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A36185 The nature of the two testaments, or, The disposition of the will and estate of God to mankind for holiness and happiness by Jesus Christ ... in two volumes : the first volume, of the will of God : the second volume, of the estate of God / by Robert Dixon. Dixon, Robert, d. 1688. 1676 (1676) Wing D1748; ESTC R12215 658,778 672

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proper rule Restraint from proper state Restraint from proper right Constraint to base actions p. 83 Title 11. Of the Subject of slavery The Sinner habitual p. 87 Title 12. Of the Reasons of slavery Restraint from proper end Restraint from proper guide Restraint from proper act Restraint from proper rule Restraint from proper state Restraint from proper right Captivity Constraint to base actions p. 88 Title 13. Of the Lord of slavery Sin Satan p. 91 Title 14. Of the Innocency of the Law Grace cannot deceive p. 92 Title 15. Of the Mystery of the Law Mystical Precepts Mystical Providences p. 96 Title 16. Of the History of the Law Writing in Tables Law lost Law found Law lost again Law restored Septuagints Translation Law burnt Maccabes Sects of Jews Christ's coming Law on Mount Sinai the same with that of Adam in Paradise The renewal of the Covenant of Works The equivocal word Law p. 99 The Fourth Book Of the Gospel or New Testament Title 1. Of the Reformation Law changed Priesthood changed Sacrifices Gospel a Covenant of Faith God may change the law Law advanced to Spirit Types Secret of Christ understood by degrees Divine Dispensations Creation Fall Promise Faithful Vnfaithful Gentiles feared God Law written Rites why commanded Civil law Rule Outward service trusted in Prophets sent Christ sent Jews Idolaters before Christ's time Jews destroyed Gentiles called Old Religion antiquated Aaron's Priesthood Christ's Priesthood Typical Redemption from typical sins Real redemption from real sins Salvation of all men No more Changes p. 105 Title 2. Of the Nature of the Gospel Few Disciples in Christ's time Resipicence True Wisdom p. 115 Title 3. Of the Gospel a Testament What the Old Testament contains What the New Testament contains Gospel a Testament rather than a Covenant p. 117 Title 4. Of a Testament the best Deed. Evidences Promises Earnest Oath Security Donation Testament a single Will A last Will. In force alone Confirmed by death Testament the Noblest deed Solemn Nuncupative Declarative Witnesses Plainness Heir Finishing by Hand and Seal In giving all In dying Testament most solemn Most liberal Marriage A near Vnion Acquisition of goods Love of God Love of Saints Communion Adoption Heir the most beloved Definition of the Gospel Definition of a Testament Testatour Appellative name of Believers Consent Testament of Father to Children Testamentum ad pias Causas No Praeterition No inofficious Testament p. 120 Title 5. Of the Grace of the New Testament Definition of Grace Nature Free-grace Right Nature Law Throne of Grace Wrath. Works Free grace Rich grace Assurance Jews loth to leave the law p. 128 Title 6. Of the Confirmation of the New Testament Writing Testimony Confirmation Execution Christ the Executor Executorship conditional Flesh and Blood Christ's Ascension Spirit 's Mission p. 132 Title 7. Of the Testament compared Spiritual Lively In force for ever Literal Deadly Abrogated for ever Consequences Cautions Instructions Exhortations p. 136 Title 8. Of Liberty Nature of Liberty Form Loosness from all Incumbrances Largeness p. 142 Title 9. Of the Seat of Liberty Soul p. 143 Title 10. Of the Terms of Liberty Recess from Evil. Access to Good p. 145 Title 11. Of the Cases of Liberty Loosness to proper end Loosness to proper guide Loosness to proper act Loosness to proper rule Loosness to proper state Loosness to proper right p. 146 Title 12. Of the Subject of Liberty God Christ Faithful Term of recess Bondage Term of access Sonship p. 149 Title 13. Of the Allegory of the two Covenants Ismael Isaac But two eminent Covenants State of Christian liberty p. 153 Title 14. Of the Minority and Majority of the Church Fulness of time Jews a childish people Time of Minority Redemption Adoption Plenage Gentiles exempted from Minority Popery Administration of both Testaments Idolatry Remedy against Idolatry p. 159 The Fifth Book Of a Mediatour Title 1. Of the Name and Thing Transition Mediatour Reconciliation Moses p. 167 Title 2. Of the Person of Christ Two Natures Vnion Incarnation p. 170 Title 3. Of the Mediatorship of Christ Christ sole Mediator God is one All Nations sinners Jews and Gentiles made one Christ a Soveraign Mediator Testament includes a Covenant Wherein Christ's Mediatorship consists Mediator and Testator how concurring p. 177 Title 4. Of Christ's Priesthood Christ's offering One God to mediate to One Man to mediate for One God and Man to mediate One Ransom to mediate by Christ a Man Christ the greatest and truest High Priest Christ offered Self p. 180 Title 5. Of the Dignity of Melchisedec A Priest A singular Priest A perpetual Priest Greater than Abraham Abraham paid Tithes to Melchisedec Melchisedec not of Aaron's Tribe Abraham blessed of Melchisedec Sacerdotal Blessing Levi paid Tithes to Melchisedec Actions of Fathers transmitted to Children Levi blessed of Melchisedec Melchisedec immortal p. 184 Title 6. Of the Order of Melchisedec Christ of that order Christ's pedigree Joseph's pedigree Maries pedigree Christ no Priest by birth Christ made a Priest by oath Christ a Royal Priest Christ Priest and Sacrifice Christ ministers in Heaven Tabernacle imperfect Sanctuary a worldly manufacture Ordinances arbitrary Way to Holiest not made Christ first enters the Holy place Faithful enter at the last day Services imperfect Christ's blood dedicates the Holy of Holies One offering Christ offers Self in heaven Christ reigns in heaven Melchisedec a type of Christ Of the offering of Christ Through the spirit Without spot Once In Heaven p. 189 Title 7. Of Christ's Humiliation Extent of Christ's obedience To all Law Above all Law Against all Law Extremity of Christ's obedience Rarity Shame Curse Reasons of Christ's obedience To confirm Testament To expiate sin and misery p. 202 Title 8. Of Christ's Exaltation Victory over sin Imputation of righteousness Jural righteousness Reasons of victory over sin Light conquers darkness Sin no native Propension in Nature to its proper state Genuine nature of the Spirit Superiour faculties predominate Active cooperation Christ's victory over Law Outward Covenant of Works Inward state of Mind Alive to sin Dead to Law Carnal liberty to sin Legal perfection Our victory over Law Grace stronger than Law Spirit of Grace stronger than spirit of Law God delights more in mercy than vengeance Man object of Gods love Christ's pleading undeniable to God Christ's victory over death Victory procured meritoriously by Christ's death Victory obtained by the spirit of Faith Our victory over death Sin conquered Law conquered Devil conquered Christ entred into the Holy of Holies p. 210 Title 9. Of mistakes of the effects of Christ's Humiliation and Exaltation Nothing for us to do Trust to outward Mortifications Superstition Natural complexion for Divine grace Rhetoricating Consequences of Christ's death and resurrection Material Cross Spiritual Cross Material resurrection Spiritual resurrection Material ascension Spiritual Ascension No oblation pleased God but Christ's Every one that comes to God must offer Christian Religion most spiritual and glorious No Mediatour but Christ End of
as for the People so also for himself to offer for Sins And no Man taketh this honour to himself but he that is called of God as was Aaron So also Christ glorified not himself to be made an High-Priest but he that said unto him Thou art my Son to day have I begotten thee Christ the Great and True High-Priest Reason Heb. 5.1 Christ therefore is the Great and True High-Priest in all Respects 1. Because he is Man in all things like unto Man Sin only excepted and therefore ordained and separated from other men and most holy that we might be made holy and therefore Compassionate of the Infirmities of Men as of their Ignorances and Errors not only in respect of Fact but of Law also because of weak capacities and slippery memories and weak performances having respect to their Wills which if earnest and honest to do what they can shall be accepted according to what abilities of knowledge and remembrance and doing they have and not according to what they have not As Man also he is compassed with Infirmity The Infirmity of the Legal High-Priest as of all men was Sin and therefore might and did fall into Ignorances and Errors frail Actions like other men But Christ's Infirmity is his Sufferings and not his Sin for he knew not sin He was subject to Afflictions and Trials as other men The Legal High-Priest therefore was fain to offer often for his own Infirmities in falling into Ignorance and Error and frail Actions often as also for the frequent failings of the People much more Lev. 16.6 c. So Christ in the daies of his Flesh Heb. 5.7 which is the subject of his Infirmity and Sufferings offered up for himself Prayers and Supplications unto him that was able to save him from death This Christ in his Agony chiefly requested to have that bitter Cup removed from him And when he was upon the Cross he lamentably complained saying My God my God why hast thou forsaken me He prayed therefore that because he must die he might be delivered from death and therefore in dying commended his Spirit to God to receive it into his hands and keep it for him and restore it to him who would not leave his Soul in Hell nor suffer his Holy One to see Corruption And these were strong Cries accompanied with many Tears in so great extremities Seeing then that Christ was exercised with the experience of unexpressible Pains he cannot but be moved at the Miseries and Pains of his Servants and must needs readily bow down his ear to hear their doleful Cries and stretch out his hand to save them before the Pit of ruine shut her mouth upon them Thus did Christ offer his Prayers for himself while he was on Earth Christ offered Self that he might save himself from death for when he was restored to life and had so overcome Death as to die no more He then being in heaven offered himself immaculate and immortal as he was not for himself as before when he bore our Sins and carried our Sorrows for he hath no need to offer for himself there Christ therefore offered up his Prayers on Earth for himself but he offered up himself in Heaven for us For himself he offered when he was mortal in the daies of his Flesh for us he offered when he was an immortal and eternal Spirit And in all his Prayers our great High-Priest is heard first for himself on Earth that he might be saved from the Death which he feared that is out of Death unto Eternal life and secondly for us in Heaven that we might be saved from the power of Death and brought to Eternal life as he was In the daies of his Flesh Christ was not yet perfect had not finished his work was not gone to his Father but when he had overcome Death and Ascended into Heaven and sat on the Throne of the Majesty on high he being made perfect through Sufferings became the Author and Minister of Eternal Salvation Then was he fully invested and installed into his Royal Priesthood there he presented himself to God for us in the Temple of God eternal in the Heavens 2. Because CHRIST is the Great and True High-Priest Reason 2 because he is called to that Office by God after the order of Melchisedec Heb. 5.10 Gen. 14.18 Psal 110.4 Who was King of Salem and Priest of the most High God The Lord hath sworn and will not repent thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedec That is a King and a Priest both for so were Kings of old as springing from the Princes of Families who were all Priests who afterwards being called to Rule many Families or a City were the Priests as well as the Princes of that City or Commonwealth Praying and Sacrificing for the People as well as Ruling them The most honourable Person was fittest to minister in the most honourable Service The CONTENTS A Priest A Singular Priest A Perpetual Priest Greater than Abraham Abraham paid Tithes to Melchisedec Melchisedec not of Aaron's Tribe Abraham blessed of Melchisedec Sacerdotal Blessing Levi paid Tithes to Melchisedec Actions of Fathers transmitted to Children Levi Blessed of Melchisedec Melchisedec Immortal TITLE V. Of the Dignity of Melchisedec MELCHISEDEC was a Priest of greatest Dignity 1. Because he Blessed men Sacerdotally as he did Abraham saying Gen. 14.11 Blessed be Abraham of the Most High God Possessour of Heaven and Earth A Priest 2. Because he received Tithes of Abraham i. e. A Tenth part of the Spoils Melchisedec was a Singular Priest A singular Priest 1. Because there were no more Priests of his Order no Predecessor nor Successor in the Priesthood as other Priests had who must be of the Family of Aaron and of the Tribe of Levi to whom the Priesthood was designed A perpetual Priest 2. Because he was a perpetual High-Priest having neither beginning nor end of life remaining a Priest as Christ doth so long as there is need of any Priest And there shall be no need of a Priest when the People of God have their sins throughly expiated and are translated to Heaven SECTION I. Melchisedec was greater than Abraham Greater than Abraham 1. Because Abraham gave him Tithes a Token of subjection as Tribute is from Subjects to Princes 2. Because Abraham was blessed by him a Token of subjection also for the Inferior praies a Blessing of the Superior not of the Equal or Inferior for he is not able to do it 3. Because he was in a manner an Eternal Person so was not Abraham SECTION II. The Dignity therefore of Melchisedec appears in that 1. Even Abraham so great a Patriarch as he was was his Subject and acknowledged himself so to be By paying him a Tenth which was no Vulgar Present Abraham paid Tithes to Melchisedec but a Present for a Priest a solemn and sacred Portion not to be enjoyed but by the Priest alone as God's
is my Spiritual will In allowing the Brute to rule over the Angel the Slave to domineer over the Master In hurrying my self headlong into Sin and Death when I should and could advance my self unto Righteousness and Life What course shall I take to change my condition for a better shall I alwaies be a Slave and know it and never seek to help it O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from this bondage shall I alwaies be a dying till I die everlastingly and know it and never seek to help it O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death Oh I have found out a Remedy The Law of God in it self does not do it but the Grace of God which is above the Law can do it Grace a sole Remedy The law of my Mind cannot do it but the Grace of God which is above the Law can do it and faith in the Promises of Grace to keep Covenant with God is God's instrument in my mind to do it And by this Grace and by this Faith I am saved and not by the Law nor by Works And I can do all things by my Faith through this Grace of God that strengthens me and I thank God for this Grace which is sufficient for me and for this victory by Grace through our Lord Jesus Christ SECTION 2. By all bad Law II. By all bad Laws A bad Law does not deceive as bad but under the notion of a good Law Evil in it self is ugly and therefore frightful and therefore abhorred and shunned but when the faces of Good is dawbed upon it then poor ignorant Souls are cheated by it A lively Bait hides the deadly Hook Thus there are Statuets of Omri The stool of Wickedness that establisheth mischief by a Law Am. 5.7 that decrees unrighteous decrees and writes grievous things that turns Judgment to wormwood that turns Judgment away backward Is 59.14 and forceth Justice to stand afar off Making Truth to fall in the streets and not suffering Equity to enter So that he that departeth from evil must make himself a prey There are Laws of Rebellion Oaths Covenants and Leagues against the Powers and Lives of Princes called Holy God's Cause the setting of Christ upon his Throne under the specious Pretences of Liberty the Children of Disobedience rise up against their Lawful Superiors call themselves Saints and the sober part of the Nation and make themselves and others more sinful and miserable Private Laws and Orders made by Subjects without the stamp of Authority are of force and credit to call forth private men out of their houses into the high Places of the field and from handling the Ax and Hammer nay the Plow and Spade to brandish the Sword of War and traverse the Instruments of death in the field and upon the mighty Waters A pitiful Injunction of a sneaking Fryer shall prevail with a wise and brave Fellow to strip himself of his Tissues and rub himself in hair and course Sacking and to plow upon his own back long Furrows like a fool with whips of Scorpions to pine himself to a Skeleton to hurt his bare feet upon the stones and in the Ice and Snow upon a Pilgrimage to I know not who And when he dyes to forget his poor dearest and nearest Relations and give all that he hath to a company of cheating lazy Lubbards that will promise to redeem his Soul from roasting in Purgatory and laugh heartily in their Sleeves to see his Heirs wiped out of all when he is dead and gone And what Law of God hath required these things at any man's hands There is a voluntary humility and worshipping of Angels and of Saints under a great Shew of Devotion against all Devotion The Law against Law and Schools and Learning makes me hate all Pen-and-Ink-horn-men all Princes Priests Lawyers Magistrates and Scholars There are Preachings against Preachings Prayings against Prayings preaching and praying by the Spirit extempore against both these by premeditation Prophets prophesie falsly they dawb with untempered Morter they preach pleasing things smooth things words of deceit The Prophet is a fool and the Spiritual man is mad The blind lead the blind and the People will be deceived and make much of them that cause them to erre and love to have it so There are Laws for Fornication Adultery Incest Plunder Piracy Sacriledge and all Villanies but above all to do the highest pieces of Injustice under the solemn forms of Justice and to wash their hands and wipe their mouths and protest their Innocency and their Piety too that they do it for good There are Laws among Thieves and Robbers and all unlawful Societies Cateline drinks Blood and makes the Conspiratours pledge him The Jews bound themselves with an Oath neither to eat nor drink till they had killed Paul The Invasion of 88 the Gunpowder Treason the Holy War the Holy League the Sicilian Evensong the Massacre of Paris and of the Albigenses the Rebellions in Germany France Flanders Scotland Ireland but especially in England for twenty years were all by the Covenants and Oaths of a godly Party for Religion for Laws when against Religion and all Laws so true is that saying Omne malum in nomine Dei If there chance to be a flaw in any Statute or a contrariety between Law and Law we can take occasion quickly to justifie our Transgressions thereby A cunning Lawyer will pick out enough Law to overthrow many good Laws Who so nice in the Law as those that break Law and yet study how to evade the penalty of Law by Prohibitions from Process in Courts Christian by Protections by Prerogatives How many by strictness of Law against Rogues and Vagabonds break all Laws of Charity In a word How do men study and take pains to deceive themselves and that by the Law too which is good and should guide them into good and by Laws which are bad to justifie them to some purpose in their ungodly deeds SECTION III. By one Law in the same Law 3. By one Law in the same Law There may be one Clause in Law which may deceive me in another Clause of the same Law because Words and Idioms of speech are full of various ambiguities When the Grammar or Common sense of the words of a Law suffice not to interpret the meaning of a Law Words and sense of Law then that is taken for the true meaning of the words of a Law that tends to the doing of the works of the Law As for instance The Law of Sicily forbad their Priests to resign their Benefices to their Sons Now Instances two Priests of Panormo agreed interchangeably to resign their respective Livings to each others Son So they kept the words of the Law but hindred the Law of its true end and so sinned against the meaning and mind of the Law which was that no Priest should resign his Benefice to the
Children that descend from him and what he then ordereth or doth as concerning his Goods the same in a manner his Heirs are accounted to do and may be bound to do as his Heirs Executors Administrators or Assigns Hence may easily be understood that which together with the Author of the Hebrews we affirm That such external Acts of the Parents concerning their Honours or Estates not their Manners or Conversation good or evil must be extended or imputed to their Children whether by Nature Law or Adoption it is all one or Posterity that succeed in their Estates or Honours otherwise if the Estate or Honour be spent or forfeited or the Children disinherited or otherwise that the Inheritance fall and is not conveyed as in a stream or line of Succession Then whatsoever any man orders or disposes as to his Estate and all that belongs thereunto cannot be attributed or imputed at all to his Posterity SECTION VII Levi Blessed of Melchisedec Because Levi received a Blessing from Melchisedec Levi was a Blesser of others but here Levi himself is Blessed by another Levi did not Bless others in his own Person because he was not then in being but in his Posterity neither did he receive a Blessing properly in his own Person because he was not subsisting but in his Father's Person If at that time Levi had been a Person separated from Abraham his Father then he had been capable by the consent of his own Will to have received the Blessings from another's Will and so this Act of Abraham's Reception of the Blessing from Melchisedec had been nothing to him But because Levi was so united and joyned to Abraham as that he was part of him and one Person with him as fast asleep in his Causes and close locked up in his Loyns therefore also he is justly reckoned or imputed to have received a Blessing from Melchisedec in or from or through Abraham his Father Melchisedec Immortal 3. Because Levi was Mortal but Melchisedec Immortal He that blesseth and receiveth Tithes dieth and another comes in his place and dies also and so the Priests still die one after another But Melchisedec both Blesseth and receiveth Tithes and never dies having no Successor Heb. 7.8 but abideth for ever Thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedec Psal 110.4 The CONTENTS Christ of that Order Christ's Pedigree Joseph's Pedigree Maries Pedigree Christ no Priest by Birth Christ made a Priest by Oath Christ a Royal Priest Christ Priest and Sacrifice Christ Ministers in Heaven Tabernacle Imperfect Sanctuary a Worldly Manufacture Ordinances Arbitrary Way to Holiest not made Christ first enters the Holy place Faithful enter at the Last day Services Imperfect Christ's Blood dedicates the Holy of Holies One Offering Christ offers Self in Heaven Christ reigns in Heaven Melchisedec a Type of Christ Of the offering of Christ Through the Spirit Without Spot Once In Heaven TITLE VI. Of the Order of Melchisedec CHRIST a Priest of the Order of Melchisedec Christ of that Order Christ was not a Priest after the Order of Aaron Because Christ came of the Princely Tribe of Judah Christ's Pedigree which by Law had no right to the Priesthood nor never gave any attendance on the Altar as Priests For it is evident that our Lord sprang out of Judah Heb. 7.14 of which Moses spake nothing concerning Priesthood Judah was the Tribe Royal the Kings of that Tribe were called the Kings of Judah of this Tribe was the Virgin Mother of Christ and by Family of the House of David the Family Royal Luk. 1.24 c. for the Kings of Judah were all of that Family Joseph also was of the same Tribe and Family but in Line different from Maries Joseph's Pedigree Luk. 3. For Joseph descended from David by his Son Solomon in whom ran the Line of the Kings who ruled before the Captivity Maries Pedigree But the Virgin descended from David by his Son Nathan from whom ran the Line of the Dukes who ruled after the Captivity So Joseph came from the Line of the Kings and Mary from the Line of the Dukes 1 Chr 3.16 Jer. 22.30 who were the Princes of the Blood and possessed the Government when the Line of the Kings failed in the Issue of Jeconiah Math. 1.11 Luk. 3.31 St. Luke describes this Pedigree of Mary from the Tribe of Judah and Family of David Luk. 3.23 descending by his Son Nathan to her natural Father Eli or Eliakim the Father-in-law of Joseph Heb. 7.14 The Author of the Epistle to the Hebrews supposes this for granted because he wrote to the Jews that believed that Jesus was the Christ who by the Scriptures was to come from David Judah and Abraham and did come accordingly by being born of the Virgin Mary the Wife of Joseph who was of the Seed of David Judah and Abraham For any Son that is born of the Body of a Man's Wife whose Body is accounted the Husband's Body though he be not begotten by the Husband so it be not begotten by another Man that is not her Husband is and must be his Son who is the true Husband to the Woman Because God hath free Power to give a man a Son which way he pleaseth that is either naturally by generation of the Husband or supernaturally without the generation of the Husband or Wife either as in the case of Isaac by Abraham and Sarah both dead as to Generation So by the Law of God it was ordained that when the Husband died without Issue his Brother should marry the Widow and if he had any Child by her it should be called the Seed of the Husband that was deceased to whom his Brother was to raise up Seed by his Widow With how much more reason may Christ be called the Son of Joseph and therefore of David Judah or Abraham though conceived and begotten of the Holy Ghost upon Mary the espoused Wife of Joseph after a supernatural manner SECTION I. Christ no Priest by Birth 2. Because not a Priest by Carnal Law or Birth as Aaron and his Sons were For The Priesthood was bound to the Tribe of Levi and to the Family of Aaron in that Tribe but Christ's Priesthood was clear another thing not after a Carnal Commandment but after the Power of an endless Life Christ made a Priest by Oath Heb. 7.10 3. Because Christ was made with an Oath to make his Priesthood immutable but Aaron without an Oath An Oath declares the truth and strength of a thing Now the things which God will have to be firm strong and unchangeable must needs be better than those that are weak and mutable such as the things are to which no Oath is added but God will have them to depend only upon his will and pleasure to retain or remove as it shall seem good unto him For those Priests were made without an Oath but this with an Oath Heb.
then of Earthly holy things Christ's Blood dedicates the Holy of Holies the Sacrifices of Beasts were sufficient but for the purging of Heavenly things with better Sacrifices than these that is the blood of Beasts might and did suffice to Consecrate the Earthly Tabernacle but no Blood but that of Christ's could Dedicate the Heavenly Sanctuary for the reception of Souls and Bodies made holy for into that place no unclean thing could enter Heb. 9.23 But Christ being entred into Heaven and appearing there in the presence of God as a Priest to consecrate the place and those that should enter into it he is become a Priestly Advocate with the Father to make propitiation for our sins and not for ours only 1 Joh. 2.1 2. but for the sins of the whole World And all this was done at Once and by one offering Dying but once One Offering and entring into the Holy place to offer but once to put away sin and from Heaven he shall appear the second time without blood to offer for Sin because all is done away Heb. 9.28 to give his people the full benefit of that Offering by vindicating them from Death and enstating them in eternal Life who look for this Salvation and wait for the Time of the Restitution of all things when at his Coming they shall lift up their heads because their Redemption draweth nigh and they love his Appearing 2 Tim. 4.8 All the Legal Sacrifices were imperfect 1. Because shadows of perfect good things to come 2. Because they were offered year by year The same Sacrifice recurring year by year made by the same persons and so for many Ages could never be perfect nor make the Comers thereunto perfect for if they had been perfect or could have made the Comers thereunto perfect they would have ceased to be offered because the Worshippers being once purged should have had no more Conscience of sins Where Health is fully recovered and settled the Medicine needs not to be iterated till Relapses come Heb. 10.3 But in those Sacrifices is a Remembrance again made of sins every year i. e. When the Solemn Fast-day came about wherein those Sacrifices were to be offered the High-priest did lay both his hands upon the head of the Scape-goat and confess over him all the Iniquities of the Children of Israel Lev. 16.21 And when the year before all their Sins were laid upon the head of the Scape-goat and banished into the Wilderness yet in the next year and so successively every year after another Goat must be banished because the People contracted new sins to be forgiven But in this great Sacrifice of Christ all Sins of all People being laid upon his head and shoulders who only was able to bear them are fully remitted for ever so that there needs no more Sacrifice for sins For he shall finish the Transgression and make an end of sins Dan. 9.24 and make Reconciliation for Iniquity and bring in Everlasting Righteousness SECTION IV. Christ offers his self in Heaven Heb. 10.5 And because it is impossible that the blood of Bulls and Goats should take away Sins therefore Christ cometh into the World to do it Psal 40.6 saying Lo I come to do thy will O God He had a Body therefore fitly prepared for that Heavenly Sanctuary wherein he offered up himself to God As if he had said unto his Father Seeing the Legal Sacrifices please thee not therefore Lo I come to do thy Will i. e. to offer thee such a Sacrifice that is wholly according to thy good will and pleasure that every one might be freed from the guilt and punishment of all his sins and in the end have Everlasting life And to this end I have offered my Body so perfected to Immortality as the Septuagint read it and I have addicted my self wholly and for ever to the Service of the Heavenly Tabernacle as the Servant addicted him to his Master by having his Ears opened and bored to the Door as the Hebrew reads it that I might do thy Will for ever Because in Burnt offerings and Sacrifices for Sin thou hast no pleasure nay because thou wouldst endure them no longer therefore I come into this thy Heavenly Sanctuary to do thy Will and please thee with the oblation of that Body which thou hast prepared me wherewith to serve thee in thy Sanctuary for ever in whom thou art well pleased Heb 9.13 Heb. 10.8 By the which Will we are sanctified by the offering of the Body of Christ For that was God's will and not the Legal Sacrifices Christ reigns in Heaven After Christ the High-priest had offered this Great Sacrifice of Himself in the Temple of Heaven he did not stand daily ministring nor offering the same Service Heb. 10.12 but after he had offered this one Sacrifice for Sins for ever sate down at the Right hand of God from henceforth expecting till his Enemies be made his Foot-stool He hath offered so sufficiently that he needs never offer more he hath done his work of Conquest and sits down to triumph over his Enemies and to expect their subjection to him For God saith unto Christ Sit thou on my Right hand until I make thine Enemies thy Foot-stool Psal 110.1 It appears therefore that CHRIST is our great High-Priest mediating our Salvation 1. By Dying to confirm God's Testament a Sacrifice slain on the Cross 2. By offering the Blood of that Sacrifice being quickned through the Spirit unto God in Heaven A Man therefore he must be that his blood might be shed and a God that by the power of his Divine Spirit his blood might be offered for the sins of the World For every High-Priest is taken from amongst Men and ordained for Men in things pertaining unto God Heb. 5.1 2 c. that he might offer both Gifts and Sacrifices for Sins who can have compassion on the Ignorant and them that are out of the way for that he himself is compassed with Infirmities And by reason hereof he ought as for the People so also for himself to offer for sins and no man taketh this honour to himself but he that is called of God as was Aaron So Christ glorified not himself to be made an High-Priest but he that said unto him Thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee Heb. 2.17 18. Wherefore in all things it behoved him to be made like unto his Brethren that he might be a merciful and faithful High-Priest to make Reconciliation for the sins of the People for in that he himself suffered he is able to succour them that are tempted And forasmuch as the Children are partakers of Flesh and Blood he also himself likewise took part of the same that through Death he might destroy him that had the power of Death Heb. 2.14 that is the Devil The Order of this Priesthood of Christ was according to that of Melchisedec who was a Type of
signifies Fraud Deceit or Imposture When the Servant deceives his Lord and breaks his Oath by doing those things which he ought not to do and leaving undone those things which he ought to have done Unless a just fear shall intervene and then he is to be excused This causes a Forfeiture and is called Refutatio Feudi Many sorts of Felonies may be committed 1. Against the Life of his Lord. 2. Against his Fame and Honour 3. Against his Wife or Children or Kindred 4. By denying Service 5. By deteriorating his Fee c. 2. Apertura Feudi i. e. by default of Issue of him to whom the first Fee was given escheating to the Lord. Customs prevail in Fees Maximè dominatur in Feudalibus consuetudo Customs introduced by long continued use among men may be taken away by long continued desuetude or disuse or contrary use The Feudal Customs sprang from the Northern Goths and Vandals into the Southern Kingdoms invaded by them who settled most in Lombardy where now for want of a King the Law labours hard for execution more than in France or England c. where it is very copious ingenious and profitable The Seventh BOOK OF CHRIST'S Church and Kingdom The CONTENTS Transition Feudal Customes Feudal Kingdoms best Goths and Vandals Goths honest Goths endowed the Church first with Lands and Lordships Jus Feudale Manners of Goths Resemblances of a Feudal Kingdom Blessedness Cursedness Church Militant Church Triumphant Tenure of Heaven conditional Holding of God Absolute Dominion Feuds a middle Government Christ sole Judge Customes in a Feudal Kingdom Excellency of a Feudal Government Collections Parables run not on all four Tenure of Fealty the best Absolute Election and Reprobation TITLE I. Of a Feudal Kingdom AND now I would learn of any man that is wise and free to judge Transition if any Government under heaven did ever more resemble the Government of God and of Christ and his Church and Kingdom than this Feudal Government does In which SECT I. 1. The King hath all the Lands in his own dominion Feudal Customes 2. Some he keeps in his proper Demain as his Crown-Lands to maintain his state and greatness and the charge of his rule and governance and all other Lands hold of him and his Crown 3. Some he gives to the Church as the Lombards first did when they became Christians and so the Clergy first became Lords and by them were constituted one of the three Estates which was more than ever Constantine did or any other Christians 4. Some he gives to his Marquesses Dukes Earls Barons c. 5. The King hath all the Legislative Power in himself incommunicable 6. The King hath all the Jurisdiction which he communicates to his Magistrates Lords and Judges Valvasones Valvasini of several degrees All these are Feudataries 7. Those that had no Fees called Censiti were the old Natives living in Villages confined to till the ground The Feudataries were called Tenants the rest Residents or Resients as our Law calls them No Tenure makes more for the honour and safety of the Prince or for the liberty and security of the Subject than this does No Subject can say I am of my self I thank no man for my Lands I am beholding to no man for all must thank the King The Subject holds by the grace of the King and the King only by the grace of God Princes and Subjects of old Jure Romano were obliged to each other for the Common good but not in so strict a tye as this is which they learned by the Examples of the Longobardian Kings the first creatours of Dependance by Law in granting out their Lands to their Subjects in Fee The old Romans and Greeks had something like unto this way but not the same as Alexander and Caesar who let the marches of their conquered Kingdoms Capitaneis Ducibus calling those Lands Limotrophi given to them only at first afterward to them and their heirs upon this account of policy Dicentes illos attentiùs militaturos si etiam sua jura defenderent Souldiers would fight with more courage in the defence of their own Rights I know not by what instinct for I cannot tell how the Lombards in the latter times of the World should meerly stumble upon it this Tenure came into the World but I am sure when it did come it did much good therein and was entertained by those Nations that counted themselves far more wise and learned and pious than they SECT II. Feudal Kingdom the best It may be without wrong to any other Institution the Longobardick Rule was the best that ever was or will be in the World 1. One King and Lord of all 2. One Faith and Obedience in all 3. The King the Common Father 4. The Subjects all his adopted Children 5. The Estate all the Fathers for propriety all the Childrens for profit 6. For Order very comely all the Members depending all alike upon the same Head 7. For Strength they fortifie one another and all are strengthned by their Head and their Head by them 8. For Peace they cannot fight one against another nor all of them against their King nor their King against them The Subjects lose all if they stir in the least to make any disturbance They cannot invade each other for each hath his lot 9. For Love they must love their Lord and their Lord them and they one another or they are all nothing 10. For Plenty they all labour to enrich themselves and so the whole No Taxes or odious burthens they enrich not their Lord at all for all is his already yet they have their benefits to themselves but the honour only and dominion is his 11. For Dependence they cannot be without their Lord nor their Lord without them They subsist by him he by them 12. For Obedience they come and go at the Princes beck they do all he commands them 13. For Covenant the King is in Covenant with his Subjects and his Subjects with him 14. For Honour the King honours the Subjects and the Subjects him 15. For Justice no robbery or oppression of the King or Subject in all this Kingdom Every one enjoys his own Fee the same things to be had of the King the same duties to be done by the Subjects 16. For War Omnia Feuda ad Militiae subventionem expeditionem inventa sunt All Fees are invented for help and expedition of Warfare SECT II. This rare Invention and form of Government deserves thanks and praise and hath it from understanding men Goths and Vandals Witness the reception of their Customes and adding others in imitation of them by the wisest Nations of the World and amongst them our own is not a little beholding to them whose fundamental frame of Monarchy was contrived from those that had it derived unto them from the Goths and Vandals for such were the Normans and Saxons from whom we and our Feudal Laws do spring though the fountain