it come from the water or some watery place it is a vapour Vapours or exhallations are fumes raised from the water earth by the heavenly bodies into one of the 3. Regions of the aire whence divers impressions are formed according to the quality and quantity of the exhalations Thunder is a sound heard out of a thick or close compacted Cloud which sound is procured by reason of hot and dry exhalations shut within the cloud which seeking to get out with great violence rend the cloud from whence proceedes the tumbling noise which we call Thunder The Earth sends out partly by its owne innate heate and partly by the externall heate and attraction of the Sun certain hot and dry steames which the Philosopher calls exhalations and these going up in some abundance are at last enclosed within some thicke cloud consisting of cold and moist vapours which finding themselves straightned do with violence seeke a vent and breake through the sides or low part of the cloude There is first a great conflict and combate there of the contrary qualities a great rumbling and tumbling and striving of the exhalations within the cloud untill it breake forth into a loud and fearfull cracke Then the exhalation by its heate incensed in the strife proves all on a flame as it comes in the aire and that is Lightning Lastly the exhalation falling downe upon the earth is so violent that sometimes it breakes trees sometimes it singeth and burneth what it meetes mith it kills men and living creatures and in the most abundance of it there is a Thunder bolt begotten through exceeding great heate hardning the earthy parts of it God hath power over the Thunder He commands it rules it orders it for time place manner of working and all circumstances the Thunder in Egypt at the delivering of the Law proves this Therefore in the Scripture it is called the voyce of God and the fearefulnesse and terriblenesse thereof is made an argument of the exceeding greatnesse of God that can at his pleasure destroy his enemies even by the chiding of his voyce in Egypt he smote them with haile lightning thunder and with stormy tempest At the delivering of the Law mighty thunder-claps made way to the Lords appearance and were his harbingers to tell of his comming and prepare the hearts of the people with exceeding great awfulnesse and obedience to receive directions from him The Lord puts down Job 40. 9. with this question Canst thou thunder with a voyce like God speake terribly and with as big and loud a voice as thou canst and if thy voyce be answerable to loud thunder either in terriblenesse or loudnesse then will I confesse my selfe to be thy equall and Elihu reasoned for God by consideration of this great worke David Psal. 29. sheweth the greatnesse of God in the greatnesse of this mighty sound But it pleaseth God to effect this worke not immediately but mediately using naturall and ordinary causes according to his owne good will and pleasure for the eff●cting thereof There doe arise from the ends of the earth as the Scripture speaks that is from all quarters of this inferiour part of the world consisting of earth and water certain steams or fumes partly drawn up thence by the heate and influence of the Sun and other Planets or constellations partly breathed out of the earth by the naturall heate thereof Whereof some are hot and moist being as it were of a middle nature betwixt water and aire some hot and dry being of a middle nature betwixt fire and aire as some Philosophers thinke of which two as of the matter are brought forth these strange things which wee see in the aire and among the rest Thunder Though thunder bee first in nature being by the violent eruption it makes out of the cloud the cause of fulgurations yet we see first the lightning before wee heare the Thunder because of the swiftnesse of the fire above the aire and because the eye is quicker in perceiving its object then the eare This is done for the benefit of the world that by shaking of the aire it might bee purged and made fit for the use of man and beast being cleansed from those ill and pestilent vapours which otherwise would make it too thicke grosse and unwholsome for our bodies for this is one speciall end of winds thunders and the like vehement works that are in the aire besides the particular work for which God assigneth them and therefore with thunder likely is joyned much raine because the cloud is dissolved at the same time and sometimes violent winds and tempests because the exhalation inflamed snatcheth with it selfe such windy fumes as it meetes withall in the aire and so by violent stirring the aire purgeth it and openeth the parts of the earth by shaking and moving it 1. We must turne all this to a spirituall use viz. to instruct us in the feare of him that is Lord of Hoasis who shews his greatnesse in these mighty deedes of his hand to which purpose alwayes the Scripture speakes of it exhorting the mighty to give unto the Lord glory and strength in regard of this 2. We must observe God so in this and all his great works as to cause our mindes to encrease in the knowledge of his excellencie and our hearts in the love and feare of him All his works are therefore exhorted to praise him because wee by all should learn his praise and greatnesse How able is God to destroy sinners how quickely and in a moment can hee bring them to ruine let him but speake to the thunder haile tempest and they will beate downe and consume his adversaries before his face ô then tremble before him 3. We must learn to put our confidence in God and boldly to promise our selves deliverance when he promiseth it God is wonderfull in making and ruling the clouds This is a work which God doth often alleadge in Scripture to prove his greatnesse Job 37. 26. Hee bindes
the waters in a garment Prov. 30. 4. that is makes the Clouds How as it were by an even poysing of one part with the other God makes these Clouds to hover a great while over the earth before they bee dissolved is a thing worthy admiration and greatly surpasseth our knowledge Job 38. 34. Psal. 14. 78. and Prov. 8. 28. Psal. 104. 3. The cloud is water rarified drawn upward till it come to a cold place and then it is thicke and drops downe They are but nine miles say some from the earth but they are of unequall height and are lower in Winter then in Summer when the Sun hath the greater force then they ascend higher and in his smaller force they hang the lower Let us consider the causes of these clouds and the uses of them The efficient causes are thought to be the heate influence of the Sun and the Stars which doth rarifie the water draw thence the matter of the clouds as you shall perceive if you hold a wet cloath before the fire that a thicke steame will come out of it because the fire makes thin the thickness of the water and turns it into a kind of moist vapour and the earth hath some heate mixed with it through a certain quantity of fire that is dispersed in the bowels of it which causeth such like steames to ascend out of it and the coldnsse of the middle region doth condensate and thicken these steames or breaths and turne them againe into water at length and at last to thicke clouds 2. The matter is the steams that the waters and earth doe yeeld forth by this heate The uses of it are to make rain and snow snow is nothing but rain condensated whi●ened by the excessive cold in the winter time as it is in descending for the watering of the earth and making it fruitfull or else for the excessive moistning of the earth to hinder the fruitfulnesse of it if God see fit to punish The earth without moysture cannot bring forth the fruit● that it should and some parts of the earth have so little water neare them below that they could not else be sufficiently moystened to the making of them fruitfull God hath therefore commanded the Sunne among other offices to make the vapours ascend from the Sea and Earth that he may powre it down again upon the forsaken wildernesse or other places whether for punishment or otherwise Ob. How can it be conceived that the clouds above being heavy with water should not fall to the Earth seeing every heavy thing naturally descendeth and tendeth down-ward Sol. No man by wit or reason can resolve this doubt but only from the word of God which teacheth that it is by vertue of Gods Commandement given in the Creation that the Cloudes fall not Gen. 1. 6. Let the Firmament separate the waters from the waters by force of which commanding word the water hangeth in the clouds and the clouds in the aire and need no other supporters Job 26. 7 8. setting out the Majestie and greatnesse of God in his workes here beginneth that He hangeth the Earth upon nothing be bindeth the waters in the Clouds and the Cloud is not rent under them Philosophie is too defective to yeeld the true reason of this great work of God which commonly attributeth too much to natura naturata nature and too little to natura naturans the God of nature Now we must here also blame our own carelesnesse and folly which forbeare to consider of this worke that hangs over our heads The clouds are carried from place to place in our sight and cover the Sun from us They hinder the over-vehement heate of the Sunne from scorching the earth and yet wee never thinke what strange things they be and what a mercifull Creator is he that prepared them Not seeing God in the workes of nature shewes great stupidity and should make us lament Let us endeavour to revive the thoughts of God in our mindes by his workes When wee see the clouds carried up and downe as wee doe sometimes one way sometimes another swiftly then let us set our heart a worke to thinke there goes Gods Coach as it were here he rides above our heads to marke our way and to reward or punish our good or bad courses with seasonable raine for our comfort or excessive showers for our terrour O seeke to him and labour to please him that hee may not finde matter of anger provocation against us When the Clouds either favour or chastise us let us take notice of Gods hand in these either comfortable or discomfortable effects and not impute it all to the course of nature By meanes of the Clouds God waters the earth yea the drye wildernesse without moysture there can be no fruitfulnesse without Clouds no raine without that no corne or grasse and so no man or beast Raine is as it were the melting of a Cloude turned into water Psal. 104. 13. It is a great work of God to make raine and cause it fitly and seasonably to descend upon the earth It is a work often named in Scripture Deut 11. 14. and 28. 12. Levit. 26. 4. Jer. 5. 24. It is noted in Job divers times 36. 27. He maketh small the drops of water God propounds this worke to Job as a demonstration of his greatnesse Job 38. 25. 34. See Jer 30. 13. Psalm 137. 8. Now this work is the more to be observed in these respects 1. The necessity of it in regard of the good it bringeth if it be seasonable and moderate and the evill which followes the want excesse or untimelinesse of it 2. In regard of mans utter inability to procure or hinder it as in the dayes of Noah all the world could not hinder it and in the dayes of Ahab none could procure it 3. In regard of the greatnesse of the worke in the course of nature for the effecting of which so many wonders concurre First without this drinke afforded to the fields we should soone finde the world pined and sterved and man and beast consumed out of it for want of foode to eate It is the cause of fruitfulnesse and the want of it causeth barrennesse and so destruction of all living creatures that are maintained by the encrease of the earth As mischievous and terrible a thing as a famine is so good and beneficiall a thing is raine which keepeth off famine Secondly It procureth plenty of all necessaries when the Heavens give their drops in fit time and measure the earth also sends forth her off-spring in great store and fit season so both men and beasts enjoy all things according to their naturall desire this so comfortable a thing as plenty is so worthy a work of God is the effect of raine I meane raine in due season and proportion Lastly The greatnesse of the workes which must meet together for making and distributing of
raine doth magnifie the worke The Sunne by his heate drawes up moist steams breath from the earth and water these ascending to the middle region of the aire which is some-what colder then the lower are again thickned and turne into water and so drop downe by their owne heavinesse by drops not altogether as it were by cowles full partly from the height of place from which they fall which causeth the water to disperse it selfe into drops and partly because it is by little and little not all at once thickned and turned into water so descends by little portions as it is thickned So the Sunne and other starres the earth the water windes and all the frame of nature are put to great toile and paines as it were to make ready these Clouds for from the end● of the earth are the waters drawn which make our showers God is the first efficient cause of raine Gen. 2. 5. It is said there God had not caused it to raine Job 5. 10. Jer. 14. 22. Zach. 10. 1. The materiall cause of it is a vapour ascending out of the earth 3. the formall by the force of the cold the vapours are condensed into Clouds in the middle region of the aire 4. The end of raine to water the earth Genes 2. 6. which generation and use of raine David hath elegantly explained Psal. 147. 8. The cause of the Raine-bow is the light or beames of the Sun in a hollow and dewie cloud of a different proportion right opposite to the Sun beames by the reflection of which beames and the divers mixture of the light and the shade there is expressed as it were in a glasse the admirable Raine-bow We should be humbled for our unthankfulness and want of making due use of this mercie the want of it would make us mutter yet we praise not God nor serve him the better when we have it Jer. 14. 22. intimating without Gods omnipotencie working in and by them they cannot doe it If God actuate not the course of nature nothing is done by it let us have therefore our hearts and eyes fixed on him when wee behold raine sometime it mizleth gently descending sometimes falls with greater drops sometime with violence this ariseth from the greater or lesse quantity of the vapour and more or less heate or cold of the aire that thickneth or melteth or from the greater or smaller distance of the cloud from the earth or from the greater purity or grossenesse of the aire by reason of other concurring accidents either we feele the benefit or the want of raine likely once every moneth· Let not a thing so admirable passe by us without heeding to bee made better by it Want of moisture from above must produce praying confessing turning 1 Kings 8. 35. 36. The colours that appear in the Rainbow are principally 3. 1. The Cerulean or watery colour which notes the destroying of the world by water 2. The grassie or greene colour which shewes that God doth preserve the world for the present 3. The yellow or fiery colour shewing the world shal be destroyed with fire Dew consists of a cold moist vapour which the Sun draweth into the aire from whence when it is somewhat thickned through cold of the night and also of the place whether the Sun exhaled it it falleth down in very small and indiscernable drops to the great refreshment of the earth It falleth only morning aud evening Hath the raine a Father or who hath begotten the drops of dew Out of whose wombe came the raine and the hoary frost of heaven who hath gendred it saith God to Job Ch. 38. 28 29. A frost is dew congealed by overmuch cold It differs from the dew because the frost is made in a cold time and place the dew in a temperate time both of them are made when the weather is calme and not windy and generated in the lowest region of the aire Haile and ice is the same thing viz. water bound with cold they differ onely in figure viz. that the hailestones are or bicular begotten of the little drops of raine falling but ice is made of water continued whether it be congealed in rivers or sea or fountaines or pooles or any vessels whatsoever and retaines the figure of the water congealed Though ice be not Chrystall yet some say Chrystall is from ice when ice is hardened into the nature of a stone it becomes Chrystall more degrees of coldnesse hardnesse and clearenesse give ice the denomination of Chrystall and the name Chrystall imports so much that is water by cold contracted into ice Plinie in his naturall Historie saith the birth of it is from ice vehemently frozen But Doctor Browne in his enquiries into vulgar errours doubts of it The windes are also a great worke of God he made and he ruleth the winds They come not by chance but by a particular power of God causing them to be and to be thus hee brings them out of his treasures He caused the winds to serve him in Egypt to bring Froggs and after Locusts and then to remove the Locusts againe He caused the winds to divide the red Sea that Israell might passe Hee made the winds to bring quailes and the winds are said to have wings for their swiftnesse the nature of them is very abstruse The efficient causes of them are the Sunne and starres by their heate drawing up the thinnest and dryest fumes or exhalations which by the cold of the middle region being beaten back againe doe slide obliquely with great violence through the ayre this way or that way The effects of it are wonderfull they sometimes carrie raine hither and thither they make frost and they thaw they are sometimes exceeding violent and a man that sees their working can hardly satisfie himselfe in that which Philosophers speakes about their causes the wind bloweth where it listeth wee heare its sound but know not whence it commeth nor whether it goeth It is a thing which farre surpasseth our understanding to conceive fully the causes of it They blow most ordinarily at the Spring and fall for there is not so much wind in winter because the earth is bound with cold and so the vapour the matter of the wind cannot ascend nor in summer because vapours are then raised up by the Sun and it consumes them with his great heate These Winds alter the weather some of them bringing raine some drinesse some frost and snow which are all necessary there is also an universall commodity which riseth by the onely moving of the ayre which ayre if not continually stirred would soone putrifie and infect all that breath upon the earth It serves to condemne our owne blindnesse that cannot see God in this great worke the wind commeth downe unto us it is neere us we feele the blasts of it and yet we feele not the power and greatnesse of God in it When
Good and Omniscient as hee wherefore they must bee made by some Maker because they cannot bee Eternall and if made then either by themselves or some other thing besides themselves not by themselves because that implies and absolute contradiction if by some other thing then by a better or worse thing not by a more meane for the lesse perfect cannot give being to a more perfect thing for then it should communicate more to the effect then it hath in it selfe any way which is impossible that any efficient cause should doe not by any better thing then themselves for excepting the Divine Majestie which is the first and best there is no better thing then the Angels save the humanity of our Lord Jesus Christ which could not bee the Maker of them because they were created some thousands of yeares before the humanity was formed in the Virgins womb or united to the second person in Trinity Wee are not able to conceive of their Essence they are simple incorporeall Spirituall substances therefore incorruptible An Angell is a Spirituall Created compleat substance indued with an understanding and will and excellent power of working An Angel is a substance 1. Spirituall that is void of all corporeall and sensible matter whence in Scripture Angels are called Spirits Psal. 104. 4. Heb. 1. 14. Therefore the bodies in which either good or evill Angels appeared were not naturall to them but only assumed for a time and laid by when they pleased as a man doth his garments not substentiall but aeriall bodies they were not Essentially or personally but only locally united to them so that the body was moved but not quickned by them 2. Created by which name hee is distinguished from the Creator 3. Compleate by which an Angel is distinguished from the reasonable soule of man which also is a spirituall substance but incompleate because it is the essentiall part of man 4. Indued with 1. an understanding by which an Angel knoweth God and his works 2. a will by which he desires or refuseth the things understood 3. An excellent power of working by which hee effects what the will commands this is great in them Psalm 103. 20. See 2 Kings 19. 35. The Angels are most excellent creatures when the highest praise is given of any thing it is taken from the excellencie of Angels Psal. 78. 25. 1 Cor. 13. 1. They are called holy Angels Luke 9. 26. Marke 8. 36. therefore they are cloathed with linnen Dan. 11. 4. to signifie their purity and are called Angels of light 2 Cor. 12. 14. to note the purity wherein they were created All the Individuall Angels were made at once and as God made Adam perfect at the first so they were made of a perfect constitution They have all our faculties save such as be badges of our weakenesse they have no body therefore not the faculties of generation nut●ition augmentation They have reason conscience will can understand as much as we doe and better too they have a will whereby they can refuse evill and chuse good a conscience reasonable affections though not such as depend upon the bodie They are endowed with excellent abilities know more of God themselves us and other things then we doe love God themselves and men are obedient to God The good Angels obey God 1. Universally in all things Psalme 103. 20. 2. Freely and readily make hast to doe what hee would have done therefore they are said to have Harps Revel 15. 2. as a signe of their chearfull mind 3. With all their might they serve God with diligence sedulity therefore they are said to have wings to flie 4. Constantly Rev. 7. 15. and 14. 4. They have incredible strength and therefore by an excellencie they are called strong in strength Psal. 103. 20. Angels of the power of the Lord Jesus 2 Thess. 1. 7. Powers Rom. 1. 38. One Angel is able to destroy all the men beasts birds and fishes and all the creatures in the world and to overturne the whole course of nature if God should permit it to drowne the earth againe and make the waters overflow it to pull the Sunne Moone and Starres out of their places and make all a Chaos therefore we reade of wonderfull things done by them they stopt the mouths of Lions that they could not touch Daniel they quencht the violence of the fire that it could not touch so much as a haire of the three Childrens heads nor a threed of their garments they made Peters chaines in an instant fall from his hands and feet they can move and stir the earth say the Schoolemen as appears Matth. 28. 2. The Angels shooke the foundation of the Prison where Paul and Silas lay and caused the doores to flie open and every mans bands to fal from him They destroyed the first borne of Aegypt Sodome and Gomorrah One Angel slew in one night in the host of Senacherib and hundred fourscore and 5000. men Reas. Their nature in respect of bodily things is wholy active not passive they are of a spirituall nature what great things can a whirl-wind or flash of lightning doe They are swift and of great agility they have no bodies therefore fill not up any place neither is there any resistance to them they move with a most quick motion they can be where they will they move like the winde irresistibly aud easily without molestation and in an unperceivable time they move more swiftly then the Sun can dispatch that space in as few minuts which the Sun doth in 24. hours They have admirable wisedome 1 Sam. 18. 14. and 14. 20. the knowledge of the good Angels is increased since their Creation for besides their natural knowledg they know many things by revelation Dan. 9. 22 23. Matth. 1. 20. Luke 1. 30. either immediately from God or from his Word Ephes. 3. 9 10. 1 Pet. 1. 12. Luke 15. 18. by experience and conjecture How an Angel doth understand is much disputed their understanding is not infinite they know not all things Mar. 13. of that day the Angells know not againe they cannot know future contingent things any farther then God reveales these things to them neither can they know the secrets of mans heart 1 Kings 8. 39. Psal. 7. 10. for that is proper to the Lord alone They are said indeed to rejoyce at the conversion of a sinner but that is no further then their inward conversion puts it selfe forth into outward actions They do not know the number of the Elect nor the nature of spirituall desertions the manner of mortifying sin unlesse by the Church and Ministry of the word So againe for the manner of their knowledge that of the Schooles about their morning and evening knowledge is vaine but it is plain they know discursivè as well as intuitivè though some say they are creaturae intelligentes but not ratiocinantes There are three degrees of their knowledg say the Schoolmen
out of the company of the faithfull and so from all the good things that are appropriated unto that condition and therefore to the destruction of the flesh they expound to be meant of his corruption for so flesh is taken in Scripture 6. Whether the Devills may appear 1 Sam. 28. He which appeared was 1. subject to the witches power therefore it was not the true Samuel 2. If Samuel had been sent of God hee would not have complained of trouble no more then Moses did Matth. 17. 3. The true Samuel would not have given countenance to so wicked a practise to the Magicke art 4. True Samuel would not have suffered himselfe to be worshipped as this did 5. Saul never came to bee with the soule of Samuel in blisse yet he saith to morrow shalt thou be with me 6. God refused to answer Saul by Prophet vision Vrim or Thummim therefore hee would not answer him by Samuel raised from the dead 7. True Samuel after his death could not lye nor sin Heb. 12. 23. He said Saul caused him to ascend and troubled him if hee had beene the true Samuel Saul could not have caused him to ascend if not hee lied in saying he was Samuel and that he troubled him If God had sent up Samuel the dead to instruct the living why is this reason given of the denyall of the rich mans request to have one sent from the dead because if they would not beleeve Moses the Prophets they would not beleeve though one rose from the dead In so doing the Lord should seem to go against his owne order The soules of Saints which are at rest with the Lord are not subject to the power or inchantment of a witch but Samuel was an holy Prophet now at rest with the Lord. Bellarmine answereth that Samuel came not by the command of the witch but by the command of God and that rather impeached then approved Art magicke which he proveth because the witch was troubled But the Scriptsre expresly sheweth that her trouble was because it was the King who having lately suppressed Witches had now in disguised aparrell set her on worke and so deceived her Bellarmine objecteth the Scripture still calleth him that appeared Samuel as if it were not an ordinary thing in Scripture to call things by the names of that which they represent or whose person they beare the representations of the Cherubims are called the Cherubims And things are often called in Scripture not according to the truth of the thing or Scriptures judgement thereof but according to the conceite and opinion of others The Angels which appeared to the Patriarks are called men the Idols of the Heathen are called Gods 1. Wee must walke warily and watchfully against Satans temptations We should be sober 1 Thes. 5. 6. 8. strong 1 Cor. 16. 13. 1 Pet. 5. 8 9. Watchfull 2 Tim. 4. 5. Matth. 26. 41. Prov. 4. 23. Wise Heb. 5. 14. Prov. 2. 9 10. and of good courage Josh. 1. 9. 1 Chron. 28. 10. Taking unto our selves the whole armour of God Ephes. 6. 12 13 14. that wee may be able to stand in the evill day 2. Beleeve not Satan though he flatter 2 Cor. 11. 3. 1 Tim. 2. 14. feare him not though be rage 1 Pet. 5. 8 9. hearken not to him though he tell the truth 2 Cor. 11. 14. Acts 16. 17. for if he transforme himselfe into an Angel of light it is to seduce 3. See Gods great goodnesse who offers us repentance and Christ when he absolutely refused the Devills 4. See the exact justice of God no greatnesse can priviledg one from punishment none can be greater nearer holier then Angels yet if they sin they shall be tumbled out of heaven Therefore we must leave all sinne if wee desire to goe to heaven it would not hold the Devils when they had sinned no uncleane thing shall come thither 5. Be not like the Devils then thou art one of his children wicked men are called sons of Belial Certaine particular sinnes make us like the Devill a lyer or murderer is like him John 8. 44. 2. A slanderer or an accuser of another 3. Envious and malicious persons as witches 4. He that tempts others or perswades them to sinne the Devil is called the tempter Eve spoke for the Devill therefore she hath two punishments more then man sorrow in childe-bed and subjection to her Husband 5. He that goes about to hinder others from godlinesse as Elimas Acts 13. Thou child of the Devil 6. A drunkard 1 Sam. 1. 15 16. 7. A proud person especially take heed of pride in spirituall illuminations and gifts 6. See the folly of those who doe the Devill service how ill will he repay them Never did any trust in the Devill but he deceived him even for the base things of this life Witnesse all witches his most devoted and professed servants if ever he made any one of them wealthy all ages are not able to shew one 7. Satans great businesse in the world is to studie men hast thou considered my servant Job when he comes neare to us in his temptations there is something in us to take part with him 1 John 5. 6. there is abundance of selfe-love selfe-flattery and naturall blindnesse 2 Cor. 2. 11. He hath a strange power to make all his suggestions take with us they are called fiery darts fire will quickly take we are led captive to do his will He comes to us sometimes in the name of God and can transform himself into an Angel of light 2 Cor. 11. 14. he can raise up in mens Spirits strange ravishments and can swallow them up with joy as well as sorrow CHAP. VIII 2. Of Man WHen God had created heaven earth he rested not in heaven nor any heavenly thing neither in earth nor any earthly thing but only in man because he is a heavenly thing for his soule and earthly in regard of his bodie Man is a living creature made after the image of God Gen. 1. 26. The efficient cause of man was the Holy trinity God the Father Son and holy Ghost In the Creation of man 3. things are considerable 1. The consultation of the Trinity let us make man Gen. 1. 26. quia rationalis creatura quasi cum consilio facta videretur 2. The worke made not an Hermophradite as some would have it though Adam comprehended both sexes but hee is distinguished into both sexes thus it followes after male and female 3. The pattern of it the image of God 1 Cor. 11. 7. Col. 3. 10. Bellarmine distinguisheth between an age and similitude the first saith he consists in naturall endowments the other in supernaturall graces rather image and similitude represent an exact likenesse These two words are in an inverted order joyned together 5 ch ver 3 JAmes 3. ch 9. v. mentions only likenesse leaving out image which is a certaine
they are divided ibid. Authenticall what it is l. 1 p. 91 Which are the Authenticall editions of Scripture l. 1 p. 92 100 101 102 Neither the Translation of the Seventy nor the vulgar Latine are Authenticall l. 1 p. 119 120 121 122 Authority of Scripture is Divine l. 1. p. 8 to 24. 130 131 B BEasts their usefulnesse l. 3 p. 81 to 85 Bees for what they are notable l. 3. p. 80 Bible why so called l. 1. p. 8. m. Who first distinguished the Bible into Chapters and Verses l. 1. p. 46 Blessed God is most Blessed l 2 p. 119 to 126 What Blessednesse is l. 2 p. 120 121 Blindnesse naturall and Spirituall l. 3. p. 42 43 Body taken three waies l. 2. p. 25 God is not a Body l. 2. p. 24 25 Bounty in God what it is l. 2 p. 83 84 85 86 C CAnon why the Scripture is called a Canone or Canonicall l. 1. p. 42 43 The condition of a Canon l. 1. p. 43 There is a threefold Canon in the Church l. 1. p. 43 44 83 84 Some abolish some adde to others diminish the Canone ibid. Which are the Canonicall Bookes of the old Testament l. 1. p. 48 to 60 Which of the New l. 1 65 66 67 Seven Epistles are called Canonicall and why l. 1 p. 77 78 Canticles why so called and who best expounds it l. 1 p. 56 Catholique why seven Epistles are so called l. 1. p. 77 78 Chaldee why some part of the old Testament was written in Chaldee l. 1. p. 93 94 The Chaldee Paraphrast l. 1 p. 94 95 96 Christ is God l. 2. p. 131 132 133 Chronicles why so called and who best expounds them l. 1 p. 51 52 Christall what it is l. 3. p. 53 Church it hath a fourfold office in respect of the Scripture l. 1 p. 29 The true Church hath given testimony to the Scripture in all ages l. 1. p. 20 21 We believe not the Scripture chiefly for the Churches testimony l. 1 p. 26 27 28 29 30 Clemency in God what it is l. 2 p. 77 Cloudes what they are a great worke of God l. 3. p. 47 48 49 Colosse the chiefe City of Phrygia l. 1. p. 74 Who best expound the Colossians ibid. Conclusion whether that of the Lords prayer be true Scripture l. 1. p. 115 Conscience what it is the testimony of it is strong to prove that there is a God l. 2. p. 6 Corinth famous for divers things l. 1. p. 73 Who best interpret ●oth the Corinthians ibid. Councell the Florentine and Trent Councels not lawfull Councels l. 1. p. 89 90 Creation what it is l. 3. p. 13 14 Taken strictly and largely ib. The efficient cause matter form and end of it l. 3. p. 14 17 19 20 Consectaries from it l. 3. p. 20 21 22 The workes of each day l. 3 p. 23 24 25 26 D DAniel why so called and who best expounds it l. 1 p. 58 59 Day what it is and the benefit of it l. 3. p. 40 41 42 Decree what the word signifieth and how it is defined l. 3 p. 2 How far it extends and the properties of it l. 3. p. 3 4 The kinds of it and the execution of it l. 3. p. 4 Devils their names and nature l. 3. p. 105 106 What the sinne of the Devils was l. 3. p. 106 107 Why they fell irrecoverably l. 3 p. 107 108 They are malicious subtill powerfull l. 3. p. 108 109 110 Some questions about the Devils l. 3. p. 110 111 112 113 114 Deuteronomy why so called and who best expounds it l. 1 p. 49 Dew what it is l. 3. p. 52 Divine why John so called l. 1 p. 69 Divinity that it is l. 1. p. 1 2 What it is l. 1. p. 3 4 The severall kinds of it l. 1 p. 2 4 How it is to be taught l. 1 p. 4 5 How to be learnt l. 1. p. 5 The excellency of it l. 1. p. 6 7 The opposites of it l. 1. p. 6 Dominion what it is Gods Dominion l. 2. p. 52 53 E EArth the Creation of it is a great worke l. 3. p. 31 32 It is firme and stable l. 3. p. 32 to 36 Earthquake l. 3. p. 33. m. Ecclesiastes why so called and who best expound it l. 1. p. 55 56 Election the severall acceptions of the word and how it is defined l. 3. p. 6 The object and end of it l. 3 p. 7 8 All are not elected l. 3. p. 9 Consectaries from Gods Election l. 3. p. 11 12 Element what it is and the number of the Elements l. 3 p. 31 32 Elephant whence derived his excellency l. 3. p. 82 83 End the Ends of the Scripture l. 1. p. 128 129 Ephesus a famous City l. 1 p. 73 Who best expounds the Ephesians l. 1. p. 73 74 Epistles why so called l. 1. p. 67 How they are divided and who best expounds them l. 1 p. 70 71 72 In what order they were written l. 1. p. 70 VVhich Epistles were doubted of for a time l. 1. p. 65 Esay an Evangelicall Prophet l. 1. p. 57 How often quoted in the new Testament and who have best expounded it l. 1. p. 57 Esther why so called and who hath best expounded it l. 1 p. 52 53 Eternall God is Eternall l. 2 p. 40 41 42 43 The world was not Eternall l. 3. p. 15 16 17 Evangelists who l. 1. p. 68 How they agree and differ l. 1 p. 64 65 VVho best expound them l. 1 p. 67 Exodus why so called and who are the best Expositors on it l. 1. p. 48 Expositors on Scripture who are the best among the Jewes Fathers Papists Protestants l. 1. p. 183 to 189 Ezekiel why so called and who hath best interpreted it l. 1 p. 58 Ezra why so called and who hath best expounded it l. 1. p. 52 F FAithfull God is faithfull l. 2. p. 97 98 99 Fire the qualities of that Element l. 3 p. 38 Fishes their nature and use l. 3 p. 75 76 77 80 81 Fowles their nature and use l. 3 p. 78 79 80 Frost what it is l. 3. p. 52 G GAlatians the subject of that Epistle and who best expounds it l. 1. p. 73 Ghost the Holy Ghost is God l. 2. p. 135 136 Glorious God is glorious l. 2 110 to 120 God how he is called in severall languages l. 2. p. 1. m. The knowledge of God is necessary profitable and difficult l. 2. p. 1 2 VVe know God three waies and there is a threefold knowledge of him l. 2 p. 2 VVhat the Heathens knew of God l. 2. p. 3 That there is a God l. 2. p. 3 to 16 VVhat God is l. 2. p. 18 19 How the word God is taken in Scripture l. 2. p. 19 The Names of God l. 2. p. 19 20 His Attributes what they be l. 2. p. 20 How they differ from Properties and what rules are to be observed in attributing them to God l. 2. p.
Canone l. 13. c. 9. Supersubstanti●lem 1. ad subst●ntiae nostrae Conservationem necessarium Em●n Sa. Omnes veteres laetini Scriptores panem quotidianum leger●●t it●que iuc●utè quidam nostro tempore i● vulgata Editione pro qu●tidi●o supersubstanti●lem posuerunt quod Corporis Cib● quem à nobl● peti probavimus minimè convenit Maldonatus Ja●●enius id●m serè 〈◊〉 harm cap. 41. Their own Dictiona●ies and Doctors expound the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 gratified or undeservedly accepted or whom Gods singular favour had made acceptable * Non habet ex hoc loco prudens l●ctor●●● Paulo conjugium esse Sacramentum non enim dicit Sacramentum sed mysterium hoc magnum est * Erasmus dicit●●n sit sacramentum o●im dubitatum erat à scholasticis Certè ex hoc loco non possit effic● nam particula adver ●a●iva ego autem satis indicat hoc mysterium ad Christum ecclesiam pertinere non ab maritum uxorem Marke 6. 8. Vide Salmerovem Rib●ram in loc P●aefat in nov T●st Doctor Fulke against Martin Vide Whitaker● Con●●versi●m primam quaest s●cundam c●p 10 11. 12. de Scripturis Sixtinus Amama ce●suram vulgatae versionis in P●ntateucho caepit t●lam pertexturus nisi morte fuisset praeventus Waltherus in officina Billica * God in Christ or God and Christ is the object of Christian religion without knowledge of Christ we can-not know God savingly John 11. 27. In jury onely is God knowne * 2 Tim. 3. 16. Rom 15 4. The word of God is profitable 5 wayes 1. For confirmation of true Doctrine or teaching men the truth 2. Reproofe of errour Rectum est index sui ob●iqui Quibus principijs veritas astruitur iisdem principijs falsic●s destruitur Tertullian c●ls the Scripture Macbaera contra haereses 3. Correction of ill behaviouur 4. Instruction in a good behaviour 5. Consolation in troubles Ro● 15. 4. 119. Psal. ●9 Vide Z●pper● A●tem hab●n●i 〈◊〉 conciones l. 1. c. 3. p. 34 35. * Divina autoritas Scripturae est Infallibilis veritas in verbu sensibus ob quam omnes sidem e● obedientiam deb●nt Altingius Exod. 32. 16. 2 Tim. 3. 16. 2 Pet. 1. 21. Heb. 11. 12 John 14. 26. * Divina auctoritas suam trabis originem una ex parte ex immediato Spiritus S. afflatu ex alter● ex sublimitate rerum qu●● exponi● Waltherus in officina Biblica Heb. 4. 12. * Matth. 5. 18. Scriptura est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Fide digna pr●pterse credenda quia 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 est Divinitus inspira●a Hic illud Pythagoricum val●ta 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We must take heed of beleeving Scripture to be the word of God because there is the greatest reason for it but for its divine authority Matth. 24. 35. * The materiall parts of Scripture are true Historicall narrations all the Histories there related are undoubtedly true that of the Creation fall of Christ. 2. Threa●enings the eternall torments in hell are sure as if thou w●st already in them 3. Promises the Scripture cals them the sure mercies of David 4. Predictions and Prophesies in Daniel Revelation as the downfall of Antich●i●t they speak therefore of things to come in the present tense O note thereby the certainty of the accomplish●●nt E●ay 9. 6. Apoc. 18. 2 * Ego in hajusmodi quo umli●et hominam scriptis libersum qu●a solis Canonicis scripturis debeo sine ulla recusati●ne consensum August de natura gratia c. 6. The essentiall forme of the word is truth in forming the whole and every part all Divine truth is there set down * Scrip●●ra Sancta appellatur Canonica totum ●jus corpus Canon Rationem nominis aut omnes aut ferè omnes esse testantur quia sit regula f●dei Chami●rus The Scripture is therefore called Cano●●call because it prescribes a ●ule of our faith and life Phil. 3 16. Gal. 6. 16. Tertullianus a●pellat Scripturam regulam veritatis Augustinus de d●ctrina Christiana l. 2. c. 8. ait in Scripturis inveniri omnia quae continent fidem moresque vivendi Advers Hel. Vid. cap. 9. Sacra Scriptura regula credendi certiffima tu●issimaque est Bellarm. de verbo Dei l. 1. c. 2. * Hoc primum Credimus cum credimus quodnihil ultra credere debemus See Mr. Anthony Burges on Marke 1. 2. 3 Deut. 5. 29. Esay 8. 20. * Verba Scripturae non sunt legenda sed vivenda Doctrinae sanitas servatur confirmando verum resellend● falsum vitae sanctinionia sugendo malum faciendo bonum Satis habet Scriptura quo veritatem doceat errorem redarguat iniquitatem corriga● instituat ad justiria● Nec haec uti●●ter praestat solum●odo quoe sophistarum cavillatio sed etiam sufficienter nempe ut perfectus sit homo c. Rainoldus * Deut. 17. 18. Esay 8. 20. Luke 16. 29. Acts 24. 14. Christians sh●ll be judged by that hereafter John 12. 48. 2 Thess. 1. 8. * Judaei do●em ex hoc loco 〈◊〉 reg●m sua manu sibi legem describere etiamsi al●is cum priva●us esset descripsisset Chamierus Reg●●● fidei est quasi causa exemplari● fidei quam vi●el●cet fides in omnibus sequi cui se conformare debet Formale objectum fidei est causa objectiva fidei s●u est principium propter quod formaliter princip●liter credimus B●ron contra Turnebu● Nos discamus ex verbo non tantum sapere sed etiam loqui B●z● Epist. 7. David Psal. 119 133. des●es that all h●s counsels thoughts manners actions might be directed according to Gods word The Scriptures contain 1 A neecss●ry doctrine viz. of the Law and Gospell Matth. 22. 37 John 13. 16. without which we cannot be save● Rom. 7. 7. it is 2. Necessary in respect of the efficient cause Jude 3. 3. Of the Forme Matth. 22. 19. 4. The end 20. John 31. * Writing doth a larger good to a greater number and for a longer time then speaking 102 Psal. 19. vox audita perit litera scripta manet To shew how much a more faithfull keeper record is then report those few miracles of our Saviour which were written are preserved and beleeved those infinitely more that were not written are all lost and vanished out of the memory of men * Among the Turkes Polylygamy is lawfull Theft was permitted among the Spartans * Literae sacrae di●untur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 scripturae ut non solùm ● saecularibus profan●● literis sed etiam ● quibuscunque quae de sacris rebus agunt discernantur * Mahomet said his doctrine c●me from God but the bla●phemy and villany therein contained sheweth it came from Satan whereas the purity and perfection of the doctrine contained in the Scripture sheweth that it is from above Mahomet puts in some ingredients of the flesh gives them liberty to revenge themselves and to have