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A13554 The progresse of saints to full holinesse described in sundry apostolicall aphorismes, or short precepts tending to sanctification, with a sweete and divine prayer to attaine the practise of those holy precepts / by Thomas Taylor ... Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1630 (1630) STC 23850; ESTC S1019 235,792 462

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Scripture in the Church and speakes not as a man but as a Iudge 3. The word hereafter must judge all things Iohn 12.48 therefore it is meete that it should judge them here and try them 4. No man will deny but that the Oracle in the time of the Law was a most sufficient and certaine rule in all cases because it was the lively voice of God himselfe But the Scriptures are titled to be the Oracles of God Rom. 3.2 yea 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lively Oracles Acts 7.38 Because though they were not delivered by lively voice yet by immediate inspiration from God and must be as Oracles to us in all doubts as David made them the men of his counsell Bellarmine here objecteth and saith that the Scripture is a Rule indeede but a partiall one or rather a briefe Commonitory to be eeked partly by Tradition and partly by the help of the Church I answer 1. Wee are content to leave that honour with them to write and speake most basely of the Scripture to set up their owne Traditions But the very light of Nature is against them herein for the Philosopher himselfe maketh it the part of a wise Law-giver to conteine as much in the Law as is possible and leave as little as may be to the liberty of the Iudge Now shall Wisedome it selfe Christ himselfe who hath the fountaines and treasures of wisedome prescribe a law to his Church which must be imperfect unlesse it be eeked by Tradition and by the helpe of a supposed Iudge For the Iudge of the Church is not the Pope Christs pretended Vicar but Christ himselfe the Popes destroyer 2. The very writing of the Scripture was to this purpose that the hazard might be prevented which the truth were in if it should spread it selfe by report onely and passe from hand to hand by Tradition as formerly it had done 3. The state of the Church of the New Testament should by this account be worse than the Old the Patriarkes should have had a more perfect word than we for they were taught and ruled by immediate revelation and infallible voice and if we should hold truth as trailed through the corruptest ages of the world and the unfaithfull hands of men we should be farre behinde them and the Apostle was out when he said Wee have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Pet. 1.19 that is a surer word of the Prophets 4. He hath lost his reason that will deny but that the first and chiefe Truth must be the rule and measure of all the rest and hee hath lost all religion that will deny that of all Truths behoofefull for salvation the Scripture is the principall and first the perfection of which David avoucheth Psal. 19.7 The Law of the Lord is perfect and Paul 2 Tim. 3.15 It is able to make the man of God perfect to every good worke Out of all this exposition ariseth this point of Doctrine That every Christian is bound in whatsoever thing he is to doe or beleeve first to try it by the touch-stone of Gods word Acts 17.11 the men of Berea are commended for searching the Scriptures to see whether the things spoken by the Apostles were so or no. 1 Ioh. 4.1 Try the Spirits And the same Commandement is in the Law Deut. 13.2 to try the Prophets not by events but by Doctrine if it were agreeable to the word This is that warinesse commended so often by our Saviour Christ as Matth. 7.15 I beseech you brethren marke them diligently which cause division and offences contrary to the Doctrine which ye have received and avoid them And for practises herein see Lament 3.40 Let us search and try our wayes c. that yee may proove what is that good that acceptable will of God Proving what is acceptable to the Lord. Let every man proove his owne worke and then shall hee have rejoycing in himselfe alone and not in another And why 1. Because there shall alwayes be false Teachers in the Church who shall easily misleade us into errour if we try them not This is the Apostles argument 1 Ioh. 4.1 Try the Spirits Why For saith hee many false Prophets are gone out into the world We reade of a lying Spirit in the mouth of 400 Prophets and in the New Testament that false Apostles came as they had beene the Apostles of Christ for if the Divell can transforme himselfe into an Angel of light no marvell if his Ministers can doe so More particularly the word of God witnesseth 1. That they shall come under Satans standart in great troupes 2 Tim. 4.3 Heapes of Teachers So wee reade that in the first foure hundred yeares after Christ which was the prime of the Church there arose 88 severall kindes of false Teachers seducing from the faith and mightily prevailing against the Church 2. That they shall come armed with all arts to deceive first they shall pretend simplicity they shall come in sheepes cloathing but inwardly are ravening wolves that is come in the habit of true Teachers being indeed false Apostles and deceitfull Teachers If Elias and Iohn Baptist come in rough and hairy garments the false Prophets also will weare a rough garment to deceive Zech. 13.4 Secondly for their Doctrine they shall alledge Scripture as the Divell did to overthrow Christ They shall obtrude errour under pretence of deepe learning as the sect of the Nicholaitans called their heresie profound learning but by the holy Ghost called the depth of Satan Rev. 2.24 So the Popish Doctours at this day pretend all the Fathers to be on their side all Schoolemen all Antiquity and Mysticall Divinity shut up in secrets and vaults of darke and unwritten Traditions when indeede it is a very cave of darknesse and the depth of the Divell Thirdly for their Authority they shall pretend themselves to be some great men as Simon the Sorcerer said he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acts 8.9 Angelicall Doctours Seraphicall Doctors the onely men of Authority Christs Vicars Peters Successours great Cardinalls on whom are set all the pillars of the state of the Church Catholikes and Catholike Doctours and the like yea sometimes they come armed with great signes and lying wonders pretending mighty miracles as Simon Magus did Acts 8.10 But alas What miracles did Calvin and Luther shew Romish Priests abound in miracles they cure strange diseases and cast out Divells c. Which indeede God may suffer them to doe sometime by sorcery sometime by jugling and knavery for a plague upon the unthankfull world which cared not to receive the truth in love as was foretolde 2 Thess. 2.9 10. For this purpose God sent them strong delusions Fourthly for their behaviour they shall pretend great humility Col. 2.18 Oh they dare not goe to God but by Mediatours Saints and Angels they must use much bodily affliction in chastising and whipping themselves as Baals
Iesus to himselfe and whereas the Apostle saith There is no other name given under heaven whereby to be saved hereby every man hath a name to save himselfe 2. That damnable Idol of the Masse wherein as they say Christ is offered by the Priest for the sinnes of the quicke and dead what is it else but an utter renouncing of Christs owne and onely oblation arguing it to be imperfect and an insufficient satisfaction For so the Apostle concludes against Leviticall Sacrifices Heb. 7.27 They were many because they were imperfect this is perfect therefore but one and once See chap. 9.26 3. Their unholy Order of Priesthood and sacrificing shavelings what else doth it but wage battel against the Priesthood of Christ which being after the Order of Melchizedeck is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and cannot passe from him to any other Heb. 7.23 24. There were many Priests because of their impotency but this man hath an everlasting Priesthood therefore needes no successour on earth nor had none as they had 4. The maine pillar of Popery which stands on the Popes headship over the Church how dishonourable is it to Christ who being every where present by his Spirit and grace is implied thereby to be absent and to stand in neede of a Vicar Besides it makes the deare Spouse of Christ a Monster having two heads being but one body Besides the infinite constitutions of this supposed head cleane contrary to the lawes and government of the one and onely lawfull head and King of his Church Iesus Christ. 5. Their Doctrine of unwritten Traditions which are pari pietatis affectu to be received with the written word how manifestly doth it dishonour the Propheticall office of Christ How could he be the onely true Prophet if hee left halfe the will of his Father unrevealed but lapt up in obscure Traditions How could he satisfie his Propheticall office if he deteined from his Church some Doctrine needful for her to know How was he faithfull in the house of God as a Sonne if he came behind Moses his servant who brought a perfect patterne from the Mount for the direction of the smallest things in the Tabernacle How did he teach us all things when he came as Ioh. 4.25 if the Church may still coyne new Articles of faith as Scotus Before the Lateran Councell Transubstantiation was no Article of faith it seemes our Saviour left something alone for the Councell of Trent and the Lateran Councell to determine and that the Samaritan was deceived 6. Their blasphemous prayers to Saints Angels and Relikes how pull they men from the Mediatour who is but One and dishonour his Intercession which now he makes for the Saints while they have one prayer to Christ they have twenty to the Virgin What can be more blasphemous and more derogatory to his power and glory than to joyne with him in the administration of his kingdome the Virgin Mary that hee must dispense justice but she mercy yea in the omnipotent worke of his mediation saluting her and praying unto her by the title of Mediatrix hominum Mediatresse of men nay giving her a power farre above him Iure matris impera Command him in the right of a mother Thus our mighty God and Saviour is become an underling to a poore creature These can be no sound Doctrines which so dishonour the Sonne of God and spoyle him of his royalties as the souldiers did spoile him of his garments to whom the Father hath given a name above all names that all tongues should confesse him and all knees bow unto him So much for the fourth Rule Fifthly that is the soundest Doctrine which most restraines corrupt nature and fleshly affections Tit. 2.11 12. The grace of God hath appeared teaching us to deny ungodlines and worldly lusts which is the maine intendment of the discovery of grace a maine fruit of the Gospell is the crucifying of the flesh with the lusts and a mortifying of our members upon earth which of all things a carnall man cannot brooke Therefore in all differences of Doctrines observe which of them presseth most precise obedience to Gods will which of them gives least toleration to the least offence of God which of them is most unpleasant and unsavoury to the nature of man which of them most boulsters and gives liberty to naturall inclination and you have tryed the truth from errour For example The whole Doctrine of Popery how pleasing is it to the nature of man seeing there is nothing in it but a naturall man may performe it without any speciall grace of regeneration which indeede is the chiefe cause why a great part of the world is taken with the love of it 1. What a deale of paines cuts it off in reading studying and meditating on the Scriptures while it teacheth that Ignorance is the mother of devotion and it is lost labour which is spent on the Scripture and while they burne the Scriptures as formerly wicked King Ahaz did or Antiochus or Maximinus calling them the Heretickes Bookes so as a man may truly say that the Papists hate the Bible as a theefe hates the gallowes This is farre easier than to call after knowledge and cry after understanding to seeke her as silver and to search as after treasures 2. How can there be devised a more easy faith and sooner got than confusedly to beleeve as the Church beleeves without any distinct knowledge or faith of their owne A faith got without all paines and of which we may well say It is worth nothing because it is had for nothing a faith wherein they never neede to looke to the essentiall markes and sound growth of it This is sooner done than to proove a mans owne selfe whether he be in the faith or no. 3. How doth it please nature to magnifie nature to deny it to be so corrupt and dead as it is but halfe dead as the man betweene Iericho and Ierusalem to tell it it hath good preparations and abilities of it selfe to conceive and practise much good and with a little helpe it can keepe the Law and come out of Gods debt What man wanting grace would not finde something in nature to bring before God to bring himselfe into request by For every naturall man is a Iusticiary Wheras our Rule saith that it is a new creation which is of nothing and a quickening where no life of grace was yea a death in sinnes and trespasses and not a recovery as out of a swoone 4. How pleasing is it to nature to be tolde and taught that no paines is required to keepe the heart nor to resist the first motions to evill which they say are not evill that some sinnes are veniall in their nature put away with a light sigh a knocke on the breast or an Ave Mary that a man may lie in sport or officiously for his advantage and if hee steale a small thing it is
is used both in a strict and in a large sense In a strict sense it is used for prediction or foretelling of things to come of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to foretell So those holy penne-men of Scripture are called Prophets 2 Pet. 1.10 And Philips foure daughters Prophetisses Acts 21.9 In a large sense Prophecy is taken for the interpretation of the word of God and the holy Scriptures And this is a gift of the holy Spirit enabling men to expound Prophecies concerning Christ and to interpret and apply the writings of the Prophets and Apostles Thus the word is taken Rom. 12.6 Having Prophecy let us Prophecy according to the analogy of faith And Ephes. 4.11 Christ ascending into heaven gave some to be Prophets speaking of Evangelicall Ministers This latter Prophecy being here meant hath two parts preaching and prayer for every Prophet is partly the voice of God to the people and partly the peoples voice unto God God said of Abraham Gen. 20.7 Give the man his wife againe and hee will pray for thee for hee is a Prophet And both of them are joyned together 1 Cor. 11.4 Both these parts of Prophecy are here meant especially the former which hath two parts first teaching which stands in right interpreting of Scripture giving the right sense raising sound doctrines and beating downe contrary errours Secondly exhorting which is the applying of doctrines to the use of edification and consolation These were distinguished in the primative Church into seuerall offices of Doctors and Pastors because of the abundant gifts then given and the indistinct multitude of beleevers not brought into distinct congregations but now for the most part they are confounded into one For the proofe of these parts of Prophecy see 1 Cor. 14.3 He that prophecieth speaketh to men for edification for exhortation and consolation II. To despise is not onely openly to contemne preaching and publike prayers but lightly to regard or carelesly to heare the word for the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 properly signifies basely to account of a thing and esteeme it nothing worth and of no reckoning which indeede is all one with despising it And the Apostle intendeth when he saith Despise not that they should not onely not loath and contemne the word but honour it highly esteeme it heartily love it yea sincerely follow it So the children are said to despise the counsell of their parents when they doe not follow it For thus the phrase Not to despise is used in Scripture Psal. 51.17 A broken and a contrite heart O Lord thou wilt not despise that is highly esteeme value at a high prise and rate In such speeches by a meiosis lesse being spoken than meant Christian men and women must not onely not despise but conscionably embrace the preaching and ministery of the word 1 Cor. 14.1.3 Above all other speciall gifts desire and esteeme Prophecying Prov. 8.32 33. Heare instruction and be wise refuse it not Blessed is the man that heareth me watching daily at my gates and giving attendance at the posts of my doores One reason hereof is in the Text By faithfull preaching the Spirit and his graces and motions are quickned and cherished as by it they are begun and continued 1. The Ministery is the chariot of the Spirit whereby he rides gloriously into the hearts of the elect Acts 10.44 While Peter spake the holy Ghost fell upon them which heard his words 2. Prophecy is that which inciteth and provoketh us in our dulnesse and quickens us to the faithfull imployment of such gifts as are given us by the Spirit Eccles. 12.11 The words of the wise are like goades and nailes fastened by the masters of assemblies As goades to pricke us forward when wee grow dull and sloathfull in the practise of piety and vertue and as nailes to fasten us to the sound love and obedience of the truth when we grow either wavering weake or weary for so the Apostles by preaching confirmed the Disciples at Antioch Acts 14.22 So Ieremy calls the word of the Lord a fire shut up in his bones which warme and heates our colde and frozen hearts and quickens our graces as the two Disciples whose hearts glowed in them while Christ opened to them the Scriptures 3. Prophecy is powerfull for Edification in the knowledge of God and Iesus Christ in faith in godlinesse love zeale repentance newnesse of life and all the heavenly vertues For Exhortation which containes admonition and reprehension both which are speciall good meanes to awake and quicken us when coldnesse and carelesnesse creepe on us And for Consolation for seeing it is the portion of the Saints by many tribulations to enter into the Kingdome they have great and continuall neede of matter of comfort and strength the which being onely to be had from the conduits of comfort in the Scriptures and from the gracious promises conteined therein what a forcible argument is this to make us highly esteeme and joyfully embrace so gracious a meanes not onely of instruction but of strong consolation 2. The gift of Prophecy and faithfull preaching is that precious gift which our Lord Iesus when he left the world bestowed on his Church Eph. 4.11 For the gathering together of the Saints for the worke of the Ministery for the building up of the body of Christ. Now with what safety can any man despise so great a gift of so deare a friend which hee was so carefull at his last departure to commend to his friends to so gracious a purpose and end as to gather them from under the wrath of God and from the dispersed and lost estate of the world whereas without vision or prophecy people are lost or as the word is naked exposed to Gods wrath and their owne perdition Prov. 29.18 Nay more the Lord in this one gift offers a whole mint of mercy to be divided among beleevers He offers us life of grace in it and therefore it is called the word of life and the word of grace Ioh. 6.33 the word that I speake unto you is spirit and life He offers us light of grace and glory without the shine of which glorious light of the Gospell men sit in darkenesse and shadow of death having their understanding darkned and strangers to the life of God through the ignorance that is in them Hee offers by it grace and peace with himselfe and in our owne consciences and therefore it is called a Ministery of reconciliation and the Gospell of peace whereby God through us beseecheth men to be reconciled 2 Cor. 5.19 He offereth us faith by this gift of Prophecy this being the ordinary meanes by which we attaine that precious gift of gifts Rom. 10.17 Without hearing no faith Rom. 10.8 The word of faith which wee preach Lastly he offereth us by it the end of our faith even the salvation of our soules 1 Pet. 1.9 and therefore it is called a word of salvation Acts 13.26 Now what
ruine to themselves The second use is an use of instruction If wee must try all things then must we learne to get wisdome rightly to apply the rule to every particular which is to be regulated 1 Cor. 2.13 Comparing spirituall things with spirituall for to try is nothing else but to apply the rule or touch-stone to the thing to be tryed And when I speake of wisdome I meane that spirituall wisdome whereby the spirituall man comparing spirituall things with spirituall discerneth all things This man led by the Spirit acknowledgeth Christ and followes him in all things takes faith his companion and sets in his eye Gods glory the end and scope of all things Quest. Can you helpe us to some directions or Rules by which we may be guided in this application which is the onely difficulty now to be opened in this Treatise Answ. Yes and these Rules are of two sorts 1. Generall Preparative 2. Speciall Practicall The generall or preparative Rules to application are foure 1. We must be industrious to know and be acquainted with the Scriptures in their right sence of them whether historicall and litterall or allegoricall and figurative For this is to have our Rule at hand and in our hand without which it must be with us as with the Sadduces of whom our Lord said Ye erre not knowing the Scriptures And because true Scripture is not in words and sillables but in the true sence of it wee must be carefull not to rest in the words without the true signification of them The Papists heare our Saviour saying of the Sacramentall bread This is my body and sticking to the words and applying them without the sense runne into infinite absurdities and errours on one hand and so the Lutherans on the other Against both which wee may not unfitly mention one of the two rules of Augustine in his bookes of Christian Doctrine Si praeceptiva locutio videtur flagitium aut facinus jubere aut utilitatem aut beneficentiam vetare figurata est It is not a proper but a figurative speech which seemes either to injoyne a thing unlawfull or to hinder a lawfull So this speech of our Lord Vnlesse ye eate the flesh of the Sonne of man and drinke his blood ye have not life in you seemes at the first to impose on us a kinde of cruelty therefore it is figurative So Augustine 2. If we would be fit for this tryall we must lay up and hide in our hearts such Scriptures as wee understand that they may be neare us to serve our severall uses The Prophet David professeth that hee had hid the word in his heart that he might not sinne against God And Mary was commended that shee pondered all the sayings concerning Christ and hid them in her heart A Carpenter or Mason whose worke is squared or laid by rule is never without his rule in his hand or at his backe so should it be with Christians 3. We must absolutely submit our judgement to the word of God without reasoning or disputing though it be never so difficult and dangerous unto us for what is else the use of a rule but to rule Abraham left his owne Countrey and went he knew not whither at Gods commandement Heb. 11.8 One would thinke this were folly in Abraham but that the Scripture acquits him and saith he did it by faith And in a more difficult commandement hee rose earely went three dayes journey to kill his onely sonne whom he loved and reasoned no cases but went Good Moses would weigh the word of God in his owne ballance fixing his eye rather upon the impotency and impossibility of the meanes than upon the strength of Gods word which cleaves the hardest rockes therefore he sinned in striking the Rocke when God bade him onely speake to it and for it was barred out of Canaan 4. We must ayme at an absolute conformity betweene the whole word and our whole man This Rule takes place above all mens rules and lawes which rule the outward man but this the inner man the soule and the conscience the heart and the will yea the affections and thoughts which in regard of mens lawes are free but the word captivateth every thought and brings it into subjection 2 Cor. 12.5 It rules the whole outward man also our speeches and actions even the least our lookes and behaviours our callings and conditions our sports and recreations and as David saith of the Sunne Psal. 19.6 there is nothing hid from the heate and discoverie of it so nothing in man is exempted from the rule of the word We must therefore bring our practise thereto and thinke it not enough to be a rule in it selfe unlesse it be a rule to us also And lay this for a ground in our soules that there must be a proportion betweene the rule and the thing ruled Now we come to the speciall rules for the application of this Rule And they concerne 1. Doctrines 2. Actions and Practise Rules for the Tryall of Doctrines are sixe First all Doctrines must be brought to the analogy of faith and squared thereby Rom. 12.6 Whether wee prophecie let us prophecie according to the analogy of faith By analogy of faith the Apostle meaneth the measure of faith and Doctrine which is indeede the holy Scripture the heads of which Doctrine or the summe of which faith is contained in the Creede the Decalogue and the Lords Prayer If any Doctrine agree not with these which are the key and rule of faith it is unsound and to be rejected As for example 1. The Church of Rome teacheth that the bread in the Sacrament is turned into the very body flesh blood and bone of Christ which was borne of the Virgin We hold the cleane contrary Now bring this Doctrine to the analogie of faith that teacheth that Christ was born of the Virgin true man with a true humane nature like ours in all sinne things sin onely excepted visible circumscribed palpable in one place only at once as is ours that teacheth that he ascended into heaven in that humane nature and there fitteth at the right hand of God untill his second comming and therefore cannot be really and locally in the Sacrament 2. Romish Doctrine teacheth that a man may merit by his good workes remission of sins and eternall life they establish the merit of mans workes in the matter of justification we utterly exclude them Bring we this Doctrine to the analogie of faith The ten Commandements say The Lord sheweth mercy to thousands that love him and keepe his commandements If the reward be given by mercy then not for the merit of the worke done The Lords prayer teacheth us to pray for forgivenesse of debts and therefore we are farre from meriting The same prayer teacheth us to pray for every morsell of bread Is it not madnesse to thinke wee can merit the kingdome of heaven if we cannot merit a morsell of bread The Creede
thus 1. Because they have most neede to borrow 2. Because they are most liable to wrong and oppression 3. The commandement of Loane is made especially for their good 4. Vsurie on them is a more grievous sinne and crying Exod. 22.21 Object But if it were unlawfull God would forbid it to the stranger Sol. 1. The morall Law forbids it to all 2. It is by God dispensed with by a Iudiciall for the hardnesse of the hearts of the Iewes for the unjustice of the Gentiles who exacted it on the Iewes and for the overthrow of the Canaanites The word is Deut. 23.20 not Lemicro but Lamicro extranc● huic that is to this stranger meaning the Canaanite 3. It is no more lawfull than Poligamy or a bill of divorce which was against the Institutor 4. When the Canaanites were destroyed all usury was afterward absolutely forbidden Psal. 15. and Prov. 28.8 Ierome on Lev. 18. In the Law usurie is forbidden onely to brethren but in the Prophets to all absolutely and in the Gospell much more because all are now brethren So much for the second Rule Thirdly in all doubtfull Doctrines that is the truth which gives most glory to God and least unto any creature for as God in all things intends his owne glory most which is the maine end of all his courses so doth his word which after a speciall manner resembleth himselfe This word so propoundeth all the frame of mans salvation from the lowest staire to the highest as God may have his glory in all 1 Cor. 1.29.31 That he that glorieth might glory in the Lord and that no creature migh● share with him in his glory which he never would communicate to any other verse 29. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That no flesh might glory in his presence To apply this to particulars 1. The Church of Rome maintaines a Doctrine that Saints departed are to be invocated as Mediatours though not of redemption yet of intercession Wee affirme the contrary according to the Scripture Bring now this point to this tryall whether gives more glory to God and lesse to the creature we who affirme him to be a God hearing prayer who onely knowes the hearts of the sonnes of men and is omnipresent to heare and omnipotent to helpe all which are incommunicable Attributes of the Deity or they which against the Scripture robbe God of this part of his honour and bestow it on creatures which are not capable of it Isay 63.16 2. The same Church of Rome teacheth that to the justifying of a sinner before God is required not onely an imputed righteousnesse but an habituall righteousnesse which are workes of charity which makes a man of just more just Wee in this Doctrine of Iustification utterly exclude humane merit Now bring this different Doctrine to this Rule Whether gives more to God and lesse to the creature that Doctrine of Iustification by faith onely which utterly takes from man all that hee can thinke of to justifie himselfe withall and ascribes the whole worke of salvation from first to last unto God or that Doctrine which puffes up man in conceit of some righteousnesse in himselfe and takes from the Lord this honour to be Hee that justifies the ungodly And this is the Rule to which the Apostle brings the same Doctrine to be tryed Rom. 3.27 28. By what Law is boasting excluded Not by the Law of workes but by the Law of faith And because this Doctrine excludes all boasting hee concludes Therefore is a man justified by faith without the works of the Law See Rom. 4.2 3. The Church of Rome also maintaineth the Doctrine of humane satisfactions and enjoynes many penances to satisfie the justice of God for veniall sinnes Wee on the contrary teach that wee must every day pray for the pardon of our daily sinnes Now bring this different Doctrine to this Tryall Which gives more to God and lesse to the creature that which applies an infinite justice to God the violation of which must be made up by an infinite person or that which imputes to him an imperfect justice such as a sinfull man may satisfie and an imperfect mercy if our owne workes make not supply 4. The same Church teacheth and so the Church of the 〈…〉 that God hath elected all to salvation and Christ hath redeemed all and every particular man We according to the Scripture holde that God hath chosen onely heires of salvation and that Christ for his part redeemed not all particulars but all kindes for hee that would not pray for the world would not die for the world How shall we bolt out the truth Answ. Bring the Doctrine to this Rule Wee aske If God have elected and Christ have redeemed every particular man why is not every particular man saved Because say they God foresawe who would beleeve and who would not which is to make Gods election frustrate as electing such as hee foresaw would not beleeve as also dependant on the will of man and mans will to overrule Gods And not mans salvation to depend on Gods will and election than which nothing can be more dishonourable to the Majesty of God Rom. 9 19. Who ever resisted his will Adde hereunto that in the Doctrine of falling from grace Gods glory suffereth for thereby the seede of God loseth the glory of being incorruptible and Gods truth suffereth who saith it abideth for ever 5. The same Church teacheth according to their ordinary practise at this day that the Pope hath power to make lawes to binde the conscience hee hath power to dispence with lawfull oathes and untie the conscience which Gods law hath bound he hath power to dispense for marriages within degrees prohibited by God the like We deny any such power can agree to any mortall creature and holde it a tyrannicall usurpation Bring these and the like positions to this Tryall Whether gives more glory to God and lesse to the creature to acknowledge him the Lord of his owne Law onely above it or to set a Prelate not onely in his chaire of estate but above God who is able to reverse and abrogate his Lawes at his pleasure and to sit in the consciences of men which is the Lords owne and onely consistory That is the third Rule Fourthly all sound Doctrine directs and leades unto Christ magnifies and sets up Christ who is the end of the Law and Gospel and as Christ prooved the Iewes not to be of God because they dishonoured him the Sonne of God Iohn 8. So whatsoever Doctrine dishonours Christ cannot be of God And if we bring the whole body of Popery to this rule of Tryall it will appeare not to be of God 1. Their whole Doctrine of merits and humane satisfactions how doth it obscure the merit of Christ yea abolish the absolute satisfaction of Christ who hath paid the uttermost farthing This Doctrine makes Christ but a peece of a Saviour halfe a Iesus for every man must be a
Gods part as well as their owne When Min●sters are diligent in doctrine careles in life they hold some good but not all Private men that carry themselves soberly and civilly and are fully content with the name of honest men holde some good but they reforme not their family nor walke religiously in the midst of their houses and so are farre from holding all good This is in matter of practise So in matter of judgement The truth and every part of it is our birth-right saith Cyprian wee must not lose a foote of it but hold the least truth Many hold fast the maine grounds and articles of religion but in things of lesser moment are altogether regardlesse as Bishop Latimer thought at first that the cause of the Sacrament was rather to be dissembled than suffered for but considering better that hee must holde all that is good himselfe happily suffered in it Nay we must not onely hold truth in sense but even the words wherein the Spirit of God hath conveyed it to us not departing easily from them for wee shall finde what great mischiefe hath oppressed the Church by taking liberty to depart from the very words of Scripture and in stead of them using other improper speeches to expresse the same thing As for example The Fathers used to expresse the Pastors of the Church by the name of Priests whereupon the Romish Church builds and backes her order of Priesthood Doctour Fulke in his sixth chapter of his defence of the translation against Gregory Martin hath these words It is a folly to thinke that a sacrificing office externall can be established in the new Testament which never calleth the Ministers thereof Sacerdotes or Priests They often call the Table of the Lord an Altar and the celebration of the Supper a Sacrifice and gave a reasonable good sence but had they kept to the words of the Scripture they had prevented much mischiefe springing thence For the Romanists make advantage of their speeches wrested out of their sense to set up that blasphemous doctrine of the sacrifice of the Masse And the word Masse what Papist knowes whence it comes being neither Hebrew Greeke nor Latine nor taken from any other language of any Nation but raked out of the bottomlesse pit without all signification unlesse it agree with our English word masse that is an heape a lumpe a chaos of blasphemies and abominations The like of the word Pope a strange unknowne and mysticall name the learned Papists knew it not but confounded themselves in the Etymologie of it some from Pape the interjection of admiration some from Papa which Latine children used to call their fathers by answering to our infants dad some from the Romane abbreviation of Pater Patriae expressed by pa pa and a pricke betweene some from the Siracusans word Papas signifying a father Such follies and ridiculous and childish dotages are they faine to wander in to seeke and finde their holy father the Pope who as himselfe is a beast rising out of the earth in whose forehead is written MYSTERIE so his name is mysticall and from men not from heaven not from the Scriptures yet is the name as ancient as Cyprian and used by the Fathers Wherein we may see how dangerous it is as Beza observes to decline from the word an hayre-breadth and not to hold all that is good even the least An arrow set a little awry at first makes a great errour before it fall at the marke How happy had it beene if the ancient Fathers otherwise godly and learned men had held them to the very names termes and proper words of Scripture rather than by departing therefrom have opened a flood-gate to Antichrists delusions who as Satan creepes in the darke and getting in his toe will shove in his bulke for give sinne an inch it will take an ell and so of the Man of sinne 4. Rule Hold most carefully the chiefe good things for so men doe in earthly matters Now there be three things worth most care in keeping 1. Gods favour presence and loving countenance Psal. 4. Lord lift up the light of thy countenance upon us let others keepe corne and wine keepe thou this feare sinne most of all as that which would most dangerously robbe thee 2. Thine owne sincerity uprightnesse and first love Iob 27.6 I will never lose my innocency till I die 3. The Crowne of life is promised to him that is faithfull to death Hold the kingdome fast in the meanes and so strive as thou maist obtaine As the Martyrs who apprehended it through fire and flames 5. Rule Hold all that is good stiffely and stoutly against with-holders and opposers for a man shall never hold good if he doe coldly approove it Hold it as one firmely glued to it for so the word signifies Rom. 12.9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cleave to that which is good things glued are not easily disjoyned God hath by this phrase glued every Christian to every truth in judgement and practise and no man must separate himselfe from it Tit. 1.9 Holding fast the faithful word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 contra 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 against gain-sayers Take hold with both hands against hereticks tyrants false-teachers flatterers that have laid hold to snatch it from us or as men in perill of drowning lay fast hold upon any thing they can catch to save themselves and will not let it goe 6. Rule Hold the truth constantly to the death whatsoever the issue be Rev. 2.25 Hold fast that thou hast till I come as the renowned Saints and Martyrs who have rather parted with their lives than their depositum 2 Tim. 1.14 Let us therefore labour to see into every truth and seeing it let us hold it As that famous souldier Cynegrius held the shippe first with his right hand till that was cut off then with his left hand till hee lost that too and last of all with his teeth till his head and body were severed So let us resolve every one with himselfe That which I see to be good I will holde it so long as I live or breathe my hands my heart and soule shall cleave unto it I will carry it to heaven with me The second thing proposed is the meanes of holding that which is good I. If wee would hold things approoved to be good let us avoid carefully such things as would hinder us in holding them And they are of two sorts 1. Some shut out good things 2. others thrust them out or choake them The former are 1. Presumption of our owne wisdome and knowledge Humility stands porter at the doore of discipline Psal. 25.9 God teacheth the humble Ier. 13.15 Heare and give eare and be not proud Men of conceits will heare whom they list but an humble man will receive good even from the meanest though it be an earthen vessell Naaman from his servant and Iob from his hand-maid 2. Distempered affections as rash conceit
the directions the Scripture doth afford us which be of two sorts and both of them within that in Iob 31. that because the eye is a most swift messenger unto the soule and most slippery as Iob make a covenant with thine eyes not to behold vanity And because all thy watching is too little for so quicke a member pray the Lord that he would turne away thine eye from beholding vanity Psal. 119.37 Wherein is this watch I. To pull away thine eyes from unallowed objects First beware of an hypocriticall deceitfull eye as in Prov. 6.12 there is one that twinkleth with his eye this is an eye quick-sighted to deceive his brother See thine eye be single as Christ teacheth that is such an eye as may discerne to doe that thou doest that it be just 2. by just meanes 3. doe it with all thy heart uprightly 4. within compasse of thy calling and if thou canst get this single eye the whole body will be likewise single II. There is a lustfull or an adulterous eye 2 Pet. 2.19 we reade of unchast persons that have eyes full of adultery First there be them that have eyes full of spirituall adultery gazing upon Popish pictures and images which they hang up in their houses as alluring harlots corrupters of the heart which is an opening of the doore to idolatry and a signe of a man willing to be deceived But the eyes of the Church are as doves eyes Cant. 1.14 chast and pure not gazing upon idolatrous pictures Secondly corporall adultery that delight in lascivious pictures filthy portraitures of naked men and women in whole or such parts as may incite the corruption of heart and feede it with contemplative adultery we neede bring no oyle to this flame the more lamentable it is that the Divell hath got such pictures into request in this wanton and unclean age for where can a man goe where he may looke off them which a manifest signe of adulterous eyes 2. Such are their eyes who are adulterous living pictures that so attire and disguise themselves to lay open their nakednes beyond all modestie to ensnare the eyes senses of others say not thou thinkest no hurt in it except thou be sure others thinke no hurt by it 3. Such are their eyes that reade lascivious and wanton bookes teachers of adultery and lewdnesse that frequent stage-playes with their beastly acts and actions wherein all gates and walls are cast open to the Divell beware of this eye by which death and poyson enters into the heart III. There is a covetous eye which is not satisfied with riches Eccles. 4.8 neither doth hee say for whom doe I thus labour this eye defraudes the soule of pleasure and is an evill sicknesse As Ahabs who was discontented with a kingdome for want of Naboths vineyard There be three things that never say enough the horse-leach the fire and the grave and adde the fourth a covetous eye which as Iobs Elephant Iob 40. thinkes hee can swallow the whole flood Iordan Let a covetous man have but a moate of dust or earth in his eye what trouble is it to him yet he thinkes to thrust a whole Country could he get it into his eye and see never the worse Take heed of this covetous eye there is no greater an enemy to faith and contentation or any good exercise than it is IV. There is an envious eye Matth. 20.15 Is thine eye evill because mine is good such an eye as Satan cast upon the happinesse of man when hee was fallen from his owne Take heede of this sore eye that cannot abide the light Basil saith that whereas many evills are in it yet onely one good thing goes with it it is the greatest plague to him that hath it V. There is a sleepy a dull and a negligent eye not open or quicke to behold with fruite and profit the noble workes and actions of God whereas God hath made the eye of a round figure and of quicke motion that it might easily move it selfe any way or every way in viewing the workes of God in beholding the afflictions of his people and the necessities of his brethren The second thing wherein we must be carefull in watching the eye is to labour to holde and fixe the eyes upon allowed and profitable objects As 1. God made our eyes to looke upward and hath given mans eye one muscle which the beasts eye wants that it should not fixe it selfe as theirs upon the earth yea hath compassed the eyes with browes and lids to fence them from dust and earth that though we looke sometimes on the earth yet the least dust or earth should not get into them Psal. 123.2 to shew that our eyes should be lifted up unto him and in seeing his creatures behold himselfe 〈◊〉 ●hem Esay 40.26 Lift up your eyes aloft and behold who created all these things the invisible things of God his power divinity and eternity were made visible to the very Gentiles by things created Rom. 1.20 And shall Christians onely looke on these things as they to make our selves inexcusable shall we looke upon the Sunne and not on him that made it 2. Let us fixe our eyes on the workes of God in and for his Church for the strengthening of our faith and confidence as Iohn 2.23 they that saw the workes of Christ Many of them beleeved in his name seeing the workes he did For the Lord doth nothing for or against his Church but according to his truth revealed in the word the Lord doth no worke in his Church either of judgement or of mercy but they are as it were the very commentaries of the Scriptures and therefore all the workes of God that wee can behold in or for his Church doe notably stirre up our faith in him 3. God hath allowed us our eyes to behold our brethren to behold their graces to see their good example to affect embrace and encourage them to imitate them to glorifie God for them thus our eyes should imitate the eyes of God which are upō the just to affect protect reward them Yea we must holde our eyes upon our brethrens misery to pitty releeve them we must not turne our eyes from our owne flesh as the unmercifull Priest and Levite did from the wounded man who were condemned by the pittifull Samaritan 4. Our eyes we●● given us not onely to be organes of sight but to be fountaines of teares in beholding both our owne sinne and misery and the sinne and wretchednesse of our brethren The Iewes eye beholding the brazen Serpent was a watery and mournefull eye because hee was stung by the Serpent so ours much more whose sting and paine is mortall and inward And can we beholde any creature and not see in it the expresse prints and markes of our owne sinne which still must adde to our griefe And for others Good Lot was vexed daily to see the uncleane conversation of the Sodomites and Davids
our callings both generall and speciall Be faithfull in thy profession of godlinesse lurke not as an hypocrite among the Saints carry no treacherous purpose to save thy selfe by denying or betraying the truth give it thy heart hand and tongue and life if it require it beware of a politique profession never let thy practise disagree from thy profession Consider Christ professed a good profession before Pilate and sealed it with his life and death 1 Tim. 5.13 and wilt thou so nourish any secret fraud in thy heart contrary to thy profession and Paul telleth Timothy hee had made a good profession and a faithfull before many witnesses And this is a most necessary doctrine we know not how soone we may be called to it therefore learne it betimes that we may be like our heavenly Father in faithfulnesse not onely in times of prosperity but in times of tryall for a Christian man is that indeede which he is in tryall let us shew our selves to bee that wee seeme to be Then in thy speciall calling be faithfull Christ was a faithfull high Priest in things concerning God Heb. 2.17 and Moses was faithfull in all the house of God as a servant Heb. 3.5 So it is required of every Minister or dispenser of the secrets of God that hee be faithfull 1 Cor. 4.1 the steward of Gods house must be faithfull to his Lord and to his family It is not great pompous titles that commends a Minister but his faithfulnesse Prov. 13.17 A faithfull Messenger is health And in thy private calling deale faithfully with all men and in all things both great and small so doth God who is not the rule onely but the witnesse and judge 1 Thess. 4.6 Let no man defraud his brother God is the avenger of all such things 4. In friendship be faithfull God is most faithfull to his friends in prosperity in adversity in life in death Be faithfull especially in the fellowship of the Gospell specially aiming at holinesse as the Lord doth and to draw thy friend along to heaven with thee and helpe him out of sinne else a sorry friend art thou But how farre we from this among whom it is so hard to finde a faithfull friend who in civill things will sticke to a man in adversity Where is to be found the friendship of David and Ionathan Among Heathens we reade of a Daman and Pithias of a Pylades and Orestes of an Euryalus and Nysus of an Achates who was a faithfull friend to Aeneas and would not leave him in danger But few such are to be found among Christians among whom faithfull friendship is degenerated into pollicy and flattery The Heathens could say that they used not fire or water oftner than friendship would Christians could say so of faithfull friendship and yet they seeme to pull the Sunne out of heaven who would take faithfulnes from friendship in the lives of men Would to God that Christians had not forgotten these naturall principles We all professe our selves to be of the family of Christ would it were with us as in that that but one of twelve were unfaithfull to God and their friend But wee see the contrary too too often 5. In communicating to thy brethren be faithfull lay out thy Lords talent faithfully as a wife and faithfull servant whom the Lord may make ruler over his house Luk. 12.42 Hast thou much many talents be faithfull in much and thou shalt finde much faithfulnesse in the Lord. Hast thou little be faithfull in that little and thy Lord shall make thee ruler over much when it shall be said Well done good and faithfull servant c. Matth. 25.23 Oh that men would remember the doome against the evill servant Matth. 25.30 Cast the unprofitable servant into utter darknesse Why was he judged so severely 1. Because an hypocrite comes among the good servants and receives some talents 2. Having his talent hee hideth it in the earth earth eates him up and buries him alive 3. He is unprofitable hinders his Lord and makes him a loser and doth no good to others all which makes the sentence as just as severe and certaine 2. This faithfulnesse of God is the ground of all true religion and hereupon must the whole frame and all parts of it be laid This appeares in five instances 1. In all the doctrine of faith 2. In all the practise of faith 3. In all the prayers of faith 4. In all profession of faith 5. In all perseverance in faith First we must ground all the doctrine of faith all the articles of faith all our judgement and opinion in matters of faith upon this faithfulnesse of God and this by holding fast in them all the faithfull word Titus 1.9 for that onely is the true religion which is wholly grounded upon his word who is unchangeable in truth and faithfulnesse How could we beleeve all the Articles of faith which are unconceivable and impossible to reason if we ground them not upon Gods faithfulnesse in his word How should we conceive that the heavens and earth were created of nothing that the Sonne of God should become man should be borne of a Virgin should by dying overcome death by descending into hell should deliver from hell How should wee beleeve that our bodies cloathed with corruption and wrapped in deaths garments should rise againe to eternall life which Article the Sadduces mocke at if wee should not apprehend them as the word of him that is faithfull and true Contrary hereto the maine pillars of Popery are set upon the unfaithfull words of men of Fathers Councels Traditions Popes Whereas Rom. 3.4 Let God be true and every man a lyer Be he Father or holy Father further than hee speakes according to the faithfull word Nay if an Angel from heaven speake otherwise let him be accursed Gal. 1.8 Nay the Popish Church is so farre from acknowledging this faithfulnesse of God in the Scripture as it never found a greater resister or opposite among the sects and opposite heresies in the world For bring in either Iewes or Turkes or any kinde of heretickes more vilifying Gods faithfulnesse in the Scripture and Papists shall not be the worst But did ever any of them accuse the Scripture to be a nose of waxe the authority of it to be no better than Esops Fables without the Churches determination to be a leaden and a Lesbian rule to be a seed-plot of heresies and they to be heretickes that stand to the voice of the Scriptures Doe not they call the Bible the booke of heretickes doe they not burne the Scriptures as sometime did wicked Asa Antiochus Maximinus Have they not burned Christian men for having them Let any such furious heretickes against Gods faithfull word be brought in if they can But certainly Papists must carry the bell above all other in the world for standing opposite to the faithfulnesse of God in the Scripture and be the most hereticall as who shut the doore against the
I am Truth not Custome so Christians must frame themselves to Truth what ever the Custome be Custome we say is a tyrant but Truth must be our King and Guide and it is the part of a wise Christian to row hard against the streame of bad Customes wherof the world is full 2. For the example of great men it had beene good for Peter to have tryed the example of the Rulers in their dealing against Christ before hee had denied and forsworne him their example as little patronized him as themselves Well said Augustine Non debemus semper probare quicquid probati homines urgent sed judicium Scripturarum adhibere an illae probent We must not still approve whatsoever worthy men urge us unto but take with us the judgement of the Scriptures whether they approove it or no. 3. Suppose they be as good as great and as great as the Apostles yet must wee follow them no further than they follow Christ 1 Cor. 11.1 4. For the example of multitudes it is a good saying of the Father Wee are not to number the voices wee have on our side but to weigh them and it often comes to passe that the great part overcomes the better part And as I approove of Diogenes his wisdome who thought he should doe best when he did least what the common people did so I am sure out of the word that that course of life is most acceptable to God which is most contrary to the fashion of the world Quest. 4. What if any thing come with Authority and have the image and subscription of Cesar upon it must that be presently admitted without further question Answ. 1. Every soule must be subject to the higher powers and that for conscience sake but not without a conscience rightly enformed and guided onely so farre forth as God be not disobeyed nor his truth disparaged 2. We acknowledge with Tertullian and reverence the Emperour as one that is the second man under God and inferiour unto God onely And give unto Cesar the things that are Cesars but so as we give unto God the things that are Gods 3. It was the errour of the unbeleeving Iewes against Iason and the brethren Acts 17.7 These men doe against the decrees of Cesar saying there is another King one Iesus For wee may not doe against the decrees of Cesar yet we must say there is another King one Iesus whose decrees are of absolute authority and Cesars so farre as they crosse not his 4. No man blames his neighbour that brings a peece of money to the touch and weights though it have Cesars image and superscription upon it It is no disloyalty but wisdome and warinesse to try the Kings coyne there being so many slippes and counterfeits Thus wee see that nothing either in doctrine or manners can come so strongly armed with Civill or Ecclesiasticall Authority but it must passe the tryall before we can hold it as good and currant Now of the third generall Who must try all these things Answ. Our Apostle writeth to a whole Church and to every particular Christian in it Object What hath every Thessalonian without restraint granted him a power to censure and judge of Doctrines in all points of faith manners Is it not enough for a common man to give his consent to the Church and to beleeve as the Pastors beleeve Answ. Indeed so the Church of Rome teacheth and namely the Rhemists on 1 Ioh. 4.1 corrupting a most expresse text where the Apostle wisheth and commandeth every Christian to Try the Spirits But nothing is more plaine in Scripture than that people ought judicially to examine the Doctrine of their Pastors before they give it entertainment as afterward we shall more clearely proove But the Papists and the Rhemists on that place say Is it not absurd that every particular person by himselfe and of himselfe should take upon him to examine and controll Doctors and Doctrines I answer It were absurd if of himselfe or by himselfe onely hee should try them but for himselfe every Christian must and by such rules as God hath appointed to discerne whether a Doctrine be of God or no unto which not onely Doctrines of Pastors but of Councells Fathers and Popes are to be subjected unlesse we will take sowre for sweet and darknesse for light Hence it is that every Christian should have his senses exercised to discerne good and evill Heb. 5.14 That every man should abound with knowledge and judgement to discerne things that differ Philip. 1.10 That every man should be perswaded in his owne proper minde Rom. 14.5 And every sheepe of Christ discernes Christs voice and will not heare the voice of a stranger because he is able to try and discerne that too Iohn 20.4 5. The fourth generall remaines By what must this tryall be made Answ. Every triall is made by some 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or direction We try the soundnesse of solid things by weights and the ballance of liquid things by liquid measures wee try figures by line and rule and the kindes of mettall by the touch-stone Wee must therefore finde out some weight or rule or touch-stone to try the soundnesse and kinde of Doctrines concerning faith or manners Now there can be no perfect ballance or exact rule for the tryall of all things but onely the word writted Esa. 2.3 The law out of Zion and the word from Ierusalem must be Iudge among the Nations and chap. 8.20 all appeales must be made to the law and the testimony or else there is no light to be had Christ himselfe for his doctrine stood to the judgement of Scripture Ioh. 5.39 Search the Scriptures for they testifie of me And Paul subjected his Doctrine to the same rule Acts 28.23 And good reason For 1. The Scripture hath all in it that a sufficient rule should have It is 1. declarative 2. directive 3. explorative 1. It is of the nature of God who is the measure of all things and immediatly derived from him and so the first cause the rule of all that follow concerning Gods worship 2. It is full of direction for any thing that is to be beleeved or done as the Artificers rule directs his worke and hand 3. It is sufficient to try and proove all things when they are done as the touch-stone tries the mettall or the square tries the work squared In all which respects it is like the patterne shewed to Moses in the Mount after which he was to frame the whole Tabernacle and by which he might try it being framed That as nothing was in the Tabernacle which was not in the patterne so may nothing be with us which is not agreeable to the patterne of Scripture called the patterne of wholsome words 2. By what should causes be tryed but by the Lawes of the Body Civill where they doe arise But looke what the Law is in the Common-wealth the same is the