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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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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
we are both baptized into Christ and have communion with him in his body and blood in his Supper And w●…en Christ is exhibited there all the blessings that are prepared for us in Christ are together with him exhibited to us Reas. 3. Because the blessings of life and salvation cannot be separated from one another as for example effectual Vocation Justification Adoption Sanctification Consolation and eternal Glorification When therefore one of these blessings is directly represented indirectly also and by consequence all the rest are signified and sealed Use 1. Of Information 1. That we may learn rightly to distinguish between compleat Sacraments and other Sacramental signes For other signes and ceremonies that do not signify and seal the blessings of the New Covenant as they are such though they are sacred signes yet are they not presently Sacraments to speak properly that is they are not of that nature and rank with Baptisme and the Supper That we have in great esteem Christs most holy Sacraments because in them we go about no less than all that belongs to our eternal happiness Use 2. Of Admonition that we never separate what God hath joyned together in the use of the Sacraments which useth to be done by such as seek onely for remission of sins but not for sanctification and preservation from sin and that because they have not determined with themselves to amend their lives Doct. 4. By the Sacraments these blessings are not onely signed generally but also particularly to all that partake of them with true faith This is hence gathered in that A●…raham particular ly is said to have received the seal of his own righteousnesse in particular Reas. 1. Because the Sacraments are not so proposed to us that they may seal on this condi●…ion t●…at we have faith but they alwaves presuppose faith al●…eady to be in us and so then they are offered to confirm and do singularly confirm it Reas. 2. Because to every one in particular and by name they are exhibited for their confirmation and not in common onely as the Word is preached publickly Reas. 3. Because the manner of administration and the Sacramentall actions that belong unto them as washing in Baptisme taking eating drinking in the Lord's Supper consist in a particular application of the signes and therefore also they signify a particular sealing of the things signified unto particular persons Use 1. Is of Comfort against scruples and doubts wherewith our minds are sometimes troubled Because in the Sacraments duly administred to such as have right God as it were from Heaven stretcheth out his owne hand and holds forth in it his grace and all the spiritual blessings of the Covenant alike unto every one of us thus participating in our own proper and singular persons particularly Use 2. Of Admonition that we neglect not the Sacraments but diligently both prepare and fit our selves for them and then seek after them receive them because to neglect them were to neglect our owne proper and singular consolation in particular Use 3. Of Direction how we may rightly use the Sacraments to wit ●…o as in a singular manner we seek our edification and advancement in this that we see Christ there offering and giving his grace to us by name and in particular and accordingly thus sealing to us in particular our salvation The six and seven and twentieth Lords day Mat. 28. 19. Go ye therefore and teach all Nations baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost HEre is expounded the command of Christ which being now about to ascend into Heaven he left unto his Apostles It contains two principal duties 1. The preaching and publishing of that Doctrine taught by Christ. 2. The administration of the Sacraments by him appointed For in this place by Baptisme according to that usual borrowing of speech called Synecdoche that puts sometimes one sort for the whole kind and sometimes contrarily the other Sacrament of the Supper is understood but here Baptisme is rather named than the other 1. Because it is the first Sacrament and that of initiation and receiving solemnly into the Church on which the other for this cause doth depend 2. Because it chiefly belonged unto the Apostles office by themselves or by others to see this Sacrament rightly administred who were rather sent to plant and gather or build Churches from their first beginnings than to feed govern and further build or advance them after they were first planted And Baptisme belongs particularly to the first ingrafting into Christ and to plan●…ation and the Supper unto feeding and growth after planting Now Baptisme is expounded in this place●… 1. From its object or parties to be baptized Baptizing them that is such as are already trained up in Christ's Doctrine or ●…ade his 〈◊〉 or ●…lars as the Greek word signifies 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 make them my ●…chollars or Disciples 2. From the ●…orme or manner of doing it to wit in the name of the Father Son and Holy Ghost By which forme or modell are designed 1. The efficient causes by whose authority Baptisme is exercised and made effectual and that is by the name or authority and power of Father Son and Holy Ghost ●… The union of the baptized that they are to have with the Father Sonne and Holy Spirit in the participation of all their graces of justification sanctification adoption c. that from the Father in the Son and by the Spirit are derived unto all the heirs of eternal salvation and in the profession and practice of all the outward Ordinances and meanes that Christ taught them whereby to attain to those inward gra●…es and to keep and advance them by the same Spirit in the Son and from the Father Doct. 1. Baptisme is the Sacrament of our ingrafting and initiation or first reception into Christ. This is hence gathered in that all that are already taught Christ's Doctrine and made his Schollars professedly are the●… presently to be haptized that so they may be registred as it were amongst the domesticks or housholders of Christ. Reas. 1. This appears in that baptisme came in the place of Circumcision and Circumcision was the Sacrament of first admition amongst the people of God Reas. 2. In Baptisme is represented the death of fin and mortifying of the old man a washing and cleansing from sin and bringing of a man from death to life All which do most properly denote our first vocation and therefore also Baptism is called by Scripture it self the Sacrament of regeneration or washing of regeneration Reas. 3. Because by our Baptisme our first solem●… reception into Christ's Family and Kingdome is represented and therefore also we are said to be baptised into Christ by this therefore Baptisme is distinguished from the Lord's Supper because however it seal the same blessings as to the main businesse that the other doth yet it doth it not after the same manner but Baptisme denotates their beginning and the
Supper their progress and advancement Use Of Direction how we should make constant and perpetual use of our Baptisme to wit if we take occasion often to meditate on it and the graces of God sealed in it on God's part and our return of universal obedience sealed too on our part and of the favour God did us thus solemnly to receive us into Covenant with him and into his Church the true confederates of God or number of them that are saved by Christ and if from this faith and belief thus sealed and continued we more and more study to take care in all things to walk worthy of this condition and to glorify God in Christ as becomes and as he requireth of us Doct. 2. In Baptisme by washing of water our adoption ●…ustification and salvation is sealed to us This is hence collected in that our union in the forme of Baptisme is designed to be with the Father Son and Holy Ghost for sealing our communion in those benefits which flow from this union And we are properly adopted by the Father justified by the Son and sanctified by the Holy Spirit Reas. 1. Because these three are directly necessary for us that we may have true entrance into the Kingdome of God For 1. We must be accepted of as God's children that he may be our Father which is by adoption 2. We must be freed from the guilt of sin by which we are separated from God and this is done by justification 3. We must be cleansed and purged from the remainders and corruptions of sin whereby men are made unfit to injoy God and this is done by sanctification Reas. 2. Because the washing with water in Baptisme designeth and some way respecteth our cleansing as well from the guilt as corruption of sinne whereby we were made strangers to the estate of the Sons of God that thence it may appear that now by grace we are adopted justified and sanctified Neither by any other visible sign could these things so conveniently have been shadowed out as by the washing of water because both of its owne nature it hath a principal fitness to cleanse and amongst all Nations it is ea●…ie to be had at hand and then also it had been before sanctified under the Old Testament for such uses Use 1. Of Information how greatly we ought to esteem our Baptisme wherein so great benefits or blessings spiritual were first sealed unto us Use 2. Of Direction that upon occasion of seeing Baptisme administred at any time we both with all devo●…t meditation on our own Baptism lift up our mindes unto the lively apprehensions of these blessings of our adoption ●…ustification sanctification namely and withall think upon what is due to God from us for so great benefits and what we engaged in and by our baptisme to perform in all manner of holy thankfull and Christian obedience Doct. 3. Those saving blessings which are signified in Baptism do not properly depend on the washing of water as to their reall efficacies but on the operation of the Father Son and holy Spirit This is hence gathered because by these words of the institution our hearts as it were are commanded to be lifted up that we may look for all the grace and efficacy of this Sacrament out of heaven from Father Son and holy Ghost Reas. 1. Because the Sacramental signs are no causes of grace neither principal nor instrumental by any virtue or efficacy that is either inherent or adherent in themselves that is are no physical causes as the phrase is us'd receiv'd in the Schools about this point but onely moral and in a moral way put forth any vertue they have to wit in as much as they seal onely that which God the Father in the Son and by the Spirit worketh in us Reas. 2. Because our ●…ustification and adoption which consists in the remission of ●…ins and accepting of us into favour are moral effects of their own nature and not physical and therefore cannot by any meanes be otherwayes produced than morally Reas. 3. Because it can no way be conceived how these external elements of the Sacraments should physically work upon the soul to the production of spiritual effects seeing themselves are but corporal and therefore can onely work physically upon th●… body Indeed in holy Scriptures such spiritual effects use to be attributed unto such signes as well in the Old as in the New Testament but this is onely in the moral sense aforesaid and by trope or borrowed speech because of the union or relation of likeness that is between signes and things signified by them from which union or relation of likeness grounded partly on the analogy between the things themselves and partly but chiefly on the divine institution there ariseth in common manner of speaking almost such a mutual interchangeable giving or communicating of the attributes or qualities of each of these to the other as is found in Christ between his human divine nature because of the hypostatical or personal union between them Though otherwayes there be no other union here but of likeness and proportion between the signe and things signified or sealed when the signes are rightly used which performance or making present of the graces signified depend wholly on the truth of God's institution and promise and that in a moral way as was said before not properly physical though this Sacramental union was devised by School Divines or mistaken and imagined physical for maintaining their corporal presence of Christ's body in propriety of words or their monster of Transubstantiation And all forsooth because the things that are proper to the signes are sometimes attributed to the things signified and countrarily the properties of the things signified are attributed to the signes The true reasons and manner whereof we have sufficiently explained Use 1. Of Refutation against Papists who in som●… sort turn the Sacraments into Idols while not by ●…rope or borrowed speech which is usual as we have declared but in propriety of words they give unto the the signes and external elements such things as are proper unto God Use 2. Of Direction that in the use of the ●…acraments we lift up alwayes our hearts and by faith and devout desires look for and seek from God such divine blessings as are represented by the outward signes Doct. 4. All and onely such are to be baptized as are the Disciples or Schollars of Christ that is that are of his family before and as it were his housholders and th●…refore fit to be solemnly declared and enrolled for ●…uch This is hence gathered because the Apostles are here commanded first to gather Disciples or Schollars unto Christ out of all Nations and then to baptize them after they were made such Reas 1. Because the Saraments are appendices of the Word so that they are often understood under it in Scriptures to wit when the Gospell and word of the Kingdome are onely mentioned because they are appendants and connexed to it
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
taught Lastly regard is had to our Faith which properly lookes at the name of Jesus Christ and of God the Father that is Christ and God the Father as they are proposed to us and as it were named in the Gospell Doct. 1. Iesus Christ saveth us from all our sins This is it that is signified by the appellation of his name and is proper to the name containing in it self the whole summe of our Redemption and its application The end also of his incarnation humiliation and exaltation Now Christ saves us by his satisfaction merit and efficacy By satisfaction because he removes the guilt of sin and wrath of God that were the hinderances of our safety and could not be removed by us By his merit because he procures to us the favour and right to all those blessings that use to be communicated to the sonnes of God By his efficacy because by his Spirit he effects indeed works all in us that belongs to our salvation In this sort therefore doth he save us from all our sins as to the guilt to the punishment and to the andduration to the defilement Reas. 1. Because he was given of God his Father for this end that is he was for that end eternally predestinated from the beginning promised in the fulness of time exhibited for this end I say as himself professeth that he might save sinners in which speech the Apostle Paul glorieth much as in a 〈◊〉 1 Tim. ●… 5. Reas. 2. Because he was fit every way to produce this effect that is to procure this salvation which followes most certainly even from this that he was for this end sent of God For God sends none to performe any duty whom he instructs not and makes fit for the accomplishment of it Hither belongs also all that before was said of the divine and humane nature of Christ and what hereafter shall be said of the spirit resting upon him without measure and the like Reas. 3. Because willingly and of his pleasure he gave himself to the performance of all these things that were necessary for our salvation Use 1. Is of Direction that we may yeeld up and give over our selves wholly to Christ to be saved Use 2. That with all Admiration of the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ we may live to him that is as being saved by him we may yeeld him all thankfulness and strive to do him all honour and homage to his glory Doct. 2. Beside Iesus Christ there is no Saviour This is expresly enough in the Text Neither is there salvation in any other c. There are no other Saviours neither in whole nor in part nor joint with him There are no other causes of our salvation neither subordinate nor ministrating properly so called Not total Reas. 1. Because none is like or equall to Christ that could do the same that Christ did for our salvation For he is the onely begotten Son of the Father the onely Imm●…nue God with us God-man in one person the onely Medrator between God and man 1 Tim. 2. 5. Reas. 2. Because God gave and proposed none oother Saviour to us as it is in the Text. Reas. 3. Because if there were any other Saviour then such exclusive assertions could have no place as every where occur in Scripture Whosoever believeth not in Christ he shall dy The wrath of God shall abide upon him Without him we can do nothing and the like Nor yet Mediators in part Reas. 1. Because Christ perfectly saveth those that believe in him so that they need not in any sort to seek salvation in any other Heb. 7. 25. Reas. 2. Because our salvation cannot be so divided into parts that part from one and part may be sought from another for so it might come to pass that one might be partly saved and partly damned Neither yet subordinate and ministring causes Because properly he saves us by himself Heb. 1. 3. Now the Saviours that were typical and the Ministers of the Word who now also are said to save many together with the Word and Sacraments which save also all these are onely said to save because they are the adjuncts and instruments of this onely Saviour serving him in the application of salvation before purchased by himself not that they are causes together with him of his salvation and have in themselves power and vertue of saving any if we speak properly Use 1. Of Refutation against Papists who many wayes joyn other Saviours to Christ as 1. While they thrust Angells and blessed spirits upon us for Saviours to be religiously invocated 2. While they teach men to place their trust and hope in satisfactions of men and pardons or indulgences of Roman Bishops 3. While they will be saved by themselves by merit of their own workes and place in them some faith and confidence Use 2. Of Exbortation that in every great and lesse●… part of our salvation we not onely fly to Christ but depend also purely onely and wholly on him saying with the Psalmist Whom have I in heaven but thee and I delight in none on earth beside thee Psal. 73. 25. Doct. 3. All that is made known to us in Scriptures concerning our Lord Iesus Christ to be done ought most of all to be done by us as bringing salvation to our souls For in this sense it is said in the Text not simply that Iesus saves us but that the name of Jesus Christ doth it that is Jesus Christ as he is proposed to us in Scriptures to be apprehended by Faith Reas. 1. Because such is the nature of our Faith as it differs from sight which we are to have in the life to come that it is not carried simply and absolutely to Christ but onely as he is proposed to us in Gods Promises Reas. 2. Because in the word of God nothing is taught of Christ which doth not directly make for our Faith and for advancing and confirming of oursalvation Ioh. 20. 31. Reas. 3. Because that charity and thankfulnesse that we owe to Christ requires this that we make high esteem of all things that belong to him seeing otherwayes we are not worthy of him Use 1. Is of Reproof against the slowness and sluggishness of our mindes who can hear and read many things concerning Christ without any affection or lifting up of our hearts to him Use 2. Is of Direction that we may get unto our selves that knowledge of the name of Christ that may be sufficient to us in all our necessities and that we put this in practise and use it when we are pressed either with our sins or our inward corruptions or the Devills tentations or the worlds allurements or with afflictions or when we are in the midst or danger of death For thus in the name of Christ we have a Magazine or rich Well from which at all times or any occasion we may draw or take something of salvation according to that of the Prophet Isa. 12. 3. When ye have drawn
diminution in its ralative perfection There were two parts of this resurrection revivification or a quickening again of the humane nature by the renewed union of soul and body and its going out of the grave to make it manifest that it was restored This resurrection was confirmed moreover by Angells by the Scriptures by Christ himself and by the assent and eye-witness or experience of many witnesses in divers apparitions reiterated from time to time during the space of forty dayes Reas. 1. Because it was unbeseeming and impossible that the Son of God and author of life could be long detained by the power of death Acts 2. 24. Reas. 2. That by this means Christ himself might be justified in the spirit or according to the spirit of holiness that is by the power of his God-head justified to be God as well as man in one person justly and fully declared and proved to be God by his raising of himself again from the dead Rom. 1. 4. 1 Tim. 3. 16. and might shew that we were justified by him from our sins for which he died and rose also again to shew that he had overcome for us and delivered us from them Rom. 4. 25. Reas. 3. That being now alive he might powerfully apply to us what before he had purchased by his death Rom. 5 10. Reas 4. That he hereby might be the cause foundation and sign of assurance and earnest to us of our resurrection as well spiritual as bodily Rom. 1 Cor. 15. 12 13 14. Use Is of Information for the direction of our faith that believing in Christ unto justification and salvation we may so lay hold on Christ's death that we still also look upon his resurrection wherein his victory for us was shewn and his power over death and efficacy to work in us appeared and which renders his death full of comfort to us Rom. 5. 34. 1 Pet. 3 2. Doct. 6. Christ's resurrection came to pass by his own proper vertue and power It is clear in the Text I take it up again and I have power of taking it up again For this is the difference between Christ's resurrection and that of others that they rise again by the power of another to wit of Christ as many as are his But Christ by his own power as Lord of life and death and therefore hath the disposing of both as he sees good Neither doth it make any thing against this truth that it is often said that God raised him again from the dead and the Spirit of God For the works of the Trinity from without are undivided common to all the three Persons Reas. 1. Because what is thus attributed to God is therefore also attributed to the Son together with the Father and Holy Spirit and is not taken from him as is clear by our Text. Reas. 2. When Christ is said to be raised by God or the Spirit of God then properly his humane nature is considered as raised by Father Son and Holy Spirit though not alwayes all three expressed but now one now another But when he is said to have raised himself his divine nature and person is spoken of and considered as raising his assumed humane nature together with the Father and the Spirit Reas. 3. Because by the Spirit and glory of God whereby Christ is said to be raised no other vertue or power can be understood than that of the divine nature which was in Christ. Use 1. Of Information to confirm our faith about the person of Christ. For he that by his own power ●…rose from death can not be a bare man onely but must of necessity be acknowledged to have been God also For the raising of a dead body is no less divine a work than the creation of a live body He that raised himself from the dead at the same time while he was dead in one of his natures yet had life and the fountain of life in his other nature to wit the divine at his command whereby he did so great a work as to raise his other nature to life again As Christ therefore by his death proved himself to be true man so also in and by his resurrection he proved himself to be the eternal and natural Son of God and true God especially not by office onelie and that most manifestly Use 2. Of Consolation to all such as are in Christ. For they are in him who hath vertue and power to raise them again from the dead and to give them eternal life Iohn 6. 39 40 Doct. 7. Christ's resurrection was for us or to do us good This is hence gathered because in the Text the common end of laying down his life and taking it up again for all is mentioned For for such as he laid down his life for such also he took it up again Now the resurrection of Christ turnes to our good in another way than his death doth For his death hath the account of satisfying and deserving for us But his resurrection not so but it hath the place and account of a samplar and efficient cause and some way of an efficacious and powerfull applier and perfecter Reas. 1. Because Christ in his resurrection represented some way all the elect of God and by a virtuall containing had them all in himself and brought them all back from death Reas. 2. Because the same Spirit that raised Christ again from the dead by a certain sort of communicating the same resurrection quickened as well the soules as bodyes of the faithfull that they may be made conforme to the likenesse of his resurrection Rom 8. 11. Reas. 3. Because that same Spirit quickens us by the power and vertue of the resurrection of Christ. Reas. 4. Because the whole reparation of our nature will be after the image and pattern of the resurrection of Christ Rom. 6. 5. Use 1. Of Consolation because in the resurrection of Christ as brought to pass for us or for our good we have our victory over Death Devill Sin and Hell and all our Enemies ready purchased and prepared for us It is not therefore left to us to fight that we may overcome but onely in sincerity that we may mind this to lay hold on the victory already acquired by Christ for us and that in the same manner we may strive to keep it prosecute it and more and more put ourselves in perfect possession of it by faith in Christ. Use 2. Of Admonition that by no means we suffer sin to reigne in our mortal bodies but that we may spiritually imitate such as arise from the dead The eighteenth Lords day Mark 16. 19. So then after the Lord had spoken unto them he was received up into heaven and sat on the right hand of God HEre is explicated a singular act of Christ after his resurrection Where mark 1. The motion wherein the act is designed And 2. The thing brought to pass by that motion The motion is but the means The thing done by the motion was
the new man that is renovation of the whole man each part is illustrated by its description which are from their effects The effects of the old man are corruptions and errours verse 22. Of the new man righteousness and holiness v. 23 24. Doct. 1. There is a great unlikenesse of condition and life between men regenerated and unregenerated This is gathered from the scope of the Text and these words the old man and the new man as if a man were not the same man after regeneration that he was before Hither belong all these comparisons which through most of the Proverbs of Solomon are made between the godly and ungodly It is pointed at also every where in the New Testament and also in the Old by the difference between light and darknesse and between a quick man and a dead and between one that being defiled with all sort of uncleannesse like the Sow that wallowes in the mire and one that is washed and cleansed Reas. 1. Because they have a diverse nature believers being made partakers of the divine nature 2 Pet. 1. 4. and unbelievers are scarcely to be said to have a mans nature in a moral consideration Hither belongs it that the Apostle every where teacheth that believers are led and governed by the Spirit of God to walk thereafter and that unbelievers are led by their own flesh Reas. 2. Because as the internal principle of operations is quite unlike so also the outward rule of all their conversation is quite contrary the regenerate ordering his whole life after the will of God revealed in his Word the unregenerate after his owne suggestions and corrupt imaginations or worldly opinions Reas. 3. Because the end to which they tend is unlike and contrary the regenerate breathing after God and Heaven as he is called to the hope of eternal life the unregenerate seeking himself and this present world Hither belongs it that the unregenerate are said to be of this world but the regenerate Citizens of Heaven it self Phil. 3. 20. and often elswhere Use 1. Of Reproof of such as will be thought and think themselves perhaps true believers and regenerate when yet in their whole conversation scarce any thing can be marked which is not common to them and unregenerate persons Use 2. Of Comfort for the godly that lead a life worthy of Christian profession but are sometimes from infirmity troubled because most with whom they live or have to do become strange to them and make it plain that they are offended some way with the strictnesse of their conversation which offence ariseth properly from this unlikenesse of conversation whereby the corrupt walking of others according to the fashions of the world are tacitly reproved Ephes. 5. Now this unlikenesse ought to be our greatest comfort as it is a sign of our regeration Use 3. Of Exhortation that by change of our life and conversation we may more and more study to shew unto others and confirme unto our selves this grace of our regeneration whereunto we are called in Christ. Doct. 2. Th●… cause of this unlikenesse of regenerate from unregen●…rate is the Doctrine of the Gospell It is in the Text clear enough Reas. 1. Because the Doctrine of the Gospell teacheth us to deny all ungodlinesse and worldlinesse and to live holily 〈◊〉 2. 12. Reas. 2. Because the mighty and powerfull operation of the Holy Spirit is present with the preaching of the Gospell for producing this change in man for which cause it is called the Ministry of the Spirit and the Law of the Spirit of life and the Arme of God Reas. 3. Because the proper power of faith is to cleanse the hearts of those that it is in Act●… 5. 9. and to make us from our hearts to harken to the Doctrine unto which we were delivered R●…m 6. 17. Use Of Admonition that we beware least by hearing in vain the preaching of the Gospell without this fruit of conversion and change of life we perniciously deceive our selves Doct. 3. One part of this conversion made by the Gospell is mortification of all our corrupt dispositions and customes It is gathered from verse 22. where by the old man all the corrupt dispositions are understood because they possessing all the parts and faculties of the man from our birth and that with dominion and power over us to keep us still under them do therefore carry the name of the old man iustly and that for these reasons 1. Because they thus possessed us from the beginning of our conception 2. Because they ought by Christians to be esteemed as things old and useless and to be put off and laid away And that Reas. 1. Because the end of Christ's death and the Gospell it self is to dissolve the workes of the Devill ●…oh 3. 8. And these inordinate dispositions and customes are amongst the first and chief works of the Devill Reas. 2 Because by these we were separated from God and the Gospell calls us and drawes us to God again and therefore to lay these aside Reas. 3. Because life and obedience cannot have place in such as these lusts and customes have power in and the Gospell calls us to a spiritual life and a new obedience Use 1. Of R●…proof of such as would have themselves thought regenerate when yet they are the servants of such carnal lusts Use 2. Of Exhortation that we manfully set our selves not onely to repress such lusts but quite also to root them out Now the old man is mortified 1. By that firme and constant purpose of changing our life which is effectually begun in our first repentance and dayly ought to be renewed and extended to all new emergencies 2. By the vertue of Christ's death applied to us by faith whence our old man is said to be crucified with Christ and it may be rightly added with the same nailes that Christ was crucified with For Christ was fastned unto the Cross partly because of the guilt of our sins partly out of the love of the Father to us that we might be saved partly out of Christ's owne love to us whereby he was willing to lay down his life for us And by the earnest meditation of these things the power of sin is most diminished in us 3. By the power of the Holy Spirit to whom we ough●… to give up our selves in the use of all the meanes ordained of God whereby he useth to put forth his powerfull working Doct. 4. The other part of this conversion is vivification or renewing of the inward man By the inward new or renewed man are understood the new dispositions that are agreeable unto the will of God They are called the man as these other dispositions were because they should be diffused over the whole man as they were And they are called the new man partly in respect to order because they follow the other partly in respect of their excellency because they are so much better than the other as new things are to old out-worn and