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A16736 The doctrine of the Gospel By a plaine and familiar interpretation of the particular points or articles thereof: with the promises, comforts, and duties, seuerally belonging to the same. VVhereunto is added, a declaration of the danger of not knowing, not beleeuing, or not obeying any one of them. Likewise, a rehearsal of the manifold heresies, wherein many haue erred contrary to them all. Diuided into three bookes. The first whereof, is of beliefe in God the Father ... Allen, Robert, fl. 1596-1612. 1606 (1606) STC 364; ESTC S106811 1,499,180 1,052

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〈◊〉 euer our Sauiour being most grieuously troubled and heauie eu●n to the death vnder the horror of Gods most heauie indignation bent against the sinne of man did as wee haue seene more at large before of humane infirmitie yet without sinne praie that if it were possible the same cuppe of Gods wrath might passe away not be drunke of him yet he presently recouereth himselfe like as the Sunne being for a while shadowed by some darke and thicke cloud breaketh forth and sheweth that it hath lost no part of the light it had before and hee submitteth his will thus troubled to the most holy and dete●mined will of God And thus though he was by the passing vehemencie of the temptation terriblie shaken in his soule yet was it but as the shaking of most pure and clarified water in a Cristall glasse which cannot by any troubling or shuffling of it too and fro be any thing at all sullied and rored insomuch as there was no whit of soile or dregges in the bottome of it But that we may returne to the second branch of the former answer wherein as was saide wee may in the second place obserue the present minde and most holy wisedome and vndaunted valoure of our Sauiour in all his behauiour towardes all sortes of people in the time of his sufferings First let vs obserue what it was towardes his Disciples that is with how singular loue and in how tender pittie and compassion it was manifested toward them Question Wherein may this be discerned Answer In this respect the present minde and most excellent wisedome of our SAVIOVR shineth brightly in this that as the time of his sufferings approached nearer he did the more often preadmonish acquaint his Disciples with the praediction and foretelling of them to the end they might not be altogether sodaine and vnlooked for and so the more discomfortable vnto them The present minde of our Sauiour together with his singular wisedome and tender loue to his Disciples is euident likewise in this that when the time was at hand indeede then did hee shewe himselfe most chearefull in heartening of them howsoeuer in ●ome considerations he carried a very heauie heart in his owne most wise and holy bosome Explicatiō proofe It is true And therevpon doth the Euangelist Iohn giue this testimonie of our Sauiour That he loued those that were his owne in the world euen vnto the end so long as he liued with them Iohn 13.1 The declaration and constancie of which tendernes of the loue of our Sauiour insomuch as it was most plentifully testified at the celebration of that Passeouer in the which hee was immediatly to suffer as it followeth in the same 13. chap. of Iohn from the 2. verse euen to the end of the 17. chapter and by some other testimonies of the other Euangelists let vs as briefly and as orderly as we can collect and gather them together Question How may this be done Answer The most tender and constant loue of our Sauiour to his Disciples and consequently euen to his whole Church is euident in this that no premeditation of his sufferings which he knew must needes be most grieuous and that onely for their and our sinnes and for tht sinnes of the rest of Gods elect and nothing at all for any default of his owne could possibly diminish his loue no though he had already begun to taste the extreame bitternes of them Explicatiō proofe So in deede we read Ioh. 12.27 And verily it is a liuely proofe of a more perfit loue then the tender and louing mother can beare to her childe while the sorrowes of childe bearing are yet fresh in her minde And which of vs if so be we knew that we must die though the gentlest death that might be for any other mans cause could loue and delight in that party for whose offence we must die But specially if hee were a wicked man and an enemie vnto vs according to that Rom. 5. verses 6.7.8 Yet our Sauiour died for vs and for all other of his though wee are both by nature and in transgression of our liues such as we speake of But let vs goe forward Howe did our Sauiour furthermore declare the same his most tender loue Question He hath done it diuerse other waies Answere And first by washing his Disciples feete as it followeth Iohn chap. 13. verses 4.5 c. Explicatiō proofe If there were no other thing but this it must needes be accounted of vs an admirable declaration of his incomparable loue For assuredly whosoeuer being a Superiour can finde in his heart to wash the feete of his inferiour the which no doubt according to the vse of that Country was an office performed of the inferiour to the Superiour when a guest was entertained of the maister of the family and a farre more meane office then to poure the Ewer at the washing of hands after meate it is a certaine argument that hee loueth him well Infinitely much rather then must it be conceiued that insomuch as i● pleased our Sauiour though hee was the Lord and Maister of his Disciples and knew well his soueraignty ouer them thus farre to abase himselfe that it was a singular declaration of his most deare loue toward them Question But was this the onely cause why he did so Answere It was not the onely cause though it was one of the chiefe and principall as the Euangelist Saint Iohn giueth to vnderstand from the beginning of his 13. Chapter Question You say well But for our further instruction What other causes moued our Sauiour so to doe Answer He did it to shew them that as they had the beginning of their sanctification from him so they were to seeke for their continuance and increase therein from him and through the grace of his mediation alone He did it likewise to giue them an example of true humility and in humility of the practise of all offices of loue one to another and to the whole Church of Christ These causes are euident from the explication of our Sauiour himselfe First verses Explicatiō proofe 8.9.10 For to this end he saith to Peter who of modesty or ciuility refused for a while to haue his feete washed that if he did not suffer him to wash his feete he should haue no part in him And touching the second our Sauiour doth further expresse it from the 12. verse to the 18. And he standeth the more fully to instruct his disciples in this point of humility in themselues and of their mutuall loue and practise of the duties thereof because they were to be the Teachers of humility and of the practise of loue to all other For these are common duties belonging to all Christians without exception Wherevnto that our Sauiour might the rather induce his disciples he pronounceth a blessing vpon them if according as they were instructed by him they would performe and practise them But this belongeth to
is as was said euen to incourage those whom it did chiefly concerne to goe chearfully about that other kind of fishing of men by casting forth that draw-net of the kingdome of God which our Sa told them of in the 13. of Mat And wheras these things might chiefly discourage Want of maintenance or outward prouision and feare of ill successe our Sa doth by one worke of his diuine power yea by a double threefold work of like miracle giue incouragement against either of these doubts or feares yea against al doubts feares which might any way dismay them For to this end whereas they were in present want see how presently he doth furnish thē with aboundāce he causes a multitude of great fishes to come together into the net he strengtheneth a weak net to hold them all without breaking any maske he prepareth vpon the land both fire fish a●d bread for them to refresh them withall shewing thereby that all things both by sea and by land are at his commandement appointment So that how vnprouided or weake soeuer they may seeme to themselues to be and likewise how weake soeuer the net of the Gospel might seeme to be to catch men who are as shie of the word as the fish is of the net yet our Sauiour giueth to vnderstand that as he was with them when hee sent them forth for a little while to preach the Gospel in Israel so that though they tooke no prouision with them nor scrip nor bag for prouision as he commanded them Mark 6.7.13 Luk. 9.1.6 and chap. 22.35 yet they wanted nothing neither wanted their ministery good successe and effectuall blessing so hee would be with them yea much more powerfully when they should performe their office of generall Apostleship to all Nations wherevnto he had already set them apart This I doubt not but is the summe of all And so the Euangelist Luke saith expresly Act. 1.3 that our Sauiour after his resurrection spake to his Disciples by the space of forty daies of those things which appertaine to the kingdome of God But let vs consider of the words of the text that is of the diuine speeches of our Sauiour of the effects thereof somewhat more particularly These speeches of our Sauiour together with the effects of them are as was touched in the answer either such as were spoken and effected before dinner was ended or after that the Disciples had dined with our Sauiour And of the former two speeches of our Sauiour the first Sirs haue ye any meate And thus vpon the answer of the Disciples that they had gotten neuer a fish the second being this Cast out the net on the right side of the shippe and yee shall finde we haue spoken before Onely let vs obserue this one point further that our Sauiour did not aske that question as being ignorant of that which hee asked but to stirre them vp the rather to consider the miracle which hee minded to worke immediately after And therefore also when he saith Cast out the net c. and yee shall find hee doth not speake by coniecture or by any experimentall signe c. though as was saide it might seeme so to those fishermen but hee speaketh by diuine authoritie and vpon his al seeing knowledge in that hee was God yea he worketh a work of his diuine prouidence and power in commanding the fishes to come and attend as it were the casting forth of the net Now let vs come to the effectes which followed vpon these wordes of our Sauiour and so to the rest of his speeches and actions before dinner The effects of this speech of our Sauiour Cast out the net c they were foure The first was that the net had taken a multitude of great fishes so that they were not able to drawe it Secondly that Iohn vpon this miraculous effect discerned that it was our Sauiour who had spoken before to giue them that direction and commandement to cast out their net Thirdly Peter being imboldened hereby feareth not to swimme to the shore that he might shewe the zeale of his loue to our Sauiour and peraduenture also that he might so much the more commodiously helpe to drawe the net to land Fourthly the other Disciples continuing in the ship doe what they can to rowe that they may helpe the ship and hale the net with fishes to the shore These were the effects but let vs heare them from the report of the holy Euangelist Question What saith he for the first Answer So they cast out saith the Euangelist himselfe being one of them and they were not able at all to drawe it for the multitude of fishes verse 6. Question What saith he for the second Answer Therefore said the Disciple whom Iesus loued vnto Peter it is the Lord verse 7. in the beginning of it Explication This Disciple whom Iesus loued was this Iohn the Euangelist so that it is as much as if he had written thus Iohn saide to Peter And in that which Iohn saith to Peter he reasoneth well from the diuine worke which followed vpon the speech of our Sauiour that it was the Lord seeing no creature could by humane knowledge haue giuen them that certaine and effectuall direction For whom might he thinke it to be rather then our Sauiour who had before appeared vnto them with like manifestation of his diuine power Now therefore what saith he for the third effect Question When Simon Peter heard that it was the Lord he girded his coate to him for he was naked to wit Answer to his shirt as it were and cast himselfe into the sea as it followeth in the 7. verse Explicatiō This no doubt was a further effect vpon the apprehension of Peter from the words of Iohn yea rather frō the work it self which our Sauiour wrought that it was the Lord. For hereby as was saide before he himselfe tooke boldnes to doe that he did as one nothing doubting of good successe seeing the Lord himselfe had begun this gratious and mightie worke For this is indeede the propertie of God to finish that good worke which he beginneth And it is said concerning our Sauiour that whom he loued to the end he loued them And therefore also there was iust cause that Peter should for his part loue him againe with a most earnest loue The which no doubt was a chiefe cause of this his hasting to the shore Neuertheles it may well be a question whether Peter presuming of his skill to swimme yea though thus farre also being well aduised that he girded his clothes about him lest by the losenes of them they might be a hindrance vnto him whether I say he might not haue beene better aduised before he had done so namely to haue staied till hee had knowen the will of our Sauiour as he did once before when he attempted to walke toward our S●uiour comming to their shippe walking on the sea And herevnto seemeth our Sauiour
fatherlie care to turne all to the benefite of the soule according to that of the Apostle Paul Romanes 8.28 Wee knowe that all things worke together for the best vnto them that are called of his purpose c. But more particularlie Question What is that admirable manner of the Lord God his most prouident mercifull and Fatherlie gouernment ouer the soules of his children and faithfull seruants Answere VVheras wee are all of vs by nature vaine foolishe prowde and rebellious against God and his word he doth by the gracious power of his holie Spirit through his word so alter and change the hearts mindes and willes of all those that be his that hee maketh them fooles in themselues sheweth them to be in themselues weake also miserable euery way forlorne that so he may make them carefull to seek to be truely wise holie and blessed in him Yea hee leadeth them downe as it were to the lowest pitte of Hell that he may make them fitte at the last to inhabite the highest and most glorious Heauens And all this of his meere grace and fauour in his beloued Sonne our Lorde Iesus Christ euen according to his owne counsell and purpose in him before the world was as was saide before It is verie true For euen herevnto doth the Lord subordinate the course of his gouernment ouer all his other creatures and workes To this purpose hath hee sanctified all his holie ordinances worde prayer Sacraments c. To this purpose doth hee speciallie guide the thoughtes wordes and works of his children censuring rebuking and chastising them so farre as they doe erre and goe astray from him but comforting incouraging and reioycing them in all things wherin they doe well obeying his word and the holie motions of his good Spirit which frameth their hearts of conscience to will and desire that onelie which God willeth c. This your last answere containeth both the effectes and also the cause of this excellent prouidence of God concerning his children For the which I desire that you should shewe some proofe out of the holie Scriptures And first concerning the effectes of Gods most holie gouernment in the altering and changing of the heartes of his chldren of fooles making them wise of weake strong c. Question What ground haue you for the proofe of these things Answere To this purpose the Apostle Paul teacheth vs that wee are not of our selues sufficient no not fitte so much as to thinke a good thought 2. Cor. 3.5 Much rather therefore must the will and the deede be of God Philipp 2.13 For it is God saith the same Apostle who worketh in you the will and the deede euen of his good pleasure And 1. Corinth 12.3 No man can say that Iesus is the Lorde but by the holie Ghost And Romanes 8.14 They that are the Sonnes of God are ledde by the Spirit of God Finallie Galatians 5.22 c. The fruite of the Spirit is loue ioye peace long-suffering gentlenes goodnes faith meeknes temperance against such there is no lawe For they that are Christes haue crucified the fleshe with the affections and lu●●es If wee liue in the Spirit let vs walke in the Spirit Explicatiō and proofe See the last Answere in the former page These holie Scriptures doe shew in deed the most excellent and admirable worke and gouernment of God concerning the soules of his children To the which purpose also the Apostle saith further Let euery one that seemeth to be wise in this world be a foole that he may be wise For the wisedome of this world is foolishnes with God c. 1. Corinth 3.18.19 Reade also Rom 7.9 c. to the ende And Galat 5.17 Read likewise Reuel 3.17.18.19 Thou saiest I am riche c. and knowest not that thou art wretched c. I counsell thee to buye of mee gold tryed by the fire that thou maiest be made rich c. As manie as I loue I rebuke and chasten be zealous therefore and amend And that the Lorde leadeth his children downe as it were to the lowest pit and raiseth them vp againe from all their feares and sorrowes c. it is euident Psalm 86.13 and Psalm 130.1 And likewise Actes 14.22 The beaten way to the kingdome of God is by manifold affliction and tribulation But in all troubles and afflictions the Lorde standeth by his children as a tender supporter and comforter 2. Corinth 4 8 9. Moreouer how exact a watche and howe prouident a gouernment the Lorde exerciseth ouer his children reade it notablie described Psalm 139.1 c. O Lorde saith the Psalmist thou hast tryed mee and knowne mee Thou knowest my sitting and my rising thou vnderstandest my thought a farre off c. Thou boldest mee straite behinde and before c. Whether shall I goe from thy Spirit c. But all this to the singular benefit of euerie true seruant of God whom God nourtereth as a Father his childe whom hee dearely loueth And as hee dealeth thus watchfullie for euerie one a parte so doth hee for the whole bodie of the Church conioyntlie against the which the verie gates and power of Hell shall neuer bee able to preuaile as our Sauiour Chr●st h●mselfe assureth vs. Finallie the gouernment of God ouer the soules of his children whether of euerie one apart or of manie or of all together it is to be considered not onely in his long sufferance before their conuersion but also in their conuersion it selfe and for euer after So that if they waxe at any time forgetfull he causeth their owne heartes to smite them as hee did the heart of king Dauid after that hee had sinned in numbring the people hee giueth them troubled consciences he chastiseth them sharplie in their bodies because of the sinne of their soules he taketh awaye all comfort of his Spirit for the time though hee mindeth to restore them to their former ioyes againe But who can expresse the manifold wisedome of Gods most holie prouidence in the gouernment of his children Hetherto of the effectes of Gods most gracious prouidence towardes his Church and euerie member thereof LEt vs now come nowe to the chiefe cause of all The which as was saide is the meere grace and fauour of God Question What ground haue you hereof Answere Because thou wast precious in my sight saith the Lord by his holie Prophet and thou wert honourable and I loued thee therfore will I giue man for thee and people for thy sake Isai chapt 43.4 c. Explicatiō proofe The same we may see likewise testified Deut chapt 7. verses 6.7.8 c. and Ezek chapt 16.1.2.3 c. The which testimonies though they respected more particularlie the Church of the Iewes yet by them it is euident what manner of affection the Lord beareth towards his whole church both of Iewes and Gentiles and also what is the true cause of all the dignitie and happinesse of the Church euen the free loue and adoption or acceptance
Explication and proofe Our Sauiour Christ taketh it for granted that we ought most dearely to loue him For who can otherwise say or thinke but he must be conuicted in his owne conscience if hee haue any knowledge of that which our Sauiour hath wrought and suffered for him Well therefore This he inferreth iustly as a fruite belonging to that loue which his redeemed stand bound to beare vnto him that they doe declare it by their obeying of his commandements that is to say of the commandements of God which are the commandements of the Sonne as well as of the Father And to the same end hee repeateth it againe in the 21. verse of the same chapter saying Hee that hath my commandements and keepeth them is hee that loueth me To the which loue also hee doth in the same verse perswade by most forcible reasons For saith hee Hee that loueth me shall be loued of my Father and I will loue him and shew mine owne selfe vnto him And yet againe verse 23. If any man loue me hee will keepe my word and my Father will loue him and wee will come vnto him and we wil dwell with him But on the contrarie hee professeth in the 24. verse that hee accounteth none of them to beare him any true loue whosoeuer doe not keepe his words Of the which words our Sauiour saieth further That they are not his to wit as hee is man simply considered in his humane nature but his Fathers who sent him Moreouer for loue and the triall of true loue toward him by a generall care of obedience thus our Sauiour saith chap. 15.9.10 As the Father hath loued me so haue I loued you continue ye in my loue If ye will keepe my commandements ye shall abide in my loue as I haue kept my Fathers commandements and doe abide in his loue Proceede now to shew the rest of the duties in like generall manner Question Which may they be Answ They are all the duties of loue mutually to be performed of one christian toward an other and the same also from an humble and lowly minde This is very true For so did our Sauiour first of all giue to vnderstand by his washing of his Disciples feete as he doth plainely expresse his owne intent therein Explicatiō proofe For so soone as he had done it Know ye saith he what I haue done ye call me Master and Lord and ye doe wel for so I am If I then your Lord and Master haue washed your feete yee also ought to wash one anothers feete That is yee ought to carry this minde to be alwaies ready to doe as much as this comes too and that euen with all humblenes of minde void of ambition voide of all bitternes and contention c. For I saith our Sauiour haue giuen ye an example that ye should doe euen as I haue done to you Wherein also our Sauiour is very earnest saying as it followeth in the text Verily verily I say vnto you The seruant is not greater then his Master neither the Ambassadour greater then hee that sent him If ye knowe these thinges that is seeing nowe yee knowe them to belong to your office and dutie blessed are ye if ye doe them Iohn cha 13. verses 12 13 14 15 16 17. The same doctrine he renueth againe verses 34.35 of the same chapter saying likewise to the same his Disciples A new commandement that is a commandement the care whereof I doe renue and reuiue doe I giue vnto you that ye loue one another Yea as I haue loued you that ye also loue one another By this shall all men knowe that ye are my Disciples if ye haue loue one to another For verily true and vnfained loue not in word onely but in truth and in deede it is as our Sauiour in these wordes giueth to vnderstand so rare and difficult a grace to be obtained and so contrarie to flesh and blood and the practise of this selfe-louing world that it cannot but be acknowledged of all that knowe any thing that they haue beene singularly taught and instructed euen of God himselfe whosoeuer are indued with it And for the same cause doth our Sauiour yet againe renue and reuiue it as it were in a new parliament and that earnestly with a new weight of reason chap. 15. verses 12.13.14.15.16.17 This is my commandement that ye loue one another as I haue loued you Greater loue then this hath no man when any man bestoweth his life for his friends Ye are my friends if ye doe whatsoeuer I command you Henceforth I doe not call you seruants for the seruant doth not know what the Maister doth but I haue called you friends for all things that I haue heard of my Father haue I made knowne to you Ye haue not chosen me but I haue chosen you and or dained you that ye goe and bring forth fruite and that your fruite remaine that whatsoeuer ye shall aske the Father in my name he may giue it you These things command I you that ye loue one another This also is that which our Sauiour doth instantly pray for as a singular effect of the holy Ghost through the preaching of the Gospell chap. 17.20.21 I pray not for these alone but for them also which shall beleeue in me through their word he meaneth the preaching of his choise Disciples and other succeeding them That they all may be one as thou O Father art in me and I in thee that they may be also one in vs that the world may beleeue that thou hast sent me To wit as being conuicted thereof by so notable and admirable an effect and that therby many may be induced truly to beleeue from time to time These things beloued brethren wee are to apply to our selues For verily no man can be a true Christian without loue to the brethren nor vnlesse wee carrie so humble a minde that we be very ready willing according to those places and callings wherein God hath set vs to performe all good offices and duties of loue vnto them euen as it were to the washing of their feete The Christian King or Queene must not refuse to be a seruant to God for the benefit and welfare of the Church of Christ nay rather they must for the Lord Iesus sake and for that duties sake which they owe to him be willingly seruiceable to his Church as the holy Prophet Isaias doth by as meane a similitude as was the practise of our Sauiour in washing his Disciples feete giue plainely to vnderstand in the 23. verse of the 49. chap of his Prophesie Read also Psal 72.9 where the subiection which is due to our Sauiour himselfe from the Kings and Princes of the earth is noted by the same phrase of speech They that dwell in the wildernes shall kneele before him and his enemies shal licke the dust The Kings of Tarshish and of the Ilandes shall bring presents c. Wherefore if Kings and Queenes ought to
either sort of these duties doe belong herevnto And first as touching the former sort it is euident that they doe so euen from that similitude of the body which S. Paul hath vsed as may well be obserued from the neare knitting of the members in the naturall body and from their mutuall tendernes each to other answerable to the same their neare connexion and according to that sweet law which God hath set in nature For seeing as hath beene declared alreadie all Christians are most nearely linked together in Christ Iesus euen by the bond of that Spirit of his which is the worker of all good and holy coniunction and likewise seeing that spirituall head to wit our Lord Iesus Christ from the which euery member of his bodie receiueth life is more liuely and mighty in operation by infinite degrees then is the naturall head of the naturall body therefore ought all Christians to be most hearty tender and faithfull in their mutuall loue to the cherishing and hearting on of one another in the way to the kingdome of heauen And for the very same cause doth our Apostle S. Paul in the 13. chap. immediatly after this doctrine of our most neare coniunction with our Sauiour Christ cōtained in our text treat of Christian loue as being in respet of some fifteene or sixteene properties which hee there rehearseth the way of all perfection And as else where hee termeth it the bond of perfection and that which wee ought to grow vp and encrease in continually Colos 3.14 and Ephes 4 15. As touching the Apostles owne example and practise what it was wee haue seene before Rom. 1.11.12.1 Cor. 9.19 c. Read also 2. Ep. 11.28.29 Now to the performance of this euery one according to that which hath likewise beene set downe before is to haue due regard what member hee for his part is in the body whether an eye to foresee or an eare to hearken after things as a good intelligencer concerning the affaires of the Church or a hand to help the poore or a foot to be commanded and imploied about any meaner seruice c. And accordingly euery one is to doe the proper office of such or such a member as he is To the which end purpose here call againe to mind Rom. ch 12. verses 3.4 ● c. And Ephes ch 4. verses 4.11.12.13.14.15.16 and verse 25 Read also Iob ch 25.15 where we may see how hee for his part was an eye to the blind c. And 1. Iohn 1.6.7 If we say we haue fellowship with God saith the Apostle and walke in darknes we lie and doe not truly But if we walke in the light as he is in the light we haue fellowship one with another and the blood of Iesus Christ his Sonne cleanseth vs from all sinne It ought to be in the Church of our Sauiour Christ in regard of spirituall graces as it was in the gathering of Manna All brought that which they gathered to one heape and all had their meet portion from the same heape again and so there was found sufficien● for euery man So it ought also to be in the communicating of bodily reliefe and succour according to the excellent doctrine of the Apostle Paul in that behalfe 2. Cor 8.13.14.15 And hereof we haue the Church of Corinth and other of the primitiue Churches notable examples for the best ordered and most charitable communion Act. 4.32 c. As the Sea filleth all riuers and all riuers runne againe into the Sea so should it be among the people of God Euery one ought to loue and tender all and all againe euery one the Minister the people and the people their Ministers c. 1 Thess 2.7.8.11.19.20 and cha 5.12.13.14.15 Heb. 13. verses 17.18 Philip. 2.1 2.3.4 The loue of the Saints one toward another and toward the whole Church it must be a holy loue that is a more excellent loue their that which is naturall or ciuill Philosophical insomuch as the corporation wherof we are memebers in the Church is not a naturall or ciuill body but a sacred and holy body as we haue seene before For the precepts of which loue read Rom. 12.9.10 c. Gal. 6.1.2 Heb. 13.1.2.3 1. Pet. 1.23 whereof we haue Dauid for one notable example Psal 16.3 All my delight saith he is in the Saints c. Hetherto of the first sort of the duties more generally considered Now touching the second sort more particularly mentioned in the second part of the answer First for the preaching of the Gospel that it is to be vsed as a meanes to bring vs and to settle vs in this holy communion read 1. Ioh. 1.3 That which wee haue seene and heard declare wee vnto you that ye may haue also fellowship with vs and that our fellowship also may be with the Father and with his Sonne Iesus Christ In which respect also it is that the Apostle Paul doth heartily praise God for that fellowship which the Philippians had in the Gospell by the preaching thereof as we read chap. 1. verses 3. and 5. of that Epistle which hee wrote vnto them That the holy Sacraments are to be vsed to the same end remember what the Apostle Paul hath written in our text By one Spirit saith he we are baptized into one body c. And likewise in the same place We are caused to drinke into one Sp rit Let vs consider also his earnest assertion in the same Epistle chap. 10.16.17 The cup of blessing which we blesse is it not the communion that is a true signe and pledge of the communion of the blood of Christ The bread which wee breake is it not the communion that is a true signe c. as before of the bodie of Christ. That is to say Haue not we that truly beleeue in our Sauiour Christ and who doe by a true faith eate the bread and drinke the wine of the Sacrament haue we not I say our very true communion with the body blood though in a spirituall manner yea with the whole humane nature yea and thereby euen with whole Christ both God and man As though the Apostle should earnestly affirme that we haue our communion with him assuredly And as we haue it with our Sauiour so also wee haue it by him as certainly among our selues as it followeth in the words of the Apostle saying For we that are many are one bread and one body because we are all partakers of one bread And all through one and the same Spirit working in vs all Call also to minde here againe Act. 2.42 c. and ch 4.32 and Ephes 4.3.4.5.6 And for Praier read in the same Epistle to the Ephesians cha 6.18 Pray alwaies with all manner of Praier and supplication in the Spirit and watch therevnto with all perseuerance and supplication for all Saints And 2. Cor. 1.11 And Philip. 1.19 For I know saith the Apostle that this shal turne to my saluation through your praier and by
seruice because by the exercise of sundry bodily afflictions I was in the middest of my thoughts this way constrained to keepe house and chamber for a long time together more then ordinarily and chiefly because thereby I found my heart through the blessing of GOD vppon my afflictions more humbled and sanctified thervnto being as one liuing in Diem death euery day threatening dissolution and hasting the decay of the outward man And that in such sort that before I am olde the infirmities of age are with a swift foote as it were before the time come vpon me In which respect as I thought with my selfe necessitie lay vpon me also to make as much hast as I could to doe the best seruice to God and to his Church that I might possibly attaine vnto before I goe hence and bee not Fiftly in my very inward parts me thought I saw and doe see very clearely that nothing is more necessatie in these daies wherein all things are growing to most lamentable vncertainties for want of reuerend and studious attending to the word as if all things might be carried after probabilities of disputation Seeing therefore nothing I say more necessarie then such a writing as might by the reading of it retentiuely stay the mindes of Gods people in a grounded meditation of the most sure and certaine principles of religion by explications and proofes from the word of God which is the onely sure certaine ground and stay of mans vncertaine and weak wandering minds hauing good trust that it hath pleased God that this writing should bee in some measure fitted herevnto I haue beene hereby incouraged to proceed so farre as I haue done And the rather also that from the viewe of this labour it may appeare to the Churc●es of God yea euen in the sight of all in the world that will looke vpon it what those things are which the faithfull Ministers of Iesus Christ doe beate their wittes about and wherein they spend themselues among their seuerall flockes and charges And that it might from hence also appeare in how many truthes that is in particulars aboue number we do agree teaching the same things from one and the same word by one and the same Spirit with a sweet consent in comparison of those fewe things wherein the iudgements of some doe differ till God shal in them all so cleare our iudgements and frame our hearts to a more full agreement in all things against the distractions of these heauie daies Finally seeing the former part of my collectiō of the doctrine of the Law being wel accepted of many I conceiued so much the better hope that this of the Gospell should finde good entertainment among the good seruants of God But now how well all this busines hath beene performed it belongeth to you the well learned and godly Ministers of the Gospel of our Lord Iesus Christ to discerne and iudge and accordingly so farre as you shall find cause either to reproue or to giue the glory to God And if you finde that which your soule liketh then say you spare not that whatsoeuer is well God hath heerein glorified himselfe by as weake and vnworthie an instrument of his as could haue beene found out among numbers of those whom it might haue pleased him to vse to such a seruice as this is And concerning my owne selfe this I willingly professe and say as it is in the peaceable and prouerbiall speech of Gideon What is my vintage in comparison of the gleaning of the least of you my reuerend Fathers and brethren if your labours in the holy Ministerie of the word had beene gathered together as these are And who am I but as the diligent Apothecarie to admit the greatest commendation that may seeme to agree in comparison of the most learned and skilfull Phisition or onely as the painefull Bee to fill the hiue with the hony drawne out of your sweete flowers as was acknowledged in the beginning Now therefore vpon these considerations gathering some hope of your fauourable interpretation of all things seeing all is well meant and intended towards you yet me thinke that I heare some say that this kinde of writing is ouer-long and tedious and able to discourage the minde of the Reader before he set his minde vnto it To this vnder your correction I answere First that if such as so may thinke will orderly reade the Questions and Answeres onely then shall it be freed from that conceite of theirs by many degrees of breuitie Secondly I doubt not but euen the same being once acquainted with the Questions and Answeres and giuing their mindes to meditate vpon them wil growe desirous to read and stay their thoughts vpon the Proofes also and that so doing they shall through the blessing of God finde no small profite ioy and comfort to their soules in that they shall find them to bee the marrowe and life of those Answeres which bee not the very wordes of the holy Scriptures and some lightsome clearing also to the same holy Scriptures themselues Thirdly I would desire such as so thinke to answere themselues from a familiar similitude which they may take from their owne counting-housen I meane such as bee rich in the world who for the most part can afford the least time to the diligent reading and studying of holy things that as they doe not account it a vaine or vnnecessarie thing to haue many more bagges of money standing together then they can presently vse because they can one time or other finde vse to improue them all to gaine so they would in this case bee of like iudgement to thinke that it is to the best purpose in all the world to haue the largest spirituall Treasurie that may bee containing the greatest varietie of the instructions comforts and duties of the Gospell of Gods heauenly kingdome though they doe but at conuenient times busie themselues to reade that which is brought to their hands concerning such or such a profitable discourse either for instruction or for comfort or to stirre vp to dutie euen as the necessities of their soules shall from time to time require Whom also I would in the name of God earnestly pray that they would consider further with themselues how necessarie a thing it is specially for them that be rich in this world that they should haue by them besides that most notable meanes of publike Preaching which God hath sent them the helpe of such holy writings as might most strongly stay their mindes in the long and serious thoughts of the necessarie points of their saluation because otherwise the vehement and vncessant cares of this life wil assuredly like a cancre fret out or as a viper gnawe out the very heart stringes of Religion euen in them that be not the worst sort of worldly minded men Last of all as touching length of writing that is not to be accounted too long which is no longer then the largnes of the matter it it selfe
doth necessarily require Thus much in way of rendering some account of the present enterprise with this admonition necessarily as I suppose inserted in respect of some who without such caution were most like to mislike to their owne greatest harme But to returne my speech to you the reuerend and learned Preachers of Gods word this doe I now humbly beseech of you in the Lord Iesus that insomuch as yee are the salt of the earth the light of the world and Stewards in the Lords house appointed by God himselfe to giue to euery one his portion in due season that you would as ye doe and yet still more and more consider the peerlesse dignitie efficacie of your office of Preaching farre excelling all writing or printing with incke and paper both for the daily calling and edifying of the Church of God as well in knowledge and comfort of faith as vnto obedience of life euen to the comming of our Lord Iesus at the ende of the world You are by your holy Preaching the most actiue pen-men of the holy Ghost to write yea to ingraue all holy doctrine and godlines in the heartes of all the Elect of God with a farre more deepe and firme impression then can be made in any thinne and shallowe papers You are those holy instruments of God which are most effectual both to giue the clearest light of knowledg and to work the best impressions in memorie and to bring the conscience to greatest remorse and to affect the heart with the sweetest and most durable comfort and also most powerfully to stirre vp to the practise of the duties of a godly life then any other can be Whence it is and no doubt hath alwaies bin found that among the godly such speeches as followe haue more often proceeded from their hearing of the word preached then from priuate reading or any other meanes I neuer vnderstood this point saith one so well as I did by such a Sermon I remember such a point well saith another euer since I heard such a text handeled I was neuer pricked in cōscience as I was at such a Sermon saith a third Me thought the Preacher spake particularly to me c. I was greatly cōforted saith a fourth by the doctrine of such a Preacher at such such a time Wee see well nowe say all that haue any grace in them with one consent that we ought to be more carefull to heare the word pre●●hed and to pray more earnestly to God for his blessing vpon it then euer we thought before These kinde of speeches I say being often in the mouthes of such Christians as be reuerend hearers of Sermons doe euidently declare that Preaching hath a speciall power giuen it of God to worke most mightie effects in the hearts of the people of God aboue al that any readings or other priuate or publicke exercises of religion can worke So that though reading of good bookes is very profitable to such as doe in godly manner acquaint themselues therewithall yet in commending of the reading of godly writings we must alwaies admonish ●he people that they preferre the hearing of holy Sermons and the reading of the holy Scriptures before their reading of any other writinges besides Yea so iust cause is there to admonish all other hereof that the most godly and learned Preachers themselues will from their owne experience easily acknowledge that they could not haue vnderstoode the mysteries of Gods truth so clearely nor haue found them so comfortable by their owne reading prayer and meditation as by the grace of God they now do in a more liberall taste of Gods power and glory had they not their owne selues not onely preached the same to others but also heard the same mysteries preached by other Ministers vnto them And so doe I willingly confesse concerning my selfe and the present Treasurie so called in these bookes O therefore be ye intreated for the Lords cause to labour to the fulfilling of the most worthie and noble dutie of your office that is the dutie of preaching which of all other is the most worthy in the sight of God most profitable to his Church Without the which no doubt all writing yea euen the holy Scriptures themselues would lie contemned and despised and without any fruit vnlesse the people were put in minde of their duty yea if they were not earnestly stirred vp by you to haue the due regard of them Spartam igitur vos nacti estis reuerēdi in Christo Patres ac Fratres vos inquam prae coeteris Prouinciam sanè selectissimam Hanc igitur macti virtute vestra coelitus sc inspirata maxime .i. qua poteritis fide diligentia exornate Ita Deum remuneratorem experiemini benignissimum locupletissimumque Ego similiter eadem gratia diuina fretus vestrae virtutis imitator maximé in votis habeo vt in idem vobiscum opus totis viribus huic scribendi negotio temperans multo deinceps accuratius Domino pro sua immensa bonitate concedente incumbam Optimé valete And now hence-forth extending my speech yet more generally this I desire that all might vnderstand that albeit this booke is in some most dutifull regard dedicated to the right worshipfull aboue named insomuch as it pleased God by their good meanes to vouchsafe mee the principall time of such quiet peace and rest with libertie leisure comfort and maintenance in the Church of God wherein I might write any thing at all worthy the reading of any Neuerthelesse that which I doe in speciall manner dedicate to them as most properly and of best right belonging to them the same doe I frō a more common affection of christian loue and duty and with their very Christian good liking I am sure communicate also to you Wishing and praying with all my heart that it may be aboundantly blessed of God to the singular both profit and comfort not onely of them and theirs but also of you and of all that do belong vnto you To the which end and purpose two things do I hence-forth most instantly request of you First that you would esteeme of these writings only as of a fruit of that holy prophecie or interpretation which is an ordinary gift of God in his church to help toward the more cleare vnderstanding of that manifold wisedome of God which is fully and perfectly contained in his owne most holy Scriptures alone and therewithall to lay open more plainely that manifold comfort which is inclosed in them and likewise to make it more manifest how plentifull fruites of thankfulnes and obedience is due from vs to God according to the same For as touching the thinges themselues they are as was saide euen now to be found most perfectly treasured vp in the holy Scriptures of GOD himselfe and in no other writings beside Neither in very deede doe these holy Scriptures of God stand in need of any other method and disposing nor of any other interpretation then their owne most pure
First therefore I would haue you shewe me as you haue bene taught what the Gospell is Question The holy Gospell is a most ioyfull doctrine or diuine message of most glad tydings sent and published to the world from God himselfe Answere and by the Ministery of his faithfull seruants the which teacheth and assureth euery one that heareth and receiueth it both what that righteousnesse and saluation is together with the causes and particular fruites or benefits and comforts of the same which is to be apprehended and layed hold vpon onely by faith in Christ and also what manner of obedience that is which God requireth and accepteth onely as a fruit of thankefulnesse but for no part of iustification or for any peece of the merit of saluatiō before him of euery one to whō the same righteousnesse and saluation with all the fruits benefits and comforts thereof doe through his most free grace and mercy in Christ Iesus appertaine and belong The morall Lawe of God as hath beene declared in the former part of our Catechisme is a diuine rule or doctrine Explicatiō and proofe teaching and commanding the perfect righteousnes of workes the which if a man could perfectly fulfill hee should surely liue therein Leuit. 18.5 And to that effect doth our Sauiour Christ answere him who asked what he might doe that he might inherit eternal life Thou knowest the commandements saith our Sauiour c. as though he should haue said Thou canst not possibly haue a more perfect rule of the righteousnes of the outward workes and actions of thy life and of the right holy disposition and inward affection of thy heart according to the first creation of mankinde then the Lawe of God is Matth. 19 16 c. Mark 10 17 c. Luk. 18 18. c. But because as we haue beene further instructed we are now of a very sinfull disposition What the Go●pel● is and euen through the corruption of nature trangressors of the law the law is so ●ar from all grace of iustifying sauing of vs that it doth most iustly conuince vs of sin and consequētly of iust deserued wrath from the iudgment seat of God Wherefore necessarily are we all to seeke to be iustified an other way that i● by the free grace fatherly mercy of God through the righteousnes holines of the works merit of the perfect obediēce of the son of God our Lord Iesus Christ and not by our owne workes either already wrought or w●●ch we may at any time hereafter possibly worke For this cause behold I beseech you the wonderfull grace most rich and precio●s mercy of our God in that as was now answered hee hath not onely p●b●●●●ed this doctrine of free grace through the righteousnes of our L Iesus Christ ●o iustification saluatiō the which the law strictly taken doth not directly so much as once tel vs of but also for that he is most graciously minded to gi●e vs the knowledge faith yea euen the very possession whole fruit of it This part of holy doctrine is of vs called the Gospell the which in the greek lang●age wherein it was first written by the holy Euangelists in the new Testament euidently signifieth good tydings or a ioyfull and gladsome message The Greeke word is Euaggelion compounded of Eu which noteth the goodnes and commoditie or the praise and commendation of a thing and of Aggello which is To bring tidings or to report declare a message Of these Greek words ioyned in one not onely those four who wrote the history of our Sa Christ but also such as were special attendants vpon the Apostles to preach where they had once planted the Gospell Luk 4.18 Ephes 2 1● 1. Cor. 1. ●7 1. Pet. 1.25 Rom. 10.15 G●● 1.8.9 Reu. ●1 20 ch 2. 1. c. are called Euangelists Yea frō these Greeke words compounded in one all Preaching is called Euangelizing And from Aggello Preachers are called sometimes Angels that is such as are sent in the name of God vpon this his most honourable and ioyfull message The Gospel as we call it in our Engli●h doth not onely in the latine tongue but also in diuers other languages take the name from the same Greek words and is made the vulgar common speech in many Christian churches like as diuers other both greek hebrew words are pertaining to the Gospell such as are Iesus Messiah Christ c. Yea among those of the heathen also who haue vsed the latine speech good and welcome newes or messages such as among them haue beene thought worthy any reward to the bringers Cicero ad Att. c lib. 2. App●●nece Cice●● Homer ●●ys● v p. 152 ●●●rat ● Ar●● Nen●p Ell●t or sacrifice and thankes to God they haue beene by ancient vse called from the same Greeke words Euangelia according to the example of the Grecians themselues going b●fore them therein The same vse is of the hebrew word Besorah answering to this as we read 2. Sam 4.10 One that brought Dauid tidings of Saules death thought that Dauid would haue giuen him a reward for his tidings The word ther is Besorah And in the same place it is said that he which reported this to Dauid thought himselfe to be Chimbassar as one bringing such tydings as should be welcome For such is the vsuall signification of the verbe Bissar of this substantiue Besorah as we may perceiue by that which we read 1. Sam. 31 9. The Philistines are said to publish the death of Saul and his sons for ioyful newes or tydings and to the praise of their idolls But 2. Sam. 1 20. Publish it not saith Dauid Al Tebassru lest the daughters of the Philistines reioyce lest the daughters of the vncircumcised triumph read also ch 18. v. 19. v. 27 v. 31. And 2. king 7 9 Ps 68 11. This therefore being a word vsed to signifie all good welcome tydings it is in the holy Scriptures for excellencies sake transferred to note out the best newes aboue all other euen the publishing of the ioyfull tydings of the Gospel For the which read Isay 40 9. O thou that bringest good tydings to Zion Meb●stereth that is as it is well translated Euangelizas preachest the Gospell c. And likewise ch 41 27. I wil giue to Ierusalem saith the Lord one that shall bring good tydings Mebassar This messenger is Christ ch 61 1. The Lord hath sent me to Preach good tydings to the poore And of all Preachers of the Gospell it is saide more generally ch 52 vers 7. according also as the Apostle Paul alleadgeth it Rom. 10.15 O how beautifull vpon the mountaines are the feet of him that declareth and publisheth peace that declareth good tydings and publisheth saluation saying vnto Zion Thy God raigneth And Nahum Chap. 1.15 Read also Psalm 40.9 and Psal 96 2. Finally from this Hebrew word the holy Euangelists who wrot the History of the Gospell are
and all things that we doe according to his word well pleasing and acceptable before him Answere 1. It is by reason of that infinite loue of God wherewith hee hath made vs accepted to himselfe in his owne beloued Sonne our Lord Iesus Christ whose righteousnesse and whole obedience and worthinesse faith apprehendeth yea and maketh vs one with Christ himselfe by spirituall coniunction and that according to the most gracious and fatherly good will and pleasure of GOD toward vs in the same his Sonne 2. It is also because God esteemeth it the greatest honour which we can possibly doe vnto him yea and the very ground and originall of yeelding him any true henour at all when we doe beleeue in him as being most true and faithfull of his word aboue all that the naturall sense and reason of man can possibly conceiue and vnderstand 3. Furthermore because faith onely teacheth vs the true deniall of our selues and of all trust in any thing but in God alone 4. Finally because faith is instrumentally as it were the seede yea the very life of all true obedience vnto him Faith most pleasing to God and why There might more reasons bee alleadged from whence the excellencie of faith may be discerned as will further appeare by that which followeth but we will content our selues with these for the present Explicatiō and proofe Now for the proofe of them first let it be well considered that euen as God is in speciall manner pleased to shewe mercy for mercy pleaseth him Micah 7.18 so likewise doth faith singularly please him in so much as it maketh most precious account of his mercy and doth most dutifully attend vpon the same as we read Ps 147.11 The Lord delighteth in them that feare him and attend vpon his mercy Now if we shall inquire yet further why it is that the Lord delighteth so greatly to shewe mercie to miserable and sinfull men it is doubtles for no other cause but for that infinite loues sake which hee beareth first to his owne naturall and onely begotten son our Lord Iesus Christ and then to them for his sake in whom he hath adopted them according to that which we read Ephes chap. 1.5 6. c. Secondly we may see by that which is saide of Abraham how greatly God doth account himselfe glorified of those that do truly and constantly beleeue in him For so we read of Abraham that he gaue great glory to God in that he did not doubt of the promise of God through vnbeleefe but was strengthened in faith aboue hope beleeued vnder hope c. He being fully assured that he who had promised was able also to doe it Ro. 4 18 19 20 21. And for this grace of faith all the seruants of God themselues are specially honoured graced as we may say according to that wee reade touching many particulars mentioned in the 11. ch of the ep to the Heb. from the beginning of the ch c. and as it is generally affirmed of them v. 39. All through faith obtained good report Whereas on the contrary they that beleeue not in God are charged to make God a lyar Then the which what greater dishonour can any doe to him who alone is the God of all truth 1. Iohn 5 10 And how also can they that be such more dishonour and reproch themselues For the third branch read Philip. 3 3 4 c. And here it may be wel worth the noting that as mans calling of the truth of Gods word into questiō was the beginning of mans fall from God so it pleaseth God that faith in the truth of his word promise should be the recouery revniting of man vnto God againe Finally call here againe to minde the words of the former answere Read also 2. Cor. 13 14. Gal. chap. 5 verse 6. VVhat Faith is BVt of the nature of faith wee are now in the next place to enquire further as after a iewell of speciall price and as after that which is the very staffe and stay of our soules as we haue partly beene giuē to vnderstand already Now therefore seeing faith is so excellent a grace shewe you yet more fully what the nature of it is Question How haue you learned to answere this so speciall a point Answere The faith whereby euery true beleeuer is iustified and saued is that most holy and excellent gift or grace of our spirituall regeneration and new birth wherein resteth the principall comfort of our soules here in this life The which arising from the knowledge of the glorious grace of God in the face of Iesus Christ and sweetly and comfortably reposing and resting it selfe onely and wholly vpon the vndoubted certaintie of the diuine truth and faithfulnes of Gods most gracious and free promise concerning the same our iustification and saluation by Christ yea laying sure hold vpon Christ himselfe in whom onely and al-sufficiently life righteousnes and saluation is to be found It hath furthermore many right worthy and admirable effects in the heart of euery true beleeuer Which are those so notable effects Question Answere 1. It reioyceth the heart of the true beleeuer with ioy vnspeakable and glorious 2. It imboldeneth him to make open profession and confession of his faith in the name of Iesus Christ euen in the middest of the most cruell despitefull aduersaries thereof 3. It causeth his soule What Faith is to haue good trust and affiance vnder the holy wings of the fatherly prouidēce protection of God in the most bitter tēptations trials of this life 4. It inciteth also and incourageth the beleeuer to earnest and constant prayer 5. It continually soliciteth to repentance and care of a godly life here in this world 6. Finally it is accompanied with hope and that also in a patient waiting for eternal happines and glory after this life in the kingdome of heauen That the true iustifying faith is of such an excellent nature as you haue described Explicatiō and proofe and that it worketh these so notable effects as you haue rehearsed it is euery where euident in the holy Scriptures as hath beene declared in the last Sermon vpon this point Let vs now briefly here call them againe to mind But first of all in so much as the word faith is vsed in the holy Scriptures in diuers and sundry significations it shall not be amisse for vs to set downe a note thereof And let vs beginne with this that faith is vsed sometimes to signifie the doctrine of faith as Act. chap 6 7. A great company and of the Priests some were obedient to the faith And againe chap. 13 8. Rom. 1 5 and chap. 3.31 and chap. 16 26. Gal. 1 22 and chap. 3 verses 2 5 23 and 1. Tim. verse 2 chap. 1. Paul writeth to Timotheus calling him his naturall sonne in the faith meaning to giue him this testimonie that hee was a true beleeuer according to the true doctrine of faith Read
life Yea and for the better declaration of this excellent doctrine I desire that you shew which they are as each succeede other in either of the same respects Question FIrst therefore which are the former sort of those graces that belong to mortification so farre as for some orders sake we may for the present discerne of them Answere They are these which follow First a true knowledge and earnest meditation of sinne yea of that originall fountaine of sinne which is in our wicked nature How infinite also in number and how haynous in offence our sinnes are and alwaies haue beene in the sight of God How grieuous to the children of God who haue alreadie begun to repent so farre as they haue broken forth to Gods dishonour Ad how dangerous and deadly they are euen against our owne soules Secondly shame and confusion of face and conscience both before God and the holy Angels and also if neede so require before all good and godly men Thirdly remorse and pricking of conscience in the sence of the guiltines of our sinnes and in the feare of Gods iust wrath and vengeance due to them Fourthly godly sorrow and mourning euen with salt teares of repentance from the bitternes of a mans soule in contrition as it were and brokennes of heart before the Lord. Fiftly a willing suffering and induring of all rebukes and chastisements which God sendeth at any time to the taming and subduing of our vnruly and rebellious nature But aboue all and in all a most neare application of the death of our Sauiour Christ to our wounded soules and consciences the which onely is a most soueraine plaister to mortifie and kill as it were the proud flesh of sinne and also to heale and quiet euerie soule that is troubled and distressed for the same Explication and proofe These indeede doe most immediatly goe before in the worke of Gods grace to the mortification of sinne Concerning the first whereof that is the knowledge of sinne c. it commeth as we haue alreadie learned from the doctrine of the law which God hath for the benefit of his children made as it were a seruant to the Gospell though to the obstinate it is armed as a Iudge to their condemnation And further for the meditation of the greatnes of sinne and the infinite number of them euen from our youth yea from our originall corruption of nature consider the example of Dauid Psal 25.7 and 38.4 and 40.12 and 51.4.5 and Psal 19.12 And of Iob. Cha. 9.2.3 and Chap. 13.26 And of Ezra Chap. 9 6. And for the griefe which we put the godlie vnto by our sinne consider it from the example of Lot 2. Pet. 2.8 of Dauid Psal 119. verses 136.158 of Ier Chap. 9.1 and Paul 2. Cor. 12.21 and Phil 3.18 Secondly for shame and confusion read in the same Ch of Ezra and in the beginning of the same verse where note that when the seruants of God are ashamed and confounded for the sinnes wherein other haue chiefely trespassed how much more then ought euery one to bee ashamed of his owne For the which reade further Ieremy 3.25 Wee lye downe in our confusion and our shame couereth vs for wee haue sinned against the Lord our God wee and our Fathers from our youth euen vnto this day and haue not obeyed the voice of the Lord our God Reade also Ezek. Chap. 16.68 Thou shalt remember thy waies and bee ashamed c. And I will establish my couenant with thee and thou shalt knowe that I am the Lord. That thou maiest remember and bee ashamed and neuer open thy mouth any more because of thy shame when I am pacified toward thee for all that thou hast done saith the Lord God And Rom. 6.21 What fruite had yee then in those thinges whereof yee are now ashamed For the ende of those things is death Marke heere the iust cause why we should be ashamed of sinne namely that we should euer be so foolish as to addict our mindes to follow so greedily and to delight so excessiuely as we haue done in that which without repentance would be our vtter destruction For want of this shame for sinne read a vehement rebuke Ier. 3 3. Thou haddest a whores forehead and wouldest not be ashamed And chap. 6.15 Were they ashamed when they had committed abomination Nay they were not ashamed no neither could they haue any shame therefore shall they fall among the slaine c. The Prophet speaketh of a godly shame for otherwise by the conuiction of their consciences that they doe ill in the committing of sinne the very wicked haue a certaine shame though it profiteth them not as chap. 2.26 As the thiefe is ashamed when he is found so is the house of Israel ashamed they their Kings and their Princes and their Prophets Saying to a tree thou art my father and to a stone thou hast begotten me c. There is none in the world who if they haue not by custome of sinne and hardnesse of heart as it were feared their consciences with a hoat yron as the Apostle writeth but they haue akinde of shame and blushing in their face when their sinne is found out according to the prouerbiall saying The good blood lyeth not But the shame of those that are in the way of repentance is an other manner of shamefastnesse for they doe willingly shame themselues and that euen as in the sight of God and from their very hearts in a dislike of their sinne c. Thirdly for remorse and pricking of conscience read Gen. 42.21.22 We haue verily sinned against our brother say the brethren of Ioseph c. Read also 2. Sam. chap. 24.10 Dauids heart smote him after hee had numbred the people and Dauid said to the Lord I haue sinned exceedingly in that I haue done Therefore now Lord I beseech thee take away the trespasse of thy seruant for I haue done very foolishly And Acts. 2.37 Now when they heard it to wit how grieuous a sinne they ●ad cōmitted in crucifying the sonne of God they were pricked in their hearts c. Fourthly concerning godly sorrowe and mourning the holy Apostle Paul writeth that godly sorrow causeth repentance to saluation neuer to be repented of 2. Cor. 7.10 The Apostle meaneth that this is one helping cause among the rest through the worke of Gods grace though not the onely cause It causeth repentance because it doth by the grace of God prouoke it not onely to beginne but also more and more to worke forth the owne worke For when a man is truly sorie for sinne hee indeuoureth to leaue it and to take a better course In which respect King Salomon Eccles 7.4 affirmeth that it is better to goe to the house of mourning then to goe to the house of feasting because this is the end of all men and the liuing will lay it to his heart Likewise he saith that anger is better then laughter he speaketh of that anger which a man
should oppresse their brethren shewing therby how greatly the sinne should be detested It is like to the speach of our Sauiour Christ that his Disciples should shake off the dust of their feete against the despisers of the Gospell Note also the speach of the Lord by his Prophet Isai chap 30.22 Yee shall pollute the couering of the images of siluer and the rich ornament of thine images of gold and cast them away as a menstruous clothe and thou shalt say vnto it Get thee hence And chap 31.7 In that daye euery man shall cast out his idoles of siluer his idoles of gold which your hands haue made you euen a sin And by Ezekiel chapt 18.31 Cast away from you all your transgressions wherby ye haue transgressed not onely idolatrie as before in Isaiah but also euery other sinne Consider likewise that which the Prophet Daniell speaketh to Nabuchadnezzer in the name of the Lord Breake of thy sinnes by righteousnesse Abrumpe c. Ther must of necessitie be rough dealing and an holy violence vsed against sinne It will not yeelde vnlesse it be vanquished If it be not killed it will kill c. They therfore that striue most manfully and couragiouslie against sinne yea euen to the death of it they are to be accounted of all others the most valiant men Prouer 16.32 Hee that is slowe to anger is better then the mightie man and hee that ruleth his owne minde is better then hee that winneth a Cittie And Hebre 12.4 Yee haue not yet resisted vnto blood striuing against sinne The weapons whereby sinne is to be incountred must be spirituall according to the nature of the aduersarie Namely by holie prayers and sometimes with fasting as the importunitie of the enemie shall require Our resistance or reuenge must not be by whipping of our selues or by any other like Popish penance but onelie as God requireth in his word All other practises and blinde deuotions are of no reckoning with God Coloss chapt 2.20 As touching those that make semblance of misliking sinne generallie but when their owne particular sinnes come in question they deale as fauourablie with them as may bee they are too great triflers and euen cowardes in this Spirituall warfare They may well be compared to those that make as if they would throwe their children to the puttocks as they say but they imbrace and holde them fast in their armes still Sinne must not be so dallied withall if we meane in good earnest to repent wee must deale with it as with a most impudent and shameles guest that must be thrust out of dores by the head and shoulders as they say before he will departe Thirdlie touching admonition to others that they may learne from our example and experience to take warning read the excellent practise of Dauid Psalm 32. and againe Psalm 51.13 Restore mee to the ioye of thy saluation and stablish mee with thy free Spirit Then shall I teach thy wayes vnto the wicked and sinners shall be conuerted vnto thee And Psal 124 consider both the title the Psal And Ezekiel 18.30 Returne and cause others to turne away from all your transgressions so iniquitie shall not be your destruction It is agreeable to the precept of our Sauiour Christ Luk 22.32 When thou art conuerted saith our Sauiour to Peter strengthen thy brethren Fourthlie concerning watchfulnes that sinne renewe not the strength read 1. Cor 9.27 I beat down my bodie and bring it into subiection lest by any meanes after that I haue preached to others I my selfe should be reprooued Sinne recouering strength is more hard to be subdued afterward Matth 12.43 c. Muta animalia cum fraude capiantur si aliquo se modo in fugam excitauerint fiunt postmodùm cautiora vitantque semper ea omnia in quibus dolos insidiasque senserūt Sic hominem inquit Lactantius poenitentia cautum ac diligentem facit ad euitanda peccata in quae semel fraude deciderit The dumbe creatures growe more warie after they haue escaped their danger much more ought man a reasonable creature growe daily more warie against the danger of sinne Fifthlie how the feare of God helpeth forward this parte of repentance yea how it preuenteth sinne Read Genes 39.9 How can I doe this great wickednesse saith Ioseph to his incontinent Mistris and sinne against God And againe chap 42.8 and chap 50.19 Hee perswadeth his brethren that he minded no reuenge against them because hee had the feare of God before his eyes Reade also Prouer 16.6 By the feare of the Lord men depart from euill And chap 14.27 The feare of the Lord is a Well-spring of life to auoyd the snares of death and chapt 23.17 and Iob chapt 28. vers 28. and Prou 3.7 Read also 2. Cor 7.11 Wher the Apostle rehearseth this holie feare among diuers other of the helping graces to repentance Godlie sorrow saith hee causeth repentance to saluation not to bee repented of c. For beholde this thing that ye haue beene godlilie sorie what great care it hath wrought in you Yea what clearing of your selues Yea what indignation Yea what feare c. Read also Psal 2.11 Serue the Lord in feare reioyce in trembling And Ps 4.4 Tremble and sinne not examine your owne heart vpon your bed and be still that is take heed that ye doe not adde sinne to sinne in an obstinate rebellion against God Selah And Psalm 99.1 Finallie as for the meanes that hinder this parte of Repentance aswell as that other part now following we will consider of them together afterward In the meane season let vs proceede to those helping graces which doe formerly serue to stir vp to newnes of life which is the second part of Repētāce Question Which are they Answere First and principallie an earnest meditation and application of the Resurrection of our Sauiour CHRIST to our dull and dead soules that by the vertue therof they may be quickened suppled and made lithe as it were with a most holie and pretious oyle to rise vp to newnesse of life Secondly a like earnest meditation of all other the mercies of God concerning the comforte of this life whose bountifulnesse and euery parte fruite or benefite thereof ought to leade vs to Repentance yea to carrie vs on forwarde to this our second parte of Repentance Thirdly a faithfull and beleeuing meditation of all the sweet and faithfull promises of God touching the blessednes of the life to come Finallie the feare of God is not onely as a bridle to with-holde from sinne as was answered before but it is also a sharp spurre to quicken vs to newnes of life It is very true and therfore when the Prophet Samuel exhorteth the people of God to serue the Lord Explication and proofe hee maketh the feare of God the ground or cause of it Therefore saith hee feare yee the Lord and serue him in truth with all your hearts and consider how great things he hath done for you
last ch 41.4 I the Lorde doe the first worke I am he that doth the last not only a perfect beeing in himselfe the onely eternall and efficient cause of all creatures but also to be the cause of the effecting of all his promises and blessings in the proper times seasons therof as the Lord doth interpret his owne meaning Ex 6.2.3 Moreouer saith the text God spake vnto Moses and said vnto him I am the Lord and I appeared to Abraham Isaak and to Iaacob by the name of Shaddai that is all-mightie or all-sufficient God but by my name Iehouah was I not knowen vnto them That is I promised to Abraham Isaak Iaacob the land of Canaan for an inheritance but I did not performe it vnto them as touching the reall and actuall possession of it as I will now to you their posteritie c as it followeth in that chapter It is asmuch as if the Lord should haue said to the Iewes at the cōming of Christ in comparison of the former ages that hee neuer shewed himselfe so manifestlie or by his name Iehouah as hee did then in so much as all the promises of God are Yea Amen in Christ In which respect our Sauiour Christ himselfe telleth his disciples that they were blessed aboue all other that were before thē in so much as they nowe sawe and heard that which the Prophets and Righteous men among them desired to heare and see but could not Wherfore worthi●ie might they then and wee our selues now in speciall manner hearken to the exhortation of the 68. Genes 21.33 Abrahā called vppon the name of Iehouah the euerliuing God Psal vers 4. Sing vnto God sing praises to his name exalt him that rideth vpon the heauens in his name Iah and reioyce before him Isa ch 26.4 Trust in the Lorde for euer for in the Lord God Be Iah Iehouah there is strength for euermore Read also this name I●h Ps 89.8 A mightie Lorde Chasin Iah and Ps 94. twice verses ● and 12. and Ps 118. fiue times and 135. vers 4. And in composition often times Halleluiah praise yee the Lord. Iah is but as it were a contraction of the name Iehouah It noteth the Eternitie yea the Sempiternitie or perpetuall eternitie of God without beginning without ending He that was is and is to come as this name is interpreted in the new Testament and applyed to Christ our Iehouah the Lorde our righteousnes as wee are after to obserue when wee come to consider of the Deitie of his person Question But what other titles are there which doe more entierly then the rest declare the nature of God Answere Next vnto the name Iehouah which as I haue learned wee doe English by the name Lord therby are to vnderstand his eternall nature beeing as was euen now declared the most vsuall title of the Lord is God the which word as I haue bene also taught is vsed of vs in stead of that which signifieth in the Hebrew language the almightines or omnipotencie of God as though hee should call him the God of all might or power Explication and proofe So is it indeed For the Hebrew word El or Eloah in the plurall number Elohim signifieth the power yea the manifold power and vertue of the Diuine nature yea with some learned interpreters also El Elohim P●alm 50.1 Deut. 32.15 Eloah the distinction of the persons in God vnto whom equallie the almighty power of the diuine nature of God doth belong as we shall further consider afterward by the grace of God Thus then the most vsuall titles belonging to the nature of God are in our language Lord and God as though we should call him as in other words we doe the Eternall Almightie God In regard of which eternitie of God the name of God is oftentimes in the holy scriptures said to be eternall likewise that his mercie endureth for euer that all his promises are sure and stedfast that his faithfulnes shall neuer faile that his throne is for euer that his righteousnes is euerlasting and that ther is no end of his kingdome And in respecte of his omnipotencie He that is mightie hath done for mee great things saith the Virgin Marie and holie is his name Luk 1.49 And the almightie God by the name Shaddai Psal 68.14 and Ps 91.1 and often in the book of Iob ch 5.17 ch 6.4.14 and chap 8.3.5 and chapt 22. fiue times verses 3.17.23.25.26 But of the titles of the iustice mercie gouernment of God we shall haue further occasion to rehearse them among some other sorts of the titles of God LEt vs therefore come to those which shew what manner of one God is named to be in respect of his creatures wherin also are noted the actions or works as likewise the diuine properties and attributes of God Question And first to speake more generallie which are they Answere Creator gouernour and preseruer of all things most high possessor of heauen and earth The Lord God of all flesh and of the Spirits of all fleshe The searcher of the hearts and reynes Iudge of the whole worlde who iudgeth without respect of persones The iudge which maketh lowe and which maketh high Lord of hosts and if ther be any other like to these These are euery where to be found in the holie Scriptures Creator Eccles chap Explicatiō proofe 12.1 and Isai ch 42.5 and chap 45.12 ver 18. Acts 17.43 c. Psalm 33.6.7.8.9 Psalm 74.16.17 And Psalm 94.9 Iob. chapt 32.22 c. Gouernour Psal 22. The Lord ruleth among the Nations And Ps 33.10.11 The Lord breaketh the Counsell of the heathen and bringeth to nought c. He that chastiseth the Nations Psal 94.10 and Psalm 47.8 God reigneth ouer the heathen And Psal 66.7 Hee ruleth the world by his power Isai 16.1 The ruler of the worlde Preseruer Iob chapt 7.20 O thou preseruer of men And 1. Timot. 4.10 Wee trust in the liuing God who is the preseruer of all men speciallie of those that beleeue And Psalm 36.6 Hee that preserueth man and beast No man could haue anie power or authoritie to gouerne if God did not giue it him Iohn chap 19.11 and Rom 13.4 Most high God possessor of Heauen and Earth Genes 14.22 and Psalm 104 24. Tremell The Lord God of all flesh Ierem. 32.27 of the Spirits of all flesh Numb 16.22 and chapt 27.16 And Hebr 12.9 Father of Spirits Zech 12.1 The Lorde who hath formed the Spirit of man within him c. And Ezech 18.4 All soules are mine both the soule of the Father and also the soule of the sonne are mine Searcher of hearts and trier of the reines 1. Sam. 16.7 The Lord beholdeth the heart And 1. Kings 8.39 The Lorde onely knoweth the hearts of all the children of men And Prou 16.2 The Lorde pondereth the Spirits Psalm 7.9 The righteous God trieth the
incourage his Disciples saying Feare not little flocke it is the Fathers pleasure to giue you a Kingdome Secondly that God as a most louing and bountifull Father wil indue and furnish his children with all spirituall gifts graces c. consider it from the parable of our Sauiour Christ Luke chap. 15.22.23.24 The prodigall child hath spent all his worldly riches but his Father inricheth him with a spirituall treasure and feedeth him with heauenly dainties c. Read also Isa ch 11.9 ch 54.13 Call to mind againe Eph. 1.3 and verses 16.17 c. For the third branch read Math. 6.31 Take no thought saying what shall wee eate c. For your Father saith our Sauiour Christ knoweth that ye haue need of all these things But seeke ye first the Kingdome of God and his righteousnes and all these things shal be ministred vnto you Seeing God is minded as we haue seene before to giue his children a heauenly Kingdome doubtlesse he will not denie them earthly things so farre as is meete for them Seeing hee hath already giuen his owne sonne for vs how shall he not with him giue vs all things also Rom. 8.32 Fourthly that God is minded to beare with the infirmities of his children that are carefull to obey him read Mal. chap. 3.17 They shall be to me saith the Lord of Hostes in that day that I shall doe this that is execute my iudgements against the wicked for a flocke and I will spare them as a man spareth his owne sonne that serueth him Then shalt thou returne and discerne betweene the righteous and the wicked betweene him that serueth God and him that ●erueth him not Read also Psal 103.8.9 The Lord is full of compassion slow to anger and of great kindnes He will not alwaies chide neither keepe his anger for euer He hath not dealt with vs after our sinnes nor rewarded vs according to our iniquities As high as the heauen is aboue the earth so great is the mercie of God toward them that feare him As farre as the East is from the West so farre hath hee remoued our sinnes from vs. As a Father hath compassion on his children so hath the Lord compassion on them that feare him For he knoweth whereof we be made he remembreth that we are but a●st And Psal 13● 3.4 If thou Lord straitly markest iniquitie O Lord who shall stand But mercie is with thee that thou maiest be feared Fiftly that when God correcteth his children he doth it in loue reade Heb. 12.6 And that as a fruite of his loue he keepeth measure wee reade Psal 89.32.33 And Psa 125.3 The rod of the wicked shall not rest on the lot of the righteous c. Finally that God of his most gratious and fatherly goodnes will heare the complaints and supplications of his children in all their necessities i● is euident by this that our Sauiour Christ hath most comfortably taught and commanded and incouraged vs to pray to God as to our heauenly Father Math. 6.9 c. And chap. 7. verse 7. c. Aske saith our Sauiour Christ and it shall be giuen vnto you c For what man is there among you who if his sonne aske him bread would giue him a stone Or if hee aske fish will hee giue him a Serpent If ye then who are euill saith our Sauiour can giue your children good gifts how much more shall your Father which is in heauen giue good thinges to them that aske him Yea as wee reade further Luke chap. 11.13 How much more saith our Sauiour Christ shall your heauenly Father giue the holy Ghost to them that desire him It is very comfortable also that wee reade in the same Chapter from the ● verse Which of you shall haue a friend c. And Iohn chap. 16.23 Our Sauiour Christ is earnest in this point Verily verily saith hee I say vnto you whatsoeuer ye shall aske the Father in my name hee will giue it to you For as it followeth v●rse 27. the Father himselfe loueth you because ye haue loued mee saith our Sauiour Christ and haue beleeued that I came out from God Thus farre of the comforts of this that God vouchsafeth to bee a Father vnto vs. THe duties pertaining to the comfort of this Article of our faith are next to be considered of vs. Question Which are they Answere First in so much as it is our principall comfort that God is our Father and that of his meere ●auour and grace it is our dutie first of all to beare in remembrance what our miserable estate is from our naturall parents of whom wee are conceiued in sinne and borne in iniquitie Yea that as wee ar● naturally descended of them wee are no bett●r then the children of the Diuell to whom the wrath of God is due for euer and euer This I say we are first of all to call to remembrance to the end we may continually put our selues in minde of that constant and euer increasing thankfulnes which i● due for so iuestimable and euerlasting a benefit and aduancement Secondly it is our most bounden dutie to withdrawe our selues from all the wayes motions and lustes of our owne sinnefull flesh and of this worlde and of the Di●ell Thirdlie it is our dutie to walke most chearfullie The Duties in all humble obedience and childe-like dutie toward God our heauenly Father beeing sorie aboue all things that wee haue hetherto bene so vndutifull vnto him Fourthlie wee are likewise admonished that it is our duety in that wee are children of God to bee imitators and followers of the same our heauenlie Father in all his most noble and diuine vertues so farre as wee may imploye our selues for the common benefit of all men speciallie concerning our Christian brethren who are members of the same houshold of faith with vs. Finallie in that wee beleeue in God to be our Father it is our bounden dutie to depende vpon his Fatherlie prouidence and in all things to account our selues to bee most gratiouslie dealt with and ordered in whatsoeuer estate and condition of life he hath placed vs for the time of our so beeing and so long also as it shall seeme good vnto him that wee doe so abide and remaine Explicatiō proofe These speciall dueties doe verie iustlie arise from the comfort of this so principall a point of ourfaith as may appeare by the proofes heereafter following Touching the first the Proph Ezekiel may be a worthie admonitor vnvnto vs in the name of God himselfe chapt 16. of his Prophesie from the beginning of the chapter in a very large and elegant discourse manie verses togither though verie sharpe and reprehensiue as the intollerable ingratitude of that people had fullie deserued Sonne of man saith the Lorde cause Ierusalem to knowe her abominations And say thou thus saith the Lorde God vnto Ierusalem Thine habitation and thy kindred is of the lande of Canaan thy father was an Amorite and thy mother an Hittite And
in thy natiuitie when thou wast borne thy nauell was not cut c. And when I passed by thee I saw thee polluted in thine owne blood and I said vnto thee when thou wast in thy blood Thou shalt liue euen when thou wast in thy blood I said vnto thee thou shalt liue I caused thee to multiplie as the budde of the fielde c. Who duely considering this forlorne estate of the Church and of euerie member of it as the Lorde findeth it and the great pittle which hee taketh on it and the manifold blessings which hee bestoweth vpon it Who I say duelie considering these things can doe lesse then acknowledge that God is most highlie to be honoured and praised for euer therein and that the forgetfulnes thereof is a most hainous sinne And herewith also howe can it be thought but that it must be one bounden duetie to loue the Sonne of God with a singular loue in so much as God is not our Father but by meanes of him According to that which our Sauiour Christ himselfe saith Iohn 8.42 If God were your father then would you loue mee And likewise it is our dutie to loue the children of God for Gods cause who is their Father 1. Iohn 5.1.2 Euerie one that loueth him which begate loueth him also which is begotten c. Secondlie that this reason ought effectuallie to mooue vs to withdraw our selues from the lusts of sin c the Apostle Iohn telleth vs plainly saying 1. Epi 2.15.16 That the loue of the Father cannot be in them that loue the world the lusts thereof c. And ch 3. verse 3. That euery one that hath the hope of euerlasting life and glorie through the mercie and goodnes of God purgeth himselfe that is more and more indeuoureth after it by vsing all good and holie meanes appointed of God considering that God our heauenly father is pure and that no vncleane thing can haue any abiding with him Read also verse 9. Whosoeuer is borne of God sinneth not c that is hee doth not giue himselfe ouer to sinne but earnestlie resisteth it c. Moreouer read Deuteron 14.1.2 Ioshua 24.1.2 c. Read also 2. Corinth 6.14 c. The want of this care in the people of God who glorie in this that God is their father it is no lesse iustlie then vehementlie reproued in the holy Scriptures as Deuteron 32.4.5.6 Isai chapt 1. verses 2.3.4 and Ierem chap 2.26.27.28 and chap 3. verses 2.3.4.5 and verses 19.20.21.22 The third part of the Answere resteth vpon as good reason and is a consequent of the former For wherfore is vndutifulnes reprooued but to the ende that the children of God should be stirred vp to care and conscience of all good dutie To this purpose therefore let vs thinke often of the holie and zealous exhortation of the Apost Pet 1. Epist chap 1. verses 13 14 15 16. c. in these words Wherefore gyrde vp the loines of your minde c. as obedient children c As hee which hath called you is holie so be ye holie c. And if yee call him Father who iudgeth without respect of persons c. Let no word of so weightie and pre●ious an exhortation be vnweighed and vnvalued of vs. Read also Iohn 4.23 The hower cometh and now is saith our Sauiour Christ to the woman of Samaria when the true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and truth for the Father requireth euen such to worship him And 2. Cor. chap 7.1 The holy Apostle of our Sauiour Christ hauing made mention of the most gratious promise of God that hee will be a Father to all such as shall forsake Idolatrie and the fellowship of Idolater● he thervpon inferreth this his earnest exhortation Seeing then we haue these promises dearely beloued let vs cleanse our selues from all filthines of the fleshe and of the ●pirit and grow vp vnto full holines in the feare of God Read also 2. Epist of Iohn verses 4.9 And Mal cha 1.6 A Sonne honoureth his Father saith the Lorde by his Prophet and a seruant his maister If then I be a Father wher is my honour And if I be a maister where is my feare saith the Lorde of Hostes c. In all these places of holie Scripture wee see how the spirit of God calleth for all manner of good duetie toward God in this respect especiallie that he is a most gratious and honourable Father aboue all other And hee doth it most iustlie For seeing ther are no naturall parents which doe not or which may not of good right looke for readie and constant dutie from their children while they themselues performe the care of good parents toward them And on the contrarie if children shall stubbornelie refuse to yeelde good duetie to their parents they a●e so farre from taking delight to heate their children to call them Father that they rather enter into purpose to cast them off and to refuse to take them for their children Infinitelie much more may the Lorde God our heauenly Father cast off all such as hypocriticallie call him Father and in the meane s●ason denie the obedience of children vnto him For in verie truth they shew themselues not to be the k●ndely children of God but the base borne of their father the Deuill as wee shall haue further occasion to obserue and to produce some proofe of it by and by In the meane while for the shutting vp of this pointe worthie is the example of him whom our Sauiour Christ describeth for the common imitation of euerie true childe of God that after former ●eglect of his dutie shall returne to performe the dutie of a childe againe Father saith he and so is euerie one of vs to say in remembrance of our former vndutifulnes I haue sinned against heauen and against thee I am not worthie to be called thy Sonne c. Now further as touching the fourth branch of the answere which sheweth that it is required of euerie true childe of God that he bee an imitator of God himselfe in all goodnes and helpfulnes towards others read Matth 5.43 c. and Luk 6.35.36 And Ephes chapt 5.1.2 Be yee therefore followers of God as deare children and walke in loue c. And Coloss ● 12 Nowe therefore as the elect of God holie and beloued put on tender mercie kindenes c. And 1. Iohn ● 10 in this are the children of God knowen and the children of the Deuill Whosoeuer doth not righteousnes is not of God neither he that loueth not his brother For this is the message that yee hearde from the beginning that we should loue one another Not as Caine who was of the wicked and slewe his brother c. Reade a so in the Gospell according to Iohn chap 8.44 They that doe the lusts of the Deuils as our Sauiour Christ saith they are not the children of God but of their father the Deuill To conclude this fourth branche that the houshold of Faith
three men of Israel there mentioned who professed that they would not worship King Nebuchadnezzars Idoll though God should not see it meete for them or for his owne glorie to deliuer them Finallie for the proofe of the last branch Reade Rom. 8.31 For seeing the Almightie God is our Father wee may boldely comforte our selues with the words of the Apostle there saying If God be on our side who can be against vs And so forth as it followeth in a most comfortable triumph of Faith described to the end of the chapter Read also Hebr 6 17 18 19 20. Where the Apostle teacheth vs that the promise and oath of God beeing both of them immutable do minister vnto vs strong cōsolation a most sure refuge to hold fast the hope that is set before vs. Read also 1. Pet 1.5 Wee are kept by the power of God through faith vnto saluation Herevnto also belongeth the comfort of the resurrection of our bodies and of the renewing of all the creatures to a farre more excellent state and condition then they were created in at the first For all these are effects of the almightie power of God For by the same power wherwith God made the worlde and after destroyed it by water and restored it againe and shall at the last day destroye it yet againe with fire by the same power I say shal he restore it at the last of all and set all things in a more comfortable estate then at anie time before According to that which wee read Rom 8 19 20. and 1. Corinth 6.14 and 2. Thessalon 1 9 10 11 12. And as wee read further 2 Pet. 3.10 11 12 13. and Reuelat chap 21.1 c. These are the comforts and we cannot but to the glorie of God acknowledge that they are verie gratious and great Question NOwe which are the duties which the faith of these so great comforts ought to yeelde in obedience to God in regarde of the same his almightie and most gratious and Fatherlie power extended towardes vs Answere First it is the dutie of a true and liuely faith in the allmightie power of God our heauenlie Father to acknowledge and ascribe all power to God as belonging onely to him and according●ie to giue the whole praise and glorie therof to his Name alone Secondly it is our duty to praye vnto God that he would to the further glorie of his name make his power more more manifest in toward his whole church euery one of vs his weak and fraile children specially that power which he hath made knowne by his Gospell through his Sonne our Lorde Ie us Christ to the crucifying of sinne and to the quickening of vs to newenesse of life with mightie increases against all naturall strength of corruption and against the supernaturall power of the Diuell Thirdly it is our duetie beleeuing in the almighty power of God so to tremble at his iudgements that wee doe make his feare as a bridle to holde vs backe from sinne Fourthlie it is our dutie from the same comfort of Faith to animate and incourage our selues and one to incourage and imbolden another against our owne timorousnes or distrustfulnes and against euerie terrour whereby eyther the Diuell or any of his instruments would goe about to discourage and dismay vs from doing of our duties in our seuerall places and callings Finallie it is our dutie in all things yea euen in the dooing ef our best duties eyther to God or man to humble our selues vnder the mightie hand of God Explication and proofe That these are dueties belonging to the comfort of faith in the Almightie power of God First Reade Psalm 62.11 God hath spoken once yea twise that is often haue I heard the same that power belongeth to God And Rom 13.1 Ther is no power but of God Read also Iohn 19.11 It followeth therfore according to that wee read Psalm 68.34 that wee are to ascribe All power to God for his Maiestie is vppon Israel and his strength in the clowdes O God saith the Psalmist in the next verse thou art terrible out of thy holy places The God of Israel is hee that giueth strength and power vnto the people praised bee God See the practise 1. Chronicles 29.10.11.12.13 c. and Psalme 44.1.2.3.4.5.6.7.8 Reade also Psalme 21.13 Bee thou exalted O Lord in thy strength so will wee sing and praise thy power And Psalme 28.7.8 The Lord is my strength and my shield my heart trusted in him and I was helped therefore mine heart shall reioice and with my song will I praise him The Lord is their strength and he is the strength of the deliuerances of his Anointed And then in the same place the last verse of the Psalme there followeth a prayer according to the second branch of your answere Saue thy people and blesse thine inheritance feede them also and exalt them for euer Reade also the next Psalme which celebrateth the power of God c. But more neare to the purpose of this second point lay the Answere of GOD to the prayer of the Apostle Paul 2. Corinthians 12.8.9 My grace saith the Lord to Paul is sufficient for thee for my power is made perfect through weakenes Most of all consider to this purpose the earnest and as hee professeth the often prayer of the same Apostle for the Ephesians chap. 1. of that Epistle verses 16. c 19.20 c. For the third point reade Hebrues 10.30.31 Wee knowe him that hath saide Vengeance belongeth to mee and I will recompence saith the Lord. And againe The Lord will iudge his people It is a fearefull thing to fall into the hands of the liuing God And 1. Corinthians 10.21 Doe wee prouoke the Lord to anger Are wee stronger then he And Psalme 90.11 Who knoweth the power of thy wrath For according to thy feare is thine anger That is No man can feare more then there is iust cause The anger of the mightie God scareth vs not in vaine Worthily therefore saith the Prophet Ier. chap. 10.6.7 In so much as there is none like vnto thee O Lord seeing thou art great and thy name is great in power who would not feare thee O King of Nations for to thee appertained the dominion or power c. For the fourth point concerning incouragement to well doing against all distrust and against euerie timorous and seruile feare c. Reade Matthew 10.18 c. Feare ye not them which kill the bodie but rather feare him which is able to destroy both soule and body in Hell In which wordes our Sauiour Christ incourageth his M●nisters to preach the Gospell boldly without feare of any man Reade also 2. Corinthians 5.11 and Ieremie chap. 1.17 Trusse vp thy loynes saith the Lord to his Prophet and arise and speake vnto them all that I command thee Bee not afraide of their faces lest I destroy thee before them But not onely the Ministers of the word but also euery faithfull seruant of
and Iob 5.23 So then this is to be held alwaies for a firme principle God made man righteous but they haue sought to themselues many inuentions Eccles chap 7.31 All euill is come vpon man from man himselfe Let no man therefore be so wickedly bould as to frame any the least cauill against any of the workes of Gods creation Nay on the contrarie let vs for a most iust and well beseeming conclusion take the whole blame of all euill to our selues and groane vnder the burthen of our sinnes as the true and proper cause thereof according to the last branch of the answere And thus through the goodnes of God wee haue renewed the remembrance of the holy doctrine concerning the workes of Gods most wise mightie and gracious creation The excellent perfection whereof God hath most solemnly confirmed by his sanctifying of the seuenth day wherein he ceased from any further worke of creation to the end that mankinde might worship God their Creator in the celebration of the same his diuine wisedome power and goodnes which are most perfectly manifested thereby The which holy doctrine according to the most faithfull and true historie thereof euery Christian must beleeue or else hee cannot rightly beleeue in God the Father almightie maker of heauen and earth as the Articles of our beliefe teach vs to doe And now touching the manifestation of the wisedome and power and goodnes of God in them it is euident to the faith of euery true beleeuer while according to the instruction of the holy Scriptures he pondreth in his minde both the manner and also the order which God tooke in performing the workes of his Creation And first concerning the manner if wee consider how the Lord beginning in darkenes deformitie and confusion as touching the great world and in basenes and deadnes when he created man the little world doth neuertheles perfectly and at an instant cause light to shine out of darkenes and in a short space of time turneth deformitie to beautie vacancie and voidenes to all sufficient furniture and plentie deadnes to life discomfort to comfort and basenes to glorie to that according to this beginning of the works of God the cōmon prouerbe might well take beginning in that wee commonly say A hardor vncomfortable beginning maketh a good ending thus I say the manner of the creation manifesteth the wisedome power and goodnes of God The like will be euident if we shall well obserue the order which God taketh in the disposing of his workes For he createth his spirituall and inuisible creatures in heauen before the visible and bodily vpon the earth the simple elements before compounded bodies the fierie region before the aierie he cleareth the lower region of the aier before hee emptieth and cleareth the earth from the waters thereof he maketh grasse for cattel before he maketh cattell themselues the foules of the aier and fishes of the Sea before the beasts of the earth finally all other creatures before he made mankind insomuch as it pleased God to make all things for the comfort of man that so by him they might be to the glorie of his owne most holy name And yet againe he doth so breake that which we would thinke should haue beene the best order that he doth in most excellent wisedome take all glorie from the creatures themselues and maketh it so much the more cleare and plaine as it is meete that all the praise both of wisedome and power and goodnes doth belong onely to him For therefore it is that God made light before he made the Sunne Caused trees to bring forth ripe fruite before any shower or dewe had fallen vpon the earth And also made all earthly creatures and gouerned them in perfect order before he appointed man to be the ruler and orderer of them Who therefore among all men yea how could all mankinde though they were as dutifully affected to God as might be how I say could they for al that sufficiently praise his most glorious name for his so great wise mightie gracious and glorious workes Yea if it were but for our owne creation alone for our outward senses and the excellent gift of speech c. and for our inward vnderstanding and memorie c. Let euery one of vs therefore conclude with the holy Prophet Thou ô Lord possessest my reines that is I am by good right altogether and entirely thine thou diddest couer mee in my mothers wombe I will praise thee for I am drawne into admiration by considering thy reuerend workes yea I will praise thy wonderfull workes as much as my soule can attaine vnto My bones or strength it is not hidden from thee from the time that I was made in a secret place and skilfully fashioned as in the lower parts of the earth Thine eyes did see me when I was without forme for in thy booke were all things written euen from the time that they were first fashioned yea while as yet there was none of them at all O how deare therefore or precious are thy thoughts to mee ô mightie God! ô how great are the Summes of them I would count them but they are more then the sand I will awake that is I will stand diligently vpon my watch that I may still abide with thee Psal 139.13.14.15.16.17.18 Trem Iunio Interp. But of the duties whereby we stand bound vnto God for his mercie toward vs in our creation more afterward HEtherto our purpose hath beene to gather together and interprete the holy doctrine of Creation according to the historical narration and report of it from the holy Scriptures of God the onely faithfull and incorrupt witnesses thereof The which also as you know hath beene set down to your hand in a fewe verses to the ende it might happily bee thereby made so much the more familiar and if it might be also the more easie to be remembred of you It shall not be amisse therefore as I thinke here to make rehearsall of them Question Which are those verses Answere They are these which followe Gen. ch 1. The world sixe daies in making was As Moses truly saith God would not onely shewe his power Verses But likewise helpe our faith 1. In first of sixe both heauen and earth A Substance they receiu'de 2. Though formeles and vnfurnished Th' earth with waters couer'd And darknes was vpon the deepe As high as heauen did reach The holy Ghost these depths vphold 3. The Father by his speech Not sound of voice but mightie power With wisedome euen his Sonne Commanded light so light brake forth And whole * Either because the world began at the equin●ctiall or to speake according to the vse of the Iewes who alwaies accounted twelue howers for the day according to that of our Sauiour Christ Iohn ch 11.9 Are there not twelue howers in the day twelue howers shone 4. Yet darknes was not quite cut off But sundred from the light It tooke his turne the light gaue place
So ganne the second night Thus first daies mightie worke we see How day it selfe was made 5. Yea day and night of better part First day so calde of God I●a● 45.7 And though the darkenes was not ill A thing which God had made Yet light by name God called good More ioious farre then shade 6. God said againe let spreading out The waters goe betweene And part lowe deepe from loftie clowdes Whence fall downe shall the raine 7. And euery vpper region So high as may be seene With sundrie loftes which God prepard For all the Hostes of heauen 8. This space so high so wide spread forth And chambred in such sort God called heauen so second day To ende was fully brought 9. In third day cleared was the earth And cleane from waters ridde Both Ilands small and countries great which acepes before had hidde 10. For waters huge at Gods command Did gather to their place So ●u●es and dales with champion fieldes Gaue earth a goodly face Gen 2.10 c. and 104 10.11.12 All springs and channells were likewise 11. Disposed on third day 12. Yea trees herbs all good with fruits 13. God made without delay 14. The fourth was spent in making lights Though light was made before It pleased God that Sunne and Moone With Starres of endles skore 15. Should order day night thence forth 16. Yea moneths and yeares define 17. And to all workes wrought vnder heauen 18. Fit seasons to assigne 19. 20. The fift daies worke was water worke 21. In it the seas were storde 22. With fishes great with fishes small 23. All sorts made very good Fift day likewise was aierie worke For fowles therein were made All sorts were made in sky to fly As fish in Seas to wade 24. Whē sixt day came the Lord did make All creatures earth to fill 25 Beastes wilde and tame with creeping things All good of Gods good will 26. But man was last of all the rest Though chiefe by Gods intent As God himselfe doth plainely shewe That so at first be meant For making man by chiefe aduise Most like vnto himselfe He gaue him rule of all belowe With flore of heauenly wealth H'inricht his soule with gifts diuine In knowledge and in will Not man alone but mans fit helpe Made fit by heauenly skill This is in briefe whole sixe daies worke All wondrous workes of God Thinke on them well yeeld him all praise He made all perfit good God our Lord euen for Iesus Christs sake giue vs all grace so to doe For there is exceeding great cause thereof in respect of God himselfe who is most worthy all honour and glory And it is also very good and comfortable euen to our ●wne soules that we should so doe as we are hereafter in the collection of the duties further to obserue BVt before we come to the duties we are to consider the promise and then also the comforts which belong to that faith or beliefe which wee haue conce●ning the almightie creation of God our heauenly Father and the seuerall workes thereof First therefore what say you of the promise Question I●●●e e any promise at all concerning the creation the seueral works thero● wherevnto our faith should looke for the stay and comfort of it Concerning the creation considered in it selfe from the beginning of it The Promise it cannot be saide that there was any promise made of it For there was no creature to whom the performance of it should be promised And therefore it must needes rest altogether in the hidden secret of Gods owne most fatherly and diuine purpose and counsell Answere But so soone as God had once created all his workes forthwith it pleased him to make knowne to mankinde the last of his creatures that hee had made all his creatures of this visible world for their benefit comfort and seruice vpon condition that they would faithfully serue and honour his diuine Maiestie first in themselues and then in the right vse of the rest of his creatures And this most gracious manifestation of Gods purpose herein was as speedie a promise and assurance as might be that the creation of God and the seuerall workes thereof were at the least in a very great part euen for them and consequently for all the posteritie that should come of them Explication and proofe It is very true For so doe the wordes of God himselfe immediately after the Creation was finished giue plainely to vnderstand Gen 1.26.27.28.29 where wee see both the diuine purpose and also the performance of God in this behalfe Yea Gen chap 2. uerses 19.20 we may perceiue the purpose and will of God to be such so soone as Adam was created euen before woman was yet taken out of his side The same promise of God thus intended and reuealed from the beginning is afterward more plainly repeated and expressed after the deluge or drowning of the world as wee reade Gen 8.21.22 The Lord as the prophet Moses writeth smelled a sauour of rest and the Lord saide in his heart I will henceforth curse the ground no more for mans cause c. Hereafter seede-time and haruest and cold and heate and summer and winter and day and night shall not cease so long as the earth remaineth And yet further chap 9 1.2.3 it followeth thus And God blessed Noah and his Sonnes and saide to them Bring yee forth fruite and multiplie and replenish the earth Also the feare of you and the dread of you shall be vpon euery beast of the earth and vpon euery foule of the heauen vpon all that moueth on the earth and vppon all the fishes of the Sea into your hand are they deliuered Euery thing that moueth and liueth shall bee meate for you as the greene herbe so haue I giuen them all to you And this verily is a very princely and comfortable prerogatiue that God hath giuen man authoritie to kill and destroy those creatures which either proue hurtfull while they liue or may be profitable to them by their death Moreouer Iob chap 5.23 It is affirmed from this promise and charter of the Lord that the stones of the field shall be in league and the beasts of the field at peace c. with the seruants of God Likewise Hosh 2.21.22 thus we read And in that day I will heare saith the Lord I will euen heare the heauens and they shall heare the earth And the earth shall heare the corne and the wine and the oyle c. Neuertheles because these and such like promises doe rather pertaine to the prouidence of God in the gouernment of his creatures then to the creation of them therefore it shall bee sufficient thus farre forth to haue touched this point reseruing the more full handeling thereof till wee come to the promise belonging to the prouidence of God NOw in the next place let vs proceede to the comforts arysing from beliefe in God the Father in respect of his almightie creation
which is most iustly fallen vpon them for it Nay rather herein the sinne of Eue was the greater because she suffered so base a creature as the Serpent was to blaspheme God as it did and did not rather forthwith euen at the mention of the first word abhorre it yea because she did not rather put it to present death then to haue consented Explication and proofe This indeed would haue beene a worthy sacrifice as it were vnto God if she had had the grace so to haue done or at the least to haue most vehemently rebuked it and to haue taken aduise with her husband what had beene best to be done in so great and blasphemous an indignitie offered principally to God and then also to themselues And the sinne of Adam also was the greater because he did giue place to the perswasion of his wife whom he as her head and guid appointed by God should haue reproued and disswaded from so hainous a sinne Hetherto we see what is meant by the fall of mankinde NOw therefore that we may proceed to consider of the holy prouidence of God herein First how can you shew that it may stand wel with the good prouidence of God that so many of his chiefe creatures created very good to wit all mankind beside many of the Angels should be so left of God that they should thus wofully fall away from him and plunge themselues for euer into so grieuous miserie when as hee could by his holy prouidence as wee would thinke most graciously haue preserued them from the same Question How therefore I say may we iustifie this to stand well with the gracious prouidence of God yea with that which we call the more speciall prouidence of God concerning his speciall creatures Answere The wisedome and iustice of God is so high aboue all that we can conceiue that wee neede not doubt but he knoweth a perfect reason and is able throughly to iustifie himselfe though we should plead nothing on his behalfe It is very true that you say according to that which we read Psal 51.4 God will approue himselfe to be righteous when he speaketh and pure when he iudgeth Explicatiō proofe Neuerthelesse it will not stand with our dutie so to leaue the defence of GOD against those which cauill at his most holy iustice If the cause of a false God came into question we might well say with Ioash the father of Gideon Let Baal pleade for himselfe Iudges 6.31 But seeing it is the most holy and iust cause of the onely true God euen the Lord our God and heauenlie Father howsoeuer hee is able indeede most sufficiently to pleade his owne cause without vs yet as was said it standeth not with the dutie of the least of his seruants to neglect to alledge what they can for the maintaining of his righteousnes against euery aduersarie that feareth not to speake euill of the same I doe therefore very earnestly desire that you should for the discharge of your most bounden duty and therein for the glory of God and peace of your owne conscience say something to this point How may it stand with the good prouidence of God Question How may we cleare the Lord from all fault or iust blame herein Answere God of his goodnes gaue both the Angels which fell and also mankinde in the beginning of their creation a pure and holy freedome of will yea and power also to haue continued therein if they would haue earnestly setled themselues to haue aboade in obedience to that most holy commandement which hee had made knowne vnto them But they of their owne accord contrarie to his reuealed will forsaking his commandement lost their freedome and so haue lost the fauour of God made themselues both vassalls to sinne and also subiect to Gods wrath as a iust punishment of the same And beside this it must needes in all good reason bee iudged most equall and meete that the Creator should in such sort create his creatures and also set them in such an estate and condition as they might knowe and finde in themselues that they are but creatures This could not haue beene vnlesse they had beene created so as they must finde it necessarie for them to depend continually vpon the fauour and supportance of their Creator and that for the same cause they should see themselues to stand most bound to humble themselues and to yeeld all faithfull and constant seruice and duty vnto him Yea moreouer this could not haue beene vnlesse also they had beene set in such an estate as it might be possible for them by vndutifulnes to fall from the same fauour and supportance of their most gratious Creator Finally it could not haue beene vnlesse through their owne default God himselfe iustly permitting the same they might haue sinned against him Explicatiō proofe It is very true For nothing could seperate the good creature of God from the most good gratious Creator but the wicked disobedience vnfaithfull departure of the creature frō him And is it not very equall meet that when the creature will not retaine his liberty that God should leaue him to himselfe and so to find the inconuenience euill of his owne losse Verily it is wonder saue that many haue lost all true light of reason that any should be found so foolish void of vnderstanding that they should not perceiue that the most wise iust God knoweth well how to permit yea to giue ouer his creature to the owne sinne and not to stay him when he seeth that he will wilfully runne into it and yet to keepe his owne most holy Maiestie most perfectly free from the least iust and deserued blame Yea be it further granted as the truth it selfe requireth that God should purpose decree in himselfe before the world was that both many of the Angels also whole mankind should through their owne default depart from him sin against him and so iustly depriue thēselues of his grace fauour therwithall procure his wrath heauy punishments to fall vpon thēselues it is wonder that any specially of those who haue the instructions of the wor● of God before thē should shew themselues more wicked in this behalfe the● the Apostatate Angels Adam Eue thēselues Who knowing best in what condition manner God had created thē durst not neither could find any iust ground in their owne knowledge or conscience wherfore they should lay any the least blame vpon the Lord. Adam indeed pretendeth The groūd and meaning of it as if he had some colour of defence for himselfe in that he saith to God The woman which thou gauest me she gaue me of the tree and I did eate Wherin he layeth blame vpon his wife but he durst not lay any blame vpon the Lord neither had he any cause And no doubt the Angells that fell were and are ●ill so shall remaine for euer no lesse conuicted in
that God hath not seldome times preserued vs euen from the imminent danger of death it selfe The which if we would duly weigh and ponder with thankfull and dutifull hearts nothing could more confirme vs that there is a diuine prouidence If we were but once or seldome deliuered we might peraduenture imagine that it came by chance but when the experience is very often yea an vsuall thing with God to preserue vs from daily perills this doth clearely argue that God of his infinite mercie keepeth a vigilant watch ouer vs. And concerning other we may easily obserue the like to the stirring vp of our hearts to be continually thankefull to God and to gather still more and more comfort to our owne soules thereby We may easily call to minde that God preserued such a mans house most mercifully and strangly from burning by diuerting of the winde from it on a sodaine or some other way such a mans body from being crushed to peeces by a cart c. such an other that the house did not fall downe vpon his heade it falling downe presently after hee came out of it such a man from the infection of the plague though at vnwares he had eate and drunke and companied with the infected c. such an other from the hands of murthering thieues c. this mās child from scalding or burning or from being troden vnder the horse feete c. But who can reckon vp all the waies whereby God doth daily and euerie where infinitely manifest the tender effects of his fatherly prouidence Fiftly our reprouing of our owne discomfort as was answered in the fift place and on the contrary our owne incouraging of our selues from those so many good grounds as God hath giuen vs for our incouragement these will through the blessing of God reuiue cheare vp yea confirme and augment our comfort in the faith of Gods fatherly prouidence We haue herein the notable example of the Prophet Dauid 1. Sam 30.6 He comforteth himselfe in the Lord his God Likewise Ps 42. Ps 43. O my soule why art thou so disquieted within me Trust in God c. But most notably Ps 77.6.7 c. I called to remembrāce my song in the night I cōmuned with my own heart and my spirit searched diligently Wil the Lord absēt himself for euer doth his promise faile for euermore Hath God forgotten to be mercifull hath he shut vp his tender mercy in displeasure Selah Thus the Prophet reasoneth against his present discomfort and concludeth that it was onely from his own infirmitie and from no failing of mercy in the Lord that his soule refused comfort c. But among all other incouragements those which the Lord himselfe doth more immediately hearten vs with they ought most effectually weigh with vs to our most singular comfort and for the same cause we are most diligently to attend vnto them Such as are those which we read Deut 31 6 7 8 9. Iosh ch 1.6.7 8 9. cōpared with Heb 13.5 6 where the Apostle applieth that incouragement which God gaue more particularly to Moses and Ioshua to the speciall comfort of euery faithfull Christian For euen for their sakes also the Lord hath said as the Apostle testifieth I will not leaue thee nor forsake thee c. Read also like vnto this the gracious incouragement of our Sauiour Christ Mat 6.25 c. concerning Gods fatherly prouidence in respect of outward things And for comfort in regard of spirituall blessings to be reached forth by the same gracious and prouident hand of his euen by his holy spirit read Iohn chap 16.6.7 c. The greatnes of this comfort of Gods fatherly incouragement may be some thing familiarly discerned of vs from the similitude of a louing natural father whose speech must needes be comfortable to his dutifull child when he shall bid him be carefull for nothing but to follow his booke insomuch as he is minded to bring him vp in learning and therefore promiseth him to prouide for him all things that are meete so as he shall not neede to take any care for them Neuertheles this comfort of the naturall child is infinitely inferiour to that comfort which the child of God may take from the incouragement of his heauenly Father To the which end I pray you let vs marke the infinite wisedome and sufficiēcie of the prouidēce of God to be aboue all that man can possibly performe For if he denieth vs one benefit because he seeth it not meet for vs he wil make a supply some other way if not by outward helpes yet by spirituall grace if not at the very instant yet within a while after yet euen in the best season that may be if not in this place yet some other where if not by the fauour succour of this man yet by the helpe of another if not by a mans acquaintance yet by some meere stranger if not by a friend yet sometimes by a very enemie according to the holy Prouerb ch 16.7 which was alledged not long before No doubt God will make an issue for his children so farre as he shall see it to be best for them aboue that the wisest man in the world can conceiue according to that most ancient holy Prou In the mount will the Lord prouide Gen 22. v. 8. compared with v. 14. For though Abraham knew of no other sacrifice which he should offer vp but onely his sonne Isaak yet the Lord had an other sacrifice in store which should be brought to Abrahams hand instead of his sonne Whereupon the former holy Prou arose and grewe into common vse in the church of God to the cōforting of such as shuld be exercised with great difficulties straits aboue that they thēselues could see how they might escape We haue likewise a notable example in the deliuerance of Dauid out of the hand of King Saul as we read 1. S●m 23. v. 26. 27. 28. Saul and his souldiers were on the one side of the mountaine Dauid on the other hasting himself all that he could away from him but Saul and his company had compassed Dauid round about so as it was very likely that he must needes take him How therefore should poore Dauid now escape Behold the excellent prouidence of God There came a messenger to King Saul euen at that very instant as the text reporteth saying Hast thee and come for the Philistims haue inuaded the land So by this occasion Saul was hindered from his pursuit after Dauid and went against the Philistims to performe a more necessarie and cōmendable seruice Wherevpon that place tooke the name Selahammalekoth that is a place of this happie parting of the armies of Saul Dauid Yea and if we consider frō time to time the whole history of Dauid we shall see the manifold reskues of Gods prouidence laid plainely before our eies to our singular instruction cōfort This gracious prouidence of God is to be vnderstood of vs as not
weighty in respect of God to whom alone doth iustlie belong the souereigne free bestowing and disposing of all his creatures and blessings both spirituall and also belonging to this life aboue all demande of euery why or wherfore hee should doe so or so It is proper and pertaining to God alone to saye May I not doe with my owne as I will Let vs therfore cast away all enuying at the prosperitie of other speciallie of other our fellow brethren and conuert all murmuring into a thankfull admiration at the goodnes of God which he exerciseth continuallie towards the poorest and basest of those that doe truely beleeue in him Whose outward afflictions hee doth recompence alwaies with inward and spirituall comforts and blessings as was said a little before GOD our heauenlie Father in this his vnequall vneuen course as fleshe and blood is readie to thinke of it may as one saith well be likened to a most skilfull Phisition in that hee ordereth his Phisicke according to the differing estate and condi ion of his Patients For hee knoweth that one dramme will doe as much with some as a greater quantitie of the same Drugge in another mans bodie c. So likewise the Lord he knoweth that a little headache will preuaile as much to humble one whom hee hath alreadie broken as an extreame collicke or gowte with an other that is yet of a sturdie and stoute stomacke The diuerse dealing of the Lorde therefore sheweth plainelie that hee doth not rule as a Father ouercarried with an inordinate or partiall pittie but as a most wise holie and righteous Father But admit this it may bee some will say that God as a most wise holie and discrete Father vseth the afflictions and humiliations of his children like as a Phisition vseth his bitter potions to cure the euils and sinnes which they are subiect vnto here in this life Yet how can death which to the viewe of the ca●nall eye doth not seldome fall cruellie vppon them be counted for good phisicke and to be a healing medicine For this destroyeth euen nature it se fe And death as we may say is after a sorte the shame of all phisicke Question Howe therefore may it agree to the Fatherlie hand of God and that his Diuine skill should haue any stroke herein Most of all seeing he hath in his most gracious prouidence appointed and preordained Answere death to be vnto all his children a counter-poison against death the most speedie and immediate passage vnto euerlasting life and therein to the possession and fruition of all perfect health wealth and honour for euer and euer Explicatiō proofe A notable proofe hereof wee read Philip 1 21 22 23 24. Likewise 2. Timot 4.8 and 1. Pet 1.3.4 c. Moreouer Psalm 116.15 Precious saith the holy Prophet in the sight of the Lord is the death of his Saints And the same againe Psalm 72.14 Deare shall their bloud be in his sight And beside this it is to be further considered that it is the good pleasure of God to take away his righteous seruants from greater euils that are after to fall vpon the wicked that remaine Isai chap 57 1. And that to this gratious ende and purpose that they should not be peruerted in their mindes to fall into errors of iudgement ouerswaied by the corruptions of the time nor carried away after common sinnes and disorders increasing ouer-strongly in the dayes wherin they liue Neuerthelesse it is not seldome seene that the Lorde maketh his seruants euen herein this world glorious by his wonderfull deliuerances and that hee crowneth them with age as with a crowne of glorie in that they are found constant in the righteous waies of God euen as it pleaseth him though death had seemed sundrie times to haue grappeled vpon them Yea and euen generallie if wee shall wisely consider wee shall finde that in common calamities God sheweth himselfe oftentimes more fauourable to his people then to their aduersaries though manie and great be their sinnes whereby they doe dailie prouoke him According to that we read Isai chapt 27.7 Hath he smitten him as hee smote those that did smite him Or is hee slaine according to the slaughter of them that were slaine by him Thou contendest with him that is with thy people as saith the holie Prophet in measure c. But hee taketh their enemies away as with a rough Spirit or blast in the daye of the Eastwinde But for all this it will peradventure be further obiected and vrged in waye of amplification that not onely particular persons but also euen whole Citties Countries and Nations professing the true religion of God doe sometimes fall before their enemies who are wicked and professed idolaters c. Question What is to be further answered to this Answere They that haue the better cause may neuertheles be guiltie of some grieuous sinnes wherin they lie without repentance for the which God in his iustice seeth meete to punish them Yea and by circumstance the sinnes of the professors of the Gospel may easilie bee greater then the sinnes of some ignorant idolaters who haue not the light of the word of God shining among them Explicatiō and proofe It is true according to that manner of aggrieuing the sinnes of Bethsaida and Capernaum aboue the sinnes of the Sodomites c the which our Sauiour Christ vseth Matth 11.20 c. And againe he affirmeth generallie that whosoeuer he be that knoweth his maisters will and doth it not shal be beaten with the more stripes But be it that their sinnes be not more heinous yet what letteth why God may not correct them in that measure whervnto they are growne that so hee may preuent the extremitie wherevnto they would shortly come And besides it may be that in the present action of defence or reuenge vpon the enemies of Gods truth or violaters of common honestie and iustice they who haue the better cause doe not prepare themselues to deale in it with holie mindes Or it may bee they doe trust in their owne strength and doe not staye themselues vprightly vpon the Lord. The which seemeth to be the sinne of the other tribes of Israel against the tribe of Beniamin before whom they fell twice Iudges chapt 20. For this verilie wee are verie apte vnto euen to presume ouer-much in a good cause as if our owne sinnes could not hinder the successe of it in our hands But therin we may easilie deceiue our selues and therfore it standeth vs in hand to walke humblie before the Lord our God and to seeke peace with him that so he may be intreated to prosper vs euen in the best seruice which wee may possiblie be imployed in But the cauilling wittes of men will be yet still maligning and oppugning the Fatherlie prouidence of our God For by an vnreuerend prying into it they snatch at this among the rest of their quarrells that manie notoriouslie wicked both particular persons also whole Cities
world an earnest longing after the Kingdome of heauen c. Verily we could neither knowe God so well in his mercy nor in his righteousnes nor in his power nor in his wisedome nor in his faithfulnes nor in any of his diuine vertues neither yet our selues so well either in our frailtie and miserie or in our peace and prosperitie as by experience of afflictions through the grace of our gracious good God and mercifull Father we learne to doe Thus aboundant that wee doe not say infinite is the commoditie of the fatherly afflictions of God laid vpon his owne deare children But that which hath beene deliuered shall for the present suffice vntill it may please God to inrich vs with a more full supply Hitherto therefore of the commodities and fruites of afflictions LEt vs now henceforth proceed for a while to inquire after the comfortes which are to be found in them at the least after the chiefe and principall of them It is true indeed that the former vses being profitable they are also to all those that feele the fruit of them euen in the same respect very comfortable also as we may euidently perceiue by the testimonie of the holy Ghost Heb 12.5 c. Where both the comfort also the profit of afflictions are lincked together Of the which place more is to be said afterward And beside insomuch as touching earthly profit it is found true that the sent of gaine is pleasant Suauis odor lucri infinitely much more ought that heauenly and spirituall gaine which groweth from the fatherly corrections of God duly pondered and weighed to be delightfull pleasant and comfortable vnto vs. But seeing there are some vses of afflictions which doe more properly and entirely belong to comfort let vs come to them as comming yet something more properly vnder the name of comfort Question Which may they be Answere First it is very comfortable to consider that no affliction commeth without the most wise louing and fatherly prouidence of God Secondly in that God is neuer nearer nor more tenderly affected yea euen as it were with bowelicke compassion toward his children then when they are in greatest distresse and trouble Thirdly if we doe willingly suffer affliction for wel-doing and while we walke in the holy waies of God we haue our communion with our Sauiour Christ in whose afflictions all ours are sanctified and made both comfortable and profitable vnto vs. For they are so many witnesses of our adoption to be the children of God and that we are liuely members of the mysticall body of Christ Fourthly the holy Ghost our most inward and sweete comforter euen the spirit of the highest glory proceeding from God the Father and the Sonne resteth vp●n vs and doth most immediately communicate the perfit comfort of the whole blessed Trinitie vnto vs. Sixtly we haue in our afflictions a holy communion and fellowship with all the faithfull as brethren fellow-members with them in Christ insomuch as it is the very cōmon beaten high way which God himselfe hath laid out for all his children to trauell through the same vnto his heauenly kingdome Moreouer the holy afflictions wherewith God doth exercise vs doe priuiledge and respite vs from infinite worldly cares and troubles the which no doubt would for our sins haue fallen vpon vs if we had continued in them and if we had not beene taken vp and had as it were receiued our presse mony to be otherwise imploied in the speciall seruice and as it were warfare of the Lord. And yet further the more sharpe and fierie hote our afflictions are so much the more spe●dy and swift forerunners or as it were harbengers are they to make way for speciall comfortes so much the more shortly to followe after But be it that most hote and vehement afflictions for the Lords cause and his Gospel are continue a long while as we count length of time yet the longest and the same also the sharpest that may be if they bee truly measured and weighed they are but momentanie and light in comparison of that which otherwise and in more terrible and fearefull manner our sinnes haue deserued Or much rather in respect of that most excellent and eternal weight of glory whereunto through the infinite mercie of God our heauenly Father they doe as secondarie and helping causes preferre and aduance vs. Finally infinite almost in number and varietie as wel as endles in continuance are the manifold comforts belonging to the sundrie and manifold afflictions and trials of the deare children of God for righteousnes and the Gospels sake aboue that any not throughly exercised therewith shal euer know or feele what they doe meane Explication and proofe So great and so many yea euen almost about number indeede are the sundry and often renewed comforts of the afflicted seruants of God the which the children of this world cannot possibly be acquainted withall For they doe not belong vnto them neither can they receiue them because they cannot rereiue him who is the onely immediate giuer and worker of al comfort According to that of our Sauiour Christ Iohn 14. ver 16.17.18 I will pray the Father and he will giue you an other comforter that hee may abide with you for euer Euen the spirit of truth whom the world cannot receiue because it seeth him not neither knoweth him but ye knowe him for he dwelleth with you and shal be in you I wil not leaue you as orphanes or comfortles but I wil come vnto you And againe verse 27. Peace I leaue with you my peace I giue vnto you not as the world giueth doe I giue vnto you Let not your heart be troubled Or timerous and fearefull c. It is the part or rather the blot and iust reproach of an vnfaithfull friend to faile his friend in time of neede Our Sauiour Christ therefore being a most faithfull friend yea euen the fountaine as it were of all true friendship and fidelitie he promiseth assuredly and will most certainely performe himselfe to be a most trustie and infallible friend yea more then a friend vnto all that doe approue their faithfulnesse to him in the holy profession and obedience of his Gospell And verily if our Sauiour Christ had not alwaies hetherto performed his promise of sending his holy spirit that perfect Comforter to his seruants with his aboundant and manifold consolation according to the manifold and exquisite molestations and torments of their persecutors they could neuer haue indured those sharpe and cruell though more speedy torments executed by th● heathen Much lesse the late more lingering cruelties of the false-beleeuing and hereticall brood of Antichrist by their long tedious and most vncomfortable imprisoning and dungeoning of the true seruants of God And therewithall by their famishing of them by their often railing examinations and siftings by their base and craftie false glozings and flatteries to seduce them by their bitter scoffings not onely at themselues which they could
the almightie goodnes of God in prison then they had before when they were at libertie And generally the goodnes of God is so bounteous that for one or a fewe troubles and discour●gements he giueth many comforts Neither is any of his faithfull children at any time so destitute and miserable but euen in their outward miserie they haue beene spiritually very blessed and happie Nowe that according to the 8. branch speciall troubles may put vs in hope of speciall comforts at hand Wee may consider it from that speech of King Dauid whereby hee comforted himselfe against the extreame and raging railings of Shimei 2. Sam 16.12 It may be saith the King that the Lord will looke on my affliction and doe me good for his cursing this day Yea we may consider and behold it as it were with our eyes in that effect which shortly ensued Read also Psalm 109 28. Though they curse yet thou wilt blesse they shall arise and bee confounded but thy seruant shall reioyce c. And verse 31. For hee that is God will stand at the right hand of the poore to saue him from them that would condemne his soule Reade likewise Psalm 102.13.14 Thou wilt arise and haue mercie vpon Sion for the time to haue mercie thereon for the appointed time is come And Isay 40.1.2 Comfort yee Comfort ye my people wi●l your God say Speake comfortably to Ierusalem and cry vnto her that her warre-fare is accomplished that her iniquitie is pardoned for shee hath receiued of the Lordes hand double for all her sinnes Compare it with Luke 1 ●1 c. Reade also Heb 10.37 Yet a very little while and hee that shall come will come and will not tarrie The Diuel rageth most and accordingly hee inflameth the rage of his instruments when their time is but short and their destruction draweth neere In which respect it is saide Psalm 76.10 Surely the rage of man shall turne to the praise of God It is a Psalme of thankesgiuing for the destruction which God sent vpon the raging and railing Assirians 2. King 19.28 c. 35 36 37. Read also Mark 1.26 and Luk 4 35. and Reuel 12.12 The Diuel hath great wrath knowing that he hath but a short time There is none of vs that vse any diligence in the obseruation of Gods workes but we may of our owne knowledge within the space of fewe yeeres remember that God hath cast his heauie burthen and iudgement vpon such as haue beene fierce against his seruants So then vpon our owne experience we may iustly say as we read in the booke of Iob chap 9.4 Who hath bin fierce against God and hath prospered It is a worthy saying of learned Beza that wee may take it for a shewe-token that God is about to worke some strange and vnwonted worke when he layeth the raines loose as it were vpon the neckes of the wicked so that all things are hasting to confusion through their wicked and outragious dealing as saith he experience in all ages doth confirme This is the effect of that learned mans sentence His wordes are these Quando animaduertimus Deum suis hostibus laxas vt ita dicam habenas permittere omniaque in peius ruentia susque deque ferri c. tum norimus a Domino nouum aliquod extraordinarium opus expectandum vt seculorum omnium experientia satis id testatur Homil 9. in Hist Passionis Finally if there were nothing else to comfort in time of extremitie yet this may suffice that death endeth all And so haue the holy Martyres comforted themselues when they were going to the stake yea so haue they one comforted another that though they were to take a sharpe breakfast yet they shoulde haue a ioyfull supper For as the Apostle writeth 2. Thes 1.6 c. God accounteth it a righteous thing to giue his seruants rest the one with the other in due time for euer as also to recompence tribulation to them that trouble his seruants Wherefore that wee may conclude according to the 9. branch of the Answere this may iustly be as the sealing vp and ratifying of all comfort that all afflictions of longest continuance and the same also the greatest that may be are but short and light in comparison of that heauenly glory whereunto they guide vs. For so the Apostle Pau● expresly affirmeth 2. Cor. 4.17 Our light affliction saith he which is but for a moment causeth to vs a farre most excellent and an eternall weight of glorie It is as was answered the onely beaten way to the kingdome of God Act. 14.22 and 2. Tim. 3.11 12. Wherefore they are not without cause pronounced blessed euen by the sacred mouth of our Sauiour Christ whosoeuer walke in this way Matth. 5.10.11 12. Neither is it in vaine that in the same respect he doth incourage all such to reioyce and to be glad yea euen as it were to skip for ioy seeing their reward in heauen is exceeding great Luke 6.23 And thus we may clearely and certainely perceiue that the comforts belonging to all the afflictions of Gods children to speake generally of them yea euen of those for sinne when they cause repentance to saluation but chiefely for those that are indured for Christ and his Gospels sake that they are and accordingly ought iustly to bee accounted many waies of exceeding good and comfortable vse BVt there are some comforts which may seeme more proper and peculiar to death the which is an affliction naturally more feareful then any other though by the grace of God it is to the faithful not only a final end of all affliction but also a speedie enterance into eternall blessednes and glorie I desire therefore so much the more gladly to heare you rehearse some of those speciall comfortes which are as the most specificall and proper medecine to the godlie to helpe against all feare of death whether naturall feare or feare as wee may say supernaturall and aboue nature through the guiltinesse of our sinne in our wounded consciences Question Which I pray you may these speciall comforts be Answere As all afflictions and sufferings for the Lords cause and in the way of righteousnes so death especially is to all those which in that respect doe endure it a most comfortable warrantize and as it were a sealing vp of the truth of their faith and obedience to God for euer Death is also to the godly the ending and abolishing of all euill not onely of the euill of punishment or chastisement but also of the euill of sinne the ceasing whereof is to the godly most comfortable to thinke vpon Furthermore death bailing our soules for euer out of the prison house of this our corruptible vile and sinfull bodie it doth lay wide open the way and passage into the kingdome of heauen to the most comfortable presence of God the Father to whom wee die and to the Sonne of God our Lord Iesus Christ who hath died for vs that hee might bee our
saith thus speaking there of the holy Ghost He shall glorifie me for he shall receiue of mine and shew it vnto you And in the next verse All things that the Father hath are mine therefore said I that he shall take of mine and shew it vnto you The Apostle Paul saith likewise that it pleased the Father that in him should all fulnes dwell Colos 1.19 And chap. 2.9 In him dwelleth all the fulnes of the Godhead bodilie Explicatiō proofe These places doe indeed shew the diuine perfection of our Sauiour generally And l ke to these are many other Such as we reade Iohn 3.31 He that is come from on high is aboue all saith Saint Iohn the Baptist And before that chap. 1.27 Whose shooe latchet I am not worthie to vnloose Neither did our Sauiour himselfe reproue the Iewes for vnderstanding his words in such sense as that thereby hee did make himselfe equall with God Iohn chap. 5. verse 18. And accordingly the Apostle Paul saith plainely that our Sauiour being in the forme of God thought it no robberie to be equall with God Phil. 26. Whence also it is that he is described to be the image of the inuisible God Colos 1.15 And the brightnes of the glorie of God and the in grauen forme of his person Heb. 1.3 Read also Isaiah chap. 6.1 2 3 conferred with Iohn 12.41 Where the Euangelist speaking of that glorious vision of Isaiah wherein was represented the diuine glorie and maiestie of GOD saith that the holy Prophet sawe therein the glorie of our Sauiour Christ But let vs come to our more particular inquirie Wherein first What proofe haue you that there was diuine perfection of wisedome in the Sonne of God our Lord and Sauiour Question Answere All the treasures of wisedome and knowledge are hidden in Christ saith the Apostle Paul Colos 2. verse 3. Explicatiō and proofe Thus also testified the holie Prophets of former times As in that eight chapter of the holy Prouerbs verse twelfe I wisedome dwell with prudence and I finde forth knowledge and counsells Or rather as Tremellius and Iunius haue translated it Ego sum sapie● tia co●aereo astutia scientiam summa solertiae praesentem habeo I am wisedome I cleaue vnto prudence and I haue the knowledge of most exact or expert skill present with me Euen the reuerend feare of the Lord c. And verse 14. Counsell and euery thing else is mine prudence is mine strength is mine By me Kings reigne c. But of this diuine gouernment of our Sauiour we shall speake afterward Concerning the diuine perfection of his wisedome wee may vnderstand it further by the prophesie of Isaiah chap. 9 6. Wherein he foretelleth that he should be called Wonderful Counseller c. And more-ouer by the saying of our Sauiour himselfe Matth. 11.27 No man knoweth the Sonne but the Father neither knoweth any man the Father but the Sonne and he to whom the Sonne will reueale him And Iohn chap. 10. verse 15. As the Father knoweth me so know I the Father And therefore no maruell though the same Euangelist saith chapter 2. verses 24 25. that hee kn●w what was in the hearts of men According also as the Disciples iointly professed chapter 16. verse 30. Wee know that thou knowest all things And as Peter professeth apart by himselfe though in the hearing of the res● Lorde thou knowest that I loue thee Yea as he addeth further Lord thou knowest all things Wherevnto finally accordeth that of our Sauiour himselfe Reuel 2.23 All the Churches shall know that I am he who searcheth the reines and hearts c. Question Now what proofe haue you for the diuine perfection of his gracious goodnes and constancie Answere All that the Father giueth me saith our Sauiour shall come vnto me and he that commeth vnto me I cast not away Iohn 6.37 And chap. 10. verse 27. My sheepe heare my voyce and I know them and they follow me And I giue vnto them eternall life and they shall neuer perish neither shall any plucke them out of my hand And chap. 13.1 Those whom hee loueth he loueth to the end Explication and proofe It is true For that which he performed toward his Disciples in the continuance of his loue to them he performeth the same to all whomsoeuer he beginneth once to manifest his loue vnto Reade also Prouerbs 8.17 I loue them that loue me c. And verses 20 21. I will fill their treasures And verse 31 c. My delight is with the children of men c. Likewise Iohn 1.9 And euery where we may see plainely that he is of the same minde with the Father whose gifts and calling are without repentance Heauen and earth saith he Matth. 24.35 shall passe away but my words shall not passe away The perfection of the diuine truth and righteousnes of our Sauiour may well follow in the next place Qeustion What proofe of holy Scripture haue you to this purpose Answere In the first chap. of the Epistle to the Hebrewes verse 8. Wher the Apostle sheweth that these words of the 45. Psalme O God thy throne is for euer and euer the scepter of thy kingdome is a scepter of righteousnes were spoken concerning the Sonne of God our Lord Iesus Christ and so are a plaine proofe of his most perfect and diuine iustice They are so indeede Hereof also is that a like proofe which we read Prou. 8.15 By me Princes decree iustice And verse 18. With me is righteousnes And verse 2● I cause to walke in the way of righteousnes and in the middest of the paths of iudgement No doubt hee that prescribeth guideth and incourageth others to walke in righteous waies is righteous himselfe The same is also faithfull and true And therefore is worthily calle● the true light Iohn 1.9 And chap. 7.18 He that ●eeketh his glorie that sent him the same is true and there is no vnrighteousnes in him This very same was our faithfull Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ And therefore most worthily doth he beare the name of Amen of him that is in a matchlesse degree the faithfull and true witnes Reuel 3.14 Question Finally what proofe haue you of the most perfect and diuine holines of the Sonne of God our Sauiour Answere He is holy in the same perfection of holines with the Father and the holy Ghost according to that holy acclamation of the holy Angelis Isai 6.3 Holy holy holy is the Lord of hostes the whole earth is full of his glorie Explicatiō and proofe I● is true as the Euangelist Iohn testifieth chap. 12.41 that the holy Prophet both saw Christ and spake of him at that time And the same Euangelist in his first Epistle 2.20 calleth our Sauiour the holy one And Reuel 3.7 Thus saith he that is holy and true And Act. 3.14 The holy and iust one Yea he is so holy that he sanctifieth himselfe Iohn 17.19 Thus farre for the proofe of the
prophesies concerning the conception of our Sauiour for vs and our benefit they are likewise promises that he should be borne for vs and our benefit yea euen for the greatest benefit that might possibly be procured vnto vs. Explicatiō proofe It is true It could not possibly be that our Sauiour should be conceiued by the holy Ghost in vaine His birth could by no meanes be hindred or defeated And therefore the promise of this may be said to be included in the promise of that Question But haue we no speciall or expresse promise concerning the birth of our Sauiour that it should be to our benefit Answere Yes The Lord did assure his Church of this singular mercie by his holy Prophet Isaiah long before it came to passe Explicatiō and proofe This also is verie true For so we read in the 6. verse of his 9. chapter of his prophecie where we finde it thus written vnto vs that is to our singular benefit and comfort a child is borne and vnto vs a Sonne is giuen and the gouernment is vpon his shoulder c. Read also Ier 23. verses 5.6 Behold the daies come saith the Lord that I will raise vnto Dauid a righteous branch and a King shall raigne and prosper and he shall execute iudgement and iustice in the earth In his daies Iuda shall be saued and Israel shall dwell safely and this is the name whereby they shall call him the Lord our righteousnes And againe with some further amplification chap 33. verses 14 15 16. c. To this purpose likewise serue the prophesies already mentioned concerning the time the place and the manner of his birth c. Wherefore of this no more now at this time Question WE hast to the Comforts of faith which arise from the birth of our Sauiour Is it not a matter of very great and singular comfort Answer Yes verily It both was and is still matter of great ioy and comfort to the holy Angels much more ought it to be so to vs and so is no doubt to all true beleeuing Christians Explicatiō and proofe So indeede we reade Luke chap 2. that the holy Angels reioiced that the Shepheards reioiced that Simeon and Anna reioiced at the birth of our Sauiour Christ And so ought we all to reioice as hauing singular cause with them according to the speech of the Angel to the Shepheards saying Behold I bring you tidings of great ioy that shall be to all people That is that vnto you is borne a Sauiour c. But of the duties more afterward The Comforts As touching the cause of ioy and comfort which wee haue hereby wee may conceiue of it the rather if wee helpe our selues by a comparison not vnfit to be made in this cause We knowe that great ioy ariseth to a nation when the King hath an heire apparant borne to the crowne by whom there is good hope that the gouernment shall not bee deriued to a stranger whereby vnnaturall oppression and tyrannous gouernment might easily take footing c. as we our selues haue lately very sensibly felt to the vnspeakable ioy of our hearts when after the dolefull decease of our blessed Queene Elizabeth our gracious King Iames hath succeeded whose entrance vpon his roiall throne and scepter among vs was right ioious to all right English hearts but so much the more because hee bringeth with him a young Prince yea more then one of a right princely seede But the cause of ioy which now we speake of concerning our Sauiour Christ is infinitely greater not onely to vs or any one nation that should otherwise haue perished vnder the tyranny of the Diuel sinne death and Hell but to all nations vnder heauen seeing the deliuerance and saluation of all people dependeth vpon our Sauiour the onely heire apparant of the most high possessor of heauen and earth for euer and euer And seeing as was said the Angels of heauen were reioiced by the birth of our Sauiour as is euident by their praising of God for it as we haue seene Luk. 2.13.14 and namely for our sake who haue the chiefe benefit of it it followeth by good reason that wee our selues much rather haue principall cause of most aboundant reioycing herein Question But in what respects is the birth of our Sauiour a matter of so singular and incomparable reioycing to vs and to all people Answere First because hereby the Lord our God hath to the glory of his owne name most graciously and comfortably manifested his diuine nature in the Person of his Sonne so farre as it is meete for the same to be manifested to vs here in this world Secondly because he hath manifested his most gracious and Fatherly good will toward all sorts of men in euery nation of the whole world whosoeuer shall thankefully imbrace that life and immortalitie which he hath brought to light and offereth in his Son Thirdly because from hence ariseth vnspeakable peace to the conscience of all true beleeuers both in the vse of all present blessings and also in the assured hope of the inheritance of all the blessings of the life to come in that through him we are adopted to be ioin●●eires with him F nally the birth of our Sauiour is exceeding comfortable because the world is as it were borne againe and renewed vnto God in him according as it is said He is a light of the Gentiles and the glory of his people Israel as Simeon said of him while yet he was newe borne Yea because after a long time of calamitie as it were of most gloomie darke and tempes●ous weather hee is as the rising of the Sunne vpon the world wonderfully clearing the whole face and compasse of it So indeed we reade from the 2. verse of the 9. chap of the Euangelicall prophet Isaiah in that he prophesied thus The people that walked in darknes haue seene a ●reat light they that did dwell in the land of the shadowe of death vpon them hath the light shined c. And the Apostle Paul saith that in our Sauiour Christ all things are become new 2. Cor 5.17 Read also Malachie chap 4.2 He is the Sonne of righteousnes and health is vnder his wings But that we may proceede in some order Concerning the first branch of the answere read Heb 1. verses 2 3. This representation is much more gracious and comfortable then was that sight of Gods glory wh●ch Moses might be partaker of Exod. 33.20 c. Con●erning the second branch read and consider the wordes of the holy Angel● Luk. 2.14 Glorie to God on high in earth peace and toward men good will And 1. Iohn ● 5 ye knowe that he that is the Sonne of God our Lord Iesus Christ appeared that he might take away our sins and in him is no sin And our Sauiour himselfe in the Gospell of Iohn ch 18.37 For this cause saith he am I borne and for this cause came I into the world that I should
answeres of our Sauiour The first whereof is not direct and plaine for holie modesties sake or lest he might seeme to a profane Ethnike ouer light and in his conceit verie ridiculous in taking to himselfe that great and stately name of a K●ng hee standing before Pilate in a poore and base estate So that wee may call it an answere in way of a modest demurre vntill the occasion should waxe more pressing and growe to some further maturitie and ripenesse ou● Sauiour also hereby preparing Pilate to consider that he had a more weightie matter in hand then all the dayes of his life hee was in all his politike wisedome aware of The second answer of our Sauiour containeth a description of the nature and qualitie of his Kingdome wherein also is implied a more direct answere to the first question then was made before And so did Pilate vnderstand it as appeareth by his third question Wherevpon in the third Answer our Sauiour doth furthermore render a most graue and weightie reason of the same profession of his to the further remouing of that appearance of vanitie and lightnes which Pilate no doubt would easilie haue imputed vnto him as was mentioned in the first answere if it had not bene most prudentlie preuented by the wisedome of our Sauiour And so might haue bene as a rocke to the profane and ignorant man who had not learned to distinguishe betwixt an earthlie and a heauenlie kingdome euen at once to ha●e made shipwracke of an equall proceeding in the examination of this innocent cause of our Sauiour But this beeing preuented at the verie first our Sauiour taketh the fit occasion which hee had thus prepared for himselfe verie notablie though briefelie to describe who and what maner of ones they be who are right and kindelie subiectes of his kingdome All which Questions of Pilate and Answers of our Sauiour Christ the three former Euangelistes doe verie brieflie contract according to that of S. Matthew who is in this matter the largest of them chapter 27. verse 11. in these wordes And IESVS stoode before the Gouernour and the Gouernour asked him saying Art thou the King of the Iewes Iesus said vnto him Thou saiest it Of these things therefore let vs heere stay a while to consider for our better vnderstanding according to the full reporte of the holie Euangelist Saint Iohn And first the most wise and holie modestie of our Sauiour is diligentlie to be weighed of vs from his first Answer Wherin hee hath clearelie shewed himselfe to be of a cleane contrarie disposition to our most vaine and corrupt nature F●r euery one of vs is ready to vau●t and boast our selues to the vttermost yea vnasked though we heare that all fleshe is grasse and though in truth we haue nothing of our selues worthy to be gloried in But behold our Sauiour Christ though he was most worthy of all glorie and had all excellencie of graces most iustly to be reioiced in yet he most wiselie and with all holy modesty auoydeth euen the appearance of vaine boasting The which as he did at this time before Pilate beeing examined of his Kingdome so did he before in the working of his miracles For though they could not be hidden yet he shewed plainely that hee did not by them seeke any vaine applause of men as that charge which hee gaue to diuers of those in whom he shewed his gratious power doth declare See thou tell it to no man saith our Sauiour See that no man know it c. Mat. 9.30 Mark 5.43 And againe ch 8.26 Read also Matt. 17.9 and ch 21.5 And so was the prophesie of Isaiah fulfilled in this behalfe as the same Euangelist St. Matthew declareth at large vpon the like occasion ch 12. verses 15 16 17 18 19 20. Our Sauiour Christ therefore is herein a most notable example and paterne vnto vs both to teach vs true and discreete modesty and also to reprooue and condemne the extreame vanity and folly of that arrogancy which is seated in our light and hauty nature Secondly from the description of the nature and quality of the kingdome of our Sauiour Christ conteined in his second answer we haue to consider first the meaning of the words and then the vses which we are to make of the same And so also concerning the third answer of our Sauiour In that therfore he saith My kingdome is not of this world the meaning of our Sauiour is not to exempt no not the wicked which be thick threefold in it frō his regency gouernment as touching their restraint frō much mischief which otherwise they would surely practise against his Church here in this world Nor yet to exempt them or any kingdom of this world from his iudgment and vtter destruction at the last whosoeuer should rebell against him Onely his meaning is that his kingdome being of another nature then are all or any of the kingdomes of this world is to be erected and administred wheresoeuer it shall please him to rule and reigne among his subiects after another manner then the kingdomes of this world are begunne at the first or afterward vpheld and maintained That is to say the kingdome of our Lord Iesus Christ being a spirituall kingdome all his subiects are ruled and gouerned spiritually and they doe yeelde him a spirituall obedience c. And for the same cause it is that our Sauiour Christ doth not say My kingdome is not in this world but thus My kingdome is not of this world The which words also are so to be vnderstood as they may no way debase the kingdome of our Sauiour but so as may serue best for the aduancing of it infinitely aboue all the vaine and transitory kingdomes of this fading and decaying world For of the kingdome of our Sauiour Christ there is no end but it shall put an end to all other kingdomes and remaine it selfe alone in all perfection of eternall blessednes and heauenly glory for euer and euer Luke 1.32.33 and chap. 19.27 1. Cor. 15.24 25 c. Reuel 19.11 12 13 14 15 16. And all this according to the former prophesies which we reade Psalm 2.8 9. and Psalm 110.1 2 c. Dan. 2.34 35 36. a part of the dreame of Nebuchadnezzar and verses 44 45. which is the Prophet Daniels interpretation of the same Such is the meaning of the most wise and graue answer of our Sauiour Christ to Pilat concerning his kingdome by an excellent and lightsome distinction of his spirituall and eternall gouernement and the temporall and worldly gouernment of all worldly Kings and Rulers Wherein also he giueth Pilate plainely to vnderstand that his kingdome was such a one as was no way preiudiciall to the kingdome or Empire of Caesar nor to any other kingdome of the world that should be subiect vnto it but that they may well stand together yea that his kingdome shall cause them to flourish and prosper And so Salomon a most wise and prosperous
seene and heard to worke most gracious workes and to preach most holy doctrine as a singular Prophet of God by the space of more then three yeares past euen to the day immediately going before Neuertheles neither the one nor the other could direct and order their affections to weepe as they ought either in respect of the speciall cause or end wherevnto they should haue imploied their teares Onely they were moued with a certaine naturall pitie and compassion to the outward calamitie of our Sauiour as of a most forlorne man Yet many degrees are they to be preferred before all the multitude of men who followed our Sauiour Christ all of them well neare reioycing at the externall miserie of our Sauiour Wherin their sinne must needes be most grieuous in the sight of God For when as this euill reioycing is deepely condemned in any toward his enemie according to that Prou 24.17.18 Be not thou glad when thine enemie falleth and let not thy heart reioyce when he stumbleth Lest the Lord see it and it displease him and he turne wrath from him to wit vpon thee Thē surely infinitly much more dānable was the sinne of this people in their reioycing not onely at the forlorne estate of our Sauiour but also in being themselues the instruments of the diuel for the procuring and furthering thereof But let vs come to the fourth thing that is to the excellent speech which our Sauiour vseth to the pitifull women he hauing greater and more excellent compassion ouer them then they either had or could possibly haue ouer him To the which ende as the Euangelist Luke telleth vs our SAVIOVR hearing their weeping and lamenting he turneth backe and partly to preuent the breaking of his owne tender heart according to that saying of the Apostle Paul Act 21.13 What doe yee weeping and breaking mine heart for I am ready not onely to be bound but also to dye at Ierusalem for the name of the Lord Iesus But chiefly for the instruction of these women and therewithal to the iust rebuke of the wicked multitude he sheweth them that they had a more necessarie cause of weeping then they were aware of that they ought to imploy their teares to an other end then they propounded to themselues And in this sense he saith Daughters of Ierusalem weepe not for me but weepe for your selues and for your children Not that he doth simply reproue their present weeping as if they had done ill in their so doing but he speaketh in way of comparison as though hee should say there is greater cause why yee should weepe for your selues and your children and posteritie then for me Like to that comparatiue speech of the Prophet Ioel Rent your hearts and not your garments And as the Lord saith I will haue mercie and not sacrifice But why doth our Sauiour Christ vtter this in way of an vnequall comparison No doubt both because his present condition was not so vncomfortable as they in their naturall affection conceiued and also because their owne estate was much more feareful yea euen by reason of this extreame malice pursued against him then they could thinke of as hee doth forthwith expresse vnto them in the wordes following For behold saith our Sauiour the dayes will come when men shall say blessed are the barren and the wombes that neuer bare and the pappes that neuer gaue sucke c. In the which words our Sauiour describeth vnto them the daies of the most heauie and wofull iudgement of God hasting to come vpon them And he doth it most significantly For where as naturally men and women in times of peace and prosperitie doe desire nothing more then to marrie and haue children For they cannot but delight in the increase of their owne kind more then in the increase of any other thing vnlesse they would put off the affection of nature and likewise whereas it is the singular delight of men to solace themselues not onely in the sweete vallies of the earth but also to behold the pleasant prospects which are to be seene from the heighte of the mountaines it must needes bee that those times must be most vncomfortable times wherin men and women shall count the barren blessed when they shall see their children destroied before their faces wherein also they shall wish that the mountaines would ouerwhelme them and couer them as deepe as they are high too And so it came to passe within lesse then fortie yeares after that Ierusalem and the people thereof were most miserably besieged and in the siege most miserably destroied to the number of eleuen hundreth thousand as Iosephus himselfe being a Iewe writeth And the ending of the which siege also ninetie thousand were taken prisoners and the whole nation of the Iewes dispeopled and scattered abroad from being a people to this day To this purpose like as the wicked multitude which pursued our Sauiour wished the curse of his blood both vpon themselues and their children so our Sauiour telleth them that they had special cause to weepe because of the feareful iudgments which they had prouoked against themselues and their posteritie So that happie should they be whosoeuer should by earnest repentance and supplication preuent that fiercenes of Gods diuine wrath Whence also let vs learne to take heed against all such wicked and desperate courses either in presumptuous cursing of our selues or any other Thus then our Sauiour Christ by this reason taken from an vnequall comparison doth teach these pitifull women in what respect especially they were to weepe to the end they might by the mercies of God be preserued from that most wofull calamitie and therwithal admonisheth the cruel multitude of that merciles iudgement the which should certainly fall vpon many of them The same reason doth our Sauiour make plaine by a familiar similitude in that he saith If they doe these things to a greene tree what shall be done to the drie As though he should say if the fire of Gods wrath be so hote that it kindleth the greene wood which yet is more vnapt to burne then that which is s●●e how much more shall it vtterly consume the drie wood to ashes and that very speedily Our Sauiour Christ indeed was as woode a fit matter in it selfe for the Lords anger to burne vpon insomuch as he tooke vpon him the guiltines of our sinnes but yet because he was righteous in himselfe and the very true Sonne of the Father that fresh moist greennes would not suffer him to c●nsume though he were laide to the stock as it were And Go● himselfe as it were the maister of the familie seeing greene wood lying to the fire commandet● it to be taken away and calleth for drie wood that is for the wicked which take fire by and by But in this they are in worse case then drie wood because that burneth without all sence of smart and when it is turned to ashes it burneth no more but the wicked they are
vnderstanding answerable to the cause of it that is to say the loue of Christ the which is said likewise to passe knowledge Ephes 3.19 Fourthly that with this vnspeakable consolation we haue power giuen vs to walke in some measure of holines righteousnes o● life we may learne from the grounds of the Apostles exhortation Rom. 6.12 c. For it is grounded in the vertue and efficacie of the death of our Sauiour whereinto we are baptized as we saw before And ch 8.3 God saith the same Apostle sending his own Sonne in the similitude of sinfull flesh and that euen for sinne that is because of sinne he hath condemned sinne in the flesh that is by Christes sufferings in the flesh hee hath vtterly disabled disauthorised sinne frō all power of condemning the faithful And that hath God done as it followeth in the next verse to the end the righteousnes of the law might be fulfilled in vs to wit by the imputation of the perfect obedience of Christ vnto vs that we also as a fruit thereof might through his spirit of sanctification walk after the spirit not after the flesh To ●he which purpose also he saith further ver 10. If Christ be in you the body is dead because of sinne that is as touching sinne so that it beareth the sway or dominion no longer but the Spirit is life for righteousnes sake Or as touching righteousnes mighty to quicken vs to the actions therof And thus also he deriueth the ground of sanctification from the death of Christ speaking in his own person Gal. 2.19.20 I through the law saith Paul am dead to the law and that I might liue vnto God I am crucified with Christ Thus I liue yet not I now but Christ liueth in me and in that I liue now in the flesh I liue by faith in the Sonne of God who hath loued me and giuen himselfe for me Read also Heb. 9 13.14 For if the blood of Bulles and Goates and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling thē that are vnclean sanctifieth as touching the purifying of th● flesh How much more shall the blood of Christ who through the eternall Spirit offered himselfe without spot to God purge y●ur conscience frō dead works to serue the liuing God Fiftly that by the sufferings death of our Sauiour the blessings of this life are blessed and made comfortable vnto vs we may take one proofe from that which we read Psa 22. ver 26. where this is reckoned for a fruit benefit therof that the poore shal eate be satisfied And ver 29. All they that be fat in the earth shall eate and worship So that both poore and rich feele the benefit of the sufferings of our Sauiour Read also Act. 2.46 Christians did eate their meate together with gladnes and singlenes of heart Praising God they had sauour with all the people And that euen afflictions also are made beneficiall and comfortable vnto vs by the sufferings of our Sauiour see Heb. 12.2 3. c. Where they are held forth for a notable remedy against all fainting wearines in the middest of all trouble reproach yea and as a meanes of making vs partakers of the holines of God our heauenly Father and as leauing behind thē a quiet fruit of righteousnes Wherevpon the Apostle exhorteth afflicted Christians to lift vp their hands which hang down their weake knees c. verses 10.11.12 And Rom. 8.29 we are made like to the image of our Sauiour Christ by them It is also very comfortable that we in suffering any affliction for the loue we beare to our Sa Christ are for his sake in that hee hath suffered for vs accounted of God to haue cōmunion with him in his sufferings and he with vs. Act. 9.4.5 and Colos 1.24 Read also Philip. 3 8.9 10. And Rom. 8.17 If wee suffer with him we shall be glorified with him It is the ordinary and as it were the Kings high way to the kingdom of heauen to passe through many afflictions Act. 14.22 And 2. Tim. 2.11.12 And chap. 3.12 This causeth the seruants of God to reioice and to be of good cheare in the middest of their afflictions according to the exhortation of our Sauiour Luke 6.22.23 And of the Apostle Iames. chap. 1. ver 2. and of Peter 1 Ep. 4.12.13.14 All this doubtlesse is from the merit of the sufferings of our Sauiour for vs insomuch as of punishments they are by the vertue and grace thereof conuerted to be medicines to cure those euils that are in vs such as are selfe-loue and loue of the world c. yea they are turned to be blessed preparations and furtherances vnto vs toward the kingdome of God according to the holy Prouerb chap. 6 23. Corrections for instruction are the way of life And Ps 119. verse 67. Before I was afflicted I went astray but now I keepe thy word And verse 71. It is good for me that I haue beene afflicted that I might learne thy word Sixtly that we haue the right of dominion Lordship ouer the creatures restored vnto vs by the death of our Sauiour read Ps 8. conferred with Heb. 2.6.7.8.9 For though Adam at the first had this dignity by the right of creation through the bounteous mercy of God yet he lost it by his disobedience and presumption against God And he lost it not onely from himselfe but also from vs. Our recouerie of that interest is only by the redemption of our Lord Iesus Christ who alone is the heire of all things so that we are no better thē intruders and vsurpers of all whatsoeuer we hold not as it were by lease permission or by free deed of gift from him Seauenthly that the naturall death is by his death made a spirituall aduantage vnto vs we may be assured by that which we read Philip. 1.20.21 22.23 This aduantage doth first of all betide our soules in that they cease to sinne and in that they are first receiued to glory and then our bodies who resting from the toile of their labours are freed for euer from their infirmities and diseases and shall at the last day rise againe to the same glory Thus in death we haue through the death of our Lord Iesus Christ a plentifull remedy against death it selfe like as the Scorpion by the skill of the Phisitian yeeldeth a medicine against the venime of the owne stinging and so is also the cause of the owne death vnto it selfe Eightly whereas the holy Angels must needes be enemies against vs because of our sinfull rebellion against God they are nowe made our friends through our reconcilia●ion with God by the death of Christ Heb. 1.14 For doubtlesse it is with the holy Angels as with the seruants of a Prince in his Court who when any are in disgrace with the King all stand aloofe from them c. but if the King receiue the same partie or parties to fauour and doe pardon their offence then are they
consideration of the carrying of our Sauiour to be crucified without the Citie Let vs goe forth therfore saith he out of the campe bearing his reproch For here we haue no continuing citie but we seeke one to come Heb 13.11.12.13.14 And we are likewise from the same meditation to be of good comfort in our Lord Iesus Christ though for his sake wee shall at any time be indited condemned led forth and executed with the wicked as our Sauiour Christ was seeing there is no cause to doubt but if our cause be good God himself both knoweth perfitly well and will also out of all question most graciously put the difference betwixt the one and the other BVt that we may proceed with the holy Storie Question What dutie ought to proceed from vs in respect of that which followeth next concerning this that our Sauiour yeelded himselfe to be stripped out of his clothes before he was fastened to the crosse Answer We are to learne from hence that it is our dutie to be willing to loose all for our Sauiours sake that is euen to goe naked out of the world like as we came naked vnto it nothing doubting but God hath prepared a heauenly clothing for vs. We may perceiue also by this that by our sinning against God wee haue made our selues vnworthy of any ragge to couer vs and therefore in no wise to bee proude though God doe neuer so richly cloth our fraile and vnworthy bodies but in all outward clothing and decking to be soberly minded Yea we are taught from hence to embrace naked Christ yeelding himselfe naked to the Crosse for vs as being through faith our onely clothing which maketh vs comely and well pleasing in the most gratious eye of our God Explication and proofe It is very true For otherwise if wee be not clothed with Christ and his righteousnes by faith no silkes nor veluets nor any ornaments or iewels of gold or the most pretious pearles that may be can any thing at all commend vs in the sight of God So that that may be said of all such which wee reade in the holy Gospell that they are yet for all these thinges still without their wedding garment Reade also Iames. 2.1 c. And 1. Tim. 2.9 10. and 1 Pet. 3.3 c. And Isai 3 16. c. Question But that wee may informe our selues yet further What dutie are wee to learne from this that our Sauiour being stripped was lifted vp naked to the view both of Iewe and Gentile vpon the Crosse Answer It is our dutie to lift vp the eyes of our mindes through a true and liuely faith to looke for our redemption onely from him euen from naked Christ and from no other person or thing whatsoeuer beside neuer so richly clad or adorned wee knowing and beleeuing that euen therefore he did set himselfe thus naked to the iudgement and anger of God that he might clothe and adorne vs with the glorious robe of his righteousnes and replenish vs with our sufficient portion of that spirituall fulnes which is perfectly compleat in him Explication proofe This also is very true For notwithstanding our Sauiour cannot be seene nowe nor for many hundreds of yeeres since vpon the crosse neither are wee at Golgotha that place and hillocke whereon his Crosse was set vp yet he is still lifted vp vnto vs by the preaching of the Gospell according to that which the Apostle Paul writeth to the Galatians chap. 3 1. Where he reprouing them for their turning aside to the ceremonies of the lawe according as they began to be seduced and led aside by some false Teachers sayeth O ye foolish Galatians who hath bewitched ye that ye should not obey the truth to whom Iesus Christ was before described in your sight and among ye crucified Like as we also may say the same to all such as are led aside by popish Seducers to set vp to themselues lying Crucifixes in Church windowes in high waies c. O ye foolish Papists how is it that ye are thus bewitched c. The preaching of the Gospell of our Sauiour Christ and of his Crosse by liuely voice is that onely lifting vp of Christ which since his bodily crucifying hee hath allowed vnto vs and his whole Church for the informing of our knowledge and faith to looke vp and to rest vpon him crucified for vs. Question NOwe therefore what is our dutie to be learned from the crucifying it selfe and that also in this respect that he was lifted vp betweene two notable theeues Answer This may iustly teach vs that we are to acknowledge our selues not small or pettie offenders but most grieuous and hainous sinners against the Maiestie of God euen such as haue robbed and spoiled him of that glorie which was most due from vs vnto him Explicatiō proofe Wee haue in deede dealt so with the most high Maiestie of God infinite waies in that wee haue denied him euery good and holy dutie euen as if wee had the soueraigntie in our owne hands and did owe no duty at all to him answerable to the dealing of our first Parents at the beginning And according to the sinne of Israel wherewith the Lord chargeth them by his Prophet Malachie chap 3.8 Will a man spoile his Gods yet ye haue spoiled me c. yea euen this whole nation saith the Lord. Reade also Isai 1.21.22.23 and Ierem. 7.8.9.10.11 Question But what else haue wee to learne from this that our Sauiour was crucified for our sinnes yea euen to the shedding of his pretious blood and in that hee did beare our curse vpon the same his crosse Answer Wee ought to learne from hence that it is our duty to slay and as it were to crucifie our wicked affections and lustes which rebell against the holy lawe of God insomuch as these wicked lustes and affections of ours were the cause why our Sauiour must then beare our curse that we might be blessed and why he must be crucified or else we could not haue beene s●ued Explicatiō proofe It must needes be so Who therefore duly considering that sinne was the cause of this so grieuous an execution and the same also against a most deare and gratious friend such a one as our Sauiour was to vs and against such a one as was in respect of his owne most perfect holines and obedience in most high reputation before God who I say considering these thinges can but hate sinne as the very sword which so deepely wounded our Sauiour yea euen to a most grieuous and dolefull death as we are heereafter further to consider when we shall come to that part of the history Question Let vs now goe forward What duty are wee to learne from this that our Sauiour Christ euen in the time of his most cruell nailing to the Crosse praieth for those that were his persecutours that is for so many of them as did belong to him by the appointment of God Answere This
least of those that be the Lords which he taketh in like ill part as if hee were neglected or molested himselfe Matth. 25. verses 45. It ought to suffice yea to be ouer much in our iudgement that the Lord hath once drunke vinegre and euery way the most bitter potion of Gods wrath for our cause though we doe neuer make him nor any of his any vnkinde offer of it againe Thus much concerning this short speech I thirst for declaration of that duty which ought to be yeelded from the comfort of it NOw we are come to the next like short speech of our Sauiour which was his Question It is finished What duty ought to arise from the comfort of faith herein Answere It is most cleare and manifest from hence that we ought not in any wise to looke to any other sacrifices or satisfactions or merits either in the whole or in part for our red●mption and iustification in the sight of God but to this of our Sauiour alone neither that wee are to feare the popish dreame of any other purgatory then the blood of our Sauiour Christ to the washing away and remouing of all sinnes out of the sight of God Explication and proofe This is very cleare and manifest indeed For seeing we haue our warrant from our Sauiour himselfe that all was finished yea euen to the very point of death when he spake these words and that immediately after this he tooke his death which was the sealing vp of all therefore we may yea we ought iustly to be out of doubt that all doctrines of any further addition for satisfaction or merit before God are false and Antichristian And for th● same cause to be vtterly reiected of all true christians who cannot bu● looke onely to Christ for their perfit redemption and saluation according to the expresse doctrine of the holy Scriptures THe duties which doe belong to that comfort of faith which ariseth from the consideration of the last words of our S●uiour vpon the Crosse they are yet behinde Answer Which ought those duties to be Question We ought from the example of our Sauiour Christ who at his death commended his spirit int● the hand of his Father to esteeme alwaies of our soules as of a chiefe treasure and to be carefull ouer them aboue all earthly things Yea more then of our corruptible bo●ies against the time of our death whensoeuer it shall come Secondly it is our dutie to make choise of God as of the onely worthy feoffie of trust as one wou d say to whose custody wee may safely commend them from day to day And thirdly it is likewise our bounden dutie comfortably to beleeue that if we shall faithfully commit our soules vnto him hee will for our Sauiours sake keepe them most charity and tenderly in his owne hands alwaies and at the end of our liues receiue them and reserue them in a blessed estate vntill the resurrection of our bodies and then also wil● ioyne them againe to our bodies like as our Sauiour returned to his bodie the third day and thenceforth will blesse vs with glorie and happinesse in them both for euermore Explication proofe Vnto these duties no doubt doe the wordes of our Sauiour Christ leade all true beleeuers according to that notable imitation of Stephen Act. 7.59 Lord Iesus receiue my Spirit And according to the practise of S. Paul 2. Tim. 1.12 saying I know whom I haue beleeued and I am perswaded that he is able to keepe that which I haue committed to him against that day Yea and hee beleeued likewise no doubt that God was as willing to doe it as he was able according to that in the 8. verse of the 4. chap. of the same Epistle in that he saith Henceforth is laide vp for me the crowne of righteousnes which the Lord the righteous Iudge will giue me at that day and not to mee onely but vnto all them also which loue his appearing The same thing therefore ought we to beleeue at this day which they did then according to the practise of our most blessed Sauiour And the rather because as we may perceiue both by the words of Stephen and also of the Apostle Paul that our Sauiour hath the ioint care of our soules together with the Father according to that he saith None shall take them out of my hand Iohn 10. verses 27.28 29 30. My sheepe heare my voice and I know them and they follow me And I giue vnto them eternall life and they shall neuer perish neither shall any plucke them out of my hand My Father who gaue them to me is greater then all and none is able to take them out of my Fathers hand I and my Father am one So that well saith M. Beza The hands of our Sauiour are not now held fastened to the Crosse after the manner as our painters doe paint him for then hee could not embrace vs but he hath them at full libertie euen from heauen to embrace the soules of those that dye in h●m the which hee cherisheth in his bosome vnto the time that they shall be restored to their bodies to the enioying of an euerlasting spirituall life and vntill that hee doe come in the cloudes of heauen to meete vs and that wee for our parts be taken vp into the aire to meete the Lord to enioy together with him that blessed estate which is prepared for vs for euer 1. Thes 4.14 Goe to therefore as saith that comfortable and faithfull Preacher Let vs be of good cheare and lay these things to heart euen these so great and notable comforts for our necessary reliefe specially against the last combate God as we knowe doth earnestly require trustie fidelitie in one man toward another euen concerning the least thinges that are committed to anie mans trust that they should be forth-comming and therfore inioineth a penaltie to be laide by the Magistrate vpon all such as shall be found to deale vntrustily as we reade Exod. chap. 22. verses 7.8 c. to the 13. How therefore can we thinke but that the Lord who requireth fidelitie in men as a principall point of his lawe as our Sauiour also declareth Matth. chap. 23. verse 23. will assuredly approue himselfe most faithfull aboue all men to euerie one that accounting him faithfull shall commit themselues to his trust Thus much of the comfortable duties of faith concerning the comfortable manner of our Sauiour Christes dying Question NOw what may our duty be in regard of the death it selfe which the same our Sauiour died Answer First of all as his death was in the manner of it farre differing from the death of all other so are we to know that the endes and fruites of his death are most singular aboue the death of any or all other creatures Explicatiō proofe It is very true as the endes and fruites themselues rehearsed in the Comforts doe euidently declare So that as K. Dauid was not affected after a
lighten our eyes by the bright beames of his Gospel through the inward operation and illumination of his holy Spirit Explicatiō proofe These things verily may we not causlesly admonish our selues of from this holy consideration of the time Yea so may we obserue both his power and diuine grace that how soeuer foolish and wicked men armed themselues and watched the body of our Sauiour as if they would willingly no doubt if they could haue knocked him downe with their billes and halbards or haue taken and carried him to the chiefe Priests to haue beene crucified againe so soone as hee should in their sight haue offered to rise out of the graue Yet it was as vnpossible for them to keep him downe that he should not rise c. or to hinder the fruit and effect of his resurrection that by it the world should not be inlightened with the knowledge of his saluation as it was for them or for all the wicked in the world with all their power or deuises which they might possibly vse to hinder the Sun one moment of time from the course of the rising thereof and that it should not cast forth the bright warme beames of it euer the face of the earth And so likewise is it vnpossble at this day or for the time to come euē as it hath bin from the first time of our Sauiour Christs resurrection that any aduerse power should be able to hinder the light of the gospel that it should not shine forth there where as God doth cōmand the light of it to breake out for the comfort of his people Yea and though it falleth out by reason of the sinnes and vnthankfulnesse of the world that it is obscured and darkened for a time as the Sunne is sometime by a thicke cloude yet it is vnpossible that it should not according to the good will pleasure of God renew the light like as the Sunne after a while breaketh through the clowde againe Th●s then the time of the resurrection of our Sauiour may fitly leade vs to consider of the comfortable prophe●ie of Malachi in the place alledged before in these words of the Prophet Vnto you that feare my name shall the Sunne of righteousnes arise and health shall be vnder his wings and ye shall goe forth c. And likewise it may aptly put vs in remembrance of the like prophecies of newe heauens ●nd a new earth and of a new and cleare light to be made by our Lord Iesus Christ at the manifesting of himselfe and through the breaking forth of his Gospel and the publishing of it to all the nations of the world Isai 60.1.3 c. and ch 65.17.19 and ch 66.22 and Zech. 14.7.9 And euen for this cause as it seemeth would the Lord then beginne the world to come euen in the morning with the light as the time of the Gospel is termed 1. Iohn 2.8 to put a difference betwixt it and the former world The place frō whence he did rise againe which in the creation thereof was begunne in darknes for darknes couered all as Gen. 1.1 Hetherto of the time when our Sauiour rose againe THe place now followeth to be considered of vs. Which therefore was the place whence our Sauiour did rise againe Question Answer The graue wherein he was buried and continued to the third day as it were among the dead and in the very state and condition of the dead that was the place from whence he rose the third day euen from the dead his body being quickened by the returning of the soule vnto it againe Explication proofe It is true For that was the very place whether the women came early to seeke the body of our Sauiour but saw that it was gone And the Angel speaking of the same place telleth them He is not here but is risen remember how he spake vnto you c. Luke 24.6 And Marke 16.6 He is risen he is not here behold the place where they put him And Matth. 28.6 He is not here for he is risen as hee said come see the place where the Lord was laid And in this respect let vs call to minde that to the end there might bee no pretence of cauill against the resurrection of our Sauiour from the very place where hee was laide the holy Story assureth vs that the sepulchre in the which hee was laid was by Gods prouidence newly hewen out of the rocke and that neuer any had beene buried in it till our Sauiour was laid there Matth. 26.60 Iohn 19.41 Let this for the present suffice touching the place THe manner how our Sauiour Christ arose out of the graue is next to be examined Question How was that Answer The holy Story reporteth it thus While the vnbeleeuing and malitious Iewes little thinking that our Sauiour Christ should indeed rise againe the third day as he had said that he would and yet to put the matter out of question gathered togither set and charged a watch or garison of souldiers to keepe the sepulchre wherein the body of our Sauiour was buried lest his Disciples as they pretended should come by night and steale it away and say to the people he is risen frō the dead and lest as they further pretended to feare that by this meanes the last error should be worse then the first the Lord in this while euen early in the morning on the third day sent his holy Angell from heauen who caused a great earthquake and rowled away that great stone which was laid ouer the sepulchre and sate vpon it hauing a countenance like lightening and his rayment white as snow so that for feare of him the keepers were astonied and become as dead men so that as the holy Euangelist testifieth our Sauiour Christ did rise againe from the dead euen in this time according as he had said that he would Explication and proofe Such indeed was the māner of the resurrection of our Sauiour as the Euangelist Matthew reporteth it chapt 27.62 c. to the end of the chapter and cha 28. verse 2.4 So that we may truly say that he rose againe in a diuine manner insomuch as hee rose by his owne diuine power and so declared himselfe mightily to be the Sonne of God according to that we reade Rom. 1.4 and Iohn 2.19 and 10.18 as we haue seene before Neither is it any thing against this that the raising vp of our Sauiour is attributed to the Father Acts. 2.24.30.33 and chap. 3.15 and 5.30.31 and 13.30.33.34.37 Rom. 8.11 Eph. 1.20 and 2.6 and 1. Pet. 1.21 this is not against it I say insomuch as there is but one Deitie both of the Father and the Sonne Question But if our Sauiour rose againe by his owne diuine power why then did not he himselfe rowle away the stone and amaze the souldiers with the brightnesse of his owne diuine glorie and maiestie and so take away all heart and courage from them as hee
to seek the liuing among the dead we see that forgetfulnes of holy doctrine neglect of due care to vnderstand it which is a forestalling of memory they are sins to be sorrowed for to be watched against c. Fourthly in that the Angel as also our Sauiour himselfe did command incourage these women to go with speed to the disciples the tender care of the Lord appeareth who would not haue vs continue long but speedily to breake off vnprofitable and causelesse sorrowes yea to comfort our selues according to all causes of comfort specially according to those of our eternall saluation which he is most carefull to make knowne vnto vs. Fiftly in that the holy Angel maketh speciall mention of Peter the same tender and mercifull care of the Lord toward sinners doth yet more liuely appeare because hee would haue Peter in special māner comforted against his special discomfort euen against that most deepe sorrow which no doubt yet lay in his bosome for his grieuous fall Sixtly in that both the Angell and also our Sauiour himselfe biddeth the women tell his disciples that according as he had promised before his death so he would now go before thē into Galile and that there they should see him this sheweth that the Lord is like minded now as he was before euen to delight to shew himselfe to further his work rather in mean places among the poorer of his people where his Gospel is more willingly imbraced thē in places of greater reckoning in the world and among the richer sort of men where both hee and his Gospel it vsually most contemned and reiected as it was at this time especially in the Citie of Ierusalem Finally in that the women fall downe at the feet of our Sauiour worship him it is manifest that they did perfectly know and discerne him from all men in the world as we may say to be our Sauiour and no other but he Explication and proofe It is manifest indeed For otherwise they would not haue fallen down before him worshipped him and that with such a religious mind I doubt not as it is not lawful to yeeld to any creature but to him on●ly who being true man is also the very true eternall sonne of God This therfore among the rest may iustly be a certaine confirmation vnto vs euen vpon the certaine knowledge of these faithfull godly women that our Sauiour is vndoubtedly risen again And touching the other branches of your answer First of all it is likewise out of all question that they who with a dutiful affecti●n seek after the knowledge and faith of our Sa Ch are a thousand fold more blessed then the wicked aduersaries who any way set thēselues against him as the gratious dealing of the Lord with thē euen here in this world doth shew in that he cōforteth all such by his holy Spirit and giueth them inward peace of conscience But at the last daie hee will most perfectly declare it when all such shall see the Lord in his glory to their vnspeakable cōfort the rest shal be so terrified that they would gladly that the huge mountaines rocks might fall vpon thē to hide them frō his presence Reuel 6.16.17 For seeing the glory of the resurrection of our Sauiour was so great by the ministery of one Angel how infinite shal the glory of his cōming to iudgment be when he shal shew himselfe in his perfect glory accompanied with the thousand thousands of his Angels Math. 2● 31 Secondly according to the second branch of your answer our Sauiour pronounceth them blessed who beleeue though they see not Iohn 20.29 But of this more afterward Touching the third branch the admonitiō of the Apostle to the Heb. ch ● 1 ● 3.4 is worthily to be harkned vnto in that he saith Wherfore we ought diligently to giue heed to the things which we haue heard lest at any time we shoul● let thē sl●p c. Certainly if our Sa Ch had not bin so gratious as to shew himself to renue the doctrine of his resurrectiō the knowledge of it was likely to haue perished through the forgetfulnes not only of these women but also of all the rest of the disciples In like manner our owne forgetfulnes is ready to indanger vs to loose the fruit of much holy doctrine frō time to time if we be not carefull to call to god for his grace to the succoring of our memories against the weaknes therof Answerable to the fourth branch is that gratious cōmission of the Lord. Isai 40.1 c. Comfort ye Comfort ye my people will your God say Speake comfortably to Ierusalem and cry vnto her that her warfare is accomplished that her iniquity is pardoned c. Likewise the practise of the Apostle guided by the Spirit of God 2. Cor. 2.1 c. in that he laboureth to comfort the Corinthians against their former sorrow And again ch 7.3.4 c. 13. Read also Phil. 2.26.27.28 ch 4 4. To the fift branch agreeth the like gratious dealing of our Sauiour in shewing himselfe to Peter before he appeared to any of his men-disciples Luk 24.34 Likewise his often demanding of him whether he loued him or no Iohn 21.15.16.17 But of these more in their due places afterward The sixt branch is according to that answer which our Sauiour gaue to the messengers of Iohn Baptist Math. 11.5 The poore receiue the Gospel and ch 18.1 c. Our Sauiour hath care of his litle ones Hetherto of the second appearance of our Sauiour to the manifesting of his resurrection The proofe of his resurrection by his third appearance LEt vs come to the third Question Where is that recorded vnto vs Ans In the 24. ch of the Euangelist Luke verse ●4 The Lord is risen indeed say some of the eleuen as they were gathered together and hath appeared to Simon Explicatiō This is vpon speciall occasion set downe by the Euangelist after the narration of the appearance of our Sauiour to the two Disciples that were going to Emmaus But that it was a thing performed by our Sauiour before that at the least before they came from Emmaus to Ierusalē the Euangelist himselfe doeth make it plaine For as he saith when these two Disciples came to report vnto the eleuē that they had seen our Sauiour at the same instant that they came in some of the eleuē were talking said that he had appeared to Simon It was as it is most like that appearance which the Apostle Paul writeth of 1. Cor. 15.5 He was seene of Cephas For Cephas as wee know as well as Simon were diuers names of one and the same Peter Of this appearance of our Sauiour to Peter there is little written and therefore we will briefly passe it ouer Onely let vs here call to minde againe that which was once mentioned before that the most mercifull disposition of our Sauiour is hereby declared in
glory of the onely begotten Son of God c yet if God doe not continue still to enlighten vs by his holy spirit we should be ignorant and vnbeleeuing touching those points yet remaining as euen these chief disciples were for a season And therefore we learne further from hence that we are still continually to craue of God that he will vouchsafe to open our eyes that euen as he hath lincked together all the Articles of our faith as in a golden chaine so it would please him to renewe from time to time the gracious light of his holy spirit that we may from point to point attaine to the true vnderstanding and faith of euery one of them For assuredly looke where the Lord leaueth teaching there of necessitie shall wee cease learning And therefore let vs be alwaies very careful not onely publikely but also priuately euery one by our selues and with our families to pray earnestly to God for the daily illumination of his holy spirit in euery point of his most holy and diuine truth This haue the excellent seruants of God done before vs namely the Prophet in the 119. Psalm verse 18. Open mine eyes that I may see the wonders of thy lawe And the Apostle Paul he praieth in the behalfe of such as had already profited excellently well in the knowledge and faith of our Lord Iesus Christ that the eyes of their vnderstanding might be yet more and more inlightened Ephes 1.16.17.18 Col. 1.9 Wherefore we much rather ought to doe it as they who stand insomuch the more need then they by how much we haue lesse profited Questionles the cause why many euen of such as haue heard the word a long time and enioyed all other the holy ordinances of the Lord doe remaine still very ignorant of whom it may be saide that they are euer learning and neuer come to the knowledge of the truth it is for that they be not instant with the Lord by praier both in publike ioyning with the preacher and also in priuate by themselues attending diligently vpon the ministery of the word intreating his blessing vpon the same For no doubt if the most ignorant in the congregation would pray feruently to God for grace they should find the Lord true in his most holy gracious promise Aske and ye shal receiue seeke and ye shall find knocke and it shall be opened vnto you For as our Sauiour assure ● vs whosoeuer asketh receiueth and he that seeketh findeth and to him that knocketh it shall be opened For what man is there among you c. Mat 7.7 c. read also Luk 11. ● They that are ch●ldren in knowledge and stande in need of milke should grow in time fit to be fed with more strong meat as the Apostle speaketh 1. Co 3.1.2.3 Heb ● 12.13.14 1. Pet 2.1.2 For as wee read Psal 19.7 The Lord giueth wisedome to the simple yea Prou 1.4 sharpnes of wit and to the child knowledge and vnderstanding Thus much concerning the effect of the breathing of our Sauiour vpon his Disciples saying Receiue the holy Ghost in that hereby their vnderstanding was opened And this is the fourth particular But that which is annexed vnto it is no lesse worthy to be obserued of vs touching the subiect matter of their vnderstanding namely the holy Scriptures for so saith the holy Euang that our Sa opened their vnderstanding that they might vnderstād the Scriptures Our Sauiour could by immediate reuelation haue giuen them knowledge without the written word but to cut off all occasion of seeking after phantasticall reuelations beside the word as many proud spirited men doe attempt and in the meane while set not a flocke by the Scriptures it pleased our Sauiour euen of purpose no doubt to honour the Scriptures thus far as to make them the groūd and guides of the vnderstanding of his most choise disciples Yea he himselfe though all that he spake was as authenticall as the Scriptures for he was the very truth it selfe yet he had alwaies his recourse to the Scriptures of the olde Testament to ground his doctrine on Moses and the prophets as it is plentifully recorded by the holy Euangelists And as it followeth in the very next words containing the fift particular Question Which are they Answer And he said vnto them Thus it is written and thus it behoued Christ to suffer and to rise again● from the dead the third day Luke 24.46 Explicatiō How the sufferings and resurrection of our Sauiour are written of in the holy Scriptures we haue shewed before Here let vs obserue diligently that insomuch as our Sauiour standeth so often in the rehearsall and confirmation of his sufferings and resurrection that they are matters of singular weight not to be posted ouer as children doe in saying the Articles of their fai●h but to be most seriously minded both of yong and olde with the best discretion and most aduised iudgement that all of vs can attaine vnto They are two of the principallest things which our thoughts and meditations ought to haue recourse vnto in the morning when we rise in the euening when we goe to bed yea in the night as wee lye vpon our beds Wee ought to talke of them as wee walke abroad with our neighbours and as wee sit at home with our wiues and children c. Verily none of vs haue yet euer sufficiently and deepely enough pondered and weighed them Whose heart should not be wonderfully affected both with godly sorrow for sinne with zealous hatred against sinne with vnsatiable loue towardes God our heauenly Father and towards the Sonne of God our Lord Iesus Christ himselfe considering that hee would according to the will of his Father most willingly suffer for vs yea euen to the death the death of the Crosse as we haue heard at large before And who duly considering that the same our Lord Iesus Christ who dyed for our sinnes is verily risen againe for our iustification cannot but bee vnspeakeably reioyced and stirred vppe to rise from the death of sinne to serue the liuing God as we are after to consider in the comforts and duties belonging to the faith of the same Here also we see which are the principall things which our Sauiour commendeth to the faith of his Disciples as the chiefe grounds and pillars thereof and which were to be most carefully preached of them as the chiefe grounds of the common faith of all Christians There are many other Articles indeede in no wise to be neglected of vs but if wee should studie neuer so long we could not name two Articles of like necessarie respect yea of like both respect and prospect as we may say the one pointing vs backe yea containing in a manner all the humiliation of our Sauiour euen from his birth to his death the other pointing vs forward to his full and perfect glorification it being as a most triumphant entrance into it neuer to fall from the victorie and
labour all the night the morning also being well spent And in this prouision which was prepared we are to consider of our Sauiour both as of the baker or rather maker of the bread and as of the fisher of the fish that was now a broiling and as of the Cooke which kindled yea altogether made that fire wherewith they were broiled Yea we are to consider of him as being all in all the onely maister and maker of this feast Wherein all things were so admirable to the Disciples and so euident declarations of the diuine power of our Sauiour beside that knowledge which they had of his person that they wrought this effect in their hearts that as the Euangelist saith as it followeth in the 12. verse None of the Disciples durst aske him who art thou seeing they knewe that he was the Lord. Yea euen their Lord and maister indeed according to that his first speech wherein he called them by the name of his children or seruants as was declared before And thus we may easily see that there was no cause why they needed to aske our Sauiour who art thou Question But why doth the Euangelist say they durst not aske him Answer He giueth thereby to vnderstand that although there was some remnant of doubtings in their minds yet that their doubtings were now so weakened by the former appearances of our Sauiour and by his present diuine workes that they durst not for feare of the iust rebuke of our Sauiour giue place vnto them Explicatiō proofe And not without very iust cause For seeing their owne hearts reprooued them they might wel know that he that was greater then their hearts might by all right haue more sharply rebuked them And verily it ought to be a shame to euery Disciple and scholler of our Sauiour much more to those that are of the head forme as it were to be alwaies learning not to profit by the excellent instructions that are giuen vnto them Heb 5.12 It is very meet that faith enioying the meanes of increase should grow more more and not alwaies be a like infirme and weake We ought not to beare with such slouth in our selues much lesse may we thinke that the Lord will indure it and not reproue and chastice vs for it Such therefore was the cause of the Disciples feare Question Now what followeth in our text Answer Iesus then came saith Saint Iohn and took bread and gaue them and fishe likewise ver 13. Explicatiō The taking of bread which the Euangelist speaketh of and likewise of fish it is in such manner to be vnderstood as hath beene else where more particularly described to wit as being accompanied with thankes-giuing after the most holy manner constantly vsed by our Sauiour And so must the giuing both of the bread and of the fish also bee vnderstood not after the common custome of the housholder who alloweth to euery one of the family his portion but as from the author and giuer of all things euen from the God of heauen and earth like as if our Sauiour should haue said to his Disciples behold my deare children and seruants I giue yee a visible signe and plaine proofe that I am both able and also willing while yee shall performe a faithfull seruice vnto me to prepare and furnish you a table in the middest of your enemies wheresoeuer yee shall become euen as I did to Dauid my seruant as he acknowledgeth Psalm 23. The Lord is my shepheard I shall not want c. Thou doest prepare a table before mee in the fight of mine aduersaries c. Such no doubt is the meaning of our Sauiour by making his Disciples this extraordinarie banquet And it may iustly teach vs all this common and vniforme lesson that all whatsoeuer wee receiue either for foode or for any other reliefe of our fraile estate here in this life it commeth not originally from our owne industrie and labour or by any other meanes but from the good hand and blessing of God our Sauiour who pitieth vs and knoweth wherereof we stand in neede And therefore that we are to receiue all things as from his holy handes and to vse all the good blessings of God soberly and purely as becommeth his guests inuited by himselfe to be partakers of them c. Specially may the faithfull Ministers and preachers of the Gospell take their comfort from these declarations of the diuine care and prouidence of our Sauiour ouer his Disciples For out of all question he retaineth the same care all waies euer since he ascended into heauen which hee at this time expressed thus graciously while he was on the earth It is he that giueth bread to the hungry c. Hetherto of all the gracious speeches and actions together with the effectes of them such as were saide to be considered of vs in the time before dinner And as for that which the Euangelist saith verse 14. This was the third time that Iesus shewed himselfe c. wee haue shewed already how Saint Iohn is to be vnderstood and that it doth nothing hinder why we in our more particular account may not reckon it for the seauenth appearance c. Now let vs come to the speeches of our Sauiour such as hee vttered after dinner We may for orders sake reduce them to the number of foure They are all of them directed indeede particularly to Peter though not for his instruction and admonition alone The first speech hath sixe branches consisting first in three questions and secondly in a threefolde charge and direction following vpon a threefolde affirmatiue answere of Peter all of them tending to one ende and purpose which our Sauiour intended thereby and all almost in the very same wordes Let vs therefore first of all consider of this first speech of our Sauiour to Peter How doth the Euangelist report it Question Answer It followeth thus in the holy story 15.16.17 So when they had dined Iesus saide to Simon Peter Simon the sonne of Iona louest thou me more then these He saide vnto him yea Lord thou knowest that I loue thee Hee saide vnto him feede my lambes He saide vnto him againe the second time Simon the sonne of Iona louest thou me He saide vnto him yea Lord thou knowest that I loue thee He saide vnto him Feede my sheepe Hee said vnto him the third time Simon the sonne of Iona louest thou me Peter was sorie because hee said to him the third time louest thou me and hee saide vnto him Lord thou knowest all things thou knowest that I loue thee Explicatiō Iesus said vnto him Feede my sheepe This may well be reckoned for the first speech of our Sauiour after dinner though consisting of sundry branches seeing all of them as was saide are tending to one and the same ende and all as wee see repeated almost in the same wordes Whether we looke to the three questions of our Sauiour or to the three answers of Peter
in vs toward him Wee must trie and examine our selues concerning our loue to Christ as the Apostle Paul telleth vs that euery Christian must try his faith in Christ 2. Cor. 13.5 Proue your selues whether ye are in the faith examine your selues know ye not your owne selues how that Iesus Christ is in yee except ye be reprobates The reasons why wee are thus to try our selues are principally two First because there is naturally in euery one of vs too great loosenesse and negligence touching the matters of the Kingdome of GOD and of our owne soules and saluation as it is euident by the common speeches of all Who though their own consciences conuict thē that the houre is to come that euer they seriously setled their hearts to inquire and search after these things yet they will readily and boldly say they are sure of their saluation and that they loue God with all their heart and that it were pitie that any should liue that loue not Christ c. Thus euery man is ready to giue forth good words But loue in words onely and from the teeth outward as wee say is condemned betwixt man and man and therefore the precept is giuen Let vs not loue in word neither in tongue onely but in deede and in truth 1. Ioh. 3.18 Much lesse may wee thinke that the Lord will regard bare words how neere so euer the mouth draweth toward him when the heart is farre from him as he complaineth by his holy Prophet Isai 29.13 Matth. 15.7 c. Lest therefore this generall loosenes and negligence should deceiue vs it is necessarie that euery wise Christian doe take a more carefull course Secondly it is necessarie that we trie our hearts concerning our loue to our Sauiour because there is a most hidden deceitfulnesse in euery mans heart to thinke that much good is in it which is not in truth and that it is free from much euill which it is tainted withall vntill it be chased away by this diligent inquisition and by our putting of our selues as it were vpon the racke Yea rather vntill we distrusting our owne triall as being partiall therein doe after the example of Dauid intreate the Lord who onely doth truly trie the heart and searcheth the reines Ier. 17.10 as was alledged a while since that it would please him to trie vs and both to make knowne vnto vs that which is amisse and also to testifie what the worke of his owne holy and secret grace is in vs according to that Psal 26.1.2 c. and Psal 139 verses 23.24 Trie me O God and know mine heart proue me and know my thoughts And consider if there be any way of wickednes in me and leade thou me in the way for euer And although the Lord doe at any time trie vs by laying his word to our consciences according to that of the Prophet Isai chap. 28.17 Iudgement also will I lay to the rule and righteousnes to the ballance c. And Exod. ●0 verse 20. or by any affliction as Deut. 8.2 or by any of his righteous seruants Psal 141.5 yea or though it should be by an aduersarie 2. Sam. 16 1●.12 Wee are to take heede that we be not therfore pettish and froward against the Lord after the manner of the wicked but that wee be sorie with Peter to remember that we haue giuen the Lord iust cause to call vs to so narrow a reckoning Neither are wee to thinke this to be contrarie to the Lords most free grace and aboundant mercie so comfortably described Psal 103 8. c. Ier. 31.33.34 Micah 7.18.19 and in many other places God doth neuer call to his owne minde or bring the sinnes of his children to their remembrance in his wrath and with a purpose to take vengeance of them but onelie in mercy to better their repentance and to stay them from further sinning euen from the remembrance of his former mercies in forgiuing their sinnes Thus our Sauiour dealt with Peter And the same course of the Lords dealing is very good for euery one of vs. For as it is truly said concerning the beneficence of one man to another that he which giueth the benefit should forget it but that he which receiueth it should hold it in stedfast memory so though the Lord do for euer forgiue our sins vtterly forgetteth to take vengeance of vs for thē yet we ought neuer to forget neither how infinit waies we haue offended him nor how great his mercy hath been is continually vnto vs in forgiuing forgetting the same our innumerable sinnes and offences Finally from that modestie which Peter sheweth in refusing to preferre himselfe before his brethren let vs also learne not to put forth our selues too farre as it were beyond our line through any inconsiderate rashnes or shew of boasting either in word or deede but wisely and discreetly keepe our selues within that measure of grace which God himselfe hath measured to euery of vs labouring alwaies after inward truth and not after outward shew and appearance in giuing honour going before all other as much as wee may in truth attaine vnto Thus much concerning the first part of the first speech of our Sauiour Christ to Peter particularly directed to him indeede but not vttered for his cause onely but that all might in him receiue their necessary instruction and admonition as was before truly affirmed Let vs now come to the second part of the same speech which is this Feede my Lambs and againe Feede my sheepe Feede my sheepe The which wordes as hath beene already obserued doe containe a most notable charge and direction to Peter in that hee was ordeined to bee an Apostle and Preacher of the Gospel how hee should both best trie his owne loue toward our Sauiour Christ to the peace of his conscience in the sight of God and also best declare his loue to the glory of God and profit of his Church and people as was touched before And therein also our Sauiour doth by a similitude or comparison taken from the sheepe and lambs of the flocke describe the properties of those that be the true members of his Church and dutifull hearers of his word c. So that the due consideration of these words will be no lesse profitable both to Ministers and Preachers of the word and also to the rest of the people of God then the former were and therefore let vs in the name of Christ with like diligence both inquire and also harken vnto it Question How may these things be gathered from the words of our Sauiour Answer First in them all ioyntly Feede my Lambs and then againe and againe Feede my sheepe Feede my sheepe verses 15.16 Secondly in a particular consideration of these words lambs and sheepe Explicatiō You answer well But before we come to the interpretation of these words two things are very requisite to be presupposed of vs as you haue beene taught Question Which may they be
them c. and ye shall be my people and I will be your God In all which promises of the Gospel wee through our Sauiour Christ haue our part with them and this our baptisme is a seale of it to vs as well as to the beleeuing remnant of them according to that which we reade Acts 2.38 39. compared with chap. 10.47 48. Can any man forbid water that these should not be baptized who haue receiued the holy Ghost as well as we So he that is the Apostl● Peter commanded them to be baptized in the name of the Lord. Likewise Ephes 2.11 12 c. to the end of the chapter In which place also wee are worthily admonished to consider the greatnes of the most gratious benefite of our admittance into the couenant of God who were strangers from it before c to the end we might prouoke our dull hearts according to our bounden duty to g●orifie the name of the Lord our God with all possible glory praise which we may yeelde vnto him for the same For verily the benefit ought iustly to be as great in our account as it was strange vnto the Iewes yea vnto Peter at the first that it should be so vntill that he was admonished by a speciall vision with this instruction expresly added on the behalfe of vs the Gentiles The things which God hath purified pollute thou not that is see thou doe not account them to be vncleane and vnlawfull to haue a holy communion and fellowship with yee Act. 1● verses 11 c. 15 c. In which respect also the mysterie of godlines is highly celebrated in that among other things our Sauiour Christ is preached to the Gentiles and beleeued on in the world And all this is according to the holy prophesie of Isaiah chap. 11.10 as it is alledged by the holy Apostle Rom. 15.12 He shall reigne ouer the Gentiles and in him shall the Gentiles trust And againe according to that Isai 42.1 2 3 4. and Matth. 12.21 Now therefore seeing the Lord our God of his infinite mercy doth according to this blessed ordinance of our Sauiour and for his sake assure vs that he receiueth vs into his most gratious couenant euen to the remitting of our sinnes c. Heb. 10.16 17 18 19. as hath been declared from the former part of the answer is it not cleare of it selfe according to the latter part of the answer that we ought most willingly thankfully and dutifully to dedicate and vow our selues wholly to the Lord and to his holy worship and seruice yea with a minde neuer to depart from him I doubt not but the heart and conscience of euery one that hath grace to discerne any thing at all cannot but from the consideration of this so inestimable a mercy of God say Amen acknowledging with all his heart that it is his most bounden duty so to doe We for our parts cannot but say as wee haue learned from the Prophet Micah chap. 4. verse 5. that insomuch as all people will walke euerie one in the name of his God yea though they be false gods much rather will we walke in the name of the Lord our God for euer and euer insomuch as the Lord our God into whose name we are baptized is the onely true God euen God the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost three Persons one onely God as the holy Scriptures doe plainely teach and confirme vnto vs. The which obedience that we may with the better cōscience yeeld let vs wel consider what this meaneth to be baptized into the name of the Father and of the Sonne Question and of the holy Ghost Say therefore What is the meaning thereof Answer To be baptized into the name of the Father is to haue assurance giuen to euerie true beleeuer which is baptized that God the Father is through our Lord Iesus Christ his Sonne become his Father and that for the same cause he standeth bound to performe the dutie of an obedient childe vnto him To be baptized into the name of the Sonne is to haue assurance giuen that the same so baptized is for his part one of those whom our Lord Iesus Christ the Sonne of the Father hath redeemed and reconciled to the same his Father through his blood and therefore standeth bound to obey him as the Lord his redeemer To be baptized into the name of the holy Ghost is to haue assurance giuen that euerie true beleeuer so baptized is sealed vp and sanctified by the holy Ghost against the day of his full redemption to haue his portion of perfit glorie in the kingdome of heauen and therefore that hee standeth bound to obey him as the Lord his sanctifier Thus indeede doth the whole Trinitie of Persons in the vnitie of the eternall Godhead Explication proofe consent in the blessed worke of our redemption and saluation And the verie phrase of speech to be baptized into the name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost doth note the giuing of such a holy assurance as you speake of yea such an assurance as challengeth that singular dutie which hath also beene spoken of as may be obserued by that one instance in stead of all which is written concerning baptizing into the name of our Sauiour Christ in that he is the second Person in the glorious Trinitie For the Apostle Paul minding to beate downe all emulation and depending vpon men and to direct christians to looke vnto our Sauiour Christ who hath accepted them to be his and to whom they haue addicted themselues he reasoneth from this Sacrament of Baptisme to that end For whereas many among the Corinthians were diuided in their mindes in that one saide I am Paules and another I am Apollos and I am of Cephas and I am Christs he opposeth them thus Is Christ diuided was Paul crucified for ye either were ye Baptized into the name of Paul c. As though he should haue said yee ought all euery one of yee to be his onely into whose name ye haue beene baptized that is ye ought to depend vpon him to giue him the whole glorie c. 1. Cor. 1.12.13 and Gal. 3.27.28 For all ye that are baptized into Christ haue put on Christ there is neither Iew nor Grecian c. For yee are all one in Christ Iesus And likewise to stirre vp the care of godlinesse and holinesse of life he saith Rom. 6.3.4 Know yee not that all wee which haue beene baptized into Iesus Christ haue beene baptized into his death Wee are buried then with him by baptisme in his death that like as Christ was raised vp from the dead to the glory of the Father so wee also should walke in newnesse of life That which is saide concerning the second Person in that he is God yea both God and man in the Person of the mediator betwixt God and man is proportionably to be vnderstood concerning the rest That is seeing we are baptized into
made an high Priest for euer after the order of Melchisedech Heb. 6.18.19.20 And hence it is that wee receiuing from the right hand of God this speciall grace and fauour that the spirit of our Sauiour Christ euen the Spirit of adoption who teacheth vs to crie Abba Father and helpeth our infirmities in this behalfe yea and maketh requests for vs with sighes which cannot be expressed wee haue exceeding comfort that our prayers which wee make shall be regarded of God seeing the spirit teacheth vs to make them according to the will of GOD and in the name of our Sauiour who sitteth at his right hand Romanes 8.15.16.26.27 and verse 34. In which respect also this may be no small comfort vnto vs which is mentioned in the articles of our beliefe and is confirmed in the holy Scriptures that our Sauiour maketh intercession for vs to God who beeing his naturall Father vouchsafeth also through him to be our Father by the grace of adoption and for the same cause is willing to heare both him for vs and vs for his sake yea and not onely willing but being almightie is as able as he is willing to graunt vs all things through him Finally this may iustly be exceeding comfortable vnto vs that looke what was represented by the glorious garments of the high Priest of the lawe his Ephod with the Onix stones in the which were grauen the names of the twelue tribes of Israell the breast-plate of iudgement wherein were likewise set twelue stones answerable to the names of the children of Israell grauen as signes the Vrim and Thummim also the hidden brightnes and perfection which were in the same breast-plate and he plate or crowne and miter on his forehead wherein was ingrauen Holines to the Lord the truth of all is nowe most perfectly and brightly performed a heauen by our Sauiour Christ For hee presents vs holy and righteous in himselfe before God continually hee supports his Church and euery weake member as it were on his shoulders hee carries the remembrance of all in his heart in him are all the hidden treasures of wisedome hee alone so sweetens vs and our prayers and all that wee doe in his name that though all be weake and vnpersit yet both wee and they are for his sake most gratiously accepted of God Reuel 8.3.4.5 Our Sauiour therefore at the right hand of GOD in the heauens in vnto vs that our onely high Priest who is anointed with the oile of gladnes aboue all his fellowes infinitely more delightfull and pleasant then euer was Aaron or any of his companions though the sweete smell of his perfume is greatly commended both in Exodus 30.22 c. and Psalme 133. Thus farre of the fruites and benefites of the exaltation of our Sauiour Christ to the right hand of God in respect of his royall and kingly priesthood Now in the last place what are the fruites and benefites of his sitting at the right hand of God Question in regard of his High-Priestry royaltie and spirituall Kingdome Answer They are partly such as doe more directly concerne his Church that is to say the whole companie of his obedient and faithfull subiects and that either from age to age in this life or at the end of the world for euer and euer And partly they are such as for the same his Churches sake and to the benefit therof doe concerne his dealing against all those enemies which it hath whom this our King and Sauiour taketh to be enemies likewise vnto himselfe It is true they may well be considered vnder these diuerse heads Question Which are they that be of the first sort Answer More directly for the benefit of the Church and euery true member thereof our Sauiour in respect of his kingly aduancement at the right hand of God he doth from the same First here vpon earth most holily spiritually and as we may say religiously rule and gouerne it Secondly he doth most vigilantly maintaine and preserue it Thirdly he doth most wisely and discreetly chastise and nurture it Fourtly he doth most sweetly comfort cherish and refresh it from time to time Finally he doth by all meanes make his Church and euery member therof truly humble and wise vnto their eternall saluation and he will verily for euer saue and glorifie them at the last in the Kingdome of heauen Explication and proofe These in deede are the most gratious fruites and benefites which proceed from the aduancement of our Sauiour to sit downe at the right hand of God in his most royall and priestly kingdome For proofe whereof read first Psa 45.6.7.8.9 and verses 13.14.15.16.17 compared with Heb. 1.8.9 And Psalm 72. vnder the type and figure of King Salomon And Psal 2.2 Blessed are all that trust in him Read Isaiah 32.1.2.3 c. Behold a King shalt raigne in iustice and the Princes shal rule in iudgement And that man to wit Christ our king shal be as an hiding place frō the wind and as a refuge c. Yea generally let vs obserue that whatsoeuer the holie Prophets doe prophesie of the speciall Kingdome of Christ in respect of the Church the perfection of the administration thereof dependeth vpoh this his sitting at the right hand of God and they are also so many proofes that his kingdom should be most graciously gouerned especially from the time of his sitting at the right hand of God as the effect it selfe confirmeth according to that Isaiah ch 9.6.7 ch 11.1.2.3 c to the end of the chapter For all I say taketh the full accomplishment from hence And to this end we may fitly ascribe that which is spoken in respect of his eternal Deitie before his incarnatiō to his most soueraigne royal state now in that he is mā vnited personally to the same Deitie so that it may be veried of him now which was said then by the spirit of prophesie Prou ch 8.14 c. I haue counsell wisedome I am vnderstanding and I haue strength By me kings raigne and princes decree iustice By me princes rule the nobles all iudges of the earth I loue them that loue me and they that seeke me early shal find me Riches and honour are with me euen durable riches and righteousnes My fruit is better then gold euen then fine gold and my reuenewes are better then fine siluer I cause to walk in the way of righteousnes and in the middest of the paths of iudgement That I may cause them that loue me to inherit substance and I will fill their treasures And further whereas the church of our Sa Ch enioyeth godly Christian kings and princes for the protection and defence of it according to the promise of God Isai 49 23. Kings shal be thy foster-fathers and Queenes shal be thy nources c. this out of all question is the gift of our Sauiour Christ from the right hand of God euen of his royall bountie and from his most high and soueraigne
against euill examples the words of our Sauiour are plaine ver 10. and 12. of Mat. And Mark ch 13.12 The brother shal deliuer the brother to death the father the son the children shal rise against their parents shal cause thē to die And Luk. 21.16 Yea ye shal be betraied of your parēts of your brethrē kinsmē friends some of you shal they put to death These tētatios indeed are very great as we may easily cōceiue if we earnestly cōsider of thē but a little while For whē neither bond of nature nor religiō cā hold thē in conscience of dutie Beliefe in God the Sone who sitteth at the right hand of God the Father almightie but they will fall from that grace and sweete fellowship which they seemed to be entred into and become persecutors of their owne kinsemen and of good Christian brethren these must needs be accounted very heauie vncomfortable spectacles to the discouragement of our feeble minds if we doe not hearten our selues against them Neither is it a small stumbling block to see any though not fallen to be persecutors yet to be declining from the truth and to be luke-warme yea euen ca-cold both touching the zeale of Gods glory wherwith they seemed so be inflamed before also touching the loue of the brethren whom they made shewe to haue loued in that they were beneficial vnto them so that now they may be scared to be no better then a pray to the diuel to be easily carried away to this or that falsehood of religion But deare brethren how many soeuer we see to doe thus farre be it from vs to be moued by either sort of such examples to wax weary of well doing No no rather so much the more let the glory of God be more deare and precious vnto vs euery faithful brother sister in our Lord Iesus Christ let them be more hartily loued tendered cherished among vs. The which if we shal do then as there is no doubt but the Lord our God wil for his part make precious reckoning of vs so wil he also for the loue he beareth vs in his Son in such sort either restraine moderate the rage of the wicked or strengthen vs in patiēce that we shall alwaies find our most safe blessed protection vnder the faithful and constant profession and practise of his onely true holy religion and worship They shall not kill all but some of you saith our Sauiour Wherfore let vs not in any wise giue place to any fearful thoughts howsoeuer they shal assalt vs so as we should say to our selues by the suggestion of the diuel to our own discomfort O what shall we doe how shall we now escape The wicked are mightily increased The zealous godly are few If we deale not very warily and frame our selues to be like to them to seek fauour with thē there shal be no abiding for vs. Nay rather let vs assure our selues that the lesse the slock of the Lord is the more vigilant will he be to defend it or if he suffer any to fall into the hands of the wicked the more rigorous they shal be in oppressing tormenting the more gracious merciful wil he be in vpholding strengthening comforting as the true church of God hath had experience from time to time Let vs not therefore be discouraged through any feare Not a haire of your head shal perish saith our Sauiour Luk 21.18 That is it shall not perish without the prouidence of God further then he shall think good to permit And therfore much lesse shall our liues whole bodies perish otherwise then he shal dispose of them Wherfore I say againe as our Sa exhorteth let vs be of good cōfort arme our selues with inuincible patience that so we may most safely retaine hold the possessiō of our soules For this is the onely sure possession of them to be prepared to all affliction for the Lords cause But that which may yet more effectually incourage and confirme vs to be of good comfort constāt in the Lord against all discouragement it is the most gracious promise o four Sa that if we continue to the end to wit of this short life that we are here to liue yea euen of that short time of affliction which shal betide vs we shal be saued That is we shall not onely be freed from all trouble but also set in a most happie estate eternally in heauen with all the Saints which haue from the beginning passed through many afflictions into the same kingdom Neither is it a small incouragement that God will so prosper his owne work in the hand of his seruants that no resistances of the wicked shall be able to hinder it so but it shall take that good effect whereunto he hath appointed it For as our Sauiour saith This Gospel of the kingdome shall be preached through the whole world For a witnesse vnto all nations and then shall the end come Our Sauiour had said before after mention made of wars that the end is not yet that is the destructon of Ierusalem and the Temple and therefore much lesse the end of the world But here he saith that after the Preaching of the Gospell to all nations then should the end come to wit not onely of Ierusalem first in the time thereof Beliefe in God the Sonne who shall come from heauen to iudge both the qu●cke and the dead which was not till the Apostles were dispersed into all quarters as one may say and had Preached the Gospell farre and neare but also the ende of the word shall be then when God hath fulfilled the course of the Gospell and caused it to be preached in all places wheresoeuer he hath any people till hee hath gathered into his Church the whole number of his elect by the voice of his Gospell Thus much of the first part of the answere of our Sauiour more generally both concerning the time of the destruction of Ierusalem and also of the ende of the world not definitely determining the space of time either of the one or of the other but onely thus farre that there should first bee great and many troubles before the destruction of Ierusalem should come and then againe after that many like great troubles before the world should end Like as the Apostle prophesied afterward concerning the day of the Lord and the last iudgement that there should come a departure first and that Antichrist should be reuealed And Iohn in the Reuelation that the Churches of Christ should be grieuously afflicted before that time And herein we haue beene the more large for the more full and plaine opening and for the better applying of these most graue and weightie things to our manifold vse and comfort God grant that wee may ioyfully entertaine this most holy doctrine of our Sauiour concerning affliction that so we may the more ioyfully indure the afflictions
before For as any haue died and as they doe from day to day depart this life either in faith and repentance or otherwise so shall they be found and iudged then like as all shall be whosoeuer shall be found aliue at his comming Wherefore seeing the Disciples of our Sauiour were to watch at that time when he spake vnto them because the time of his comming was vncertaine though further off therefore we are to watch now seeing the time is not onely as vncertaine as it was but also much rather as much as almost sixteene hundred yeare commeth vnto as was said before But let vs come to the words of our Sauiour and first to those which are deliuered more simply and without parable Watch therefore saith our Sauiour as we reade in the Euangelist Matthew for ye know not what houre your Master will come These words of our Sauiour are recorded more fully by the Euangelist Marke let vs therefore make our supply from him to our more full and plaine instruction in this his admonition Qu. Which therefore are the wordes of our Sauiour as St. Marke reporteth them Answer They are these as we reade chap. 13. verse 33. Take heede watch and pray for ye know not when the time is Explicatiō Here indeed we haue three words in stead of one and so the minde of our Sauiour more fully opened as it were by an excellent commentary vpon the words of the Euangelist Matthew For whereas in all wise and circumspect dealing these three thinges are necessary to bee put in continuall practise first that the danger imminent bee seene and discerned secondly that it be watched against and preuented by all meanes as much as lieth in him that is in danger thirdly that if he finde himselfe too weake he doe implore and craue the aide of such as hee knoweth to be both willing and also able to relieue and aide him All these are here mentioned by our Sauiour First take heede Blepete see looke to it secondly watch thirdly pray And wee haue great neede to be stirred vp to all these things For howsoeuer we are vsually warie enough to espy bodily dangers and such as would annoy vs in our outward estate and accordingly wee are also ready to watch narrowly and with all diligence to make all the friends we can to backe vs yet touching our soules and the eternall welfare of them yea touching the eternall saluation both of soule and bodie we are euery way strangely negligent Wee are so farre from watching against the danger and from seeking helpe that wee are willingly ignorant that we are in any danger at all Wee fare as if it were a matter of no difficultie to attaine to the kingdome of heauen But alas all that thinke so are vtterly deceiued It is a matter of the greatest difficultie in all the world No aduersaries of our outward welfare how craftie and crabbed instruments of the diuell soeuer they are be of like subtiltie as is the diuell himselfe yea many diuells who are aduersaries to the saluation of our soules Ephes chap. 6. verses 10 11 12. And therefore wee had neede to be in speciall watch and ward against them as we are admonished 1. Pet. chap. 5. verses 8 9. And besides this the aduersaries which the diuell vseth for his instruments to hinder our saluation by the peruerting of our mindes such as our Sauiour hath giuen warning of to wit false Christs and false Prophets they are more dangerous in their craft that way then any aduersaries of the outward peace of our liues are And therefore wee haue most speciall cause to bee specially prudent and watchfull in this behalfe all the daies of our life we for our parts and all other euen to the day of our Lord Iesus Christ But because we cannot either by our owne foresight espie our danger in this respect or by our owne strength or any coadintory helpe of any man escape the continuall danger wee are in to be pulled away from the due care of our saluation wee are therefore aboue all things according to the direction of our Sauiour to pray to God and to seeke for helpe at his most gratious and onely al-sufficient hand that we may by him be guided and strengthened to walke on safely and constantly to the escaping of all the dangers which wee are most dangerously compassed about withall In which respect most comfortable is the promise which God hath made to all such as shall faithfully constantly seeke vnto him as we reade Ioel chap. 3.32 Whosoeuer shall call on the name of the Lord shall be saued Yea this benefit as there the Prophet saith shall be found of those that shall pray to God when his great and terrible day shall come euen that day when the Sunne shall be turned into darknesse and the Moone into blood c. according to that which our Sauiour saide should come to passe before his comming to execute his most fea●●full iudgement Yet so as wee must take heede that wee doe not thinke that euery one that shall vpon the sodaine view and terrour of Gods comming to iudgement say Lord haue mercie vpon vs shall be saued For then sure it is likely that none at all should be condemned But this promise is made to such onely as shall be found true worshippers and beleeuers in God who acquaint themselues with the duties of his seruice and worshippe of the which prayer is a very principall one as may appeare by this that the Lord himselfe did for the same cause call his house a house of prayer And as may appeare on the contrary in that he doth note out all heathenish and profane persons by this marke that they are such as doe not call vpon him Psal 14.4 and Psal 79.6 and Ier. chap. 10. verse 25. Hence therefore wee may see that they are in a blessed estate whosoeuer are carefull to invre their hearts with the performance of this excellent dutie of true christian prayer both morning and euening and so often as iust occasion is giuen both publikely and with their families and in their owne secret chambers and closets that God who seeth in secret may reward them openly Thus much concerning the words of our Sauiour as they are recorded more fully by the Euangelist Marke then they were by the Euangelist Matthew But now if wee might be certified in this great case of danger what those things are which wee are to watch against as being very dangerous vnto vs and likewise what wee are to pray for at the hands of God then should this admonition of our Sauiour conteine an excellent and full instruction as we must needes confesse Behold therefore the Euangelist Luke sheweth that our Sauiour continued the speech of his admonition euen thus farre also as we reade in the Gospel written by him chap. 21. verses 34 35 36. Question Let vs heare those words of our Sauiour Which are they Answer Thus saith our Sauiour in
whose iudgement giuen as well of one as of the other shall be their acquiting and iustifying for euer and euer But as touching the wicked which haue and shall die in their sinne and vnbeliefe before that day though they shal rise againe with their bodies and the rest which shall be liuing shall appeare before the iudgement seate of Christ yet shall their bodies abide stil in their naturall dishonour and finfull corruption onely fitted to indure that iudgement which shall be awarded against them euen their condemnation to perpetuall most extreame torment and miserie Explicatiō proofe This difference of the resurrection is made manifest in many places of the holy Scriptures As Dan. 12.2 3. Many of them that sleepe in the dust of the earth saith the holy Prophet shall awake some to euerlasting life and some to shame and perpetuall contempt And they that be wise shall shine as the brightnesse of the firmament and they that turne many to righteousnesse shall shine as the starres for euer and euer And Iohn 5.29 After that our Sauiour Christ hath affirmed that the houre shall come in the which all that are in the graues shall heare his voyce as was before alledged he addeth these words And they shall come forth that haue done good vnto the resurrection of life but they that haue done euill vnto the resurrection of condemnation We reade also concerning the state and condition of the faithfull apart by themselues 1. Cor. 15.51 and 1. Thes 4 14. and Luke 13.29 And concerning the condition of the wicked apart Matth 24.30 as wee saw before And Reuel 1.7 And chap. 6.15 16 17. But let vs stay principally vpon this our present Text wherein the difference is most liuely expressed and that also diuers and sundry waies First in the seperation of the sheepe from the goates that is to say of the faithfull and godly from the wicked and the same also with a most charie and sheepheard like care answerable to the prophesie of Ezek. chap. 34. And Ier. chap. 31.10 Secondly the difference is expressed in the setting of the faithfull and godly on the right hand for honours sake and the wicked on the left hand to their perpetuall reproach But most of all the difference is manfest by the contrarie iudgement which our Sauiour hath already determined and foretolde that hee will giue vpon them THis sentence or iudgement of our Sauiour let vs nowe in the fift place come to consider Question And first What is that part of the sentence which our Sauiour will giue for the finall acquiting iustifying and sauing of the faithfull euen of all such as shall be set on his right hand Answer The King saith our Sauiour shall say to them Come yee blessed of my Father inherite the Kingdome prepared for you from the foundations of the worlde Explicatiō There being two diuerse yea contrary parts of the iudgement of our Sauiour according to the contrary estate and condition of the persons to be iudgeed we haue three things to be obserued in either part First the sentence it selfe Secondly the reason of the sentence or rather the law whereby our Sauiour will giue his sentence Thirdly an explication of that doubt which ariseth from the reason or rule of the sentence to the iustifying thereof both to the eternall consolation of the godlie and also to the eternall conuiction of the wicked The first part of the sentence we haue alreadie before vs. It is a most gratious sentence of the most soueraigne and supreame King and Iudge concerning those that doe belong vnto him let vs accordingly with all holy reuerence consider of it For whereas the words of Kings and Princes here vpon earth are not to be neglected speciallie when they sit in place of iudgement hauing God before their eyes much more is this sentence of the King of heauen himselfe euen the King of all Kings to be regarded of vs. And the rather because it conteineth such a sentence as no King but hee may presume to giue No earthly King or Monarch hath euer had or shall euer haue so large an authoritie this ouer all the world is much lesse ouer all the generations of the earth and that from the beginning to the end of the world None euer had or shall euer haue so great and high authoritie as to giue iudgement vpon bodie and soule and that for euer and euer but onely our Lord Iesus Christ the sole Monarch of the whole world In this sentence our Sauiour being thus the soueraigne Lord and King of all hee doth first most notably open and reueale to his Church before hand for the common instruction of all the faithfull what is the onely supreame and chiefe efficient cause of their perfect saluation and glory which hee will at that day bestow vpon them This cause of their saluation and glory is not their owne worthinesse either for excellence of their nature or for merit of their workes but it is as our Sauiour giueth plainely to vnderstand the onely free grace and fauour of God In regard whereof and of the fruits and effects of it he calleth them first the blessed of his Father Secondly he putteth them in possession of the kingdome of God not by purchase but in way of inheritance and the same also not by naturall descent but by adoption onely And thirdly our Sauiour telleth vs that this inheritance whereof hee giueth the faithfull the possession is such an inheritance as God had prepared for them before they were and therefore could in no wise be merited and deserued by them All which considerations are so many notable reason as well against the prowd opinion of mans merit as for the magnifying of the most free and deserued mercy of God saue onely as our Sauiour hath deserued mercie for vs at his hands And it is well for vs that our saluation is not fitted answerable to our merit though it were so that wee could deserue any thing to be paide as a wages or due debt vnto vs. For euen as the gifts of earthly Princes of great estate which proceed from them of meere fauour and bountie are greater then those which they giue in a proportion of this or that seruice done vnto them Of the which we may take the great King Ahashuerosh for an example Est chap. 6. verse 6. What shall be done saith Ahashuerosh to the man whom the King will honour Haman forthwith conceiuing in his minde that this should be a speciall honour seeing the King minded to declare his royall magnificence and gratuitie therein he therefore describeth such an exceeding honour as hee himselfe aspired after though he had no desert whereby he might presume that it should be due vnto him And chap. 7.2 of his princely bountie he sheweth himselfe ready to grant Ester her request to the halfe of his kingdome Where as if she should haue stoode vpon her worthinesse hee would not haue yeelded her so much as
of God how this is vrged from the force of the same argument read 1. Ioh 2.28.29 Litle children saith the Apostle abide yee in him that when he shall appeare wee may be bold and not be ashamed before him at his comming If ye know that he is righteous knowe ye that he which doth righteously is borne of him And chap 3. verses 2.3 Dearly beloued now are we the Sonnes of God but yet it doth not appeare what we shal be we know that when he shal appear we shal be like him for we shal see him as he is And euery man that hath this hope in him purgeth himselfe euen as he is pure Read also 1. Tim 6.13.14 and 2. Ep 4.1.2 Where a most earnest charge is laide vpon the Ministers of the Gospel that they be faithfull in their office as they will answer it at the appearing of our Sauiour to iudge all flesh This moued the Apostles themselues to be carefull in the discharge of their dutie in their Preaching of the Gospel 2. Cor 5.9 10. And generally it ought to moue all to the like care in the duties of their seuerall callings 2. Pet 3.11.12.13.14 To this end also tend all the parables of our Sauiour whereof we haue heard before Mat ch 24. 25. and Luke 12.35 36. c. And in other places of the Euangelists Touching constancie in godlines the holy Apostles did earnestly pray for it on the behalfe of the Christians to whom they wrote euen from this consideration as Philip 1 9. c. And 1. Thes 3 12.13 And chap 5 23.24 For the obtaining of which grace of constancie they giue all incouragement that they shall be partakers of it whosoeuer will chearefully seeke after it according to that 1 Cor 1 8 9. Our Lord Iesus Christ shall confirme yee to the ende that ye may be blameles in his day God is faithful c. And in the Epistle of Iude verse 24. God is able to keepe vs that we fall not and to present vs faultles before the presence of his glory with ioy And 1. Thes 5 9 10. Of the duties of loue and mercy toward Christians being in outward want and distresse how they are perswaded from the description of the last iudgement by our Sauiour himselfe we haue seene before And that it is mightie to moue vs to pitie poore sinners that lye in their sinnes to their extreme perill without repentance whether they be our children or seruants or friends or euen our very enemies we may consider from the exhortation of the Apostle Iude verses 20 21 22 23. But yee beloued edisie your selues in your most holy faith c. And haue compassion of some in putting difference And other saue which feare pulling them out of the fire c. We may consider it also from the example and practise of the Apostles themselues mentioned a litle before 2. Cor 5. Wee knowing the terrour of the Lord saith Paul doe perswade men c. And Colos 1.28 We Preach Christ saith the same Apostle whom in the verse before he calleth the hope of glory admonishing euery man and teaching euery man in all wisedome that we may present euery man perfect in Christ Iesus c. And who I pray you can but rue to thinke in his heart that either his wife or his child or his friend yea or his enemies as was said should through any default or negligence on his part be throwne into endles easeles and remediles extremitie of vnspeakable torment Among other duties it may not be forgotten of vs that we do stand bound to be very carefull to celebrate most gratefully the memoriall of the death of our Sauiour Christ by our often resorting to the table of the Lord from time to time in euery generation euen till his comming againe as we are admonished 1. Cor ch 11.26 To conclude this point The care of performing these duties faithfully and constantly in our seuerall callings with regardfull remembrance of this comming of our Sauiour to iudgement It doth cause exceeding ioy to the conscience of euery Christian as may appeare from the example of the holy Apostles and of other Christians For they hauing care to haue a good conscience in the hope of the resurrection of the dead c. Act 24 15 16. they did likewise obtaine exceeding peace and ioy to the same their consciences in hope of the same at the last day according to that which we read further Phi 3.20.21 1. Thes 2.19.20 For what is our hope or ioy or crown of reioycing Are not you euen it in the presence of our Lord Iesus Christ at his comming yes yee are our glory and ioy And 2. Tim. 4. verses 6 7.8 A like notable place to the same purpose Now fourthly concerning patience with ioyfulnes in all present troubles from the consideration of the same argument beside the example of Paul last alledged 2. Tim 4.5 c. wherein the same is euident let vs hearken to the exhortation of the Apostle Iames ch 5. v 7. Be ye patient therefore saith he vnto the comming of the Lord. Behold the husbandman waiteth for the precious fruite of the earth c. Read also Heb 10.32.35.36 And 1. Pet 1.3.4.5.6.7.8.9 And ch 4 12.13 Moreouer wee haue the promise that if wee suffer with our Sauiour Christ we shall be glorified with him Rom 8 17 18. And 2. Tim 2.11.12 It is a true saying c. And Luke 22. verses 28.29.30 Ye are they saith our Sauiour who continued with me in my tentations Therefore I appoint vnto you a kingdome as my Father hath appointed to me That ye may eate and drinke at my table in my kingdome and fit on seates and iudge the twelue tribes of Israel Fiftly that the reuerend consideration of the last iudgement of our Sauiour Christ ought to restraine vs from rash vnaduised iudging of others the Apostle Paul teacheth vs Rom 14. v. 10. c. Why saith the holy Apostle doest thou iudge thy brother or why doest thou despise thy brother For we shall all appeare before the iudgement seate of Christ. For it is written I liue saith the Lord euery knee shall bowe to mee and all tongues shall confesse vnto God So then euery one of vs shall giue accounts of himselfe vnto God Let vs not therefore iudge one another any more but vse your iudgement rather in this that no man put an occasion to fall or a stumbling blocke before his brother And Iames chapt 4.12 There is one Lawgiuer which is able to saue to destroy Who art thou that iudgest another man 1. Cor 4.5 Iudge nothing before the time vntill the Lord come who will lighten thinges that are in darknes make the counsels of the hearts manifest then shall euery man haue praise of God It is the same precept which our Sauiour himselfe gaue Matth 7.1 Iudge not that ye be not iudged c. Luk 6.37 Iudge not ye shall not be
the sin against the holy Ghost so properly called is made vnpardonable before God and the person guiltie thereof if God doe discouer it not to be prayed for of any because such a one doth not sinne of ignorance nor of weakenes of iudgement in some one point or other but of malice in a generall contempt of the truth yea euen of the Spirit of truth himselfe the most gratious Teacher thereof Heb. 6.4 c. And ch 10.28 c And 1. Iohn 5.16.17 Wherefore beloued in the Lord we see that in euery most weighty respect we haue the greatest cause that may be why we are with all holy religious and constant reuerence to beleeue and obey the holy Ghost as being one true and euerlasting God to bee blessed and adored for euer together with the Father and the Sonne And on the contrarie wee cannot but see that we ought to take heede most carefully that wee doe not at any time any manner of way blaspheme the holy Ghost or giue any occasion that he should be blasphemed or spoken euill of either directly or indirectly by scoffing at any because they are of the spirit or hote of the spirit c. All such iesting and all irreuerence is exceeding dangerous and therefore let vs all very heedefully not onely auoid the same but also thinke and speake alwaies most reuerendly of this so high and glorious a Maiestie And as for all such heretikes as feare not to affirme that the holy Ghost is not God but a creature or a name only of diuine vertue and operation c let vs vtterly abhorre all such their blasphemous heresies In which respect to the end we might haue before our eyes some graue admonition I haue thought it to good purpose and so I trust will euery godly Reader to set downe that which the good Minister of Gods word Bastingius hath written in his Commentaries vpō the Palsgraues Catechisme to the same purpose The doctrine concerning the Deitie of the holy Ghost saith this godly learned Minister hath had foure principall Aduersaries First those that haue and doe contend that the holy Ghost is nothing else then an internal operation motion or action whereby God worketh effectually in the hearts of the elect Energeia but not to be any substance much lesse a Person as Samosatenus Seruetus and their schollers who are all refuted very manifestlie by this that those things are attributed to the holy Ghost in the scriptures which doe agree to none saue onely to God and consequently to a Person truly subsisting and therefore also to a true substantiall Beeing Secondly this doctrine hath had Macedonius an aduersary against it who taught indeede that the holy Ghost is a substance and a true Person but yet created which also was the error of Arius wherevnto the Oecumenical Council held vnder Theodosius the Great opposed it selfe and gaue it his deadly wound The words whereof are these If it be created how doth it create how then doth it sanctifie how doth it quicken how doth it distribute graces how is it God how doeth it search the deepe thinges of God how is he the Comforter how hath he his ioynt place with the Father and the Sonne Of which Macedonius Iohn Cassianus Chrysostomes scholler writeth after this manner in his first booke of the incarnation of the Lord Macedonius also saith he vttered his blasphemie against the holy Ghost with an incur●ble impietie in that although he said that the Father and the Sonne are of the same substance yet he calling the holy Ghost a creature was guilty of blasphemie against the whole Deitie insomuch as nothing can be iniured in the Trinitie without iniurie done against the whole Trinitie Now adde vnto these in the third place the Tritheites who confessed indeeded that the holy Ghost is a Person yea and that he is God but yet another God beside the Father and the Sonne albeit in truth the holy Ghost is so of the same substance or co-essential with the Father and the Sonne Homoousios that they be not sundry Gods but one onely Iehouah The fourth error was the error of Sabellius who stucke not to say that the holy Ghost was a diuine Person eternall and vncreated but not a distinct Person with the Father and the Sonne the which how repugnant it is to the scriptures we haue likewise declared before And thus truly haue they waged battell against the Person of the holy Ghost Now as touching his office and the efficacie thereof these following did not well vnderstand what it is First they which do thinke that the elect may altogether loose or fall away from their faith though it be sealed vp in them by that holy spirit of promise But the truth is that the Spirit of sanctification is neuer vtterly taken away Energeia from such as are truly regenerated and borne againe Onely the effectuall working of it may be interrupted for a time while the contrarie lusts doe beare the sway like as drunkennesse doth not altogether bereaue men of their wit Beliefe that God hath a holy catholike Church but onely taketh away the vse of it for a while The ground and meaning of the Article And furthermore the Romish Teachers doe likewise erre in that they require that men should alwaies stand in doubt of the fauour of God seeing the holy Ghost is therefore called the spirit of adoption because he beareth witnesse of that free good will wherewith the Father embraceth vs in the Sonne and teacheth vs also to cry Abba Father Thus much out of Ierimias Bastingius a faithfull Minister of the word of God And thus for the time of this our present inquirie an end of the doctrine of this Article and therewithall of the whole doctrine of the most blessed and glorious Trinitie and so also an end of the first part of the most generall diuision of the Articles of our beliefe Now the same most blessed and glorious Trinitie of distinct Persons our one onely true and euerlasting God most wise most holy and most gratious blesse it for euer vnto vs. The grace of our Lord Iesus Christ and the loue of God the communion of the holy Ghost be with vs all Amen Beliefe that God hath a holy Catholike Church Question Answer Explicatiō proofe WHat followeth in the Articles of our beliefe The holy catholike Church Here beginneth the second part of the Articles of our christian beliefe shewing euery Christian what hee ought to beleeue concerning the people of God called his Church All which is nothing else but the effect of that which is contained in the former part which as we haue alreadie seene teacheth how we ought to beleeue in God who is the only Author Caller Redeemer Iustifier Sanctifier and Glorifier of his Church And verily it cannot be that God the Father should giue his Sonne to take mans nature and in the same to die for man in vaine according to that Gal.
Article let vs come to the Promise The Promise Question What promise hath God made of the remaining or forgiuing of our sinnes Answer We haue many very gratious and often renewed promises hereof both old and new euery where dispersed in the holy Scriptures of God Question Name you some of them Answer Beside that which you rehearsed Isai 48. verses 8.9.10.11 You haue pointed vs to another notable testimonie in the 31. chap of Ieremie from the 30. verse to the 35. of the same And chap 33 the .8 verse And in the newe Testament the same promise is alledged to belong through our Sauiour Christ to the beleeuing Gentiles as well as to the beleeuing Iewes Explicatiō It is true as we may reade Act 2 38 39. And ch 10.43 Rehearse the words of some of the places which you haue named Question How do you reade Answer In the 31. cha of Ieremie verses 31. thus it is written Behold the dayes come saith the Lord that I will make a new couenant c. For I will forgiue their iniquitie and remember their sinnes no more And chap 33.8 I will cleanse them from all their iniquitie whereby they haue sinned against me yea I will pardon all their iniquities whereby they haue sinned against me And it shall be to me a name and an honour before all the nations of the earth which shall heare all the good that I doe vnto them c. Explicatiō Let this suffice out of the Prophet Ieremie for this time Wee may read the like testimonies in other of the Prophets beside those which haue beene hitherto alledged As Isai 33.24 The people that dwell therein shall haue their iniquitie forgiuen Read also Ezek chap 18. verse 21. c. 32. All these promises of forgiuenes of sinnes doe belong vnto vs Gentiles The Comforts now through our Sauiour Christ as well as they did before to the Iewes THe Promise being thus confirmed the vse of this Article is next And first for Comfort Question What is that Answer The comfort is euery way very great insomuch as the glory and happines both of our bodies and soules in this life and also in the life to come consisteth herein It is very true as we reade Psalm 32. in the beginning of the Psalme And Rom 4.6.7.8 Explicatiō proofe Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiuen and whose sinnes are couered Blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth not sinne So that forgiuenes of sinnes is as one may say an epitome or short summe of all the mercies of God Whence it is that the Lord is saide Psal 103. as was before alledged to crown vs with his mercies and compassion Verily there is no goodnes or dignitie in our selues whereof we may reioyce or for the which we may looke to be accepted with God The mercie of our God is our onely crowne the glory of Gods free grace is our onely glory c. No doubt the comfort of this Article is singular to all those that knowe what Sinne meaneth And it will the rather warme and cheare vp our hearts if we shal consider that beside our former sinnes infinite and hainous in the sight of Gods iustice we remaine still very apt and prone to offend God euen after that we are by his grace regenerated and borne againe Yea if we shal consider that we daily offend his diuine Maiestie not onely by forgetfulnes and neglect of many good duties but also by rash and vnwarie committing of much euill according to that saying of Saint Iames In maine thinges wee sinne all Furthermore the Comfort hereof will be the more manifest to our consciences if we consider earnestly of the nature of sinne not onely how odious it is in itselfe but also how vile and abominable it maketh our persons both bodies and soules in the sight of God how it keepeth all good things from vs and pulleth downe vpon vs all euill Ier 5.25 Isai 59 1 2 3. till it be couered and forgiuen in our Sauiour Christ But most clearely of all wil the comfort of this Article shine into our hearts if we shall duly looke into the cause and fountaine of the forgiuenes of all our sinnes which would haue pressed vs downe to the very bottome of the gulfe of Hell to wit the most free and amiable grace and fauour of God our heauenly Father through his most blessed Sonne our Lord Iesus Christ which is better then our life though naturally that is most pretious vnto vs. According to the 3 verse of the 63 Ps Thy louing kindnes is better then life And Ps 30 5. This maketh our Baptisme exceedingly comfortable vnto vs insomuch as the whole blessed Trinitie cōsenteth to make it a testimonie of the forgiuenes of our sins through the same most free grace and rich fauour of our one onely true God Mark 1 4. Act. 2 38. and chap 22.16 It maketh the Supper of the Lord in like māner exceeding comfortable vnto vs in that it is a further pledge and assurance that our sinnes are forgiuen through the blood of our Sauiour Christ Mat chap 26. verses 26 27 28. The largenes of this free grace of God to the forgiuenes of sinnes through our Lord Iesus Christ reaching vp as it were to the heauens Ps 36. verses 5. and 7 and Ps 103 11 it enlargeth the comfort of this most excellent blessing seeing God sheweth vs plainly that he hath aboundance of mercie in store not onely for the forgiuenes of some fewe persons here and there but euen for the forgiuenes of his whole Church that is of so many thousands yea myriads of thousands of all sorts of people as shall seeke for mercy at his hands as was touched before Yea not onely for sinners of smaller degrees in offences but also for the greatest sort of sinners aboue other whosoeuer among them shall earnestly repent them and truly beleeue the Gospell of our Sauiour Christ according to that most liberall The Duties and sweete consolatorie incouragement of the Lord by his holy Prophet Isaiah chap 1.18 Come now and let vs reason together saith the Lord though your sinnes were as crimsin they shall be made white as snowe though they be red as skarlet they shall be as woole If ye consent and obey ye shal eate the good things of the land And chap 40.1.2 Comfort yee comfort yee my people will your God say Speake comfortably to Ierusalem and cry vnto her that her warfare is accomplished that her iniquitie is pardoned for shee hath receiued of the Lords hand double for all her sinnes Finally the bowell-like tendernes of Gods mercy is not the least cause of the great comfort of this Article as we may consider from these and such like testimonies of holy Scripture Psal 25 6.7 and 79.8 Ier 31.20 Lament 3.22.23 Hos 11.8.9 Ioel 2.13 Luke 1.7.8 and ch 15 20. O how sweet therefore ought this mercy of God to be vnto vs in all these
respects And the rather also because the couenant of this forgiuenes of sinnes is an euerlasting couenant Ier 32 40 41. Which he hath confirmed by oath and sealed with the blood of his Sonne the which is therefore called the blood of the euerlasting couenant Heb 9.22.26 ch 13 verse 20. Of the which blood it is further said in this respect that it speaketh better things then the blood of Abel which cried for vengeance against Caine ch 12.24 Gen 4 10. Thus we see touching the first part of the vse of this Article that the cōfort of it is exceeding great to all true beleeuers euen to so many as haue grace to lay hold of this great mercy of God to the assuring of themselues of the forgiuenes of their sinnes NOw let vs come to the second part of the vse of it which concerneth the obedience of faith Question Which therefore are the duties which the comfort of faith in the forgiuenes of sinnes challengeth at the hands of all those to whom they are forgiuen They are these which followe Answer First an humble acknowledgement of our selues to be grieuous sinners ioyned with godly sorrowe for them and earnest praier for the forgiuenes of them all Secondly most earnest and heartie thankefulnes to God for his so infinite and vnspeakable mercie as sheweth it selfe most clearly in the forgiuenes of our most hainous and infinite sinnes Thirdly exceeding loue toward the Lord God our heauenly Father according to the greatnes of his mercy by how many the more and the greater sinnes he doth forgiue vs. Fourthly a reuerend care not to offend him any more as heretofore we haue done yea rather a most earnest studie and desire to please him better in all things then yet we haue done Fiftly a ready and tender affection of mercifulnes to forgiue one another euen as God our heauenly Father in and for our Sauiours sake hath forgiuen vs. Finally earnest resistance of all feares and doubts touching Gods faithfulnes in forgiuing the sinnes of our selues or of any other that doe walke in these duties Explicatiō proofe Concerning the first branch of this answer to wit our acknowledging of our selues to be grieuous sinners that it ought to be so the truth of the assertion it self that we are so may be a sufficient warrant vnto vs. For the proofe of which assertiō that we are grieuous sinners read 1. Kings 8 46. Eccl 7.22 There is no man that sinneth not No not the regenerate as their own cōfessiōs plainly shew Paule Rom 7.14 c. Iames ch 3 2. Iohn 1. Ep ch 1.8.9.10 Read also Psal 19.12 and 130.3 Prouerbs ch 20.9 And though there are degrees of sinners as well as of sins yet euery one for his own part ought to account himselfe among the chiefe as Paule did 1. Tim 1. Daniel ch 9. Yea and though it were so that a man did not know any thing of speciall offence by himselfe yet seeing our Sauiour who knoweth vs all better then wee doe our selues teacheth vs all to pray for forgiuenes it ought to be a sufficient proofe vnto vs that we are great sinners and that we doe stand in great need of forgiuenes Neither is it in vaine as was touched before that this Article of the forgiuenes of sins is lincked with that other of the cōmuniō of Saints insomuch as not onely in most holy things but also in our most holy assembling of our selues and accompanying together we doe many waies offend And that not at our owne Tables alone which made holy Iob to feare his children so much as hee did and to be so carefull as he was to sanctifie them by holy exercises of religion while they feasted one another lest they should forget themselues and speake any thing to the dishonour of the name of God cha 1 5 but also euen in the Lords house and at his most holy Table Which was the cause why God did appoint Aaron in the time of the lawe to sacrifice for the iniquitie euen of the holy offerings of the children of Israel Exod 28.38 and why wee are so earnestly admonished to examine our selues when wee come to the Table of the Lord c. Wherefore let vs alwaies and in all things well remember that we are sinners and that God could easily lay greater sinnes to our charge then we are ware of and accordingly let vs without all hypocrisie acknowledge in his sight that wee are more grieuous and miserable sinners then we are priuy vnto Let vs I say do it without hypocrisie for else we should euen herein make our selues more abominable sinners then in any thing beside Luke 16 15. Mat 23. Neither could the Article of forgiuenes of sinnes be any Article of faith at all vnto vs for our comfort vnlesse we doe acknowledge our selues to be sinners and vnlesse we see iust cause why wee should be sorie for them and pray earnestly alwaies for the forgiuenes of them according to the instruction of our Sauiour Mat 6 12. and according to the example and instruction of the Prophet Dauid Ps 32 5 6. and Ps 25 7. and Ps 51. But here an obiection may be made how it may stand with faith to pray still for foriguenes of sinnes seeing it is an Article of faith to beleeue that they are forgiuen at the least those sinnes which haue already beene committed and for the forgiuenes whereof faithfull praier hath beene already made Question What is to be said to this Answer First this Article of the forgiuenes of sinnes presupposeth true repentance to be in euery one that hath any true faith to beleeue that his sinnes are forgiuen Neither can it stand with any reason that faith should disanull or any way preiudice prayer which God hath appointed to be the onely subordinate messenger and Spokes-man as it were of faith for the intreatie of the forgiuenes of sinnes through the mediation of our Sauiour Christ Secondly no man doth so firmely beleeue the forgiuenes of former sinnes by former praiers but by the renewing of his praiers for the forgiuenes of the same he may bee better assured against all temptations of feares and doubtings that they are verily forgiuen vnto him Thirdly faith by exercising of it selfe in prayer to the further strengthening of it selfe touching the forgiuenes of old sins it doth therewithall make it selfe both more watchfull against new sinnes that they be not wilfully committed and also more comfortable in the assurance of the forgiuenes of those our sinnes of infirmitie and weakenes which we cease not to commit day after day Finally God doth at once and for euer after forgiue all the sinnes of true beleeuers but yet vpon this condition that they continue in prayer for the forgiuenes of them and for daily profiting in godly sorow and repentance for the same so long as they haue a day yea an houre to liue in this sinfull world Explication and proofe It is very true For these are
the soules of all godly and true beleeuers For as touching their naturall creation in respect of their substance and also in regard of their faculties of vnderstanding memory reasoning will election or choise and likewise in ministring life sense and motion to the body they are naturally of the same kinde The one cannot die or be extinguished more then the other For though it be saide in the holy Scriptures that the wicked and all vnbeleeuers shall perish and die the second death c yet this perishing or death is not to be vnderstoode as simply opposed to beeing and life but to that good and blessed estate of life and well beeing which is onely proper to the children of God after this naturall life is ended For this is very plaine in the holy Scriptures that the misery and torment of the soules of the wicked shall be perpetuall euen from the time of their naturall death and so to continue for euer The worme of their guilty conscience shall neuer die neither shall the fire of their torment euer be quenched as our Sauiour sheweth plainely in the parable of the rich man Luke 16.22 c. So then the wicked are said to die a second death moreouer and beside the naturall death in respect of their punishment and torment or destruction after this life in such sense as they are saide as touching all grace and godlinesse to be dead euen while they liue here For like as they while they liue the naturall life are dead because they want the ioy of godlinesse and thereby of a good conscience which is as wee may say the life of our life so yea much rather because after the end of the naturall and sinfull life of the wicked their torment beginneth neuer to end they may iustly be saide to passe to a second death that is from a death in extremity of sinne to a death in extremity of an eternall punishment Thus the immortality of the soule belongeth to the wicked as well as to the godly so farre forth that their soules can no more die that is bee extinguished or loosed their nature and Beeing then the soules of the godly can But as touching the good beeing or blessing of immortality that is to say touching the blessed estate of the soule in the continuance of it for euer in the fauour of GOD this belongeth peculiarly to the children of God who through faith and by the Spirit of God doe mortifie sinne in some measure here in this life and liue vnto God through that life which they liue by the Sonne of God by whose grace th●ir soules are daily renewed and sanctified vnto him as it is euident by the testimonies and examples alledged before for the ground and warrant of this Article vnto vs. And that the estate of the soules of the faithfull are vnspeakeably blessed with God after this life we may be assured from that which wee reade 1. Cor. 2.9 For the glory of it is such as the eye hath not seene nor eare heard nor came into the heart of man which God hath prepared for them that loue him The Promise And 2. Epist chap. 12.4 And that the same blessed estate of the faithfull shall be a fruit of that care which they had here in their naturall life time to attaine to true christian knowledge faith c it may be euident from that which is written 1. Cor. 13.12 that then shall be the perfection of that which we haue now but in part Reade also Reuel ch 7.14 15 16 17. And ch 14.3 4 5. and verses 12.13 Whence also it finally appeareth that this vnspeakeable blessing shall be as was answered in the cōmunion of all the thousands of the triumphant Saints and with the Angells to all those that haue had their part in the communion of the militant Saints here on earth According to that which we reade Heb. chap. 12.22 23. Ye are come vnto the mount Sion and to the Citie of the liuing God the celestiall Ierusalem and the company of innumerable Angells And to the congregation of the first borne which are written in heauen and to God the Iudge of all and to the spirits of iust and perfect men Thus much briefly concerning the meaning of this Article Question Now what Promise haue we in the holy Scriptures for the further warrant of the same Answer We haue the promise of it Psal 22. verse 26. The poore or meeke saith the holy Prophet shall eate and be satisfied they that seeke after the Lord shall praise him your heart shall liue for euer Explication This indeede may well be one testimonie of Gods promise in this behalfe For by the heart the soule of man is vsually signified in the Psalmes and in other places of holy Scriptures There are many other testimonies to the same purpose For all the promises of euerlasting life after the natural life ended they haue the beginning of their accomplishment in this blessed immortality which we speake of according to that of Iames chap. 1. verse 12. Blessed is the man that endureth tentation for when he is tried he shall receiue the crowne of life which the Lord hath promised to them that loue him Likewise Reuel 2.7.17 And chap. 3.5.12.21 though these promises shall not haue their perfect effect till the resurrection of the body as we shall see further when we come to that Article IN the meane season our order requireth that wee come to the vse of the present Article And first concerning the Comfort of it Question What may that be Answer I heard a voyce from heauen saith St. Iohn Reuel chap. 14. verse 13. saying vnto me write ●lessed are the dead from the time that they die in the Lord. Euen so saith the Spirit for they rest from their labours and their workes doe follow them Explication In these words of Saint Iohn we haue a double comfort expressed as belonging to the faithfull euen from the time that they die in the Lord that is for the Lords cause or in faith and repentance as it becommeth the seruants of God First that thenceforth they rest from their labours that is from all the troubles and disquietments of this life such as we read of Eccles 1.8 All things are full of labour And Psal 90.10 According to that promise Reuel 6. verse 11. They shall rest for a little season c. And chap. 7.16 They shall hunger no more nor thirst any more c. And God shall wipe all teares from their eyes The second comfort of the faithfull immediately after their naturall death is that their works doe follow them that is to say the fruit and reward of all good things which they haue done in their life time For God will performe all his promises which he of his bounteous goodnesse hath made to the obedience of his seruants in and for Christs sake according to that Ephes 6.24 The grace of God shall be to the immortality of all that
of their soules and therefore as they liue immortality in their soules which are one part of his creation so shall they also in their bodies But of this more in the promise This second reason thus concluded from an absurditie which must needes followe vpon the deniall of the resurrection of the body insomuch as the bodies of the faithfull are oftentimes most cruelly persecuted here in this world where they are as strangers while the wicked are at ease and prosper growing as it were in their naturall soile the Apostle also hauing before noted many other absurdities which might iustly make all the aduersaries of this Artiticle ashamed of their part now henceforth hee doth as it followeth in the text call the aduersaries thereof backe againe to the ground of the truth called by them into question And he affirmeth against them that there is most certainely a resurrection of the body to come for the benefite of the faithfull insomuch as our Sauiour is out of all doubt bodily risen againe The which ground of the question hauing beene before so proued by him he doth furthermore illustrate the same by two notable similitudes or comparisons The former whereof is set downe in the 20. verse Question Which are the wordes of the text Answer 20. They are these But now saith the Apostle is Christ risen from the dead and was made the first fruites of them that slept Explicatiō This first similitude or comparison is taken from a certaine ordinance of God prescribed as we know in his holy law to illustrate cleare the matter in question after this manner For like as when according to the appointment of God the first fruites of the yearely renewing of the fruites of the earth were duly offered as an homage or rather as a religious profession of spirituall allegiance and subiection due vnto him then all the whole crop of their corne or increase of their vineyeards or of the flockes of their sheepe c. were sanctified to the free vse and benefite of the people of God so also yea much rather insomuch as God hath ordained that the whole Church should enioy the benefite of bodily resurrection by the resurrection of our Sauiour it cannot be as the Apostle giueth to vnderstand but seeing our Sauiour who is as the first fruits or a sacred pawne and pledge of the resurrection is risen againe the faithfull also shall doe so when the time therevnto appointed of God is come This therefore is the former of the two similitudes Question Now which is the second Answer It followeth in the 21. and 22. verses in these words 21. For since by man came death by man came also the resurrection of the dead 22. For as in Adam all dye euen so in Christ shall all be made aliue Explication The holy Apostle hauing as wee saide laied a sure foundation before obserueth now a good proportion in this his second comparison For the resurrection of our Sauiour through his righteousnes and obedience and therewithall by reason of his satisfaction for our sinnes must needes be of as great vertue and grace if not of greater to giue life and resurrection to the bodies of his Saints after death then Adams sinne was to bring death vpon the bodies of all mankinde According to that which this same our Apostle writeth Rom 5 verse 17. For as he saith there if by the offence of one death reigned through one much more shall they which receiued the aboundance of grace of the gift of righteousnes reigne in life through one that is Iesus Christ And againe verse 21. That as sinne had reigned vnto death so might grace also reigne by righteousnes vnto eternall life through Iesus Christ our Lord. In the which wordes though the direct purpose of the Apostle be to proue and illustrate the doctrine of our iustification by our Sauiour Christ yet the force of his reasons and of that comparison which he maketh doe extend themselues as farre as doth the present question which wee haue in hand insomuch as the resurrection of our bodies is a fruit of that iustification which our Sauiour hath procured vnto vs and to all that doe truly beleeue in him Yet let vs marke that were as in our text the Apostle saith generally that as in Adam all dye euen so in Christ all shal be made aliue we must restraine his words answerable to the limits of the question in hand that is to the resurrection of the bodies of the faithfull For notwithstanding the bodies of the wicked shall rise againe also yet because that shal not be so properly an effect of the resurrection of our Sauiour as of the iustice of God to take vengeance of their sinne in their bodies as well as in their soules therefore we are to disburthen this question of that consideration at this time Now therefore that we may proceed Whereas it might be obiected and demanded why then doe we not see the bodies of the faithfull to rise againe as the bodie of our Sauiour is risen The holy Apostle doth prudently preuent that obiection as we may perceiue by his words immediately following to wit in the 23. verse Question Which are those wordes of his Answer 23. They followe thus But euery man in his own order the first fruites is Christ afterward they that are of Christ at his comming Explication and proofe That is to say Howsoeuer the faithfull doe not rise againe the third day after that they dye as our Sauiour did no nor the third yeare no nor many hundreths of yeares after as we haue had experience by the space almost of sixteene hundreds of yeares alreadie since the resurrection of our Sauiour yet the bodies of euery one of them shall certainly be raised vp at the time appointed and determined of God to that ende Which time all the faithfull are with patience to waite for Yea euen with this minde that it may aboundantly suffice vs all that we haue the promise of God for our assured resurrection at the last day And this patient waiting for it by faith is necessarily to be obserued of vs lest after the manner of proude and presumptuous heretickes we goe about ambitiously to preuent the Lord to our vtter destruction For verily the want hereof is no small cause that many will needs haue their heauen here and that therefore they willingly imagine that the resurrectiō is past alreadie c. And so both destroy their owne faith and the faith of so many as will be led by them as we shall haue further occasion to consider hereafter Hitherto of the two former reasons of the holy Apostle for proofe of the first question with the illustrations and comparisons belonging vnto them The third reason nowe followeth And that by occasion of the mention of the time when the resurrection of the bodies of the faithfull shall bee to wit at the comming of our Sauiour at the ende of the world as it followeth
rather shall the bodies of men as we reade verse 23. of the chapter And likewiise 1. Cor. 16.20 they are bought with a price Doubtlesse insomuch as the bodies of the faithful beare the violence of all cruell persecutions for the Lords cause he will not suffer thē to want their reward In this respect the sacrament of Baptisme is the more comfortable as we haue seene in the fourth reason of the Apostle The like may be said of the Lords Supper whereof the body is partaker For seeing the tree of life should haue beene a sufficient means or assurance of euerlasting life to Adam both in soule and body if he had abode faithfull to God much more will our Sauiour sacramentally represented yea wholly giuen vnto vs in this Sacrament be the author and meanes of eternall life vnto vs. Thus comfortable is the assured hope of the resurrection of the body to all those that apprehend it by a true and liuely faith so that not in vaine may they comfort themselues and one of them comfort another in this respect as Paul exhorteth and incourageth the beleeuing Thessalonians 1. Epist 4 18. Wherfore much more shall the comfort of the fruition it selfe be when once we shall be made partakers of it BVt till that time come it is necessary that we do not onely diligently learne to know but also carefully indeuour to practise those duties which this comfortable hope iustly challengeth at our hands and which are as it were the way to the obtaining of it at the last Question Which may these duties be Answer They are set forth vnto vs by the Apostle Paul in the former alledged 15. chapter of his first Epistle to the Corinthians as it followeth verses 57. and 58. which are the last verses of the chapter Question Let vs heare the Apostles words What doth he write in these verses Answer 57 Thanks be vnto God saith he who hath giuen vs victorie through our Lord Iesus Christ 58 Therefore my beloued brethren be ye stedfast vnmoueable aboundant alwaies in the worke of the Lord for as much as ye know that your labour is not in vaine in the Lord. Explicatiō These words of the Apostle doe notably set forth vnto vs the duties belonging to the comfort of the resurrection partly by his owne practise and partly by his exhortation made to the Corinthians The Apostles practise commendeth vnto vs most hearty thankfulnesse to God as one particular dutie most boundenly belonging to him through the Lord Iesus Christ in this respect And that not without very iust cause seeing it is a very great and gratious benefit The which duty of thankfulnes would to God we had grace to remember to performe euery day that we rise out of our beds more heartily then hitherto we haue done For our bed may not ●naptly represent vnto vs our graues and our sleepe in our beds that sleepe of death which our bodies must haue in the graue And likewise euery mornings vprising from the sleepe of the night may not vnfitly put vs in mind of our resurrectiō which shal be at the last day and therewithall of this dutie of thankfulnesse which wee speake of for that comfortable assurance which he hath giuen vs concerning the same The exhortation of the Apostle moueth the Corinthians and likewise all other Christians more generally first to constancie in the assured beliefe of this Article of the Gospel as well as of all the rest against the false doctrine of all deceiuers in which respect he saith Therefore my beloued brethren be ye stedfast and vnmoueable And secondly it prouoketh to diligence in all good duties of obedience to God to the vttermost of our power both with soule and also with body all the daies of our liues according to the same assurance of immortality not only to the soul presently after the death of the body as we haue seen before but also to the body from the time of the resurrection of the same So that by this time we may see how truly it was said in our entrance to treat of this Article that this one fifteenth chapter of the Apostle Saint Paul containeth not onely the ground and warrant of it but also there withall the true Meaning of it and the Promise and the Duties belonging vnto it yea and the Danger also of not beleeuing it as we shal haue occasion to consider in the cōclusion of our inquirie concerning this Article But before we come to that it may be profitable for vs first to see how the duties aboue mentioned are called for as fruits belonging to the comfort of the resurrection which we speake of and secondly what other duties do belong to the same Question In the first place therefore What other Scripture haue you for the dutie of thankfulnesse Answer In the 2. Epistle to the Corinthians chap. 4. verses 13 14 15. thus we reade 13 Because we haue the same spirit of faith according as it is written I beleeued and therefore haue I spoken we also saith the Apostle doe beleeue and therefore we speake 14 Knowing that he which hath raised vp the Lord Iesus shall raise vs vp also by Iesus and shall set vs with you 15 For all things are for your sakes that most plenteous grace by the thanksgiuing of many may redound to the praise of God Explicatiō Here no doubt the resurrection of our bodies apprehended by faith is made one speciall cause of this thanksgiuing whereof the Apostle speaketh as depending vpon the resurrection of our Lord Iesus Christ Shew now likewise some other testimonies of holy Scripture for constancie in the faith and for the care of all good duty as a fruit of the comfort of the same faith touching the said resurrection Question What other testimonies can you alledge Answer It followeth in the 16. verse of the 4 chapter of the 2. Epistle to the Corinthians before alledged thus 16 Therefore saith the Apostle we faint not but though our outward man perish yet the inward man is renewed daily Explication and proofe To this purpose also well may that serue Acts 24.15 16. Where the same our Apostle professeth in an excellent profession of his faith that he had hope towards God that the resurrection of the dead which the Iewes themselues also did generally looke for shall be both of iust and vniust And herein saith he further I endeuour my selfe to haue alwaies a cleare conscience toward God and toward men Reade also Philip. chapter 3. verses 7 8 c. The things saith the same Apostle againe which were aduantage vnto me the same I accounted losse for Christs sake c. And verse 11. If by any meanes I might attaine vnto the resurrection of the dead Not that the Apostle doubted of his attaining vnto it but hee speaketh so to note the excellencie of that which hee laboured after as being worthie all labour that may be imployed about it as it is further euident verses 12.13
were the Sadduces as we haue seene before Likewise Hymineus Philetus 2. Tim. 2.16.17.18 who affirmed that the resurrection is past already and by that their hereticall doctrine destroied the faith of certaine as the Apostle saith Of this hereticall stocke or linage is H. N. with his schismatical Familie of loue who make nothing but an allegorie of the bodily resurrection though it be most simply and plainely affirmed in the holy Scriptures as we haue seene Whence it is also that the schollers of this Family are so dastardly and of so euill consciences that by shamefull dissemblings they shunne all open and plaine profession of that which they hold so soone as they see thēselues to be in danger of suffering any bodily affliction for the same Danaeus that learned writer reckoneth vp vnto vs 19. sorts of heretikes on a row which denied the resurrection of the body to wit the Simonians the Saturninians the Basilidians the Carpocratians the Valentinians the Marcites the Ophites the Caians the Sethians the Archontikes the Cerdonians the Marcionites the Apellites the Seuerians the Bardesanistes the Heraclites the Seleucians the Hermians the Procitans And we know besides how the fine witted Athenians mocked at the Apostle Paul so soone as he had made mentiō of the resurrection from the dead Wherefore to the end we may auoide this so great and so common a danger whereinto so many haue fallen let vs I beseech you make the more precious account of that blessed diligence which the holy Apostle hath vsed in the proofe of this Article The which seeing he hath done it so substantially plentifully that none can desire either greater strength of reason or more comfortable ground of holy Scripture to put the matter out of all doubt for euer let vs so looke to the almighty power of God and so rest our selues vpon his most gratious good will and pleasure herein through our Lord Iesus Christ that abandoning all erroneous and heretical conceites we may firmely holde the truth of this most comfortable Article And from the comfort of it let vs likewise haue care to walke in all those good duties which may guide vs to the blessed fruition of it to the glory of God and to our owne euerlasting comfort and saluation both in body and soule together Amen Beliefe that to euery true member of the Church of God belongeth the inheritance of euerlasting life Question NOw what is that which remaineth of the Articles of our beliefe Answer The last Article is this I beleeue that there is an euerlasting life Question What ground of holy Scripture can you alledge for the proofe and warrant of it Answer We haue a plaine proofe and warrant of it Act. 13. verses 46 47.48 in these words 46. Then Paul and Barnabas spake boldly aad said It was necessarie that the word of God should first haue beene spoken vnto you but seeing ye put it from you and iudge your selues vnworthy of euerlasting life lo we turne to the Gentiles 47. For so hath the Lord commanded vs saying I haue made thee a light of the Gentiles that thou shouldest be the saluation to the end of the world 48. And when the Gentiles heard it they were glad and glorified the word of the Lord and as many as were ordained to euerlasting life beleeued Many worthy things are contained in these words Explicatiō First as wee easily see both the Apostle Paul and also Barnabas consenting with him doe not coldly or doubtfully affirme but with singular boldnes and resolution giue an assured testimonie of the euerlasting life of all the faithfull Secondly they shew by what meanes God guideth and draweth his children to the inheritance of euerlasting life to wit by the preaching of the Gospell of our Sauiour Christ vnto them which is the word of life and saluation The which because many of the obstinate Iewes refused to hearken vnto and embrace they are said to refuse euerlasting life it selfe thereby most gratiously offered vnto them Thirdly they describe who they be to whom euerlasting life belongeth namely to these that doe beleeue and embrace the Gospell whereby our Sauiour Christ is preached vnto them Not onely to such among the Iewes but also to euery such one among vs the Gentiles Finally they testifie of our singular comfort that it is the eternal decree and counsel of God that it should be so To the end therefore beloued in the Lord that we may stirre vp our selues to the embracing of the doctrine and faith of this Article Let vs consider of it according as it is in deed as of that which cōtaineth the chief benefit yea euen the onely full perfiting of all whatsoeuer the manifold and most precious benefits which our Sauiour Christ hath purchased and obtained for vs. It is that very scope which God himselfe propounded to himselfe in his owne most sacred purpose to the glorious and eternall praise of the riches of his grace euen before the world was And for this cause it is that as our Sauiour himselfe affirmeth God hath giuen his onely begotten Sonne to be borne of a woman The groūd of the article and to die for our sinnes As Iohn 3.16 So God loued the world that he gaue his onely begotten Sonne that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life To this purpose also God hath poured forth his Spirit vpon his Church to testifie his glorious grace and to guide vs to the obtaining of this euerlasting life The wisedome of the Spirit is life and peace Rom. 8.6 and verse 11. As this euerlasting life is the chiefest blessing of all other so hath God most gratiously manifested and confirmed the same to his Church from time to time Hee did it to Adam in his paradise euen from the beginning of the creation in that hee gaue him the tree of life to be a Sacrament to him of immortality if he would haue continued faithfull in his obedience to God And after that by disobedience he had lost it and therewithall pulled death vpon himselfe and his posteritie such was the gratious goodnes of God that for his recouerie hee gaue him the promise of our Sauiour Christ who should be to him and to all that should beleeue in the same our Sauiour more effectuall to their saluation then that tree of life could be to Adam as wee are giuen to vnderstand by that allusion which the Spirit of God maketh therevnto when this benefit of euerlasting life is assured vnto vs. Reuel ch 2.7 And againe ch 22.2 Moreouer for a reall confirmation of this his most gratious purpose to bestowe this vnspeakeable blessing vpon his people it pleased God to take away faithfull Henoch before death into his heauenly kingdome out of this world so that as the holy Scripture testifieth He sawe not death Gen. 5.21 and Heb. 11.5 In like manner for the confirmation hereof to the ages following he tooke vp the Prophet Elijah from earth