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A14721 Theologicall questions, dogmaticall observations, and evangelicall essays, vpon the Gospel of Jesus Christ, according to St. Matthew Wherein, about two thousand six hundred and fifty necessary, and profitable questions are discussed; and five hundred and eighty speciall points of doctrine noted; and five hundred and fifty errours confuted, or objections answered: together with divers arguments, whereby divers truths, and true tenents are confirmed. By Richard VVard, sometimes student in the famous vniversities of Cambridge in England: St. Andrews in Scotland: and Master of Arts of both the kingdoms; and now a preacher in the famous city of London. Ward, Richard, 1601 or 2-1684. 1640 (1640) STC 25024; ESTC S118017 1,792,298 907

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hath beene reprehended and refused Therefore their consent and agreement is not the true rule of interpretation The Minor proposition is proved from this verse 21 31.33.38.43 where our Saviour doth plainely and directly oppose himselfe against the expositions of the Ancients It hath beene said of old thus but I say thus unto you Sect 4 § 4. Thou shalt not commit adultery Quest 1 Whether did the Law of Moses only restraine and forbid the outward act of sinne A sw The law did not onely restraine the body but the mind also not onely the outward action but also the inward affection Against this it is ob ected Object our Saviour faith here it was said unto you of old Thou shalt not commit adultery But I say c so that it appeareth the law onely restrained the outward act but Christ doth forbid more even the inward affection and desire First our blessed Saviour speaketh according Answ 1 to their opinion because they thought they were onely obliged and tied to the outward act and therefore he doth deliver the law from their corrupt interpretations n●t giving a new exposition as appeareth plainely verse 43. ye have heard that it hath beene said thou shalt love thy neighbour and hate thy enemie but in all the old Testament there is no such precept given by God or liberty for any to hate their enemie our Saviour then meaneth not such sayings as were found in the law but such expositions as they made among themselves Secondly the law of Moses did bind not only Answ 2 the hand and externall act but also the inward will and desire as appeares thus First none are said to repent but of that which is evill but they under the law were to repent and to shew themselves contrite even for the internall acts of their minde as appeares Psalme 4.4 Tremble and sinne not examine your hearts upon your bed c. Therefore the law did restraine the inward will and desire Secondly it is directly forbidden Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thy heart z Levit. 19.17 which was an internall act and many other such like sinnes of the heart are reprooved by the Prophets Ierem. 14 4. Thirdly the Law doth not just●fie that which is naturally unjust but forbiddeth it Therfore the extends law it selfe to the hidden man of the heart not only tying mens hands The assumptiō is proved thus First he that coveteth his Neighbours wife faileth in the end coveting her onely out of lust not for procreation which was the principall end of the institution and ordination of marriage Secondly Matrimonie is grounded even upon the law of nature if then to breake and violate matrimonie bee against the law of nature then to will and purpose so to doe is against nature also yea the will and purpose is rather sinne then the act it selfe for it may fall out that the externall act is sometime without sinne as when a man ignorantly lieth with another woman taking her to be his wife as Iacob tooke Leah for Rachel but the will and desire is never without sinne as saith Tostatus himselfe s exod 20. praec 7. Fourthly our Saviour saith that this precept Thou shalt not kill is transgressed by the anger and hatred of the heart verse 22. Therefore the law intendeth even by the externall act to forbid the internall also How doth Christ oppose himselfe to this precept Quest 2 Thou shalt not commit adultery Not by denying it Answ but by adding something unto it not by retracting it or by adding a bridle unto lust and uncleannesse but by spurring them forward to a spirituall sense which is to be extended beyond the literall as if our Saviour would say It was said of old Thou shalt not commit adultery and this is true but this is not the whole truth for there is mo●e then this here meant What uncleanenesse is here meant Quest 3 Vncleannes is twofold either Internall in the heart Externall which is either Circumstantiall in gesture and voice Substantiall which is Indirect Direct viz. Against or contrary to nature namely Sodomy either with Brute beasts called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Men that is Males called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 According to nature is committed either Uiolently and is called a Rape Uoluntarily and is either Cōplicata because it is With a kinsewoman is called Incest With a married woman and is called Adultery Simple and that either With a strumpet called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 With a Uirgin called Stuprum I will not here speake at all either I of the Internall uncleannesse or II of the Circumstantiall or III. of the Indirect because I will understand the place as the Pharisees understood it namely onely of actuall uncleannesse and for the horrour odiousnesse of the name I will omit Sodomy Thou shalt not commit adultery Quest. 4 Why must Christians hate avoide and shun fornication and adultery Answ Because God hath forbidden it Reade Exod. 20.14 Deut. 23.17 Prov. 5.8 Heb. 13.4 Obie 1 It may be objected simple fornication is no such great matter Adultery indeede is a great sinne but fornication is but a swall evill yea this the heathens could see by the light of nature Answ 1 First certainely fornication is a most greevous sinne in it selfe although not so great Answ 2 as adultery if therewith compared Secondly true it is fornication by no positive law of God was punished with temporall death but what was that seeing by the word of God it shall bee punished with eternall Bee not deceived saith the Apostle for neither fornicators nor adulterers shall ever enter into the kingdome of heaven Answ 3 Thirdly although simple fornication with an harlot whereof the former answer speakes were not by any positive law adjudged to bee punished with temporall death yet there was a simple fornication which was If a damosell play the whore in her Fathers house they shall bring her out to the doore of her fathers dwelling and the men of her citie shall stone her with stones that shee die because shee hath wrought folly in Israel a Deut. 22.21 Answ 4 Fourthly although by no positive law God commandeth Moses to punish 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fornication with a strumpet with death yet the Lord himselfe doth cutting off foure and twenty thousand in one plague for this simple fornication Numb 25.1 and 1 Cor. 10.8 And therefore wee should not thinke that a light thing which the Lord who is just in all his judgements punisheth so severely Obie 2 Harding objects here that it is no great matter to permit stewes or brothell houses or to goe unto them for they had better doe that then deflower virgins yea their countrey of Italy being hot there is a certaine necessitie of suffering them First certainely it is most false that the permitting Answ 1 of those publique places of uncleannesse doth prevent greater mischiefes for experience teacheth that it makes men more
makes us cold but by and by wee burn So at first we are afraid of sin by and by fearlesse therof at first our affections freez afterwards fry in the love of sin at first wee abstain from sinne and are hardly drawn to the committing of sinne but by and by custome makes it habituall and naturall unto us and us insensible of it III. In a Fe●er when we are cold yet even then we are hot within though we are not so sensible of that heat So even then when the naturall man fears and trembles to commit sin there is the fire of evill concupiscence which in time sets on fire the whole course of nature shews it selfe outwardly in the practise of sin IV. The Fever inflames the whole body even to the very toes of the feet So sin wounds and enfeebles us from the crown of the head to the sol● of the foot Esay 1.6 Answ 4 Fourthly si●ne may be resembled to a Fever Respectu effectuum in regard of the effects For I. The Fever in membris in the parts of the body workes this effect it debilitates and weakens the whole man so that hee cannot walke forth of doors nay bee cannot walke within his owne house neither is able to stand but forced to sit or lye and keep his bed So by sinne we are so weakned that wee are neither able to walke in the wayes of God nor run the race that he hath set before us nor worke out the work of our salvation with fear and trembling II. The Fever in intellectu in the understanding works this effect it disturbs takes away the use of reason making a man not know what he saith or doth And this is for the most part or at least very often mortall and deadly So when men grow obstinate and bold in sinning and are neither sensible of sinne nor punishment but will do whatsoever they will Ier. 44.16 it is an argument of a soule not distant from death III. The Fever In appetitu in the appetite produceth these effects namely First it loaths the most wholsome things So sinne makes us to loath both I. Good workes and duties and exercises of religion like the Iews who cryed when will the new Moons and the Sabbaths be done that we may return unto our sins Malach. 1.13 II. Good Counsell for that we think to bee a hard saying and we cannot endure it Ioh. 6.60 Secondly as the Fever loaths that which is wholsome so it longs for that which is unwholsome So wee loath the heavenly Manna of the word and spirituall graces and love the vaine pleasures of sin although they be but for a season and the end therof destruction and death Rom. 6.23 Thirdly In a Fever there is a thirst not to bee quenched or satisfied but insatiable having no moderation in drinki●g if it can come unto liquor So many are furious in sinning and cannot cease to sin h 2 Pet. 2.14 although they see oftentimes that I. The thing is childish and of that nature that it is a shame for a man to be besotted therewith Yea II. That the event is perillous and dangerous And III. That both the estate is lessened and impaired and the body enfeebled and enervated therby Thus no feverish man is more mad after drink then wicked men are after their sins Fourthly Potus factitij made drinks quench not the thirst in a Fever but now pleaseth the Pallat and by and by displeaseth it it being only cool things which allaieth and asswageth the heat therof although often they kill because the stomack is not able to bear them So it is not ordinary comforts that appease the soule because they cannot fill the soule neither can they allay the heat of a wounded spirit but it is the word and the comminations and promises thereof which afford ease and peace to the troubled heart And yet sometimes this cooling Cordiall doth kill and drives accidentally to desperation as we see in Cain Gen. 4. and Iudas Mat. 27. Fifthly sinne may be resembled to a Fever Respectu finis in regard of the end thereof For I. Sometimes it ends in health and life of it selfe that is a man recovers sometimes out of a Fever without the use of any means or help of any man II. Sometimes the Fever ends in health and life by the use of good means and the helpe of the Physician III. Sometimes the Fever ends in a sickly and weakly estate that is when the Fever leaves a man oftentimes he fals into deafnesse and swellings and boyls and the like IV. Sometimes it ends in death Fevers often bring men to the period of their life now this is two-fold viz. First sometimes a Fever brings a man to a speedy death when he dies therof Secondly sometimes it brings a man unto a lingring death and that either I. By an H●ctick Fever which inflames the heart or lungs Or II. By bringing a man into a Dropsie Now to apply this First sinne herein differs from a Fever this as was said sometimes ends in health and life without the use of physick or helpe of the Physician but never that for sin cannot be cured or healed of it selfe Secondly sin is cured and healed by Christ who is the only Physician of the soule Thirdly if sinne end not thus in health and life by Christ then it ends either I. In a dry Hectick Fever and a barrennesse of all good fruits Or II. In a cold Dropsie or Lukewarmnesse in Religion Or III. In a deafnesse and unwillingnesse to hear the word of God Or IV. In filthy Vlcers and putrified Boyls of actuall transgressions V. The safest Crisis or conflict of nature in this sicknesse is evacuation and that either by vomiting purging sweating or bleeding So we must labour either to vomit up our sinnes by Confession or sweat them out by Contrition or purge them out by alienation and separation or else if the Lord love us he will bleed us and make us forsake sin by affliction as hee did by David and Manasses Quest 2 How may we know whether we are sicke of the Fever of sin or not By these plain signes namely Answ First if without thou be inflamed with the lust of sinne or if it shew it selfe in in thy life and actions Secondly if the fire of concupiscence kindle thy affections unto evill although as yet it doth not appear by thy actions and outward man Thirdly by examining what drink pleaseth us best whether is the word of God unpleasing to our taste or not c●rtainly if we be refreshed and comforted with the pleasures of sin and that the word of God relisheth not with us we are feverish Fourthly by examining whether Christ hath cured us or not whether we be freed from the Fever of sin or not For this Fever of the soule differs from the bodily Fever there being many in health of body and free in body from the corporall Fever but none at all from the Fever of
is no solid or sincere Religion but onely a forme 2 Tim. 3.5 Or Answ 3 Thirdly because the Master of the family doth not teach and instruct his houshold many follow Religion in some sort themselves but doe neglect to instruct their families and to teach their wives children and servants their duties Or Answ 4 Fourthly because either the head or parts of the family doe follow some other respects besides Religion and conscience namely either covetousnesse or gaine or partiality or selfe-will or the like Quest 4 What are the remedies against these domesticall dissensions Answ 1 The best remedy in all these is to run unto God Mic. 7.7 as for example I. If our friends or kindred or those who are neerest in the bond of nature unto us be angry or at strife with us then let us goe unto God and labour that he may be our friend and we shall then be happy and have cause to rejoyce in the middest of these jars and distastes If we be injured and unjustly wronged by any who are neere unto us or whosoever and that we must suffer and endure those wrongs then let us respect the promises of God made unto such and rejoyce our selves in them Answ 2 Secondly some understand this verse of the dissensions which shall arise amongst the godly Quest 5 How many sorts and kinds of peace are there Answ Three namely First the peace of the wicked or that peace which wicked men have amongst themselves this our Saviour spake of verse 34. Secondly the peace of the godly amongst themselves this is both commanded Ioh. 14. and also promised The God of peace will give peace unto the righteous Esa 57. Thirdly the peace of the righteous with the wicked and this our Saviour speaks of in this place Here observe that it is understood two manner of wayes to wit either I. Indicatively onely Or else II. Imperatively also First this may be understood Indicatively onely shewing what shall come of preaching and thus it seemes to be understood by that which went before Whence we note That the preaching of the Gospel will beget jars and dissensions Observ amongst the neerest and deerest friends for some will beleeve and some will belye the Preachers and preaching of the Word some will practise it some will persecute it some will desire to injoy it some others envie it Like the two theeves whereof the one prayes unto Christ and the other reviles him Many more examples hereof may be seen in Scripture both in the Athenians Act. 17. and in the Scribes and Pharisees and Sadduces and others Acts 13.45 and 14.13 19. and 18.6 8. and 19.23 and 21.30 and 23.7 and Ioh. 6.52 and 7.40 c. and 9.16 and 10.19 c. Why doth the preaching of the Gospel breed Quest 6 this variance betweene fathers and children masters and servants friends and friends First because no man can serve two masters Answ 1 Matth. 6.24 The children of God and of the world or Belial cannot agree Secondly because Religion and the word Answ 2 withdrawes men from their pleasure profit and gaine and therefore doth exasperate them against their dearest friends Moses and Aaron if God had not preserved them had paid dearely for bringing the Israelites from the flesh-pots of Egypt Exo. 16.2 Saint Paul was in danger of death for dispossessing a Damosell because she brought much money to her Master so long as shee was possessed Act. 16.18 Afterwards for speaking against Dlana Demetrius by an uprore and insurrection had likely to have slaine him because Paul spake against his profit Act. 19.24 And thus when Preachers speake against mens lucre and darlings they are hated by those who otherwise love them Thirdly because the word is a hard saying to Answ 3 flesh and blood Iohn 6.60 Or because men cannot endure reproofe Lot was well liked by the Sodomites for any thing we know untill he reproved them but then they threaten him Gen. 19.9 So many when once the word reproves them will endure it no longer but spurne against the reproofes and set themselves against the reprovers Fourthly because naturally men cannot endure Answ 4 that others should bee thought to be better then themselves for those who endeavour not to bee good indeed doe yet desire to be thought to bee good Esay 65.5 And hate those whom the world thinkes better then themselves as we see in Cain who hated his brother Abell because he was better in Gods esteeme and more beautifull in his eye then himselfe was Gen. 3. Fiftly the preaching of the word begets dissension Answ 5 amongst deare friends because thereby one becomes more blessed then another God promiseth and performeth that hee will blesse those who obey his word but curse the disobedient And hence the blessed are hated of the other as Iacob was by his brother Esau Gen. 27.41 And therefore we may observe the perversenesse of our nature and impiety of our dispositions in this particular that those whom 1. Nature and 2. Civility and 3. Custome and 4. Acquaintance hath taught us to love yea whom 5. we have loved indeed wee now hate onely because they are religious Quest 8 Who hate others or become enemies unto others for religion only Answer Many yea in a manner all sorts of people as for example First wives are offended with their husbands and husbands with their wives because they are religious Iob 2.9 Secondly Children are angry against Parents because with the bridle of religion they seeke to restraine them of their unbridled wils Thirdly Parents are often angry with their Children because they are young Saints and too religious and Masters dislike servants because they are too pure and religiously bent Fourth servants stomack their masters because they observe such pious practises in their houses wil rather leave them then submit themselves to be taught and instructed and catechised by them yea utterly refuse to be examined at home what they learnt at Church And thus I might have gone through all rankes and qualities and degrees whatsoever Secondly this verse may be understood Imperatively also as appeares by that which followes To teach us Observ That the strongest bonds of nature are to bee broken and neglected for religion Deut. 33.9 and Psalme 73.25 c. David must leave his Countrey and Rebecca her kindred if God call and command it As justice is painted blind without never an eye so Religion makes men Vnoculos to have but one eye and therefore they only behold and love Colos 3.15 and serve the Lord contemning all other things though never so strong as for example First Propinquity familiarity and intimacy is a strong bond and yet Religion makes us forsake our most neare and deare and familiar friends if they labour to seduce us and lead us aside from God or if they be hinderances unto us in his service Secondly Nature is a strong coard yea what nearer bond can there bee then is that of the Child to the Father and
to speake unto in this verse and the former If yee will receive it this is Elias and he that hath eares to heare let him heare Answ 5 Fiftly As some went out to heare Iohn who returned back againe because his doctrine contradicted their lusts and opposed their lewd lives And as many approved of his preaching when hee reproved others but were offended with him when they were taxed themselves So many forsake the word because it crosseth their wils and although they allow Ministers to reprove others yet they doe not like that themselves should be reproved Answ 6 Sixtly some in outward shew would neither seeme to be adversaries nor contemners of the word preached but yet in themselves contemned the counsell of the Lord as the Scribes So many in heart despise the Gospel of Christ who shew no such thing outwardly at all Answ 7 Seventhly As the Disciples of Iohn attributed more unto him then unto Christ yea ascribed that unto Iohn which was proper unto Christ So some ascribe more to the Instrumentall then to the Principall or efficient cause that is often times more to the Minister then to Christ yea often sacrifice to themselves their own labours endevours more then unto Christ Answ 8 Eightly some have mens persons in admiration but their doctrine in contempt Many certainely admired both Iohn and Christ as appeares by the applause never any man spake 〈◊〉 this man speakes who would not obey the word preached Now none of all these are worthy our imitation or commendation but rather all of them deserve exprobration VERS 18 19. Iohn came neither eating nor drinking and they say hee hath a devill The Sonne of man came eating and drinking and they say Behold a man gluttonous and a wine bibber a friend of Publicans Sect. 1 and sinners But wisedome is justified of her children Quest § 1. For Iohn came neither eating nor drinking Answ How many sorts of Diet are there in Scripture Foure namely First Iohn Baptists diet who came neither eating nor drinking that is hee ate wild honey and the courfest things Secondly our Saviours diet who dranke wine but yet very moderately Thirdly the Epicures diet who saith Let us eat and drinke for to morrow we shall die Fourthly the scrupulous mans diet who eateth nothing but herbes Rom. 14.2 Now the difference betwixt these is this Iohn the Baptists diet and Christs diet are both vertues but the Epicures diet and the Scrupulous mans are the two extreme For the Epicure taketh God to bee an indulgent Father to him in giving him the creatures to eate of them at his pleasure And the other taketh God to be a niggard who granteth not the liberall use of the creatures to his children § 2 And they say hee hath a Devill Sect. 2 What was the cause that provoked them thus Quest 1 to censure the Baptist The provoking and incensing cause was two-fold namely Answ First because he preached the Law Secondly because hee was abstemious and temperate First Iohn preached the Law and the threatnings thereof he proclaimed them to be a generation of Vipers Matt. 3.7 He preacheth that God can raise up children unto Abraham of stones Matth. 3.9 yea that now the axe is laid to the root of the tree verse 10. And therefore fruitlesse trees shall be cast into the fire verse 12. Now hence they were angry and in their rage said hee had a devill To teach us That the preaching of the Law is never acceptable to sinners N●hem 9.30 Prov. 1.24 Act. 7.54 Esa 30.14 Ierem. 44.5 and 25.4 and and 2 King 17.13 c. 2 Chronicles 24.19 Ierem. 7.13 How doth this further appeare Quest 2 Because the Law preacheth foure things Answ opposite to so many humane affections to wit First the Law teacheth that our condition by nature is evill desperate and miserable now this is opposite to the pride and selfe-love that is in our natures when Christ preached upon this head of the Law the Pharisees cry Are wee blind also Iohn 9.40 Because our proud natures will not brooke this doctrine Secondly the Law teacheth that punishment hangeth over our heads and will fall certainely at length upon us except wee repent Now this is opposite to presumption When Ieremy preacheth this point the people reply Thou liest Ieremie 43.2 They will not beleeve that they shall be punished although they have grievously offended So naturally we presume that no evill shall come unto us and make a covenant with death Iob 36.13 Esay 28.14 And therefore cannot endure the menaces and comminations of the law Thirdly the Law exhorts us to repent as Causa sine qua non and telleth us that without repentance wee must needs be brought to destruction at the last Now this is opposite to the love of sinne which is inherent in our natures and habituall unto us And therefore this doctrine of repentance is as harsh and unpleasant unto us as is a prohibition of meat to him that is hungry or of drinke to him that is thirsty Fourthly the Law perswades us to repent betimes speedily whiles it is said to day and to deferre it no longer Now this is opposite to that sluggish idlenesse that is in our bones and which makes us from day to day to cry yet a little sleepe á little slumber a little ●olding of the hands to sleepe And therefore the preaching of the law is as distastful unto us as it is to a sleepy sluggish man to be awakened and pulled out of his bed Quest 3 Why may wee not despise or lightly regard the preaching of the Law Answ 1 First because the Law is truth what would it profit a man to dye laughing or to be deceived If the Physitian should tell us that out bodies were in no danger or the Lawyer that our estates were safe and secure when as both are in apparent danger we would say they were Traytours to our bodies and possessions And yet we are angry with the Law when it telleth us truth and could wish that it were a Traytor to our soules The Law telleth us That for sins sake the wrath of God fals upon the children of disobedience Ephes 5.6 Now although this be an undoubted truth and that experience doth dayly prove it yet we had rather not hear it Answ 2 Secondly we must not despise the preaching of the Law because it is a necessary way we comming by death unto life as the sharp needle makes way for the smoothe thred and as the Prodigall by poverty is brought home unto his Father we must be wounded before we can be cured we must be humbled before we can be raised up yea we must dye before we can live And therefore seeing the threats of the Law are true yea and necessary to humble and wound us we must take heed that we do not slight them Quest 4 What things hinder us from regarding and loving the preaching of the Law Answ 1 First self-love Esa 65.5 And therefore we
It may here bee asked Is any faith beleefe or credit to be given to dreames Quest Answ 1 I answer first sometimes dreames are messengers from God according to his promise your young men shall dreame dreames k Ioel 2 2● Act. 2.17 and wee have many instances of such dreames as for example Ioseph Gen. 37. Pharaohs baker Gen. 40. Pharaoh himselfe Gen. 41. and Ioseph in this verse Answ 2 Now these dreames are to be beleeved Secondly dreames in times past were more ordinary l 1. Sam. 28.6.15 but the light of the Gospel hath now dispersed and expelled them signes belonging to unbeleevers Thirdly Dreames now are alwaies doubtfull Answ 3 and therefore not lightly to be credited nor taken notice of for the confirmation of this answer observe some make a sixefold originall of dreames l thus every dreame is either first Naturall or secondly Spirituall m Creg Moral 8. s Iob. 7. or thirdly Diabolicall Naturall dreames either proceede from causes Internall to wit either From the temper or temperature of the body as fulnesse emptinesse or some change wrought in the humors of the body by sicknesse This the first cause Or From abundance or diversity of thoughts n Eccles 5.2 as when our friend is absent wee dreame that hee is dead or returned or the like This is the second cause Externall proceeding from abundance of imployments This is the third cause Spirituall dreames are divine admonitions and are of two sorts either Simply divine as this Dreame of Iosephs which was a divine admonition meerely from the Lord. This is the fourth cause Or Mixtly divine that is when our dreames are spirituall but mixed with some thoughts of our owne o Iob. 7.14 This is the fift cause There are diabolicall wicked and uncleane thoughts or such dreames arising from such thoughts And this is the sixt and last cause of Dreames Answ 4 I answer further Dreames have their significations either first as signes or secondly as causes Dreames have their significations as Signes and that either first of things present as dreaming of meat or drinke argues hunger or thirst c. Or secondly of things to come this is called a prediction and is threefold either First Naturall and divine as Galen tells of one Crus lapideum balneo lotus c who dreamed that bathing himselfe his legges and thighes were metamorphosed from flesh to flint Or secondly Diabolicall and wicked the devill sometimes forewarning of things to come to gain credit and beleefe with men Or thirdly Divine and these are to bee observed and marked and of this kinde was Iosephs dreames p Matth. ● 13. and the dreame which was dreamed by the wise men Matth. 2.12 Againe dreames have their significations as causes and that either By illusion of Sathan Or By revelation from God and that either Commanding as in this verse and Matt. 2.19.22 Or Forbidding as Gen. 31.24 Answ 5 And in all these three we must carefully take heede of the illusions of Sathan who can doe all these Deut. 13.1 c. Lastly all dreames do either First promise something Or Secondly terrifie and affright us Or Thirdly declare or shew something unto us Fourthly or admonish and advise us and these are not altogether to be sleighted but to be weighed and pondered observing therein these conditions viz. First doe not wholly believe them but onely suspect that they may be true Secondly Procura ne cura if we can provide against what wee doubt and dreame of doe it but be not careful of the successe nor fearefull for any dreame Thirdly doe nothing upon a dreame either against thy generall calling as thou art a Christian or against that particular calling wherein God hath placed thee More plaine and particular signes of divine dreames wee shall consider of God willing in another place Sect. 3 § 3. For that which is conceived in her is of the holy Ghost Exposition From the words it evidently appeares that Christ is the true Sonne of God or the onely begotten Son of the true God Not First onely man by nature and Quasi Deus as it were a God by grace as the Arrians Nestorians and divers others would have it Nor Secondly onely God and made Quasi homo as it were a man as the Maniches Marcionites and divers others falsly imagine Nor Thirdly true God and true man but having the humanity created of nothing as the Valentinians and Wittcham hold that Christ tooke not flesh of the Virgin Mary and Servetus that the body of Christ was compacted of three uncreated Elements Beza epist 8. confess Gal. art 14 But Fourthly that in Christ are two natures united by a hypostaticall conjunction being Man of the flesh of his Mother without a Father and God of God his Father without a Mother Now hence divers Quares may be made of which briefly First why was it necessary that Christ should Quest 1 be God Answ 1 I. Because man alone could not doe that which was requisite for our Redemtion viz. First satisfie Gods justice And secondly overcome and conquer death And II. Because neither could an Angell save us or performe that which was to bee done before we could be ransomed that is First an Angell could not dye Nor secondly overcome temptation for us Nor thirdly make us the children of God Quest 2 Secondly Why was it necessary that Christ should be man Answ 1 I. That he might dye for God cannot it being contrary to the nature of an immortall God and without death there can bee no Redemption And Answ 2 II. That he might merit which God cannot doe neither because to merit is to procure unto ones selfe that which otherwise they have not nor is due unto them Thom. wherefore God cannot merit Answ 3 III. That he might apply his merit unto us and therefore it was convenient that hee should be like unto his brethren Quest 3 Thirdly why was it necessary that the Son the second person of the blessed Trinitie should be made Man Answ Because he being the Character and engraven Image of the Father Heb. 1.3 was most fit to restore and repaire againe the Image of God in us Quest 4 Fourthly why was Christ begotten of the holy Spirit Answ That hee might bee holy pure immaculate and a lambe without spot both in his generation and conception Quest 5 Fiftly why is the conception of Christ ascribed to God the holy Ghost alone seeing it is common to all the three persons in the blessed Trinitie Answ 1 I. This is not done to exclude the Father or the Son himselfe from this work but to signifie that it comes of the free gift and grace of God which commonly is tearmed by the holy Ghost that the manhood of Christ being but a creature should bee advanced to this dignitie and become a part of the Sonne of God Answ 2 II. The holy Ghost is the authour of this conception in a speciall manner for the Father and the Sonne
Rama is here to be taken for that Answ 5 Ramah which was in Benjamin and neere unto Bethlehem § 2. Rachel weeping 〈◊〉 her children Sect. 2 Who is meant here by Rachel Quest Or what was this Rachel I answer first Rachel was one beloved of God Answ 1 yet shee was afflicted teaching us that the best are subject to affliction Secondly but Rachel was now dead and therfore Answ 2 the Prophet uses a Prosopopeia See D. Mayer upon this verse Teaching us that in the study of divine things Observ there is a great use of figures and humane learning the Scriptures have figures yea fables as shall be else where shewed therefore there is need of humane literature for the true understanding thereof Arts are handmaids unto divinitiy he will scarce ever prove a good Theologue that is deprived of these attendants I. The knowledge of the originall tongues are needfull that so we may draw the water of truth from the very fountaines II. Philosophy expounds III. Logicke confirmes IV. Rhetorick perswades and therfore the best divines doe teach Rhetoricall places as Hyperius Erasmus Melancthon Perkins and divers others but of this more largely else where §. 1. VERS 19. Vers 19 And when Herod was dead behold an Angell of the Lord appeareth unto Ioseph Sect. 1 in Egypt in a dreame It may here be doubted Quest whether Herod died a naturall death or if he went out of the world after so many bloudy cruelties without some remarkeable judgement It should seeme hee did because the Scripture makes no mention of any thing but that onely he died neither expressing when nor how I answer first that he dyed about two yeares Answ 1 after Secondly as his life was short after this unheard Answ 2 of cruelty so it was miserable a Ioseph lib. 2. de Bell. Iud. cap. 22. as may appeare by this description of it Hee first was stricken with an extreame burning heat within which so fast consumed his meat that hee had continually a most greedy desire to feed but could never be satisfied his intrails rotted in his body he was tormented with most cruell pangs in his genitals and his feet were greatly swolne To all this was added a putrifying of his privy parts crauling with wormes and a most horrible stinch proceeded from him in which miserable lothsome case hee continued some weekes and then dyed Sect. 2 § 2. This verse may bee allegorized thus Herod is sin and as long as he lives and raignes Christ doth absent himselfe and will not come unto his people Herod must dye before Christ will returne sinne must bee mortyfied before Christ will come unto the soule whence it may be questioned Quest Why is there no participation of Christ before mortification I answer first because the Holy Spirit will not come into a polluted vessell God and Mammon Answ 1 cannot dwell together b Matth. 6.24 one Temple cannot hold the Arke and Dagon 1 Sam. Non bene conveniunt nec in una sede morantur sin and grace Satan and Christ will never bee immates or cohabitants in one and the same heart at one and the same time and therefore sinne must bee expulsed before Christ wil be entertained Answ 2 Secondly to dye and to live are contraries as the Apostle St Paul saith how can hee that is dead in sin live therein c Rom. 6.2 A man cannot be alive and dead at one instant in one sense and therefore we cannot pertake the spirituall life of grace and Christ untill sinne dye d 1 Cor. 15 Christ will rather continue an exul in Egypt then come into Israel so long as this Herod sin is alive and therfore if we desire the fruition and possession of Christ in the soule wee must labour to fight against e 1 Pet. 2.11 to mortifie f Col. 3.5 all carnal affections in us putting off this old garment of sinne and casting it from us that so wee may bee clothed with that new man Christ Jesus g Rom. 13 12.13.14 Vers 20 §. 1. VERS 20. Saying arise and take the babe Sect. 1 and his mother and goe into the land of Israel for they are dead which sought the babes life Quest It may bee demanded What was the end of Christs flying into Egypt and returning from thence Answ 1 I answer first this was done that in the beginning of Christs nonage he might show that hee was borne to undergoe many temporall miseries Secondly that in regard of that estate of humanity Answ 2 which he had undertaken he might as a man have a care of his life in foreseeing and preventing all dangers that may ensue Thirdly this was done that Christ hereby Answ 3 might shew that it was he alone that was appointed by God to bring us out of spirituall Egypt into the promised land of eternall rest Sect. 2 § 2. And goe into the land of Jsrael Quest It may be asked why must Ioseph returne with Christ into Israel Answ 1 I answer first that he might be educated and brought up amongst his owne people Observa where was the law of God and the true Church of God teaching us that parents should be very carefull of the pious education of their children that they may have both good instruction and discipline and also good example Now there is a three-fold good education the I. Learned this is good for those that are able to allow unto their children some learning that they may be the more capable of religion The II. Is sober to teach them humanity and humilitie towards all and sobriety and temperance in themselves The III. Pious and holy and this is required as well as the former of all parents to endeavour by Catechising instructing and godly example to educate their children in the feare and nurture of the Lord. Secondly this was done also that it might be Answ 2 knowne that Christ was an Israelite least otherwise hee should have beene called an Egyptian Thirdly this was done for Iosephs and Maries Answ 3 sake that they might be no longer afflicted then was necessary God not suffering his to bee afflicted save onely for a moment § 3. Because they are dead who sought the babes life Sect. 3 Here it may bee demanded who were they Quest 1 that sought the childs life and now are dead First Hierome thinkes it was the Pharisees Answ 1 and Sanhedrin a Hiero. 1. and he is moved to this opinion for these reasons I. Because it is spoken in the plurall number mortui not mortuus they are dead not he is dead II. Because they were troubled as well as Herod vers 3. and as Hierome thinkes consulted also with Herod against Christ III. Because they were slaine by Herod as we shewed before vers 3. Some b Gualt ● deny S. Hieromes second reason affirming that the Parisees did neither lye in wait for the life of Christ nor consult to kill him Secondly this is certaine
and unto thee thy brother never wronged thee so much as thou hast wronged him thou canst never be so readie to forgive thy brother as he is to forgive thee And therefore when thou callest to mind how unthankfully thy brother deales with thee reflect upon thy selfe and remember how ungratfully thou hast dealt with thy deare Saviour who tooke thy nature upon him submitting himselfe unto the forme of a servant yea even unto death that he might purchase life and immortality for thee Quest 2 What is required of him that doth wrong unto his neighbour Answ 1 First he must aggravate and not extenuate his fault he must not goe about to excuse it or lessen it but rather amplifie it that it may seeme worse in his eyes then in the sight of his brother Answ 2 Secondly he must labour to make ample satisfaction for the wrong done that is 1. If he have beene angry with his brother in his heart hee must be heartily sorry for it 2. If he have injured his brother by his words hee must with his mouth confesse and acknowledge it 3. If hee hath wronged his brother in his estate he must make restitution as Zacheus did § 4. Then come and offer thy gift We see here that as soone as we are reconciled Sect. 4 unto our brethren our Father is reconciled unto us Why is the Lord appeased towards us as soone as our brother is pacified Quest and satisfied First because herein wee obey God wee are obsequious unto his will when we seeke peace Answ 1 and sue for reconciliation at the hands of our brother whom wee have offended and therefore the Lord will be appeased towards us Secondly because he that submits himselfe to Answ 2 his brother craving pardon for offences done promising restitution of all wrongs and purposing to injure him no more either in heart or word or deed doth stoppe the mouth of his brother who formerly cried unto God for revenge of the wrong done and therefore his brother being satisfied his Father passeth it by and is reconciled VERS 25 26. Vers 25.26 Agree with thine adversary quickly whiles thou art in the way with him lest at any time the adversary deliver thee to the Iudge and the Iudge deliver thee to the Officer and thou be cast into prison verily I say unto thee thou shalt by no meanes come out thence till thou hast paid the uttermost farthing § 1. Agree with thine adversary Citò quickly Sect. 1 What is the scope and drift of our Saviour in Quest 1 this word Quickely First he hence would have us to observe the Answ 1 brevity and uncertainty of life Agree with him quickely because thou dost not know how quickly thou maist bee taken hence It is the Divells craft to make us blind insensible obdurate negligent and full of delaies in the worke of grace it is through the malice of our adversary that we put off our repentance crying we will repent us in our old age But our Saviour doth counsell advise us not to procrastinate our conversion and repentance because 1. many are dead before they bee sicke dying suddenly 2. many when they are sicke unto death are either so oppressed with bodily paine and anguish that they have no spare time seriously to call their sinnes to account or if they doe it is extorted from them through the paine of the body not the compunction of the soule 3. Because wicked men grow worse and worse and the more they are in yeares the more they are setled upon their lees Wherefore these things considered Christ exhorts us if we love our selves and soules to agree with our adversary quickly Secondly our Saviour hereby would teach us that reconciliation is not to be deferred or delay Answ 2 Agree with thine adversary quickly that is procraed stinate it not but be made friends out of hand and seek to be reconciled maturely betime remembring I. if thou deferre it then thou maist seeke it too late Yea II. the more quickly thou seekest reconciliation at thy brothers hands the more pleasing and acceptable thou art unto God for it argues that wee doe it willingly and readily without compulsion which the Lord loves Object Hee who hath injured his brother may object against this I have my whole life to turne me in and if I bee reconciled unto my neighbour whom I have offended before I die it is soone enough though it be many yeares hence and therefore there is no necessity of this hasty and quicke reconciliation Answ 1 First thou art not certaine whether thy life shall last untill to morrow or not and therefore agree quickly or thou maist deferre it too long Answ 2 Secondly the proposition is false that thou hast totum vitae spatium the whole time of thy life to be reconciled in for datur vita sola non tota thy life onely is given thee to be reconciled in but not thy whole life that is there is no reconciliation after this life and therefore either whilst thou livest or never thou must be atoned unto thy brother but thou canst not be reconciled unto him at any time when thou pleasest Wherfore our Saviour commands thee to agree quickly Answ 3 Thirdly thou must respect more then thy owne life to wit thy brothers Agree while thou art in the way with him that is while you are both alive for if he die before the breach be made up thou art in danger to be delivered up by the Judge unto the Officers and by them to be cast into prison Death makes a separation between thy brother and thee and therefore agree quickly because thou knowest not how quickly he may be taken away Quest 2 Who are faulty in this particular Answ 1 First those who unwillingly seeke reconciliation and though they have unjustly wronged their neighbours yet can hardly bee perswaded by their dearest and best friends to sue for pardon and peace at their hands whom they have offended Answ 2 Secondly they who never desire peace and unity but before Easter or when they are to come to the Table of the Lord. Answ 3 Thirdly they who will never seeke to be accorded unto their brethren untill they lie upon their death beds All these grossely and egregiously erre from this rule of Christ agree with thine adversary quickly Answ 4 Fourthly they who onely respect their owne lives not at all the life of their brethren I doe not altogether condemne the practise of those who when death is approaching unto them seek to be reconciled unto their brethren because it is better to doe it then than not at all but I doe not commend it for 1. it should be done quickly as aforesaid 2. before the death of thy brother lest hee should depart hence not being reconciled unto thee or having forgiven thee Quest 3 But the injurious person may here demand what danger is there or can there be unto me although he die before we are reconciled
together For First in the world my fault shall be hid the better if he be gone to whom the wrong was done Secondly if he were a holy and good man then I know hee would forgive me before he died for he durst not then harbour vengeance or malice in his heart Thirdly if he were a wicked and ungodly man then 1 hee dares not goe unto God to accuse me or 2. if he durst yet God would not heare him for he heares not sinners And therefore these things considered what hurt or danger can it be unto me though he die before our jarres be composed First what will it availe thee that the wrong Answ 1 done by thee unto thy brother should by his death be concealed from the world considering that both God the Devill and thy owne conscience sees knowes and remembers it Secondly if thy brother were a member of Answ 2 Christ then certainely he would forgive thee but it doth not hence follow that thy guilt is washed away or thy sinnes pardoned by God for before him thy sinne remaines unblotted out because thou didst not reconcile thy selfe unto thy brother before hee was taken hence by death Thirdly if thy neighbour against whom thou Answ 3 hast sinned were a wicked man then First hee dares goe unto God more impudently and cry out unto him for vengeance more enviously and with a greater and more perfect malice then a holy man would or durst Secondly and although if he be wicked God will not heare him when hee prayes for some blessing for himselfe yet he will heare him when he complaines upon thee For That were contrary to Gods justice not to heare the cry of him that is wronged This is according to Gods justice to heare the complaints of the oppressed and to revenge them § 2. While thou art in the way What is meant Sect. 2 by these words Quest 1 Some understand them Allegorically Answ Dum in via whilest thou art in the way that is in hàc vita whilest thou livest Thus Chrysostome oper imperf And all the Fathers What doth our Saviour imply in these words Quest 2 thus Allegorically understood First Christ hereby would teach us that this Answ 1 life is the way both of good and evill men of corne and chaffe of wheate and tares which God will not as yet separate Secondly our Saviour would teach us that Answ 2 this life is the way unto Judgement or that so long as we live here on earth we are but travellers unto the tribunall seate of God It is appointed unto all men once to die and after death comes judgement c Hebr. 9.27 where wee see life brings us to death and death unto Judgement Thirdly Christ would hereby teach us that Answ 3 the remembrance of the Judgement of God should detaine us from jarres and discord one with another The remembrance of the Reward will perswade us unto patience in wrongs Punishment will terrifie us from seeking revenge What will it helpe a man to revenge himselfe upon his brother and himselfe therefore to bee judged and condemned by God and therefore we must so meditate of the severitie and terrour of the last day that wee may avoid dissensions and embrace Christian charity Quest 3 From the second answer to the former question it may bee doubted why our judgement shall be no longer deferred then death Answ 1 First there is a double day of Judgement to wit first generall of all flesh this shall not bee untill the end of the world when all the elect shall be gathered together Secondly particular of every individuall and numericall man whether righteous or wicked and this shall bee at their death when the righteous shall goe unto rest and the wicked unto woe poore Lazarus as soone as he dieth is carried into Paradise but rich Dives into the painefull prison of eternall destruction d Luke 16.22.23 Secondly this life is the very last period of Answ 2 Gods long suffering and therefore the night of death being come God will deferre Judgement no longer Answ 3 Thirdly the justice of God cannot bee violated neither shall it ever be made voide Iustice and mercy hath kissed each other but not crossed thwarted or contradicted each other And therefore mercy at death gives way unto judgement For the understanding hereof observe That there are 2 parts of Gods mercy viz. First to pardon the penitent and those who are reconciled And here the suffering of Christ doth satisfie the mercy of God Secondly to expect those who are obstinate rebellious and disobedient that they laying hold upon mercy and turning unto God might be saved e 1 Tim. 2.9 and Pet. 3.9 And this part of Gods mercy shall bee satisfied at the last dreadfull day Rom. 2.4 and 2 Thes 1.8 Quest 4 What must we doe to bee made partakers of everlasting mercies as well after this life as in this life Answ Remember seriously and frequently these three things First that wee are strangers and pilgrimes in this life and altogether uncertaine how neare we approach unto the gates of death And though we see not our Judge yet hee standeth before the dore f Iam. 5.9 Secondly remember our life is lent us not to sinne or to corrupt our waies but that wee might be converted g Rom. 24. because our good and gracious God desireth not the death of a sinner but rather that he would repent and live h Ezech. ●3 1● Thirdly remember that after death there is no mercy to be expected by those who have not laid hold upon mercy while they were in the way as the tree falls so it must lye wherefore let us spend our lives I. in striving wrastling and fighting against sinne and out owne innate corruptions Heb. 12.4 II. In watchfulnesse and circumspection against evill and the occasions thereof Ephes 5.15 III. In growing and encreasing in the waies of grace 1 Pet. 2.2 IV. In redeeming the time by-past of our lives by being zealous of good workes devoting our selves wholy and sincerely unto the service of the Lord. § 3. He shall not come out untill he have paid the Sect. 3 uttermost farthing The Doway men undertake to prove Purgatory from hence by the justice of God Object because when any dieth penitent and yet hath not made any full satisfaction they must suffer for that which remaineth after death and bee purged before they can enter into rest which remnant of debt our Saviour calleth the last farthing and saith here it must be paid and therefore there is a purgatorie wherein this satisfactorie punishment must be inflicted i Doway Bible pag. 33. First if a man die truely penitent all his sinnes are forgiven him in Christ and none of his Answ 1 transgressions shall bee mentioned unto him Thus the thiefe was received unto mercy upon the crosse there being no further satisfaction required of him Secondly the satisfaction to Gods justice is Answ 2 not payed by us but
have addicted unto death and destruction as much as in them lieth Fifthly the uncleane person sinneth against the Church and Common-wealth wherein hee lives because hee corrupts it by his example as did Zimri Numb 25.6 And thus we see how woefull the effects of adultery and fornication are both in regard of God the wife of the partie offending the neighbour whose wife is abused the neighbours wife who is defiled the children that are begotten in a polluted bed and the Church and Common-wealth wherein the offender lives What punishments are due vnto the violaters Quest 6 of this precept Thou shalt not commit adultery The punishments are either Humane Divine which are either Corporall which are either Ordinarie Answ Extraordinarie Spirituall First there are Humane punishments which are inflicted by the lawes of the Gentiles or by the Civill law or by the Canon law First by the lawes of the Gentiles a three-fold punishment was inflicted upon such offenders I. Some of them punished it with death thus did the Arabians Eusebius and the Parthians m Alex. ab Alex. 4.1 and the ancient Saxons who hanged both parties n Carion and Nau. clerus Plato leg 3. ordained also death for such transgressors Charles of Burgundy caused an Earle first to marry a countrey wench whom hee had forced and then made him to be beheaded o Spandenberg Sesostres King of the Egyptians caused many uncleane adulterous women to be taken and shut up in a little village then burnt the village and them togetherp. q Diodor. Sic. 1. II. Some of them inflicted corporall punishment but not death Thus Zalenchus ordained that hee who was taken with a married woman should loose both his eyes and after in part inflicted the same law upon his owne sonne taken tardie in that sinne q Valer. The Egyptians in this case appointed that the man should have a thousand stripes and the woman her nose cut off that wanting the chiefe grace and ornament of her face shee might enflame and allure no more r Dioder Sic. 1.6 The Germans were accustomed to shave the mans head to strip him out of his garments and then to scourge him through the streets ſ Alex. ab Al. 4.1 Mahomet himselfe commanded that an adulterer should receive an hundred lashes in a great assembly forbidding any man so much as to pitty him III. Some of the Gentiles punished this sinne with infamie and shame The Cumani set such as were either taken in the act of uncleannesse or were convicted of it upon a stone in the market-place and after they had sitten there a while to be a spectacle unto al they were set upon an Asse and carried up and downe the market place and some chiefe streets that they might bee a laughing stocke unto all and then afterwards were set upon the stone againe and held as infamous varlets all their lives after whereupon it was called lapis detestabilis t Erasm chil the abominable stone The Ostrogothes caused the man to be drawne about the market by the privie parts and then banished him u Olatis Magn. 14.16 If any desire to know the customes of divers other nations in this particular let him reade Rhodingin 27.4 and Alexander ab Ales. 4.1 and St●baus Thus wee see how adultery and fornication was punished by the Gentiles either with death or some other corporall punishment or disgrace Secondly the Civill law punisheth this crime thus The Iulian law punished it with death Aurelian hanged those that were herein guilty v Rhoding 10.6 P. Attilius slew his owne Daughter because she had suffered her selfe to bee defiled w Valer. max. 6.1 Augustus banished for this his daughter Iulia. Tacit. Dion Thirdly Canon Law punished it thus first with seven yeares Penance Concil Ancyranum l. Can. 20. and Concil Wormaciense Can. 9. Secondly others Concil Elibertinum can 64. 69. punished it thus I. if the woman committed adultery but once shee was to doe penance five yeares II. If she continued long in adultery but left it at length shee was injoyned ten yeares penance III. If she continued in her sinne she was never to be admitted to the communion nor injoyned any penance Secondly there are besides these Humane Punishments others which are called Divine and these are either Corporall or Spirituall and the Corporall are either Ordinary or Extraordinary The Ordinary punishments are those which are injoyned by the law of God as for example I. Adultery was punished by the death of both parties Levit. 20.10 II. Vncleannesse committed with one that was espoused or contracted unto a husband but not as yet knowne by him was punished with the death of both parties also Deut. 22.24 III. He that lay with a woman in her monethes must die and she also Levit. 20.18 IV. He that defiled the daughter of a Priest must die V. The damosell that workes folly in her fathers house and is afterwards married unto another must die Deuter. 22.21 Thus wee see how the law of God punished this sinne with death Thirdly there are Extraordinarie punishments here observe I. God approves sometimes of severe punishment which is inflicted by others upon this sinne thus he approues of Phineas Act who slew that couple Zimry and Cozbi Numb 25.10 By which it appeares how odious and detestable this sinne of uncleannesse is unto God II. Sometimes God shewes and reveales his severe anger against this sinne by inflicting many severall punishments upon the transgressors thereby and that either in regard of the estate or of the credite or of the body First God punisheth uncleane persons in their estates for it rooteth out all the encrease of our substance x Iob 31.12 it brings a man to a crust of bread Prov. 6.26 and 23.27 because he that keepeth company with harlots spendeth his substance Pro. 29.3 Strumpets for the most part are costly and therefore quickly consume and wast those who maintaine them And againe God by a just vengance doth not blesse any thing that such a person takes in hand And therefore those who desire to be blessed in their estates let them take heede of Adultery and fornication Secondly the Lord punisheth such in their good name credite and reputation whence the Apostle entreats both the Corinthians and the Ephesians not to be companions of fornicators y 1 Cor. 5.9 and Ephes 5.7 because that would be a blemish to their reputations this evidently appeares thus I. none can endure to be called Adulterers or Adulteresses whatsoever they are shewing thereby that it is a disgrace to be such II. Whatsoever men are yet they would not be knowne to be such thus they that are wicked in this kinde doe yet desire that their sinne might be concealed from others because it were a shame for them to bee knowne to be such III. Those are chast will not associate themselves with such yea though they be but suspected to be such IV. Except
1 Cor. 7.5 Therefore if the wife will not consent her husband cannot goe from her nay though there be consent yet they must be separated but for a time les● the Divell should tempt them Whether may the guiltlesse partie being lawfully Quest 6 divorced marry againe during the life of the adulterous or not For no other cause in the world Answ but onely for fornication may there be either a finall separation or cleane dissolution of marriage by way of divorce But for that cause our Saviour hath granted liberty both to dissolve matrimonie and to marry againe Because this is questioned or rather plainely denyed by the Papist I will first confirme it and then answer what they can object against it Our proposition is this In the case of fornication it is not unlawfull to marry againe that is those who are lawfully divorced for fornication and adultery may marry againe with others but never one with another The truth hereof appeares thus First the bond is broken they are not now one flesh d Hier. s and therefore may lawfully contract marriage with others Secondly because under the Law divorce was never without liberty of a new choise Deut. 24.1 2. all that were divorced had freedome to marry againe and therefore in a lawfull divorce this is not debarred under the Gospel Thirdly because otherwise the guiltlesse party should be punished and that grievously It is better to marry than to burne saith the Apostle thereby shewing that marriage is left us by God as a remedy against lust now if the guiltlesse party could not containe neither might marry another neither take her unto him who hath beene divorced Deut. 24.4 then he were necessitated to sinne which the Lord never doth unto any by any law Fourthly we might confirme this from the Fathers Ambros Tertul. 2. From the Councels Concil Mogunt Triburiens 3. From the consent of many Bishops in Origens time 4. From the opinion of the Papists Zach. Papa Cajetan Ambros Compsa 5. Of our men Pet. Mart. 2.10 § 37 38 58. But this I omit comming to the last and best proof Fifthly that it is lawfull for the guiltlesse partie to marry for I now meddle not with the guilty appeares plainly from our Saviours words in this verse and Mat. 19.7 8 9. Whosoever putteth away his wife except it be for fornication committeth adultery Therefore for fornication it is lawfull for a man to dismisse his wife Matth. 19.9 Whosoever shall put away his wife except it be for wheredome and marry another committeth adultery Therefore for adultery it is lawfull for the man both to put away and renounce his wife and the wife likewise her husband there being the like reason for both and for them to marry againe The Papists hold that married persons may dismisse one another for adultery but neither party may marry againe for any cause during life And because they are sore pressed with this place they object many things both against the place and point by us propounded Object 2 First Durand answereth that when Christ uttered these words the Law of the Jewes was that the adulterous woman should bee put to death and so the husband might have liberty to marry againe Bellarmine overthroweth this answer by a three-fold reason to wit Answ First because Christ here giveth a rule not onely to the Jewes but to all Christians not being ignorant how that in every Nation the law of putting the adultresse to death should not be in force Secondly Christ might as well have excepted other crimes that were punished by death as murder and the like that in those cases they might marrry againe because by the Law their wives were to die as well as in the case of fornication Thirdly Christ speaketh of dismission but properly the wife is not said to bee dismissed when she is put to death And therefore Christ is not thus here to be understood Secondly Bellarmine would have the exception Object 3 except it be for fornication restrained to the first clause in this sense Hee that putteth away his wife which is not lawfull to doe but for fornication so that the crime of fornication maketh it lawfull to dismisse but not after dismission to marry againe First the Jesuite is here contrary unto himselfe Answ 1 for he elsewhere alloweth a separation of matrimony in other cases as of heresie infidelity and vow of continencie but here he saith that separation and dismission is to be made in the case of fornication onely Secondly Christs answer had not satisfied if Answ 2 he had spoken onely of divorce and not of liberty to marry againe for the Pharisees moved the question concerning the manner of divorce permitted by Moses Law after the which it was lawfull for them to marry againe And therefore it was expected that our Savior should answer to both these points both in what cases they might dismisse their wives and marry aga●ne Thirdly the Apostle saith If a woman depart Object 4 from her husband let her abide unmarried or bee reconciled 1 Cor. 7.10 11. Therefore it is not lawfull after divorce to marry so long as both parties live The Apostle speakes not there of a lawfull departure or separation to wit Answ by reason of fornication and adultery for then he should diametrally have opposed his Master Christ saying here for adultery there may be a divorce and departure Paul there I command no discedat let not the wife depart from her husband but of a separation for Religions sake or for afflictions or for the cares of those times § 7. Causeth her to commit adultery Sect. 7 How Quest or how many wayes is that Divorce which is not for fornication an occasion of adultery First if she which is divorced being deprived Answ 1 of the company of her husband is not able to containe her selfe but falls unto whoredome her divorce is an occasion of adultery unto her for the separation not being lawfull the bond of matrimony is not broken wherefore her whoredome is adultery Secondly if she which is thus unlawfully Answ 2 that is not for fornication separated marry another husband she commits adultery because she is yet the former mans wife and thus also her divorce is an occasion of adultery Thirdly hee who marries a woman that is Answ 3 thus unlawfully separated from her husband commits adultery because he coupleth himselfe with another mans wife and thus this divorce is unto him an occasion of adultery Fourthly he who puts away his wife but not for fornication and joynes himselfe in marriage Answ 4 unto another doth commit adultery because he is yet the former womans husband and causeth her whom he secondly marries to commit adulterie because shee lyeth with another womans husband And thus we see how an unlawful separation is the cause of much mischiefe Sect. 8 and root of many evils and therefore is carefully to be avoided f Chem. Harm fol 569. fine Object § 8. Whosoever shall marry
because the Divell is the author hereof as will appeare in the last section of this verse yea as swearing comes from him so it bringeth to him as was probably shewed in the example of a Gentleman riding over a bridge in Cornewall who was a notorious common swearer and upon the stumbling of his horse swore at him and presently fell with his horse ●nto the R●ver and was drowned saying as hee fell Horse and man and all to the Devill Answ 2 Secondly because it is an argument of a prophane person All things fall out alike to all saith the wise man to the cleane and the unclean● to him that sweareth and that feareth an oath In which words he maketh swearing an evident proofe of a prophane person Eccles 9.2 Answ 3 Thirdly because God somet●mes remarkably judgeth this common swearing as we reade hee did in a serving man in Lincolnshire who used to sweare commonly by Gods Blood for when he lay upon his death bed continuing still in that sinne hee finally heard the Bell toule and therewith sware Gods Blood this Bell touleth for me and presently the blood gushing out on all parts of his body he dyed Quest 2 What may we thinke of the practise of those who sweare by the Masse and by the Rood Answ This is a wicked thing in a very high degree because they have beene made Idols and consequently Gods greatest enemies if a subject should give that royall honour which is due only unto the King unto a professed and proclaimed Traytor he deserved to dye and were unworthy to live that should thus esteeme his Soveraignes greatest enemy so they deserve that God should never hold them guiltlesse that thus in Gods steade set up these superstitiously used idols and then sweare by them as if they were Gods This makes the Lord breake into such impatience against the Israelites How should I spare thee thy children have forsaken me and sworn by them who are no Gods o Jer. 5.7 And againe They that sweare by the of Samaria saying Thy God O Dan liveth shall fall and not rise againe p Amos 8.14 Sect. 2 § 2. Be yea yea and nay nay What doth our Saviour meane by this affirmation and negation The Ancients did expound this doubling of the words yea yea nay nay Quest three manner of Answ 1 wayes namely First as in the conscience the thing either is or not so also it should be in the tongue Secondly as the thing indeed either is or not so also it should be in the speech Thirdly as in the mouth there is yea or nay so there should be in the deed or worke that is according to the truth of the thing and our knowledge thereof should our words be and then according to our words spoken our works should be performed Secondly our Saviour hereby would teach us Answ 2 carefully to avoid both all superfluitie of speech and all manner of oathes answering all questions either by a simple affirmation or negation § 3. For whatsoever is more then this Sect. 3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word here used sometimes signifies excellent sometimes abundant sometimes superfluous comming from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 supra as if we should say above that which is necessary and so it is taken ●n this place whatsoever is superfluous or more than needs avoid it for it commeth of evill The An●baptists hence object that all swearing Object 1 yea even before a Magistrate is forbidden because it is superfluous and more than needs for the thing enquired after may simp●y be affirmed or denyed First necessary oathes are not superfluous Answ 1 oathes thus Beza Secondly our Saviour saith Let your speech Answ 2 be yea and nay but when the Magistrate imposeth injoyneth and commandeth an oath then it is not ours that is in our power Areti part 1. probl 66. Our Saviours scope is here to forewarne us of all levitie and vanity in our ordinary talk and not to forbid all swearing when a weightie necessity urgeth thereunto They object againe our Saviour saith here Object 2 Whatsover is more than these commeth of evill And therefore to sweare by God before a Magistrate is unlawfull This followes not it proceeds from evill Answ therefore it is evill And thus Saint Augustine saith sup Non dicit malum est sed a malo procedit Christ doth not say that it is evill to sweare by God in it selfe but that it comes from evill thus ordinarily and without any necessity to call God to witnesse the truth of what wee affirme Can that be abused in using vvhich is lawfull Quest Wee may deprave and pollute the best th●ngs by too much liberty as for example 1. Answ Externall good things may bee abused 2. Internall First there are many externall and outward good things which may be abused as for example First Honour is good but yet It is not good to eate much Honey nor for men to seeke their owne glory too much Secondly Prov. 25.26 riches are good but yet a man may so set his heart upon them that they may become a snare unto him r Mat. 6.19 and therfore as we must not seek honour too much so must we not labour too fast to bee rich Thirdly Meat and Wine are good and yet they may be abused unto gluttony and drunkennesse ſ Eze. 16.49 Ephes 5.18 Fourthly apparell are good and yet they may be abused unto pride Luke 16 19. Act. 12.21 c. Fifthly pleasure and delight is good and yet they may be abused Luke 16.25 Prov. 25.16 Sixthly ease and rest are good sometimes and yet the abundance of ease is the cause of much evill t Eze. 16.19 Seventhly time is good but it may be mis-spent and abused Secondly there are many internall and inward good things which may be abused as for example First joy is good and yet a man may give himselfe too much to jollity and mirth Eccles 3.4 and 7.4 and 1 Cor. 7.29 Secondly sorrow is good and yet a man may be too sad and dejected giving too much way to sadnesse and griefe Eccles 3.4 and 1 Cor. 7.29 and 2 Cor. 7 10. Thirdly feare is good and yet a man may be too fearefull 1 Chron. 21.31 Fourthly knowledge is good and yet sometimes it puffes up 1 Cor. 8.1 and Eccles 1.18 c. Rom. 12.3 Fifthly Justice is good and yet a man may be too just u Eccl. 7.18 that is a man may be too cruell severe and rigid pressing the Law alwayes to the uttermost and so Summum jus summa injuria Sixthly divine Revelations are good and yet Paul was in danger to have bin puft up through abundance of them v 2 Cor. 12.7 And therefore let us labour to be sober and moderate Rom. 12 3. § 4. Commeth of evill or a male illo Sect. 4 Some reade these words Neutraliter commeth from evill some more rightly Masculine of the Divell whatsoever is more than these commeth of the
corrupt What is the meaning of these words Sect. 4 First the phrase here used is applyed to our Quest 1 vulgar and common possessions and the corruption thereof For 1. Moth is applyed to garments 2. Rust to vessels 3. Theeves to both Secondly the meaning is that all things here Answ 1 are subjected to vanity and corruption Christ doth not here name Lyons beares shipwracke fire and the like but ordinary and weake things to teach us Obser That the smallest and most usuall evils are instruments of Gods correction For 1. He can convert and turne all things yea even evill things unto good 2. He can make use of sathan well and therefore whatsoever evill doth afflict us is but the Lords rod. And therefore we should see Gods hand in all evils Wee may see the hand of God in the Moth Quest 2 and rust but how in the theefe whose deede is wicked yea forbidden by God positively in his law Thou shal not steale God permits theeves either 1. Answ for thy coveteousnesse and hard-heartednesse Or 2. for the correction of the negligence of the common-wealth because sinne is not punished Or 3. for some other sinne because it is usuall with God to punish one sinne with another If it be thus then theeves are Gods servants Object Certainely they are Answ as Asshur was the rod of his anger and Nebuchadnezzar an instrument to punish the Jewes theeves are Gods servants as the Caldeans and Sab●ans and sathan himselfe was Iob 1. Bur yet these must know that they are indeede the slaves of sathan and that God will at length cast them into the fire What may we learne from hence Quest 3 The Omnipotencie and infinite power of God Answ who can punish us by the least creatures Hee did not oppresse Egypt with Lyons but with Grashoppers and Frogges and Flies and the like And thus often the least creatures have been great enough to take away the li●e of man As for example First we may see this in Animate creatures 1. Popilius Hatto and divers others were slaine by rats and mice 2. Aristides dyed through the bite of a weasell 3. Messalinus was killed with Horseleeches 4. Hermonactes was stung to death with Bees 5. Pope Adrian was choaked with a flye 6. Cassander was eaten with lice 7. Antiochus and Herod with wormes Secondly we may see the truth of this in Inanimate things 1. Alexander Eleus the Philosopher died with a reede 2. Drusus the sonne of Claudius Caesar was choaked with a peare 3. Terpandrus with a fig. 4. Sophocles with the stone of a grape 5. Tarquinius Priscus with a fish-bone 6. Our Earle Goodwin with a crumme of bread 7. Fabius with a haire in milke 8. sampson Sultane of Egypt was choaked with dust Thus we may reade as in a Map Gods Omnipotency and Mans Impotency and learne to feare him who is able to arme the least and weakest of his creatures and make it strong enough to cope with and conquer sinfull man VERS 20. But lay up for your selves treasures in heaven Vers 20 where neither moth nor rust doth corrupt nor where theeves breake through and steale § 1. Lay up for your selves treasures in heaven Sect. 1 How doth this verse agree with Colos 1.5 For Quest 1 there the Apostle saith that life and glory as laid up to wit by God in heaven but here our Saviour biddeth us to lay up treasure for our selves in heaven where by treasure is meant eternall glory We must here distinguish betweene these two things Answ namely 1. The essence and substance of glory 2. The degree and measure of glory First there is the essence and substance of glory which consists in the fruition of the presence of God in the fellowshippe and society with God the Father Sonne and holy Ghost and with the Angels and Saints now this the Apostle speakes of Colos 1.5 because this is laid up for true beleevers Secondly there is the degree and measure of glory which may be laid up and may be increased by beleevers For they by their good workes of faith may treasure up a greater measure degree of glory True it is that a greater reward shall not be given them in heaven for the merit of their workes but of the meere mercy of God who in the day of retribution will crowne his own gifts not our merits and where he findes a greater measure of gifts and a greater measure of the workes of faith there he will in mercy bestow a greater measure of glory according to that of the Apostle He that soweth sparingly shall reape sparingly and hee that soweth liberally shall reape liberally l 2 Cor. 9.6 And againe as one starre differeth in brightnesse from another so shall it bee in the resurrection m 1 Cor. 15.41 Whence it appeares that there shall be a greater measure of glory in one Saint then in another according to the measure of the workes of faith Now this our Saviour speakes off in this place lay up treasures for your selves in heaven that is treasure for your selves a measure of glory and adde one measure to another as men in heaping and hoording up riches adde one shilling and one pound unto another § 2. Lay up treasure in heaven where neither Sect. 2 moth nor rust c. What is the principall scope of our Saviour in Quest 1 this verse His maine drift I conceive Answ is to shew an Antithesis or opposition betweene terrestriall and celestiall treasures Wherein and how doe they differ Quest 2 First in temporall things the successe and event Answ 1 is uncertaine yea often the end doth not answer the expectation nor the crop the paines but a man utterly loseth his labour But pietie hath certaine Promises of God and heavenly glory in the life to come And therefore the Lord being true the event and successe of heavenly treasures is certaine Secondly In earthly things a man often takes Answ 2 much paines and great labour for little profit benefit But in heavenly things the least thing even a cup of cold water shall have a plentifull reward Mat. 10.42 and our least sufferings shall be crowned with exceeding glory Rom. 8.18 Thirdly earthly things are but temporary transitory Answ 3 and corruptible are sometimes spent exhausted by use sometimes corrupted or deraced either with the moth or rust or age yea though they be retained entire and reserved safe yet they cannot make the possessors constantly solidly happie and blessed But heavenly treasure our Saviour calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luke 12.33 a treasure which faileth not because neither by time use or any way they can either bee diminished defaced corrupted or made worse but are durable perpetuall eternall yea a treasure which can never be exhausted but will remaine with and make eternally happie the possessor thereof VERS 22.23 The light of the body is the eye Vers 22.23 if therefore thine eye be single thy whole body shall be full
Quest 6 in us as it was By these plaine markes namely Answer 1. Are thy affections as strongly set upon sinne as ever they were dost thou love sin as well as ever thou didst then certainely thou art yet sinnes slave 2. Are thy temptations as frequent as ever they were doth the devill tempt thee as often as ever he did then it is an argument that hee hath too much in thee 3. Art thou as stupid dull and blinde in seeing the craft and subtlety of Sathan as ever thou wert art thou still as ignorant of his devices as ever it is a signe then that sinne hath a commanding power in and over thee 4. Art thou as unable to resist sinne as ever thou wert as weake as ever as naked as ever as feeble and faint-hearted as ever this showes that corruption is too strong in thee On the contrary if wee finde that our love is not so much unto sinne as it was but that the edge of our affections is taken off if temptations be more rare in us and we more quick sighted unto Sathans subtlety and more strong to resist him both by Faith Prayer and the Word then it is a comfortable signe that sinne is growne weaker in us and our feet reduced from this broad way § 3. That leads unto destruction Sect. 3 Our Saviour in these words showes that the broad way of sinne brings at last unto perpetuall paine How doth it appeare that sinners shall perish Question 1 for there are many who thinke otherwise perswadeing themselves that they may walke in this way and yet at last come unto salvation First it appeares evidently from Christs owne Answer 1 words in this place where hee showes that the end of the Broad way is perdition Narrow way is salvation And therfore it matters not what others thinke Secondly it appeares from other plaine and positive Answer 2 places of Scripture reade Psalm 9.17 and 11.6 and 83.10.13 and Jsa 5.24 and 1 Corinth 6.9 Thirdly sinne is the foundation of condemnation Answer 3 or all and onely sinners shall bee damned And therefore it is cleare that the broad path leades to perdition reade Isa 50.1 and 59.2 and Ierem. 5.25 Hose 13.1 Rom. 6.23 Psalm 1.5 and 5.4 and 34.16 Prov. 16.4 Isa 3.10 11. Fourthly the arrowes of the Lord are levelled against Answer 4 such as walke in the broad way And therefore they must needs come to destruction at the last Psal 34.16 Fiftly the reward of sinne is death The locusts Answer 5 having brought forth their young die 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist so lust having conceived brings forth sinne and sinne when it is finished brings forth death Iames 1.15 and Rom. 6.28 Sixtly otherwise God should not bee just For Answer 6 1. Hee hath made a law that if we sinne we shall dye Genes 2.17 In the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt dye the death Pope Iulius the third caused this sentence to bee written about his coyne That nation and people shall perish which will not obey me so the Lord hath made a law and threatned to inflict condigne punishment upon all those who disobey it Rom. 3.23 2. Mankinde hath broken this Law in Adam and wicked men daily breake it themselves in their owne persons And therefore the justice of God requires that they should be punished whose sinnes are not done away in Christ Question 2 Shall no wicked men at all escape this destruction None who continue to walke in this way untill they come to the end thereof For Answer First Kings and great men shall suffer if they run with the common sort Isay 41.2 Daniel 5.27 Secondly Wisemen shall bee punished if they thus play the fooles Exod. 1.10 and 15.7 and Rom. 1.22 Thirdly Proud men shall be ruined notwithstanding all their high conceits of themselves Malach. 4.1 Fourthly Hypocrites shall perish who walke in this broad way secretly and unseene Matth. 23. Question 3 Why must wee thus labour by all meanes to renounce sinne Answer 1 First because there can bee no true repentance without the reformation of the life from sinne Answer 2 Secondly because there can bee no true faith without this Faith purgeth and purifieth the heart Acts 15.9 and the heart being purged the life must needs bee pure Wherefore there is no truth of faith where sinne is not forsaken Answer 3 Thirdly wee cannot bee made partakers of the blessed Spirit of God untill wee have left sinne for the Holy Ghost will not come to a polluted soule And therefore it is to bee renounced Answer 4 Fourthly there is no way to escape the wrath of God or eternall destruction without the forsaking of sinne And therefore wee should bee carefull to leave it Question 4 How may wee avoid and leave sinne Answer 1 First shunne and beware of all the occasions of sinne Answer 2 Secondly use all holy meanes to bee good and pure and sincere Answer 3 Thirdly deplore thy infirmities speedily and heartily wash thy soule with teares for thy former transgressions sorrowing with a godly sorrow 2 Cor. 7.10 Answer 4 Fourthly promise unto God to fight manfully against thy former sinnes and all sinnes for the time to come and labour to performe thy promise Answer 5 Fiftly Pray fervently unto God to free thee from the commanding power of sin and to preserve thee from sinne and to make thee the free-man of Jesus Christ Question 5 What things hinder us from turning aside out of this broad way of sinne Answer And what are the remedies against these impediments The Impediments are these First insensibility when a man is not sensible of his sin he is not carefull to forsake it Secondly presumption when men either presume that they are not sinners or that their sinnes are small or that though great yet they shall be pardoned it makes them more carelesse and fearelesse of sin and more slack to leave it Thirdly Procrastination and delay when wee promise repentance but put off the performance thereof from day to day Fourthly key-coldnesse in performing perfecting of the worke not striving against sin unto blood Hebr. 12.4 The Remedies are these First a tender circumcised heart which is sensible of the least touch of sinne Secondly a godly feare remembring that wee are sinners yea great sinners and neither able to satisfy for our sins our selves not sure that they shall bee pardoned in Christ except wee strive to forsake and leave them Thirdly not to deferre but while it is said to day to turne from our sins and turne unto the Lord our God Fourthly zeale alacritis and industrie in the resisting of sinne striving against it with manfull wrastlings till wee have prevailed § 4. And many there bee which goe in thereat Sect. 4 What is the meaning of this word Many Question 1 Our Saviour shewes hereby Answer that there are not onely Many simply which walke in the broad way but that there are so many that in comparison of them they who
walke in the narrow way are but a very few so that the meaning of Multi Many is Plurimi the most by much Whereunto is this word Many to be referred Question 2 It is to be referred both unto the Way Gate as if our Saviour would say Many walke in the broad way D. Answer Many enter in at the wide gate E. D. First by Many our Saviour would have us to take notice of the Multitude of sinners as if hee should say the most part of men walke the wayes of sinne reade Psalm 14.3 and 53.2 and 1 Iohn 5.19 and 1 Cor. 1.25 Numb 16.4 How doth this appeare that the most men vvalke Question 3 in the broad vvay First It may be illustrated by a double Embleme Answer 1 to vvit 1. The locust is an Embleme of vvicked men shee is called in Hebrevv Arbeh of the numbers and multitudes of them for Rabah signifieth to multiply And hence the Scripture it selfe expresseth the number of vvicked men by the locusts They came as locusts or Grashopers for multitude Iudg. 6.5 And againe They are more then the grashopers and are innumerable Ierem. 46.23 2. The Mouse is an Embleme of vvicked men because shee encreaseth exceedingly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Arist both in number and speede Answer 2 Secondly this will appeare by the partition of the world In the foure corners of the world there are foure kindes of men namely 1. Prophane persons who are given to grosse and enormous sins 1 Tim. 5.24 2. Hypocri es who have a forme of goodnesse and godlinesse but in their hearts have denied the power thereof 2 Tim. 3.5 3. Carnall men who are not egregious sinners but only minde the world and outward things not regarding the hidden man of the heart at all 4. Righteous and holy men who being truely regenerated become burning and shining lamps Rom. 12.11 And these are but few in comparison of any of the rest Question 4 Why doe the most part walke the wayes of sin Answer 1 First because sinne is most naturall unto all 1. Cor. 15. First comes that which is naturall and afterwards that which is spirituall wee were all conceived and borne in finne and nature and sin works in all grace but onely in a few Answer 2 Secondly because sinne is pleasant to flesh and blood By reason of that innate and naturall concupiscence which is in us temptation workes upon every part of the soule and sense and body and all follow willingly but perswasion unto good workes onely upon some few And therefore more follow the broad way of sinne then the strait way of grace Answer 3 Thirdly because Sathan is so craftie subtle strong and vigilant that hee is called the prince of this world and the god of this world 2 Cor. 4.4 And therefore hee drawes the most part of the world after him Answer 4 Fourthly because it is easier to fall and to lie still then to rise and flie unto heaven And therefore the most men walke not in this strait and painefull way Answer 5 Fiftly because temptation unto evill is like poyson which infects with a light touch thereof or whereof one drop will doe hurt But perswasion unto good is like a potion or purgation which except it be drunke up and well digested doth not produce his wished effect And hence it is that so many are taken captive by sinne and few wonne by grace Question 5 How can this be that the most part of men walke in the broad way Is not Multitude a true note of the true Church Answer No For the true Church is but small in comparison of the world of wicked men The most part of the world is without the Church overwhelmed with the deluge of ignorance and Atheisme and in the Church there are but a few good And thus wee see how Many here is referred to the broad way E Secondly this word Many may be referred to the wide gate Now by the Gate we showed before was meant Death so that the meaning of these words Many there bee which goe in thereat is that that the most men dye unto condemnation or enter in by death at the gates of hell Wee see there were but onely eight out of the whole world preserved and saved in the Arke amongst which small number was wicked Cham. Wee see that ten righteous men could not bee found in five populous Cities of Sodome Genes 18. Yea wee see that of six hundred thousand of Israelites there were but two onely that came into the holy Land And one Nicodemus only we reade of amongst the Senators How doth it appeare that the most part of men are Question 6 damned It appeares most evidently thus First Answer there are many who know not God and Christ John 17.3 and 2 Thess 1.8 Secondly there are many who contemne and despise the word which is the meanes to bring them unto saving knowledge Thirdly there are many who although they doe not contemne it yet susque deque habent they neglect it and doe not much regard it Fourth there are many who care for no hing but the world and honours and pleasures and riches Fiftly many are ensnared and entangled in sinne and wholy serve either some publike or private lust Sixtly many boast and brag of their owne righteousnesse and feele no want neither stand in any neede of Christ Seventhly there are but very few who feele their sinnes to be a burden unto them and desire to bee eased of that loade by Christ And therefore these things considered we may safely say that it is as cleare as the Sunne that the most of men enter in at the wide gate of destruction Whence comes it that the most perish Question 7 First from the weakenesse of our nature Nature Answer 1 cannot save us by grace only we are saved and hence it is that so few are saved and so many damned Secondly this comes from the nature of sinne and Answer 2 here is to bee observed that even one sinne without repentance sufficeth unto condemnation one such transgression is enough to bring a man to eternall destruction as wee see in Achan in Korah and his company in the man who gathered stickes upon the Sabbath day (g) Num. 15.36 and in him who blasphemed Numb 24. We see how at once for one rebellion there dyed foure and twenty thousand 1 Cor. 10. Thirdly this comes from the nature of our enemies Answer 3 who are many and strong as for example 1. The World 2. Sathan 3. The flesh 4. The custome of evill 5. Men. or friends who often tempt unto evill 6. The scoffes and taunts that are thrown upon the profession of the Gospell 7. Carefulnes for the things of this life All these are enemies unto us and one or other of them daily prevaile against us Fourthly this comes from the nature of the multitude Answer 4 or of the men in the world Here observe that in the world there are foure sorts of people
and labour must last for terme of life for there is no rest from labour till after death Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord for they rest from their labours (q) Reve. 14.13 where we see that there is no resting from the works of Religion or the labour of the Lord till death Neque hîc requies spiranda neque ibi tristitia timenda (r) Chrys s As we must not expect rest in this life so we need not feare labour and paines in the life to come Sect. 6 § Which leades unto life Quest 1 Why is it said which leades unto life and not which leads unto heaven To teach two things unto us namely Answer First that life is the end of the strait and narrow way H. Secondly that this mortall life is not worthy to be called life heaven onely being the true life I. H. First our Saviour here teacheth us that true Observat 1 life is the end of this strait way Or that the end of a godly life is to be crowned Read Rom 8 17. and 2 Tim. 1.11 and 4.8 1 Joh. 3.1 Duke Cosmo de Medicis warring upon the enemies of his Master the Emperour bare in his shield the Eagle which signified Jupiter and the Emperour holding out in herbeak a triumphant Crown with this Motto Jupiter Merentibus offert by which he signified that his Highnesse deserved each glorious reward for his worthy vertues but wee may apply it thus that God will give a Crown of glory to every one who labours in his Vineyard faithfully and fights manfully his battels against sinne and Satan When Vrsicinus a Physician endured martyrdome for religion a Souldier perceiving his courage begin to fayle spake boldly unto him Doe not now Vrsicinus cast away thy selfe that hath cured so many nor after so much blood of thine spilled lose the reward prepared for thee Thus should every Christian encourage himselfe in this narrow path that the end thereof is life and his obedience shall be rewarded Is salvation then of merit or of workes Quest 2 First certainely it were of works and merit Answer 1 if we could keep the whole Law perfectly that is if we had so fulfilled it that wee had never transgressed against it Rom. 7.10 Galath 3. Rom 2.13 But Adam brake the covenant and violated the Law And therefore now we cannot be saved thereby Rom. 3.23 and 8.3 Secondly now having broken the Law in Adam Answer 2 we can merit nothing at Gods hands but all is of grace Ephes 2.5.8 Rom 5.21 Thirdly although we cannot merit salvation by Answer 3 our workes yet the way thereunto is sanctification and obedience as appeares thus 1. Salvation is the reward of faith John 1.12 and 3.16 and 1. Pet. 1.9 2. Faith is to be prooved and tryed by workes Gal. 5.6 James 2.17.26 3. Therefore the Spirit of faith works sanctification in us and then crownes that his owne work Rom. 6.22 Life eternall is called an inheritance and a reward Objection 1 and therefore it is the merit of our workes First it is called a reward Propter similitudinem Answer 1 for the analogy or resemblance that is betweene them both 1. In respect of the time wages or the reward is given when the worke is done so heaven is not given untill after death 2. In respect of the measure to him who workes more or takes more paines a greater reward is given so he who is more carefull to exercise and stirre up the gift and grace of God within him and more diligent in the worke of the Lord shall have a greater measure of glory in the Kingdome of heaven for there are degrees of glory in heaven according to the measure of grace on earth And although heaven be not given for our workes yet it shall be given according to our workes Answer 2 2. Secondly heaven is a reward and that justly for as the merit of Christ is ours so we although not by our workes personally merit in Christ This distinction should carefully be marked by the wary Reader because the Papists say thus as well as we although we and they be not both of one mind as appeares thus they understand it thus that our workes are meritorious in Christ but we thus that our persons are accepted of God as worthy by the operation and obedience of Christ Thus wee should provoke and incite our selves unto piety and the workes of Religion by the remembrance of the reward promised unto us Giacopo Sauzaro being long in love bare for his devise a pot full of little blacke stones without white amongst the rest with this Motto Aequabit nigras candida una dies Meaning that the day of marriage would contervaile all his black and cloudy dayes So should we doe call to mind that day of refreshing and remember that when that comes we shall be marryed unto our Lord Christ with such absolute and compleate joy that all our labour paines toyle care and watchings shall be quite forgotten and aboundantly rewarded Quest 3 How may we know whether our lives here be such that the end thereof will bring us to life eternall Or how may we know whether we be godly or not and whether this true life belong unto us or not Answer 1 First those who love God but hate sinne are heires of this true life Eye hath not seene nor care heard nor ever enterd it into the heart of man once to conceive the things which God hath prepared for those who love him 1 Corinth 2.9 And therefore wee must seriously examine whether we love the Lord or not above all yea so love him that we hate every thing which is opposite unto him and hated by him Answer 2 Secondly those have a promise of this life who labour and endeavour to purge themselves from sin 1 Joh. 3.3 He that desires this hope let him purge himsefe even as Christ is pure And therefore we must trie whether we desire to know what is sinne and what is sinfull in us that wee may labour to leave all sinne and forsake our owne Answer 3 Thirdly they who are vessels of honour belong unto Gods great Mansion house of glory 2 Timoth. 2.20 And therefore we ought to examine by our actions what vessels wee are whether we bring forth the fruits of Religion thereby approving our selves to be vessels of honour or the fruits of rebellion thereby showing our selves to be vessels of dishonour Answer 4 Fourthly the Prophet Isaiah showes most plainely to whom this true life belongs Esa 64.4.5 For since the beginning of the world men have not heard nor perceived by the eare neither hath the eye seene oh God besides thee what he hath prepared for him that wayteth for him Thou meetest him that rejoyceth and worketh righteousnesse and remembreth thee in thy wayes In these two verses the Prophet layes down foure particular markes of an heire of heaven and eternall life namely 1. Those who wayte for him that is those who
the greatest horrour of conscience that can bee in a man on earth comes farre short of that which the damned feele in hell 3. To this beginning and progresse adde eternitie that it is not for a thousand yeares as Origen thought but for ever In other molestations or afflictions there are sometimes some mutations or mitigations or cessations or at least death puts a period to them yea in the greatest temporall evils a man may appease the wrath of God But in hell a man though ever dying yet never dyes and though with teares of blood he aske pardon mercy and reconciliation yet he shall never obtaine it Hebr. 12 17. X Thirdly there is Poena damni X the punishment of losse and this is by much the greatest If a man should suffer the torments of a thousand hels yet it were nothing to this Chrysost S. There is no voyce in hell so irkesome to the eare or so dolefull to the heart as this J know yee not depart from me Matth. 25.12.41 For 1. If God were present hee would love and comfort in the most grievous torments hell would bee no hell if God were there the fire could not scortch us if God were in the fire Daniel 3. 2. But God being angry with wicked men doth absent himselfe from them and thereby deprives them of all hope of helpe comfort succour reliefe or mercy Verse 21. Verse 21 Not every one that saith unto mee Lord Lord shall enter into the Kingdome of heaven but hee that doth the will of my Father which is in heaven § 1. Not every one that saith unto mee Lord Sect. 1 Lord. What is the meaning of these words Question 1 First this may be understood of profession Not Answer 1 every one that saith Lord that is that professeth God to bee his God Now there are two sorts of Professors in the Church of God which shall never be saved namely 1. Grosse hypocrites which professe Christ with their mouth and yet in heart and life renounce him of this sort is First the common Atheist who onely for feare of the Magistrates lawes professeth Religion And Secondly the Epicure that is such an one as beares Christs Name for the fashion sake and yet his belly and his pleasure is his God And Thirdly the worldling who spends the strength of body and minde and all hee hath on the world for earthly things Now none of these three sorts thus living and dying can be saved 2. There are another sort who are more close hypocrites who professe the name of Christ in truth and have in them some good gifts of God by reason whereof both before men and in their owne conceit they are reputed members of the Church and yet are but hypocrites which shall not enter into the Kingdome of heaven Secondly this may bee properly understood of Answer 2 prayer where we see that Christ neither denies all nor condemnes the worke but onely saith Not every one c. As if hee would say It is a good duetie to pray unto God but there are some who doe it not well it is a good beginning but many doe not proceede And therefore the action is to bee established but the evill performers thereof are to bee blamed Two things here are then to be considered of to wit 1. That prayer unto God is in it selfe a good worke A. 2. That the prayers of many are not accepted of God B. A First The invocating of God and Christ is an acceptable action of religion where it is truely and religiously performed Reade to this purpose these places Psalme 50.15 Rom. 10.13 Psalme 116.13 Ioel. 2.32 Acts 2.21 Quest 2 How doth it appeare that prayer is a Religious action or an acceptable duetie Answer 1 First because it is a signe of Religion of the Church and of the faithfull some saith David trust in chariots but wee will remember the name of the Lord our God Psalme 20.8 that is we will trust in him and by prayer implore his helpe Thus Saint Paul exhorts Timothie to follow righteousnesse faith and love with them that call on the Lord out of a pure heart (h) 2 Tim. 2.22 Answer 2 Secondly prayer is a remedy against evils and a principall help in the time of trouble 2 Sam. 22.7 Psalm 107.6.15 Prov. 18.10 Psalme 34.6 Quest 3 Who are here worthy of blame Answer 1 First those who neglect this Religious and acceptable worke of prayer Paul would have all men to pray and all men to bee prayed for 1 Tim. 2.1.8 And indeed they are unworthy of mercy who will not begge it Answer 2 Secondly those who in praying doe not call upon God religiously but use much babbling and many vaine and idle repetitions Thirdly those who rashly approach unto God intruding themselves into his presence without due and fitting preparation Quest 4 How may we be assured that our prayers as a religious good worke shall be accepted of God Answer 1 First let us labour to be assured of Gods love towards us for if he love us hee will heare us Read Psal 3.3.5 and 5.2 and 18.2.3 and 63.1 Answer 2 Secondly let us labour to be acquainted with our God no stranger dare approach into the Kings presence but his houshold servants ordinarily without checke or controlement let us be frequent in holy meditation which is a Soliloquie with God and then we may be assured that he will heare us when by prayer we speake unto him Answer 3 Thirdly let us learne the true manner of prayer Here observe that it doth not consist in voyce but in heart wherein foure things are required namely 1. Understanding we must pray with our understanding 1 Corinth 14. that is we must not onely know what wee say but we must knowingly offer up our prayers unto God or as Saint Paul saith make our requests and desires knowne unto him Philip. 4.5.6 2. The Spirit we must pray with the Spirit that is fervently and powerfully Rom. 12.11 and 1 Peter 3.21 3. Faith wee must pray in faith James 1.6 and then wee shall obtaine any thing at Gods hands 4. Purity wee must labour to hate sinne and to serve the Lord and then the Lord will heare our prayers 1 Tim. 2.8 B. Secondly many pray unto God whose prayers are not acceptable or there are prayers which are unprofitable many shall crie Lord Lord which never shall be saved saith our Saviour here and the Holy-Ghost in divers others places as Jerem. 7.4 c. Proverb 1.24 Psal 18.42 Jer. 11.11 Ezech. 8.18 Mich. 3.4 Why are the prayers of many unprofitable Quest 5 First because many will not heare God when he Answer 1 cals to them in his word therefore hee will not heare them when they call unto him by prayer Proverbs 1.24 c. Secondly many pray and are not heard because Answer 2 they seeke not unto the Lord in time Esay 55.6 If we desire to be heard we must take the Lords time and call upon him in
an acceptable season and then we shall be heard Thirdly the true cause why some pray and obtaine Answer 3 not their sutes at God● hands is because they pray nor ●●●y or because their prayer is no 〈◊〉 prayer but either powred forth hypocritically drawing neare unto God with the lips but not with the heart Math. 15.9 Or else coldly and carelessely not intending the holy worke in hand Who erre here Quest 6 First those who remaine in their sinnes and Answer 1 yet perswade themselves they shall be heard John 9.31 Secondly those who have but onely an hypocriticall shew of Religion in them and yet fully perswade Answer 2 themselves that their prayers shall be both pleasing unto God and profitable unto themselves Now both these are vulgar and common errours some out of a carnall confidence some out of an hypocriticall confidence hoping to be heard How may we know that our assurance and confidence Quest 7 is true and neither carnall nor hypocriticall Prove and examine thy selfe by these signes Answer namely First hast thou made the Lord thy God both by receiving from him the seale and earnest of his love the evidence of his Spirit and by giving thy selfe wholy up unto him and his service John 8.34 and 1 Cor. 6.20 Secondly doth the Lord dwell and inhabite within in thy heart that is 1. Is his love there dost thou love him unfainedly and desire and long for him above all other things Psalm 27.4 and 42.1 and 63.1 2. Is his feare there dost thou tremble before him are thou fearefull to offend him art thou ashamed and affected with blushing for thy former sinnes art thou smit with an awfull reverence of Gods presence 3. Is his comfort there doe the comforts of the Lord refresh thy heart If these things be in us then certainely God is within us and when wee pray will surely listen unto us Thirdly whether are these things perpetually in thee or not art thou not one of these who remembers the Lord and the Lords worke onely upon the Lords day or dost thou alwayes remember thy God and serve him in a constant practise of life Certainely if the Spirit of God witnesse unto our spirits that we have addicted our selves wholy unto God and that the Lord hath his residence in our hearts and that wee labour to serve him in a constant course of Religion all our lives we may be then confidently assured that the hope we have to be heard when wee pray is neither carnall nor hypocriticall but true and spirituall Sect. 2 § 2. Shall not enter into the Kingdom of heaven What is the meaning of these words Question First by these words he shall not enter many understand Answer 1 the spirituall Church as if our Saviour would say they are not my members although they call upon me and prophesie in my name but this followes verse 22. Answer 2 Secondly by these words The Kingdome of heaven is commonly meant eternall joy as if our Saviour would say It is not so easie a thing to enter into eternall blisse as many suppose it to be 1 Peter 4.18 But this is handled sufficiently ● Math. 6.33 and 7.13 14. Verse 22. Many will say to me in that day Lord Lord Verse 22 have we not prophecied in thy name and in thy name have cast out Devils and in thy name done many wonderfull workes Sect. 1 § 1. In that day Illo is a relative but it hath here no Antecedent And therefore it is to bee understood 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the end of the world or the last day wherein two things are implied to wit First that there is a day of judgement C. Secondly there is a time when all shall be judged D. Observat 1 C. First our Saviour by these words In that day doth teach us That there shall certainely be a day of judgement wee have else-where amply handled this and therefore here I insist not upon it I onely entreat the Reader for the proofe of the proposition to reade these places Act. 1.11 and 17.31 Rom. 2.16 and 2 Thessal 2.2 Quest 1 What is the nature of this day Answer 1 First therein all things in this world shall be dissolved 1 Pet. 4.7 and 2 Pet. 3.10.12 Answer 2 Secondly on that day all shall be judged Mat. 25. But of this in the next proposition Answer 3 Thirdly after this day there shall be time no longer Revelat. 6.10 D D. Secondly our Saviour by these words In Observat 2 that day teacheth us That there is a time when all persons all actions shall be judged Revelat. 20.12 and 2. Corinth 5.10 Rom. 14.10.12 Why will God judge all at the last day Quest 2 First because otherwise if with reverence I Answer 1 may speake it injury should be offred unto the godly for they suffer many things while worldlings swell with pleasure and aboundance Psalme 73.17 Secondly because otherwayes the Lord should Answer 2 be injurious unto his Law which is violated transgressed and contemned by the wicked What is required of us in regard of this day Quest 3 First meditate daily and hourely thereof remember Answer 1 thy last end consider all men must die and all must be judged Hebr. 9.27 For this will make thee more carefull of thy actions when thou remembrest that one day all will be told thee whatsoever thou hast done and thou shalt be judged according to that which thou hast done Some may object here Object oh but this remembrance of the day of judgment doth grieve and deject the minde and affect the heart with nothing but sighing and sadnesse and sorrow Though it be thus Answer yet we must not therefore forbeare them editation and remembrance thereof for it is better to goe into the house of mourning then of mirth Eccles 7.4 But further whosoever is dejected and cast downe with the remember of rhis day it is for one of these causes namely either 1. Because the world is deere unto him that is because he is married either unto his pleasure or treasure or honour or his owne will and wayes and these he delights in here and whether he shall have such delights in the other world or not he knowes not and therefore the remembrance of leaving this to goe unto that makes him afflict himselfe Or 2. Because his sinnes amaze him and for his sinnes his heart presageth terrible things Or 3. Because he is not prepared for that day not having yet entred into a covenant with God not being yet reconciled unto God not being sealed by the Spirit of God unto salvation Certainely there is nothing so Sure as death or that we must die Unsure as when or how quickly we must die Necessary as the meditation of death and what will become of us when we die Secondly we must prepare our selves so for this Answer 2 day that it may be a day of refreshing unto us How may wee know whether it will be well Quest 4 with us or no
one Abraham Gen. 12.1 And of two in t●e hoast of Israel Caleb and Ioshua Numb 14.30 Therefore how doth our Saviour say that many shall come unto heaven First they are few comparatively in regard of Answ 1 those who perish according to that of the Apostle S Iohn Wee are of God and the whole world lieth in wickednesse 1 Iohn 5.19 Secondly but absolutely they are many as Answ 2 appears in generall from these places Gen. 33.16 and 15.5 and Revel 7.9 And more particularly thus I. It were opposite to the glory of God not to have many to glorifie him in heaven And II. It were opposite to the death of Christ not to have many saved therby And III. It were opposite to the ministery of so many millions of Angels who are made ministring Spirits Heb. 1. God made all things for his glory and therfore certainly hee would decree and ordain many to glorifie him in heaven where hee is most truly glorified Christs bloodshed suffring and death were of infinit value and himselfe of infinit price and esteeme with God and therfore undoubtedly the Lord would appoint many to be ransomed redeemed and saved by him The number of the Angels which stand about the throne of God is ten thousand times ten thousand and thousands of thousands Rev. 5.11 And therfore certainly God hath many Saints for whose good these hoasts of Angels are employed and consequently there are many who shall come into the Kingdom of heaven Sect. 2 § 2. From the East and West Quest 1 Who are these who come from the East and West Answ The Gentiles this is confirmed from Esa 49.6 and Luke 1.32 Acts 9.15 and 13.47 and 22.21 and 26.23 c. Rom. 3.29 and 9.22 c. and Chap. 11. Quest 2 Why shall many of the Gentiles bee made partakers of the kingdome of God Answ 1 First because they hearkned unto God from whence we may learne that those who hearken to the word of God shall be called Reade Act. 10.35 and 13.26 And therefore we should highly esteem the hearing of the word of God it being the means of our vocation and of the opening of our heart Act. 16.14 and of the removall of the vail of ignorance from our eyes 2 Cor. 3.16 Answ 2 Secondly the Jews hardning themselvs God therfore doth of stones raise up children unto Abraham and makes the Gentiles his sonnes Sect. 3 § 3. And shall sit down Quest 1 What is meant here by sitting Answ 1 First sometimes sitting signifies Loco manere to abide in a place as Marke 14 34. Sit yee here that is abide in this place and watch Answ 2 Secondly to fit sometimes signifies to bee quiet Answ 3 Thirdly to fit sometimes signifies to possesse glory Then shall the Sonne of man sit upon the thron of his glory Mat. 25.31 Answ 4 Fourthly to fit sometimes signifies to feast and banquet as Matth. 14.19 Luke 7.36 and 12.37 and thus in this place it is taken for our feasting and banquetting in heaven as is plainly expressed Luke 13.29 Observ Whence we learn that Christians are not called unto misery but unto mirth and feasting Quest 2 What kind of banquet are we called and invited unto There is a three-fold banquet to wit Answ First Symbolicall in the Church namely the Sacrament of the Lords Supper because the children of God are there made partakers of the body of Christ which is meat indeed Iohn 6.51.55 Secondly Spirituall in this life this banquet is described Prov. 9 2. c. and Cantic 8.2 Luk. 14.16 Psalme 63.5 Thirdly Celestiall hereafter in the kingdome of heaven Revel 27 and 7.17 and 19.9 Quest 3 What is required of those who desire to bee made partakers of this heavenly Banquet Answ They must give themselvs to frequent meditations therby labouring to prepare themselvs for this heavenly Banquet What must wee meditate of Quest 4 First remember that there is a period and end Answ 1 of all men It is appointed unto all men once to die Heb. 9.27 And Secondly that we have lived long already and Answ 2 therefore it is time now to prepare for death And Thirdly remember how great horror is prepared Answ 3 for those who are not prepared for death or who die unprepared Fourthly meditate daily of the sudden approach Answ 4 of death how it comes like the pangs of a woman with child and a thief in the night 1 Thess 5.2 3. Fifthly meditate continually of those things Answ 5 which are in heaven that thou may be the more carefull to prepare thy self to enjoy them What and how great things are in heaven Quest 5 First although what they are we know not Answ 1 particularly yet this in generall wee know that they are Optima the best things that ever wee enjoyed or can wish to enjoy Psalme 36.8 Secondly in heaven wee shall enjoy good Answ 2 things and repletionem to the replenishing and satisfying of our soules for there wee shall want nothing that wee can wish for Psalme 22.26 and 17.15 Thirdly wee shall enjoy the joyes of heaven Answ 3 with joy of heart nothing shall disturbe our peace no care shall accompany that Crown which there shall be set upon our heads neither shall any sorrow afflict our soules Psalme 16.11 for there is full compleat and perfect joy Fourthly this joy and felicity shall be perpetuall Answ 4 and eternall world without end Psal 16.11 Ezech. 47.12 Revelat. 22.2 And therfore let us so seriously meditate of these joyes that we may be carefull so to live here that whensoever the Lord shall take us hence wee may be sure to bee made partakers of them Are the children of God miserable in this Quest 6 life and only happy in the life to come They are blessed even in this life Answ as appears by those many and great blessings here bestowed upon them viz. First they are endued with knowledge so long as they are naturall the word is unto them as a strange language which they cannot understand but when once they are anointed with spirituall grace then the eyes of their understanding are opened and they enabled to see and perceive spirituall things Secondly they are endued with strength in some measure to perform what they know to be their duty Psal 65.12 and Ier. 31.12 and Iohn 7.37 c. Thirdly hence they have a good conscience which doth not accuse but excuse them for from sincerity of obedience ariseth peace of conscience Proverb 15.15 Fourthly even in this life the righteous have internall blasts v that is u Cant. 4.16 not only the motions of the spirit but also the joy of the Holy Ghost and some sweet and comfortable taste of the powers and joyes of the world to come Fifthly the children of God are most happy men even in this life by reason of their society with the Saints on earth and their union and communion wirh Christ by faith and the fruition possession of the Holy Ghost in their
By some beginning Apopl●xie But none of these had place in this Maid she being truly dead Secondly some understand these words Miraculously Answ 2 as if our Saviour would say As yet after the course of nature she is dead but I will restore her unto life Thus the Prophet from the Lord saith Morieris to Hezekiah thou shalt die Esay 38.1 and afterwards vives thou shalt live 2 King 8.10 But these words imply something more for they doe not belong only to this D●mosell but also unto us Muscul s Offendit naturam mortis piorum Guali s Thirdly some understand these words Philosophically in regard of the soul which dieth not Answ 3 therfore neither the Maid because Mens cujusque est quisque And therfore death is called a dissolution because the soul dieth not but returneth unto God that gave it Eccles 12 7. And therfore David commends his soul unto God Psal 31.5 as doth also Christ Luke 23.46 and Stephen Acts 7.59 But these words imply something more than this because this opinion neither affirmeth nor proveth any thing concerning the Resurrection and therefore may be maintained by a Sadduce Answ 4 Fourthly these words The Maid is not dead but sleepeth may be expounded Theologically because the whole man shall live again hereafter in the Resurrection and that either I. Generally because at the last day the body of every one shall be raised and united again to the soul Or II. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Because onely the godly shall live for ever a life of felicity and glory Ergo docet quae conditio mortis spem resuscitationis Gualt s In these words our Saviour teacheth us the condition of death namely Observ That death is not a finall dissolution but only as it were a sleep for a time Quest 2 How doth the truth of this appear The truth hereof appears by these particulars viz. Answ First because death is common unto all and hath ceazed upon all and therefore is not a finall dissolution nor totall destruction of soul and body Secondly because those who dye are said to sleep as appears I. By the godly before the Law Gen. 47.30 And II. By the godly under the Law as 2 Sam. 7 12. and 1 King 2.10 and 11.43 And III. By the wicked under the Law as 1 King 14.20 c. and verse 31. and 15.8 Esa 14.18 And IV. By the Saints under the Gospel Iohn 11.11 Acts 7.60 and 1 Cor. 11.30 and 15.18 Thirdly because sleep is like to death for so it binds all the senses that it makes the body seem to be livelesse because in sleep the body moves not perceives not regards not either wife or children or possessions or employments or affairs or pleasure or beauty or health Psal 76.5 And hence Sepulchers are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dormitories or sleeping houses Fourthly because death is like unto sleep for we sleep for a time and then awake and rise So we shall all arise from the grave of death Reade Iob 19.25 Psal 16.9 c. Daniel 12.2 and Mat. 25.32 c. Iohn 5.28 and 2 Cor. 5.10 Quest 3 What happinesse do they enjoy that sleep in the Lord Answ 1 First now they enjoy the sight of God that beatificall vision Mat. 5.8 and that in fulnesse B●●n ex Psal 34.8 Answ 2 Secondly now they are free from all mutation change danger and fear Thirdly and their very bodies at the last day Answ 3 shall awake unto glory 1 Cor. 15. What is required of us in regard of this sleep Quest 4 death Let us prepare our hearts for a happy Resurrection Psal 57.7 doing as men do Answ who are ready to lay themselves down to sleep namely First before they sleep they shut bolt and lock the doors for fear of Thieves so let us bolt and lock the doors of our hearts that sathan do not enter let us seek to be secure from him by Christ that is let us labour that we may be certainly assured that Christ is our Mediatour Intercessour and Advocate who will obtain for us at Gods hands remission and pardon of all our sins Secondly before men sleep they hide lock up or make sure their purses and money so we must be carefull to lay up our treasure in heaven Matthew 6. Thirdly before men sleep they provide and prepare something to cover them lest they should take cold so we must labour that we may be cloathed with the covering of Christs righteousnesse Rom. 13.12.13 Fourthly men before they sleep dispose and lay ready in order their garments that they may finde them and cloath themselves with them when they awake lest they be found naked so we must labour that we may have the garments of sanctity and sincerity otherwise we shall be found naked and like him without a wedding garment cast into everlasting fire And thus if we desire that death may be a happy sleep and our Resurrection a happy awakening we must be watchfull against sathan and carefull to adorn our selves with sanctity and piety but principally carefull that Christ may be our Mediatour and we cloathed with his righteousnesse and then death shall be but like a sweet sleep and the last Trump like a joyfull sound summoning us to our Coronation and everlasting inheritance § 5. And they laughed him to scorn Sect. 5 Christ we see here both speaks and does promiseth and performeth and yet is derided for which they are justly excluded and caused to depart to teach us That deriders mockers and scoffers Observ shall be shut out from Christs presence Gen. 21.9 Gal. 4.29 c. Why shall these be put out from Christ Quest 1 First because on their part it argues pride Answ 1 and insolencie that they will not hear Christ Prov. 13.1 Secondly because this scoffing and derision is Answ 2 terminated in God whether it be I. Against God himself as Gal. 6.7 Or II. Against Christ as Luke 22.63 and 23.11 Or III. Against Gods word as Act. 2.13 and 2 Pet. 3.3 Or IV. Against his Messengers as 2 Chron. 30.10 L●m. 3.14 15. Or V. Against the godly or the true Church as Psal 22.7 and 35.15 and 119.51 Esa 37.23 Or VI. Against the poor and weak who hath no helper 1 Sam. 17.42 Now against which soever of these derision be directed yet it is terminated in God and therefore no scoffers shall come or be suffered to abide in Christs presence Quest 2 Who is here blame-worthy Answ 1 First those who deride the dejected Here observe that there are two sorts of evils namely Culpae Poenae Now wicked men sometimes deride their brethren for evils either First Active of sin thus the Ammonites laughed because the Sanctuary of the Lord was prophaned Ezech. 25.3 Now Charity covers a multitude of sins n 1 Pet. 4.8 and therefore Christians should deride none for this kinde of evill Secondly Passive of punishment thus Iob complains that base persons disdained him when Gods hand was upon him
no branch of it shall goe unpunished except it be repented of Why must wee not deny Christ Quest 3 First because if wee deny him we shall bee denied Answ 1 by him 2. Timoth. 2.12 and in this verse Secondly because if we deny the Sonne wee Answ 2 have no part in the Father 1 Iohn 2.23 Thirdly because it is a signe of Reprobation Answ 3 and sure condemnation to deny Christ 2. Peter 2.1 Iude 4. Fourthly because not to deny but to confesse Answ 4 Christ and the truth is a thing praise-worthy with God as appears by that excellent commendation given by the Lord unto the Church in Pergamos Revel 2.13 Fiftly because if wee doe not deny him then Answ 5 he will preserve his Church planted amongst us that our enemies shall not prevaile but rather be subiected unto the Church Revel 3.8 9. What are the causes which move men to deny Quest 4 Christ First hatred and thus Iulian the Apostate out Answ 1 of an impious and blasphemous hatred against Christ and his truth denied both Secondly Ignorance for those who are Ignorant Answ 2 of Christ and his truth are easily perswaded to deny them Thirdly shame or reproach makes many with Answ 3 Nicodemus afraid to confesse Christ yea rather choose to deny him then to undergo the taunts and scoffes of mocking Ismaels Answ 4 Fourthly feare of Persecution makes many deny Christ as we see Iohn 18.25.27 Answ 5 Fiftly gaine promotion the love of the world and estimation of great ones are meanes to draw many to a deniall of Christ as we see in Demas and Francis Spira and divers others And therefore if wee would not deny Christ then let us learne to love him and his truth and not to hate it let us labour for a true knowledge of Christ and his truth and beware of ignorance let us not feare the disgrace and reproach of men but by our constant and couragious confession of Christ and Religion procure the praise and commendations of God Let us not feare those who can but hurt the body yea not hurt that nor a haire of our heads without the permission of God but feare him who can cast body and soule into euerlasting perdition Let us not deny Christ for any temporall thing but contemne all as nothing worth in regard of Christ Hormisda a great Noble mans Son and a man of great reputation among the Persians was condemned by the King Sapor when he understood that hee was a Christian and denied to turne from his Religion to keepe his Elephants naked In processe of time the King looking out and seeing him all swarted Theodor. lib. 5. cap. 39. and tanned in the sun commanded him to have a shirt put on and to be brought before him whom then the King asked if he would deny Christ Hormisda hearing this tare off the shirt from his body and cast it from him saying I will never surely deny my Christ for a shirt So wee should never deny our Lord for riches or honours or the esteeme of the world but reckon all these as dung and drosse in regard of him Phil. 3.8.9 Sect. 4 § 4. Him will I also deny before my Father which is in heaven Quest 1 When will Christ deny those who deny him Answ At the day of judgement for our Saviour speaks here clearely of that day To teach us Observ That at the day of judgement there shal be a retribution of all those who deny Christ The truth hereof appeares most plainely by these particulars viz. First there shall be a day of Judgement Acts. 17.31 Rom. 2.16 Secondly then Christ will returne Math. 24.30 and 25.31 and Acts. 1.11 and 1 Thessal 4.16 Thirdly then all shall bee gathered together Mat. 24.31 and 25.32 Rom. 14.10 Revel 20.12 Fourthly the sheepe and goates shall then be separated asunder Math. 25.32 c. Fiftly all men shall then be judged 2. Corinth 5.10 Revel 20.12.13 Sixtly the godly shall then be received into glory Mat. 25.34 and 1 Corinth 15.52 and 1 Thes 4.17 Seventhly and lastly the wicked shall then be cast into hell Mat. 25.46 And therefore in all our sinnes and delayes and worldly delights Luke 16.25 let us meditate what the end of all will be and what will become of us at the last What must we meditate off or remember in regard of this last dreadfull day We must remember continually these seven things namely First that wee are all guilty of manifold Quest 2 transgressions Answ And Secondly that none can deny none can palliate or conceale their sinnes the books shall bee opened Revel 20.12 the accusers mouth will not be stopped and our own consciences will bee as a thousand witnesses against us And Thirdly that the judge of all the world cannot be bribed And Fourthly that all helpes and meanes wee can use to prevent this judgement or condemnation are vaine whether they be riches or honour or craft or friends or the like Fiftly that Christ will deny us there if here wee be wicked this wee should seriously consider of and say with David whō have I in heaven but thee O Christ Psalme 73.25 and wilt thou deny me This was it which went so close to the heart of Vsthazares one of king Sapores Eunuches and made him so bitterly cry out woe is mee with what hope with what face shall I behold my God whom I have denied when as this Simeon my familiar acquaintance thus passing by mee so much disdaineth me that hee refuseth with one gentle word to salute mee If any desire to reade the whole story let him looke upon M. Foxe his Booke of Martyrs fol. 97. 98. Sixtly that we can by no meanes delight our selves or arme or strengthen our minds to suffer those paines which wee shall be adjudged to undergoe For as the mind of the righteous shall be confirmed and established for ever in ineffable peace and perfect joy Phil. 4.7 So the mind of the wicked shall be dejected and deprived for ever of all comfort peace or light and the darkenesse of the heart shal be more full of heavinesse and Lamentation then hell it self And Seventhy that the last comfort which miserable men have shall bee taken away and denied unto those who here denied Christ either with their mouth or hearts When men are in excessive and extraordinary misery their comfort is that death will put an end unto it but there the miserable can neither kill themselves nor dye for ever but must remain alive for all eternitie although the pangs of death be continually upon them And all these miseries and many more we must remember are prepared for those who deny Christ What deniall doth our Saviour speake of here Quest 3 I will deny him c. There is a double deniall namely Answ Verball amongst men and reall which is a direct Rejecting of one and this our Saviour speakes hereof to teach us That those who are wanting to the profession of Christ Observ or
love him not in this life This followes not Our Saviour rather argues thus Some sinnes namely those committed against the Holy Ghost shall neither be forgiven in this life nor in the life to come But some sinnes shall bee forgiven both in this life in the life to come that is all the sinnes of all the faithfull for they are pardoned here and they shall be pronounced and declared to be remitted at the day of judgment Scharpius de purg p. 544. Ninthly Purgatory being an Article of their Answ 9 faith should not be collected from a certaine oblique kind of reasoning but from the direct plain and expresse words of Holy writ And therefore this place is ill brought for the proofe of Purgatory Tenthly our Saviour in this place speakes De Answ 10 culpà of the remission of sinne And therefore Bellarmine is here guilty of the Sophisme called Ignoratio elenchi applying it onely to the punishments of sinne and that temporall Christ saith that the sinne or fault cannot be remitted in the world to come Iohn 3.18 And the Romanists doe not much oppose it And therefore this place which speakes onely of the remission of the sinne is injuriously produced for the proofe of the Remission of temporall punishment In the place alledged Iohn 3.18 Our Saviour saith Hee that beleeveth is not condemned but hee that beleeveth not is condemned already Upon which place the Rhemists give this note that he that beleeveth shall not be condemned either at the houre of death or day of judgment from which place I reason thus Every man either dieth in faith or without faith If he die in incredulity he is condemned and there is afterwards no hope if in faith hee is freed from condemnation and entred into life and so consequently delivered from his sinnes Therefore in this life onely wee obtaine remission of sinnes because faith is onely of this life whereby our sinnes are remitted Willet Synops 405. Answ 11 Eleventhly the meaning of these words shall neither be forgiven in this life nor in the life to come is shall never be forgiven world without end as is plaine from Luk. 12.10 and Mark 3.29 He that blasphemeth against the Holy Ghost hath never forgivenesse Marcus alijs verbis candem sententiam expressit August de verb. Dom serm 11. St. Marke expresseth in other words the selfe same thing that S. Matthew doth although this Evangelist useth more words for the greater Emphasis according to the usuall and old custome of the Jewes Saint Matthew was an Hebrew and the Hebrewes were not content to say In seculum for ever but in Seculum seculum for ever and ever that is alwaies So here neither in this world nor in the world to come that is never as St. Marke expounds it Mark 3.29 yea according to the exposition of St. Matthew himselfe in this place for verse 31. he saith Blasphemy shall not be forgiven that is at all and then he addeth in the verse following neither in this world nor in the world to come so that not to be forgiven in this world or the next is not to be forgiven at all Bellarmine opposeth that which we say that Matthew is to be expounded by S. Marke but I omit his exceptions entreating my Reader if he desire to see them both proposed and solved to looke upon Scharpius de purgat pag. 544. Vers 33 VERS 33. Either make the Tree good and his fruit good or else make the Tree corrupt and his fruit corrupt for the Tree is knowne by his fruit Object The Rhemists object this place for the proofe of free-will thus It is in a mans owne free-will and election to be a good Tree or an evill to bring forth good fruit or bad for our Saviour here saith either make the Tree and fruit good or bad Answ 1 First from this place they might as well prove that a man hath wings to fly whether hee will as free will to doe what good he will for the plaine meaning of our Saviour is no more then this to wipe away the blasphemy wherewith the Pharisees went about to charge him and declareth by this phrase that his miracles as the fruits being even by their own judgment unreprovable himself as the tree ought not to be condemned And therefore they should either justifie him with his miracles or else condemn him and them together Secondly this verse doth not onely not confirm Answ 2 free-wil but doth also confute it because it affirmeth that by Nature we are all corrupt and naughty trees but this followeth more plainly in the next verse VERS 34 35. O generation of Vipers how can ye Vers 34 35. being evill speak good things For out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh A good man out of the good treasure of the heart bringeth forth good things and an evill man out of the evill treasure of his heart bringeth forth evill things § 1. O generation of Vipers Sect. 1 What resemblance was there between the Viper and the Iews or Pharisees that our Saviour here calleth them A generation of Vipers Chrysostom s Mat. 3. answers Quest that they are fitly termed Vipers in regard of a three-fold property which is common to them with Vipers namely First when the Viper hath bit a man Answ by and by she runs unto the water which if she finde not she dyeth by and by So the Iews having committed many great grievous sins run unto Baptisme that thereby after the manner of Vipers they may escape the danger of death Secondly as the nature of the Viper is to break the bowels of his dam and so to be brought forth so the Iews persecuting daily the Prophets did therby kill their Mother to wit their Church and Synagogue Thirdly as the Viper outwardly seemes faire and speckled as though she were painted but inwardly is full of poyson So the Scribes and Pharisees did without counterfeit and faine a shew of holinesse but did carry within the poyson of maliciousnesse and the venome of wickednesse § 2. How can ye that are evill speake good things Sect. 2 It is questioned betwixt us and the Papists Argum. whether a man can doe any thing that is good of himselfe and by the power of Free-will or whether there be in man Free-will or not wee affirme the negative and confirme it from this verse thus If any worke which proceeds from the meere Free-will of man be good then it will follow that a man may doe some good thing of himselfe But the latter is false Therefore also the former The necessity and truth of this connexion is manifest for all grant that to be done by man which is done by Free-will and so oppose Free-will to grace And therefore it is necessary that that which doth not proceed from grace should proceed from Free-will that is from man by the power of his will The Consequence is easily proved from these two verses Oh generation of Vipers
how can yee speake good things when yee your selves are evill that is as Lyranus interprets it yee being filled with malice and envie against me cannot speake any good of me The good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth good things and the evill man out of the evill treasure of his heart bringeth forth evill things Anselm upon these words hath this Observation or Exposition Quomodo bonus homo non possit proferre mala nec malus bona sic non possit Christus mala nec diabolus bona opera facere As the good man cannot bring forth evill things nor the evill man good things So Christ can doe no bad workes nor the Devil any good Reade further for the proofe hereof Mat. 7.16 17 18 19. and Luke 6.43 44. From whence plainely this Argument may be drawne No corrupt and evill tree can bring forth good fruit But every man by nature is a corrupt and evill tree being the child of wrath and infected with sinne And therefore no man by nature or by the onely power of his Free-will is able to bring forth good fruits Sect. 3 § 3. A good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth good things Quest 1 What is a good thing or a good worke Answ Good workes are generally thus described They are actions externall or internall conformable and agreeable to the will and to the Law of God But from this verse they may be thus defined They are workes which flow and proceed from a disposition of vertue For the good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth good things Quest 2 How many things are required unto a good worke Three things are required viz Answ First a good beginning that is the will well disposed and working out of true vertue For goods fruits cannot spring but from a good tree verse 33. Secondly a good matter or object that is something which is commanded by God for otherwise it will bee but will-worship as Matth. 15.6 In vaine doe they worship me teaching for doctrines the commandements of men Thirdly a good end that is the glory of God and those things which tend to his glory 1 Corinth 10.31 And thus if we desire to approve our selves to bee good men by our good fruits we must labour that I. Our wils may be rectified and rightly disposed And II. That our workes may be moderated according to the word of God in regard of the matter of them And III. That our end in all our good workes may be that God may be glorified in us and by us Verse 36 VERS 36. But I say unto you that every idle word that men shall speake they shall give account thereof in the day of Iudgement Object Bunderius a Papist from this place would prove Purgatory thus Men at the day of Iudgement shall give an account for every idle word which they have spoken Now which is this day of Iudgement certainely that day which comes presently after death according to that of the Apostle It is appointed unto all men once to die and after death comes Iudgement Therefore in that day after death men shall give an account of those things which have beene culpable and worthy of reprehension in them and which must bee expiated by temporall punishments now in what place can this be but only in Purgatory His meaning is this As soone as ever men die they shall give an account for their veniall and lesse sinnes which they have not satisfied nor suffered for on earth and those shall be purged by the paines and penance of Purgatory flames First Sophister-like he concludes that which Answ 1 hee proves not or hath that in the conclusion which is in neither Proposition For to me hee seemes to argue thus We must give an account for all our small sins Answ 2 at the day of Iudgement But this day of Iudgement is the time which followes presently after death Therefore there is a Purgatorie perhaps to punish such a Logician as hee is Secondly wee grant that by and by after death there is a particular judgement of God wherein every one shall give an account of those things which he hath done in the body Thirdly by the day of Iudgement both Franciscus Answ 3 Lucas and Gorranus and divers others understand the last day and generall Iudgement and some leave it doubtfull Sa Iudicij scilicet particularis in morte vel universalis that is by this Iudgement is either meant the particular Iudgement presently after death or the general Iudgement at the last day Now wee need not greatly care which of these say true for if the last day be here understood then Bunderius his Argument or Sophisme rather is absurd for there will bee no Purgatory after the day of Iudgement But if wee leane unto those who hold the place doubtfull then it will prove but an uncertaine Argument and consequently not an Argument of faith nor to build an Article of faith upon as Purgatory is to them A question may hence be demanded Quest whether every sinne be mortall of its owne nature or not Although it be true Answ that all sinnes are not equall but one greater then another and although also it be true that in a good and godly sense some sinne may be termed mortall and some veniall which yet may more fitly be called sins regnant and not regnant yet it is most true that every sinne is mortall of its owne nature and only veniall by way of Gods free acceptation and mercy for his owne names sake and merits of his deare Sonne our Lord Iesus as appeares by these reasons First because our Saviour here saith that wee must give a straight account of every idle word in the generall day of Iudgement and this is certaine because every idle word is flatly against the Law of God and yet these idle words are those sinnes which they call veniall And therefore this is a truth that all sinnes are mortall that is against the Law of God Secondly because the Rhemists Rhem. in 1. Iohn 3.4 confesse in plaine termes that every sinne is a swarving from the Law of God For doubtlesse that which swarveth from the Law is truely said to be against the Law but not agreeable to the Law Thirdly because the famous popish Friar and Romish Bishop Iosephus Angles in 4. sent pag. 215. teacheth the same doctrine in his booke dedicated to the Pope himselfe His words are these Omne peccatum veniale est al cujus legis transgressio Patet quia omne veniale est contra rectam rationem agere contra rectam rationem est agere contra legem naturalem praecipientem non esse a regulà rectae rationis deviandum Every veniall sinne is the transgression of some Law This is cleare because every veniall sinne is against right reason and to doe a thing against right reason is to doe it against the Law of nature which commandeth us not
others despise them and therefore some choise should be made in the distributing of them Yea II. It would make others to sleight and despise holy things if they saw them given to dogs and hogs and all sorts of wicked men Fourthly Ministers are dispensers distributers Answ 4 and stewards of the mysteries of God A nobis 1 Cor. 4.1 ordained by the Lord to give meat in due season to his servants Matth. 24.45 And therefore they must not take the childrens bread and give it to dogs or the servants money and give it to loyterers or rebels What holy things are not indefinitely and Quest 2 without difference to be communicated First the word for wee see that the Lord Answ 1 warnes the Apostles to goe to Macedonia but not unto Bithynia Act. 16. Against this it will be objected Christ commands his Apostles to preach upon the house tops Matth. 10.27 Object what hee spake unto them Therefore the word is indifferently to be preached unto all First wee distinguish here betwixt the preaching Answ 1 I. Of anger and judgement which may be proclaimed and published to the wicked And II. Of Mercy which is preached either I. Exhortatoriè by way of exhortation and thus mercy is to be preached Conditionalitèr upon condition that men will doe as they are exhorted And thus Mercy I. Is and may bee preached in the beginning to all indifferently But II. After grace is once offered in the word and despised it is not then to be preached to the contemners as followes more plainely in the last distinction o Act. 13.51 18.6 and 19 9. Ier. 51.9 II. Mercy is preached Consolatoriè by way of consolation and thus it is preached Absolutè positively to the obedient and beleevers Secondly wee distinguish betwixt All and Answ 2 Some that is betwixt the whole multitude and some of them for often the generality of men seeme bad and yet there are many good amongst them although like those seven thousand they cannot be discerned Now the word must rather be preached to many wicked then kept backe from a few righteous who love it prize it and desire to be obedient unto it Thirdly wee distinguish betweene those who Answ 3 are I. Openly wicked and malicious contemners of the word as Act 18.6 and 19.9 and 13.51 and 2 Tim. 4.14 And II. Those who are doubtfull for they which for the present are enemies may be in Gods election of grace Rom. 11.6 Esay 11.6 Ephes 2.12.13 and 2 Tim. 2.25 Now although the word be to bee taken away from the former yet not from these Secondly the profession of the word is not Answ 2 to be communicated unto all that is wee are not to make a publike profession of our faith and religion in all places or before all sorts of persons It is not necessary that men should accuse themselves and consequently not required to lay our selves open to those who persecute the truth either by fire sword or derision Here I lay downe these particulars viz. I. That if we be called thereunto wee must confesse Christ and his truth and that even unto death for wee must rather dye then deny either our God or religion II. Wee must not so hide or conceale our selves in the times and places of danger that we seeme unto others either to deny or to be ashamed to confesse Christ or his truth as Nicodemus at first did Iohn 3. For our lives must bee as pure and our love unto religion as sincere and our hatred to all manner of supersticion and iniquitie as great in the times and places of persecution as of peace III. This only is lawfull for us to remove our selves from the company and society of those who are wicked in themselves or maliciously and despightfully bent against us Answ 3 Thirdly reproofe is not indefinitely to be given unto all Titus 3.10 Here observe I. That charity beleeves all things and hopes all things 1 Cor. 13. and therefore often through hope admonisheth those who are no better then dogs and swine II. That charity at the least makes a Christian doe for the wicked as Samuel did for Saul that is although he came not at him 1 Sam. 15.35 yet hee ceased not to pray and mourne for him 1 Sam. 16.1 So the children of God sometimes forbeare to reprove those who are wicked and remove themselves from their society and acquaintance but never cease to pray and mourn in secret for them III. Observe how miserable men make themselves by the contempt and disobedience of the word of God for the Lord will not suffer such to be reproved and without reproofe they must needs run on head-long unto destruction Answ 4 Fourthly all without difference are not to bee admitted to the Lords Supper I passe this by here because it is proved and handled sufficiently afterwards Matth. 26.26 Answ 5 Fifthly Musculus observes a great abuse in conferring of holy orders sometimes upon ignorant men and sometimes upon wicked But I enlarge not this Sect. 4 § 4. Then Iesus answered and said unto her Wee see here this poore woman to stand in need of mercy to desire mercy to cry for mercy yea to follow Christ the fountaine of mercy and yet seemes a great while to be sleighted by Christ and neglected but at length hee heares her To teach us Observ That Christ oftens defers a long time to hear his servants and to helpe them and to grant their requests Ioseph was afflicted hated of his brethren and sold falsely accused and laid in prison as though God had forgotten him David all his life time in a manner was under one affliction or other and Israel was forty yeares in the desart Thus the Lord seemes often not to regard his children nor to take notice of their wants When doth the Lord seeme not to regard his servants First when they pray for the children of Quest 1 God often call upon him when hee answereth Answ 1 them not Psalme 22.2 3. And that either I. In temporall affliction for sometimes the godly are oppressed and the ungodly insult over them yea although in their misery they call upon the Lord yet hee holds his peace Psalme 69.17 Or II. When they pray for spirituall grace or strength 2 Cor. 12.8 Why doth the Lord so often refuse to answer the prayers of his children First because they aske a stone instead of bread and pray for those things which may be hurtfull unto them Secondly because some sinne or corruption hinders the Lord from performing that which hee hath promised Thirdly because our wants and afflictions may make more for Gods glory and the confusion of Sathan and thus Iob was afflicted a while Fourthly because God hath appointed times for the conferring of all his graces and favours And therefore if wee begge any thing at Gods hands and receive it not then let us thinke that either I. God seeth it not to be commodious and profitable for us Or II. That our sinnes
they doe Here it may be demanded Quest 2 Is it not good to make a faire profession outwardly and to doe those things which may bee seene by men Answ 1 First it is if it be done for these ends namely I. That God may be glorified thereby And II. That our brethren may be edified and converted thereby And III. That our owne faith may bee confirmed thereby Answ 2 Secondly it is not only lawfull but it is also requisite and necessary that wee should shine before men by good workes and that I. Because sinne and Sathan have many servants And II. Because they are bold impudent and brazen-faced in shewing themselves to be the servants of sinne and Sathan and therefore it is a horrible shame for us to bee ashamed by our workes to shew our selves the servants of the Lord. Yea III. Because it is a great fault not to shine before men and to hold forth the Lampe of a pure life yea to shew forth a life replenished with all manner of good workes For First if a man dare not professe Christ or shew forth Religion in his life it is a signe that he wants faith And Secondly if a man bee carelesse in shewing forth the light of Religion in his life and conversation it is a signe that hee wants both zeale and love And therefore it is necessary that wee should shine in good workes before men But Answ 3 Thirdly it is a shame for a man to make the praise and applause of the world his aime and end in the performance of his good workes First in so doing a man deprives himselfe of good workes Quest 3 How may wee know whether we be Pharisees and Hypocrites in the performance of good workes or no First they are proud boasters of themselves Answ 1 and despisers of others Secondly they regard the outward man but Answ 2 the hidden man of the heart they neglect Thirdly they seeke themselves and their own Answ 3 gaine in all things Mat. 23.14 And therfore let us examine our selves in these Secondly this practise of the Pharisees in relying wholly upon the outward worke may bee applied to those who place their confidence in the worke wrought as the Papists doe thinking that they have discharged their dutie towards God and merited a reward from God if they have but performed those workes materially which God requires Indeed good workes are to be done and that both for Gods service and our ●xercise but yet formally as well as materially and with a right mind as well as with the body IV. Finem legis nesciendo the Pharisees sinned against the Morall Law by their ignorance of the end thereof which is three-fold to wit First to condemne and convince us of sinne accusing both our evill actions and internal corruption Secondly to leade us unto Christ or rather to shew that it is not able to save us and therefore if wee would be saved wee must goe unto Christ Thirdly to bee unto us a rule of obedience for the framing of our lives And therefore the libertines of our daies who would overthrow the Law are justly reproved And thus we have seen how the Pharisees sinned against the Law both Ceremoniall and Morall Secondly the Pharisees sinned against the Gospell and that in a double regard viz. I. Because they taught Liberum Arbitrium that there was in man a freedome of will unto good as well as unto evil as both August de haeres and Epiphanius write of them II. Because they denied righteousnesse by faith Rom. 10.3 which Paul only cleaves unto Philip. 3.9 From whence wee may learne what true righteousnesse is to wit First to labour and endeavour with all our might and strength and power to doe whatsoever the Lord in the law requires of us And then Secondly to put no confidence in any thing we doe or can doe but place our trust as wholly in Christ as though we had done nothing at all VERS 14. And they said Verse 14 some say that thou art Iohn the Baptist some Elias and others Ieremias or one of the Prophets The Pharisees held divers and sundry erroneous opinions amongst which some errours they had concerning the resurrection of the dead which although they acknowledged and maintained against the Sadduces yet concerning it they thus taught r Ioseph de bell● lib. 2. cap. 12. That the soules of evill men deceased presently departed into everlasting punishment but the soules of good men they said passed by a kind of Pythagorean 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 into other good mens bodies And hence it is thought ſ Serar Trihaeres lib. 2. cap. 3. Drus in Praeter that the different opinions concerning our Saviour did arise Some here saying that hee was Iohn Baptist others Elias others Ieremias as if Christ his body had beene animated by the soule of Iohn Elias or Ieremias Verse 16 VERS 16. And Simon Peter answered and said thou art Christ the sonne of the living God It is questioned and controverted between us and the Church of Rome what the object of justifying faith is and they say that it is not a particular assurance or application of the promises of God unto our selves in and through Christ as wee hold but onely in generall to beleeve that whatsoever is contained in the word of God is true Bellarm. lib. 1. de Iustifie Cap. 4. Now because wee deny this they undertake to prove it from this verse arguing thus Object That faith which Peter confessed when hee said to our Saviour Thou art Christ the Sonne of the living God was the same faith that justifieth But this faith was a confession only of the divinity of Christ and no speciall application of his merits Therefore faith is no such thing Bellarm. lib. 1. de Iustifie Cap. 8. Answ 1 First by our adversaries owne confession This was not the whole justifying faith which Peter here confesseth For they affirme that faith is an universall beliefe of the Articles of Christs death and Resurrection c. But at this time though Peter confessed thus of the Son of God yet he neither I. Beleeved that Christ should die for therefore was he called Sathan ver 23. of this Chapter because he went about to perswade Christ not to die Nor II. Did Peter beleeve at this time Christs Resurrection for the Apostles in generall for ought wee reade to the contrary doubted of it even when Christ was risen againe And therefore how could this be the justifying faith in respect of Peter that confessed it Answ 2 Secondly this faith which Peter confessed though it were not the whole justifying faith yet it was a principall part thereof for in faith there are two things namely I. The matter and substance thereof which is the beliefe of the Articles of faith And II. The forme which is the particular use and application thereof to every man severally To confesse therefore that Christ is the Sonne of God which doth comprehend both the natures
1.14 and 1 Pet. 2.11 Iosh 7.21 Answ 3 Thirdly because wee can neither approve our selves to have faith nor to be regenerated untill wee deny our owne wils Iohn 1.12 13. Answ 4 Fourthly because wee are but servants and children and wives and therefore must not follow our owne wils and wayes but be obedient and subject to the will of our Father and Master and Lord. Quest 2 How must wee deny our selves or wherein or in what things doth selfe-deniall consist Answ 1 First Gregory Hom. 32. in Evang. answers Wee are one thing being fallen through sinne and another thing by nature or by our first creation and then doe wee deny our selves when as wee shun and desire to bee freed from that estate and condition wherein now wee are and to bee made partakers of that estate of grace wherein first wee were That is wee deny our selves when we desire and endeavour to put off the old man which is pleasing to corrupt nature and labour to put on the new which is contrary thereunto Answ 2 Secondly Gregory Hom. 10. in Ezech. saith hee denieth himselfe who is changed to better beginning to be that which hee was not and ceasing to be that which he was Answ 3 Thirdly Gregory lib. Mor. 23. saith hee denieth himselfe who treading pride under foot sheweth himselfe to be estranged from himselfe Answ 4 Fourthly there is a double deniall of our selves viz. I. Negatio meriti a deniall of our merits or an humble confession and acknowledgement that no good thing belongs unto us by desert or merit This deniall belongs unto faith and is necessary but is not here spoken of and therefore I wil omit it II. Negatio placiti a denying of our selves in those things which are pleasing to our natures not seeking those things which are delightfull unto us And this deniall belongs unto service and is that which is here spoken of Whence we learne That wee cannot serve both Christ and our Observ 2 selves or wee cannot submit our selves as wee ought to the will of Christ untill wee deny our owne wils And therefore wee must not seeke or serve our selves but our Lord and Master Christ Jesus Matth. 6.24 Hence then we learne that true selfe-deniall includes foure things namely First Obedience and this included three things to wit I. A deniall of our selves and our own wils because our will and nature will leade us aside from the obedience of Christ II. A deniall of the world and of men though great and potent for God must bee our Lord and King Now this is not to be understood Anabaptistically as though we denied obedience to Magistrates and those who are over us but only if there bee an opposition betweene their will and Gods Wee must confesse our selves onely to be the Lords servants and not obey any in those things which are contrary to his will III. An absolute universall and constant obedience of God wee must so deny our selves and submit our selves unto Gods service that we must labour to obey him in all things whatsoever he commands continue in that obedience all the dayes of our lives For this Deniall includes this Obedience Secondly true selfe-deniall includes Honour we must not arrogate any thing unto our selves but wee must ascribe all glory and honour unto the Lord onely yea as servants honour and reverence our Lord Malach. 1.6 Thirdly true selfe-deniall includes Obligation for wee must serve the Lord Liberè non liberè for the understanding hereof observe that there are three sorts of men to wit I. Some who serve the Lord but it is by compulsion and constraint for if they were left unto themselves they would not doe any thing which hee commands at all II. Some there are who serve the Lord and that without coaction but yet they thinke not themselves bound so to doe They doe many things which God requires but in the manner of a free-will offering III. Some there are who labour to obey God in all things that hee commands and that willingly and cheerfully but yet they confesse that they doe no more then is their dutie to do yea in their best performances come far short of what they ought to doe Now this is the nature of true selfe-denial and acceptable service Fourthly this service and selfe-deniall includes Dependance upon God for those who deny themselves and give themselves wholly up to the service of the Lord must and will depend upon him for whatsoever they stand in need of Luke 12.30 Matth. 6. Sect. 3 § 3. Let him take up his Crosse Quest 1 How many wayes doth a man take up his Crosse These namely Answ First when hee afflicteth his body by abstinence Secondly when he afflicteth his mind by compassion towards his neighbour Now because abstinence is subject to the infection of vaine glory and compassion to the infection of false piety Christ subjoyneth Let him take up his Crosse and follow me Greg. hom 32. in Evang. Thirdly when hee doth patiently beare whatsoever affliction adversity and evill is laid upon him for Christs sake But of this in the next Question Quest 2 Whether is there any difference between these phrases Ferat crucem tollat crucem Let him beare his Crosse and take up his Crosse The differ and that thus to wit Answ First Ferre crucem to beare the Crosse is simply to beare it or to suffer any adversity although against the mind and will Many have burdens imposed upon them which they must beare and which they cannot shake off and therefore beare them but they wish that their shoulders were eased of them Now this is To beare the Crosse Secondly Tollere crucem To take up the Crosse is to beare willingly and cheerfully and contentedly whatsoever the Lord layeth upon us or is imposed or inflicted upon us for the Lords sake Reade for the proofe hereof these places Rejoyce when yee suffer for my names sake Matth. 5. And the Apostles went away rejoycing that they were thought worthy to suffer for the Lords sake Act. 5. Yee were imitaters of the Lord and of us receiving the word with much tribulation and joy in the Holy Ghost 1 Thess 1. They endured the losse of their goods with joy Heb. 10. and divers the like places Sect. 4 § 4. And follow me That Christ is to be followed and how hee is to be followed we have shewed before Chap. 4.19 and 8.22 and 9.9 One question therefore only I here adde namely Quest What must we follow in the Crosse of Christ or what must wee learne to imitate in Christs bearing of his Crosse Answ 1 First as hee was obedient unto the will of his Father and that unto death yea even unto the death of the Crosse Philip. 2. so must we be ready and willing even to die for Christ if the Lord shall call us thereunto or require it at our hands Answ 2 Secondly as Christ died not for any fault of his owne but was innocent yea a
recapitulation And Answ 3 Thirdly in regard of our Bretheren for by that means we may be the better inabled to help their memories Thirdly this place is thrice expresly repeated for our meditation to teach us That the punishments Observ 4 and torments of Hell and the eternity thereof are alwaies to be meditated and remembred Quest 1 Why must we thus meditate of the bottomelesse pit and the torments thereof Answ 1 First because it will be a means to preserve us from sin And Answ 2 Secondly to weane our affections from this wicked world And Answ 3 Thirdly it will make us more carefull to prepare our selves for Heaven And therefore let us meditate and seriously remember these three things viz. I. How suddenly we may be called by death unto judgment And II. How severely we shall be judged Index nec pecuniâ nec penitentiâ c. August de Symbol No bribe can be fastned upon that Iudge no tears will prevail with him Tum Potentissimi Reges-Aristotelis Argumenta-non proderunt Hier. Epist ad Heliodorum At the day of judgment the most potent Princes shall find no more favour then the poorest persons yea then neither Tullies Rhetorick nor Aristotles Logick will a whit avail them III. Meditate how inevitable Hell is and how impossible it is for a wicked man to avoid the eternall punishment thereof It is impossible for men by any art or power or pollicy to shunne death and as impossible to escape judgement after death and alike inevitable is punishment after judgment unto all that are wicked dying without Repentance for Christ hath preached and the Holy Ghost thrice repeated That those who will not cut off and pluck out and cast from them their sins shall together with their sinnes be cast into Hell Fire Verse 10 VERS 10. Take heed that ye despise not one of these little ones For I say unto you that in heaven their Angels do alwaies behold the face of my Father which is in Heaven Sect. 1 § 1. Their Angels The Rhemists urge these words to prove the Object 1 protection of Tutelary Angells a great dignity and marvailous benefit it is say they that every one hath from his nativitie an Angell for his custody and patronage against the wicked before the face of God H●er s And the thing is so plain that Calvin dare not deny it and yet he wil needs doubt of it Lib. 1. Institut cap. 14. § 7. First Calvin doubteth not of the Protection of Answ 1 Gods Angels but whether every one hath a severall Angell appointed for his custody from his nativitie that he justly doubts because no place of Scripture evidently proves it Secondly this the Scripture doth avouch that Answ 2 sometimes one Angell hath the charge of a great many men sometimes many Angels are ready for the defence of one man yea all the Angels with one consent do wait for our preservation as is proved clearly by Calvin in the place cited Thirdly Hierome doth not mean that every Answ 3 one hath his severall Angell for he alleadgeth for the proof of his exposition Paraphrase The Angell of Ephesus Thyatyra Philadelphia and the rest Where if the word Angell were to he understood of heavenly spirits yet it is one Angell for the Church of a whole City and not for every person one Fourthly Chrysostome affirmes that by Angels Answ 4 here are understood not the inferiour but the superiour whereby he signifies that every one hath one superiour Angell alone but yet that he may have divers other inferiour Angels See Cartwright and Doctor Mayers The Papists urge this place amongst others Object 2 for the proof of the invocation of Saints In these places say they Zachar. 1.12 Revelat. 8.3 Daniel 10.13 Psalm 91.11 Matth. 18.10 the Angels intercede for the living and have care of them in particular And therefore much more ought the Spirits an● soules of men so to doe and consequently we may call upon them First in some of the places quoted the Holy Answ 1 Ghost speaks of the intercession of Christ for his Church Secondly the Argument is sick of a Non sequitur Answ 2 The Angells intercede for the living and care for them in particular therefore so do also the souls of the deceased follows not because to the Angels is committed the care of the faithfull in the earth as appears from this verse and Psalm 91.11 and Heb. 1.14 But wee reade of no such charge or power given to the deceased Saints Thirdly in Revelat. 8. Iohn declares a vision Answ 3 wherein by Saints he understands the Saints on earth and not them in Heaven and by the Angel he understands Christ as Daniel 10.13 Fourthly in this place here is nothing at all of Answ 4 the intercession of Angells in particular Scharp de eccles triumph 38. § 2. They behold the face of my Father Sect. 2 What is meant here by the face of God or Quest 1 how many waies it is taken in Scripture First sometimes the face of God is taken for Answ 1 his presence in generall as Genes 4.16 Iudg. 6.22 Iob. 1.12 and 2 7. Psalm 89.14 and 96.13 Zachar 2.13 Answ 2 Secondly sometimes the face of God is taken for his familiar presence as Genes 3● 30 Exod. 33.11 Numb 12.8 and 14.14.15 Deut. 5 4. and 34.10 Answ 3 Thirdly by face is sometimes signified and meant the sight knowledge and acknowledgement of God Iob 1.11 and 2.5 and 13.20 Ps●l 10.11 and 51.9 and 139 7 Eccles 8.8.12.13 Esa 26.17 and 65 3. Ierem. 4.1 and 16.17 Hos 7.2 Ionah 1.3.10 Answ 4 Fourthly sometimes by Gods face is meant his presence in the Temple Sanctuary Holy worship as 1 Samuel 2.18 and 13.12 and 21.6 and 2 King 13.4 and 2 Chron. 34.27 Psalm 95.2 and 119.58 Ierem. 26.10 Hag. 1.12 Zach. 7.2 and 8.21 c. Answ 5 Fifthly the face of God is sometimes taken for his presence in Heaven as in this verse and Psalm 16.11 and 1 Cor. 13.12 and Revelat. 22.4 And Answ 6 Sixthly sometimes for his providence Psalm 104.29 And Answ 7 Seventhly for his love mercy and favour as Exod. 33.14 Esa 63.9 And Answ 8 Eighthly sometimes for the Majestie glory and terrour of God Exod. 33.18 Iudg. 5.5 Nehem 1.5 6. Psalm 68.8 and 97.5 and 114.7 Esa 63.1 2. Ioel 2.6.10 And Answ 9 Ninthly sometimes face signifies anger and revenge Numb 10.35 Ierem. 3.12 and 4.26 and Psalm 21.10 and 1. Peter 3.12 And Answ 10 Lastly by Face is meant Gods remembrance to punish those that are wicked Nehem. 4.5 and Ierem. 18.3 Quest 2 What is the nature and property of Gods Face Answ 1 First it is invisible and cannot be seen Exod 33.20 23. by mortall eye Answ 2 Secondly it is our hope and trust Proverb 17.15 Answ 3 Thirdly it is sweet and most delectable Psalm 89.14 Answ 4 Fourthly it seeth al things for the proof hereof see the places quoted above Answer 3. of the former Question Quest 3 What is required
the Minister of the word Sacraments is said to save and to beget in Christ as the Apostle saith 1. Corinth 4.15 and. 2. Cor. 5.21 And therefore if we desire to walke in that way which leades unto him let us pray unto God to give us his holy Spirit let us attend carefully to the preaching and reading of the holy word and approach reverently and preparedly when we are invited to the holy Sacrament of the Lords holy Supper Who shall be made partakers of this life eternall Quest 3 First onely the Elect and faithfull Iohn 17.9 Answ 1 Acts. 2.47 Rom. 11.7 If it be here demanded whether the wicked Quest 4 shall rise or not at the last day I answer they shall but not unto eternall joy Answ but unto an eternity of torments Daniel 12.2 Matth. 25.46 and 2. Thes 1.8.9 Shall not wicked men rise at the great day of Quest 5 judgement unto eternall life shall not they also live for ever They shall rise unto eternall death Answ but not unto eternall life For I. It is like death herein as there is no exemption from death so there is no redemption from hell And II. In death there are two things namely First Mortis inchoatio the inchoation of death or the dolefull and strong pangs of death now this wicked men have for the bitter paines of eternall death are alwayes upon them they with St. Paul in another sence may justly say that they dye daily Secondly Mortis consummatio in death there is the period perfecting and consummation thereof Now this wicked men never have for they are alwaies a dying but they never dye Secondly all the Elect shall be made partakers Answ 2 of this everlasting life It may here be demanded whether the joy of Quest 6 heaven shall be alike unto all or unlike whether equall or unequall First in heaven there shall be Par gaudium Answ 1 an equal joy for every man shall receive his penny and shall have a fulnesse and perfection of joy Secondly in heaven there shall be Impar gradus Answ 2 different degrees of Glory Daniel 12.3 When shall the Elect and faithfull be made Quest 7 partakers of this everlasting life both in bodies and soules Answ 1 First in generall concerning the yeare when the Righteous shall rise unto life there was a double opinion to wit I. Some said it would bee 6000 yeares after the Creation of this opinion were Iustinus Iraenaeus Hieronymus Augustinus Lactantius Hilarius Rabbi Elias and some heathens II. Some said it would bee 6500 yeares after the Creation and of this opinion were Cyrillus Chrysostomus Hyppolitus Germanus Constantinopolitanus Vide Senens bibl Sanct. lib. 5. § 190. pag. 399. Answ 2 Secondly more particularly there are three times when this life eternall is by the Elect injoyed viz. I. Tempus Inchoationis There is the time when they are first interested into this life and that is when they are Regenerated Iohn 5.24 and 17.3 and 1 Ioh. 3.2 Thus this fruition of life Eternall is begun in this life Read Rom. 5.2 Colos 3.3 Gal. 2.20 II. Tempus Possessionis There is the time when they enjoy this life in Soule onely and this is presently after death When First the body rests from labour Revelat. 14.13 And Secondly the soule hath a certaine perfection Quest 8 It may here be questioned If the soule doth not sleepe as well as the body untill the generall Resurrection Answ 1 First some held that the soule was like the body altogether mortall and the same in men with beasts as the Nazarens thought Danaeus and therefore the soule should never be restored to the body or to life as the Saducees dreamt Answ 2 Secondly some held that the soule died but that at the Resurrection it should be restored againe alive to the body and thus thought the Arabians Thirdly some held that the soule died not but Answ 3 onely when it departed from the body it fell a sleepe and slept untill the day of judgement And of this opinion were well nye 20 Fathers who are reckoned up by Senens § 345. Page 569. 570. Fourthly some held that the soule enjoyed the Answ 4 presence of God before the generall Resurrection but imperfectly Pet Mart. 3. 14. 16. Page 684. Fifthly some hold that the Elect and faithfull Answ 5 in regard of their soules doe perfectly enjoy the pesence of God presently after their corporall dissolution Here some object God onely is immortall Object 1. Timoth. 6.16 and therefore the soule is mortall First God onely is Eternall wee only sempiternall Answ 1 God is from everlasting Aparte ante and to everlasting aparte post but man had a beginning although he shall have no end because both soule and body shall be conjoyned together againe at the last day and shall endure for ever Secondly God onely is the fountaine of Immortality Answ 2 having life and immortality in himselfe and of himselfe but we are made immortall onely by him Thirdly that the soule is immortall and dyeth Answ 3 not appeares thus The Scripture saith the soule goes to God Eccles 12.7 Revelat. 7.15 and .14.4 And Stephen commends his soule to God Acts. 7.59 And CHRIST saith That man cannot kill the soule Matth. 10.28 And. Iohn 6.40 Christ promiseth to the faithfull that they shall be raised up and made partakers of life everlasting III. Tempus perfectionis there is the time when the Elect shall absolutely and perfectly enjoye this life eternall and that is in the Resurrection when the body and soule shall be united and conjoyned together for ever inseparably What is this life eternall Quest 8 Answ 1 First it is Life Here observe that life is either Increate as is the life of God Or Create and is either Naturall as is the life of the body or the life which we leade in the body Or Spirituall which is Inchoate and imperfect in this life Or Comsummate and perfect in the life to come Answ 2 Secondly this Spirituall life consists in the union of the soule with God Iohn 17.21 Revel 21.3 Answ 3 Thirdly this Communion will be I. With the humanity of CHRIST And II. With his Deity And III. With the Father and the holy Ghost Iohn 17.22 Answ 4 Fourthly the difference between this inchoate and that consummate spirituall life is this that there God will be all in all by himselfe without the use of meanes There shall be no need or use of the word and Sacrament and Temples and the like nor any use of the creatures the Sunne Moone and the rest Indeed there shall be an use of the creatures Rom. 8.21 but it is for pleasure and delight not for necessity or want What manner of life shall this everlasting Quest 9 life be First it may be illustrated and described by the Answ 1 names given thereunto Heaven is called I. A reward great is your reward in heaven And II. An inheritance Rom. 8.17 and. 1. Pet. 1.4 And III. A crowne of
sinne Answ 3 Thirdly an idle and lazy sluggishnesse hinders this call Agrippa was almost perswaded to become a Christian Acts 26.28 but not all together Vult et non vult piger the sluggard being called and awakened answereth to rise but deferres and procrastinates it crying Yet a little sleepe a little slumber a little folding of the hands to sleepe And therefore if wee desire this effectuall vocation let us I. Learne to deny our selves and to renounce all selfe-confidence and high conceits of our owne deserts and goodnesse And II. Let us learne to hate all Sinne and that with a perfect hatred And III. To cast off all sluggishnesse and avoide all idle endeavours and Soule-killing delayes and with speed alacrity and diligence undertake the labour of the Lord and the worke of our salvation unto which wee are called Object Some object these words against the wise and divine Providence of God He hath rejected more then he hath elected because many are called and but fewe are chosen Now this stands not with the providence of an all-wise Creator Answ 1 First it is not against the most wise providence of God that there is a greater number of wicked then godly because he maketh no man evill but whatsoever he made was very good and he onely suffereth the evill to be Answ 2 Secondly it is true that God hath rejected more then he hath elected but he did it not without good cause For I. Hereby he would shew that those who are chosen are chosen of meere grace and not for any merit or worthinesse of their owne And II. Hereby he would stirre up us to give grea-thankes unto him for so great a benefit in choosing us so few out of so great a multitude of men unto eternall life Sect 9 § 9. And few are chosen Quest 1 It is questioned by some whether there be a generall election or not that is whether all be elected unto life or not Answ Wee answer no and the trueth of our negation appeares thus First God hath mercy of whom he will have mercy and whom he will he hardens and therefore all are not elected Secondly our Saviour here saith Many are called but few are elected Thirdly few enter into the straite gate Mat. 7.13 14. But all that are elected unto life enter therein 2. Timoth. 2.19 And therefore all are not elected Rom. 8.30 Fourthly the Apostle saith plainly The election obteyned mercy and the rest were hardned Fifthly the goates shall goe into everlasting fire which was prepared for them from the beginning Matth. 25. And therefore all were not at the beginning elected Sixthly universall election is overthrowne by these Scriptures Iohn 13.18 and. 15.19 1. Corinth 1.26 and. 2. Timoth. 2.20 Iohn 17.9 Rom. 8.29 Se●venthly Election is out of a heape or masse or multitude to segregate or choose some things or some persons and therefore all are not elected Deuter. 7.7 Iohn 15.19 and. 1. Corinth 4.7 Some demand againe why there are but few Quest 2 elected and why God rejected so great a multitude of men that is predestinated more to death then to life For if the principall finall cause was his glory which is illustrated both in the manifestation of his wrath and power against sinne and in the demonstration of his riches grace and goodnesse towards the vessels of mercy could not this cause have place in the reprobation of a few as well as of many First who art thou O man that reasonest against Answ 1 God who hath knowne his minde or was his Counseller who is wiser then God who Rom. 9.23 and. 11.34 Secondly we deny that God should have Answ 2 bene as much glorified or his glory as much manifested by the reprobation of a few as it is by many for nothing could bee done more wisely or better then God hath done it And with this answer every godly man should rest satisfied VERS 18. Vers 18 Behold wee goe up to Ierusalem and the Sonne of man shall bee betrayed unto the chiefe Priests and unto the Scribes and they shall condemne him to death Why was it necessary that CHRIST should be Condemned and suffer and dye Quest First because it so pleased God Answ 1 Secondly because so he wrought and purchased Answ 2 our Redemption For it was necessary that hee should satisfie the divine Justice for our sinnes Thirdly because God so loved the World Answ 3 that he gave his Sonne unto death for the Redemption and Salvation thereof Iohn 3.6 VERS 22 23. Vers 22 23. But JESVS answered and said Yee know not what yee aske Are yee able to drinke of the Cup that I shall drinke of and to be Baptized with the baptisme that I am baptized with They say unto him Wee are able And hee saith unto them yee shall drinke indeed of my Cup and be baptized with the Baptisme that I am baptized with but to sit on my right hand and on my left is not mine to give but it shall bee given to them for whom it is prepared of my Father § 1. Yee know not what yee aske Sect. 1 Wherein did the Sons of Zebedee erre in their requests that our Saviour here blames them Their petition and request was faulty and inordinate in three regards to wit Answ First because they desired the crowne before victory And Secondly because they desired and dreamt of a carnall Propinquity and nearenesse unto CHRIST And Thirdly because out of a certaine Presumption and pride they seeme to have made this request desiring the chiefest place and glory yea that they might be preferred before all the other Apostles Carthus § pag. 164. b. Sect. 2 § 2. But to sit on my right hand and on my left is not mine to give Object The Arrians objected this place against the Deitie and power of CHRIST thus The Mother of Zebedees children desiring that one of her Sonnes might sit at Christs right hand and the other at the left in the Kingdome of him hee answers To sit on my right hand and on my left is not mine to give but it shall be given to them for whom it is prepared of my Father Therefore CHRIST is not omnipotent or of absolute power and consequently is not God Answ 1 First the mother of Zebedees Children desired these things out of a humane affection acknowledging CHRIST onely to be a man and his Kingdome some Kingdome of this world Now our Saviour answers in her sence that as he is man it is not his to give so before when the young man called him good he answered there is none good but one that is God because the young man did onely attribute unto him a humane goodnesse Answ 2 Secondly this was spoken by Christ not onely in regard of his humane nature but also yea rather in respect of the present Ministery for which he was sent into the world and therefore Christ denies that it was his worke to assigne to the Elect divers degrees of
sinne by custome becomes habituall and habites like a second nature are hardly left Wherefore we must learne to repent in our youth and to serve our God in our best and young yeares Eccles 12.1 There are three watches Whereof Obser 9 The first is Pueritia Childhood And The second Adolescentia Youth And The third Stnectus old age Now those who have neglected to purge out sinne in their Childhood must deferre it no longer but forthwith purge it out in their youth and those who have spent both Child-hood and Youth in vanity must not delay it a day more but while it is said To day turne to the Lord lest sinne become so habituall usuall and naturall unto them that they cannot cease to sinne 2. Peter 2.14 Nam quos diu ut convertantur tolerat non conversos durius damnat Hier. s Matth. 20. The longer time and space that God gives us unto repentance the greater shall our punishment be if we repent not And therefore we must doe as Seneca said he did that is Ante senectutem ut bene viverem in senectute ut bene moriar labour in our youth to live well and in our age to dye well because if we should not turne from our sinnes untill our old age then we should not leave sinne but sinne us and this is the great and grosse errour of the world for men not to begin to repent untill they be going out of the world nor to thinke of living well untill they are a dying but this we must take heed of because they seldome dye well who live ill if we live unto Sathan we must not expect to dye unto God Quest 10 Thirdly Quousque purgandum How long must we purge Answ 1 I. E Corpore we must purge till we have purged that which was hurtfull out of our body for otherwise if the obnoxious humour be brought into the ventricle and not then cast our it kils by overcharging and suppressing the stomach So if sinne be brought into the Conscience and not then purged out it drives to insensibility or desperation Answ 2 II. Totum we must labour to purge all the evill humours out of the body lest otherwise we fall into a Relapse if any remainders be left behind and our second sicknesse proves more perillous then the first Hence two things are observable to wit First that we must labour to leave all our sinnes for he that is guilty of one sinne is guilty of all And Secondly that we must labour to leave all sinne for ever Matth 12.45 2. Peter 2.20 One question more may be demanded from these verses and the precedents namely Quest 11 To what purpose tended all the speeches of CHRIST Answ The words of our Saviour tended either First to the praise of his Father and many are the speeches to this end in St. Iohn and Matth. 11.25 c. Or Secondly to teach men what to doe and hereunto belong all the precepts and instructions of the Gospell Or Thirdly to reprehend wickednesse and vice and hereunto are referred all the reprehensions and comminations of the Gospell and this Chapter speakes principally of these Vers 34 35. VERS 34 35. Wherefore behold I send unto you Prophets and Wisemen and Scribes and some of them ye shall kill and crucifie and some of them shall ye scourge in your Synagogues and persecute them from City to City That upon you may come all the righteous blood shed upon the Earth from the blood of righteous Abel unto the blood of Zacharias the sonne of Barachias whom ye slew betweene the Temple and the Altar § 1. Behold I send unto you Prophets and many Sect. 1 of them ye shall kill and crucifie It is disputed betweene us and the Romanists Argum. whether St. Peter were at Rome or not and we say that if he were there yet he could not sit there five and twenty yeares as they hold but that it is probable that he was never there and herein we have some evidence even from other Churches viz. First from some of their owne side as Lyranus upon this place saith Some of them ye shall kill as Iames the Brother of Iohn c. and some yee shall crucifie as Peter and Andrew his Brother And thus he thinkes that Peter was crucified at Ierusalem Secondly from the Greeke Church as Chrysostome upon this place saith Behold I send unto you Prophets c. Intelligit Apostolos et qui cum Apostolis fuerunt He understandeth the Apostles and those who were with the Apostles whence it appeares that his opinion is That some of the Apostles should be crucified at Ierusalem But they can shew non else to have beene crucified there unlesse it were Peter or Andrew and Bellarmine Lib. 2. de Pontif. Cap. 10. confesseth that Andrew was put to death in Achaia Thirdly from other Divines of the reformed Churches who have objected also against Peters being and dying at Rome as Vldaricus Velenus who hath written a Treatise of this Argument and Jllyricus Lib. cont primat pap and Calvin Lib. 4. Instit Cap. 6. § 15. Magdeburgens Centur. 1. Lib. 2. Cap. 10. Col. 561. Fourthly from the South Aethiopike Churches although they deny not Peter to have beene at Rome yet they hold it of more certainty that he was at Antioch which made the great Emperour there aske Alvares Alvares descript Aethiop Cap. 29. Why they divided the Churches of Antioch and Rome seeing the Church of Antioch was in a manner the chiefest untill the Counsell of Pope Leo c. And indeed of Peters being at Antioch there is evidence in Scripture Galath 2.11 but of his being at Rome none at all § 2. From the blood of righteous Abel Sect. 2 At whom did the Church of the faithfull begin Quest Answ At Abel and thus our Saviour seemes here to begin it Against this it may be objected Object That if we reckon the Church from Abel we leave out Adam who was the first faithfull man First the Fathers used so to accompt the Church Answ Augustine s Psalm 92. Ecclesia est qua ab ipso Abel usque ad finem The Church begins at Abel and continues to the end of the World Secondly our men also reckon the Church from Answ 2 Abel Lubbert de eccles page 7. 13 23. And Answ 3 Thirdly our learned Doctor Field gives the reason God wanted not a Church in Adam yet because Abel was the first that the Scripture reporteth I. To have worshipped God with Sacrifice And II. To have beene divided from cursed Cain Therefore we usually say That the Church of the redeemed began in Abel De eccles page 9. Answ 4 Fourthly Alexander de Ales part 3. quaest 95. memb 4. saith Ab Abel dicitur incepisse Ecclesia justorum sicut ecclesia malignantium a Cain The Church of the righteous is said to beginne at Abel as the Church of the wicked doth at Cain Ratio hujus est c. And the reason hereof is because although
aufertur That forbearance is no payment but although the Lord spare long yet he will not spare alwayes but punish at the last The longer the blow is a comming the deeper and deadlier it wounds and the longer God spares the stronger are his stroakes for his Mill workes but slowly but when it grinds it grinds men to powder Answ 7 Seventhly Philautia selfe-love humane confidence and pride of heart causeth security for when men are proud or selfe-conceited or lovers of themselves they then quickly grow secure trusting to broken Reeds and Egyptian staves which will faile them at the last The remedy against this is to deny our selves and renounce all confidence in our selves and to flee onely to the merits and mercies of CHRIST Answ 8 Eighthly the custome of sinning is another cause of security For I. Custome takes away the sense of sinne making it habituall and naturall unto us And II. Custome is corroborated with the shame of mutation and alteration For men are ashamed to be Changlings and to turne from their former wayes thereby acknowledging their former errours and say to themselves Sciens vidensque pereo Although I see my sinne and foresee my ruine yet I will perish rather then now forsake that which J have so long followed The Remedy against this is to labour against the customary practise of sinne and to learne to be truly sensible of sinne and to remember that it is not evill but good not miserable but happy not disgracefull but praise-worthy to turne from evill unto good from the Devill unto God from sinne unto grace from errour unto truth from the wrong way to the right and from the way that leads unto perdition to the way that leads to life and salvation Answ 9 Ninthly the care of the world and abundance of worldly imployments makes men carnally secure for the love and care thereof doth so take up and possesse the whole man that there is no time to care or labour for either grace or glory The Remedy against this is not to love the World 1. Iohn 2.15 nor to labour for the World 1. Timoth. 6.9 but to seeke first the Kingdome of Heaven and the righteousnesse thereof and then not feare but God will afford unto us those temporall things which are needfull for us Mat. 6.33 Tenthly false Teachers are causes of security for Answ 11 when those who are to deliver the Lords message speake lyes and those who are commanded to stretch forth their voyces like Trumpets and reprove the iniquity of their people shall sow Cushions under their elbowes and cry peace peace unto them no wonder if that people be lulled asleepe in a carnall security The Remedy against this is to pray unto God for faithfull Pastors and to endure those patiently who reprove our sinnes and labour to rowse us from the bed of security and if we have those who speake peace unto us not to take it upon trust or their bare words but diligently examine our selves by the word of God and see whether the Lord speake peace unto our consciences or whether we be of that number unto whom the Prophet from the Lord saith There is no peace Esa 41. § 2. So shall the comming of the Sonne of Sect. 2 man be How manifold is the comming of Christ Quest First some say that there is a double comming Answ 1 of his to wit I. By-past which Comming the Jewes understood not And II. To come which Comming we expect and looke for August super 9 Psalm Now the difference betweene these is this the first Comming was in the flesh the second is unto Judgement the first was for the manifestation of the truth and for freeing us from sinne and for the drawing of of us unto God but the second shall be for the judging of all men Thom. Aq. 3. part qu. 1. art 6. ad 3. qu. 36. art 1. qu. 40. art 1. et Chrysost super illud Iohannis Non misit Deus silium suum ut judicet Secondly others Gerson vero part 2. Serm. de Answ Verb. Dom. Matth. 11.28 Venite ad me omnes c. et Pelbart Lib. 3. Rosarii Theo. say that there is a fourefold comming of CHRIST namely I. His comming in the flesh Hence it is said John 1. The word was made flesh and he came unto his owne and his owne received him not II. His comming into the mind and of this he speakes Iohn 14. If any man love me we will come unto him that is not onely God the Father and God the holy Ghost but also God the Sonne III. His comming unto the death of man as Mark. 13. Watch and be prepared for yee know not the houre when the Sonne of man will come namely to call you unto death IV. His comming unto the finall judgement and of this he speakes Luke 21. Then shall ye see the Sonne of man comming in his glory Now this last Advent is a happy comming unto the good and godly for then shal they be made partakers of everlasting happinesse but a miserable and most unhappy comming to the wicked and ungodly for then shall they be condemned and bound over unto eternall torments for ever and ever Mat. 25.41 VERS 42. Watch therefore for ye know not what houre your Lord doth come Vers 42 Our Saviour by an unanimous consent of all Interpreters speaketh here of the day of Judgement but because there is a particular Judgement of every particular person at the day of death and a generall judgement of all men and women in generall at the last day therefore some apply this that neither unfitly nor unprofitably unto the houre of death and some unto the day of Judgement of the last more amply by and by and of the first briefly from this verse Christ giues us here to understand that we are altogether uncertaine of the day and houre when he will come to call us either to death or judgement and therefore because we are sure that he will come but unsure when we must watch and prepare our selves against his comming to call us unto death Observ In a word we must daily expect death and duly prepare to e●tertaine and welcome it when it comes because we are altogether ignorant when the Lord by death will call us unto judgement Quest 1 Why hath the Lord hid the day of death from us and ordained that it should be unknowne and uncertaine unto us Answ 1 First God hath decreed that the houre of death should be uncertaine unto us for this end that we might live the more holily and purely For it is a great folly for a man to live in that estate or manner that he would not dye in that is to live in sinne when he would not dye in sinne seeing that death may come unto him every moment And therefore in regard of this great uncertainty of the time of our dissolution there is great reason that our lives should be holy and pure as we desire our
thus preaching is profitable for our instruction in the nature of the Sacrament for our preparation unto the Sacrament for our admonition to performe what we promise in the Sacrament and for our consolation if we pay our vowes unto our God which we have behight Fourthly J therefore conclude and determine Answ this question thus I. That it is principally necessary that first we should be taught before we communicate of these sacred mysteries For if this Sacrament must not be administred to Infants who are not able to discerne of the Lords body then certainly neither ought it to be communicated to those who are as ignorant and stupide as Infants are II. Preaching doth not seeme to be absolutely necessary unto the Sacrament Toties quoties or in omni Tunc as often as the Sacrament is administred because then it could not be administred to the sicke at home without a Sermon III. But it is most profitable that there should be a Sermon when the Eucharist is celebrated for these reasons First that thereby we may be taught what we doe and that I. Lest we fall into the Popish and Capernaitish errours who said Will this man give us his flesh to eate For without teaching we might easily fall into the errour of the Corporall presence And II. That we may know the mutuall conditions of the obligation made betweene God and us in the Sacrament that is what God promiseth unto us on his part and what we promise unto God on our parts For it is necessary that those who enter into bonds should know what they seale unto and what covenants they make and this the Lord did admonish his people of when they entred into covenants Exod. 19.5 and Deut. 30.15 c. and 1 Sam. 8.11 Secondly Preaching is profitable before the Sacrament that therby our affections may be excited that is I. That our sorrow may be excited and stirred up for our sinnes which were the cause of the death and suffering of our blessed Saviour II. That our desire may be excited and stirred up for grace and Christ that is that we may long for Christ and his grace which are onely profitable unto us for pardon of our sinnes past and preservation against sinne for the time to come III. That our joy may be stirred up for that great love that God sheweth unto mankind in giving his onely and dearely beloved Sonne to death for their redemption and for that hope which we have that he died for our particular sinnes and rose againe for our Justification It is necessary before we come unto the Lords Table that we should be admonished of all these now how can we better be admonished of them then in and by the preaching of the word of God Thirdly preaching is requisite before the Communion because great is the danger that they incurre that abuse or profane it or come not lcoathed with a wedding garment thereunto 1 Cor. 11.28 29. Matth. 22. Quest What is required in the receivers of this blessed Sacrament Answ Three things namely Preparation Examination and Execution of the two former I have formerly spoken it remaines therefore now onely to speak of the last which respects a threefold time viz. the time Precedent the time present and the time Subsequent First this Execution respects the time precedent or going before the receiving of this Supper wherein two things are wont to be done by the faithfull to wit First a serious Meditation of what they are to undertake and about to doe namely I. They are going to enter into a Covenant with the Lord that is either to renew that Covenant which they have often made or at least to make that contract wh●ch hitherto they have neglected Now the scope of this Covenant is that they for their parts promise and desire that they may become new creatures 2. Corinthians 5.17 Galathians 6.15 And CHRIST for his part promiseth that he will be theirs 2. Corinthians 6.16 They come unto the Table of the Lord with a desire to be ingrafted into CHRIST Iohn 15.4 and with a purpose for the time to come to shew themselves the godly branches of a holy stocke Romans 11.16 c. II. They come to confesse their sinnes to pray unto God and to praise his name for his infinite mercies therefore that they may doe these things diligently they either doe performe or ought to performe a threefold duty namely First consider how great gaine doth accrew unto them from the death of Christ that the remembrance thereof may make them powre forth themselves in thankefulnesse unto God Secondly they ought to search and inquire out all their sinnes and all the reliques of concupiscence that remaine within them that so they may truly and understandingly confesse their sinnes and blush for their sinnes and crave forgivenesse of all their sinnes Thirdly they must observe the state of their soules principally their wants weaknesses defects and imperfections that so they may desire the supply of them with the greater zeale and fervour III. They come unto Christ and to his Communion they come unto a spirituall Feast and most rich treasure And therefore they whet and sharpen their appetite that they may feed the harder and be fully satisfied with the fatnesse of Gods house For if they be CHRISTS and he theirs if they be worthy receivers of this holy Communion and heavenly banquet then they shall have First remission and pardon of all their sinnes 1 Iohn 2.1 2. and 3.5 And Secondly reconciliation with the Lord their God in and through Christ 2 Cor. 5.19 c. although formerly they have beene enemies and strangers Ephes 2.13 c. Thirdly they shall have preservation from sinne for the time to come the grace of God shall sustaine them in the houre of temptation 1 Samuel 25.32 c. 2 Corinth 12.9 Fourthly they shall have an increase of grace and strength in the inward man they shall have both power to will and doe Philip. 2.13 Rom. 7.25 And Fifthly a Communion of both the natures of CHRIST that is both of the humane nature and also of the divine 2 Peter 14. and 1 Iohn 1.3 Yea Sixthly they shall be made partakers of life eternall Rom. 6.23 and 1 Peter 1.5 Now these things the worthy and faithfull receiver may expect and ought to desire with all his heart soule and spirit Secondly after the Meditation of the worke which we are to undertake followes the fitting and preparing of our selves for these things above mentioned and that three manner of wayes viz. First by sequestring of our selves from all worldly imployments and distractions if it be possible the day before we are to receive Secondly by corroborating and strengthning our meditation by fasting For this I. Expels and drives away all sluggishnesse dulnesse and idlenesse And II. Sharpens the mind unto meditation and examination of our wants and weaknesses And III. Doth singularly helpe and further us in prayer For as empty vessels sound the loudest so
shew us the fruits and effects of Covetousnesse Answ 1 that so we might beware of avarice it selfe The onely cause that we read of which moved Iudas to betray his Master was covetousnes therfore we should avoid it with all our power through liberality some have entertained Angels into their houses yea Christ himselfe but through covetousnesse some have expulsed CHRIST out of their coasts as the Gergesines and some have sold Christ unto death as Iudas here did Wherefore let the horriblenesse of the fruit make us abhorre the tree Answ 2 II. This History was written to shew us Gods anger against Murderers such as Iudas was he being a maine a better in the death of CHRIST Hence we may learne Observ That murder as a great evill is to be avoided and shunned Quest 5 Why must we so carefully beware lest we fall into this sinne of murder Answ 1 First because it is contrary to God for he gives life and therefore he will not have the life of creatures to be taken away but murderers take away life whence Sathan is called a murderer and Lyar Iohn 8.44 Answ 2 Secondly because life is the best temporall gift which God gives unto man and th●refore the Devill saith Skin for skin and all that a man hath he will give for his life Now a murderer robs him whom he murders of this most precious temporall blessing Answ 3 Thirdly we had need carefully to avoid this sinne because God will not have it pardoned or suffer it to be forgiven Read Exod 21 23. and Deuter. 19.13 Numb 35.31 Hence Iacob inveighes against yea curses his Sonnes cruelty and murder although it was done for to revenge that great indignity which was offered unto their Sister Dinah Genes 49.7 Answ 3 III. This History was written to shew us Gods anger against Traitors for we read but of two that hanged themselves and they were both traitors Achitophel and Iudas And therefore Salomon saith J hate a Traitor Having handled some generals concerning this history it remaines now that we should treat particularly of these two verses Quest 6 How many things are observable in these two verses Answ These two namely First Iudas his repentance wherein we have three particulars observable to wit I. The occasion thereof viz. when he saw that Christ was condemned § 2. II. The action which is twofold to wit First he repented him of what he had done § 3. Secondly he made restitution of the money backe againe § 4. III. His confession which is twofold namely First he confesseth his owne sinne § 5. Secondly he confesseth Christs innocency § 6. Secondly the Priests answer unto him wherein two things are observable viz. I. Their excuse of themselves What is that to us § 7. II. Their laying the blame upon him See thou to it § 8. Sect. 2 § 2. When he saw that Christ was condemned What is meant here by Seeing Quest 1 First some by Video to see understand Intelligo Answ 1 to perceive or understand as if the meaning of our Evangelist were when he understood that Christ was condemned to death c. according to those phrases Loquere ut videam speake so that I m●y understand and know what thou saiest and Christ saw their hearts that is knew the thoughts of their hearts as if Iudas before now knew not that Christ should dye or that his death was intended or aimed at by the Pharisees But this cannot be thus For I. Christ had plainly foretold his death The Sonne of man must be betrayed into the hands of sinfull men and crucified and had told Iudas that it should be by him II. The Scripture saith plainly the Scribes and Pharisees sought to slay Christ and Iudas hereupon askes what will ye give me and I will betray him unto you Matth. 26.15 And therefore he could not be ignorant that his life was aimed at III. If he were not guilty of the death of Christ then why was his punishment so great Secondly to See is to consider or intently looke Answ 2 into the thing done as if before he had not sufficiently foreseene the nature of the fact the infamy that would follow the doer thereof the end of the fact and the wrath of God against him that did it these things he had not observed nor taken into his consideration before but now he saw them most clearely when the fact was done Whence two things may be observed to wit First that for the most part men sinne inconsiderately never considering what they do till the deed be done and then like fooles say Non putaram I did not thinke it Secondly that the conscience is quicker sighted when the sinne is committed then it was before for although before sinne we see not the nature fruit or end of it yet after sinne we do Rom. 6.21 § 3. Hee repented Sect. 3 What arguments or signes or shewes of repentance Quest 1 may a Reprobate have The Reprobate may have a certaine repentance in him of sinne whereby Answ First he doth acknowledge his sinne And Secondly is prickt with a feeling of Gods wrath for sinne And Thirdly is grieved for the punishment of sinne And Fourthly doth confesse and acknowledge his sinne And Fifthly acknowledgeth God to be just in the punishing of sinne And Sixthly desireth to be saved And Seventhly promiseth repentance in his misery and affliction in these words I will sinne no more And all these it may be were in Iudas Js not repentance good hath not the Lord exhorted all unto repentance and promised pardon Quest 2 to every penitent person Ezech. 18. Matth. 3. Acts 3.19 Why then is Iudas his repentance named and himselfe not pardoned First as there is a good and true repentance so there is a bad and false and therefore although Answ 1 some repentance be good yet all is not Answ 2 Secondly repentance is divided into two parts namely humiliation and conversion mortification and vivification Answ 3 Thirdly the repentance here spoken of signifies onely humiliation Answ 4 Fourthly we divide humiliation either I. According to the motion thereof Or II. According to the moving cause thereof Or III. According to the effect thereof First humiliation is divided according to the motion thereof thus I. There is a solitary or sole humiliation when sinners are onely dejected and cast downe by reason of their sinnes II. There is a humiliation conjoyned with comfort and a certaine ere ion of the Spirits to some joy Quest 3 Hath this humiliation alwayes place in the righteous or have the godly alwayes some joy and comfort commixed with their humiliation Answ No for often they are destitute of all hope and comfort for a long time as Psalm 32.6 Quest 4 Doe the godly then despaire when they are destitute of this hope and comfort Answ There is a double desperation namely First temporall and this is incident to the righteous as appeares by Iob. 3. and David Psal 32. and 80. Secondly finall
Faith and willing to be baptized must then be admitted unto the Sacrament of Baptisme and baptized in the name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost Marke 16.16 Acts 10.47 But these two Answers are to be understood of those who are of yeares of discretion and not of Infants Who ought to bee or may bee Baptized Quest 6 Those who are baptized are either Answ I. Men of ripe yeares or yeares of discretion Now these Adulti doe either First not professe the Faith of Christ or are without the Church of Christ and these are not to be baptized Or Secondly doe professe the Religion of Christ and desire to be baptized and these as was said before are to be admitted Or II. Infants now these are either Answ 3 First the Children of Iewes Turkes and Heathens who are without the Church and these are not to be baptized Or Secondly they are the Children of those who are wiihin the Church and these are to be baptized Quest 8 Whether is the Sacrament of Baptisme necessary or not Answ 1 First it is necessary because it is commanded in this verse and Marke 16.16 For as we must pray if we would be blessed because God hath comman●ed it Matth. 7.7 and as we must eate if we would live because according to Gods owne ordinance that is the meanes to preserve life so we must be baptized because God hath ordained that by that doore we should enter into the Arke the Church Answ 2 Secondly but Baptisme is not absolutely necessary unto salvation as appeares thus I. God did precisely command that Circumcision to which Baptisme answers now should be on the eighth day before which time without doubt many dyed and yet it were absurd peremtorily to set downe that they were damned II. Jf Circumcision had beene absolutely necessarily unto salvation then Moses and Aaron would not have omitted it for 40 yeares in the Desart III. This Doctrine of the absolute necessity of Baptisme was unknowne to the ancient Fathers and primitive Church who therefore did oftentimes forbeare baptisme although we approve not of this their fact till a little before death Hence Constantine the great was not baptized untill a little before his death and Valentinian by reason of his delay was not at all baptized whom notwithstanding Ambrose pronounceth to be in heaven And Bernard in his 37. 77. Epistle affirmeth that not every privation or want of Baptisme but only the contempt and palpable neglect of it is damnable IV. The Papists themselves confesse that the Baptisme of the Spirit Baptismas flaminis and Martyrdome Baptismas sanguinis are sufficient without the Baptisme of water that is where or when it cannot be had unto salvation V. CHRIST himselfe saved the Thiefe upon the Crosse without Baptisme Luke 23.43 And therefore it is not so absolutely necessary that without it none can be saved Quest 9 What doe we promise in Baptisme Answ 1 First we promise to renounce sinne Rom. 6.6 and 1 Cor. 6.19 and Acts 3.26 and 1 Peter 4.6 Answ 2 Secondly to serve the Lord in newnesse of life all the dayes we live on the Earth Rom. 6.4 and 7.6 and 2 Corinth 5.17 Galath 6.15 Ephes 4.22.23 and 4.1 and 1 Peter 2.9 and 1 John 2.6 Sect. 5 § 5. In the name of the Father c. In this forme wherein the Apostles must baptize those who are instructed our Saviour by nominating of the Father Sonne and holy Ghost doth plainly insinuate and teach unto his Apostles the profound mistery of the Trinity and Unity For these three names Father Sonne and holy Ghost doe expresse the Trinity of divine persons and this phrase In nomine non in nominibus in the name in the singular number and not in the names in the plurall doth evidently shew the Unity in Trinity or that these three ever blessed persons have but one essence and nature Pet. Galat. Lib. 2. Cap. 12. page 63. medio § 6. And of the Sonne Sect. 6 From these words we may draw this plaine Argument against the Arrians Argum. who deny the Deity of CHRIST He in whose name we are baptized is truly and essentially God But we are baptized as well in the name of the Sonne as of the Father and holy Spirit in this verse Therefore the Sonne is aswell God in nature and essence as the Father and holy Spirit are and consequently he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the same nature and substance with the Father § 7. And of the holy Ghost Sect. 7 Deuterius an Arrian Bishop being at Bizantium as he was about to baptize one Barbas after his blasphemous manner saying J baptize thee in the name of the Father through the Sonne and in the holy Ghost which forme of words is contrary to the prescript rule of Christ who in this place commanded his Apostles to baptize all Nations In the name of the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost the water suddenly vanished so that he could not then be baptized Wherefore Barbas all amazed fled to a Church of purer Religion and there was entertained into the Church by baptisme Socrates in his Ecclesiasticall History Lib. 7. Cap. 17. reporteth the like History of a Jew who had beene oftentimes baptized and came to ●aulus a Novation Bishop to receive the Sacrament againe but the water vanished and his villany being detected he was banished the Church Because I have spoken divers things in divers places before of the Father and the Sonne here therefore thus briefly passe them over speaking something more largely of the holy Spirit because hitherto I have treated of that divine person more sparingly How many things are requisite to be knowne Quest 1 concerning the holy Ghost Two namely Answ First Nomen his name He is called 1. Spirit Then 2. Holy Secondly his nature wherein two things are observable viz. I. Veritas the truth thereof wherein two things are included to wit First that he is God with God Secondly that he is a distinct person from the Father and the Sonne II. Priprietas the properties thereof namely that First he proceeds from the Father and the Sonne Secondly that he is equall to the Father and the Sonne Thirdly what his operations and workes are What is meant by this word Spirit Quest First this word Spirit is taken either First literally and that two manner of wayes to wit either Answ 1 I. For an invisible corporeall essence as for example First sometimes for the aire and wind Secondly sometimes for the blast or breath of the Lungs Or II. Spirit is taken for an invisible incorporeall essence which is two-fold namely either First created as Sathan specters the reasonable soule of man and the good Angels Secondly uncreated and thus God the Father God the Sonne and God the holy Ghost are called Spirits Secondly figuratively and thus it is taken either I. Spiritually and thus First the power and Deity of Christ is sometimes called Spirit And Secondly sometimes the