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A25854 Mr. John Arndt (that famous German divine) his book of Scripture declaring that every child of God ought and must 1. daily die to the old Adam, but to Christ live daily, 2. and be renewed to the image of God day by day, 3. and in the new-birth live the life of the new creature / translated out of the Latine copie by Radulphus Castrensis Antimachivalensis.; Wahres Christenthum. 1. Buch. English Arndt, Johann, 1555-1621.; Antimachivalensis, Radulphus Castrensis. 1646 (1646) Wing A3731; ESTC R16074 180,338 440

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judgement Rom. 2. The third is the Law of Nature or naturall justice by which honest and dishonest are commonly discerned whereby both joy and sorrow are discerned and reconciled For there was never The light of nature any Nation so barbarous and c●●ell which did not acknowledge some God to be nature arguing and convincing this by both inward and outward reasons most firmly yea they did acknowledge not only there was a God but taught by their owne conscience because therein somtimes they were cruciated with sharp and terrible things and sometimes they did find an inward pleasure and tranquillity thereby collecting that God was just and ought so to be and that he was the revenger of ev●ll things and the rewarder of good things by which knowledge they went further to find the knowledge or doctrine of the immortality of the soule as appeareth by Plato who most gravely hath discussed and treated of this businesse Last of all by this law of Nature or inbred light they gathered that God was the author and cause of good according to whose nature the best and true worship was the study of vertue and a mind purged from vices wherefore they defined the summe or chiefe good by vertue vertue is the chiefe goodnesse and there were for that cause Schooles of Morall vertues founded and maintained by Socrates and other Philosophers which things doe serve us for instruction that God hath left in man a spark of the light of nature and as it were a certaine token of footstep of in-bred knowledge and understanding Sparks of naturall Theologie of God that thereby he might be admonished of his off-spring and by following these footsteps might so come to his Maker neither was many of the Ethnickes ignorant of this and amongst those Aratus the Poet spoken of by Saint Paul Acts 17. We are the off-spring of God And Munilius who thus saith Is there any doubt that God dwels in our hearts and that our souls return to heaven as they came from heaven Moreover because the Gentiles had this naturall testimony of God and a conscience besides which is a convincing argument that he is our maker and hereupon through their own fault and merit man shall be condemned and shall be altogether without excuse And St. Paul Ethnickes are inexcuseable to the Romans argueth thus Chap. 1. He who knoweth that God is and doth not study to know him aright and him to worship he shall be inexcusable at the day of judgement Seeing then that the Gentiles did know the justice of God that is to say taught by their natural conscience because they that do evill are worthy of death not only because they doe evill but because they are delighted therein and thereby have condemned themselves And in Chap. 2. hee speaketh of their consciences in themselves in like manner accusing or excusing themselves will be a testimony at the future day of judgement when God shall judge the hidden thoughts of men which if the Gentiles for that cause shal be inexcusable because being indued with the naturall knowledge of God against their consciences they have not sought God what shall they say for themselves to whom God hath manifested his Word and by Jesus Christ his onely begotten Sonne hath invited them to repentance that is that they should abstain from sinne and decline from the works of malice to participate by faith False Christians lesse excuseable then Ethnicks the merit of Christ and obtain thereby eternall salvstion Wherefore every halfe Christian in that day shall be condemned of two most grievous witnesses by their conscience I say the law of Nature and by Two witnesses shal cōdemn the wicked the revealed word of God Whereupon the terrible sentence will follow Christ saying In that day it shall be easier or better for Sodome and Gomorrah then for them and that the Queen of the South shall arise to the condemnation of the wicked generation The reason is because our great God made the Whereupon cometh the eternall vexatiō of the soul soule immortall and in that soul a conscience which can neither forget God nor come at God and hereupon followeth the terrible vexation and unrest of the soule and the everlasting pains of the damned which also will be so much more heavy hereafter by how much more by impenitency of heart they have heaped up the wrath of God against the day of judgement 2 Thess 2. for even as our great God Why amongst Christians be wickedness unknown to the heathen by a most just judgement hath given over the Gentiles into a reprobate sense because they contemned the inward Law of Nature and their conscience and the Law of God written in their hearts and contemptuously resisted it as God himself whereby they become blind in their understanding they fell violently into filthy and abominable heynous offences thereby heaping up the just wrath of God So false Christians because they have contemned both as well the inward as the outward testimony of God in not repenting doe resist the holy Ghost and blaspheme God For this cause God giveth them over to a reprobate sense worse then Ethnickes and Turkes And moreover suffereth them to fall into terrible errours to beleeve lies and that all those should be punished that are delighted in unrighteousnesse Whereupon it is that such filthy abominable offences do creep abroad among Christians and doe beare rule pompous and Satanicall pride unsatiable covetousnesse abominable intemperance beastly lust and every kind of most inhumane wickednesse all which doe arise from wilfull blindnesse hardnesse of heart and are in a reprobate sense and the reason is because Christians in their life and They that wil not follow Christ follow Satan conversation will not follow poore courteous meek lowly Christ and are scandalized in him thinking it a shame to them to lead his most holy life whom God hath given to the world that they might live after his example as in the light and walke in his steps Hereupon the the same most just God suffereth them to follow Satan taking the life of Satan upon them full of all abominable wickednesse lying and unmercifulnesse to execute all the workes of darknesse because they resolved in their minds not to walk in the light according to that of Christ Walk in the light while you Joh. 12. have the light that the darknesse doe not overtake you Lastly if God did punish the Ethnicks with such terrible blindnesse and reprobate sense because they contemned the Law of Nature being like unto the snuffe of a Lamp smoking and the remainder of the darknesse of the light of Nature and Conscience or as the words of Paul to the Romans Chap. 1. they did not approve it to have God in their knowledge so that by their own fault they went without their own salvation how much more true is it The new covenant written in our hearts that those doe not attain to salvation in
whose hearts not onely by nature but by the word revealed the new covenant the word of God is written and yet do despise and cast behind them this grace and favour Of which new Covenant Jeremy saith Chap. 3. This shall be my compact I will put my Lawes into their inwards and I will write it in their hearts and a man shall not any more teach his neighbour and a man his brother saying Know the Lord for all men shall know me saith the Lord even from the least to the greatest because I will forgive their iniquity and I will not remember their sins any more Heare what is said Heb. 10. To those that voluntarily offend or sinne against God after the knowledge he hath received for such there is no sacrifice left for him but a certain terrible expectation of judgement and offering by fire which consumeth the adversary He that breaketh the Law of Moses without any mercy by the mouth of two or three witnesses shall die the death how much more and worse doe you thinke doe they deserve death which have contemned against the Sonne of God and polluted the bloud of the Testament in whom he is sanctified and contumaciously despised the spirit of grace for we know who hath said Vengeance is mine and I will return it upon them And again because the Lord will judge his people It is a fearfull thing to fall into the hands of the living God With which heavie sentence without doubt those are not strucken which fall through humane frailty but those that wittingly and willingly sin against the tru● knowledge and persevere in impenitencie CHAP. VIII Without true repentance no man can challenge Christ and his merits to belong unto him Numb 9. The unclean may not celebrate the Passeover THe words of our Saviour Christ Mat. 9. are The healthy hath no need of the Physitian but the sick I did not come to call the just but the sinners to repentance whereby we are clearly taught that Christ indeed did call sinners but to repentance neither can any come unto him without repentance without conversion from sinne and What is true repentance faith for repentance is no other thing then by true contrition and sorrow to die unto sinne and by faith to obtain forgivenesse for sinne and to live unto righteousnesse in Christ so that in true repentance necessarily serious and divine contrition must go before a heart as I may say broken and c●ucifying the flesh whereupon in Cap. 6. Epist ad Hebr. Repentance is said to be or is called the worke of dead men because by it we abstain from those works whose reward is death which if it be not done then the merit of Christ profiteth not us one haire For seeing Christ proffereth himselfe to be the Physitian of our souls his holy bloud to be the only and most true medicine of our sins and no medicine although it be most pretious can cure the sick man which will not refraine from hurtfull thin●s and things resisting the power of the medicine so it remaineth that the bloud of Christ and death can profit nothing those that purpose not to abstain from sinne Whereupon blessed Paul cap. 5. ad Galat. saith Whosoever doth such things the works of the flesh doe not obtaine the Kingdome of heaven nor shall have any part in Christ Moreover if Christ by his bloud is become our medicine who can doubt that first we must be sick for the whole have no need of a Physitian but the weake And none is spiritually sicke who is not penitent and who is not sorrowfull from his heart for his sinnes who hath not a contrite heart and humble who is secure as concerning the wrath of God who hath not resolved and firmly in his mind decreed to flye all worldly concupiscence who lastly seeking after honour wealth and pleasure takes no knowledge of his sinnes such as are so those are not sick and consequently need no Physitian and Christ profiteth them nothing it is manifest Therefore again and again let this be remembred that Christ called sinners but it was to repentance because a penitent heart contrite pensive and faithfull onely and alone is capable of the most pretious bloud death and merit of Christ I account him happy whosoever he be that heareth this holy calling inwardly and in his heart I call that a divine sorrow and anguish for sinnes which worketh repentance God worketh spirituall sorrow to stedfast salvation as the words be 2 Cor. 7. The holy Spirit doth produce this divine sorrow by the Law and serious meditation of the passion of the Lord because it not onely aboundeth with the documents of grace but also withall hath in it an earnest exhortation to repentance and a most terrible glasse of the divine wrath For if we seek into the cause of his The Passion of Christ efficiēt to repentance most bitter death what else can we say was the cause but our sinnes If you joyn the divine love out of which he most willingly gave his Son for us as also you shall have his singular example both terrible and wonderfull of his divine justice and clemency which seeing they are so who then sincerely loving Christ can be affected and delighted with sinne which he knows Christ had with his bloud washed and purged Consider also with me O man which art subject to pride and art slave unto ambition with what contempt and how great humility Christ Jesus ought to repaire our pride and insolency think of his poverty that he might satisfie for thy covetousness The fruits of Christs passion surcease at last through God so studiously to seek after wealth and insatiably to thirst after riches most wretchedly He with incredible griefe of mind and anguish not to be uttered doth satisfie and abolish the pleasures and concupiscence of the flesh and thou contrariwise continually dost give thy selfe to pleasure and lust how evill is thy preposterousnesse pravity and wickednesse to take delight and pleasure in those things which to Christ were so wonderfully bitter he died to expiate thy wrath hatred enmity rancor bitternesse desire of revenge and implacability with extreame mildnesse and patience and wilt not thou even for the least cause be very angry and account revenge more pleasant then life even for which thy Redeemer did drink the most bitter cup of death wherefore so many as aspire to the name of Christians and doe not abstain frō sin those I say do even crucifie Christ and doe make a mock of him as it is said The impenitent do even crucifie Christ in the Epistle to the Hebrews Chap. 6. Therefore it is unpossible that those should participate of the merits of Christ which indeed they doe tread under foot as it is in the same Epistle Chap. 10. And because they doe pollute the blood of the Testament neither beleeve truly that their sinnes are expiated by him or much esteem his death or think
is Christ doth as it were call back his merit from them that do not pardō their neighbour not first reconciled to his neighbour For all mankind under the person of the wicked servant Matth. 18. is described who when hee had not wherewith to pay the King remitted him all his debts but when he afterwards behaved himselfe so cruelly towards his fellow servant the King revoked his pardon condemning the wicked servant by reason of his hard usage of his neighbour Which Parable Christ concludeth with this farewell So will my heavenly Father doe unto you Like unto that is the saying of Matth. 7. What measure you mete unto others the same shall hee meted unto you Christs mandate Whereby it appeareth that man was not onely created for himselfe alone but for his neighbours cause also And immediatly he passeth over the precepts of loving our neighbour to withdraw the love of God and to proceed with his justice by whose most rigid decree hee is immediatly condemned but if we should call such things to mind as this Parable we should never be angry long with our Neighbour neither should the Sun go down in our wrath for it A heart irreconcilcable is not capable of Christs merits is in truth a horrible thing to be thought that the merit of Christ whereby he satisfied for the whole world fully and after the example of that little King of meer grace hath remitted all our sins I say that this merit should be cut off and become of no effect if we do not pardon our brother and hate him But although this law seem hard yet so it is written and it so bindeth us that God without the love of our neighbour will not be loved of us and if wee become irreconcileable wee lose the love and favour of God Neither may we think The cause of charity it was for other cause that man was not created one better then another but that one should not insult over another but as twins of one mother and one father we should live lovingly peaceably together our consciences never accusing us Therfore whosoever hateth his brother and despiseth him let him know that God doth hate him and despise him because he hath most severely forbidden it and consequently that he is hatefull and abominable to him as also guilty of eternall condemnation and altogether excluded from the merit of Christ Neither can it by any means come to passe that a heart in enmity without mercy and inhumane should participate of the bloud of Christ which was shed out of meere love seeing out of the Parable Matth. 18. it is manifest that God was lesse moved or offended for the debt of ten thousand Talents then at the unmercifulnesse and cruelty of the fellow-servant Wherefore let us never forget but daily remember that saying of Christ So will my Heavenly Father doe unto you CHAP. XXVI Wherefore a mans Neighbour is to be loved Rom. 13. Owe nothing to any man but that you love one another for he that loveth his Neighbour fulfilleth the Law THese are the words of Micah chap. 6. What good things shall I offer unto the Lord Shall I offer unto him Meat-offerings and Calves of a yeare old Can the Lord bee pleased in thousands of Ra●●nes or in many thousands of fat be-goats Shall I give my first-born for my wickednesse and the fruits of my womb for the sinnes of my soule I will shew thee O man what is good and what the Lord requireth of thee Even to doe judgement and to love mercy and to walk carefully before thy God By which judgement he teacheth us Wherein consisteth the true worship of God wherein the true worship of God consisteth not in Ceremonies and Sacrifices which conferre nothing on God because all is his own nor in humane offerings which hee requireth not nay rather hee abhorreth because they contain the reproach of Jesus Christ the Propitiatory offering which God appointed to take away the sinnes of the world but in pure faith which the Prophet describeth in this form To doe judgement I say in the exercise of faith in charity in mercy better pleasing then all sacrifices in humility according to the Psalm 51. The sacrifice to God is a troubled spirit a contrite heart and humble O God thou wilt not despise To which divine worship consisting in the inwards of the heart and in faith charity and humility Saint Paul exhorteth us Rom. 13. whose admonition we have prefixed to this chapter which containeth the praise of Charity and the perpetuall debt to our neighbour For certainly there is no other way of serving God but this to whom we can approve of nothing but what wee our selves allow and he himselfe worketh in our hearts so that to worship God is nothing but to observe our neighbour and to doe him good To this love of our neighbour the Apostle inciting us useth an argument somthing plausible to those which Charity praised are desirous to lead a Christian life calling it a breviary of all vertues and a fulfilling of the Law not that we are able possibly by our charity to fulfill the divine Law or that consequently it followeth to gain eternall life thereby but it insinuateth unto us the noble bounty and majesty of this most excellent vertue and inflameth us to love it with all our desire For our justice and happinesse is founded on the merit of Jesus Christ which we apply to our selves by faith out of which also the love to our neighbour doth flow and all other vertues which therefore are called the fruits of justice to the praise and glory of God Seeing then the dignity of this vertue is so great it were worthy the labour to seeke more arguments to draw us unto the love of it but the strongest in my opinion is that which Saint John useth Epist 1. Chap. 4. The imp●lsive cause of charity God is Love and he that remaineth in Love remaineth in God and God in him for who would not wish to be in God and remain in him and that God in like manner shall be and remain in him And who on the contrary would not abhorre to bee in Satan and Satan in him which is so often as charity is repulsed barbarisme and inhumane hostility doth dwell in our hearts For as it is the delight of God to be with the sonnes of men so contrariwise the Devill is a devourer of men To which belongeth that place of John who saith He that Charity is a token of the sons of God loveth is born of God and knoweth God In this is made manifest whether they be the sons of God or the Devil and can there be any thing more desirable then to be the sonnes of God to be begotten of God to know God truly and whosoever hath his heart void of charity nor by experience hath known the force of it life gifts goodnesse gentlenesse long-suffering and patience
might doe good unto him which to perform if any contemn and refuse this man cannot bee the sonne of God because he loveth not his neighbour He that exerciseth not Christian Charity doth shew a man how to be a living member of Christ charity that man separateth himselfe from the spirituall body of Christ which is the Church and forfeiteth or loseth thereby all the merits of Christ according to that of the Ephesians chap. 4. One Lord one Faith one Baptisme For even as the members pulled from the body doe not participate of the life and bountifull influence of the head but dieth every member even so as many as live not in charity these because they separate themselves from their head Christ doe not participate nor receive his life lively motions and fulnesse Prayer without charity is unprofitable according to that of Saint John Epist 1. chap. 3. He that loveth not his brother abideth in death Last of all because by prayer all good gifts are to be obtained of God and without it all helps consolation and freedóme wee may look for but in vain being without blessing and safety And God Almighty giveth hearing to no prayers but to those that are grounded on Faith and Charity according to that saying of Matthew chap. 18. If two of you upon the earth consent together whatsoever they shall desire it shall be granted unto them by my Father which is in Heaven Goe to therefore O mortall men let us live in charity wherein is peace Peace in charity and union and where peace is there is the God of peace where he is in that place the Lord hath commanded his blessing and life for evermore CHAP. XXVII Wherefore our enemies are to be loved Matth. 5. Love your enemies doe good to those that hate you and pray for them that persecute you and revile you that you may be the children of your Father which is in heaven THe first cause for which our enemies ought to be beloved of us is the commandement of God to which he giveth no other reason but that you may be the sonnes of your father of him that is to wit that loved us when we were his enemies Rom. 5. As if he should say Unlesse you love your enemies you cannot be the children of the heavenly Father And he that is not his sonne what father shall he have To which commandement when exceeding few of us doe obey it is manifest how farre wee are from the fruits of the children of God wherein we ought to use charity towards our enemies He that loveth not his brother saith blessed John Epist 1. chap. 3. abideth in death for hee hath not in him the true life which is of Christ which is spirituall and heavenly which consisteth in faith towards God and charity towards our neighbour according to that of blessed John We know that we are translated from death to life because we love the brethren Whereupon it is manifest that the fruit testimony of our quickning in Christ is brotherly charity and contrariwise the hatred of him is death so that whosoever dieth in hatred hee shall die an everlasting death And all his good works that hateth his neighbour his divine worship and observation of the commandements of God are in vain according to that of Paul to the Without charity all works are dead Corinthians Epist 1. chap. 13. If I give and distribute all that I have to feed the poore and give my body to be burned have not charity it profiteth me nothing Moreover it is the property of a noble great and divine mind to pardon injuries For let us behold God both how long suffering he is and consider how suddenly hee is reconciled Behold Christ how amongst his most heavie torments and most inhumane pains on the Crosse like unto a Lamb did not so much as open his mouth Isa 53. Let us contemplate the holy Ghost who for no other cause rather appeared in the form of a Dove then to teach unto us the meeknesse and lenity and simplicity of manners Behold Moses with what patience hee did bear the reproaches of the people whereby Numb 12. he deserved this praise Moses was a most meek man above all men which remained on the earth David also with what Ienity of mind he did heare Shimei cursing of him 2 Sam. 16. And one saith True charity knoweth none to be angry with but himselfe and true peace consisteth not in a great fortune but in humble bearing of adversity and his adversaries Publius said excellent well The free estate of an honest man receiveth no reproach And Seneca If thou be magnanimous thou wilt never judge thy selfe any reproach to be done to thee Even as the Sun if any mad man should reproach it and call it meere darknesse for that cause it would not nor doth it change the nature of it so neither a valiant mind or generous whose great generosity is also to pardon The Ethniks exam●le of long-suffering revenge And many Ethnicks in their examples did expresse th●se golden sayings and admonitions As Pericles that was the most pleasant Orator of Greece who having heard a man upbraiding and reproaching him the sp●ce of a whole day with his own eares ●●ght comming on did command him to bee brought into his house lest he should take any harm this speech b●ing added It is an easier thing to speak evill of vertue then to possesse it Phocion the Prince of the Athenians when he had deserved exceeding well of his Countrey through the envie of some was adjudged to death which being about to undergoe when he was asked by one if hee would command him any thing to his sonne Nothing else said he but that he never take in hand or goe about to revenge this injury which I suffer of my countrey Titus the Emperour when it was told him that two brethren did affect the Empire of Rome and that they had conspired his death made no scruple to bid them to supper and about three dayes after set himselfe betwixt them to behold a Stage-play with which admirable clemency he overcame their improbity When it was told to Julius Cesar that Cato had laid violent hands on himselfe He hath bereaved me saith he of the greatest victory that ever I had for I had decreed with my selfe freely to pardon him all the injuries he had done unto me But most of all whom would not the extream patience and meeknesse of the Sonne of God himselfe move to love his enemies The great long-suffering of God neither this nor any of those of the Ethnicks which I mentioned nor any of the Saints in their examples did equall him For what greater injustice and dishonesty can be thought on then that the Sonne of God should bee so miserably handled of men to be made a laughing-stock to bee scourged with stripes to be crowned with thorns to be spit upon and lastly to be nailed on the Crosse
meere love Wherefore he that liveth not in Charity this man is a dead member of Christ manifestly if hee bee in the body of Christ For even as a dead member is not warmed with naturall heat nor nourished and for that cause is altogether without life So hee that liveth not in charity hath not the spiritual life of Christ but is dead to God and Christ because he is without faith and is a dry tree without juice from the Vine which is Christ and to be cut off lastly He that hath no charity is dead without God Christ and the holy Ghost the Christian Church and life eternall where God face to face shall bee seen which is love it self CHAP. XXXIII God giveth no respect to the works of the persons he judgeth and esteemeth the worke according to the heart Prov. 21. Every way of a man seemeth right to himselfe but God trieth the heart WHen the Prophet Samuel by the commandement of God went to anoint David King he entred his Fathers house and would have anointed his first-born the Lord said Doe not thou respect his countenance nor the height of his stature being I have rejected him neither doe I judge according to the countenance of a man for a God iudgeth all things by the heart man seeth those things that are open and evident but the Lord beholdeth the heart By which example God teacheth us that he hath no regard to any person although never so great and illustrious when his heart is void of goodnesse love faith and humility but to esteem of the workes by the inward spirit and intention of the mind and to allow them according as it is in the 21. of the Prov. Moreover all gifts how great soever illustrious praise-worthy and excellent they are in the judgment of the world unlesse they proceed from a pure heart unlesse they respect the sole honour of God and the profit of our neighbour lastly unlesse they be free and altogether separated from pride arrogancy self-love desire of private praise and glory they cannot please God Therefore whosoever thou art O man be assured and certainly Arrogancie corrupteth all gifts perswaded that if God should bestow on thee alone all the gifts he hath bestowed on all men yet if thou shouldst not use them to the profit of thy neighbour and honour of God to which end God bestowed them upon men but shouldest use them as certain instruments of praise glory honour and lucre God would abhorre them no otherwise then the greatest sinnes This you may learn from the example of Lu●ifer a fairer and more beautifull Angel heaven had not who when hee vilified the gifts of God with his own honour and selfe-love and did not purely respect the love and glory of God by his own act hee became a Devil and was cast from heaven Therefore those things which God will accept and account well of ought to proceed out of faith alone and most pure love of God and men and ought to be void of all selfe-love arrogancy and private gaine so much as may be by the grace of God in this infirmity whereof Saint Paul writeth If I speak with the tongues of Men and Angels and have not charity I am as a sounding brasse and a tinckling Cymball that is I am in vain and altogether unprofitable In truth God regardeth no faculty but in humble hearts not arts not much learning but whether our spirit doth seek the honour of God Miraculous faith saving faith differ edification of our neighbour not a miraculous faith to remove mountaines for glory sake but the pure and contrite in spirit trembling at his word as it is read in Isa 66. not lastly if any covetous of fame and renown doe distribute all he hath to feed the poore and give his body to be burned alive but the heart and the cause of them all That which is manifest by many examples to be brought Cain and Abel both of them brought Sacrifices Differing sacrifices to God one of them acceptable the other was execrable by reason of the disparity of minds The same reason was of David and Saul both which attended Gods service but with unlike event for the foresaid cause David Manasses Nebuch adnezzar and Peter by repentance obtained grace contrariwise Saul Pharaoh Vnequal repentāce and Judas did misse the same by reason of the same variety of mind Pharaoh and Saul and Manasses used the same prayer Lord I have sinned they received unlike rewards Judith and Hester and the daughters of Israel Esay 3. they adorned themselves and combed themselves with praise and renown the one the other dispraise and reprehension In like manner the prayer of Hezekia Josua and Gideon by which they required a signe from heaven as approved is praised Contrariwise the Pharisees Mat. 12. doing the same are reproved of the Lord. The Publican and the Pharisee both of them pray in the Temple not approved The Ninivites and the Jewes and Pharisees doe fast alike but the one God heard the other he heard not wherefore Isai 58. they cry Wherefore have wee fasted and thou regardest us not The Widow which brought into the Treasury two small Mites is praised of Christ he that gave more was not Herod and Zacheus in the sight of Christ doe rejoyce but had most differing rewards The holy Martyrs for Christ suffered death Achab and Manasses offer unto the Lord their own children and God accepted the sacrifice of the one and the other was rejected Which variety proceedeth from no other cause then from the heart which God onely respecteth whereupon hee onely accepteth those works which come from a heart unfained and sincere charity and free humility Contrariwise whatsoever gifts they be if arrogancy self-love and the contagion of lucre doe infect them he rejecteth them CHAP. XXXIV That a man doth nothing at all to his salvation but God doth all things to us onely we admit of his grace as a sick man doth his Medicines to those without repentance the merit of Christ is not imputed 1 Corinth 1. Christ is made unto us the Wisdome of God and justice and sanctification and Redemption BY this Sentence Saint Paul teacheth us what things are necessray for our salvation by Christ all things are done for us For when we were ignorant of the way of life he was made wisedom unto us whē we were sinners our justice when we were abominable our sanctification lastly when A man cannot help himself we were damned our redemption Whereupon it remaineth that the man doth not confer one jot to the beginning middle and end of his salvation with all his merits of works strength and free will But sinne he could of himselfe but he could not justifie himselfe again lose but not recover kill but not raise again to life be subdued to the Devill but not set free from him again For even as a dead carkasse cannot quicken it selfe again so neither
the Devil of which wee speak God had planted in man in the state of innocency a pure chast and honest conjugall affection that he might beget children after the image of God according to the spirit neither could there bee imagined a more holy pleasure or love then to propagate the image of God and to multiply humane kind to the glory of God and good of men So I say if men in the state of innocency could beget infinite children and could propagate the honour of God and his image in infinite generations for the great love both of God and man as the image of God nothing more acceptable nothing more pleasant and nothing would be more to be desired For even as God in the creation of man did receive an ineffable pleasure and had in him or took in him delight as his image so the man was to receive and have most pure pleasure in the procreation of his life and sending forth of the divine Image which at this day is the reason of marriages and how Satan hath spotted and defiled that The abuse of matrimony most pure and chast matrimoniall love with his filthinesse it is as evident as the noon-day Therefore they mix together no otherwise then brute beasts and in a blind and furious heat doe beget like unto themselves Moreover as the Devill is a Thiefe and a Robber so hee infuseth the same guile and art in the soule of man As the Devil is a calumniator a Sophister a Sycophant and a Scoffer of God and man depraving both deeds and words and wresting the sense and repugning it with false interpretation of which craft hee shewed us a faire example when hee suduced our first parents so the minds of men corrupted with his pestilent contagion did contract a perverse nature lying and cunning intrapping and calumniating Which Diabolicall and Satanicall corruption of the soule inexpressible both in the craft and variety of it selfe the Psalmist describeth under the person of a double tongued lying man Psalm 14. Rom. 3. and blessed James chap. 7. For God as wee said even now doth not accuse the mouth onely the tongue hands and feet but the whole Man in his own law yea his heart and mind as the cause and fountain of all evill as appeareth by the two last precepts of the Decalogue concerning concupiscence to be avoyded Which is well to be observed The Image of the Devill with special regard And this is that image of the Devil set by his Father against the divine image as lust and pleasure in sinning slandering and reproaching so farre forth as many that desire to be accounted good Christians take occasion of traducing their neighbour which happily being done they say applauding themselves I did this lately now I have enough I am freed of a great burden I seeme to my selfe to returne as it were to life again when at length I have satisfied my mind What blindnesse is this of yours and unhappinesse O mortals even not to know by whose instinct you doe these things whose sonnes you are whose image you beare about or doe you doubt that these workes are of the Devill the work-master these fruits to be of the seed of the Devil these properties to bee from the nature of the Devil which hee hath planted in our nature that hee might riot by a plentiful increase in vices of all kinds as pride covetousnesse lust and slanders of which wee spake erewhile And this corruption of the Satanicall image or originall sin is so filthy horrible and profound as no man can in thought much less in speech expresse the abomination of your hearts Which notwithstanding no creature no Angell I say nor men can either amend or purge or root out For seeing our strength and powers are utterly worne No creature can extirpate sin out consumed and spiritually dead it is a vain thing to expect any thing from them Therefore this remaineth that we bee miserable and unhappy to all eternity or use the counsell or help of some most powerfull avenger and extirper of sinnes Lord of evill and death and which can by himselfe change renew and purge humane nature Whereby it appeareth in the first place that justification can be obtained by no humane good work as also the necessity of regeneration is to bee found out The natural power of man And to speak this again the soul can by its own power or strength do nothing but live in its in-born pravity malice and all kind of fins both against the precepts of God and most especially against the first Table in transgressing whereof consisteth the true enmity with God in our understanding will we are so blind corrupt and dead that it is against nature to feare God love call The true explication of free-wil on him honour praise worship trust in him and to convert our soules to him As concerning the second Table truly I confesse that there is in the soule a spark of free-will remaining yet very weak and without sinewes which therewithall it is hardly able to retain and bridle the evill concupiscences that they break not forth into outward works to which things the example of the virtuous Ethnicks are extant in their virtue but to change the heart to turn it to God to purge it from wicked concupiscences is a greater work onely a work of divine strength For the inward roots and fangs of evill are most deeply fastened so as all the endeavours of free-will cannot perform to forbeare to breake out openly into flames to destroy all but liveth in smoak and ashes Therefore without God this humane kind could not subsist the will of man is so depraved and howsoever the Devil can do nothing more to exercise the greatest cruelty in the mind of man yet he cannot extirpate all naturall strength and affections whereby wee know the law of nature and in-bred affection of married couples parents and children which are foundations and bands of humane society For hee that will doe all things to which hee is carried by the force of corrupt nature it must needs bee that Why naturall love is left in man he shall disturb humane society and find out a revenging sword of revenging power Moreover it must bee thought a deed done by the singular counsell of God that this naturall affection was not utterly extinct that we might understand the love of God was the soveraigne good and the Image of God which we lost by our fall and vice But that which pertaineth to spirituall good concerning blessednesse and the Kingdome of God is as true as truth it selfe blessed Paul saith 1 Cor. 2. The naturall man understandeth not the things that are of the spirit of God for it is foolishnesse to him and be cannot understand it that is he hath not the least spark of the spirituall light tasting nothing of those things which belong to an heavenly divine and spirituall life to which man onely was