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A69028 The rule of faith, or, An exposition of the Apostles Creed so handled as it affordeth both milke for babes, and strong meat for such as are at full age / by ... Nicholas Bifield ; ... now published ... by his sonne, Adoniram Bifield. Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622.; Byfield, Adoniram, d. 1660. 1626 (1626) STC 4233.3; ESTC S113882 419,023 572

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be an excellent estate he brings vs to we are redeemed out of the earth we are first fruits to God and the Lambe Revel 14. 4. hee accounts of vs as a peculiar people and as his onely treasure in the world Tit. 2. 14. The fifth question is when Christ died And that is answered either by the season of his death or by the Chronologie of it For the season S. Paul saith he died in the due time Rom. 5. 6. Christ himselfe saith it was when he had finished the performance of what was shadowed in the types and ceremonies of the Old Testament when all things were accomplished hee gaue vp the ghost Ioh. 19. 28 30. The Author to the Hebrewes saith it was once in the end of the world Heb. 9. 26 27 28. The Angell told Daniel that the Messiah should be cut off after 62. weekes in propheticall account from the time of his prayer Dan. 9. 26. Saint Peter said it was at the time that God had appointed in his eternall counsell and foreknowledge Act. 2. 23. yea he died precisely at the very houre God had set so as he could not be killed either before or after Ioh. 7. 30. and 13. 1. and that houre was the ninth houre of the day euen at the time when the Euening Sacrifice was offered vp Matth. 27. 46. 50. For the Chronologie Scaliger saith he died in the yeare of the world 3982. and the common opinion is that hee died in the 34. yeare of his owne age and on the Friday as we terme the fifth day of our weeke which that yeare was the 15. day of their Moneth Nisan or as others thinke the 14. day which that yeare answered to the seuenth day of our Aprill Quest If Christ were slaine towards the end of the world how can it be said that he was the Lambe slaine from the beginning of the world Revel 13. ●8 Answ Both are true in diuers respects For in respect of the Storie of his death he died at the time before specified but for many other respects it may be truly said hee was slaine from the beginning of the world as 1. In respect of Gods counsell and foreknowledge He was dead in Gods counsell from euerlasting 2. In respect of the promise of his death giuen in Paradise Gen. 3. 15. 3. In respect of the efficacie of his death for the iustice of God was satisfied with that promise of his death knowing it should as certainly be as if it had beene then fulfilled Neither was the effect here before the cause for if a Suretie compound with the Creditor the Debtor is deliuered out of prison though the payment be made long after at the time the Suretie and the Creditor agree vpon so it was here 4. In respect of the Sacrifices which shadowed out his death which were slaine from the beginning of the world Christ was slaine typically in those Sacrifices Adam or Abel offered to God 5. In respect of his seruants that were martyred So Christ was slaine when Abel was slaine 6. In respect of the faith of the godly for it is the propertie of faith to make things to come to be present as giuing a substance or person to things hoped for and a present demonstrarion of things which yet are not seene Heb. 11. 1. 7. In respect of sinne which was the cause of his death which was committed by the Elect and was the cause of his death Their sinne was his death when they began to sinne death was in the pot for Christ and so their sinne was remitted them only for the respect of that satisfaction was to be made in the sacrifice of Christ Rom. 3. 21. to 27. The Vse wee may make of the time of Christs death may be 1. To leaue the times and seasons to God and not to exact an account of him why he doth not doe the things concerne the Church in the time we desire or looke after Though the death of Christ was deferred almost 4000. yeares yet we see God saith it was the due time though perhaps a full demonstration of the reason of it doe not appeare to vs. God is so wise and good as we must beleeue that is the best time for euery worke which he chuseth and therefore we should giue God the glory of the time of euery worke of his whether concerning the Church in generall or our selues in particular as beleeuing that God hath done in the very day that which was fittest for the day and so also in the things we desire either of deliuerance or blessings we should wait till the time appointed come and beleeue that all shall be done when it is most seasonable 2. We should hence be much established about the time of our owne death God hath set the houre and till that houre come no disease nor enemies shall euer be able to take away our life and therefore wee should follow our worke with diligence and a holy securitie and leaue it to God to take vs from our worke when he sees it to be the fittest time Thus of the time when he died The consequences of his death follow and they must be considered negatiuely or affirmatiuely Negatiuely It is obserued by the Euangelists That not a bone of Christ was broken which is worthy to be noted First because the Iewes had made a request to Pilate that the leggs of those which were crucified might be broken to hasten their death that they might not hang on their Crosses on the day of the great Sabbath Iohn 19. 31 32. But notwithstanding they were preuented for Christ was dead before they came backe to shew that he died when himselfe would not when they would to let them haue cause to guesse thereby that he was more than a bare man Secondly because of the excellent signification of this thing for it is said the Scripture had said that not a bone of him should be broken Iohn 19. 36. Now the Scripture had only said so of the Paschall Lambe that not a bone thereof should be broken Exod. 12. 46. which manifestly shewes that Christ was the true Passeouer the true Paschall Lambe which was sacrificed for vs 1 Cor. 5. 6. and withall it signifies that the mysticall bodie of Christ shall be preserued The Church may haue many enemies but yet a bone thereof shall not be broken The flesh of the Church may be wounded but not a bone of the Church shall be broken Affirmatiuely the consequents of his death bot the piercing of his side with a Speare and the testimonie giuen of his glory in his death The side of Christ after he was dead was pierced with a Speare by one of the Souldiers and forthwith came out water and bloud Iohn 19. 34. and this was a businesse of so high a nature that the Euangelist saith thus vpon it He that saw it bare record and his record is true and he knoweth that he saith true that he might beleeue Now the side of
Christ was pierced First that the Scripture might be fulfilled which said They shall looke vpon him whom they haue pierced Ioh. 19. 37. Zach. 12. 10. Secondly that great mysterie of the originall of the Church is here imported As Eue was formed out of the side of Adam when hee was asleepe so the Church was to bee formed out of that which flowed from the side of Christ when he was dead God opened the side of Adam when he would make the woman and so God opened the side of Christ the second Adam when he was to make the Christian Church Now that place of the Prophet shewes what vse wee should make of this part of the Passion of Christ namely to take occasion from thence to bewaile our sinnes that were the cause of his death and to acknowledge that we were the men that are spiritually guilty of that cruelty shewed vnto Christ And because our hearts by nature are barren and vnapt to this godly sorrow we must pray God to powre out vpon vs of his Spirit as it is a Spirit of compassion to melt our hearts and a Spirit of deprecation to make vs able by prayer to sue for pardon of our sins and to beseech God to accept of the propitiation made in Christs bloud that so his wrath may not fall vpon vs for our sinnes Now the water and bloud that came out of the side of Christ was both miraculous as is thought and wonderfully mysticall That it was miraculous is gathered from that extraordinary notice S. Iohn takes of it Iohn 19. 34. and 1 Iohn 5. 6. wherin the miracle should lye is not easie to tell There is a skin that incloseth the heart called Pericardium which holdeth water in it that cooleth the heart of man which is so essentiall to life that if it be consumed it is impossible the creature should liue Now I take it that the wonder lyes in this that whereas in death especially such a painefull death as Christs was that water is consumed and dried vp with the extreame heat of the heart striuing for life yet in Christ who died not only willingly but also before the time he needed to die with the paine the water was still in that bag or skin and therefore when the speare pierced the heart both water and bloud came forth Now for the Reasons why this fell out diuers are assigned For first hereby the truth of Christs death is infallibly proued For no creature can liue if the heart and that Pericardium be pierced And it concernes our saluation that Christ should die indeed and not in appearance Secondly the chiefe thing intended by this suffering was the discouery of a dreadfull mysterie concerning the vertue of the death of Christ for this is he that came by water and bloud euen Iesus Christ that brings with him for our saluauation both the water of Sanctification to wash vs from the staine of our sinnes and the bloud of expiation to make full atonement before God for the guilt of our sinnes Not by water only but by bloud also Moses when he deliuered the people of Israel in that bodily deliuerance came by water when he went thorow the Red-sea but he brought no bloud for atonement Iohn Baptist when he brought tidings of Spirituall deliuerance he came by water washing men to signifie repentance but there was no bloud that he could exhibite and his water was but Symbolicall and significatiue But Christ came by water and bloud which hee not onely powred out on the Crosse but hath left in the hearts of all beleeuers as witnesses not only to him but to them also 1 Ioh. 5. 7 8. For as there be Three in heauen that beare witnesse of Christ and the happinesse of Christians in him viz. the Father who testified by voice from heauen Mat. 3. and the Word who testified both by doctrine and miracles and the Holy Ghost who testified as at other times so on the day of Pentecost Act. 2. So there be Three on earth that testifie viz. the Spirit of Adoption that witnesseth to our spirits and the water of Mortification which washeth away and destroyeth the staine and power of sinne and the bloud of Iustification for a beleeuer relying vpon the bloud of Christ as the pacification for his sinnes is effectually deliuered from the guilt of them Now there would be no water to wash him from his sinnes nor bloud to make atonement if Christ had not shed both water and bloud vpon the Crosse Now all this is testified by the Spirit also in the Gospell and by water in Baptisme and by bloud in the Lords Supper and these also receiue all their life and force from the water and bloud that came out of the side of Christ on the Crosse Now the vse that we should make of this dreadfull Mystery should be to flie vnto this part of the Passion of Christ for our comfort against the power and guilt of our sinnes as beleeuing that out of the side of Christ at this time did runne that Fountain that was opened vnto the house of Dauid and to the inhabitants of Ierusalem for sinne and for vncleannesse Zach. 12. 1. Though our sinnes were neuer so many and loathsome yet in this Fountaine they may be cleane washed away but then withall wee must striue to get this Fountaine within vs this miraculous Fountaine I say that runnes water and bloud and to shew that we haue indeed a part in the death of Christ by the sound fruits of mortification and by the solide tran quilitie of our conscience beleeuing the expiation made in the bloud of Christ for vs as verily as if that bloud had beene really sprinkled vpon our hearts Some Diuines doe obserue another mystery in this water and bloud running out of the side of Christ for they obserue that as out of the side of the first Adam came the woman that deceiued all the world so out of the side of Christ came redemption and oblation from that deceiuing Thus of the piercing of Christs side after his death The testimonie giuen of his glory in his death was partly diuine and partly humane The diuine testimonies were three the Earthquake the rending of the Rockes and the opening of the Graues Matth. 27. 51 52. The trembling of the earth may signifie diuers things as First the immediate presence of the Diuine Nature for as the earth trembled when Christ came to giue the Law on Sinai Psal 67. 8 9. and as both heauen and earth shall melt and be in a manner consumed when Christ comes to Iudgement 2 Pet. 3. 10. So now that Christ is making atonement for the sinnes of the Elect and going out of the world hee makes the earth doe him homage and acknowledge his Diuinitie at that time when he seemed so despised amongst men Secondly the horrible indignitie of the fact of the Iewes in killing Christ the senselesse creatures tremble when the Lord of life dies and the Creator
was his Father and the rather because in the Originall the proposition imports that this Conception was not onely by him but of him Answ The holy Ghost did worke this Conception not materially but effectually by causing it to be not by giuing matter out of himself to the Nature of Christ As Damascen said the holy Ghost begetteth not spermatically but operatiuely And Bernard saith that Christ was conceiued not of the substance but of the power not by any generation but by the appointment and benediction of the holy Ghost Rom. 11. vlt. all things are said to be of God Now it were senselesse therefore to conclude that God is the Father of all things for though he made all things yet hee did not make them out of his own substance for he is Father that makes a thing to be out of his owne substance so the holy Ghost did not make the humane Nature of Christ For the fourth there were two things done by the holy Ghost in this conception the first was the production of the humane Nature the other was the vniting of it to the second Person in the Trinity The first of these is most properly the worke of the holy Ghost the secōd but in som respects for the secōd Person in Trinity did assume the matter so prepared wrought by the holy Ghost The humane nature produced was both the body and soule of our Sauiour now in the production of the body of Christ there are two things to be considered first the preparation of the matter of his bodie secondly the sanctification of it The matter of the body of Christ prepared in the conception was the very substance of the flesh of the Virgin that is the seed or purest bloud of the Virgin separated by the holy Ghost and carried to the place of conception and therefore is Christ called the fruit of her wombe Luk. 1. 42 The sanctification of this matter containes in it two things first the washing of that substance from the staine of sin with which it was infected by nature so as now it should neuer more haue any spot or staine of sin in it and the stopping of the imputation of Adams sinne secondly the infusion of all purenesse and holinesse which belongs vnto the soule aswell as the body in that very moment it was ioyned to the body Now that Christ was conceiued without sinne of that there was no sin in that flesh when it became the flesh of Christ is manifest by these Scriptures he was made like vnto vs in all things sinne onely excepted Heb. 4. 15. and Rom. 8. 3. he was said to be made onely in the similitude of sinfull flesh Against this diuers things are obiected as Ob. 1. That the Scripture saith that Christ was made sinne for vs. Answ He was made sinne for vs as he was made a Sacrifice for sinne so the sinne offerings in the Old Testament were called sinne Againe he was made sinne for vs by imputation because our sinnes were charged vpon him but he had no sinne in his Nature 1. Pet. 2. 21. Ob. 2. Whosoeuer were in Adam sinned in Adam Rom 5. 12. But Christ was in Adam as appeareth by the Genealogie which is drawne vp euen to Adam Luke 3. Answ It is not true that all that were in Adam sinned in him for they onely sinned that were in him not onely in respect of the substance of the flesh but in respect of the carnal manner by which ordinarily man is begotten by man but Christ was in Adam in respect of the substance of his flesh but not in respect of the manner of propagation by him because he was conceiued without the seed of man and therefore sinned not in Adam or thus Originall sin is deriued vnto Adams Posterity by propagation only now Christ to preuent that came into the world by this wonderfull conception by the holy Ghost Paul saith not of one man but by one man sin entered into the world Christ is onely from Adam other men are from him in respect of substance and by him in respect of propagation Ob. 3. But the flesh of the Virgin Mary was sinfull and therefore his flesh must needs be so Answ That flesh of hers was first sanctified made cleane by the holy Ghost before it was the flesh of Christ Ob. 4. If it be granted corruption of nature was not in Christ yet there is another part of Originall sinne and that is guiltinesse of Adams sinne in Paradise for all his posterity being in him sinned in him as Leui paid Tythes in Abraham and therefore that flesh of Christ sinned in Adam and was guilty of Adams particular offence though it neuer was propagated for propagation caries downe onely corruption of nature or an euill disposition to sinne after conception Answ If Adams offence bee imputed to none but to such as come of him by propagation as the Apostle imports Rom. 5. 12. then this scruple is so auoided secondly doth not the sanctification of that flesh in the wombe of the Virgin clense it from Adams actuall offence aswell as from euill disposition thirdly what inconuenience will follow if we grant that Adams sin was imputed to Christ so as we vnderstand it in respect of the Malediction for Christ was a surety for all sinnes Adams sin and all the sin of his posterity Ob. 5. Vpon whomsoeuer death came he sinned but death came vpon Christ therefore it seemes he sinned Answ It is true that whomsoeuer death by his owne power doth preuaile against that party surely sinned because death is the wages of sinne But death did not exercise any power ouer Christ for hee was not compelled to die but laid downe his owne life voluntarily Iohn 10. 17. 18. besides death befell him not as a sinner but as a surety for sinne and so though death came vpon him for sinne yet it was not for his sinne but for other mens The Papists to auoid sinne in the flesh of Christ say that the Virgin Mary was conceiued without sinne and so it came to passe that Christ was without sinne But this is a senselesse do●age for first where doe they proue it by Scripture that shee was without sinne Secondly if shee were conceiued without sinne then her parents were so too and if her parents then theirs and so into an infinite thirdly then what needed Christ this conception by the holy Ghost Thus of the producing of the body of Christ His soule was produced as the soules of other men are that is It was immediately created by the holy Ghost and infused into his body onely there is difference amongst diuines about the time of the infusing of the soule of Christ for in the ordinarie course Nature proceeds in this manner first there is the masse of bloud or seed receiued in the wombe but there is no parts of a body framed at the first after a certaine number of weekes
him or bee quickly remoued if it were possible and might stand with Gods will there was no necessity that his Agonie should abide still vpon him Secondly if it be vnderstood of his death yet all that might bee without sinne because they are the words of Christ now astonished and amazed his vnderstanding and memory by the violence of the paine being interrupted in their working for a short time As a Clocke may be perfect and yet stand by reason of some outward cause as a mans hand or the weather or the like so the frame of our Sauiours affections and desires was most perfect though by the violence of the hand of God vpon him for a time his nature remembred only the preseruation of her selfe From this frailty of our Sauiour shewed in the matter of his petition weake Christians may gather much comfort and perswasion that their weaknesse and frailties in prayer shall be passed by of God and Christ 3. The clauses limiting his petition are two Frst if it bee possible Secondly not my will but thy will be done which as they shewed the holinesse of Christ in desiring to auoid the requesting of absurd contrary things and to submit himselfe his desires to Gods will notwithstanding the tormēt he was in so it is a notable example to teach vs what to do in all distresses yea the bitterest crosses can befall vs euen to striue vehemently to beare Gods sharpest stroakes with all humble submission to his good will and pleasure Thus of the fourth point in his prayer The fift point is the issue and euent of his prayer and that is reported partly by the Euangelist and partly by the Apostle to the Hebrewes The Euangelist saith that an Angell came from heauen and comforted him in his Agonie Luk. 22. 43. which may teach vs to know that when God will not presently deliuer vs from the crosse yet he is able to comfort vs vnder the crosse and if ordinary meanes faile he can supplywith extraordinary If men on earth will not pitty vs he can send his Angels from heauen to releeue vs. The Apostle to the Hebrewes further tels vs euen that this prayer was heard of God as he reports Heb. 5. 7. Now from hence ariseth another great scruple and that is how it can be said this prayer was heard seeing hee was not deliuered but did suffer death I answer if you vnderstand his prayer only of the speedy taking off of Gods hand then there is no difficultie or doubt and if it bee vnderstood of death wee must fly to a distinction which is thus God heareth prayer two wayes the one when he directly grants what we expresly aske the other when he giues vs so much of our suit as is good for vs and what he denies recompenceth in some other thing which is answerable thereunto and more profitable for vs. So he dealt with Christ here though he did not free him from death yet he did free him from the hurt of death so as he was able to beare it and was deliuered from it in due time which was all that which the nature of Christ in distresse in effect sought viz. the preseruation of it selfe and this may bee very vsefull for vs to obserue God may seeme to deny vs many things which yet he grants and our weakest prayers may get vs some blessing though wee feele it not for the present and if God change with vs and giue vs that which is better for vs than that which we aske he doth vs no wrong In hearing prayer God considers not so much the pleasing of our wills as the furthering of our Saluation And therefore wee must take heed we grow not froward or discouraged and iudge that God heareth vs not because he lets vs pray often and yet according to the letter of our praier we see not that we are heard let this example of Christ that prayed thrice and the like of Paul praying thrice against the temptation of the Deuill stay our heart and teach vs as to get skill and resolution to pray so to seeke the skill of Gods different manner of hearing of prayer Thus of what Christ did now followes to consider what was done to him and that both by the Iewes and by his owne Disciples Concerning the behauiour of the Iewes in the apprehension of Christ I obserue two things First how they came to Christ and met him Secondly how they laid hands vpon him and bound him and led him away About their comming to Christ three things would be noted 1. Who came 2. How they came furnished 3. What communication passed betweene Christ and them when they were come For the first The persons that came to Christ were the Iewes and Iudas souldiers and feruants all sent from the High Priests and Pharisies and Elders of the people Matt. 26. 47. Iohn 18. 3. And they were a great multitude of them So naturall is the hatred that the men of the world beare to Christ that it is easie to get men enow to beare armes against Christ or to doe hurt to Religion or religious persons but wee see in our times what a wonderfull hard thing it is to get men or money to doe any seruice against Antichrist For the second Iudas and the Iewes came thus furnished They first get a band of men which being not in the power of the Priests they must needs haue them as borrowed from Pilate And with this Band they send their owne officers and all were furnished with weapons swords and staues and the Text notes that they were a great multitude of them Now what was all this to doe It was to take Christ Christ I say that was knowne to be so peaceable a Man and so quiet as no man came neere him for meekenesse and lowlinesse and besides he was vsually in the Temple and so easie to be taken at any time or in any place if they will needs lay violent hands vpon him But obserue two memorable things First the effect of an ill conscience in Iudas and the Priests they knowing the cause to be so naught suffer such a conflict with an armie of feares in their owne hearts that fearing lest both God and men should be against them they raise an armie of men for the effecting of their wicked purpose Oh the force of conscience What a fearefull basenesse is it to be wicked or to set vpon wicked purposes It is a very troublesome and chargeable thing to be engaged for the effecting of mischieuous deuices Secondly note how iust God is these sinfull men haue drawne their swords and bent their bowes against the Iust one How deseruedly therefore afterwards did God make the sword enter into their owne brests These men that entertaine but one Band of Romans against their Lord and King euen Christ shall afterwards receiue into their owne bowels and bosomes the swords of the whole armie of the Romans to reuenge their rebellion not against them but against
wrought therefore he would signifie that the new world had a Paradise prepared as well as the old world had at first In this answer of Christ diuers errours are confuted as 1. Theirs that said that the soules of men after death did either sleepe or perish 2. Theirs that dreame that mens soules must goe into Purgatory for this Theese had been a great offender and had not performed the satisfactions they talke of and yet went to heauen presently 3. Theirs also that say the soules of the faithfull before Christs Ascension were not in heauen but in Limbo 4. Theirs that say the soule of Christ went downe into hell locally after his death Paradise is not Hell and into Paradise he went 5. Theirs that say that outward Baptisme with water is precisely necessary to saluation whereas this Theefe was not baptised and yet saued 6. Theirs that thinke heauen is had for mens merits euen for the deserts of their good workes that is false for as Adam was placed in Paradise by Gods free gift and Creation so are all the godly placed in heauen and therefore doth Christ liken it to Paradise Eternall life is the gift of God Rom. 6. 23. Thus of the Conuersion of the Theefe The fourth testimony giuen to Christ on the Crosse before he died was the miraculous rending of the Veile of the Temple from the top to the bottome and that this fell out before the death of Christ appeares by Saint Luke Chap. 23. 45. The Temple had three roomes in it the one more inward as it were our Chancell and into that roome came only the High Priest once a yeare and was called Sanctum Sanctorum The Holy of Holies and in that roome was the Arke and the Mercy Seat The next to that was the Holy place as it were the body of our Church and into this place came the Priests only to offer sacrifice for there was the Altar for burnt offring and the Altar of Incense and the Table of the Shew-bread Now without this was a third roome whither the People came to worship and was called the Court and Solomons Porch It is resembled by our Church porch but it was a very great roome able to receiue a multitude of people Now the Veile was that parted the Holy of Holies from the Holy place and was made of Blew and Purple and Skarlet and fine twined linnen of cunning worke hanged vpon foure pillars of Shittim wood ouer-layed with gold The most holy place was a type of Heauen and the holy place a type of the Church Militant on Earth as it consists only of Gods elect as a Nation of Priests offering holy sacrifices to God The outward Court was a type of the visible Church as it confists both of good and bad professing the true worship of God The rending of the Veile signified diuers things 1. That God did abhorre and despise the Temple of the Iewes and was departed from them with indignation and had reiected that Nation for their reiecting of Christ his Son and that he did dissolue all their priuiledges and staine their glory If the Iewes will forsake God he will forsake them and so will hee deale with all Nations where he hath dwelt if they despise his word and Gospell and will not walke worthy of his mercies shewed to them 2. That there was now an end of ceremoniall worship the rending of the Veile was the seale of the words of Christ saying It is finished Now that Christ had fulfilled all was shadowed by these ceremonies by the tearing of the Veile he signified that there was now no further vse of those rites 3. That now we haue accesse freely to goe to the Mercy-seat euen to the Throne of Grace with our suits and requests in the name of Christ Iohn 1. 51. Eph. 2. 18. Heb. 4 16. 4. That whereas heauen was shut for our sinnes now it is opened by Christ and we may enter in as the Apostle expresly shewes Heb. 10. 19 20. The passage into heauen is now set open Only we should looke to our assurance and sound sanctification as followes vers 22. Dead 1 THESS 5. 9 10. 9. For God hath not appointed vs vnto wrath but to obtaine saluation by the means of our Lord Iesus Christ 10. Which died for vs that whether we wake or sleepe we should liue together with him HItherto of the crucifying of Christ His death followes And concerning his death I shall first consider of the Proposition Reasons and Vse in generall and then consider of diuers particular things that concerne the explication of the doctrine and storie of his death That Christ died is abundantly testified by the Scriptures 1 Cor. 15. 3. Now the reasons why it was necessarie that Christ should die are these 1. To satisfie the iustice of God for our sinnes The wages of sinne is death Rom. 6. 23. Christ therefore taking vpon him the similitude of sinfull flesh as our surety God condemned sinne in his flesh by inflicting death vpon him and so satisfied his iustice Obiect But can the death of one man satisfie so as to be accepted for the death of many men Sol. The death of one bare or meere man cannot bot the death of him that is the Sonne of God both God and man is of infinite price and so an infinite satisfaction Act. 20. 28. 2. In respect of the truth of God God had said The day thou eatest thereof dying thou shale die Gen. 2. 17. which presently fell vpon Adam in respect of spirituall death and in time inuaded his body and seazed vpon the bodies of his posteritie Now Christ comming in the first Adams stead must suffer what God had threatned and beare that punishment he had appointed 3. For the fulfilling of the types and prophecies of Scripture the Sacrifices were slaine and Esay had said He must be as a sheepe led to the slaughter Esay 53. 7. and Christ himselfe had foretold his owne death and buriall diuers times 4. For the ratifying of the New Testament and the confirming of his last Will wherein he grants by vertue of the new couenant with God all those Legacies that comprehend the spirituall and eternall felicitie of the Church This will is not of force without the death of the Testator Heb. 9. 15 16 17. 5. That he might abolish the power and kingdome of death and so deliuer vs from eternall death and from the authoritie of the Deuill who had power to inflict death vpon vs Rō 6. 10. 2 Tim. 1. 10. Heb. 2. 14. Ob. But seeing eternal death was due to vs for our sins how could Christ deliuer vs from it seeing he suffered not eternall death Or how did he suffer al was due to our sins seeing he suffered not eternall death Answ Death in it self is the wages of sin growes eternal only because men or deuils that suffer it cānot ouercome it performe sufficient satisfaction in a shorter time Now Christ in a short time
hate life for this very respect because it hinders the Lords presence from vs and keepes vs absent from him whom our soules loue 2. Thes 3. 5. 1. Iohn 3. 2. Psal 31. 19. 7. It should especially fire vs to a desire to imitate these sweet praises in God and to striue by all meanes to make our natures like to his we should from our hearts seriously constantly diligently endeuour to bee bountifull mercifull free patient and full of Loue as our God is Wee should neuer thinke we had a iot of good nature in vs till we could in some sound measure shew a constant disposition in these things 1. Iohn 4. 11. Luke 6. 36. Romanes 15. 4 5. Thirdly this Doctrine of Gods goodnesse is wonderfull comfortable if wee soundly consider our interest in the fauour of him that is so louing mercifull gratious and bountifull and especially against our sinnes and in the case of Afflictions for in both these Arguments of great consolation may bee drawne from the goodnesse of his nature as 1. Against the burthen and guilt of our sinnes it may greatly ease our hearts and quiet our consciences to know that he hath set vs vnder grace and freed vs from the hard conditions vnder the Law and so acknowledgeth satisfaction in his owne Sons death and passeth by without grieuance a world of infirmities in vs and is most ready to declare forgiuenesse of all our sins so as the Iustification of life by his grace shall exceed and ouercome the condemnation for our sins Rom. 5. 20. 21. Esay 55. 7. 2. In the case of afflictions as was partly shewed before for he is of so good nature 1. That he will not consume vs but onely try vs hee will not afflict vs for his pleasure but for our profit Heb. 12. 18. Lament 3. 21. Mal. 3. 17. Deut. 4. 31. 2. That he will not forsake vs nor chide for euer Nehemiah 9. 17. 31. Psal 103. 8 9. nothing shall separate vs from his loue Rom. 8. 38. Esay 54. 7. 10. 3. That he will heare vs gratiously when wee come to him in the day of trouble Zach. 13. 9. Psal 118. 5. Exod 22. 27. so as we may goe boldly to the Throne of grace to seeke help Heb. 4. 16. Nahum 1. 7. Yea he will shew himselfe to be a God of consolation 2. Cor. 1. 3. 4. That we shall neuer be oppressed by our Aduersaries though neuer so great and malicious Psal 1●8 6. if so good a God be on our side what can man doe against vs Psal 86. 14 15 16. and so in generall out of all affliction he will deliuer and giue a good end Psal 34. 17. Iames 5. 11. Hee will repent him of the euill Ioel 2. 13. Lastly heere is matter of great Humiliation 1. To all ill natured fierce vnmercifull froward and cruell minded persons for hence it appeares they are not of God they that are of God are like to his nature in some degree but these natures are of the diuell 3. Iohn 11. 1. Iohn 3. 6. 10. Iohn 8. 44. 2. To such as abuse this so great goodnesse of God as they doe that prophane the doctrine of it by taking liberty from thence to sinne the more securely and so turne the grace of God into wantonnesse wofull is the condition of such persons for thereby they heape vp wrath against the day of wrath and depriue themselues of all the benefits of Gods goodnesse Iude 3. Rom. 6. 1. Heb. 10. 29. Rom. 2. 5. 4. Deut. 29. 19. 3. To all wicked men that are in disgrace with God Oh what a miserie is it to want his fauour or suffer his displeasure that shewes so much goodnesse to all that serue him Exodus 34. 7. Iohn 3. 17. 19. 4. The best men in the Church may be most heartily grieued for their owne deficiencies that they cannot more admire loue and praise his infinite goodnesse Hitherto of the goodnesse of God His Iustice followes The Iustice of God comprehends his Truth and his Righteousnesse Gods Truth is diuersly magnified in Scripture partly as it is in himselfe and partly as it is declared towards the creatures God is Truth in himselfe three waies 1. In his Essence as he truely is and truely is such as he is said to be thus he is said to be the true God Ier. 10. 10. Ioh. 17. 3. and thus he winnes himselfe glory and triumphes ouer all the Idols of the Gentiles Ier. 10. 14. 1. Thes 1. 9. and thus God is truely infinite truely immutable truely immortall truely wise truely good truely iust c. 2. As he is that increated first and chiefe Truth and that immutable Archetype exemplar and Idea of all true things without himself as he is the frame of all things in his minde The true patternes of all things were in the minde of God from eternity and all created things are said to be true only as they answer these patternes 3. In his internall workes and so his decrees are all true not one of them mistaken or disappointed but haue their precise and punctuall accomplishment 2. God is true without himselfe towards the creatures and so 1. In his workes because all his workes he doth truely there is nothing counterfeit or dissembled or fained in them Reuel 15. 3. 16. 7. He did truely create and doth truely gouerne the world call iustifie sanctifie and will glorifie the Elect c. Psal 11● 7. 2. In his words all he saith is true This is called the iustice of his words and so 1. All his Commandements are true right Statutes and true iudgements and so they are as they containe an absolute platforme of Holinesse and haue no imperfection defect or wickednesse or iniquity in them Nehemiah 9. 13. Psal 19. 8 9. 119. 86. 142. 160. 2. All his promises are true and so the Couenant of grace is true the Gospell is the Word of Truth Not a Tittle of the good word of God shall faile Zach. 8. 8. Ephes 1. 13. 3. All his Threatnings are true and shall bee truly accomplished Rom. 2. 2. 4. All his Prophecies are true and faithfull sayings Reuel 22. 6. 7. The Truth of GOD is yet further magnified in Scripture 1. As it is the Fountaine of all Truth in the creature so God is called the God of Truth and the Light that inlightneth euery man in the world he is the Father of all light in the minds of the creatures Psal 31. 5. Iohn 1. 9. Iames 1. 17. 2. As it is eternall and immutable and inuincible no parcell of Gods Truth can faile Psal 117. 2. Mat. 5. 18. 24. 35. Rom. 3. 3 4. 2. Tim. 2. 13. great is the Truth and will preuaile It may bee ouerwhelmed with strong clouds and mountaines of darkenesse and error and yet it will so struggle and get ground that in the end it will destroy and consume what is exalted against it As we see in the consumption of the Kingdome of the man of sinne The
consideration of this doctrine of Gods Truth should first teach vs diuers duties for 1. We should striue to acknowledge and praise God for the glory of his Truth especially when we obserue the experience of it and can say this is the Word or Truth of the Lord and thus he hath fulfilled it Psal 89. 6. 92. 2. Isay 38. 19. 2. It should make vs with all confidence to beleeue what God saith to vs though it be in things vnlikely or aboue carnall Reason This is to seale to it that God is true Iohn 3. 33. thus did Abraham and Sarah Heb. 11. 23. 3. If any man want the Light of the Truth let him come hither euen to the God of Truth and hee will bee the true Light to enlighten him hee is the Father of Lights and therefore let him pray with Dauid that God would direct him in his Truth Iames 1. 17. Psal 25. 5. 43. 3. 4. It should make vs loue the Truth and sticke to it without fainting or discouragement though all the world doe oppose vs for the Lord wil be iustified in his Truth and it shall preuaile Wee should choose out that way of life which God hath directed vs and not doubt of the issue for there is no error or deceit in his waies they will be found all true Ierusalem should be called a Cittie of Truth Gods people should trade more heartily for the Truth then any other people would doe for any Merchandize They should loue the Truth but neuer sell it for any respect Zach. 8. 3. 19. Pro. 23. 23. Psal 119. 30. Phil. 4. 8. 5. It should fashion vs to the imitation of Gods Truth wee should be a people that hate lying and falshood and all deceitfull waies wee should speake truth euery man to his neighbour Ephes 4. 24. 25. Zeph. 3. 13. 6. It should teach vs in all straites to flie vnto God and beleeuing his promises to pleade his Truth for our succour trusting vpon him and committing our waies to him Psal 31. 5. as knowing that Gods Word hath bin tryed and purified in the fire seuen times and neuer failed and therefore we should rest our selues vnder the shadow of his winges whatsoeuer danger or aduersaries we haue Psal 12. 7. 36 7 8. 86. 14 15. Reuel 6. 10. 11. Yea if God doe himselfe afflict vs yet we should be sure and fully perswaded that his Mercy and Truth will neuer be taken from vs Psal 89. 34. 35. 7. It should teach vs to serue God in all sincerity without dissembling and hypocrisie and come neere to him with a true heart for God is Truth and cannot abide lying and hypocrisie He cannot be deceiued nor will he accept deceitfull workers as hee is our God in Truth so must we be his people in Truth and Righteousnesse Hebrewes 10. 22. Zach. 8. 8. 2. This Doctrine of Gods Truth may also serue for singular consolation to all the godly of whom such glorious things are spoken How many sweet comforts and promises are made in the whole Booke of God And how should it fill vs with refreshing to know that all these are true and that heauen and earth may sooner passe away then any iot of these good words shall faile of their Truth Psalme 146. 5 6. 3. It may also informe vs in diuers things as 1. That the Testimonie of God is Authenticall His Word is onely fit to iudge in all controuersies God is true and all men are lyars It is a most blasphemous impiety to deny vnto the God of Truth the fulnesse of sufficiencie to testifie or conclude in the things of his owne glory what men say may bee false but what God saith must bee true 2. Concerning the wofull estate of all men that liue in their sinnes without Repentance Oh how fearefull is their estate when all the curses written in Gods Booke must vnauoidablie bee executed vpon them God will not repent him of the least word in his Threatnings Hee is God and not man that he should repent 1. Sam 15. 29. 3. That true Religion will preuaile It may bee resisted and ouerwhelmed for a time but they shal not prosper that hate the Truth The Truth will get vp againe and ouercome because God is Truth and the power of his Truth is as great as the force of any other his Attributes Hitherto of the Truth of God His Righteousnesse followes His Righteousnesse is to bee considered more generally or more specially in generall the Righteousnesse of God is magnified in Scripture six waies 1. Because in himselfe hee is most pure and holy without any vice sinne defect or blemish aboue all that Holinesse can be found in all or any of the creatures Esay 6. 2. 1. Samuel 2. 2. 2. Because in all his dealings he is most iust he doth no wrong there is no iniquity in him his waies are neuer vnequall Psal 84. 11. Deut. 32. 4. 3. Because he is Author of all the Holinesse is in the creatures they haue nothing but what they haue receiued they haue all their Holinesse by participation 4. Because his Righteousnes for eminency is like great mountaines and for vnsearchablenesse is like a great deepe Psal 36. 7. Iob 37. 23. 5. Because hee executes Iustice in all places and at all times there are yeerely springs of iustice from God Esay 45. 8. 6. Because his Righteousnesse cannot be abolished In particular his Iustice is to bee considered either towards godly men or towards wicked men first then of his iustice towards godly men The iustice of God towards godly men is described in Scripture either as it is his iustice of Anger or his iustice of Grace The iustice of his anger towards the godly he hath shewed two waies 1. Towards their suretie Christ Iesus and how fearefully he was displeased with sinne euen in them may appeare in that he spared not his owne Sonne but abased him to the very condition of a seruant exposed him to the temptations of the diuels and the disgraces and oppositions of vnreasonable men and laid vpon him all the curses of the Law humbled him to death euen the death of the Crosse powred out vpon him his fierce wrath when he made his soule a very sacrifice for sinne so as for very paine hee sweat bloud c. 2. Towards themselues by scourging and chastening them with all sorts of afflictions when they sinne against him Psal 89. 34. and that in so grieuous a manner sometimes that the whole world is searched for similitudes to expresse their sorrowes and miseries as we may fee in the booke of Lamentations The iustice of his Grace is that wonderfull qualification of his wrath by an agreement as it were betweene his grace and his iustice which hee shewes vnto them by many admirable consolations And so it is his Iustice and hee confesseth himselfe to bee bound to them in Iustice 1. To moderate all his Chastizements and that in foure respects 1. That they be not
and therefore couetousnesse is called the loue of money by a Periphrasis 1 Tim. 6. 10. 2 A second signe of couerousnesse or immoderate care is when the minde is so taken vp about earthly things that it can not attend to Gods word or his ordinances Psalm 119. 36. Matth. 13. Ezech. 33. 31. and therefore the couetous cannot brooke Gods Sabbath and desires greatly to haue it ouer Amos 8. 3. A third signe is when men will vse ill meanes to compasse gaine as when men will vse lying flatterie oppression vsurie false weights and measures or any other wayes of fraud and crueltie Pro. 28. 16. 1 Thess 4. 6. 4. Fourthly when men giue sparingly or grudgingly or slackly to charitable vses I adde that this care is vaine and that in diuers respects For first he that loueth filuer shall not be satisfied with siluer and besides after all his trauell his earthly riches will perish while he lookes on or if they doe continue he must not continue with them for as he came forth of his mothers belly so shall he returne naked to goe as he came he shall carry away nothing of all his labour in all points as he came so shall he goe and then what profit hath he that hath trauelled for the winde I say inclining the soule to take in the lowest degree of couetousnesse for some haue their hearts and eyes and hands and tongues all exercised in it 2 P●● 2. 14. Now others are only secretly drawne with it and infected with the daily inclinations to it I adde for his owne priuate good to note the end of couetousnesse for if he sought these things only for Gods glory or the good of the Church it were to be allowed The last thing in the definition is to the singular detriment of the soule for many are the vile effects of couetousnesse First it infatuates a man and makes him without vnderstanding Esay 56. 11. Prou. 28. 16. Secondly it leaues a man in continuall danger to erre from the faith 1 Tim. 6. 10. Thirdly it is the root of all euill it drawes a man to many a sinne as we see here in Iudas and seldome is couetousnesse mentioned in the Scripture but some vile sinne or other is ioyned with it Fourthly it angreth and vexeth God exceedingly especially when men are exercised in it Esay 57. 17. Ezech. 22. 13. Ier. 6. 13. besides temporall iudgements it causeth the damnation of the soule in hell Ephes 5. 5 6. and therefore it should not be so much as named amongst Christians Ephes 5. 3. And as couetousnesse ought to be auoided by all men so especially by Ministers Couetousnesse in them is very abominable and pernicious the Prophet cals such Ministers greedy dogs Esay 56. 11. Againe this lamentable example of Iudas should make men abhorre the sinne of betraying Christ Many men detest the fact of Iudas and yet commit it or the like themselues for Christ is betrayed many wayes as when his truth and honour is denied before men and men dare not shew their faith or puritie before others so also when men professe true religion and yet denie the power of it and liue wickedly and cause the aduersaries of Christ to blaspheme this is to deliuer Christ to be accused arraigned and condemned of euill Iudges Againe when for reward a man will betray the truth by bearing false witnesse for to betray the truth is to betray God who is Truth and so when men violate brotherly loue they betray God who is Loue. Ministers also betray Christ with Iudas when they betray the flocks of Christ and following their owne ambition or gaine leaue their flocks to the Wolfe to be daily deuoured and besides staruing them for want of fodder or wholsome food And such Iudasses are they that will sell Religion and their owne soules to get vnlawsull gaine by lying and swearing and false commodities and weights c. or will breake Gods Sabbaths to follow their gaine yea in some respects they are worse than Iudas for he was neuer a Traitor but once and then it was to get thirty peeces of siluer but a great number of men amongst vs will sell Christ and their owne soules for one peece of siluer and doe make a practise of it they doe it daily Againe let all men take heed of grosse sinnes or any extraordinary causes of corruption for strange punishments will follow such workers of iniquitie The fearfull iudgement of God vpon this poore creature may affright the Sodomites Effeminate the cursed Swearers and Blasphemers the damned Drunkards and Atheists the hellish Traitors and Hereticks of our time Further wee see that all godly Christians in this world had need to looke well to themselues this world is full of treacherie and falshood and dissimulation We see Christs familie was not without a Iudas in it and there are few sorts of men or priuate families of any note but there is one Iudas or other there It is and will be still true A mans enemies are they of his owne house Sometimes the very wife that lieth in a mans bosome proues false and treacherous sometimes to a mans state sometimes to a mans reputation and oft times to his soule and Religion Mich. 7. 5 6 7. The vsuall complements of the world proue but as Iudas his kisse Lastly such as suffer for the ingratitude or perfidiousnesse of others should comfort themselues in this part of the Passion of Christ they may the more patiently abide it seeing Christ himselfe was so vsed and by such a one as Iudas was Thus of the Treason of Iudas The apprehension of our Sauiour followes and there we are to consider two things First What Christ did Then What was done to him For the first the Euangelists with great care record what our Sauiour did now that the time was come that he must be apprehended and brought to his last Passion and so they shew how he prepared himselfe for these sufferings immediately before he was to be apprehended and so they report fiue things that he did 1. He made a Feast to his Disciples he chose to suffer at the time of the great Passeouer that thereby he might confirme the hearts of the Disciples and shew how little he feared death and how willing he was to obey the Commandement of his Father by being obedient to the death 2. He made his will and last Testament and therein he appoints a solemne assembly to bee yearely and oft in the yeare obserued in commemoration of his Passion by all that loue him to the worlds end and further grants a generall pardon of all sinnes to all that shall worthily partake of that solemnitie at all times till his comming againe and besides bequeathes vnto godly Christians all the merits and benefits of his Passion and all the good things contained in Gods Couenant made with the Church in Christ and all this is comprehended in the institution of his last Supper 3. He tooke his leaue
it is a thousand times more easie to suffer the death of a Martyr than for Christ to suffer bare death of any kinde because Martyrs in death are freed from the guilt of all their sinnes whereas Christ in death as our surety stands charged with sinne but it was not the feare of death thus troubled our Sauiour he had many other more dreadfull things to thinke of As first the tyrannie of Sinne Death and Sathan that had preuailed ouer mankinde Secondly the great ingratitude of the greatest part of mankinde who would not regard redemption though made in his bloud Thirdly the dispersion of his Disciples and the scandall that euen they would take at his death Fourthly the ruine would come vpon the Iewish Nation by making themselues guilty of his bloud Fifthly and especially the sense of the most horrible wrath of God against the sinnes of the world which he must endure and did begin to feele for our sakes as being our surety It was not death then simply that he feared but death ioyned with that powring out of the dreadfull wrath of God vpon his soule this bred that incredible and deadly sadnesse and paine and inward feare in our Sauiour Now this mournfull consideration of his grieuous feare and agonie may serue vnto vs for great consolation and that in diuers respects For first herein we may see his loue to vs that can be content to take vpon him our infirmities euen those that are most troublesome such as this dreadfull feare and perplexitie was he was here truly transfigured for as on the Mount by transfiguration hee shewed what glory he should haue in heauen so in the Garden by this transfiguration he shewes what weaknes cleaues to his members on earth only we must still remember that he tooke vpon him only vnblameable infirmities for in this he sinned not If any aske how could such vnspeakable feare and sadnesse be without sinne seeing the affections were so violently moued and troubled I answer that the perturbation that was in our Sauiours heart was like to cleane water in a cleane glasse if it be shaked neuer so violently yet it is cleane still because there is no mud in the bottome But on the other side if cleane water be put into a cleane glasse and mud withall be setled in the bottome then the least stirring that is makes it foule and so it is with vs there is sinne in almost all perturbations that arise in our hearts because euery shaking of our hearts stirs vp some corruption that is in our nature but it was not so with Christ Againe fearefull Christians may take some comfort from hence to see that their Sauiour was afraid as well as they His Agonie may comfort them against their pusillanimitie and further such as finde strange accidents in prayer and are suddenly oppressed with feares and doubts or terrors may profitably remember what befell their Sauiour when he went to pray Lastly such as are afflicted in conscience vnder the sense of Gods wrath may wonderfully from hence be releeued First by considering that Christ himselfe did feele the same or much greater sorrowes than they doe and therefore doth pitie them and will suocour them Secondly by considering that Christ hath borne in his owne soule the brunt of Gods displeasure for sinne and therefore they should not be so dismayed but behold his soule as made a sacrifice for their sinnes And thus of his Agonie There was yet another great discouragement befell him in his prayer and that was the maruellous senslesnesse and drowsinesse and want of compassion in his Disciples who were so farre from comforting him or mourning with him that they could not watch with him one houre That Peter that a little before said If all men were offended in him yet he would neuer be offended yea he was ready to die for him yet now he doth not resist his very sleepe but neglects his Sauiour in his greatest distresse And from this obseruation we may gather diuers Vses For hereby it is manifest that the whole burden of satisfaction lies vpon Christ only Here is no bodie to helpe him to pay one farthing nor so much as pitie him or incourage him when our ransome is in paying the great Apostles are a sleeping Besides men in misery must learne to trust vpon God only for there are none so neare or deare to vs but in times of distresse may come farre short of that compassion or succour which we may expect from them and if any such thing befall vs in our paines or other miseries we must labour to comfort our selues with this example of the like case of our Sauiour Moreouer men that are giuen to bodily sleepinesse in time of Gods seruice should be warned from hence Euen such a bodily infirmitie if it be nourished may bring vs into fearefull temptations and makes vs guilty of grieuous offence against God and Christ as is imported by our Sauiours milde reproofe of the sleepie Disciples Matth. 26. 4. The forme of prayer hee vsed and that was Abba father let this cup passe from me if it be possible yet not my will but thy will bee done Mark 14. 36. In which forme we may note three things First the Titles he giues to God Secondly the substance of his suit to God And thirdly the clauses limiting his petition 1. The Titles are recorded by Saint Marke and wee shall finde them giuen to God in three places of the new Testament viz. in this prayer of Christs and Rom. 8. 15. and Galat. 4. 7. The tearme Abba is an Hebrew or Syriacke word and the other word Pater is both a Greeke and Latine word Now in that Christ calling vpon his Father giues him his title in diuers languages it is thought that thereby Christ would intimate that he was the God of both Iewes Gentiles and in as much as the time drew on in which the partition wall was to be broken downe and God was to bee beleeued on and called vpon by both sorts of people Christ himselfe first beginnes to treat with God in both languages And it may well be that being now in infinite torment he would intimate by these tearmes that he suffered them both for Iewes and Gentiles 2. As for the substance of the petition a great doubt may arise in a mans mind how this could be in Christ without sinne or contradiction to himselfe He that had foretold his death and professed so often to bee willing to die and was sent into the world for this purpose and if he died not all the Elect were vndone how can it bee that now hee prayes that if it be possible he may not die I answer this obiection two wayes first that he doth not expresly pray against his death but his words may be vnderstood as well as I conceiue of the Agonie he was in in his soule and so what inconuenience can follow if we grant that hee desired of God that it might passe from
became the Christ the Lords annointed King to carry himselfe Kings need not seeke protection or defence for themselues by words against the false accusations of their subiects 2. Hereby hee shewes his magnanimitie in contemning death If he had answered hee might seeme to doe it to preuent the sentence of death He that seekes not life feares not death He that saues all men betrayes his owne safetie that he might purchase our saluation 3. By his Silence hee satisfies Gods iustice for the sinnes of our words 4. He is silent on earth that he might merit to speake for vs in heauen by making intercession freely for vs at the right hand of God and that we might haue free accesse to God for our prayers in pleading for our liues through his merit 5. Hee hath thereby left vs an example to teach vs to beare false accusations patiently and imports that our innocencie shall not need defence when wicked men are vnreasonable He may well be silent that needs not defence Let them be eager to make Apologies that feare to be found guiltie the cause is the better that is not defended and yet is proued 6. Hereby he proues himselfe to be the Messias promised because he was as a sheepe dumbe before his Shearers according to the prophecie Esay 53. 7. And as he was silent in these accusations that touched his life so afterwards when they accused him for making himselfe the Sonne of God Ioh. 19. 7. he would giue no answer to Pilate that being much afraid asked him whence he was vers 8 9. both because Pilate was vncapable of the doctrine of the Trinitie and because there was no time to reueale his Deitie but rather to suffer and die according to his Humanitie Thus of our Sauiours examination Now follow the courses the Iudge tooke to auoid putting of him to death and so to saue his life and so in the story we shall finde that Pilate vsed foure policies to saue Christ or at least to put off the businesse from himselfe The first was that he perswades the Iewes to take him themselues and iudge him by their owne law Ioh. 18. 31. but this policie succeeds not and that for two Reasons First the Iewes plead they had not power to put any man to death because the Romans had taken that iurisdiction into their owne hands In which answer of theirs we see their horrible wickednesse and impudencie that professe to haue resolued vpon his death and to tell the Iudge so before the cause be opened and yet the prouidence of God was in this thing God had sent him to die for the people and by the people his death is called for with importunitie Secondly the Text saith That this was done that the saying of Iesus might be fulfilled signifying what death he should die for he had said that he should be deliuered vp into the hands of the Gentiles to be crucified and therefore this policie must be disappointed whence we may note that the Counsell and word of God concerning the sufferings of his people cannot be altered It shall not be with vs according to the will of men but Gods Counsell shall stand which should make vs with the more patience to beare what may befall vs seeing if God doe it it will be good for vs and no aduersaries can haue their wills of vs further than their plots and practises doe serue to accomplish Gods secret will The second policie vsed by Pilate was that he took occasion from the report that Christ was a Galilean to send him to Herod to be tried before him Luke 23. 6 7 c. This Herod was he that cut off Iohn Baptists head and was called to distinguish him from other Herods Herod Antipas Pilate though he dealt herein politickly yet he deales vniustly for he ought to haue defended the innocencie of our Sauiour and deliuered him from the hands of his violent and vnreasonable aduersaries and not send him to another In the Story of Christs appearing before Herod obserue 1. The disposition of Herod and how he stood affected towards our Sauiour the Text saith He was glad of his comming and had long desired to see him and hoped to see him work some miracle before him Luke 23. 8. There is a great difference betweene godly men and wicked men though they both meet in this that they desire Christ or to see Christ A wicked man desires more the miracles of Christ than his word A godly man especially desires to heare the voice of Christ My sheepe heare my voice saith our Sauiour Herod had beene so searched by the ministery of Iohn that he durst not aduenture to heare any effectuall ministerie afterwards He hath no desire to haue Christ to instruct him in the great mysteries of the kingdome of Heauen or to shew him how he might saue his soule To desire Christ for carnall ends as pleasure glory profit or the like is but an vnregenerat humour To desire Christ for his owne sake or for his word sake or for the holinesse we desire to get from him is proper only to the godly 2. The behauiour of our Sauiour who would not yeeld to worke any miracle before Herod because he knew Herod would abuse the power of God to make sport of such great works to feed his owne vanitie and besides our Sauiour constantly applies himselfe to the businesse he came about He knew then that was not a time of exercising his power but of suffering Secondly though Herod questioned with him in many words yet he answered him nothing Which he did first to abate the pride and vanity of Herod thereby intimating how little he esteemed his worldly greatnesse and how much he contemned his leuitie and vanitie of minde Secondly he would not cast Pearle before Swine He knew he should doe no good by talking to him that was a man giuen to so much viciousnesse of life and voluptuousnesse Thirdly because he knew that he must receiue his sentence not from Herod a Iew but from Pilate a Romane and Gen●●ie and be condemned and put to death after the Romane manner viz. by crucifying 3. The things our Sauiour suffered and so first from the Iewes then from Herod The Iewes viz. the chiefe Priests and Scribes stood and vehemently accused him which our Sauiour endured and came to passe by Gods prouidence that so thereby the innocencie of Christ might be the more manifest which was easily discerned by Herod obseruing the violent and tumultuous proceedings of the Priests and it may be gathered from Pilats speech that Herod did finde no fault in him Luk. 23. 15. From Herod our Sauiour suffred two things First he was extremely mocked by Herod and his men of warre and then hee was sent backe to Pilate arraied in a gorgeous robe For the first we see how great men that are giuen to pleasure and worldly pompe entertaine Christ and religion It is no strange thing that religion should be scorned by voluptuous
innocent and did not consent to our Sauiours death It seemes that he had borrowed this Ceremony from the Iewes who had an ancient vse of it in some cases as appears Deut. 21. 6. and did thereby think the more to affect them with remorse see Psal 26. 6. Though this Ceremony were not necessary yet Iudges and publike Officers of State should haue cleane hands hands I say cleane from bribes and corruption and hearts fearing God and hating couetousnesse and so all solemne seruice in Piety as well as Iustice requires the washing of the hands in innocencie Psal 26. 6. for if the Ciuill seat of Iustice must not be compassed but with integritie of heart and life much lesse should we dare to compasse Gods Altar vnlesse we haue washed our hands in true innocencie But further obserue what poore shifts a troubled and ill conscience flyes to What will it iustifie Pilate that he washeth his hands and yet by and by doe that which himselfe condemnes The basenesse of his minde cannot be scoured off with the water on his fingers An ill conscience is often attended with a senselesse minde To conclude Note one fearfull thing that fell out vpon this Action Pilate said I am innocent from the bloud of this man Immediatly the madde Iewes shout it out that for his bloud let it light vpon them and their children Matth. 27. 25. How suddenly did the Iudge of the world take vp this Imprecation He ratified it in heauen This direfull curse fell vpon them and yet lyeth vpon them to this day as a standing monument to warne all cursing Caitifes such as wish death and damnation or desperate diseases to themselues or others God may say Amen before they be aware Thus of the declaration of our Sauiours Innocencie The second thing about his condemnation is the cause why Pilate would not deliuer him knowing him to be innocent and so two causes are assigned the first was his willingnesse to content the people Marke 15. 15. And Luke saith the instancie and clamour of the Commons and the chiefe Priests preuailed Luke 23. 23. And a second cause is assigned by Saint Iohn Chap. 19. 13. And that was the feare of Caesar for they had charged him that if he did not condemne Iesus he was not Caesars friend and when he heard this saying he sate downe in the Iudgement seat to giue sentence Which shewes vs that it sometimes comes to passe that Christ and the sincerity of Religion may suffer very vniustly either to satisfie the stubborne humours of wicked people or vpon pretence that Christ and true Christians are enemies to Princes Many things are done in Caesars name and vpon pretence of Caesars right which yet Caesar knowes not of or if he did ought not to fauour such proceedings We see that of old these two things haue beene great motiues to iniustice The third thing was the manner of the Iudgement and so Saint Iohn reports that Pilate brought forth Iesus and sate downe in the Iudgement seat and after some reproachfull speeches to the people about Iesus as their King and after their last tumultuous crie to haue him crucified he deliuered him to be crucified Oh what heart can by faith see Iesus come out vpon the Pauement and so patiently set himselfe before the Tribunall of Pilate and not be dissolued into teares to see our sweet Sauiour after so many indignities to stand amongst such vile people to receiue iudgement of death that was the blessed Author of life But in this sentence of condemnation lieth one chiefe consolation for in that houre and in that sentence did God our heauenly Iudge giue sentence vpon our sinnes in him our Surety and condemned sinne in his flesh that had no sinne and therefore our faith should gather hence assurance of eternall comfort seeing he was condemned that we might be saued and in this sentence vpon him God hath fully satisfied his iustice so as we need not feare the day of Iudgement for Iesus hath beene already iudged for our sinnes Rom. 8. 3. and a part of the iudgement it is to be reckoned that he found no mercy in the Iewes when Pilate said Behold the Man but rather with greater rage they called for the sentence to haue him crucified and withall that he was reiected of the chiefe Priests and Scribes and Elders of the people He found no mercy in the Iewes that he might thereby procure for vs the eternall Mercy of his Father He found no mercy with Men that we might obtaine mercy with God And he was reiected of the chiefe Priests that the Scripture might be fulfilled that had said That the stone that the builders refused should be made the head of the corner Psal 118. 22. And that he might thereby satisfie for vs that had refused God and would not haue him raigne ouer vs but yeelded our selues to the Deuill to rule vs. The fourth thing in the Story is the consequent of the Iudgement or what followed immediatly vpon the sentence and that was most vile vsage by the Souldiers of the Gouernour for they tooke him into the common Hall and gathered vnto him the whole band and they stripped him and put on a Scarlet Robe and a Crowne of Thornes vpon his head and a Reed in his righthand and bowed the knee and mocked him saying Haile King of the Iewes and spit vp-vpon him and smote him on the head with the Reed and after they had mocked him they tooke off the Scarlet Robe and put his owne rayment on him Matth. 27. 27. to 32. Now whereas Saint Iohn Chap. 19. 1 2 3. mentioneth that diuers of these things were done before the sentence to moue the people to pitie we may suppose that they were twice done once by Pilates commandement before sentence and then by the prophane rage and storme of the Souldiers after sentence howsoeuer to vs it is sufficient to know they were done and why hee endured such things wee should chiefly inquire Now out of this part of the Story some things may be learned in generall and somethings from the signification of some speciall things here mentioned In generall wee must inquire after the Reason of two things 1. Why he is here shewed in the habit of a King and scorned by the representation of the ornaments reuerence of a King He is crowned and clothed with a Robe and a Reed put into his hand like a Scepter and saluted as a King all in scorne Consider first that God did by his speciall prouidence acknowledge the regall dignity of his Sonne euen in the middest of his greatest abasement that which Pilate and the Souldiers did in scorne God did in earnest for all these things are ensignes of his Kingdome Secondly hence we may gather how senselesly and scornefully the men of this world doe iudge of the Kingdome and glory of Iesus Christ It is so farre remoued out of their sense and iudgement that they account it but foolishnesse and scorne
gall chap. 27. 34. As for the reason of this fact it is generally receiued amongst Diuines that either the Iudges appointed or that the women of Ierusalem out of pitie to the malefactors going to execution prepared a Potion of strong wine the better to comfort them against death or to inebriate their senses so as they should not feele the paines of crucifying And it is guessed that this was a custome euen in Solomons time because of that sentence hee vseth Prou. 31. 6. Giue strong drinke to him that is ready to perish and wine to him that is of a heauy heart If the Potion were giuen only to cheere their hearts it was a worke of mercy at least in their intendment but if it were to make them drunke it was horrible cruelty to the soules of the poore creatures that should be better prepared for death Now for reconciling of the difference betweene the Euangelists to omit many opinions I thinke their iudgement is the most probable that say that the women of Ierusalem gaue him wine mingled with mirrhe but the Souldiers and the Iewes out of very spight and cruelty changed it into vineger mingled with gall Now it is said of the first Potion he receiued it not and of the latter when he had tasted he would not drinke of it By all which was signified 1. That Christ hath paid for our vicious pleasures by tasting of the cup of gall 2. That true solace and comfort is not to be found or sought from the earth or the men of this world who in stead of sweet incouragements vsually doe of purpose giue vnto Gods seruants drinke of gall and vineger that is proffer them all occasions of vexation and discontent And for further vse let vs consider that it was our sinnes that were this gall and vineger to Christ If we blame the Iewes for giuing him such a Potion let vs iudge our selues for our sins for it was we that gaue him this gall to drinke Deut. 32. 22 23. Now for the third question in the diuision Christ was crucified for these Reasons or Vses First that thereby it might appeare that he was the true Messias and Sauiour promised to the Fathers as he himselfe saith Iohn 8. 28. Secondly that thereby he might deriue the malediction of the Law vpon himselfe which was due to vs and that we might possesse and inherit the blessing Gal. 3. 13 14. Thirdly that by a vertue flowing from his crucifying the viciousnes of our corrupt natures might be abolished that we might not afterwards serue sinne Rom. 6. 6. Fourthly that our debts being there paid the hand-writing that was against vs might be cancelled so as our sinnes should be no more remembred of God Col. 2. 14. But the speciall thing to be considered in Christs crucifying is to looke vpon it as a sacrifice offered vp to God for the sinnes of the elect in which an atonement and expiation is made for our sinnes About this Sacrifice diuers things are to be inquired into As first who is the Priest And that is Christ considered in both Natures as is proued in many chapters of the Epistle to the Hebrewes And he is indeed the only Priest of the New Testament considered really for he came in stead of all the Leuiticall Priests his Priesthood is euerlasting Heb. 7. 24. because it doth not passe from man to man by succession as the Leuiticall High Priesthood did Secondly what is the Sacrifice and that is Christ as he is man or the manhood of Christ so we are said to be sanctified by the offering vp of the body of Iesus Heb. 10. 10. and this Sacrifice of his was not an Eucharisticall but an whole burnt offering or a propitiatorie Sacrifice such a Sacrifice as was seized vpon by the fire of Gods wrath and all burnt to ashes Thirdly what was the Altar And that was the Godhead of Christ not the Crosse properly because the Altar sanctifieth the gift Matth. 23. 19. and that which sanctified the Humanitie that it might be a meritorious Sacrifice was the Diuine Nature vpon which it was laid and presented to God Fourthly how often this Sacrifice was offered viz. but once only as is proued Heb. 10. 14. and 9. 28. 25. Fifthly the excellencie of this Sacrifice which appeares by the fruit of it and by the continuance of it The fruit of it was both the bearing of our sinnes Heb. 9. 28. and the taking away of our sins from before Gods sight Heb. 9. 26. so as he made thereby a perfect atonement and propitiation for our sinnes God smelling a sauour of rest and his sacrifice being a sweet smelling sauour vnto God so as he is well pleased Gen. 8. 21. Ephes 5. 2. And besides by this Sacrifice we are consecrated as a holy and peculiar people to God as the Priests were consecrated in the Law Heb. 10. 14. Thus of the fruit of it The continuance of the Atonement and fruit of this Sacrifice is for euer it was not such as needed to be renued Heb. 10. 14. for he is a Priest for euer after the order of Melchisedech Sixtly what is required of vs that we may haue benefit of his Sacrifice and crucifying for vs And so three things chiefly are required First that we be crucified with him not only in sorrow for his sufferings Zach. 12. 12. but in bewailing our sinnes and crossing the corrupt disposition of our Natures and forsaking the vaine pleasures and glories of this world Rom. 6. 6. Gal. 6. 14. Secondly that we looke vpon Christ by faith as the Sacrifice offered for vs or the brazen Serpent lifted vp vpon the Crosse for vs Ioh. 3. 14. Thirdly wee must be sanctified as a people willing to consecrate themselues to God as a liuing sacrifice soule and body for his seruice Heb. 10. 14. Rom. 12. 1. The fourth point is the manner how he was crucified and so six things are distinctly to be noted 1. That he put off his garments and suffered naked 2. That he was lifted vp vpon the Crosse 3. That he was fastened to the Crosse and fastened with nailes driuen into his hands and feer 4. That he hanged with his armes spread abroad 5. That he was crucified in the middest of two Theeues 6. That he suffered the effusion of his precious bloud on the Crosse For the first our Sauiour being to be crucified put off his garments for diuers reasons 1. That he might thereby shew that he was ready for death and did willingly imbrace it 2. That he might satisfie for the sin of our first Parents that made themselues naked by losing the garment of innocencie in which they were created and so make expiation for their abominable nakednesse 3. That hee might vn●loath vs of sinne and mortalitie of which the garments giuen to our first Parents were a Monument for when they had sinned God made them garments of the skinnes of dead beasts and put them vpon them as memorials of mortality
whose it should be shewed that m●● do not attaine the righteousnesse merits of Christ by ●●eir owne deserts industry or skill but by lot that is ●● the immediate gift of God Our portion amongst the S●ints in light is by lot Coloss 1. 12. Concerning the derision he suffered it is obserued by the Euangelist Saint Matthew Chap. 27. 39 c. that they that went by wagged their heads at him vpbraiding him with the destruction of the Temple and the chiefe Priests and Scribes and Elders derided him many wayes and tempted him mocking at his Miracles and trust in God and the Theeues also that were crucified with him vpbraided him also the standers by mocked him about the very prayers hee offered vp to God peruerting his words wilfully as if he called to some creature to helpe him so that he was here on all hands despised as a worme and no man and all this he suffered 1. That from those often extreme contempts powred out vpon Christ at other times now we might be throughly made to know how hatefull our sinnes are to God especially the sinnes by which we and our first Parents haue despised or slighted God and dishonoured him and caused others to blaspheme his Name in that God doth so reuenge our Transgressions vpon his Sonne 2. That wee being deliuered from that eternall scorne and contempt which was due to vs might in this life inioy the comfort of a good name and in the life to come eternall glory before God and his Angels Christs ignominie did merit and procure our honour 3. That by his example wee might be comforted and by his silence and patience learne to despise the shame and scornes of sinfull men and not render reuiling for reuiling Heb. 12. 3. It may perhaps runne in mens mindes to wish that our Sauiour would haue done as they said seeing they promise to beleeue in him if he could saue himselfe from the Crosse But let men consider first that our Redemption had beene hindered if he had not died on the Crosse and besides being brought to that houre as our surety hee could not come downe till he had satisfied Gods iustice and further he had denied to worke Miracles in his life time when they and Herod defired him to doe it because they were an adulterous generation and cast off of God who was now loth to haue them conuert Esay 6. 10. Neither would they haue repented though they had had their desire and if Miracles would haue satisfied them he had done store of them in his life time and in that kinde he had saued himselfe from the hands of a multitude that intended to kill him as when they tooke vp stones in the Temple to stone him and it was more that he did to rise from the dead then to come downe from the Crosse and yet they did not beleeue him Againe in these reproches we may obserue that wicked men doe hate godly men for the very goodnesse that is in them and the true glory God hath stamped vpon them and the good they do They doe not vpbraid Christ for any euill no not for the euils they accused him of before for they themselues knew hee was innocent but for the good hee had done in sauing others and for his trust in God and for his prayers to God Further we may gather from hence that all persecutors are Atheists though they professe Religion for these men though learned and great men yet blaspheme God and deride him as if he had not power to saue him Moreouer we may obserue how malice and wickednesse had besotted the Priests and Scribes They alledge a place in the Psalmes viz. He trusted in God let him saue him now if he will haue him which words were there vttered in the name of the wicked enemies of God and yet these men so skilfull in the Old Testament haue not the braines to discerne that by their owne mouthes they haue condemned themselues Thus doth God in his iustice infatuate wicked men so that their owne mouthes doe betray them Lastly see how desperately wickednesse is set in the hearts of men the poore Theeues now ready to dye for their offences yet haue no loue of Iesus or the truth in him but ioyne with the Iewes in reuiling Christ. It seemes both the Theeues reuiled Christ when they first came vp vpon the Crosse which increaseth the wonder of the conuersion of one of them The third thing he suffered was grieuous torments both of soule and bodie And first for the torments of his bodie they must needs be great both in respect of what went before and what he then felt Before he had beene grieuously pained in that Agonie in the Garden when he sweat bloud and afterwards was tyed bound and carried away bound and was buffeted and beaten with rods and with extreme contumelie kept waking all night and then cruelly whipt crowned with thornes and beaten with a Reede and made to carry his Crosse on his shoulders and after all this to be so tortured with nailes in his hands and feet it must needs import a most grieuous torment he felt so as of him may be said what Dauid vttered My heart melted like wax my tongue cleaued to the roofe of my mouth and thou hast placed me in the dust of death Psal 22. 15 16. and this exceeding weaknesse and torment of body he suffered 1. That thereby he might satisfie for vs that had so often despised the power of God and his threatnings against our sins and in generall to pay for all the sinnes we had committed in the body 2. That thereby he might free vs free vs from eternall torments in our bodies and that he might make vs strong in his might so as to say The Lord is the strength of my life of whom shall I be afraid and through Christ I can doe all things 3. That hereby he might sanctifie the paines we feele in our bodies either from diseases or from the hands of violent men or persecutors and to teach vs with patience to beare our paines by faith looking vpon the torments such a Sauiour endured for vs and when we feele our bodies weakned by diseases we should by faith remember that our Sauiour was beyond all comparison made more weake in body for our sinnes That he suffered most grieuous distresse and anguish in his soule appeares by that lamentable voice My God my God why hast thou forsaken me By which words it appeares that he was not only tormented in conscience vnder our sinnes and Gods wrath but that he was also forsaken of God and forsaken he was in two respects First that God lest him in most vnutterable distresse and did for the time defer his deliuerance Secondly that God withdrew from his Humane Nature the consolation might support him suffering him to endure those torments we should haue endured for euer Ob. How could God forsake him seeing the Diuine Nature was vntted to the Humane
inseparably Sol. The Diuine Nature of the Sonne did not forsake the Nature assumed but secretly susteined it but yet so as the glory of that vnion was hidden for the present Nor doth the Humanitie of Christ complaine that the second Person in the Trinitie had forsaken him but that God the Father did forsake him Ob. God loued his Sonne with an eternall loue how could he then be so wroth with him Sol. God loued Christ with an eternall loue and yet as he was our surety he powred out vpon him the vials of his wrath deserued by our sinnes The Vse of these grieuous torments in soule and Gods forsaking of him may bee diuers 1. It may confute their opinion that say he suffered not in soule at all when the Scripture saith His soule was made an offering for sinne and these words cannot without great iniurie to Christ be thought to be vttered by Christ in respect of his bodily torments then not onely the Martyrs but the Theeues on the Crosse should beare their paine and death more patiently than he 2. It may make vs all afraid of sin when we seriously thinke on it how wroth God is with his owne Sonne to pursue him so that was but a surety to make him vtter this pittifull complaint Can men euer thinke that God can endure sinne in them that in the spirit heare Christ making this moane Now was the time that the whole Sacrifice was on fire and burning in the flame of Gods wrath 3. It may greatly comfort Gods seruants when they are in great distresse Christ was forsaken of God for a time that they might not be forsaken for euer and therefore wee should take heed of doubting of Gods care for vs Esay 40. 28 and 49. 15. and resolue vpon it that though he leaue vs for a time yet he will receiue vs with euerlasting mercy Esay 54. 7 8 10. Yea and withall it may bee some comfort to weake Christians that doe too much feare lest God will leaue them to thinke that this feare was in Christ 4. We may hence gather what is the wofull case of all impenitent sinners if it were such a griefe to Christ to be forsaken for a time what is their case that shall be forsaken for euer If God thus torment his owne Sonne that neuer knew sinne how can he spare them that haue beene transgressors from the wombe 5. We should hence learne to pitie poore Christians that are afflicted in conscience no torments of the body are like the trouble of the conscience which our Sauiour shewes here in his owne case And withall we may hence learne to iudge charitably of such as say they are damned or forsaken of God for we see it may be found in Gods deare children though it be true that in some men these words are the fruits of hellish despaire Lastly note in the words of Christ that he expresseth his faith in the middest of his conflict My God my God are words of hope as why hast thou forsaken me are words of feare Whence we should learne to esteeme assurance and to make vse of it as the only thing will be left to vs to hold by if great extremities come vpon vs. To know that God is our God if the chiefe support of our spirituall life The last thing which he suffred while he was aliue on the Crosse was the Thirst of which he said I thirst Ioh. 19. and this thirst of body he suffered First that the Scripture might be fulfilled that said In my thirst they gaue me vineger to drinke Psal 69. 22. Secondly that thereby he might merit the satisfying of our spirituall thirsts and the desires of our hearts In his thirst they gaue him vineger to drinke that thereby the same Scripture might be fulfilled which was mentioned before Ioh. 19. 28. Secondly that thereby hee might expiate for the tasting of the Iuice of the forbidden fruit and for all our sinfull pleasures Thirdly that we might be warned not to looke for better intertainment from the world but to be serued with sharpe and bitter potions for we must drinke of his cup Matth. 20. 23. Thus of the things our Sauiour suffered while he hanged aliue vpon the Crosse The glorious Testimonies giuen to Christ on the Crosse while hee was yet aliue follow and they were foure The first was in the Superscription was written ouer his head The second was in the darknesse was ouer the Earth The third was in the wonderfull conuersion of one of the Theeues The fourth was in the rending of the veile of the Temple For the first Pilate caused a Superscription to be written ouer his head in Latine Greeke and Hebrew in these words Iesus of Nazareth the King of the Iewes or rather as the originall sounds Iesus that Nazarene that King of the Iewes Ioh. 19. 19. This Superscription it is likely was written in a Table and hanged ouer our Sauiours head for it is not probable that so many words in so many Languages in great Characters that might be read of them that passed by could be grauen vpon the head of the Crosse As for Pilates meaning herein some Writers thinke that it was the custome for the ludges to set ouer the heads of them that died the cause of their death Yet we reade not of any such custome in Scripture nor of any Title set ouer the heads of the two Theeues It is very probable that Pilate meant in this Title both to vp-braid the Iewes and withall to saue himselfe from blame with Caesar and to shew how carefull he had beene of Caesars right But God intended by a speciall prouidence herein to giue testimonie to his Sonne which we may gather two wayes First by the consent of the Euangelists who all make mention of this Title which must needs import that they saw some mystery in i● Secondly by the very words for besides that they containe a most exact description of the substance of our faith in Iesus they are not the words of the Iewes accusation vpon which he was condemned but an expresse affirmation of his glory which is the more plaine because when the Priests gowled by the Title would haue it mended thus He said he was King of the Iewes yet Pilate would not alter it his hand being stayed by the power of God This Title then was giuen from God from aboue and is of Gods owne deuising and she was vs for the confirmation of our faith what God himselfe acknowledgeth and what he would haue vs make vse of in the meditation of the Passion of Christ Many things may be hence noted 1. That God acknowledgeth his Name vpon the Crosse to be Iesus that is a Sauiour of his people from their sins This name was giuen him by an Angell before hee was horne with this signification yea with an acknowledgement of his Diuinitie that he was Emmanuel God with vs Matth. 1. 22 23. And now on the Crosse did he fulfill what was
might haue the better assurance that God would shew mercy but this is not the case of most of our people 5. That the repentance of this Theefe had a great deale of businesse in it more than saying three words at his latter end as will appeare by opening the third point and that is how he shewed the truth of his conuersion So that for the third point we may obserue in the storie of his conuersion Luke 23. that he shewed three excellent fruits of his conuersion The one was reproofe of sinne in his fellow The other was his confession that he made both concerning himselfe and Christ The third was his petition or prayer to Christ for mercy For the first Saint Luke saith vers 40. that when the other malefactor railed on Christ he answered and rebuked him saying Dost not thou feare God seeing that thou art in the same condemnation Out of which words I obserue diuers things 1. That a true conuert cannot abide sin or that God should be dishonoured by those that they conuerse withall He that repents of his owne sinne may discerne it by his true dislike of sinne in others They are farre from true repentance that can liue in places where God is daily dishonoured and yet haue not their hearts vexed or their tongues loosed to reproue sinne 2. That he that will reproue sinne in others must be sure they haue mouing and effectuall arguments They must haue skill to admonish We see here what a stirring argument the conuerted Theefe brings Yea it is true that if the hatred of sinne be sincere in vs it will furnish vs with solid arguments to furnish reproofe 3. That the want of the feare of God is the cause of all disorder as it was of this mans rayling so it is of drunkennesse whoredome swearing stealing lying vsurie and the like if men had the feare of God before their eyes they would not doe so 4. That such as do abuse Christ by scoffing or rayling haue great cause to be afraid of God and what he will doe to them though they escape punishment amongst men Such sinnes as men will not punish God will especially these sinnes of scorning or reproching Christ and true Christians and the ordinances of Christ 5. That a true conuert doth loue Christ better than his old acquaintance as here the Theefe speakes against his old comrade and companion and for Christ though he had neuer seene him before 6. That such as will scoffe and raile at the truth haue no feare of God in them 7. That for a man not to repent when the iudgement of God is vpon him is a signe of a carelesse and gracelesse heart It is a wickednesse or stubbornnesse to be wondred at that a man being vnder the execution of condemnation as a malefactor should yet be void of the feare of God see Ier. 5. 3 4. Hee that will not thinke of paying his debts when the Arrest is serued vpon him hath no minde to pay it at all And the childe that relenteth not when he is vnder the rod is in a manner past grace So is it with men that haue hearts like Adamants when Gods speciall hand is vpon them Dost not thou feare God As if he would say though others were carelesse yet it is an infinite shame for thee that art in the same condemnation not to feare God Now for his confession that he made it stands of two parts In the one he doth penitently accuse himselfe and his fellow as suffering iustly and receiuing the due reward of their deeds and in the other he doth excuse Christ and auouch that hee hath done nothing amisse or that is absurd or out of place as the originall word doth import 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In the first part of his Confession I obserue these things 1. That without confession of sinne ●here can be no true repentance Prou. 28. 13. 1 Ioh. 1. 9. 2. That a true Conuert doth from his heart acknowledge that he hath deserued all the miseries are inflicted vpon him from God or man and doth patiently submit himselfe to beare them Dan. 9. 7 8. without stomack or malice or desire of reuenge vpon such as are instruments of his punishment 3. That he that reproues sinne in others in sincerity of heart doth acknowledge sinne in himselfe if he be guilty of the same or the like offence The repenting Theefe makes this confession in his owne name as well as in the name of the railing Theefe In the second part of his Confession I obserue 1. It is a signe of true grace to haue from the heart an honourable opinion of Gods seruants though they be extremely disgraced and slandered and reuiled as in the Theefe here to beleeue Christ did nothing amisse though almost all the world accused him and put him to death as a malefactor 2. That in Religion it is not enough to be free from grosse sinnes but we must be free from the sinnes of indiscretion and rashnesse Nor is it enough to doe good duties but we must doe all things wisely and in their place so the word in the originall imports About his prayer we are to obserue both what he said and what our Sauiour answered His words were these Lord remember me when thou commest into thy kingdome vers 42. In which words of his prayer I note the wonder of his faith the truth of his deuotion and the humilitie of his Petition His faith was to be wondered at both for the things beleeued and the circumstances of beleeuing For the things beleeued hee here saith foure great things of Christ First that he was Lord and King Secondly that his Kingdome was spirituall and not of this world Thirdly that in that very abasement he was possessed of a Kingdome he saith not When thou shalt come to reigne but when thou commest reigning Fourthly that he had power to let in all penitent sinners into that Kingdome The circumstances make it more wonderfull that he should confesse all this and yet haue no Preacher to instruct him and Christ himselfe so much abased and being a man that had not seene his former Miracles that he should say thus at this time when the cuting of the sicke was ceased and the giuing sight to the blinde and the raising of the dead and that he should thus acknowledge these glories in Christ when the great Rabbies the Priests and Scribes blasphemed him and could not acknowledge him for the Messias The truth of his deuotion appeares in this that he askes not temporall but eternall life He is more carefull to pray for the saluation of his soule than for the deliuerance of his body The humility of his petition appeares in this that he askes not for a great place in heauen or to sit at his right hand or his left as the sonnes of Zebedee did nor to be preferred before others nor at all to prescribe vnto Christ but onely desires to be remembred of him for any place
in heauen We must all learne of him and that diuers points out of his prayer The one is to flie to Christ only and to rely vpon him alone for saluation Another is to deale particularly for ourselues and euery one to say as he did Lord remember me Thirdly he may teach all the Christians in the world how to exercise their faith euen to beleeue though it be against all sense and aboue reason for this Theefe beleeues these great things of Christ when there was no outward appearance of any of them but rather of the contrary It is the greatest praise of our faith to beleeue when we haue no sense or feeling And the practise of the Theefe in this point doth greatly condemne a number of Christians now adaies The Theefe worships him and honours him beleeues and repents when Christ was on the Crosse in extreme ignominie What shall become of them then that will not worship him now especially such as blaspheme him and dishonour him now that he sits at the right hand of God Here is consolation also for if this be all the suit to Christ that he would remember vs when he comes into his kingdome this we may be sure of if we be truly godly for he hath now an infinite memory and he loues vs with an vnspeakable loue and he must needs remember vs for it is his office to be our Remembrancer before God and he being our High-Priest hath all our names written on his Brest-plate so as he cannot chuse but be still looking vpon vs besides he hath bought vs at such a price that hee hath good cause to remember vs and therefore howsoeuer it goes with vs here and though all the world forgets vs yet we may be sure that Iesus Christ remembers vs in heauen and if wee would haue our faith confirmed in this point we were best to doe as the Theefe doth viz. put him in minde of vs in particular and pray him to remember vs and withall it will much helpe if we remember him here on earth to confesse him before men and to stand for his honour and glory desiring to know and remember nothing more than Iesus Christ setting our affections on things aboue where he sits at the right hand of God But on the other side if men be workers of iniquitie and will not repent and be such as loue not the Lord Iesus and can spend daies weekes months and yeares without Christ in the world he will not remember them He cannot think of them in heauen if they forget him on earth Yea if they had beene acquainted with Christ on earth and eaten and drunken with him and beene of in his company as Matth. 7. 22. yea if they had died with him at the same time and the same kinde of death which was the case of the other Theefe when Christ shall come from heauen againe he will let them vnderstand that hee did not remember any such thing he knew them not all such naked relations vanish out of his minde if they had repented of their sinnes he would neuer haue forgotten them The answer of our Sauiour is Verily I say vnto thee this day shalt thou be with mee in Paradise In which answer we may obserue diuers things concerning prayer as also diuers things concerning heauen 1. That the prayer of penitent sinners gets great suits here is a Kingdome giuen for asking 2. That poore men may speed in great suits as well as great men A poore Theefe here speeds as well as if hee had beene a Patriarch or a King What could Abraham or Dauid haue had more than is granted to this Theefe 3. That poore sinners obtaine speedy Audiences they are not put to long suits when they seeke the greatest things This day thou shalt be with me If we speed not presently with God it is long of our selues or God delayes for some respect of vs Esay 65. 24. Dan. 9. 21 23. 4. That Christ stands not vpon the length or eloquence of our prayers he will heare a short prayer as well as a long he loues a plaine heart if wee speake the words of our hearts and aske according to Gods will in the name of Christ we shall speed Now concerning heauen it is described by the terme of Paradise The Scripture makes mention of a two-fold Paradise The Terrestriall where the first Adam was placed and the Celestiall into which the second Adam was now about to enter And that by Paradise is meant the Heauen of the blessed or rather the blessednesse of glorified soules is plaine because it is the kingdome mentioned by the Theefe and Saint Paul shewes that when he was caught vp into Paradise he was in the third heauen 2 Cor. 12. But here are two questions Quest 1. How could the Theefe vnderstand what our Sauiour meant by Paradise seeing no place of the old Testament did speake of heauen by that name of Paradise Answ The earthly Paradise was a Type and shadow of the heauenly or of the glorie of heauen and it seemes that by Tradition that was so commonly knowne among the Iewes that our Sauiour is assured he shall be vnderstood in the Terme Quest 2. But why doth our Sauiour call heauen Paradise at this time why Paradise and why at this time Ans He calls heauen Paradise because it was that which was shadowed out by the earthly Paradise In the earthly Paradise was a Tree of life in the middest thereof in the heauenly Paradise is Iesus Christ the true Tree of life by whose vertue and grace we shall liue for euer The great pleasures in that first Garden the Trees of all sorts did shadow out the vnspeakable variety of heauenly delights in the kingdome of Christ In the earthly Paradise was a Riuer that diuided it selfe into foure heads and so runne euen without the Garden What is this Riuer but the abundance of holinesse flowing from the Holy Ghost for the qualification of the Elect gathered from all the foure parts of the world the streames of which Ocean runne in the hearts of the godly in this life euen on the outside of Paradise And at this time did our Sauiour fitly vse this Metaphor for thereby he signified that though this world were but a place of banishment yet in death Gods banished should returne After all the labours and trauells and sorrowes they haue felt in this cursed world they should in death come to a place of pleasure and eternall rest and that as by the first Adams meanes all were cast ou● of the first Paradise so Christ was the second Adam that hauing at that time satisfied Gods wrath for the sinne of the first Adam would let all the godly into the celestiall Paradise and that hee had now driuen away the Angell with the flaming sword and so the passage into Paradise was open Yea fitly doth Christ talke of Paradise now because now was the very time in which the second Creation was beginning to be
makes sufficient payment to Gods iustice and ouercomes death for vs and that by reason of the worthinesse of his person It is more for Christ to die one houre than for all the world to be dead for euer For it is in this as it is in a prison into which many debtors are cast It is an euerlasting prison to such as cannot pay their debts but it is but a temporarie prison to such as either by themselues or any other make full payment of what is owing 6. That by his death he might make a medicine to kill sinne in vs which might so eat downe the power of sinne that it should no more reigne in vs and so by degrees abolish sinne He died that we might die to sinne by the vertue of his death Rom. 6. 7. That thereby he might buy life for the world He gaue his flesh for the life of the world euen to purchase eternall life for the elect world Ioh. 6. 51. 8. That many sonnes might be borne to God Christ was like seed falling from heauen to the earth and there dying it quickned and brought forth many sonnes to God Esay 53. 10. Ioh. 12. 24. yea the doctrine of Christ dead for our sins is still like to diuine seed falling into our hearts which conuerts men and turnes them to God Thus of the Reasons Now what vse may we make of the consideration of the death of Christ Many things we may learne from hence 1. It should teach vs to be stedfast in the faith and to beleeue and trust vpon Gods mercies for Christ died for our sinnes and therefore wee are certainly reconciled vnto God 1 Cor. 15. 3. Rom. 5. 10. And God doth assure vs of so much in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper Matth. 26. 2. We should neuer be afraid of Death and Hell 1 Thess 5. 9 10. Christ by dying for vs hath deuoured and euen swallowed vp Death and Hell so as they shall neuer hurt vs. As the fire consumes the stubble so by wonderfull Art Christ by dying hath consumed all the forces and power of Death and the sting of it 1 Cor. 15. 54. Heb. 2. 15. 14. Death as a curse was laid vpon Christ that our death might be blessed to vs. 3. It should maruellously inflame our hearts with the admiration of the loue of Christ to vs 1 Ioh. 3. 16. 4. Henceforth we that liue should not liue to our selues but to him that died for vs and carry our selues as men that are dead to the world and the sinfull pleasures and lusts thereof and shew the proofe of the vertue of Christs death in vs by the mortification of our sinnes 2 Cor. 5. 15. Rom. 6. 2. 6. 5. It should breed in vs a holy resolution to suffer any thing for his sake euen to forsake Father Mother Wife Children Husband yea and Life it selfe for his sake and the Gospels Iohn 12. 24 25 26. yea it should make vs willing to lay downe our liues one for another if our life may doe seruice to the Church of God and our brethren 1 Ioh. 3. 16. 6 Seeing Christ in death falls to the ground like a dead carkas we should be like spirituall Eagles to flie to it wheresoeuer we finde it whether in the Word or Sacraments and our soules should feed heartily but spiritually vpon it Matth. 24. And seeing God in his ordinances presents vs still with the dead body of his Sonne it should be a meanes to draw all men to it and to gather into one all the children of God that were scattered abroad Iohn 11. 52. and 12. 32 33. 7. The meditation of the death of Christ should make vs in all estates to liue at rest and in a holy security as knowing that Christ died for vs that whether we wake or sleepe we might liue together with him 1 Thess 5. 10. If we liue we liue to the Lord and if we die we die to the Lord Whether we liue or die we are the Lords Rom. 14. 7 8. Thus of the generall proposition concerning the death of Christ and the Reasons and Vses of it In the Explication these things are to be confidered 1. Who died 2. Who were the speciall witnesses of his death 3. How he died 4. For whom he died 5. When he died 6. The consequents of his death For the first if we aske who died the Apostle Paul Rom. 8. 34. answers It is Christ which is dead Which is to be obserued the better to stirre vp our hearts to consider both the wonder of it and the reason of it That any other man should die is no wonder because all other men were sinfull and mortall but here Iesus Christ the Righteous who onely hath immortality dies and withall it leads vs to thinke of the reason of it for he did not die nay he could not die if he had beene considered as a priuate person because he deserued not death in his owne person but he died as our suretie and as a publike vndertaker for vs all hee died in our roome But yet we are further to inquire into this question and to consider whether this death belong to the person of Christ or only to his Natures or to each of them he being God and man in one person And in this we must take heed what our hearts answer for though it be true that Christ died in respect of the flesh so as it was only the flesh that suffered death in respect of the Nature that died yet his death belonged to the Word in respect of the Person for the Word the Lord of life and glory suffered and died not in respect of his Diuinitie which is immutable and altogether impassible but in respect of his Humanitie or in his flesh God did not die with the flesh but in the flesh and he died in his flesh that is in that flesh which was vnited to the diuine Nature If the flesh of Christ were the flesh of the Sonne of God then his dying in the flesh doth belong to him as the Sonne of God Thus his bloud is said to be the Bloud of God Act. 20. 28. and this we must needs beleeue for else his death as a bare man could not haue beene of sufficient merit for all our sinnes There is yet one thing more to be thought on about this Question and that is that the Humanitie that is the soule and flesh of Christ did in death and after death remaine in the Person of the Sonne of God firmely vnited Though the Soule was disvnited from the Body yet neither Body nor Soule were dis-vnited from the Person of the Sonne of God The parts of the Humane Nature were diuided in death one from another so as one was on earth and the other in heauen but yet both of them remained and subsisted in the Diuine Nature else if in death there had beene a new manner of subsisting Christ had had two Persons as well as two Natures which is Heresie to
beleeue Thus of the first Question For the second we shall finde in the Story of the Euangelists that the chiefe Witnesses of Christs death were women that followed Christ from Galile and ministered to him by name Mary Magdalen and Mary the mother of Iames and Ioses and Salome and the mother of Z●bedees children These a farre off beheld what was done Of all the Apostles and seuentie Disciples here is not one but onely Iohn the Euangelist who was by the Crosse with the Virgin Mary Thus will God exercise the faith of his seruants the Church must receiue the report of the things that concerne the death of Christ from women as the chiefe Witnesses and hereby did Christ honour the pietie of these women that followed him to the death when the Disciples fled and left him which is an euerlasting honour to their sex and shewes that God can make women glorious confessors of the Truth euen at such times as men hide their heads for feare What a shame is this for the Apostles to be absent from a spectacle vpon which the saluation of the whole world doth depend Besides hence we may gather that Christ can preserue vnto himselfe some number that professe his Truth and can arme them against the feare of danger euen in the most desperate persecutions Yea some such as will neither flie nor hide themselues Now for the third Question there are many things to be noted in the manner how Christ died for 1. Hee died truly It was not a putatiue death but a true death He died in deed and not in shew or appearance onely 2. He died a grieuous death for hee died a painfull death and he died a violent death and he died a cursed death There were certain in ancient times that held that Christ receiued many wounds was smitten whipped nailed and shed his bloud and died his Soule going out of his Body but yet neuer indeed felt any paine He had they said a body that could suffer but not a Nature that could grieue or feele paine But that he did feele paine is not only manifest by his owne words but is expresly affirmed by the Prophet Esay Chap. 53. He suffered also a violent death he did not die a naturall death and it must needs be so because Christ had nothing in him to cause him to die and besides he thereby answers to the Types in the Sacrifices of the old Testament which were not onely beasts dead but beasts slaine Thirdly he suffered a cursed death for such was the death of the Crosse and God had before pronounced it a cursed way of dying Galat. 3. 13. All which as it shewes the grieuousnesse of our sinnes by nature so doth it import the greatnesse of our blessednesse by grace for therefore did Christ die a cursed death that wee might liue a blessed life as the Apostle shewes Gal. 3. 13 14. Yea and besides hereby the Curse is remoued from our death so as it is a blessed thing for a Christian man to die and go out of the world when God calls for him 3. He died willingly not by compulsion he laid downe his life for no man could take it from him Ioh. 10. 18. and that may appeare by the Story for Christ cried with a loud voice and gaue vp the ghost Now men that lye a dying languish and their voice failes them or at least growes weake Againe it is said Christ laid his head aside and then gaue vp the ghost whereas other men first giue vp the ghost and then their heads fall aside and further to shew that he died when he listed he was found dead sooner than other men that died on the Crosse which Pilate himselfe wondered at Now this is for our great comfort that he died so willingly for it both addes to the sufficiencie of the propitiation in his death and shewes vs the greatnesse of his tender loue to vs and withall it should fire vs to a holy resolution with all willingnesse to doe any thing he would haue vs or suffer any thing for his sake 4. He died most religiously and his piety in his death is commended for his obedience to his Father and for his care for his Mother and for his loue to his enemies and for his deuotion in respect of himselfe His obedience to God his Father in his death is commended Phil. 2. 9. because hee did not onely obey all the Morall Law that all men were bound to but obeyed the singular commandement giuen by his Father euen that of dying for the people which as Man he was not bound to but as a Mediator Which should teach vs abnegation of our selues whatsoeuer it is God commands vs we should be willing to do how hard soeuer Gods work seemes to be This care for his Mother is recorded by Saint Iohn Chap. 19. 25 26. when he saw his Mother standing by with the beloued Disciple he said Woman behold thy Sonne and vnto him Behold thy Mother Thus is Christ a most perfect Patterne of righteousnesse in both Tables for as hee had before shewed his godlinesse in the first Table so doth he here shew his naturall affection and tender care of his Mother in the second Table Now was the time come when Simeons prophecie was accomplished vpon his poore Mother now did the sword of bitter sorrowes pierce thorow her righteous soule while shee beholds that dolefull spectacle of her matchlesse Childe suffering death vpon the Tree Luke 2. 35. And therefore now to comfort her doth he commit her to Iohn his beloued Disciple with charge that he should looke to her after his death taking this care for his Mother of whom he was made man and commending her to his Disciple with such humane affection he shewes himselfe to be that high Teacher sent of God The Tree to which the members of Christ dying were fastened was a chaire of a spirituall master teaching for hereby he teacheth children how they should honour their parents and continue a reuerent loue to them euen to their last gaspe and hereby he teacheth hearers how to performe gratefulnesse to their Teachers not only by releeuing their Teachers while they liue but by helping their parents or children when they are dead He calls her Woman not out of contempt but to tell her and all men that he that then was a dying was more than the Sonne of Mary Yea and thereby the comforts her for he intimated that being more than Man hee was able to ouercome death and could not be van quished by his enemies His loue to his enemies he shewes by praying for them when they most outragiously and blasphemously persecuted him to the death He said Father forgiue them they know not what they doe The crie of their blasphemies and his innocent bloud went vp to heauen against them but Iesus makes haste to send vp the crie of his prayers for them that they perish not for euer and therefore the first words he
speakes on the Crosse is the words of his intercession Luke 23. 34. which should be an admirable paterne to teach vs to goe and doe likewise Neuer was there a greater man on earth nor did euer man suffer such wrongs and yet you see how he is affected He that bids vs pray for our enemies doth it himselfe in a harder case than euer can be ours If we will be true disciples we must shew it by forgiuing men their trespasses and by praying for them especially when we are about to die if we would euer haue God forgiue vs we must forgiue men their trespasses against vs. This prayer of Christ was heard as appeares by the conuersion of many of those enemies of his after his death Yet obserue he prayes not for such as sinned of malitious wickednesse but for such as sinned out of ignorant zeale or generall prophanenesse of Nature many of the people were carried with blinde zeale and many of the Gentiles were ignorant of the true story of the life and cause of Christ for which he suffered those were curable and for those he prayes And this may be a comfort to vs he that can obserue this difference in his persecuting aduersaries will much more shew it in considering the frailties and ignorances of his owne seruants that desire to please him though they faile of that they desire to doe through strength of temptation or other weaknesse and ignorance Againe note it is not enough for the partie offending that the partie offended doe forgiue but God also must be sought vnto for forgiuenesse Lastly our Sauiour shewes his religiousnesse in his maner of dying by his deuout care for his owne soule shewed in his prayer when he said Father into thy hands I commend my Spirit Luke 23. 46. when he had be queathed all other things as Peace to his Disciples his body to the Iewes his garments to his Tormentors Paradise to the Theefe pardon to the penitent and his Mother to his Friend now only remained his Soule and that he commends to God Euen Iesus can carry nothing with him out of the world but his Soule and therefore he prouides for that Which should teach vs what we should doe our greatest care should be that our soules may be safe when we die and that they may be so we see here two things must be done while we liue First we must get assurance that God is our Father we are his children and then when we come to dye we must commit our soules by faithfull and heartie prayers into his hands and for feare of the worse wee should begin betimes to prepare for death and by daily prayer to put our soules into Gods hands Obserue that these words were first vsed by the Prophet Dauid Psal 31. 5. who committed his soule to God being horribly persecuted by Saul and in great danger and hauing no friend to trust to Now our Sauiour being in like but greater distresse doth make choice of Dauids words to expresse his prayer in which should teach vs to acquaint our selues with the Scriptures especially of this kinde for as it will be accepted if our prayers be made according to Gods will so is it a speciall aduantage and helpe to our faith and prayers to fashion them to the very paternes in Gods Booke and to say as the godly haue said to God in the like case Finally this practise of our Sauiour may be a great comfort to vs and that two waies for first we may gather from his example that if once we haue committed our soules to God he will keep them safe as Paul said 2 Tim. 12. And secondly it will be comfortable for vs in death or danger to flie to Iesus Christ to beseech him to helpe our soules with his Father who cannot forget that once himselfe on earth made the same moane to his Father that we doe now to him Thus Stephen doth Act. 7. The fourth question is for whom Christ died and the Answer is giuen distinctly in many places of Scripture First he died for men not for other creatures Heb. 2. 14. 18. Though the effect of his death reach to other creatures as to the Angels Phil. 2. 10 11. and to the creatures that suffered vanitie for mans sinne Rom. 8. 19 20 22. Secondly he died not for his friends but such as in the state of nature were his enemies and sinners not iust men Rom. 5. 8 10. Thirdly he died not for Iewes only but for the Gentiles also 1 Ioh. 2. 2. Fourthly hee died not for goats but for his sheepe Ioh. 10. 11 15. not for the world but for the Church Ioh. 17. 9. Eph. 5. 25. euen for such as should beleeue in his name Ioh. 3. 16. Fifthly he died not for some beleeuers but for all beleeuers Rom. 8. 32. and so not for learned men or great men but for all men of all sorts that beleeue 1 Tim. 2. 6. Sixthly he died not for those that did beleeue his words but for all that should beleeue the words of his seruants afterwards to the end of the world Ioh. 17. 21. And so he died for vs many hundred yeares before wee were borne Seuenthly not for all beleeuers in generall only but for euery particular by name Ioh. 10. 3. 14 15. And the knowledge hereof should serue for diuers Vses For first it should be very comfortable for all sorts of Christians to thinke that Christ died for them and did thinke of them in particular and by name Secondly it should much affect vs with admiration of the greatnesse of his loue that would die for such vile wretches as we were by nature wicked and enemies to him as the Apostle vrgeth it Rom. 5. 6. to 10. And thirdly in speciall it should much incourage such as are burthened with the greatnesse of their sinnes to know that he well vnderstood it that he was to die for the vngodly Fourthly it should teach Christians to restraine censure and iudging of them that are without The vertue of Christs death may reach to many more than we know and to such as for the present are vile enemies to the Christian name Fifthly wee should all labour to be such as Christ hath described to haue actually a part in his death And so Saint Paul tels vs we must be such as see and acknowledge how vile and wicked we are by nature whatsoeuer gifts or priuiledges we haue and how ciuill soeuer we haue liued in comparison of others Rom. 5. 6 c. and our Sauiour tels vs we must be beleeuers and sheepe such as will heare and be ruled by his voice and 2 Cor. 5. 15. the Apostle saith We must be such as will liue to him that died for vs and Saint Iohn saith Reuel 14. 3 4. we must not be defiled with women that is with Idolatry or spirituall whoredome that is with any beloued sinne and must follow the Lambe whithersoeuer he goeth Finally if Christ died for vs it must needs
is slaine by the creature which also vpbraids the stupiditie of men that cannot be moued with such an obiect especially the horrible wickednesse of the chiefe Priests and Rulers and people of the Iewes that are not stirred with remorse for so grieuous a sinne Thirdly this shaking of the earth is thought to signifie and foretell the shaking of the world by the Gospell afterwards so as all the world should be moued at the sound of the voice of Christ in the Gospell Heb. 12. 26 27. The rending of the Rockes 1. Did vpbraid the Iewes for the hardnesse of their hearts that were worse than the very Rockes The Rockes cleaue at the death of Christ and yet their hearts are vnmoued 2. It might signifie the same with the Earthquake viz. that the vertue of Christs death carried by the Gospell into the world would bee of force to teare and rent the hearts of wicked men though they were as hard as Rockes The opening of the graues signified that Christs death had vanquished Death and that it should not haue power to hold the body of the Saints in the graue long and withall it told the Iewes aforehand that it would be in vaine for them to roule great stones vpon Christs graue for he would rise againe doe they what they could It is said that the dead bodies arose after the Resurrection of Christ which hath made some Diuines thinke that the graues were not opened till after the Resurrection though Saint Matthew reckons this thing together with the rest of the Miracles that concerned Christs death Thus of the Testimony Diuine The Humane Testimony was the Testimony of the Roman Centurion and the Souldiers with him who feared and glorified God and said Of a truth this was the Sonne of God and the multitude that came to the execution beholding the things that were done smote their breasts and returned Matth. 27. 54. Mark 15. 19. Luke 23. 47 48. And this Testimonie shewes 1. The maruellous senselesnesse of the Priests and learned men and great men of the Iewes that these men that were Pagans and these poore Plebeians should be so affected with feare and wonder and giue such an honourable testimony to the innocencie and Diuinity of Christ when these great Pillars of the Church are so obstinately auerse and hostily minded it shewes that they were prodigiously sinfull and hard hearted and withall it shewes what a plague a hard heart is whereso euer it is found though in learned or great men Though God shake the earth teare the Rockes open the graues and though he make strangers to confesse his glory yet they are the same men still 2. That it is easie with Christ to defend his owne credit and cause euen in the hardest times though Iudas betray him Peter deny him and the rest of the Disciples flie from him yet he can make a Centurion a Souldier a Pagan to doe the worke his Disciples should haue done Hee can glorifie himselfe by the mouth of Babes and Sucklings if need be Psal 8. 2. Buried ACT. 13. 29. And when they had fulfilled all things that were written of him they tooke him downe from the tree and put him in a sepulchre THat Christ was buried is manifest by the Storie of the Euangelists and is a part of the Creed not doubted of by any amongst vs. Concerning his buriall I propound these things to be considered 1. The reasons why it was needfull Christ should be buried 2. The place where he was buried 3. The persons by whom he was buried 4. The manner how he was buried 5. The time how long he continued in the graue Our Sauiours bodie was buried for these Reasons 1. That the Scripture might be fulfilled that had prophecied of it see Esay 53. 9. 2. That it might appeare he was truly dead 3. That he might pursue and ouercome death in his owne cell or den 4. That he might burie our sins with him and for euer hide them from the sight of God 5. That we being made partakers of the fruit of his buriall might be buried with him in respect of our sins The immersion in the water of Baptisme is a signe of this spirituall buriall with Christ Rom. 6. 4. Col. 2. 12. 6. That he might sanctifie our buriall to vs and so expell from vs that horror and feare we might conceiue about our lying in the graue and so confirme vs in the hope of our Resurrection 7. That we might learne from thence to giue honour to the body of Christians in prouiding honest and decent buriall for them such as might answer the hope wee haue of our Resurrection Mens bodies shall rise and to signifie so much we should lay them in the graue as in a safe place to keepe them till the Resurrection For the place where he was buried that may be diuersly answered 1. He was buried in a noted place neere to Ierusalem and that for two causes The one that so all occasion of doubting of his death or truth of his buriall and so of his resurrection might be remoued The other that by the rest of Christ in the graue the vision of rest and peace which the name Ierusalem signified might be knowne to bee procured by Christ Rest I say spirituall and eternall 2. He was buried in a Garden thereby hauing relation to the first Adam for as our vnrest began at the sinne of the first Adam so here in a Garden doth the second Adam come to rest and so begins our spirituall rest And withall to giue vs hope that as from the sinne of the first Adam we were cast out of the garden of pleasure so by the suffering of the second Adam who lay buried in a Garden we might haue a happy returne to the heauenly Paradise And as Christ was carried from the Crosse to the garden of rest so shall we be taken from the calamities of life into heauenly rest 3. He was buried in a Sepulchre hewed out of a rocke that so his enemies might haue no occasion to cauill and say his Disciples stole him away by secret holes or passages vnder ground and withall to signifie what the state of our naturall hearts is when Christ comes spiritually to rest in our soules hee must hew him a place out of the rocks if he get roome in our hearts 4. He was buried in a Sepulchre that was new that thereby might be signified that the condition of death was by the merit of Christ made new and was altogether different from that which it was wont to be and withall to tell vs that Christ will rest in the heart of no man vnlesse it be new 5. He was buried in a Sepulchre in which neuer man was laid lest his aduersaries should cauill and say it was some other that was risen or that he rose from the dead by vertue of touching some other corps see 2 King 13. 21. 6. He was buried in another mans Sepulchre to signifie that he died and was
Ghost yet that hinders not the truth of this assertiō for in the works ad extra all the Trinity work but yet in their order God the Father by the Son through the Holy Ghost raised the dead body of Christ Secondly he rose by a way that neuer man rose and not as other men haue risen or shall rise by a way peculiar to himselfe viz. as the Lord of Life as the first borne of the Dead as the first fruits of them that sleepe Rev. 1. 5. 1 Cor. 15. 20. 23. not as a priuate person but as a publike person as our head and surety He saw no corruption in the Graue as other dead bodies doe and he rose to immortall life neuer to dye againe whereas Lazarus and others that were raised were raised but to a mortall life they were to dye againe he was the first tha● euer rose to eternall life Thirdly hee rose in the same body that was dead and buried Luk. 24. 39. which was necessary for our comfort in the discharge of our debt that the same body that was imprisoned came out of prison and doth the better assure the hope of the resurrection of our bodies Fourthly he rose inuitis custodibus whether the Keepers of the Sepulchre would or not and smote them with great amazement to shew how easie it is for him to triumph ouer his enemies when they seeme to bee surest of victory He that could conquer them when they had nothing in appearance to oppose them but a dead body can as easily defeat all his enemies that onely differ from his people only in greatnesse of earthly power If the Church were as the dead body of Christ yet it may rise againe notwithstanding all their armed Troopes Fistly hee rose with an earthquake that thereby hee might signifie First that the earth did him homage and as it were sware fealty to him as her Lord and Proprietary Secondly that as the earth trembled at his death so now as it were is exalted for ioy that shee was to render him aliue from the dead Thirdly that Christ would shake the world and the heart of man by his Gospell Heb. 12. Fourthly that Christ by his power can and will make the earth giue vp her dead at the last day Lastly the Angels ministred vnto him by rolling away the stone c. to signifie that not onely he was Lord of Angels but that God was satisfied as Iudges that send some officer to fetch the prisoner out of prison and release him Fiftly but why was it necessary that Christ should rise againe Ans First that the Scripture might bee fulfilled that had foretold it Psal 16. 10. Ioh. 20. 9. Mat. 26. 54. Secondly if the Scripture had not foretold yet such was the dignity of his person that he must needs rise for it was impossible for him to be holden downe of Death Act. 2. 24. for first he was the onely Son of God and the Father loues his Sonne and cannot suffer him to be ouercome of death Besides he was God himselfe the Author and Prince of life and therefore it had beene absurd for him to abide in death that giues all others life Thirdly hee was a iust man and innocent and had fully satisfied for our sinnes and therefore God could not keepe him in prison for nothing and where sinne is not there death cannot reigne Thus of the second reason Thirdly such was the office of him that rose againe that he could not abide in death as was shewed before hee must declare Gods name to his brethren hee must make intercession hee must reigne as a King euerlasting all which he could not doe if he abide in death Fourthly because there was a Decree for his resurrection in Gods eternall Councell Psal 2. 7. commpared with Act. 13. 32. 33. Fiftly that the types and shadowes of it might bee fulfilled Ionas was a type of the Resurrection Mat. 12. 39. So was Adam waking out of the sleepe into which hee was cast when the Woman was made out of his side 〈◊〉 was Samson that brake asunder the barres and gates and was deliuered so was Dauid that was so often oppressed and yet exalted to the kingdome Psal 86. 13. Concerning the Apparitions of Christ after his resurrection the Scripture records that our Sauiour was on earth forty daies and in that time appeared to many at seuerall times shewing himselfe aliue from the dead and giuing order concerning his Kingdome as hee was forty daies in giuing the Law to Moses on the Mount so was he forty daies in giuing order about the new Law to the Apostles and hee that began to consecrate himselfe to the office appointed him by his Father in fasting forty daies doth now take forty daies both to lay downe that office and to consecrate the Ministery of his Disciples Now concerning these Apparitions diuers things are to be considered 1. The Reasons why he appeared 2. The Persons to whom he appeared For the first our Sauiour staied a while vpon earth and appeared at seuerall times for these Reasons 1. That he might confirme the infallible truth of his Resurrection that the Christian world might bee fully assured of it that God had raised him from the dead Act. 10. 40 41. and that he was raised in the same body that was crucified and buried for our sinnes 2. That he might giue order to his Disciples concerning all things that concerned his Kingdome ouer Iewes and Gentiles and might appoint all the alterations were to bee made in the manner of gouerning the Christian world Act. 1. 3. and thus hee instituted the seuerall orders of Ministers vnder the Gospell granting full Commission to the Apostles Act. 28. 18. Eph. 4. 11. and so we haue reason to beleeue that the translation of the day for the Christian Sabbath was by appointment from him while he was on earth with other things which the Apostles ordered afterwards 3. That he might giue gifts vnto the men that were to begin the worke of erecting the Christian world Ioh. 20. 21 22 23. Eph. 4. promising to giue the holy Ghost more fully Act. 1. 4. The persons to whom hee appeared are to be considered negatiuely and affirmatiuely 1. Negatiuely he appeared not to the world not to all the people not to the chiefe Priests Rulers of the people Act. 10. 41. that therby he might shew First that his Kingdome was not of this world Iob. 18. 36. Secondly that he did not need the helpe and patronage of the greatnesse of this world in businesses of his Kingdome Thirdly that his Kingdome comes not by externall obseruation and is not obiected to the eyes of the body but to the eyes of the minde and faith Luk. 17. 20 21. Ioh. 20. 29. Fourthly that the contempt of the meanes in the ordinances of Christ shall bee scourged with a priuation of all fellowship with Christ in his glory The chiefe Priests and Rulers and other despisers of the Doctrine and Miracles of Christ in
naturall condition to a glorious fruition of the name of God and therefore in the Originall the Preposition rendered in hath the force of into as well as in Baptise them into the name of the Father Sonne and Holy Ghost 4. Words of consolation and so he comforts them by two arguments the one taken from the successe of their doctrine and the other from his own perpetuall presence with them The argument from the successe of their doctrine is recorded by Saint Marke and that is two-fold the one ordinary the other extraordinary The ordinary successe is either in the good or in the bad In the good so many as will beleeue and are baptised and will obserue all that Christ commands them which is to be supplied out of Saint Matthew they shall be as certainly saued in heauen as they are taught on earth And contrariwise such as will not beleeue and receiue their doctrine Christ wil reuenge it vpon them with the damnation of their soules nor shall their Baptisme helpe them if they will not beleeue and obey Mark 16. 16. The extraordinary successe should be in the signes should follow such as beleeue which are reckoned Mar. 16. 17 18. and these are attributed to all beleeuers though they were to be done but by some only because the end of those miracles was to glorifie the doctrine beleeued on by all Nor did these signes last vnto all times but onely in the first times of the Church for the more effectual confirmation of that doctrine which could not be demonstrated by naturall arguments Nor did euery beleeuer that shewed some of them shew all of them some spake with new tongues that yet could not heale the sicke for there were diuersities of gifts and operations and yet all from one Spirit 1 Cor. 12. 4 5. The second argument of consolation is taken from his perpetuall presence with them to the end of the world which must be vnderstood of his spirituall presence and must be extended to all the godly especially Ministers seeing the Apostles could not liue themselues to the end of the world Thus of the third Apparition after the day of the Resurrection We reade of the appearing of our Sauiour at three other times besides these as to more than fiue hundred brethren together 1 Cor. 15. 6. and to Iames the Apostle alone 1 Cor. 15. 6. And then lastly vpon the day of his Ascension he appeared to the Apostles on Mount Oliuet not far from Bethania Act. 1. 12. Of these three I haue nothing to say for concerning two of them we reade nothing in Scripture but the bare mention of them and for the last it belongs to the Article of his Ascension And thus of the Apparitions of Christ after his Resurrection The last part of my Diuision that concernes the Resurrection is about the fruit of the Resurrection or the good that comes to vs by our Sauiours rising from the dead and so 1. The Resurrection of our Sauiour serues exceedingly to confirme our faith and to assure vs that he was the Sonne of God Rom. 1. 4. and the promised Messias that could thus miraculously raise himselfe from the dead Ioh. 10. 17 18. and 2. 19. to 23. Matth. 12. 39 40. 2. The Resurrection of Christ assures vs of our Iustification from our sinnes Rom. 4. 25. The Father by deliuering Christ to death did actually condemne our sinnes in his flesh as our surety Rom. 8. 3. So by letting him out of the prison of the graue in his Resurrection he did actually absolue and acquit him from the obligation in which he was bound and so in discharging him doth acknowledge payment and satisfaction and so we are discharged too If he had not risen we had been still in our sinnes 1 Cor. 15. 17 18. Rom. 8. 34. Phil. 3. 8 9 10. 3. The Resurrection of Christ is the cause of a two-fold resurrection in vs. The first Resurrection is of the soule from the death of sinne to the life of grace Eph. 2. 4 5. Col. 2. 12 13. Rom. 6. 4 5. and this flowes from his Resurrection The second is of the body out of the graue which is to be accomplished at the last Iudgement of which the Resurrection of Christ is both the cause and the pledge 1 Cor 15. 20 21 22. Rom. 8. 11. 1 Thess 4. 14. And a taste of this Christ gaue in the resurrection of diuers Saints that appeared to many in Ierusalem immediately vpon his Resurrection Matth. 27. 52 53. 4. The Resurrection of Christ begets in vs a liuely hope of a most glorious inheritance in heauen As the Apostle shewes 1 Pet. 1. 3 4. and Rom. 5. 10. where we shall for euer triumph with him in the victory ouer Death and the Graue and Hell Hosea 13. 14. 1 Cor. 15. 54 c. 5. It warrants and effects our pers●uerance in life for he rose to life to die no more neither in himselfe nor in the spirituall life of his members as the Apostle reasons Rom. 6. 9 10. Now the reason of all this is because Christ sustained our person and rose againe as well as died in our stead He died and rose againe as a publike person and a root of a new mankinde and besides the same Spirit that raised Iesus Christ from the dead is in vs to worke all those things intended by his Resurrection Rom. 8. 11. The vse of this Article may be diuers 1. By way of Information and so it proues the Diuinitie of Christ the Apostle sayes he was mightily declared to be the Sonne of God by the Resurrection from the dead He that could ouercome so great Enemies as Sin Death the Graue and Hell and had power of himselfe to take vp his life must needs be God and so Saint Paul applies the words of the second Psalme Thou art my Sonne this day haue I begotten thee to the Resurrection of Christ which is true in respect of the manifestation of his Diuinitie Rom. 1. 4. Act. 13. 33. 2. By way of Instruction and so first Saint Paul 2 Tim. 2. 8. chargeth vs in a speciall manner to remember this Article and to lay fast hold vpon it for Iewes and Pagans can beleeue that Iesus died but a Christian must goe further to beleeue that he was raised from the dead Secondly wee should learne from Christs Resurrection to rise to newnesse of life A Christian should be ashamed to lye dead in the graues of sinne when his Sauiour is risen from the dead Nay if we be ingrafted into Christ aright wee are risen with him and are aliue from the dead and shew it by a spirituall liuelinesse in all parts of a renewed conuersation and therefore if thou wouldest haue comfort that thou art a true Christian thou must shew it by liuing in a new conuersation and by awaking from spirituall slumbring and securitie and standing vp from the dead Eph. 5. 14. If there be life in the Head there is life in all the
hath made vs to sit in heauenly places in Christ Iesus Eph. 1. 6. for as he left vs the earnest of his Spirit so he tooke from vs the earnest of the flesh and caried it into heauen as a pawne to assure that the whole should be brought after him So that his ascension into heauen works our ascension into heauen and so a threefold ascension For first heauen is opened for a spirituall ascension of our minds while our bodies are on earth our hearts taking vnspeakable comfort by faith in our vnion with Christ and so with God whereas otherwise without Christ our very thoughts are shut out of heauen our hearts hauing no cause of comfort but rather of sorrow to thinke of our losse of Gods fauour and so glorious a place Secondly heauen is opened for our soules to enter in when we dye our soules being to bee caried by the Angells into heauen that before in Adam kept vs out of heauen Thirdly heauen is opened for both soule and body at the last day 1 Thes 4. 14. 17. Ioh. 17. 24. Thus of the first benefit Another benefit comes to vs by the ascension of Christ and that is the leading of our enemies captiue for his triumph ouer them when he led captiuity captiue Psal 89. 19. extends to vs. That we may vnderstand this the better wee must know that Christs victory ouer his enemies had fiue degrees First it is the ordination of it and so he conquered from eternity Secondly the prediction of it and so his conquest was a foot in all the ages of the old Testament and began at the promise in Paradise after the fall and was plainly renewed in that place of the Psalmes quoted before Thirdly the operation of it in his owne person and so he conquered on the Crosse and triumphed in his Ascension Fourthly the application of it and so he conquereth and hath in all ages conquered in his Members making them able to ouercome Sinne and Sathan and the World but this is but in part and in the beginnings of it Fiftly the consummation and full accomplishment of the victory and so the Deuils and the Graue and Death and Sinne and the World shall be for euer vanquished at the last day when Christ shall appeare in glory and wee be made like vnto him in an euerlasting freedome from all misery The third benefit is the daily helpe wee haue from the intercession of Christ in heauen that perfectly remembers vs and appeares before God for vs to make our persons and praiers and workes still accepted before God as hath beene shewed before The last benefit is the sending of the holy Ghost to be with the Church to the end of the world in a speciall manner to qualifie vs with all needfull gifts and to be our Comforter as hath likewise beene shewed before Thirdly this Article serues for confuration of diuers sorts of men as 1. Of those that say the very body of Christ is present to the bodies of men in the Sacrament of the Supper whereas the Article is plaine he is in body ascended into heauen 2. Of the Papists about merit of workes They say Christ merited our Iustification but wee must merit our place in heauen Whereas our Sauiour saith He went to heauen to prouide and prepare a place for vs. 3. Of such as say they must giue way to an insufficient ministery because able men cannot bee had Whereas Christ ascended to giue gifts vnto men and therefore if all lawfull meanes were vsed able men would bee found by his blessing 4. Of such as thinke because they were not brought vp to learning or haue liued long in ignorance therefore knowledge must not bee required of them nor can they attaine to it whereas if they had honest hearts and would conscionably vse the meanes they might bee led into all truth by the Comforter which Christ hath sent 5. Of such as say they may liue in some sinnes and they can neuer bee seduced in this life which is a varne excuse for their negligence and wilfull indulgence ouer their corruptions for Christ ascended to lead captiuity captiue 6. Of all worldlings that professe they are Christs and yet minde nothing but earthly things whereas if they were true Christians their hearts would haue ascended with Christ by seeking those things that are aboue Col. 3. 1. A fourth sort of vses are for instruction and so 1. This Article should make vs willing to dye seeing it is the highest point of our preferment to ascend to heauen and seeing to dye is but to ascend to heauen and goe to our Father and that Christ ascended to take possession for vs. 2. It should teach vs not to mourne immoderately for the losse of our dearest friends seeing they are ascended to heauen and wee can neuer lose so much as the Disciples did when such a Master and Sauiour was parted from them and went to heauen 3. It should stirre vs vp to all possible care of an holy and contented life it should seeme to vs a monstrous base thing to serue sinne or the deuill or the world that are such shamefull captiues to be a slaue to a slaue is a matchlesse basenesse and yet this is the condition of the most and which makes it more wofull man likes it and desires to continue so still Lastly it should worke vpon vs a strong impression of desire to carry our selues as strangers here and pilgrims and to haue our conuersation in heauen where Christ is and ●●om whence wee looke for him to come and vnite vs to himselfe when he shall change vs and make vs like himselfe in glory Hitherto of the Ascension of Christ The third degree of his exaltation is his Session at the right hand of God The first words of this Article are ambiguous because they are not taken in their proper sense for properly God hath no right hand as being a Spirit and Christ may not be thought to vse no other gesture in heauen but sitting and therefore we must enquire of the Scripture for the sense as it is figuratiue and so first what sitting may signifie then what the right hand of God signifies and then what it is to sit at the right hand of God For the first Sitting in a figuratiue sense in Scripture is vsed two waies First to note habitation abiding or resting as when the Apostles were willed to sit in that City till they were endued with power from on high Luk. 24. 49 Secondly to note Soueraignty and Iudiciarie power and when Solomon is said to sit vpon the Throne of his Father 1 King 1. 30. so Prou. 20. 8. Isa 16. 5. The right hand of God when it is spoken of about earthly things notes his power and helpe as Psal 44. 3. and when it is spoken of as in heauen it notes supreme glory and Maiestie and authority Now to be at the right hand when it is spoken of men it signifies to helpe as Psal 142. 5.
penance before one particular congregation for one fault when the punishment is inflicted for their amendment and it may be men will pray for them forgiue them What wil the horror be then whē they must be shamed before all men and Angels for all their sins and this iudgement must be for their confusion and no eye shall pity them And so it serues for the singular comfort of the godly if it be a comfort to be praised and cleared of aspersions before a great assembly on earth as say it were at the meeting of Parliament and done by the mouth of a King with the applause of all the hearers What shall their euerlasting comfort be when at that day by the voice of Christ himselfe they shall be praised for all the good they haue done and cleared from all aspersions censures suspitions and wrong iudgements on earth before all the world of men and Angels 6. It will bee a sudden iudgement Christ will come vpon the world like a theefe in the night that doth not vse to knocke at the doore and giue men warning He will come as the snare doth vpon the bird Luke 21. 35. 1 Thess 5. 2 3. Which serues to shew the wofull estate of wicked men that liue in securitie for while they say Peace peace sudden destruction comes vpon them either by particular or generall iudgement 1 Thess 5. 3. and it should serue to warne wicked men to take heed of those sins which doe especially harden the hearts of men and breed securitie and indisposition in them Our Sauiour himselfe instanceth in surfetting and drunkennesse and cares of life Luk. 21. 34. and it should teach all men to watch and daily to pray to God for mercy and grace that they may be alwayes ready as our Sauiour vrgeth in the same place Luk. 21. 34. 7. It will be a righteous Iudgement Rom. 2. 5. Reu. 19. 11. Psal 9. 9. for God will iudge according to his owne righteousnesse which is infinitely perfect Psal 7. 9. and it will be true iudgement without error or mistaking either by euidence or the law or the sentence Reuel 15. 5. and 19. 11. He will not respect any mens persons 1 Pet. 1. 17. nor will he iudge according to the outward appearance and colours of things Esay 11. 3. and it must be righteous because it shall be according to mens wayes and workes Ezech. 18. 30. Rom. 2. 7. 2 Cor. 5. 10. and hee cannot be corrupted with bribes for riches will not auaile in the day of wrath Iob 36. Nor will he regard the false testimonie of the world either for the wicked or against the godly for though it be true that Christ saith As I heare I iudge Ioh. 5. 30. yet that is meant of what he heares from his Father and his booke of prescience and remembrance and not of what hee heares from the world and no multitude nor power can be able to daunt this Iudge for he is a Lord of hoasts Ier. 11. 20. and will iudge by his strength Psal 54. 1. and therefore woe to the Hypocrite that makes a shift to scape the iudgement of man by his deceitfull colours and woe to the mightie men that now breake the net and scape and no man dares controll them and woe to all those foolish men that beleeue not Gods iustice because they like it not or seemes to be against their reason at that day God will ouercome euen in the things he is now iudged Psal 51. 6. Rom. 3. 4. and woe to all them that haue pronounced wrong iudgement on earth their sentence shall not stand but themselues shall come to iudgement for their ill iudgement on earth Eccles 3. 17. and in generall if God will iudge in righteousnesse then no wicked man shall euer be able to stand in iudgment Psal 1. 5. 8. It will be an eternall iudgement for so it is called Heb. 6. 2. not because the Iudge shall sit for euer in examining of causes and sentencing of men but because the effect of this iudgement shall be for euer Looke what happinesse is by sentence of the Iudge appointed for the godly that shal last for euer and so what miserie the wicked are adiudged to shall last for euer Which should serue greatly for reproofe of the carelesnesse of most men that so thinke of a present estate in this little space of time on earth that they forget to take order for eternitie and most wofull is the case of the wicked that so esteeme the pleasures of sinne here which are but for a season that they care not to plunge themselues into estate of torment which shall neuer haue end Ob. But how can this be iust that they should be punished for euer that haue sinned but a little time Sol. Diuers things may be answered to this 1. That no Iudge limiteth his torments to the time of the doing of the fact or crime he measures his punishment by the greatnesse of the offence not by the length of time As in the case of treason murder whoredome c. which may be done in an instant or short time and yet the punishment be for a long time as men punish by death which is a remouing of the malefactor from the societie of men for euer and shall not God haue the like allowance for his proceedings Secondly we must consider of the greatnes of sin by the person against whom it is committed men sinne against God who is infinite and therefore must suffer punishment that is infinite in continuance Thirdly if two men bargain together one selleth another buyeth the buyer will haue his bargaine for euer though the contract be made in a quarter of an houre now sinning is a selling of mens soules and bodies to the deuill for a short pleasure and therefore why should it not be iust that the deuill should haue them for euer Hitherto of the Answer to the first Question The second question is who shall be the Iudge The answer is to that that Christ shall be Iudge euen the same person that is Mediator and of whom all the former Articles of the Creed affirmed which is apparent by these and other Scriptures Ioh. 5. 22. 27. Act. 10. 42. and 17. 31. Not that the Father and Holy Ghost is remoued from this Iudgement for the authoritie of iudging belongs to the whole Trinitie but because the Sonne shall appeare in the Humane Nature and speake and pronounce sentence but when he speaks God speaks and when he iudges God shall iudge not only because he is God but because the Father shall speake and iudge by him so that the Iudgement belongs to him in respect of the visible proceeding in Iudgement and the promulgation and the execution of the sentence Dan. 7. 9. 13. and the like may bee said of his iudging as Man not that he is not Iudge in his Diuine Nature but because that which shall be seene and heard in the Iudgement shall proceed from his
cannot imagine any true praise of friendship that can be there wanting to any of that society The fourth is the actuall donation of power ouer all things euen the kingdome of the whole world God will then suffer them to enioy what their hearts can wish in heauen or earth they receiue then as their own all that euer God made Now from the possession of all these ariseth ioy vnspeakable and delight aboue imagination not only the heart of man but all his senses being taken vp with perpetuall admiration and refreshing being as it were continually in●●riated with those riuers of pleasures that are at the right hand of God The second part of the Execution containes the thrusting of all the wicked with the Diuell and his Angels into Hell where all the damned must suffer first abiection from the face of God and depriuation of the very sight of all that might comfort in heauen or earth Secondly the gnawing of conscience vpon the eternall remembrance of all their sinnes Thirdly vnutterable torments in fire vnquenchable Fourthly the horrid presence of the Deuill and his Angels all which are made more grieuous by the impossibilitie to find either ease or end The life they loath they must liue and the death they desire they shall neuer finde Oh that men could be warned in time to prouide that they neuer come into that place That message Diues would haue sent to his brethren is brought vnto men now by the Gospell and therefore let them awake to liue righteously that they perish not in this great damnation where shall be the Chaos of darknesse the horror of tribulation the feare of confusion the griefe of fearfull visions the voice of men lamenting the biting of wormes gnawing cold intollerable fire vnquenchable stinch intollerable darknesse palpable and an absolute despaire of all that is good The third thing is the creation of new heauens and new earth according to these Scriptures Esay 65. 17. and 66. 22. Reu. 21. 1. 2 Pet. 3. 13. Now about this Creation we are to consider of two things 1. The firing of the world 2. The libertie of the creatures For the first of these it is manifest that the world that it may be made new shall be cast into the fire as into a furnace The heauens and the earth are reserued vnto fire the heauens shall perish and shall all wax old as a garment and as a vesture God shall fold them vp and they shall be changed the heauens being on fire shall passe away and be dissolued with a noise and the elements shall melt with heat and the earth with the workes thereof shall be burnt vp Psal 102. 27 28. 2. Pet. 3. 5 7 10 11 12. The substance of the heauens and the earth shall not be annihilated but the qualities only shall be altered that is bettered The figure of this world shall passe away not the nature 1 Cor. 7. 31. For the second of these all things shall be so made new as all creatures that were brought into bondage shall then be set at libertie and receiue restitution as is manifest Acts 3. 21. Rom. 8. 23. That this point may be the more clearely vnderstood I must consider of two things First how the creatures are in bondage now and then how they shall be at liberty then The creatures be now in bondage many wayes First as any of them are corruptible so in bondage to corruption Secondly as they are subiect to mutations and confusions as in the case of the Aire and Seas Thirdly as they are forced to serue the turnes of wicked men and their vses Fourthly as they are teachers of the world and men will not learne the creatures are Gods great booke and it is a bondage to teach and lose their labour Fifthly as any of them are either the instrument or the subiect of mans punishment Sixthly as since the fall they haue lost their vigorous instincts as they are dulled and distempered in them Now for the second point they shall then be freed from all that vanitie or paine or misery or mutabilitie fell vpon them since the fall of man and withall they shall be restored into a glorious estate when the Elect are glorified and so they partake of the glorious libertie of the sonnes of God But this restitution shal not be made to each particular creature that hath beene but to each sort of creatures shall be then found aliue at the last day But what shall be their glorie or how long they shall continue cannot be determined without curiositie and rashnesse The fourth effect or consequent of the Iudgement is the deliuering of the kingdome of Christ into the hands of God the Father 1 Cor. 15. 24. which is to be vnderstood not of the glorious estate of Christ but of his temporall gouernment ouer the world and the Church as he ruled by means in this world for this kingdome ends when hee hath fully subdued the deuils and death and wicked men and hath fully deliuered the Elect from all sinne and misery Then there shall be no need to gouerne men by Magistrates or Preachers or Sacraments or discipline or of any of the helps of naturall or spirituall life Thus of the explication of this Article The vse that may be made of this Article in generall followes and so first it may extremely affright all men that lies in their sins without repentance for there are many things in this doctrine terrible as 1. That God hath set them a day wherein he will certainly bring them to account 2. That this day is most certaine and God will not alter his minde Act. 17. 31. Heb. 9. 27. 3. That this day will be a day of wrath to them and not of mercy The date of mercy vnto impenitent sinners will then be out Rom. 2. 5. 4. That all his sins shall then be discouered euen all his secret sins and none can be forgotten in as much as the euidence shall bee giuen out of so many bookes where all things are written as it were with a pen of iron and the point of a Diamond 1 Cor. 4. 5. Reuel 20. Ier. 17. 1. 5. That euen the longer hee liues the more hee heapes vp wrath against that day Rom. 2. 5. 6. That no meanes will then be auaileable to deliuer them Riches will not helpe them Iob 36. 18 19. nor multitude cannot shelter them Iude 15. 7. That though thou hast excelled in many gifts and done much good in the world yet if thou die in sinne without repentance thou shalt not escape Gods vengeance 1 Cor. 13. 3. 8. That it is but a little while thither 1 Pet. 4. 7. Iam. 5. 8. The signes of Christs comming are the most of them run out and we see that diuers of the last signes run together as if the Lord made haste to make an end of all things and if generall iudgement were yet further off yet death is at hand which giues a particular iudgement vpon thee
the word they reioyce in nor doe they apply the promises to themselues so as to beleeue Gods fauour and their owne saluation in the world to come 7. The gifts of restraining grace this is a great gift by which a man is made to forbeare many vile actions contrary to the bent of his owne nature and to act diuers things wholly aboue his owne disposition so as he is as if he were another man as Saul was when the spirit of God fell vpon him and so many men euen among the heathen had an expression on of valour wisdome chastity iustice c. and this was from the holy Ghost for the good of humane societies Thus God kept Abimelech from Abrahams wife Gen. 20. 6. Thus Haman can refraine his rage against Mordecai Hest. 5. 10. If this gift were not wicked men would bee as the wilde beasts of the desert And yet it is one thing to restraine a mans corruptions and another thing to mortifie them Thus of the operations of the holy Ghost t●at are common both to good and bad but the surpassing glory of his working is in the benefits proper to the Elect only so his works may be considered either in general or in particular The generall workes are 1. The conception and qualification of the humane nature of our Sauiour by which hee was made fit for that great worke of the redemption of all the Elect Math. 1. 18. Esay 61. 1. and 42. 1. and thus hee receiued the Spirit without measure Ioh. 3. 34. 2. His habitation in the godly their hearts being the temple of the holy Ghost so as he dwells in them after a wonderfull manner Rom. 8. 11. Eph. 2. 22. 2 Cor. 6. 3. The regeneration of all the Elect in their seasons Ioh. 3. 3. 5. 1 Thes 2. 13. Tit. 3. 5. Thus they are washed sanctified and iustified 1 Cor. 6. 11. and in respect of new graces the godly are the Epistle of Christ euery grace being as a word or letter grauen vpon their hearts by the holy Ghost 2 Cor. 3. 3. 4. The vniting of all the godly into one mysticall body being himselfe the bond of that vnion in Iesus Christ of which most glorious worke the Scriptures speak euidently Eph. 4. 3 4. 1 Cor. 12. 12 13. 5. The quickning and raising vp of our bodies at the last day Rom. 8. 10. The particular workes or things he worketh in the godly are such as these maruellous things as 1. Liberty Liberty I say chiefly from the power of sinne making a godly man able to subdue such corruptions as nostrength of nature or naturall arguments or meanes could euer master This is farre aboue restraining grace Where the Spirit of God is there is liberty 2 Cor. 3. 17. and The law of the Spirit of life which is in Christ Iesus hath freed me saith S. Paul from the law of sinne and of death Rom. 8. 2. and this the Spirit doth first by working a spirituall circumcision vpon the heart causing a man to imploy himselfe in the duties of mortification till he giue deadly wounds to his beloued sinnes and at length cast them away like a lothsome fore-skin Rom. 2. 29. making a man to accuse and condemne himselfe pray against the deedes of the flesh till hee get some victory ouer his corruptions Rom. 8. 13. and in this worke the holy Ghost discouers himselfe as a Spirit of iudgment and a Spirit of burning as the Prophet Esay calls him Esa 4. 4. Secondly by lusting against the flesh that is stirring vp consent and earnest desires and grones to be rid of the burthen of corruption Gal. 5. 17. Thirdly by causing a man to heare a word behind him when hee is about to goe out of the way either on the right hand and on the left Esay 30. that is by daily good motions and inward checks of conscience which tend to diswade a man from yeelding to any thing he knowes to be a sinne Fourthly by baptizing the penitent sinner with the baptisme of fire Matth. 3. 11. which is when the holy Ghost falls vpon his heart and so inflames his affections that he is full of indignation and a desire of holy reuenge against his corruptions and an vnspeakable zeale after righteousnesse and Gods glory 2. The infusing of diuine gifts qualifying the godly with such abilities as are altogether aboue nature such as are Faith Loue Hope and the gift of Prayer no man can beleeue things aboue reason and without meanes vnlesse he haue the spirit of faith Rom. 4. 17 18. 2 Cor. 4. 13. Heb. 11. 1. The loue of God is likewise shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost Rom. 5. 5. and it is the Spirit that makes a man hope and wait for the righteousnesse to be reuealed in another world Gal. 5. 5. and therefore is the Spirit called the Spirit of prayer or supplication Zach. 12. 11. because it is he only that qualifies a man with such a language as to be able to speake to God with iudgement affections and confidence Rom. 8. 15. Yea besides these he bestowes such gifts vpon the godly in respect of which they are said to partake of the diuine nature as they are made like vnto God 2 Pet. 1. 4. as when the Spirit makes a man resemble God in his contentment in his loue in his knowledge or wisdome and in mercy and a pure and sound minde and patience and goodnesse and such like First it is a wonderfull worke to make the heart of man vnmoueable like God delighted and pleased and at rest in himselfe without discontentment at his condition and this peace and ioy the Holy Ghost is the author of Rom. 15. 13. and 14. 17. Secondly the Holy Ghost makes a man to resemble God in his loue to the godly aboue all the people of the world and is therefore called the Spirit of loue Rom. 15. 30. 2 Tim. 1. 7. Thirdly to let goe all the other gifts of the Spirit which are mentioned in that catalogue Gal. 5. 22. I will only instance further in that grace of knowledge it is a wonderfull worke to make a man vnderstand supernaturall things the mysteries of Gods kingdome which are knowne only to God himselfe for the naturall man perceiueth them not 1 Cor. 2. 14. 13. 10. Matth. 13. 11. as to know how God stands affected to vs yea to know the height length bredth and depth of Gods loue to vs Eph. 3. 19 20. yea to know those sacred truths so as to be transformed by them and changed into the likenesse of the things taught vs from one glorious grace to another 2 Cor. 3. vlt. Now this knowledge or wisdome from aboue the Spirit worketh in vs both by curing and making sound our mindes 2 Tim. 1. 7. and by leading vs into all truth and bringing to remembrance the things which we haue heard Ioh. 14. 26. The third worke of the Holy Ghost in the elect is the fanctification of their works or
doth despight the works of the power and grace of the Holy Ghost without remorse to the death 1. When I say the sin vnpardonable I exclude all the sins against the Holy Ghost named before 2. When I say a sin after illumination and sanctification I exclude all the sins of such people as neuer had the powerfull meanes of saluation or neuer so as to worke a manifest change in them The person that commits this sin must be such a one as was before inlightned Hebr. 6. and sanctified Heb. 10. 29. that is such a one as did attaine to diuers gifts which he had not before which were wrought in him by the Holy Ghost and had a taste of the doctrine he heard and of the powers of the life to come but yet he was not sanctified with any sauing grace or repentance from all sinne or effectuall relying vpon Iesus Christ for his owne saluation He had tastes of many things but did not soundly digest any thing 3. When I say he doth wilfully and wholly fall away I meane diuers things First that this sin cannot be committed by such as continue in the same manner they were in relation to Religion it must haue apostacie in it Secondly it must be a wilfull apostacie which is when a man falls into sin not only against his knowledge but without any temptation Heb. 10. 26. and this excludes the sins of Dauid and Peter Thirdly I say it must be a totall apostacie not a falling into some one or two grosse euils but a falling away from respect of all parts of truth that should master his nature or works though he shew not all this openly but in heart he is an Apostata from all grace He doth as it were depose or abrogate all the Law Heb. 10. 28. 4. When I say contemning the Gospell I meane two things The one that he doth loath that way of saluation by Christ and the other that he doth extremely scorne the meanes of publishing the Gospell that is effectuall to worke sanctification in men and that meanes which had before power to worke change in the partie himselfe both these I take it are imported Heb. 10. 29. He may brooke the generall vse of exercises of Religion still as the Pharisees did but not that meanes that hath power and life in it 5. I adde the word despight from Heb. 10. 29. to include the sins of persecuting and blaspheming and both out of desperate malice without any colour of cause or measure of dislike This person is alwaies a knowne aduersarie and withall doth reproch godly persons and godlinesse but it is of wilfull malice which excludes persecuting or blaspheming that is done of ignorance as in Paul 1 Tim. 1. 13. 6. When I adde the works of the Holy Ghost I difference this sin from the blasphemie that is against the nature or person of the Holy Ghost for so it is no greater sin than to blaspheme the nature or person of the Father or Sonne but it is the speciall operation of the Holy Ghost that is the obiect of this sin by which God comes more neere vnto man than he is in nature or person 7. I adde works of power or grace because as vsually this sin is committed by despighting the worke of grace in other true Christians so sometimes also it is committed by despighting the works of power as the miracles wrought by Christ were reproched by the Pharisees Matth. 12. 8. I adde without remorse because I thinke that he that commits this sin is so far from being capable of true repentance that it is impossible he should get but that remorse or repentance he had when he was first inlightned So I take that place Heb. 6. and so I thinke such as haue any remorse or despaire arising from the sense of the greatnesse of their sins cannot be guilty of this sin 9. I adde to the death only to note that this is that sin which the Apostle calls the sinne vnto death in a speciall sense Finall impenitencie in any sin is vnto death but then it hath not the description going before Nor doe I meane that it cannot be knowne till death but that it will last vnto death without returning from it Now this sin is said to be vnpardonable not because it is greater than Gods mercy or Christs merits but because God hath resolued to shew his iustice vpon this sin without mercy and because in that way of sauing of men which God hath now resolued vpon all meanes of salustion are disappointed to the vttermost else if they could repent God could forgiue and this iustice of God may not seeme strange since he declares himselfe willing to forgiue all sins and doth except but this one Now the explication of this sin should serue for a warning to such heareres as haue had remorses and illumination and finde themselues in many things changed I say they should be warned to looke to themselues since this sinne can be found in no other persons and to this end they should take counsell in two things 1. Now that they are neere the kingdome of God by these effects of the Holy Ghost in them they should be carefull to goe on and neuer rest till they attaine to sound conuersion and true sauing grace and that they will doe if they humble themselues before God for euery knowne sinne especially those sins that haue beene most loued of them or most rooted in nature and secondly if they will be at the paines to vse all good meanes to get the particular assurance of Gods loue to them for these two things were neuer found in any of those that so fall away 2. My next counsell is that they take heed of those speciall sins that were in such as at length grew faultie in this vnpardonable sin that when they feele any of them in themselues they make haste to get out lest they proue forerunners of the sin against the Holy Ghost such as were in the Pharisees and others these or the like the forsaking of that meanes by which that inlightning was wrought as the Pharisees did the ministerie of Iohn Baptist Secondly the constant affectation of the praise of men more ●●an the praise of God Thirdly habituall alienation of 〈◊〉 heart from God and goodnesse Fourthly wilfull euill practises without temptations Fifthly constant enuie at the gifts and praises of the godly Sixthly wilfull misinterpretation of all that godly men doe euen their best works especially if they be gone so far as to feele themselues to bee tempted to fall into a course of open opposing and persecuting of good men and good causes if it bee possible let them breake off and by speedy repentance preuent the horrible mischiefes they may fall into lest from these oppositions and the custome in them they fall into malice and despighting of the worke of grace Thus of the Vse of Admonition The Vses for Instruction follow and so the consideration of this Article should
be an Hypocrite page 365 I. I Dols are false Gods page 165 Christ suffered at Ierusalem page 325 He was buried neere to Ierusalem for two causes page 435 Iesus whence this word comes page 214 Why Christ was called Iesus page 215 The word Iesus is a short Gospel page 216 That Iesus may be our Sauiour wee must doe three things Ibid. The saued by Iesus must shew it in seuen things page 217 Diuers men know not Iesus Ibid. Calling of the Iewes page 414 Christ suffered Ignominie and disgrace in three things page 323 Hee bore this for foure reasons Ibid. Ignorance no plea. page 488 Immutability of God See God Gift of Illumination page 540 Humility of Christs Incarnation page 318 He sustained Infirmities of all sorts for foure reasons page 322 Christs Innocency page 37● 440 God can giue testimony to the Innocencie of his page 373 Insufficient Ministers page 487 Christs Intercession shadowed out in the Law page 484 Incarnation of Christ page 248 How one Person is Incarnate and not the other Ibid What Christ assumed in his Incarnation page 249 When he was Incarnate page 250 Why Christ was Incarnate page 251 Gods glory shineth in Christs Incarnation page 257 Christ makes a threefold Intercession for vs. page 248 His Incarnation teacheth vs diuers things page 258 It is comfortable to the godly Ibid. Doctrine of Christs Incarnation terrible page 259 Christ like vs in all Infirmities page 258 Day of Iudgement shall bee in the end of the w●rld page 505 Why it is deferred so long Ibid. The precise time of this Iudgement vnknowne and why page 506 Christ did not know the day and houre of it how it is meant page 507 Place where the Iudgement shall bee Ibid. Who shall be Iudged page 508 Signes of Christs comming to Iudgement page 513 Euents no signes page 112 Corruption of manners a signe of Christs comming to Iudgement how page 514 Preparation of the Iudge to Iudgement hath in it foure things page 416 Preparation of the Persons ' Iudged hath in it foure things Ibid. The world summoned to Iudgement Ibid. Wicked men shall be Iudged according to their workes page 519 Diuers obiections answered Ibid. Infants how Iudged page 520 By what lawmen shall be Iudged ●●0 Doctrine of the last Iudgement terrible to the wicked page 532 Comfortable to the godly page 534 Iudas his treason six things obseruable in it page 327 Why it was necessary that Iudas should betray Christ page 329 Iudas sin Informes vs of diuers things Ibid. Iudas meant not to haue Christ killed probable page 330 Good Iudges must learne expedition page 360 Christ Iudged in a polyticall court for foure reasons page 362 Church-men must abide the Iudgement of lay Iudges page 363 Why Christ Iudged by Pilate page 362 Iudges no accusers page 363 Iudges must haue cleane hands page 377 Needfull to vnderstand Christs comming to Iudgement page 496 Seuen properties of this Iudgement Ib. Particular Iudgement page 498 Last Iudgement manifest Ibid. It is sudden Ibid. Christs Iudgement a righteous Iudgement page 499 It is an eternall Iudgement how page 500 Christ shall be the Iudge page 501 This is comfortable to the godly Ibid. Terrible vnto the wicked page 502 How Saints and Apostles Iudge the world page 501 Whence Christ shall come to Iudgement page 502 When the day of Iudgement shall bee diuers opinions Ibid. Memoriall of the Iust blessed page 440 Iustice of God See God K. KIngdome of Christ page 229 Kingdome of Christ not of this world page 365 Christ clothed in habit of a King in way of scorne page 379 Christs Kingdome scorned page 380 Iesus that King by an excellency page 400 Kingdome of Christ deliuered to God page 532. 490 That Christ is a King appeares by seuen things page 229 Christ excells all other Kings in thirteene things page 230 Lawes of Christs Kingdome page 232 Christ our King what we learne from hence page 234 Diuers kinds of Knowledge in Christ page 253 Knowledge of God See God L. PVrge out the old Leauen page 310 Christs Legacy page 422 Lightnings Gods arrowes page 171 Liue not to our selues page 417 Iewes cast Lots vpon Christs garments for fiue reasons page 393 Beleeue that Iesus is our Lord. page 240 Christ is our Lord by a fiuefold right page 241 Excellency of Christs Lordship in six respects page 241 This teacheth vs diuers things page 243 Seuen Rules for the seruing of this Lord. page 244 Diuers vses of this point page 245 A threefold act in Loue. page 64 M. OBey Magistrates in the Lord. page 243 Malice in the wicked cruell page 327 372 Man the Epitome of all Gods workes page 194 Man miserable in respect of the euill of punishment diuers waies page 205 Christ the Son of Man page 268 Man hath eight prerogatiues aboue the creatures page 199 Notorious Malefactors may repent and be saued page 405 Christ appeared to Mary Magdalene page 460 Christ Manifested three waies page 270 Whether Mary may be called the Mother of Christ. page 267 Matter of Christs Body page 261 The sanctification of that Matter Ibid. God not tyed to the vse of Meanes in what cases page 559 Religion is vaine without Mercy page 528 How Mercy better then piety page 526 Ministers corrupt page 329 How Ministers betray Christ page 333 Qualifying of Ministers page 539 Publique Miseries to bee bewailed page 385 Christs care for his Mother page 421 He calls her woman Ibid. Mortality and Immortality in the same person page 256 Merit of workes confuted page 487 Meteors in the ayre page 169 Fiery Meteors page 170 Watery Meteors page 174 What vse God puts them to Ibid. N. Christs Natiuity HE was Borne three waies page 269 Bethlem the place of his Natiuity page 270 Time of his Natiuity Ibid. Christ borne poore why page 271 Borne of a Virgin why Ibid. Christ a first borne how page 272 Signes about the time of his Natiuity page 272 Three things haue relation to Christs Natiuity page 269 Diuers effects of Christs Natiuity page 271 Son of God tooke the Nature of Man page 248 He tooke it into vnion with his diuine Nature page 258 Mans estate by Nature hath need of mending page 205 No worke of Nature to beleeue in Christ page 207 Christ fastned to the Crosse with Nailes for foure reasons page 390 To destroy Niniuey a conditionall will in God page 108 O. CHrists Obedi n●e to his Father in death page 421 Auoid Occasions that leads to sinne page 353 Christs threefold Office page 226 Originall sinne page 204 A threefold Opposition page 120 P. PApists sin against Christs prophecie page 226 A twofold Paradice page 411 Paradice a Type of the glory of heauen page 412 Our life a continuall Passeouer page 310 Christ the true Passeouer page 428 Why Christ suffered at the Passeouer page 325 How Passion is in God page 107 Passions of two sorts Ibid. Christs primitiue Passion page 315 Extended to both Natures Ibid.
Christ verse 23. 6. That God would in his due time bring them all to him in heauen that they may for euer behold his glory there verse 24. These are maruellous things and should wonderfully affect vs and comfort vs. 5. By what arguments our Sauiour vrgeth these pe●itions for his very reasons doe shew what care he had of vs and how he pities vs and that he stands vpon our right And so we shall finde that hee vsed foure Reasons why God should grant all he asked for them The first was because we are Gods thine they are vers 9 10. and therefore God should defend vs in that we are his owne and belong to his charge and care The second was because the world hates vs vers 14. we are likely to be so ill vsed in the world that God must needs looke to vs to protect and prouide for vs. The third was because our Sauiour himselfe should be now no more in this world to looke to vs in his owne person and therefore hee praies God to looke to vs vers 11. The last was because hee had sanctified himselfe for our sakes and therefore pleads his owne merits for vs vers 19. Lastly it is profitable for vs to marke the intimation our Sauiour giues all along his prayer by which he lets fall a description of what we must be if we would haue our part in his Intercession For in the 20. verse wee may see it plaine we must be beleeuers and verses 6 7 8. with 26. We may see further that we must be such as will receiue the words which God gaue to Christ to deliuer to vs by them will know Gods name and such as will keepe the word as the greatest treasure in the world They that heare not Christs preaching on Earth shall not haue benefit by Christs praying in Heauen Nor will hearing serue turne but there must be knowledge and beleeuing and keeping of the word as a treasure and for practise Thus of the prayers our Sauiour made for the Church The prayers he made for himselfe concerne either his Glory in Heauen or his Passion on Earth His prayer for his Glory in Heauen is recorded Iohn 17. v. 1. to 6. and in that prayer our Sauiour first layes downe the substance of his request vers 1. Secondly hee vrgeth it with arguments vers 1 2 3 4. Thirdly hee explaines his meaning for the manner how he would haue his petitions granted The substance of his suit is that God would glorifie his Sonne The Reasons are First because God is his Father and he his Sonne vers 1. Secondly because if God glorifie him hee will glorifie God againe verse 1. Thirdly because God had giuen him power before to bestow glory vpon others and therefore much more he should haue it himselfe verse 2 3. Fourthly because hee had glorified God on earth and should within a little time finish all his hard taske verse 4. Now the manner how hee would be glorified was by receiuing the same glory againe which hee had with the Father before the world was which referred to his humane Nature must be vnderstood of his exaltation aboue all things that are made in heauen or earth and so to be worshipped with the diuine Nature And as it is referred to the diuine Nature it must bee vnderstood of manifestation to the world that as alwaies he as second Person had glory equall with the Father so that God would let it be knowne to be so through the world which was accomplished after his resurrection when the Diuinitie of Christ was published to all Nations Thus of his prayer for his Glorification The prayer that concernes his Passion was made in the Garden a little before his enemies came to apprehend him And concerning that prayer diuers things may be obserued 1. The company was with him or neere to him at the time of his prayer and so the Text notes that he singled out of all the Disciples three of them whom he loued most viz. Peter and Iohn and Iames. Now this company hee tooke for two Reasons First that they might bee witnesses of this part of his Passion Secondly he chose them to be by him as such as to whom he could more freely discouer himselfe and in this our Sauiour did expresse that which is setled in the natures almost of all men and so of all godly men in the businesses of religion There be some persons before whom a man would more willingly pray or preach or doe any dutie and yet others haue no iust cause to take exceptions as if they were neglected or it was partialitie for we see here Christ himselfe did single out these men and leaue the rest of the Disciples further off Matth. 26. 36 37. and withall from hence we may learne that the very presence of such as we loue doth vs good when we are in distresse though they should say nothing to vs as here our Sauiour giues these Disciples a great charge to tarry by him and yet they say not a word to him no not when he makes his moane that his heart was heauy to the very death yea it seemes our Sauiour was not willing to be without them though they slept by him and seemed to take little notice of his distresse Further these three were they that had seene his Transfiguration on the Mount and therefore are now the fittest to behold this great abasement without wauering in the faith of his Diuinitie because they had seene him glorious whom now they are to behold so infirme 2. The gesture he vsed in prayer viz. He felt on his face and praied Euen the more grieuous the distresse was vpon him the more humbly did he demeane himselfe towards God When his heart was so heauy nothing but praying to God would helpe him for he had made his moane to the Disciples and that eased him not Nor doth hee rest in that simply to pray but his Agonie being great hee applies himselfe to that gesture might best fit the greatnesse of his distresse to teach vs what we should doe when our hearts are heauy and how we should striue to inlarge our affections and suit our whole behauiour in Gods presence according to his hand vpon vs or the great need we haue of his helpe 3. What befell him when he went to pray viz. a most grieuous Agonie in soule which with such speed increased vpon him that he cried out to his Disciples that his soule was euery way compassed about with sorrow euen vnto the death and he sweat in that Anguish very bloud as is noted by the Euangelist and he was maruellously amazed and afraid Now if any aske what made our Sauiour fall into this perplexitie I answer that wee must not thinke that it was the feare of bodily death that thus affrighted our Sauiour seeing we know that the Martyrs that were infirme men did yet embrace death without these Agonies though by the way we must remember that