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A20766 The summe of sacred diuinitie briefly & methodically propounded : more largly & cleerely handled and explaned / published by John Downame ... Downame, John, d. 1652. 1625 (1625) STC 7148.3; ESTC S5154 448,527 580

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from being our guide to leade vs vnto Heauen the same being the proper office of Christ Who b Ioh. 14. 6. is the Way the Truth and the Life as contrariwise they conuince vs euery mothers childe both of impietie to God and iniustice to men in that wee shew not forth the power thereof in our liues but restrayne and keepe it backe vniustly to doe quite the contrarie Insomuch as men naturally knowing c Rom. 1. 19 20 God both his eternall Power and Godhead yet they glorifie him not as God but wax vaine in their reasonings and disputes and rush forth into all vnrighteousnesse against men as the Apostle there at large declareth And the like may bee said of the conscience also that it tendeth onely vnto this to take away all excuse from vs Rom. 2. 15. So as our Desire Will Affections retayne now no part of our former conscience but are wholy brutish sensuall and slaues vnto sinne as wee heard before Not that hereby wee take away all freedome of will from man but we teach that the same hath place onely in the naturall inclinations common to all liuing Creatures which naturally seeke their own good life nourishment maintenance preseruation propagation c. or in the outward actions of this life for matter of manners gouernment of Houses Families Common-wealth Cities c. but not to doe the things that are good and pleasing vnto God The reliques of our former dignitie that yet remaine In the bodie a kind of maiestie in the bodie are c Gen. 9 6. Maiestie and comelinesse of person which bring men many times into a loue and admiration of vs. In the whole d Gen. 9. 2. man there is a certaine soueraigntie that keepeth in awe the brute Creatures insomuch as In the whole man a certain soueraigntie that keepeth in awe the brute creatures The creature here through the fall of mā receiueth an impaire of his first perfection many sauage beasts that farre excell man in strength doe willingly yeeld themselues to be tamed of him Lastly the punishment of mans transgression resteth not in man alone it is of a more large extent reacheth for mans sake to the other creatures for as they were for his seruice and command made in all excellencie of perfection So by the fall of Adam he hath not onely vndone himselfe and his posteritie but euen the brute beasts and all the dumbe creatures are impayted by it grone vnder that impayre for so God pronounceth Gen. 3. 17. Cursed bee the earth for thy sake And againe Verse 18. Brambles and Bryers shall it bring forth vnto thee And the Apostle Rom. 8. 22. The whole Creation that is all the things created grone and trauaile together vnto this present time And that hee calleth there vanitie or a vanishing and a flitting estate subiect to corruption and decay they hauing a part in the punishment of man to agrieue his curse and to make it more appeare how fearfull his transgression was whereof all the Creatures and the whole frame of the Creation doth feele the smart as e Rom 8. 20. Paul saith They are subiect vnto vanitie for him that subdued them that is to obey the Creatours pleasure who by casting them into this vanitie would leaue it testified how much he is offended with man for whose good he had created them in a farre more excellent condition So much of that which is in part The fulnesse of the curse after death is damnation with the Deuill and his angels This which you haue heard is that miserable and wretched estate which sinne hath drawne vpon all the sonnes of Adam so long as they liue in this World That which we call full cursednesse is a sorer and a more grieuous punishment the full cup of Gods heauie indignation insupportable of all his Creatures No Angell no man not all the Angels or men of the World able to before it or to indure the least brunt of it but forceth miserable man vpon whom it lighteth downe into Hell that horrible place of darknesse where they indure euerlasting torments with the Deuill and his angels such as no tongue can expresse or vtter And therefore it is called The f 2. Thes 1. 9. destruction of the creature The second g Reuel 2. 6. 21. 8. death h 1. Cor. 11. 32. damnation and there is said to bee i Mat. 22. 13. 25. 30. weeping and wayling and gnashing of teeth for first they are separate and quite cut off from the gracious presence of God Present indeed they find and feele him by experience but that presence separated from his fauour is an increase of their feare and horrour not onely so but the wrath of God sensibly pursuing them giueth no rest vnto their soules but as a Worme biteth and gnaweth on them continually the fearefulnesse of which torment what heart is able to conceiue But to giue some glimpse of it the Scriptures vse diuers names The k Mar. 9. 43 44 45 46 47. Worme that neuer dyeth Hell fire Vnquenchable fire The l Reuel 19. 20. 20. 10 14. burning Lake Therefore wretched and fearefull is their condition yea thrice miserable are they and happie had it beene for them if neuer they had beene borne as also our m Mat. 26. 24. Sauiour Christ doth say Two circumstances there are whereby these torments insupportable in themselues are made yet more grieuous First By the place Hell where they are kept fast bound in chaines and fetters of darknesse In regard whereof it is called Outer n Mat. 22 13. 25. 30. Darknesse Secondly By the eternitie of the punishment o Mat. 18. 8. 2. Thess 1. 9. Dan. 19. 2. being euerlasting without all hope of ransome no strong nor mightie man to be looked for that may breake this Prison and let the Prisoners loose no end of punishment nor hope of any end alwayes dying and neuer seeing an end of death Their p Esay 66. Mat. 9. 44 45 46 48. Worme neuer dyeth their Fire neuer goeth out they finde not so much as one q Luke 16. ●4 drop of cold water at any time to quench their thirst A paine otherwise not so grieuous if it haue no intermission nor hope of any ease is worse then a thousand deaths O how much more then doth this exceede which with the first waight thereof breaking the very bones and all the veines and sinnewes of their heart must needes in the euerlasting continuance of it infinitely be increased The sinfulnesse annexed to this estate is hatred of God finall desperation and the full height and top of all iniquitie as in the damned spirits we saw before Further to this estate three things are proper In soule presently till the latter Day First it lighteth vpon men one by one presently after death So hath the wisdome of God ordayned that when the course of this life is runne out
Iohn 2. 16. lusts of the flesh The y Ephes 2. 3. will of the flesh The z Gal. 5. 24. affections of the flesh All these parts before reckoned the Apostle comprehendeth Ephes 2. 3. First generally naming the flesh or the whole man vnregenerate which he afterwards deuideth into two kind The flesh so calling by the generall name that part of the soule wherein the lust and will and vnbridled affections are and our discoursing parts or the very strength of the Mind of Knowledge Iudgemēt Memorie Conscience Among whom euen wee all did once conuerse in the lusts of our flesh doing the will of the flesh and of the discoursing parts All which hee calleth not halfe dead but thorowly and wholy a Vers 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dead leauing nothing vnto man which sinne hath not defiled Shewing further that wee haue this by b 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nature not by custome or example as elsewhere c Rom. 5. 13 14. hee prooueth by the death of little Infants which neuer transgressed actually as Adam did dying as soone as they were borne and yet sinners by nature for otherwise they could not dye vntill the Law for sinne was in the World for Death raigned from ADAM vnto MOSES euen vpon them which had not sinned according to the likenesse of the transgression of ADAM for as our Sauiour d Iohn 3. 6. saith That which is borne of the flesh such wee are all by nature is flesh and Who saith IOB e Iob 13. 4. can giue a cleane thing out of that which is vncleane Not one This naturall corruption the Scripture calleth sinne f Rom. 7. 17. because it is the sinke and puddle of all other sinnes and the Law g Rom. 7. 23. of sinne which as vtterly peruerting the whole strength of nature and contrary thereunto hath an elegant addition giuen vnto it Heb. 12. 1. h 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sinne that is so well fitted to gird vs in as a curbe and a bridle holding vs backe that wee are not able to runne the course that is set before vs. Thereof it is that all our actions are corrupted and naught Rom. 3. 12. There is none that doth good no not one Rom. 7. 5. When wee were in the flesh sinfull affections wrought in our members to bring forth fruit to Death which fruits hee setteth downe Titus 3. 3. For euen wee also were foolish disobedient seruing lusts and diuers kinde of pleasures leading our life in malicousnesse and enuie hated and hating one another And how can it otherwise bee chosen but that all our fruits must needes bee vnsauourie and bad when as the whole Tree and all the twigs and branches of it are rotten and naught Thirdly and lastly it is called totall in respect of both the parts of Righteousnesse Pietie and Iustice which with all the powers of our soule and bodie both by nature and in all our actions wee doe nothing else but continually transgresse Therefore PAVL Rom 1. 18. pronounceth of all men that the wrath of God is reuealed from Heauen vpon all impietie and iniustice of men as those that with-hold the truth or those small sparkes of light that God hath left them in vnrighteousnesse meaning that by reason thereof they rush forth vnto all vnrighteousnesse And Ephes 4. 24. hee willeth our renewing to be in both these parts of Holinesse and Iustice as being corrupt in both by nature All men by nature are thus alike sinfull neither doth face more answere vnto face then one mans corruption answereth to another but the fruits of sinne are in some more aboundant for as he that is sicke of the Dropsie the more he drinkes the more he may so men by long custome of sinning come at the length to such an habit that they are not afraid to lash forth openly audaciously and impudently into all euill casting off all feare of God and reuerence of man as he shameth not to professe of himselfe in the i Luke 18. 4. Gospell and so come to bee Monsters and prodigious in all kinde of wickednesse Of these the Apostle speaketh Ephesians 4. 19. Who casting off all griefe haue giuen themselues to wantonnesse to worke all vncleannesse euen with greedinesse So much for their sinfulnesse Touching their miserable and cursed estate albeit For the rest the wrath of God be fully and wholy powred forth vpon 1. The wrath of God vpon them all that sinne yet is it not so presently for being in his wisdome and goodnesse pleased to make a difference betweene Angels and Men offending both for that their state and case doth differ and for the Elects sake whom he meant to take out of the Race of Adam hee purposed with himselfe not to ouer-whelme them at once with the waight of his Iustice as hee would the Angels that did transgresse but in his mercie to spare them for a time that so a way might be made for his to come vnto Repentance This time is the whole course of their life wherein they beare not the full burden of their sinne that presseth downe to Hell but feele onely some light beginning of that heauy Iudgement which hereafter is to seize vpon them if by turning vnto God they doe not repent and turne the same away Therefore the Apostle k Act. 27. 26 27 saith that God hath made of one bloud all Mankinde to dwell vpon the face of the Earth determining the oportunities of times which hee hath fore-set and the set bounds of their habitation that they may seeke the Lord if so be by groping after him they may finde him This is the reason why the whole course of our life is tearmed that Day l Iohn 9. 4. wherein we must doe good before the night come when none shall be able to worke that time of m Gal. 6. 8 10. sowing either to the flesh or Spirit the Haruest whereof shall be death or eternall Life for such as the houre of death findeth vs such shall our doome be and with n Heb. 9. 27. Death the irreuocable sentence commeth None shall rise againe to better the things he hath done in the dayes of his flesh whether they be good or euill No Sacrifice any more for sinne no intercession for the dead no Purgatory to make them cleane But whosoeuer by Christs purgation are not in this life washed from their sinnes shall after this life lye and rotte in their sins foreuer The summe is that albeit God in his mercie for the cause before remembred doe thus forbeare all yet euen during o Iohn 3. 18. this life such as haue no part in Christ that is to say all men in themselues considered are indeed and truly though not fully accursed for so the Scripture speaketh Hee that beleeueth not is alreadie condemned And p Gen. 4. 11. GOD telleth CAIN Cursed art thou euen whilest thou now art aliue In this estate I
and the declaration of those wonderfull things that are in him which by no other way then this could be made knowne appointed first beside the setting forth of his power patience hatred of sinne loue of righteousnesse and other vertues to manifest the riches of his Mercie in certaine both Angels and men knowne vnto himselfe who should be saued and in like sort the greatnesse of his Iustice in certaine both Angels and men to bee condemned wherein in looking to nothing else either present or to come within vs or without vs in Heauen or in Earth but to himselfe alone hee chose vs of his free good-wil and pleasure After which for men themselues the All-wise God much more aduise of nothing but they set the end before them and first the end then the meanes concurring to it After this therefore in order of the causes not in course of time all his purposes being from eternitie and none before or after other hee purposed to create them both holy and righteous like vnto himselfe who hauing free-will to imbrace either good or euill and a nature subiect to temptation should of their owne accord voluntarily fall away thereby subiecting themselues to his wrath and indignation First of the Angels those onely appointed to destruction whom hee neuer would repayre The rest hee did decree to establish by his Grace that they might not lose their standing but abide fast for euer in that integritie which at the first he gaue them Touching Mankinde who were wholy to fall in Adam for those whom he did select and separate to bee saued by his Mercie he purposed in the loue he bare them not to spare his owne onely Sonne the Sonne of his Loue most deare vnto him but to send him into the World to take vpon him our flesh In whom adopting vs for his sonnes being by faith in graffed into him and made one together with him hee would in his good time bestow freely through Grace Wisedome Righteousnesse Sanctification and Redemption The rest hee did decree to leaue in their sinnes and deseruedly to harden and so their destruction to come from themselues the others Saluation from him and from his Mercie So haue you in generall the state and as it we 〈◊〉 the proiect of this Doctrine But before we proceed Those which make the name of Predestination proper to the Elect as though God had not predestinated the Reprobate but onely foreknowne that they should bee such whereas Predestination is spoken of wicked actions Acts 4. 28. and the word equiualent thereunto 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fore-appointed is vsed for reprobation Iuae 4. The word prescience or fore-knowledge is misse-vnderstood of many for a bare knowledge in God of all things that shall be especially of the qualities that God fore-saw would be in men whereby he was led to choose or reiect them as Faith or Infidelitie good or euill workes And so they make it a cause by it selfe seuered from his Decree teaching that the Reprobate are onely fore-knowne not predestinate wherein is a double errour beside the mistaking of the word Predestination for First Prescience or fore-knowledge is neuer separate from the Decree of God but alwayes taken for an ordayning and fore-appointing when it is referred to him and therefore his bare knowledge wherby he vnderstandeth all things that shall bee commeth not within the compasse of this word Secondly It pointeth out the free fauour of God and therefore hath place onely in the Elect. to the further vnfolding of it let vs for our better vnderstāding distinguish these words Purpose Predestination and Prescience or Fore-knowledge a word which in this Argument we often meet withall Purpose is Gods generall Decree of all things for the manifesting of his Glorie Predestination is one branch of this Decree to glorifie himselfe by the saluation of some and destruction of other some in the one to shew his Iustice in the other to set forth his Mercie Prescience or Foreknowledge is restrayned to that part of his Decree which concerneth those that shall bee saued signifying a Decree with a loue and liking and when you apply it to the persons is alwayes spoken of the Elect neuer of the Reprobate as Rom. 8. 30. Whom hee did foreknow he did predestinate to be conformed to the Image of his Sonne Rom. 11. 2. God hath not reiected his people whom hee fore-knew 1. Peter 1. 2. Fore-knowne before the foundation of the World So that where the Apostle Acts 2. 23. telleth the Iewes that by the determinate counsell and foreknowledge of God they had staine and crucified Christ then the which there was neuer a fouler deed nor more hatefull to God committed vpon the Earth hee doth purposely make choice of this word to shew that GOD not onely decreed this Action so foule and detestable in the Iewes which determinate counsell noteth But howsoeuer in Iudas and the Iewes hee hated it yet as it was the meanes of redeeming of the World hee loued and imbraced it and therefore saith He was deliuered or giuen vp of God vnto them in his speciall grace and goodnesse These three words therefore Purpose Predestination and Prescience or Fore-knowledge are euery one more speciall then other for Rom. 8. 29. which may seeme to make Predestination subordinate to Foreknowledge speaketh not of Predestination vnto life which in regard of vs is the extreme and end but of Predestination to bee adopted in Christ that is of Predestination to one subordinate meanes as we shall heare anon The words being cleered let vs now open the particular Doctrines that arise wherein I shall not need to meddle with the Angels hauing spoken of them in the former Booke First That there is a Those which teach that God hath not from euerlasting purposed any such Decree but that it lyeth in the hands of euery one to purchase vnto himselfe life if hee will beleeue or death if he lye in sinne Those which hold that God hath predestinated all vnto saluation but the vnfaithfulnesse of many to bee the cause that God either cannot effect that which he purposed or altereth his counsell Predestinate decree and appointment of GOD both vnto life and vnto death to punishment and to glorie wherein all men are not chosen to life nor all ordayned vnto death but some to the one and some to the other g Acts 13. 24. They beleeued saith the Holy Ghost as many as were ordayned to life This is that Booke of Life so oft spoken of in the Scripture The h Ex. 31. 32 33 Booke of IEHOVAH to be i Psal 69. 28. written amongst the iust and in the k Ezecl 13. 9. writing of the house of Israel Againe of the Reprobate Iude l Iude 4. saith Which were before appointed to this damnation And m 2. Pet. 2. 3. PETER For whom damnation since of old lingreth not and their destruction doth not slumber n 1. Thes 5. 9. PAVL to the
famous examples one in the Family of Abraham who hauing two sons Isack and Ishmael Isack onely was accounted for his Seed and that by Gods owne appointment to make it appeare that the Fountain of Predestinatiō is the pleasure of God not the goodnesse of man The other of two Twins in the Family of Isack Iacob Esau both borne of the same father of the same mother and at the same conception whereas neuerthelesse onely Iacob was chosen Esau reiected and that before their birth that neither any good thing in Iacob could bee the cause of the choosing of him nor any wickednesse in Esau of his reiecting but the onely will and pleasure of God for if men were not more brutish then the beasts themselues their owne sence would teach them that since the Will of God is God himselfe a higher and a further reason then his owne Will cannot be sought for vnlesse there were some higher then hee to goe vnto And when Christ himselfe the Wisdome of GOD resteth in this reason Euen l Mat. 11. 26. so O Father because so is thy good pleasure why should wee wretches enquire any further Worthily therefore doth the Apostle there conclude What m Ro. 9. 2● 23. if God willing to shew forth wrath c. haue suffered the vessels of wrath framed to destruction and to make knowne the riches of his Glorie vpon the Vessels of Mercie which hee hath before prepared vnto Glorie As if hee should say What hast thou O man to doe with it if such bee his pleasure But if cursed men will needes ransacke the secrets of the blessed God and inquire a reason of his most holy counsels let them heare how the Apostle n Rom. 9. 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23. answereth these Cauillers cleering the Lords Iustice First in regard of the subordinate meanes which hee hath appointed to bring those his counsels to passe namely towards the Elect Mercy comprehending an effectuall Calling through faith whereby they attayne Righteousnesse and Sanctification vnto the Reprobate hardening the fruites whereof are Incredulitie and sinne the proper and immediate causes of their Damnation so that no way can the Lord be accused as vnrighteous either in sauing the Elect vpon whom he first bestoweth Faith and Holinesse of life or in destroying the Reprobate whose incredulitie and sinne doth come betweene And if he should deale with all men so who could complaine of wrong Againe if you looke to the end of Gods counsels in the damnation of the wicked the Apostle saith it is not absolutely and simply their destruction as if God were like an vnmercifull and a cruell hard-hearted Tyrant that taketh pleasure in other mens ruines but it is as he setteth out in the example of PHARAOH to shew forth his power and to haue his Name published in all the Earth making his Glorie to shine in their deserued punishment whilest thereby hee doth declare himselfe an Enemie and Reuenger of sinne Mightie in the execution of his Iudgements Wonderfull in the riches of his Mercie towards the Elect as one contrarie doth set forth another Lastly for the thorow iustifying of Gods most righteous Decree especially of Reprobation which prophane Dogges doe most of all barke against hee both alleageth the Will of God as the rule of all Righteousnesse and his Soueraigntie as the Lord and Creatour of all things in whose hands wee bee as Clay in the hands of the Potter to deale with vs as seemeth good in his owne eyes and to conclude his wonderfull lenitie and mildnesse not onely in so long suffering and forbearing of the wicked but besides in the aboundance of blessings wherewith hee loadeth them which bring vpon them a more iust Damnation Wherefore that which some obiect out of the Prophet that God will not that Ezech. 18. and else-where is delighteth not nor taketh pleasure in the death of a Sinner hath a readie answere for God so farre forth as it is the ouerthrow and destruction of his Creature hath no pleasure in it but as it is a punishment of sinne and a meanes to declare his Iustice Neither can God therefore be said first and of himselfe to hate his Creature for he hateth none which haue not in themselues the cause of hatred euen their own sin being that for which alone he actually hateth any thing his Decree to destroy them was not because hee hated them for the cause of this Decree is his owne most holy pleasure that so he might manifest in them the glory of his Iustice Fourthly Predestination is from euerlasting Ephes 1. from eternity 4. Hee hath chosen vs before the foundations of the World were laid And of o Rom. 9. 11. Iacob and Esau it is said that before that they had done good or euill or before they were the one was hated the other loued In the Epistle to TIMOTHIE p 2. Tim. 1. 9. that the purpose and grace of God to saue vs was giuen to vs that is prepared for vs in Christ before the euerlasting times meaning the whole course of yeeres which hath runne on euer since the beginning of the World in one word before the World was Which saith hee is now made manifest vnto vs by the appearance of our Sauiour Iesus Christ Therefore it is called Predestination as if you would say The fore-determinate counsell of God When before Euen before all ages So Paul q Rom. 9. 23. saith Whom he hath before prepared vnto glorie And r Iude v 4. Iude addeth that the Reprobate are before of old euerlastingly ordayned to Damnation ſ 2. Pet. 2. 3. PETER also that Damnation since of olde expecteth for them So then our Election being from Eternity is certaine and immutable so as none of the Elect can euer come to perish no more then a Reprobate can euer come to bee saued the Decrees The Papists make Gods Predestination mutable of God being all vnchangeable as he himselfe is So doth Paul strengthen the t Ephes 1. 4. Ephesians in the assurance of Gods loue towards them in that being eternall it was not subiect to any change Who hath chosen vs saith he before the foundation of the World This Doctrine is plentifully layd downe in the Scripture comfortable is the place u Rom. 9. 12. Before they had done good or euill that the purpose of God might remayne firme according to the election not by workes but by grace it was said The elder should serue the yonger As many words so many Arguments for the vnchangeable hold of our Election first because it was the Decree and Purpose of Whom Of God particularly made of Iacob and Esau For what cause Not of workes but of his owne grace Therfore doth the Lord after a most wise and wonderful manner cause all things to fall out vnto the best to those that loue God which are called according to his purpose by afflictions by diuers lets
c Daniel 9. 14. Daniel vseth the Phrase of purging sinnes in stead of the pardoning and taking them away by Christs purgation and the price which he should pay But shall we then make Christ the Beloued and Blessed one of his Father to bee accursed Verily the Apostle as he called him Sin before so in the same sense feareth not to say that he was made a Curse * Gal. 3. 13. for vs by imputation of the curse due to our sinnes The curse that our sinne deserueth beeing of two both that of this life Kindes both that of this life and the fulnesse of it due vnto vs after death Christ indured both Touching those of this life generally the Apostle to the Hebrewes faith d Heb. 4. 15. 2. 14. He was tempted and had experience of our infirmities in all things like to vs without sinne But to number them in order answerable to our owne they are these that follow First Satan himself molested him with his temptations to whose halings and pullings carrying and recarrying he subiected his sacred Bodie if we follow the literall sense and vnderstand the Euangelists words properly and his holy and innocent Soule to his temptations Math. 4. 5 8. Then the Deuill tooke him into the holy Citie and set him vpon a pinacle of the holy Temple Againe the Deuill tooke him into an exceeding high mountaine and shewed him c. Secondly the creatures were his enemies and armed to doe him hurt e Mark 4. 36 37 3● the windes the stormes and the waues of the Sea did rise vp against him Thirdly he tooke vpon him the infirmities of our nature f Matth. 4. 2. Hunger g Iohn 4. 6. wearinesse weakenesse sicknesse c. Esay 53. 3 4. and Math. 8. 17. He hath indured our diseases and horne our sorrowes Fourthly Basenesse contempt abiection humbling himselfe who was Lord of Heauen and Earth and in the forme of God and equall with his Father not onely to come downe into the lower parts of the earth but emptying himselfe to become of none account and to take the forme of a seruant that is of a poore contemned person that the people and Rulers did abhorre him wherevpon worthily doth the Prophet call him h Esay 49. 67. Him whom euerie one despiseth whom the Nation esteemeth as abominable a seruant to the Rulers c. And againe i Isai 53. 2 3 4. There is in him no beautie nor comelinesse and when we looke vpon him there is no shew why we should desire him A contemptible person and an Abiect among men a man of griefe and acquainted with infirmity contemned so as we doe not esteeme him Fiftly Infinite calamities as Smitings Lyings in wait Spittings Scourgings Pouertie al kind of wrongs Contumelies Slanders Reproches Blasphemies Scoffings Esay 50. 6. My backe I expose to the Smiters and my checkes to the Nippers my face I hide not from contumely from spittle As in the holy Storie it is recorded they pittifully scourged him crowned him with Thornes scoffed and spit at him Particularly of Pouertie wee reade 2. Cor. 8. 9. Hee became poore for our sakes Insomuch that as hee k Mat. 8. 20. professeth of himselfe Hee had not where to lay his head Sixtly Bodily death and that a reprochfull one to be hanged Phil. 2. 8. He humbled himselfe vnto Death euen the Death of the Crosse All which were properly in him the l Esay 53. 34. Mat. 8. 17. punishment of our sinnes Touching the full cursednesse due vnto vs after death and the fulnes of it due vnto them after death which we affirme that hee indured the meaning is not that he felt the verie estate and condition of the damned but the whole and full seuere wrath of God due to sinne equall to the very Hellish torments in vehemencie of paines and sharpnesse which may appeare First because he suffered the very sorrowes and paines for sinne which else wee should haue borne as the Prophet saith m Esay 53. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He bare our iniquities and our very sorrowes hee sustayned neither could he otherwise haue beene the n 2. ●●m 2. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 price of our Redemption nor our o Heb. 7. 22. Suretie if hee had not paid the verie summe Secondly The sorrow and trouble of his minde before hee came to handie-gripes whereof hee himselfe saith p Iohn 12 27. Now is my soule troubled And what shall I say Father saue mee from this houre but therefore came I vnto this houre my q Mat. 26. 38. soule is euery way compassed with sorrowes to death his feare fright because of this bitter Cup being so terrible that r Mar. 14. 33 34. Angels were faine to be sent downe to strengthen and incourage him that his bodie as yet without all harme ſ Luke 22. 44. trickled downe with clots of bloud in stead of sweate which was neuer heard of in any man besides shew that it was more then bodily paines euen the whole Cup of Gods wrath which hee so t Heb. 5. 7. feared in fearing felt and feeling was deliuered from Else he had not beene so strong as ten thousand Saints and Martyrs that fight but by his strength Thirdly It appeareth by the mayne battaile fought three whole houres vpon the Crosse all which time tugging in the fearefull darke with him that hath the power of darkenesse to hide from the eyes of the World the fire of his Fathers wrath which in that hot skirmish burnt vp euery part and to giue to the Enemie full scope and aduantage he cryed out at the last in the extremitie of his anguish but yet as one that had now ouercome the vttermost of the brunt My u Mat. 24. 45 ●6 God my God why hast thou all this while forsaken me Fourthly The Apostle expresly saith that x Gal. 3. 13. Christ was made a curse for vs. And it cannot be that hee meaneth that curse but of a shamefull and ignominious death only for he speaketh of the curse due to euery one that continueth not in all things that are written in the Booke of the Law to doe them from which Christ redeemed vs himselfe being made that curse for vs. Neither doth the reason which the Apostle rendreth As it is written Cursed is euery one that hangeth vpon the Tree prooue that our Sauiour Christ was no otherwise accursed then as euery other Male factor is or as the Thiefe vpon the Crosse whose soule notwithstanding went to Paradise but his reason serueth for the contrarie to prooue that this kinde of death was by way of Type and Ceremonie accursed in the Law prefiguring the curse that was to light vpon our Sauiour Christ in whom all the Ceremonies of the Law had their accomplishment and perfection But how will you say could this feare in Christ be without sinne Because it grew not from weaknesse of faith much
vp vnto full and perfect Happinesse And thereof came those Phrases e Iohn 6. 47. He that beleeueth in me or as it is in another place f Iohn 3. 36. Hee that beleeueth in the Sonne hath euerlasting life and commeth not vnto iudgement but is passed from death to life g 1. Iohn 5. 12. Hee that hath the Sonne hath life h 1. Iohn 3. 14. Wee know that wee are alreadie passed from death to life because we loue the Brethren That is the reason why the i Rom. 8. 29. Apostle speaketh in the present or time past not in the future when he saith Whom he hath iustified them he hath also glorified The particularities of this degree of Happinesse beside our Vnion with Christ and through him with God whereof wee haue spoken alreadie are these that follow First The loue of God k Heb. 12. 6. anew that now he vouchsafeth First in the Loue of God anew to call vs friends As we reade of ABRAHAM that he was called the friend of God Iames 2. 33. Whereof follow three excellent consequences First His generall goodnesse in the gouernment of the World doth after a more speciall and louing manner extend vnto the faithfull and that three manner of wayes First In an extraordinary bountie and goodnesse In which sence the l 1. Tim. 4. 10. Apostle calleth him the Sauer and Preseruer of all men but especially of the faithfull And m Psal 68. 20. Dauid saith The God of our Saluation lodeth vs with benefits day by day Secondly In a most fatherly prouidence ouer his Church and chosen people of whome hee letteth not so much as n Psal 34. 20. one bone to bee broken keepeth them in all their wayes that they should not o Psal 91. 22. dash their foote against a stone Nay the p Luke 12. 7. very haires of their head are all numbred And q Zach. 2 8. he that but toucheth them toucheth the apple of his eye Whereupon wee are r 1. Pet. 5. 7. willed to cast our care vpon God for hee careth for vs. A Doctrine full of most sweet comfort the vse whereof is large and reacheth very farre all our life is subiect to an infinite heape of euils whether we looke vpwards or downe vnto our feet A thousand dangers compasse vs about at home and abroad rising vp and lying downe walking and sitting stil On euery side of vs how many things there be that threaten dāger yea to the verie taking away of life In the middest of these how were it possible for a man to bee quiet if hee did not rest assured that God had a speciall care of him which when once his heart conceiueth by and by all feare and perplexitie flyeth from him and casting all his care on God Hee saith boldly ſ Psal 27. 3. Though an Armie pitch against me my heart shall not bee afraid Though Warre rise vp against mee in that will I haue trust t Psal 3. 6 7. I will not feare for tenne thousand of people that haue set their Tents round about mee but will lye downe and sleepe and wake againe for IEHOVAH holds mee vp u Psal 118. 6 7 Heb. 13. 6. IEHOVAH is with mee and my helper I will not bee afraid what man can doe vnto mee And therefore also hee taketh as made vnto himselfe those golden promises mentioned in the Psalme x Psal 91. 3 4 5 6 7. He shall deliuer thee from the snare of the hunter from the plaguie pestilence with his feathers shall he couer thee when thou betakest thy selfe vnder his wing a shield and buckler his truth shall bee Thou shalt not bee afraid of the feare by night of the Arrow that flyeth in the day of the Pestilence that walketh in a mist of the Murraine that wasteth at noone day a thousand falling at thy side and ten thousand at thy right hand it shall not come neere to thee In a word no open nor secret outward nor inward bodily nor spirituall euill no not at any time shall bee able to preuaile against thee Thirdly In all kindnesse and mercie comforting them in their distresses as hee hath promised To y Esay 25. 8. wipe away all teares from their eyes And againe z Esay 49. 15. Though a Mother forget her childe yet will I not forget thee Sorrow saith a Psal 30. 6. DAVID may come in the night but in the morning is singing And in the Prophet ESAY b Esay 54. 7 8. For a little time I haue left thee but with euerlasting Mercies will I gather thee with a little wrath did I hide my face from thee for a moment but with euerlasting kindnesse will I haue mercie vpon thee The second consequence is that all things turne vnto whereby all things our good We know saith the c Rom. 8. 28. Apostle to the Romanes that to them that loue God all things worke together to good In which respect he saith in d 1. Cor. 3. 21 22 another place All things are yours whether life or death or things present or things to come c. To declare this more particularly First The calamities and troubles of this life are not not the calamities onely and troubles of this life now any punishment of sin vnto vs which is all borne in Christ but fatherly chastizements for our amendment whereunto that sentence of the Apostle Rom. 8. 28. more specially driueth And this is the Couenant and promise of God Psal 89. 31 32 33 34. If his sonnes forsake my Law and walke not in my Statutes c. I will visit their transgressions with the Rod and their inquitie with stripes but my kindnesse I will not put from him nor falsific my faith Secondly Death it selfe hath lost his sting and the and also death it selfe Graue his victorie Being no more fearefull and terrible but the gate of hope and a sweet pleasant passage vnto life and immortalitie In so much as knowing the nature of it to be changed from a punishment of sinne which properly it is vnto a good and happie thing wee come now to desire it and to wish for it Phil. 1. 23. I desire to bee dissolued and to bee with Christ Wherefore 1. Cor. 3. 22. death is said to be ours and to serue for our good And to the e Heb. 2. 14 15 Hebrewes that Christ by his death doth set vs free from all feare of death Hence ariseth the f 1. Cor. 15. 55. Apostles holy triumphing ouer it O Death where is thy sting O Graue where is thy victorie Thirdly Our verie sinnes by the wonderfull Goodnesse but euen our very sins turne vnto our good of God and his admirable and vnspeakable Wisdome who bringeth light out of darknesse serue for our further strengthening and incouragement vnto good For first they tend to manifest our owne weaknesse and corruption and to make vs
yeeres knowledge or howsoeuer else Reuerence in acknowledging the good things wherein they are preferred and making our vse of them The notes of which Reuerence are rising vp before them Giuing them the honour and place of speaking first c. To them in Authoritie Subiection in a readie submission to their gouernment and obedience voluntarily to doe what they command or when it cannot with a good conscience bee done patiently to beare the punishment To publike authoritie of Magistracie and the Ministrie supplying of Charges and other necessaries for the execution of their Office and a defending of them in the same Touching them in priuate Authoritie To Parents not marrying without their consent and in their necessities to releeue them To Masters faithfull seruice To Husband and Wife each from other mutuall helpe and due beneuolence The Wife also to represent her Husbands vertues and to saue that which hee bringeth in Againe from all Superiours a good example of graue and wise carriage and vsing of the things wherein they are preferred to the others benefit From them in Authoritie first instruction of their Inferiours in the things of God and of their speciall callings Then due recompence of good or euill actions And lastly protection from wrongs From publike Authoritie that is to say from Magistrates maintenance aswell of true Religion as of Peace and Honestie of life From the Ministrie publike teaching From priuate Authoritie prouision of Food and Rayment familiarly to teach their Inferiours and in Prayer to goe before them From both the Parents to apply their Children to that they are fit for and to prouide for them The Father to name the Child the Mother to nurse it From Masters due respect of their Seruants trauailes From Husbands cherishing of their Wiues with all intire affection Secondly it is of equals one vnto another in louing honouring doing of good to all but chiefly to such as by the bond of Nature or profession of the same Faith are more neerely linked vnto vs. And lastly towards our selues the maintayning of our honest credit and sober esteeming of the graces we haue receiued CHAP. XI Of the sixt Commandement THe generall duties of Loue are those that are without respect of degree And respect the Person or the good things belonging to the Person Person as Mercy and Chastitie Mercy is of the duties that touch the preseruation of ones person Where the speciall vertues that leade vs by the hand to the keeping of this Commandement are Meekenesse and Kindnesse Meekenesse in a gentle and peaceable disposition readie to depart from ones right slow to wrath and patient to indure wrongs Kindnesse in a louing disposition and helpfulnesse vnto other not only forgiuing offences but recompencing good for euill CHAP. XII Of the seuenth Commandement CHastitie is of the duties that touch the puritie of ones person both soule and body and that aswell in single life as in the state of marriage which God hath instituted for a Remedie against Vncleanenesse The two preseruatiues of Chastitie are Modestie and Temperance Modestie which keepeth a comely Shamefastnesse in Words Countenance Gesture Apparrell and other things Temperance which is a moderate and sober vse of lawfull Pleasures especially in Meats and Drinkes and in the vse of Marriage CHAP. XIII Of the eighth Commandement THose that respect the good things belonging to the Person are Vprightnesse and Contentednesse Vprightnesse is to hold a lawfull course in dealing about them and standeth in Right and Truth Right which is in dealing iustly Both for the meanes of comming by them that it be by lawfull Purchase or Descent and in the vse of them to doe it frugally and liberally by a cheerefull communicating of them all both in Giuing and Lending One Branch whereof is Hospitalitie CHAP. XIIII Of the ninth Commandement TRVTH is in dealing faithfully As Prudence in iudging aright Simplicitie in speaking and doing the Truth Charitie to take things in the best part c. CHAP. XV. Of the tenth Commandement THis is Vprightnesse Contentednesse is to rest fully satisfied with that which God bestoweth reioycing in anothers good as in our owne which is the top and perfection of Loue. CHAP. XVI Of the Couenant of Workes WIth the Creatures who are thus to doe his Will it hath pleased GOD to make a Couenant which is called the Couenant of Workes A Couenant of Life to the Doers of Death vnto Transgressors Both more or lesse as the Righteousnesse or Sinne aboundeth Life is a continuall Progresse in Holinesse and Happinesse Death is a Sinnefull and Cursed Estate Sinnefull in Darkenesse and a totall corruption of the whole strength of Nature vnto all Vnrighteousnesse Cursed in the Wrath of God and all the euill that commeth of it contrary to the former Coniunction and Communion with him CHAP. XVII Of the Fall of Angels THis Couenant both Angels and Men in our first Parents Adam and Eue kept for a time but left vnto themselues they quickly fell away First of the Angels some onely fell but a great multitude One the Scripture nameth him Satan or the Deuill the chiefe Ring-leader of the rest The Curse vpon them is the fulnesse of Gods Wrath which falling vpon a bare Creature not able to beare the brunt of it crusheth him downe into Hell for euer And this estate is called Damnation drawing with it the full height and top of all Iniquitie hatred of God obstiuate Vnrepentance finall Desperation and such like Notwithstanding it pleaseth God many times to send them some release out of that Dungeon suffering them to dwell in the Ayre and to roame thorow out the World that so they may be Instruments to worke his pleasure here among vs. All this till a Day appointed which we call the Latter Day when they shall receiue their last Doome of an euerlasting and more dreadfull Damnation with Execution accordingly The Angels that fell not are supernaturally vpholden from all danger of falling CHAP. XVIII Of the Fall of Man AFter the Fall of Angels by Satans Temptation of Eue and through her of Adam they and in them all Mankind did fall The punishment vnto them by the great patience and long sufferance of God and in his singular Mercie to make a way for the Redemption of Mankind is so qualified that the vttermost and most extreme furie of it is put off till the Latter Day Whereupon grow two Degrees of this sinfull and cursed estate for either it is in part onely during this Life or in the fulnesse of it after Death In part onely as Sinfulnesse not in the highest pitch Touching their Cursed estate first the Wrath of God vpon them so farre that all things not Blessings onely but his very Graces turne to their Ruine Secondly separation from his Presence Thirdly losse of our former Soueraigntie and consequently of our Power insomuch as both the Creatures are become our enemies and we slaues to Satan Fourthly all kinde of Calamities Ignorance Shame Infirmitie Sicknesse and
sort Mans corrupt Nature yet so as it may be lost againe But whoso once of Malice falleth from it can neuer be repayred CHAP. VI. Of the Church vnder the Law THe Church is One and cannot be diuided but hauing regard to the diuersitie of Gods Dispensation it may be distinguished into the Church vnder the Old Testament and the Church in the New That vnder the Old Testament had diuers Rites Ceremonies and Sacrifices Figures of Christ and of the good things we haue in him especially among the Iewes his then peculiar People Whereby the Dispensation of those Times was more obscure and lesse accompanied with Knowledge and other Graces But of all these things as also of their Sacraments which in regard of the outward Signes were a part of the Legall Paedagogie and likewise of the Ministeries that were among them both that of Prophets inspired by whom were written the Bookes of the Old Testament and of other I haue written at large in a Treatise entituled The Old Testament or the Promise CHAP. VII Of the Church in the time of the Gospell TO the Church of the New Testament the Dispensation is in all cleerenesse and perfection Touching the Sacraments and Ministeries of the New Testament there be two Sacraments Baptisme and the Lords Supper Baptisme is a washing with Water to assure our entrance into the Couenant the forme whereof is thus or to this effect I baptize thee in the Name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost The Lords Supper is a feeding with Bread and Wine to assure our continuance in the Couenant the forme whereof is thus or to this effect For the Bread Take ye eate ye This is my Body which is giuen for you Doe this in remembrance of me For the Cup Drinke ye all of this for this is my Bloud of the New Testament which is shed for many for the remission of sinnes Doe this as oft as ye shall drinke it in remembrance of me The Ministers of the New Testament were Apostles inspired by whose Ministerie were written the Bookes of the New Testament Prophets Euangelists Pastors Teachers c. CHAP. VIII Of the Church of Gods Elect. THus farre of the outward Church The other is the Church of Gods Elect drawne to beleeue in Christ ordinarily by Preaching Wherefore with these God maketh indeed his Couenant By vertue whereof our Faith albeit apprehending Christ absent it apprehend Him weakely yet confirmed by the Word and Sacraments Prayer and other holy meanes it neuer letteth goe the Hold but continually groweth till we come to see Christ in his glory So as Faith hath alwayes Hope that is an assured waiting for of that blessed Sight going with it CHAP. IX Of Regeneration HItherto of Christs Propheticall Office The Kingdome by excellencie so termed is that whereby destroying the Old Man by the Power of his Death and Sufferings all that are of the Church of Gods Elect He doth regenerate by the Power of his Resurrection The Day of his Rising which was the first Day of the Creation is for an euerlasting Remembrance of that Benefit come in place of the Sabbath and called the Lords Day beginning when he arose and began to renew the World Regeneration is our spirituall incorporating into Christ euery Member in his due proportion whereby being one with him through him with God and his Spirit ours we become Gods children by adoption Of a regenerate estate there be two Degrees as it were two Ages Infancie and Mans estate Infancie which is during this Life by Faith and therefore by meanes of the Word and imperfectly sealed vp in our owne inward assurance of the Spirit not in the Worlds discerning of it and growing according as our Faith doth grow And this is called the State or Kingdome of Grace Mans estate which is after this Life by Sight and therefore immediately by Christs Spirit and in all Perfection And that is called the State or Kingdome of Glorie CHAP. X. Of Wisedome Righteousnesse Sanctification and Redemption THe Spirit of Christ being ours consequently doth saue vs from our sinfull and cursed estate to inioy all the Good that is in him It standeth in Illumination and Iustification and from thence comming Sanctification and Redemption Illumination Whereby expelling Darkenesse he doth inlighten our Minds with the Knowledge of the Will of God in Christ which the Apostle calleth Wisdome Iustification Whereby forgiuing our sinnes by his taking them vpon him he doth account the Holinesse of his Nature and Righteousnesse to be ours From whence as I said come Sanctification and Redemption Sanctification Whereby slaying Sinne he putteth a new Life of Holinesse into vs to bring forth fruits of Righteousnesse Wherein there is no more now required but that Sinne beare not the rule in vs and our Workes of Righteousnesse though all mingled with sinne are not onely pleasing vnto God through his forgiuenesse of the sinne but haue beside of Gods free Goodnesse looking vpon them in the perfection of his Sonne speciall Promises of Reward made vnto them both in this Life and in the Life to come Redemption Whereby freeing vs from the Curse himselfe becomming a Curse for vs he maketh vs blessed by the participation of his Blessednesse Our Blessednesse in this estate standeth First in the Loue of God anew Whereby all things not the Calamities and Troubles of this Life and also Death it selfe but euen our very sinnes turne vnto our good and in the assurance whereof wee haue Peace of Conscience and Ioy in the Holy Ghost Secondly in that wee are made neere vnto him and haue continuall accesse with boldnesse into his Presence Thirdly in our former Soueraigntie and Power ouer the Creatures whereof commeth free liberty of vsing them all and deliuerance from the Bondage of Satan This also as a noble accesse added thereunto that the holy Angels themselues are made ministers for our good Fourthly in a Spirituall Glorie and Wisedome and other Graces After this Life commeth the fulnesse of Blessednesse more or lesse according to the diuers measure of our Faith here To the Soule in Heauen presently after Death till the Latter Day At what time our Bodies being raysed vp glorious the whole Man shall meete CHRIST comming to Iudgement in the Ayre and there receiue Sentence of all fulnesse of Blessednesse for euer Which we shall inioy taken vp into Heauen by the vertue of his Ascension Certaine Men vpon our Sauiour CHRISTS Resurrection rose againe and are alreadie with him in Heauen So are Enoch and Elias both aliue assumed thither Those that are liuing at the Latter Day shall suddenly be changed after the dead are once risen The Creatures also for our sake shall then be renewed into a Glorious estate not subiect to Corruption A TABLE OF ALL THE principall Points handled in this BOOKE The first Booke CHAP. I. THe scope and drift of the Doctrine of Diuinitie Fol. 1. The Parts 6. Of God his Being Life Vnderstanding and
Will Holinesse 1. Petition Kindnesse Truth Iustice Mercie Blessednesse Kingdome Power Glory Wisedome Infinitenesse singlenesse of Nature Eternitie Vnchangeablenesse 7. That there is but one God 26 Of the Persons in God 27 The distinction of Persons 31 The three Persons and one God 31 The incommunicable Properties whereby they are distinguished 34 The God-head of the Sonne 35 The God-head of the holy Ghost 53 CHAP. II. Of the Kingdome of God and the order of administration thereof 60 2. Petition Of the Decrees of God the eternitie cause generalitie of the same 61 CHAP. III. Of the Creation of all Things 64 The Matter and Manner 72 73 Sixe Dayes Worke. 74 The perfection of the Creature 75 The holinesse happinesse of the principall Creatures Angels Men. 75 Of the Law of Nature 77 CHAP. IIII. Of Gods Prouidence extending to all Persons and Actions 82 His free and absolute Dispensation 94 The ineuitable necessitie of the execution of his Counsels 101 The end both of Creation and Prouidence 109 CHAP. V. Of the Honour due to God That his Will be done 112 3. Petition Of the Morall Law that teacheth the Will of God or the Duties we owe vnto him 114 Fiue things which the Law of God generally requireth or which are to concurre in euery Dutie 1. To doe all that is commanded 114 2. To doe whatsoeuer we doe as vnto God 114 3. That there bean Integritie or right frame and disposition of all the powers of Nature both of the Soule and Body 115 4. To doe it with the whole strength of those Powers Sinceritie Zeale Watchfulnesse Diligence and Perseuerance 128 5. To doe euery thing with so much the greater strength as the Dutie doth more excell 139 The properties of the Morall Law 143 Rules for the vnderstanding of the Ten Commandements 145 The first Commandement Of Loue Reuerence Feare Beleefe Trust and Hope in God Of Patience and Humilitie Of Prayer and other Seruices 148 CHAP. VI. The second Commandement To worship God as he hath appointed Of Will-worship Idolatrie Superstition c. 159 CHAP. VII The third Commandement Of Reuerence in Gods Worship Preparation Attention Meditation Of Fasting and of a holy Feast 162 CHAP. VIII The fourth Commandement Of set times in Gods Seruice 168 Of the Sabbath day The Duties it requireth the day for it in the first Institution the Moralitie 169 CHAP. IX The fift Commandement Of Duties to Magistrates Ministers Parents Masters Husbands and from them againe 175 Of Duties to Equals 186 The due respect we are to haue to our selues 187 CHAP. X. The sixt Commandement Of the Duties of Mercie 188 Of Meekenes Gentlenes a peaceable disposition putting vp of Wrongs 191 Of Kindnesse Pittying and helping our Neighbor in Distresse forgiuing Offences ouercomming Euill with Good 194 CHAP. XI The seuenth Commandement Of Chastitie of holy Marriage Incest and Polygamie Of Contracts of Matrimonie of Vncleannesse Buggerie Adulterie Fo●nication Rapt Of Modestie and Temperance 198 CHAP. XII The eight Commandement Of Iust dealing and the contrary Theft Oppression Extortion Vsurie c. 207 Of Frugalitie Liberalitie Hospitalitie 210 CHAP. XIII The ninth Commandement Of Prudence a righteous Sentence Slandering Hearing of Iales Flattering and Dissembling 212 Of Deceit in Bargayning Buying and Selling remouing Bounds fraudulent with-holding of Goods Gaming and other vnlawfull Trades 214 Of taking Things in the best part and the contraries euill Suspitions and sinister Censures 218 CHAP. XIIII The tenth Commandement Of Couetousnesse Selfe-loue Enuie c. CHAP. XV. Of the Couenant of Workes Of Life and Death 222 The Couenant of Workes seruing in this our corrupt estate not to iustifie but to leade vs vnto Christ CHAP. XVI Of the Fall of Angels and Men. The reason of their Fall The time when they fell 227 Speciall to the Fall of Angels Their Sinne what it was The number that fell Their Captaine and Ring-leader 228 Of the Deut●s damnation in Hell The Release which God doth sometimes giue them and why 230 Of their full damnation in the latter Day 232 Of the elect Angels that did not fall 232 CHAP. XVII Speciall to the Fall of Man Their Sinne what it was The Actors that had a hand in it 233 In Adam and Eue all Mankind did fall 236 Of the totall Corruption of Mans Nature 237 Of the Curses of this Life 243 Of the Remn●nts of Gods Image 249 Of the impayre of the Creature 252 Of Mans Damnation 252 Of the Abolition of the Creatures 255 THE CONTENTS OF THE Second Booke CHAP. I. OF Christ the end of the Law His Godhead Humane Nature Christ the end of the Law whom the 3. last Petitions doe respect the Vnion of them into one Person And why all this was necessarie Fol. 267 Of Christs Office of Mediation Of his Appointment and Calling thereunto when it began That it belongeth to whole Christ and is appropriate vnto him for whom he maketh Mediation and wherein his Mediation lyeth 278 Of Gods Couenant the End and Fruit The Substance or Foundation The Meanes or Condition The extent of the Couenant 283 The excellencie of the Couenant of Grace aboue the Couenant of Works Of the Old and the New Testament 307 Of Predestination both Election and Reprobation 283 Of the words Purpose Predestination Prescience or Fore-knowledge Of the number of Gods Elect the Cause the subordinate Meanes the Eternitie and Immutabilitie the end of Gods predestinate Decrees CHAP. II. Of the Priesthood of Christ His Calling thereunto The eternitie of it He our onely Priest 311 Of the sanctification of Christs humane Nature 312 Of Christs Righteousnesse or Obedience 314 Of his Suffrings In what nature and what things he suffred 315 Of Satisfaction How it was and when The fruit of it 322 Of Christs Resurrection Ascension Glorification 326 Of his Intercession 330 CHAP. III. Of the Kingdome of Christ His Calling and inuesting into it the fruit of it 332 Of his Gouernment of the World in generall The largenesse of his Power the qualitie of Administration the fruit of it 334 CHAP. IIII. Of Christs Propheticall Office 343 Of his Word The Author the Matter the Ministeriall Instruments the perfection of his Doctrine 345 Of the Promise and the Gospel 347 Of the outward Church The Condition of it to be subiect to error to be mingled of good and bad The priuiledge of the outward Church and of euery Member thereof 348 Of the Sacraments 360 Of Ministeries Preaching of the Word Publike Prayer Administration of the Sacraments 366 Of the Ministerie of Men inspired of a liuely Voice of the Scriptures the truth holinesse authoritie perfection of the same and of Miracles 368 Of Graces for the discharge of publike Functions 377 Of Knowledge 378 Of a Taste of the sweetnesse of Christ and of sinne against the Holy-Ghost 379 CHAP. V. Of the Church vnder the Law 387 Of the Church in the time of the Gospel of the Sacraments of the New Testament Baptisme and the
Dauid to Murder and Adulterie Lot to Incest Noah to Drunkennesse c. And the best of all their actions are stayned with some corruption that is his and commeth from him But is not God hereby made the Authour of sinne God forbid The Manichees indeed when they knew not how otherwise to excuse him plunged themselues into a foule and monstrous absurditie for they made two beginnings of things God from whom all goodnesse commeth and the Deuill from whom all euill or which is all one two gods a good and an euill god This is a horrible and a fearefull Blasphemie and striketh at the verie roote of all Religion But for auoyding all danger that may grow hereby it is necessarie first to know how and in what sence wee say that God hath a stroke in vnrighteous and sinfull actions not because he instilleth or powreth into his Creatures a poyson which before they had not or inclineth them vnto wickednesse for that were indeed to make God the authour of sinne but partly in that hee forsaketh and leaueth them to their owne naturall corruption either by taking away the grace they had or not bestowing new grace which they want whereby they runne head-long vnto euill partly that he letteth Satan loose vpon them to bee by him blinded and misse-led because they haue refused to be ruled and gouerned by Gods Word and Spirit To the former those places are to be referred where he is said to tempt or try them as the Holy Ghost recordeth y 2. Chron. 32. 21 of EZECHIAS that when hee dealt with the King of Babylons Ambassador God forsooke him trying him what was in his heart And Moses z Deut. 8. 2. in Deuteronomie Remember all this way wherein IEHOVAH thy God hath led thee now fortie yeeres in the Desart that he might afflict thee in trying what was in thine heart whether thou wouldest obey his Precepts or not So afterwards a Deut. 29. 3. 4. he vpbraydeth the people that notwithstanding these great tryals signes and wonders which Iehouah had done for them Yet he had not giuen them a mind to know eyes to see and eares to heare wherin we may not think God vniust who is indebted to none For who b Rom. 11. 35. gaue vnto him first and he shall be recōpenced And who according to his owne free pleasure bestoweth the measure of his graces how and where he will I c Rom. 9. 15. will haue mercie vpon whom I will haue mercie And is d Mat. 20. 15. it not lawfull for me to doe what I will with mine own Of the latter we haue an Example 1. Kin. 22 23. IEHOVAH hath sent a lying spirit into the mouth of all thy Prophets And the 1. Sam. 16. 15 16. An euill spirit from IEHOVAH vexed SAVL And that nothing herein falleth from the holinesse and Iustice of the Lord as all men not forsaken of common sence doe easily discerne for else as the e Rom. 3. 6. Apostle reasoneth how should God iudge the World So the Holy Ghost in many places teacheth very plainly for when the f Hosh 13 9 Prophet cryeth out Thy destruction is from thy selfe O Israel doth it not follow of necessitie that the cause also of destruction which is sinne is wholly from our selues and that GOD hath no part in it Which g Iames 1. 13. Iames more plainly vttereth Let no man when he is tempted say I am tempted of God for God cannot be tempted of euill neither tempteth he any man And 1. Iohn 2. h 1. Iohn 2. 15. Whatsoeuer is in the World as the lust of the flesh and the lust of the eyes and the pride of life is not from the Father but is from the World For this cause sinne is called The i 1. Iohn 3. 8. he that committeth sinne is of the Deuill for the Deuill sinneth from the beginning For this cause was the Sonne of God manifested that he might destroy the worke of the Deuill worke of the Deuill And our Sauiour Christ saith When k Iohn 8. 44. he speaketh a lye hee speaketh of his owne The sinne therefore of the Action is wholly to bee ascribed to the depraued nature and corruption of men wherein God is no way to be blamed l Eccles 7. 29. Who made all righteous but they haue sought many inuentions to themselues To illustrate this by one or two Similitudes Hee that spurreth a lame Horse is the cause of his stirring but not of his halting The Sunne that shineth vpon a filthie carcasse maketh the sauor yet it is no cause of any stench for out of sweete Flowres it bringeth a pleasant odour Such is the worke of God in the actions of wicked men And the better to apprehend how God in all this remayneth without any touch of sinne wee must consider that sinne hath alwayes three things going with it whereof it is impossible that any one should fall vpon God First To bee subiect to a Law For m Rom. 5. 13. where no law is there is no transgression And the n 1. Iohn 3. 4. Apostle defineth sinne to bee a breach of the Law Now God who made his Lawes for others is not himselfe to bee tyed to them Secondly Impuritie and corruption a thing most contrarie to the nature of God who is not onely holy and pure but holinesse and puritie it selfe and so farre off from being euill that he o Iames 1. 13. cannot be tempted of it Thirdly An euill and a wicked end Whereas GOD euermore seeketh his owne glorie which is absolutely good and the chiefe Good of all Therefore beside that the will of God is the Rule of all goodnesse the difference in these sinfull actions betweene that hee worketh and the worke of wicked men lyeth plaine aswell in the cause that mooueth him as in the end hee setteth before him and in the manner of doing all which though they bee in respect of wicked men vniust and sinfull yet as they proceede from God they are most iust and holy for first by reason of this diuersitie of the causes moouing and of the diuers ends which these two Agents God and wicked men set before them it falleth out that the selfe-same Action which in respect of the corruption of wicked men becommeth vnto them sinfull and damnable is as in regard of God most holy and righteous being led thereto for most gracious and iust respects either to set forth the riches of his Iustice or Mercie or for the chastizement and tryall of his Children or for some other cause as he seeth good which ends the wicked neuer set before them but all the contrarie what more blessed or glorious worke and of greater loue to vs was there euer or can possibly be then the reconciling of the World by the death of his Sonne And what more iust in respect of God then to inflict all these punishments vpon him who was our suretie and tooke
The summe whereof is in few words He b Rom. 10. 5. that doth these things shall liue by them As on the other side c Gal. 3. 10. Cursed is euery one that continueth not in all the things that are written in the Booke of the Law to doe them For this Couenant requireth workes done by the strength of Nature and according to the Law of our Creation answerable to Gods Iustice the expresse Image whereof is in the Morall Law And therefore the nature of Men and Angels beautified in their first Creation with Holinesse and the light of Gods Law written in their heart is the ground and foundation of this Couenant for otherwise it could not haue stood with the Iustice of God to require these things at their hands vnlesse the Law of GOD had beene stamped and signed in them and their nature made holy and pure able by Creation to doe the same The Couenant therefore of Workes hath those two parts before remembred for the Law of God as all other Lawes that are but streames and shaddowes of that euerlasting Law is vpholden by two things reward and punishment without which there would bee neither care to obserue nor feare to breake it This reward commeth from Gods free and vndeserued goodnesse for what can the Creature deserue at the Creatours hands doing nothing but that which the Law of his Creation bindeth him vnto Wherefore our Sauiour Luke 17. 10. doth admonish when wee haue done all things that are inioyned vs we must say we are vnprofitable seruants for we haue done nothing else but that we ought to doe And therein lyeth a mayne difference betweene the reward and punishment for the punishment is in Iustice and sinne hath indeed a merit belonging to it the merit of Gods heauie wrath and indignation as it is said d Luke 12. 48. He that doth things worthie of stripes shall be beaten c. And againe The e Rom. 6. 23. wages and due desert of sinne is death From this reward it followeth that the exact obseruation of the Law of God hath alwayes a good conscience ioyned with it A good conscience I call that which beareth record to vs that we doe well in all things and therefore are to be rewarded whereof our Sauiour speaketh Iohn 8. 29. The Father hath not left mee alone because I doe alwayes the things that are pleasing to him called therefore good because telling vs we doe well in all things it assureth vs of good The fruit of this good conscience is perpetuall ioy and comfort as the f Pro. 15. 15. Wiseman saith A good conscience is a continuall Feast And therefore this is as it were the gate that leadeth into the possession of the promised happinesse Againe from the punishment it followeth that contrariwise sinne hath attending vpon it guilt and an euill conscience Guilt is an estate that by reason of our sinne bindeth vs ouer vnto punishment and maketh vs subiect to the wrath of God as our Sauiour doth expresse it Mat. 5. 22. He that saith to his Brother Foole is guiltie of Hell-fire Genesis 4. 7. It is compared to a Curre or a Mastiffe Dogge which is alwayes arring and barking against vs If thou sinne sinne lyeth at the doore readie to flye in thy face and to take vengeance on thee g Heb. 10. 22. An euill conscience so called by the Apostle from the effects is that which by reason wee haue sinned telleth vs of the punishment wee are guiltie of and which abideth for vs. The fruit of an euill conscience is perpetuall feare and horrour as appeareth by h Gen. 4. 13. CAIN Mine iniquitie the guilt and punishment which through the same I am subiect vnto is greater then I can beare And in the King of Babel BELSHASSER whose i Dan. 5. 6. Royaltie was all changed his thoughts perplexed him the girdings of his loynes loosed and his knees dashed one against another when hee saw the Bill of his Indictment drawne Felix k Acts 24. 25. also is said to haue beene afraid hearing PAVL dispute of Righteousnesse and Temperance from which hee was so farre and of the Iudgement that was to come which he trembled to thinke vpon Such a terrour doth the guilt of an euill conscience strike into a man and therefore is as it were the Hangman to leade him by the hand to the place of execution as it is said Iob 18. 11. that terrors terrifie him round about and cast him downe following him at the heeles and leaue him not till they haue brought him before the terrible King But neither the reward nor punishment are alike to euery Both more or lesse as the righteousnesse or sinne aboundeth one it is to some more to some lesse as their righteousnesse or sin aboundeth For l 1. Cor. 3. 8. euery man saith the Apostle shall receiue his owne hire or measure of glorie according to his owne worke And the same is to be said of the other member for as the sinne increaseth so doth the punishment as our Sauiour saith Hee m Iohn 19. 11. that deliuered me vnto thee hath the greater sinne both for the guilt and punishment which he shall sustayne And Mat. 11. n Mat. 11. 21 22 23 24. It Life is a continuall progresse in holinesse and happinesse shall be easier for Tyrus and Sidon at the Day of Iudgement then for you The reward as we heard is life o Leuit. 18 5. Ezech. 20. 11. Rom. 10. 5. Gal 3. 12. He that doth these things shall liue by them Life the greatest good that can possibly come vnto a Creature the full blessednesse and perfection of his nature for by it is meant a continuance with growth and increase in all Holinesse Happinesse Honour and immortalitie And what more sweet then life wherein all pleasures are inioyed The punishment is death Genesis 2. 17. In the day thou Death is the contrary to them both eatest of the forbidden fruit thou shalt dye Death therefore is the reward of sinne death both spirituall in a subiection to the power of sinne and reall in an estate subiect to destruction Thus the Apostle Paul doth expound it Ephesians 2. 1 2 3. when hee teacheth that by nature we are first dead in sinne the sonnes of disobedience and then the children of wrath and condemnation Wherfore this is the most fearfull punishment that can bee thought of comprehending the whole Curse of the Law wherein all miseries are enwrapped p Deut. 27. 26. Gal. 3. 10. Cursed is euery one that continueth not in all things which are written in the Booke of the Law to doe them Which because in our corrupt estate it is impossible for men to doe therefore this Couenant is said to ingender children vnto bondage Gal 4. 24. Here therefore is threatned the vtter ruine and destruction Namely in stead of holinesse darknes and a totall corruption of the whole strength of nature
consider three things First The guilt of sinne whereof the q Rom. 3. 9. Apostle witnesseth that all the World is subiect to the iust punishment of God And againe r Heb. 2. 15. that all men naturally and in themselues considered out of Christ are subiect vnto bondage Secondly As before whilest they stood in their integritie inioying the comfort of a good conscience they had peace and quietnesse of minde so man had no sooner falne but feare and terrour came vpon him As wee see in Adam Gen. 3. 10. I heard thy voyce and was afraid And as it may be seene in all the sonnes of Adam who in respect of sinne ſ Heb. 2. 15. are in a perpetuall feare of death all their life long Wherefore the t Rom. 8. 15. Apostle noteth it the generall condition of all Mankinde before they be renewed to be possessed with the spirit of bondage vnto feare The fruit whereof is the drawing vs from God and to make vs flye from him as from our Enemie as Adam u Gen. 3. 8. fled from the presence of God and hid himselfe among the Trees of the Garden Thirdly The particularities of this cursed miserable estate which all the sonnes of Adam doe welter and lye in all their life are manifold and of diuers kindes comprehending x Deut. 28. 61 and 29. 20. all the plagues and punishments that may be thought of written not written but the chiefe and principall of euery sort as they lye in order opposite to the happie and blessed estate before described are these that follow First The wrath of God for so the Holy Ghost saith y Iohn 3. 36. He that beleeueth not the Sonne the wrath of God now abideth vpon him But this is not the full cup of his wrath So farre that all things not blessings onely but his very graces turne to their ruine the dregges whereof the wicked shall drinke hereafter for that no man can indure and liue but qualified and mixed that it breaketh out yet no further then this to turne all things to their ruine not onely outward blessings wherein God lifteth them vp that hee may with a greater force cast them downe but euen the good graces of God and gifts of his holy Spirit which all through their owne fault worke vnto their euill Christ is to them a Rocke z 1. Pet. 2. 7. of offence and set a Luke 2. 34. for a stumbling blocke all b Esay 28. 13. the wholesome instructions which he vseth his chastisements and corrections to reclayme them by their wickednesse are to make them fall to bee snared and in trapped the c 2. Cor. 2. 6. Gospell is a sauour of death vnto death vnto them the d Ro. 2. 4 5 c. bountie and long suffering of God serueth to the hardening of their vnrepentant heart And this is contrarie to that loue wherewith God before imbraced man Secondly Separation from the fellowship of God as 2. Separation from his presence Adam was cast out of Paradise the visible testimonie of his presence In regard whereof the Apostle e Ephes 4. 18. saith We are estranged from the life of God are f Ephes 2. 19. strangers and forainers and g Ephes 2. 17. farre off from him Thirdly Losse of our soueraigntie and consequently 3. Losse of our former soueraigntie and consequently of our power insomuch as both the creatures are become our enemies of the power wee had to rule and to command In so much as the Creatures that before were subiect to vs shaking off the yoke of their obedience are through Adams fall armed to our destruction the wilde beasts of the field readie to deuoure vs and all the creatures to rise vp against vs. Wherefore the h Iob 5. 22 23. Holy Ghost noteth it a fruit of our reconciliation vnto God Not to bee afraid of the beasts of the Earth but to bee in league with the stones of the field and to haue the beasts of the field in peace as being otherwise at warre and at defiance with vs. More then that a thing most opposite to our former and we Slaues to Satan soueraigntie and dominion Satan himselfe the most vilest and most basest of Gods Creatures and the same our vtter Enemie is become our Lord and Master insomuch as hee ruleth and raigneth ouer vs after his owne pleasure haleth and pulleth vs which way it pleaseth him and holdeth vs fast bound as it were in chaines to doe his will being therefore called The i 2. Cor. 4. 4. God of this World that blindeth the mindes of the vnfaithfull the Prince k Iohn 12. 31. and 16. 1● of this World the l Ephes 2. 2. spirit that worketh effectually in the children of disobedience in m 2. Tim. 2. 26. whose snares wee are and holden captiues of him Whereupon the Apostle saith that by the ministerie of the Gospell Wee n Col. 1. 13. are deliuered out of the power of darknesse and freed o Heb. 2. 15. by Christ from the bondage which through feare of death wee were all our life subiect to And hereof it followeth that the Reprobate hauing beside the sinfulnesse of their nature the Deuill by whose swindge and sway they are wholy led so readie to kindle the coles and to blow the fire of their owne corruption can doe nothing else but sinne Fourthly A heape and multitude of all manner of euill 4. All kind of calamities and calamities of all sorts which the Holy Ghost p Deut. 28. Deut. 28. doth reckon vp as fruits of sinne first in body to be q Verse 25. smitten before the enemies r 25 48. captiuity seruing of the enemie in famine and in thirst in nakednes and want of all things in ſ 50. great disgrace and to be t 64. dispersed and scattered into the furthest parts of the earth In mind a u 65 66 67. trembling and heauie heart In the morning to say I would it were euening To bee x 28 29. smitten with madnesse and with blindnesse and with astonishment that they shall grope at noone day as a blind man gropeth in darknesse Then foraine in our possessions first wife and children and then in our goods A y 30. wife shall bee espoused and another shall lye with her sonnes z 32. and daughters giuen vnto a strange people and goe a 41. into captiuitie Touching goods in the Land first and the fruits thereof to b 30. build a house and another to dwell in it to plant the Vineyard and another to eate the fruit the c 23. Heauens to bee brasse that no rayne shall fall and thereby the Land to bee Iron that no fruit shall grow the seed d 38. that shall sowe the ground to bee consumed by the Locust the e 39. Vineyard by the Worme all the f 42. Trees and
Fruits of the Earth by the Caterpiller the g 40. Oliue Tree to cast her Oliues In goods the h 17. basket the Dough the i 18. increase of the Kine and the flocke of the Sheepe to be accursed that which k 29 33. one hath to bee taken from him by Rapine and Fraud his l 31. Oxe to be slayne before his eyes and he not eate of it his Asse taken away and come no more to him his Sheepe to bee giuen to his Enemies and none to keepe him from this violence And thus for m 48. outward sustenance to be brought to extreme penurie and want of all things that n 44. hee must bee driuen to borrow and not able to lend In estate and honour the o 43. Stranger amongst them to climbe aloft high high and they to come downe lowe lowe the p 44. Stranger to bee the head and they the tayle In ones name fame and estimation to be a q 37. taunt a by-word and a Prouer be vnto all people and to get r 20. shame and rebuke in whatsoeuer they set their hand vnto Particularly of this kind are First Ignorance losing all that excellency of Wisedome Ignorance Knowledge and vnderstanding that was in Adam and in stead thereof a putting on a contrarie habit of blindnesse and errour a manifest fruit of sinne and so noted Deut. 28. 28. Secondly Shame comming from that nakednesse Shame whereby wee are stripped of all the ornaments of our Glorie for that by sinne shame entred into the World it is plaine in that ſ Gen. 2. 25. compared with Gen. 37. before Adam and his Wife were naked and yet not ashamed Thirdly All kinde of paine weaknesse and infirmitie the t Gen. 3. 19. woman in sorrow to conceiue and beare the man u Gen. 3. 19. Infirmitie Sicknesse in the sweat of his browes to eate his bread Againe x Deut. 28. 1 22 27 35. hunger thirst wearinesse sores itches sicknesse c. And that these and such like are the fruits of sinne appeareth also by the warning our Sauiour gaue to him that hee had healed of his sicknesse Iohn 5. Iehoua shall make the pestilence cleane vnto thee vntill be hath consumed thee Iehoua shall smite thee w●●h a Consumption and with the Feuer and with a hot burning Ague and with a feruent heate Iehoua shall smite thee with the Botch of Egypt and with the Eme●ods and with the Scabs and with the Itch. Iehoua shall smite thee in the knees and in the thighes with a sore Botch that thou canst not be healed euen from the sole of thy foot vnto the top of thy head and in the end Death which is the separation of soule and bodie 14. Behold thou art made whole sinne no more lest a worse thing come vnto thee Therefore Mat. 9. 2. when hee was to heale the man sicke of the palsie hee said vnto him Be of good comfort sonne thy sinnes are forgiuen thee Fourthly Death the separation of the soule and bodie So the Apostle telleth vs Rom. 5. 12. Through death sinne came into the World which bodily death is a part of that death threatned at the first Gen. 2. 17. What day thou eatest of it thou shalt dye And this is as it were the last and vttermost period of all our former miseries in which one they all are comprehended for in death our shame weaknesse and dishonour is most apparant as the Apostle saith 1. Cor. 15. 42 43. that our bodie is sowne that is buried and committed to the ground in corruption in dishonour and in weakenesse And of this nature is a y 1. Co 15 51 52. 1. Thes 4. 15 16. Yet in all this some reliques of former dignitie doe remaine namely in the minde miserable change like to death which shall befall them that are aliue in the latter Day But in all this God hath beene pleased to vse a temper leauing still some reliques of our dignitie and first condition That part indeed of his image which standeth in righteousnesse and true holinesse is quite and cleane abolished that not so much as any steps or fragments doe remayne the z Ephes 2. 1. Apostle bearing witnesse that we are borne dead in sinne but the Image of GOD standeth also in the excellencie of man aboue other Creatures of which dignitie or excellencie but not of holinesse or Innocencie some reliques wee carrie yet about vs And they are first in the minde or bodie alone and by themselues considered then in the whole man In the minde First Common principles of good and euill which Common principles of good and euil sparkes of that light of nature the a Rom. 1. 18. Apostle calleth Truth that is some seed of the eternall Truth both for knowledge of God and of our duties to our brethren as that there is one God and that the same God is to bee serued that hee rewardeth those that keepe his Law and punisheth the transgressors that men must reuerence their Superiours and not harme their Neighbours nor doe iniurie one vnto another And from this light that euerie one carryeth about him and is borne and bred together with him commeth the Law of nature that nature which now wee haue since the fall of Adam therefore Iohn 1. 9. it is said that euery man comming into the World is lightened therewithall And this serueth notably for the collection and gathering of his Church out of the wicked World for if all common honestie all seedes of comelinesse and vertue were vtterly extinguished and put out how could either the Church bee gathered at all or preserued or kept when it is once gathered Secondly A conscience when we doe amisse whereof some seedes of conscience naturally some seedes are left in euerie one the better to represse the vnbrideled course of our affections howsoeuer some struggle to shake them off Rom. 2. 15. their conscience accusing or excusing Now this light of Nature and seedes of conscience which notwithstanding are wholy sinfull left in man are good and holy things in themselues and of their owne nature but in vs vtterly corrupt and naught All whose parts and powers are wholy tainted and defiled with sinne that truly the a Titus 1. 15. Apostle saith Both our minde and conscience is defiled Therefore they serue not at all to iustifie vs as though and doe but serue partly to keepe men from breaking forth without all shame or regard of honestie partly to make them vnexcusable by our owne Wisedome Reason Will Desire or Affections wee were able to doe or to indeuour that that is good but partly to keepe men from breaking out without shame vnto an ouer-bold and audacious defiance of all godlinesse and honestie partly to make vs inexcusable in the sight of God Rom. 1. 20. For first those seedes of Truth and Light which wee haue of God are so farre
Iudgement should then beginne vpon the soules both of the Elect and Reprobate presently departing into their place of ioy or of torment a third place there is not any So saith Peter t 1. Pet. 3. 19. of the wicked disobedient in the time of NOAH That their spirits are in Prison chayned with the fetters of darknesse And the Rich man as soone as he dyed was cast into Hell for being in Hell saith our u Luke 16. 23. Sauiour Christ in torments he saw ABRAHAM a farre off and LAZARVS in his bosome For men in this most excellent part of theirs perish not like bruit beasts as the Sadduces of old and now-a-dayes the Libertines doe teach neither Sadduces and Libertines doth their soule vanish in the Ayre or dye with the bodie till the time of the restoring of all things which is contrarie to the propertie of that spirituall nature but it still liueth and continueth either in paine or comfort Mat. 10. 28. Bee not afraid of them that kill the bodie but are not able to kill the soule Secondly Their soule onely feeleth this heauie torment their bodies resting in the graue till the time of the dissolution of all things Thirdly The condition that men also must vndergoe in the end is the whole extremitie and fulnesse of Gods wrath to seize then vpon them many degrees heauier then the punishment they felt before that Iudgement going before the great and solemne Day wherein all flesh is to bee presented before the Iudge of all the World as it were a pettie Sessions before the grand Assises Wherefore the Apostle calleth the last Day in respect of the wicked x Rom. 2. 5. A Day of wrath because then God will tread out the full Wine-presse of his wrath and y 2. Pet. 2. 9. Peter by excellencie A Day of Iudgement whereto the wicked are reserued to be punished And againe z 2. Pet. 3. 7. A Day of Iudgement and destruction of vngodly men For to this purpose will God rayse vp their bodies in the latter Day that so their bodie and soule which haue both sinned together may be both together punished whereof they shall then receiue their sentence and last doome with execution accordingly But of these two Doctrines the Resurrection and the last Iudgement wee shall haue iust cause to speake more fully and at large hereafter A miserable change to such men as then are liuing A miserable change to such men as then are liuing shall bee in stead of a death and rising from it The creature is then also subiect to an vtter abolition shall be in stead of a death and rising from it The creature also to make the curse of man the greater is then subiect to an vtter abolition hauing in the meane time their being and continuance for the Elects sake as the a 2. Pet. 3 9. Apostle Peter teacheth when to the wicked Scorners that make a mocke of the Comming of Christ and of the end of the World for that all things continue hitherto as they were from the Creation hee opposeth the patience of God deferring the same because of the Elect for whose sake hee holdeth vp the World till their number bee fulfilled that none of his might perish And so that saying of Salomon Pro. 10. 25. may not vnfitly be interpreted howsoeuer another sence serueth very well That the iust man is the foundation of the World yet true it is the Creature shall not at the last Day be in fact vtterly done away but that is not long of the desert which the sinne of man had brought vpon them but by a further mercie of God towards the Elect for whose comfort in Christ they shall stand and be renewed an euident proofe that otherwise in the damnation of all flesh they should vtterly haue beene abolished The end of the first Booke THE SECOND BOOK OF DIVINITIE OF IMMANVEL GOD AND MAN OVR REDEEMER CHAP. I. Of Christ BEfore wee enter vpon This is the summe of that Doctrine which we haue concerning God The other followeth concerning Immanuel God with vs. this part because Christ the subiect it treateth of a Rom. 10. 4. is the end of the Law somewhat would bee said as an inducement to the principall concerning the power efficacie and vse of the Law of GOD for if such bee the condition of all Mankind as wee haue hitherto left them in what shall wee say Is there no means by any thing we can do to attain vnto saluation No verily there is not any for b Ephes 2. 13. we are borne dead in sinnes and are by nature the children of wrath accursed euery Mothers sonne and vnable of our selues or by our owne strength to get out of that curse It is true the Law or Couenant of workes is of sufficient power and abilitie in it selfe to iustifie for by it the Holy Angels that kept their first estate are iustified in the sight of God and by it our Sauiour Christ was iustified and so should Adam and all his posteritie haue beene if they had continued in the obedience thereof but in respect of our weaknesse who are not able to performe it it is now become c Rom. 8. 3. Gal. 3. 21. impossible for the Law to saue vs. Wherefore the d Rom. 3. 20 Gal. 3. 11. Scripture euery where proclaymeth as a thing euident e 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and cleere that by the Law no man is iustified before God for saith the Apostle Gal. 3. 17. 18. The Law which was foure hundred and thirty yeeres after cannot disanull the Couenant that was confirmed afore of God in respect of Christ that it should make the promise of none effect The meaning is Abraham foure hundred thirtie yeeres before the giuing of the Law was iustified by faith in the promise or couenant of Grace which could not bee made void by the Law comming so long after as it must if the Law should iustifie To what vse then doth it serue for vs that are fallen It serueth for a threefold vse First To shew and discouer sinne Rom. 3. 20. Therefore by the workes of the Law no flesh shall be iustified in his sight for by the Law commeth the knowledge of sinne Rom. 7. 7. I had not knowne sinne but by the Law for euen lust I had not knowne if the Law had not said Thou shalt not lust Secondly Through corruption of our nature who are sharpest set to doe things forbidden to increase and stirre vp sinne within vs Rom. 7. 8 9 10 11. But sinne taking occasion by that Commandement wrought in me all lust for without the Law sinne was dead but I liued without the Law once But when that Commandement came and was truly vnderstood of me sinne reuiued and I dyed And the Commandement which was for life was found to mee to be vnto death for sinne taking occasion by that Commandement deceiued me and thereby slue mee Thirdly By
euerlasting Spirit hath offered vp himselfe to God c In this part of his Oblation the sufferings which he did indure obserue First That Christ himselfe performeth all the parts his taking vpon him and his whole person hath a stroke in it for both hee is the Sacrifice or thing it selfe offered the Priest or the Offerer and the Altar or that which sanctifieth the offering whereupon in his whole person as GOD and Man he is said to be our Priest Heb. 5. 6. First As Man he is the Sacrifice his whole humanity suffering both Soule and Bodie which was the Tabernacle of his Deitie wherein he performed this Sacrifice whereupon the Apostle calleth him The x Heb. 8. 2. Minister of that true Tabernacle which the Lord pight and not man and that y Heb. 9. 11. Christ being come an High Priest by a better and more perfect Tabernacle not made with hands that is not of this building which the earthly Tabernacle was of but euen by his owne bloud entred into the holy Place Wherefore the Scripture attributeth the remission of our sinnes by this oblation sometimes to his whole person sometimes by a Synecdoche of the part for the whole to his Bodie flesh or bloud and sometimes to his Soule Who z 1. Tim. 2. 6. gaue himselfe a ransome for all who a Titus 2. 19. gaue himselfe for vs that hee might redeeme vs by b Heb. 10. 10. the which wee are sanctified euen by the offering of the Bodie of Iesus Christ once made c 1. Pet. 2. 14. he bare our sinnes in his Bodie on the Tree he d Col. 1. 22. reconciled vs in the Bodie of his flesh through his Death he e Col. 1 20. reconciled vs making Peace by the bloud of his Crosse he f Esay 53. 10. made his Soule sinne or a Sacrifice for sinne The g Mat. 20. 28. Sonne of man came to giue his Soule a ransome for many Else must our soules haue perished This Marke 10. 45. was both prefigured in the Law by the bloud which is the soule of the brute creature and otherwise by the Holocaust or whole burnt Offering and is signified in the Sacrament of the Gospell for the Ceremonie of breaking bread vsed in the Lords Supper cannot bee so properly referred to his Bodie which had not a bone broken as to his Soule most specially h Esay 53. 5. bruised and broken in pieces with heauinesse and sorrow Secondly As God he is the i Heb. 13. 13 Altar or the Sanctifier Wee haue an Altar c. of his Man-hood which hee offereth by giuing it power to ouercome for that is the propertie of the Altar to k Mat. 23. 17. sanctifie the gift God saith PAVL Acts 20. 28. hath by his owne bloud redeemed the Church As if he should haue said It was indeed the Man Christ Iesus that shed his bloud but of small effect had that beene vnlesse he had beene God whereby his bloud obtayned strength and power to sanctifie those that are his And in the Epistle to the l Heb. 9. 14. Hebrewes How much more shall the bloud of Christ which by the euerlasting Spirit offered himselfe vnblameable vnto God purge your conscience from dead workes to serue the Liuing God Laying the whole vertue and efficacie of Christs death vpon the eternall Spirit that is the fulnesse of the God-head which dwelleth in him So that in a sort God himselfe who is not subiect vnto suffering did suffer when he suffered that was both God and Man Whereupon the Apostle saith that euen in respect of his God-head he emptied himselfe c. Philip. 2. 7. The difference of this part of Christs Priest-hood from that of Aaron stood in these points First Hee himselfe was offered here there other Oblations and Sacrifices Secondly They offered many times himselfe being here the Sacrifice could bee but once offered whereof the Apostle hath many notable speeches in the Epistle to the Hebrewes By m Heb. 10. 10. the which will we are sanctified euen by the Oblation of the Bodie of Iesus Christ once made but he hauing offered one Sacrifice for sinnes setteth for euer at the right hand of God for by one Oblation hee hath consecrated for euer those that are sanctified And in the ninth Chapter Christ n Heb. 9. 26. being once offered in the end of the World to beare the sinnes of many c. Thirdly He o Heb. 7. 27. did it for vs and our good onely for for himselfe he needed not The Priests of Aaron offered first for themselues and then for the people In the second place are to be obserued the things hee of our sinnes suffered and tooke vpon him to wit First our verie sinnes all layd vpon Christ as our Pledge and Suretie otherwise wee must needes haue remayned in them whereupon he is called p Heb. 7. 22. The Suretie of the New Testament And hereof it is that the Apostle saith q 2. Cor. 5. 27. Him that knew no sinne he made to be sinne for vs in regard of our sinnes cast vpon him and imputed to him Secondly taking our sinnes hee tooke with-all the and the whole curse guilt and the whole Curse and punishment due vnto them By reason of the guilt there befell him feare and horror from the sense of his Fathers wrath Heb. 5. 7. Sorrow trouble of mind astonishment heauinesse vnto death Math. 26. 38. Which specially appearing towards the end of his dayes when he was to enter into the lists and to fight the great combate hand to hand with his angrie Father did withall stretch it selfe in some measure to the rest of the parts of his life Of the r Esay 53. 5. other wee read The chastisement of our peace did lye vpon him For this cause he is said ſ Math. 20. 28. Mark 10. 45. to haue giuen his soule a Ransome for many and to be a t 1 Tim. 2. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ransome equiualent for all Therefore he is called u 1. Iohn 2. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Propitiation for our sinnes is said to be x Rom. 3. 25. set vp of God for a Propitiatorie by allusion as it seemeth to the couer which was vpon the Arke of the Couenant called the y 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Propitiatorie couering a type of the Propitiation wrought by Christ and manifested in and through him when he brake downe the vayle of Ceremonies that stood betweene God and vs. To this E●●hu z Iob 33. 23. doth allude when he bringeth in the Minister of God praying for the deliuerance of the afflicted person because God hath elsewhere found an expiatorie Propitiation which is Christ his Sonne For this cause we are said to bee a Rom. 3. 25. redeemed by him and that b Heb. ● 3. by himselfe he hath made the purgation of our sinnes And herevpon
lesse from desperation for euen when hee cryed out in the anguish of his soule Why hast thou forsaken me yet he ceaseth not to call him his God of whom he complayneth himselfe to bee forsaken but it grew out of a meere humiliation for howsoeuer as touching his Diuine Nature he were equall with GOD the Father yet he found in his humanitie wherein hee was to pay our ransome an exceeding vnabilitie to satisfie Gods Iustice vnlesse hee might bee pleased fauourably to accept the Sacrifice of his Bodie not as the Sacrifice of a man but as the Sacrifice of his onely begotten Sonne and what was wanting in the weaknesse of his humane Nature to account sufficiently made vp in the worthinesse of his God-head Besides he feared not an vtter desertion or forsaking which to feare were desperation but lest his humane Nature should for a time be left alone without any comfortable assistance of the God-head fearing in that distressefull agonie of his and the verie confusion of the powers of his nature how long it might hold him and how infinitely more it might increase vpon him seeing that hee was not yet come to the greatest of his Passion from whence by a meere naturall desire abhorring paine which may well be without sinne he would haue gladly beene released And therefore praying it might passe from him yet presently submitteth himselfe vnto it Mat. 26. 39. O my Father if it be possible let this Cup passe from me Neuerthelesse not as I will but as thou wilt And againe Verse 42. O my Father if this Cup cannot passe away from mee but that I must drinke of it thy will bee done y Mar. 14. 36. MARKE hath it thus Father all things are possible to thee take away this Cup from mee Neuerthelesse not as I will but as thou wilt The third thing to bee obserued in his sufferings is All which hee fully satisfied that by the power of his God-head hee did indure and went thorow with them and did not take the foile for as a huge stone falling vpon a piece of britle glasse grindeth it all to powder but if it light vpon a thing as huge as it selfe it is not able for to wagge it so the infinite power of his God-head strengthened the humane Nature of Christ to indure the brunt of the infinite wrath and displeasure of his Father in such sort as it did not ouer-whelme him but that in the middest of all his sufferings hee did in a manner conquer and ouercome laying in his humilitie the beginning as it were and foundation of his Glorie and of his Kingdome in his lowe estate Whereof it followeth First that in the middest of his most bitter sufferings he was freed from hatred of God finall desperation and such like which are not of the substance of the punishment but lamentable and fearefull effects in those that are ouercome of it Secondly That hee was not nor could not bee crushed with the waight of it into Hell the place of the damned Thirdly That making satisfaction he did not lye for euer vnder it But how then did hee pay the ransome of our sinnes which is Hell fire the second Death euerlasting condemnation if he neither were in Hell to suffer there and came so quickly out of his suffering here These things as hath beene shewed are no part of the punishment but effects and things annexed to it when the punishment it selfe is not able to bee indured and hath no place where that is borne and satisfied And yet it is more that Christ the onely begotten Sonne of God yea God himselfe should for a small while thus beare the Curse of the Law then if the whole World had suffered eternall punishment in Hell fire The fourth thing is how and which way he satisfied our cursednes here in the whole course of his life all this and when First Our cursednesse here he satisfied in the whole course of his life as z Mat. 8. 16 17 the Euangelist out of the Prophet noteth He healed all that were sicke that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Esay the Prophet saying Hee tooke our infirmities and bare our sicknesse Secondly the infinite wrath of God his Father hee our full cursednesse vpon the Crosse satisfied vpon the Crosse for thither doth the Scripture euer call vs a 1. Pet 2. 24. Who bare our sInnes vpon the Wood that b Ephes 2. 16. hee might reconcile both in one bodie vnto GOD through the Crosse killing enmitie through it c Coloss 2. 14. blotting out the hand-writing of ordinances that was against vs which was secretly contrarie to vs hee tooke it away nayling it to the Crosse Thirdly Death in the graue where beeing solemnely and death by dying vnder the power whereof he lay three daies in the graue buried to assure vs his death was a true death and not counterfeit nor fayned he lay three dayes vnder the ignominious dominion of it The fift and last thing is the end which is also the vse and fruit of his sufferings Forgiuenesse of sins Mortification or Abolishing of our sinful lusts and the Freeing of vs from death and condemnation as shall appeare hereafter To come vnto the last of those foure heads our Sauiours The glories of Christ that followed his suffrings humbling of himselfe so farre as to be obedient vnto death the death of the Crosse it pleased God to crowne with an infinite waight of blisse as the Apostle teacheth Phil. 2. 9. Agreeable whereunto is that of the Prophet d Esay 53. 10. Esay Seeing he giueth himselfe an Oblation for sinne hee shall see a seede and prolong his dayes And Reuel 5. 12 13. It is the voyce of infinite thousands of holy Angels applauded by all the creatures in heauen and vpon the earth and by the foure liuing creatures and the foure and twentie Elders Worthie is the Lambe that was slaine to receiue power and riches and wisdome and strength and honor and glorie and praise In which two e 1. Pet. 1. 11. Psal 22. the sufferings of Christ the glories that did follow the whole substance of the Gospell standeth as he himselfe teacheth his Disciples Luk. 24. 26. Must not Christ haue suffered these things and so enter into his glorie But had he no glorie at all before he had finished his sufferings Indeed during the time of his humiliation which was all his life long whilest he bare the infirmity of our natures and the punishment due to the same the great happinesse belonging to him was smothered in some sort that it did not so appeare neyther was the time for the full manifesting thereof yet come Howbeit euen then he did not obscurely make ouerture of it many wayes For first in that weakenesse of his flesh he gaue so liuely tokens of his glorie that the f 1. Tim. 3. 16. Apostle feareth not to say euen then When he was manifested in the
power and comfort of his Spirit whereby he doth communicate himselfe and all he hath vnto vs not in any corporall or bodily presence The time that hee thus ascended both in Soule and the fortieth day after his Resurrection Bodie was fortie d Acts 1. 3. dayes after his Resurrection during all which time hee was conuersant with his Disciples teaching and instructing them aswell in all points of Christian doctrine as in those that belong to the Policie and Gouernment of his Church whereupon the e Heb. 3. 2 3 4 5 6. Apostle saith He was faithfull in all the House of God after a more excellent sort then Moses was The fruit of Christs Ascension into Heauen is our comming thither as shall appeare more at large hereafter And this entrie into Heauen to purchase full Redemption for vs belonged to his Priestly Function wherof the High Priests entring into the Holy of holies once a yeere was a type or figure Heb. 8. 7 12. The fourth and last step is his f Iohn 7. 39. Acts 3. 13. Glorification or the and there sitteth at the right hand of God that is to say enioyeth all Soueraigntie Power and Glorie inriching of him after hee was ascended with an vnspeakeable and incomprehensible though not an infinite measure of all Happinesse Ioy Wisdome Knowledge Excellencie more then all men and Angels haue whereof the g Psal 45. 8. Heb. 1. 9. Psalmist speaketh God euen thy God hath anoynted thee with the Oyle of gladnesse aboue thy fellowes Therefore this is called also his h Acts 2. 33. Exaltation or i Phil. 2. 9. Superexaltation hauing in stead of shame and contempt which for our sakes hee did willingly vndergoe becomming subiect vnto death the most ignominious death of the Crosse all and all manner of excellencie both Kingdome Power and Glorie bestowed vpon him and this is that which figuratiuely is meant by his sitting or standing at the right hand of God his Father Heb. 1. 3. Hauing by himselfe purged our sinnes hee sitteth at the right hand of Maiestie in the highest places Marke 16. 19. The Lord after he had spoken these things was taken vp into Heauen and sitteth at the right hand of God Acts 7. 55. He being full of the Holy Ghost looked stedfastly vp to Heauen and saw the Glorie of God and Iesus standing at the right hand of God A phrase or forme of speech taken from earthly Princes who are said to set them at their right hand whom they are pleased to k Mat. 20. aduance into the principall place of Honour and Administration of their Kingdome First touching his Gouernment and Dominion both the Apostles so expound this Phrase when that which l Psal 110. 1. Dauid saith IEHOVAH said vnto my Lord Sit thou at my right hand till I make thine enemies thy footstoole The one m 1. Cor. 15. 25 rendreth thus He shall raigne till he haue put all his enemies vnder his feet The n Acts 2. 36. other inferreth vpon it Let all the house of Israel therefore know for a certaine that Him God hath made both Lord and Christ For power and dominion both that serueth Ephes 1. 10 20 21. According to his mightie power which hee wrought in Christ when he raysed him from the dead and set him at his right hand in the heauenly Places far aboue all Principalitie and Power and Might and Dominion and euery name that is named not in this World onely but also in that that is to come and hath made all things subiect vnder his feet Of his Glorie the same is manifest in that this verie setting at the right hand of God is o Acts 3. 13. called his Glorification and the p Acts 7. 55. Storie of Stephen coupleth them together He saw the Glory of God and Iesus standing at the right hand of God The fruit of his setting at the right hand of God is very great and in a manner all in all both for his Intercession and Kingdome as we shall haue occasion to note hereafter All that hitherto hath beene said concerneth our Sauiours Hitherto of Oblation Intercession is offering of himselfe we come now to the other part of his Priesthood standing in his Intercession A thing most necessarie to be added to the rest for in vaine were all his Offerings and Oblation if by his Prayers and Supplications to his Father and the continuall presenting of his Merits hee did not purchase Grace that the same should bee made effectuall for vs. Wherefore this as one step higher is added to the former Rom. 8. 34 Who shall condemne It is Christ that dyed nay rather which is risen who also is at the right hand of God who also maketh Intercession for vs. In his Intercession I obserue First that it is the proper Office and Honor of Christ by whom onely we come vnto God Heb. 7. 25. Secondly That it is the requesting and intreatie of the continuall presenting of his Merits to God his Father the continuall presenting of himselfe and the Merits of his Death and Passion whereupon hee is called our q 1. Iohn 2. 1. Aduocate or Spokesman and is said to r Heb. 9. 24. appeare on our behalfe before the face of God and to make If any man sin we haue an Aduocate with the Father euen Iesus Christ that righteous one Å¿ Rom. 8. 34. Heb. 7. 25. his Father Intercession for vs. The word appearing being a word taken from the Courts and Seats of Iustice as we vse to say when the Plaintife or Defendant is called Who is heere to appeare for him Christ therefore is as it were our Attournie to appeare for vs before his Father I make mention of the Father onely because the Father is the first of the three Persons in order who being appeased the Sonne and Holy Ghost are also pleased they all being one as in essence and nature so in will and agreement Thirdly When and how he performed this Intercession namely whilest hee was vpon Earth in so many so sweet so heauenly and so feruent Prayers as he powred forth from time to time for the Saluation of his Elect especially that most solemne and sacred one aboue the rest Iohn 17. wherein being anon to be offered hee did consecrate both himselfe the onely and eternall Sacrifice and vs in and through him vnto his Father by the power and force of which his Prayer the Church of God hath euer stood and shall stand vnto the end And what he did then vpon the Earth the same he doth though not in the same manner now in Heauen not with knees bowed and hands stretched out but yet in such sort as is fit for him to giue and fit for his Father to receiue Fourthly That hee maketh Intercession for all the Elect on the behalfe of those Elect. and for them alone not for the Reprobate and Worldlings Iohn 17. 9. I pray not
operations or faculties to worke great and wonderfull things but the same God there is that worketh all these things in all And so I distinguish those wordes in the question of the High Priests vnto the Apostles c Acts 4. 7. By what power or by what name haue you done this As if they should haue said By what Gifts or Calling noteth the Gift and Grace the other the Function or Calling it selfe Of gifts that are for a mans owne priuate is one knowledge Gifts for a mans owne priuate are knowledge of the Word of Christ and vnderstanding of the Word of Christ An excellent and a goodly grace for howsoeuer knowledge of it selfe without further The Popish assertion that Ignorance is the Mother of Deuotion which the Apostle maketh the Mother of Pride and of Rebellion against God Rom. 10. 3. grace bee not of power to reforme the hart yet it is so necessary that the holy Ghost pronounceth e Pro. 29. 2. Without knowledge the heart cannot bee good And this also is the proper worke of Christ for f Iohn 1. 18. No man hath seene God at any time the onely begotten Sonne who is in the bosome of his Father he hath declared him But knowledge as I said a man may haue and yet be and a taste of the sweetnesse of it which being the highest step that it is possible for any Reprobate to ascend neuer a whit the neerer to his Saluation nor haue made one pace vnto the heauenly Kingdome as touching any reformation of the heart That which followeth bringeth a change and alteration with it which the g Heb. 6. 4. Apostle calleth A tasting of the good Word of God c. meaning the sweet promises of the Gospell and is the furthest step that it is possible for any Reprobate to goe Wherein I obserue foure things First That it is a peculiar worke of Christ and commeth not but from him and h Heb. 10. 29. the Spirit of his Grace Secondly That it is not a counterfeit shew of holinesse or in hypocrisie onely but a matter of truth and an excellent grace of GOD wrought indeed in them touching and affecting their hearts as the Apostle Peter plainly sheweth 2. Pet. 1. 8. They beguile those that i 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 indeed had escaped from them that were conuersant in errour Thirdly I obserue the neerenesse and affinitie that it hath with the sauing faith and the fruits of this with the fruits of that in which respect it pleaseth the Holy Ghost to call them both by one and the same name for they are said to bee k Heb. 6. 4. enlightened to l Heb. 10. 29. receiue the Spirit of Grace to m Luke 8. 13. They beleeued for a time Iohn 2. 24. Many beleeued yet he would not commit himselfe vnto them because he knew them all and what was in them Acts 8. 13 Then Simon also himselfe beleeued haue Faith to beleeue that the n Mat. 12. 43. vncleane spirit is gone out of them to flye o 2. Pet. 1. 20. the pollutions of the World to be p 2. Pet. 2. 22. washed to be q Heb. 10. 29. sanctified by the Spirit to be made r Heb. 6. 5. partaker of the Holy Ghost And the mayne sinne committed here-against is termed in the Scripture ſ Mat. 12. 13 32 Sinne against the Holy Ghost So that these men come to the skirt of the Holy Land and as Moses did from Mount Nebo behold it from afar or rather are at the very gate of the Kingdome of Heauen though for lacke of Faith they cannot enter in In nature it commeth so neere that they taste the changeth after a sort mans corrupt nature sweetnesse and excellency that is in Christ as we shewed before out of Heb. 6. 4. In the fruits and effects that a great and wonderfull change is wrought in them in all their parts and powers their Vnderstanding Will affections Wayes For touching their Vnderstanding they are t Heb. 10. 26. inlightened to the Knowledge and acknowledgement of Christ Touching their Will they desire to bee like Gods Children and to bee saued as Balaam did Numbers 23. 10. O that my soule might dye the death of the Righteous and that my last end might be like theirs For their Affections to omit those that comming from the Law and Couenant of workes may be in such as neuer heard of Christ as terrour and pricking of conscience for their sinnes which u Acts 24. 25. Felix had when Paul disputed of Righteousnesse Temperance and of the Iudgement to come to bee sorrie for them as x Heb. 12. 17. Esay that with teares sought the blessing and y Mat. 27. 35. Iudas that repented him and in the anguish of his soule hanged himselfe Those that properly belong to this place are First An imbracing of the Truth whereupon they are said to z Heb. 10. 25. receiue the Word and to receiue the acknowledgement of the Truth as it were taking it in their armes and imbracing it Secondly Ioy and Gladnesse in the sweet promises of the Gospell They a Heb. 6. 4 5. taste the good Word of God and the powers of the life to come they b Mat. 13. 20. receiue the Word by and by with ioy So did the c Iohn 5. 35. Iewes who willingly reioyced for a while in IOHNS light And d Marke 6. 20. Herod that heard him gladly Thirdly Zeale which was in the Galatians e Gal. 4. 15. that receiued Paul as an Angell and would haue plucked out their eyes to haue done him good and yet afterwards fell away So was f 2. Kin. 10. 16. Iehu zealous for Gods cause in the defacing of Idolatrie and yet a g 2. Kin. 10. 31 wicked man Fourthly Reuerence of the Ministers as HEROD h Marke 6. 20. reuerenced IOHN knowing him to bee a iust and a holy man and obserued him Changes in their actions and wayes Beside a confession of their faults with i Exod. 9. 27. PHARAOH I haue sinned this time IEHOVAH is most iust but I and my people are most wicked And k 1. Sam. 15. 24 26. 21. SAVL I haue sinned now c. And a conforming of themselues in the outward duties of holinesse as to heare the Word preached which l Marke 6. 20. Herod did to Prayer c. They haue these First Vexation in themselues and disquietnesse of minde before they commit sinne and feare to commit it So m Marke 6. 26. Herod was sore grieued to grant Herodias request when shee asked Iohn Baptists head and n Mat. 27. 24. Pilate much troubled in minde before he condemned Christ and sought all meanes to put it off Secondly Repentance and a kinde of humiliation for sinnes committed as o 1. Kings 21. 27 29. Ahab that rent his clothes and put sackcloth vpon him and fasted
childrens bodies are not able to beare the other And here a three-fold Ceremonie is to bee obserued First The sprinkling secondly The lying as it were vnder the water thirdly The rising out of it all which the Apostle noteth Rom. 6. 3 4. The grace signified is our incorporating into Christ And therefore it is called i Tit. 3. 5. According to his mercie he hath saued vs by the Lauer of Regeneration The Lauer or Sacrament of Regeneration and thereupon wee are said in Baptisme k Gal. 3. 27. As many of you as are baptized into Christ haue put on Christ to put on Christ Whereof followeth First That it is the first Sacrament of the Church as birth is the first beginning of our life Secondly Children of beleeuing Catabaptists that denie the baptisme of Children parents in that they are members of the Church and partakers of the Couenant cannot bee shut from Baptisme which is the Sacrament thereof no more than they might from Circumcision Wherefore our Sauiour l Mark 10. 14. saith Suffer little children to come vnto me for vnto such belongeth the Kingdome of God Thirdly that is to bee done The Donatists and Nouatians that hold Rebaptization The Papists teach that Baptisme hath onely force to purge sinnes past The Nouatians denie forgiuenesse of sinnes to them that fell after Baptisme but once only as men are borne but once yet it assureth vs of our vnion with Christ not once but all the dayes of our life and testifieth the forgiuenesse of all sinnes past present or to come And therefore is said to saue vs 1. Pet. 3. 2. Fourthly Hereupon wee are said to be baptized into the name of the m Math. 28. 29 Father and of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost because by Baptisme we being consecrate to God are ioyned to him to beare his name as the wife beareth the name of her husband Fiftly It is a Sacrament also of our vniting into the Church Therefore n Gal. 3. 27. Paul after he had said As many of you as are baptized into Christ haue put on Christ immediately addeth For all you are one in Christ Iesus Sixtly Being a seale of Regeneration consequently it sealeth vp the fruits thereof Iustification and Sanctification Hee hath saued vs saith o Tit. 3. 5 6 7. PAVL by the Lauer of Regeneration and of the renewing of the holy Spirit which hee hath shed forth vpon vs richly through Iesus Christ our Sauiour That beeing iustified by his grace wee might be made heires in hope of euerlasting life A seale it is of Iustification in this sort first Of the hiding and couering of sinnes by the couering of the childes face with water Secondly of Christs accomplishment of the Law making vs righteous by the water washing and making cleane the Bodie It is a seale of Sanctification thus First The water lying vpon the childes face declareth that the old Adam in the baptized person is buried with Christ our Sauiour Secondly As after the water shed from the Bodie the Bodie appeareth white and cleane so doe wee rise and appeare in newnesse of life and hereof it is called a p Mark 1. 3. Sacrament of Repentance Iohn baptized in the Wildernes and preached the baptisme of Repentance vnto the forgiuenesse of sinnes Matth. 3. 11. I baptize you with water vnto Repentance The forme whereof is thus or to this effect I baptize thee in the name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost All these vses both for Iustification and Sanctification and the distinct parts of euery one the Apostle notably setteth forth Rom. 6. 3 4 5 6. Know yee not that all wee which haue beene baptized into Iesus Christ haue beene baptized into his Death Wee are buried then with him by Baptisme into his Death that like as Christ was raysed from the dead vnto the glorie of the Father so also wee should walke in newnesse of life For if wee bee grafted with him to the similitude of his death euen so shall we be to the similitude of his resurrection Knowing this that our olde man is crucified with him that the bodie of Sinne might be destroyed that henceforth wee should not serue Sin The forme of Baptisme which the Minister is here to vse is this q Matth. 28. 19 I baptize thee in the name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost The Lords Supper is a receyuing of Bread and Wine to assure our growing vp in Christ where the outward signe is double as before in Baptisme The Lords Supper is a feeding with Bread and Wine First The matter both r Matth. 26. 26 27. bread Papists by their Doctrine of Transubstantiation take away the signes in the Supper and wine of which Elements God made choyce because they are the chiefest meanes of nourishment And of them both to shew how plentifull and assured a Redemption we haue in Christ The kind of Bread must bee The Popish Wafer-cakes ordinarie Bread according as our Sauiour Christ tooke such as was vsed at the common table at that time Secondly The action which is the Ministers breaking of bread and powring forth The Superstition of the Papists which will haue it thrust into their mouthes of wine with his deliuering of them both and the peoples receyuing of them Matth. 26. 26 27. As they did eate Iesus tooke Bread and when he had blessed he brake it and gaue it to his Disciples and said Take eate c. Also he tooke the Cup and when he had giuen thankes he gaue it to them saying Drinke c. And of this Wine all are to The sacriledge of Poperie robbing the people of the vse of the Cup. Their priuate and Corner-Masses drinke aswell the people as the Minister so expresly prouided Matth. 26. 27. Drinke yee all of this which is more than he said of the Bread The graces signified are our growing vp in Christ to assure our continuance in the Couenant wherein is noted our continuance in him with increase and consequently iustification and holinesse of life for in the elements themselues the Bread and Wine set before vs the Bodie and Bloud of Christ Matth. 26. 26 27 28. He brake the Bread and said Take eate this is my Bodie Also he tooke the Cup and said Drinke yee all of it for this is my bloud of the New Testament that is shed for many Their nourishing of our Bodies signifie his spirituall feeding of our Soules 1. Cor. 12. 13. By one Spirit we are all made to drink into one Spirit which quickneth and putteth life into vs. In the Actions the Bread broken before our eyes doth represent Passion and sufferings 1. Cor. 11. 24. ſ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 As Matth. 23. 38. Behold your house is left 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vnto you desolate That is most certainely shall be left and that shortly He tooke
with hands euerlasting in the Heauens k 1. Ioh. 3. 4. We know that wee are translated from death vnto life because we loue the brethren l Matth. 9. 2. Sonne be of good comfort thy sinnes are forgiuen thee m 1. Tim. 1. 15. Christ Iesus came into the world to saue sinners of whom I am chiefe As if he should say One and a speciall one Giuing to vnderstand that he himselfe was one of those whom Christ came into the world to saue Lastly This is proued by both the Sacraments the seales of the Couenant of grace which are giuen and offered to euery particular man Therefore the n Eph. 3 17. Apostle assigneth it as a fruit of faith that thereby Christ dwelleth in our hearts which without a particular application cannot be From this part Faith is termed a speciall confidence o 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 affiance or trust for the nature of Faith is chiefly seene in it when the will and heart is not so much in expectation and hope as it doth in present apprehend some good and dependeth thereupon and reioyceth as if it had it which affiance is of the nature of Faith both deriued from one p 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 8. 38. Phil. 1. 6. 2. Cor. 5. 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 word that signifieth to perswade Another kind of confidence there is which is but a consequence and a fruit of faith whereof we shal speake hereafter Touching the subiect or persons to whom it is appropriate Faith is the proper and peculiar gift of Gods Elect which onely differenceth them from the rest of the World for all other graces be they neuer so bright or shining are common with the Reprobate but faith with the fruits thereof is proper to the godly Wherevpon Tit. 1. 1. it is called The faith of Gods Elect for onely they and of them all and euerie one are in their time by vertue of Gods Couenant brought to beleeue Ioh. 6. 37. Euerie one that the Father giueth mee commeth vnto mee Else in what better case are wee now then when the couenant of Workes did hold vs seeing it is as impossible of our selues and by our own strength to repent and belieue the Gospel which is the condition of the Couenant of Grace as it was to fulfill the Law Wherefore we must vnderstand that God to speake properly doth not require the same as a mutuall res●ipulation of our part as it was in the former Couenant where nothing is imposed which mans nature could not weild But here it is rather a declaration of his pleasure what he would haue vs doe and whereunto he will enable vs not a condition to endanger the Couenant but an assurance that he will giue vs strength to keepe it So as the whole Couenant properly and in truth riseth of his part and lyeth vpon him Like his other Couenant q Ier. 31. 35 36. brought to confirme this with the Sun and Moone and Starres whom otherwise vnable of themselues he maketh to runne their course But howsoeuer r Ier. 32. 39. Ezech. 36. 26 27. all come from his onely grace and vertue yet to vs that are not stockes and stones but endued with a reasonable 2. Cor. 5. 17 18. soule vnderstanding will and other faculties this Couenant is wont to bee expressed sometimes by words ſ Rom. 10. 9. Rom. 8 13. conditionall sometimes in t Ezech. 18. 31. commanding wise that the greatnesse of the perill and the difficultie of the precept might make vs to bestirre our selues to vse with care and conscience the meanes that he appointeth for the attayning of that precious gift and to worke together with God when we are once wrought vpon by his Spirit And herein lieth one other maine difference between the Law and the Gospel or the couenant of Works and this couenant of Grace The Law onely commandeth obedience but giueth no power to obey and therefore is called u 2. Cor. 3. 3 6 8 9. The dead Letter written with Inke and in Tables of Stone readie indeed to be read and seene but hauing no life in it to change the heart which remayneth as stonie as before The Gospel not onely commandeth but giueth faith and newnesse of life and is therefore said to be written in our hearts and called The ministration of the Spirit because it giueth the Spirit of Christ and righteousnesse through him The Law therefore pronouncing nothing but Iudgement and condemnation against vs as that which commandeth things impossible by reason of our weakenesse terrifieth and amazeth the conscience In which respect it is called x 2. Cor. 3. 7 9. The ministerie of death and condemnation Contrariwise the Gospel bringing glad tidings of peace and reconciliation quieteth appeaseth the conscience Rom. 5. 1. Being iustified by faith wee haue peace with God through Iesus Christ our Lord. Both parts of this difference are found Rom. 10. 5 6 7 8. For MOSES thus describeth the righteousnesse which is of the Law that the man which doth these things shall liue thereby But the righteousnesse which is of faith speaketh on this wise Say not in thine heart Who shall ascend into heauen That is to bring Christ from aboue Or Who shall descend into the deepe That is to bring Christ againe from the dead But what saith it The Word is neere thee euen in thy mouth and in thine heart This is the Word of Faith which wee preach But if God bestow faith vpon all and euery of his Elect what shall wee then say of Infants that dye in the Mothers Wombe or assoone as they are borne who cannot as it seemeth properly bee said to haue faith and yet neuerthelesse we cannot deny but the x Mat. 19. 14. Kingdome of God doth appertayne vnto them If it bee cleere that Infants haue no faith then wee must needes say the Spirit of God in some other vnspeakeable manner vniteth them vnto Christ But yeelding all due respect to other mens opinions I should thinke that were rather a quaere then a ruled case for First As they haue knowledge and other faculties of the minde without which no reasonable soule consisteth so I doe not see but they may haue supernaturall Grace some seedes of the habit of faith for the apprehending of Christ that are of the nature of faith and faith it selfe in a kind which how small soeuer sufficeth to saluation doth the weaknesse of the Organ of the bodie make it impossible for God to worke supernaturally in their soule and to giue to little children whome his purpose is to saue at the least so much illumination of the minde more then is ordinarie for that age as may bee fit to receiue the Grace of Christ Those whom in a moment and at an instant as soone as they are taken vp into Heauen hee filleth with a whole Sea of Knowledge and Vnderstanding of Christ more then all the Prophets and Apostles had
the Sonne of man and drinke his bloud ye shall haue no life in you for without an Vnion with Christ there can bee no true partaking of his gifts vnto Saluation no more then a woman can be partaker of the riches and honour of some great man except shee be ioyned with him in Marriage so that they become one bodie and one flesh or then the members can draw life from the head if they bee not knit vnto it The worke of this sauing Grace that is brought vnto vs by the comming of our LORD and Sauiour Iesus Christ hath beene pointed at in generall First To destroy the old ADAM or the old man that is the sinfull and wretched condition which by nature euery Mothers Child bringeth into the World and is as old as since Adam fell to bee vnder the power of Satan slaues of sinne and children of destruction Then the bestowing of a new a blessed and a happie estate opposite to the former The r Heb. 2. 15. Apostle to the Hebrewes comprehendeth both that through death hee might abolish him that hath the power of death that is the Deuill and might set free his Children So in the Epistle to the ſ Col. 1. 13. Colossians Who hath deliuered vs from the power of darknesse and translated into the Kingdome of his Sonne And our Sauiour Acts 26. 17 18. To whom now I send thee to open their eyes that they may turne from darknesse vnto Light and from the power of Satan vnto God that through Faith in me they may haue remission of sinnes and an inheritance among hath two parts Illumination and Iustification the sanctified ones Paul 1. Cor. 1. 30. brancheth all the benefits wee haue by Christ into foure Wisdome Righteousnesse Sanctification and Redemption or Holinesse and Blessednesse Such a traine of Noble Graces doth attend Regeneration for as man by Creation was made holy and happy so by this new Creation we obtayne a repayre of our first estate not as some Relique or Remayne of that Image of God according whereunto we were created in the beginning but as a new worke of Gods Spirit forming the same in vs after a heauenly and diuine manner out of nothing by the power of the Resurrection of Iesus Christ And in euery of these good things is implyed the remoouing of the contrarie Wisdome standeth not with Ignorance and Blindnesse Righteousnesse putteth away the guilt of sin Sanctification the power and dominion of sinne for where one of these is the other cannot bee Redemption speaketh more cleerly of freeing vs from wrath and the curse of the Law Wisdome and Righteousnesse from the which the other two doe flow were for their surpassing excellencie figured in the High Priests Vrim and Thummim as you haue it taught in the explication of the Ceremonies of the Law But to handle these foure apart The first benefit which wee haue by Christ is the taking Illumination whereby dispelling darknesse away of the vaile of ignorance the blindnesse that naturally possesseth our soules as in that place of the Acts it is first named And Esay 25. 7. He will swallow vp the vaile of the face the vaile that is vpon all people and the couering that is vpon all Nations So 2. Cor. 3. 16. When their heart shall bee turned to the Lord the vaile shall be taken away for where the Spirit of the Lord is there is doth enlighten our mindes with the knowledge of the will of God in Christ which the Apostle calleth Wisdome Freedome But this is not all In stead of the Light of Nature turned through sinne into palpable and grosse darknesse we haue now another manner of light an heauenly and Spirituall Wisdome A grace distinct not onely from Knowledge that went before which was common to the Reprobate whereas this is the peculiar of GODS Heritage but euen from Faith though the same include Knowledge in it for Faith is the Instrument of Regeneration Iohn 1. 12. and therefore before it in nature but this Wisdome commeth in nature after Regeneration for so the Apostle saith Yee are of God in Christ who is made vnto vs Wisdome and Coloss 3. 20. Renewed t 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vnto Knowledge which is this Wisdome Therefore in nature it commeth after I take it to bee that Light of the Minde of which the Scripture speaketh so oft comprehending vnder it by a Synechdoche the whole worke of our Renewing Ephes 5. 8. Ye were once darknesse but now are light in the Lord 2. Cor. 4. 6. God which commanded that light should shine out of darknesse is hee who hath shined in your hearts to giue the light of the knowledge of the Glorie of God in the face of Iesus Christ In this regard we are said to bee illuminated or enlightened Heb. 10. 32. to bee translated out of darknesse into his wonderfull light 1. Pet. 2. 9. Wisdome and Sanctification or Holinesse both inherent in vs seeme to differ thus Holinesse is the Renewing of vs into the state of Innocencie which we had by Creation But this Wisdome is of a farre more excellent mould then the light of Knowledge that Adam had for Adams minde was indeed enlightened to vnderstand all morall duties but ours to the knowledge of things that u 1. Cor. 2. Eye hath not seene Eare hath not heard nor haue entred into the heart of man x 1. Pet. 1. Which the Angels themselues desire to stoope downe and looke into namely one Mysteries of the Gospell reuealed from aboue wherefore that was according vnto nature this is Diuine and supernaturall wherein after the vaile of Ignorance taken away that our eyes are once made able to behold the Light Christ the Image of God doth shine vnto vs 2. Cor. 3. 17. Such a Light as man by nature when it was at the best could neuer comprehend And hereby wee come to haue all the secrets and the whole will of God in Christ Iesus made knowne vnto vs by his Spirit A maruailous benefit sensibly to be seene euen in this life that dull and ignorant men become able on a sudden to conceiue the hidden Mysteries of Christianitie It is that the Apostle saith 1. Cor. 2. 15. The spirituall man discerneth all things in that we haue the minde of the Lord manifested vnto vs through Christ Howbeit the illumination of our mindes in this life hath withall much darknesse for growing wholy by the meanes of the Word as the Apostle saith Coloss 3. 16. Let the Word of Christ dwell richly in you in all Wisdome and to TIMOTHIE y 2. Tim. 3. 15. Thou hast knowne the Scriptures that are able to make thee wise wee can know but weakly and imperfectly because the way and meanes whereby wee come to knowledge by the Ministerie of man is weake and imperfect for in part wee know saith the same Apostle 1. Cor. 13. 9. and in part wee prophecie that is we learne but imperfectly because our
so Esay 45. 24 you shall find this very word to that purpose in the u Matth. 22. 11 plurall And Iohn here placeth wholly in the robe that the Saints put on the x 2. Cor. 5. 21. marriage garment Christ Iesus not in themselues but the y Rom. 1. 17. 3. 21. 22. brightnes wherof is not meant of shining before men but in the eyes of God wherefore in many and elsewhere places it is called The Righteousnes of God as that which may boldly offer it selfe in Gods sight and abide the strict examination of his Iustice being the Righteousnesse of him that is God himselfe But what vse will you say is there of the imputation of righteousnesse if our sinnes that seuer vs from God be forgiuen and taken from vs Yes vndoubtedly verie great and singular as may appeare by those parts of happinesse whereunto otherwise then by this we are able to lay no claime And therefore the Apostle Rom. 5. handleth professedly this Doctrine of imputation of Righteousnesse as without which the other of forgiuenesse of sinnes had not beene perfect And where in z Rom. 4. 6 7. another place he defineth Happinesse by the forgiuenesse of sinnes Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiuen and whose sinnes are pardoned it is no full and exact definition numbring all the parts but by a Synechdoche naming one best fitting his present purpose hee giueth to vnderstand the rest as in diuers other places Blessednesse is diuersly defined by those things which yet in truth are but branches of the true and perfect Blessednesse Blessed a Psal 1. 1. is the man that hath not walked in the way of sinners Blessed b Luke 11. 2● are they that heare the Word of God and keepe the same The reason whereof is because all the parts of happinesse are so linked and ioyned together that he which hath one must needs haue all The parts if I may so call them of this righteousnesse the holinesse of his nature imputed to vs are first the perfect Sanctification of Christs humane nature whereby our originall and naturall corruption not imputed to vs our nature it selfe is accounted holy in the sight of God whereof the Apostle speaketh Rom. 8. 2 3. The Law of the Spirit of life which is in Christ Iesus hath freed me from the law of sinne and of death for which was impossible to the Law for that it was weake by reason of our flesh God sending his own Sonne in the likenesse of sinfull flesh for sinne hath condemned sinne in the flesh that that which the Law requireth might bee fulfilled in vs where the Law of the Spirit of life which is in Christ Iesus he calleth that perfect and all-sufficient Sanctification of our nature in him whereby he comming in the likenesse of sinfull flesh for sinne that is to abolish sinne it selfe in our nature taken vpon him condemned or which is all one abolished sinne in the flesh meaning in his own person through whose perfect Sanctification of nature made ours the reliques of sinne that our corrupt nature is tainted with are not imputed to vs and therefore wee bee free from death and condemnation being wholly restored euen in our nature to a greater integritie then we lost in Adam All which the Apostle sheweth was in respect of the weaknesse of the Law being of no strength by reason of the flesh or part vnregenerate which hindreth the worke of the Law otherwise most perfect and is opposite thereto that it neither can or will be subiect to it So as to the end we might fulfill that which the Law requireth which is to be righteous not in our Actions onely but in our verie nature it was necessarie so to haue it sanctified in the person of Christ not supplying that which ours wanteth but wholly and altogether sanctifying vs in himselfe And by this meanes it commeth to passe that wee are after the most precise and exact rule of the Law righteous before God hauing the perfect integritie of our nature absolutely in Christ for which purpose hee saith not might be fulfilled of vs but in vs speaking of Christs owne Sanctitie imputed to vs. Secondly The thorow and perfect obedience which and Righteousnesse to be ours he performed in the whole course of his life both in the duties to God his Father and in respect of men with whom he was conuersant here on Earth whereby all our vile and filthy actions not comming into account our whole life is reckoned most absolutely good and holy not onely void of sinne but full of perfect Righteousnesse as the same Apostle teacheth b Rom. 5. 12. to the end of the Chapter Rom. 5. setting it forth by an excellent comparison of our Sauiour Christ with Adam both in the things wherein they agree in this point and in those wherein they differ They agree in this that each conueyeth his owne to those that are his whom the Apostle therefore calleth many opposing them to that one whom hee considereth as their Head Adam hee conuayeth both guilt and sinne vnto condemnation Christ Righteousnesse and Obedience vnto Iustification they differ in this First Adam deriueth it downe by nature vpon all his posteritie Christ bestoweth it by grace and fauour and free imputation Secondly Adams one sinne condemed all CHRIST iustifieth from many sinnes not that one onely but all other Thirdly Christs Righteousnesse is more auaileable and of greater power to saue then Adams sinne was to condemne for that indeed threw vs downe from the state of Innocencie but Christ hath raysed vs to a more excellent state vnto the heauenly glorie And hereof commeth our Iustification properly so called that is to say Gods censure and Iudgement of vs approouing vs for holy and righteous before him as hauing that Righteousnesse that is able to abide his presence So as euen by the sentence of God himselfe and in his most exact Iustice we are freed and absolued and declared righteous and worthie of euerlasting life which is that the Scripture opposeth to the sentence of condemnation Rom. 8. 33 34. Who shall lay accusation to the Elect of God It is God that iustifieth who can condemne Thus the Apostle speaketh Rom. 5. 18. As by one offence guilt came vpon all men vnto condemnation so by one c 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth the matter of our Iustification 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Iustification it selfe fulfilling of Righteousnesse that is by Christs perfect fulfilling of the Law the benefit came vpon all vnto Iustification of life or to the declaring and approouing of vs iust before God whereby wee obtayne euerlasting life This so noble a benefit commeth to bee wrought by the Resurrection of Christ as the Remission of our sinnes came by his death and sufferings So writeth the d Rom. 4. 25. Apostle to the Romanes He dyed for our sinnes and rose for our Iustification Not that his death had no hand in
iustifying but because our Iustification begunne in his death was perfectly made an end of when he rose from the dead From Iustification two things doe follow Sanctification from whence commeth Sanctification and Redemption and Redemption or Holinesse and Blessednesse Holinesse as the fruit Blessednesse the reward Rom. 6. 22. Being freed from sinne and made seruants vnto God which hee said before Verse 18. to bee seruants vnto Righteousnesse You haue your fruit vnto Sanctification and the end euerlasting life And as death before comprehended our sinfull and cursed estate whereunto these are contrarie so the Scripture is wont to note them both in one word of Life euerlasting begunne on Earth and perfected in Heauen for that the Righteousnesse of Christ made ours by Faith is effectuall in vs vnto eternall Life by the Spirit of CHRIST who sanctifieth and quickeneth vs. By Sanctification I meane the renewing of vs to Sanctification whereby Holinesse and Righteousnesse by his Spirit dwelling in vs when e Rom. 6. 18. being freed from sinne we are made seruants vnto Righteousnesse and not onely f Esay 1. 17 18. Cease to doe euill but Learne to doe good nor be onely g R●● 6. 11. Dead vnto sinne but liuing vnto God through Iesus Christ which the Apostle Peter calleth To h 1. ●et 2. 24. foregoe sinne that we may liue vnto Righteousnesse and againe to be i 1. Pe● 4 6. condemned as touching men in the flesh and to liue as touching God in the Spirit The former of these two is commonly called Mortification slaying sinne or the slaying and beating downe of the lusts of sinne when through the power of the Spirit of Christ they are not repressed onely and kept from breaking out but subdued and conquered within vs as the Apostle teacheth Rom. 6. 6 7 12 13 14. Therefore it is called A crucifying of the flesh A doing away of the bodie of sinne And to the end wee may know it must bee thorowly done the Scripture not onely speaketh of our dying vnto sinne but that the old man must bee buried also Rom. 6. 4. This abolishing of our sinfulnesse or mortification of sinne within vs doth Paul ascribe to the power of the death of Christ when hee saith that k Rom. 6. 3 4 5 6 7. we are baptized into the death of Christ buried together with him and engraffed into the likenesse of his death that our old man might be crucified together with him and the bodie of sinne done away that we might no more serue sinne for he that is dead is free from sinne And to the Hebrewes l Heb. 9 14. that it is the bloud of Christ shed and and powred forth for vs which purgeth our conscience from dead workes to serue the liuing God To the m Gal. 6. 14. Galatians hee saith that by the Crosse of Christ the World is crucified vnto them and hee vnto the World And Colos 3. 3 5. Because wee are dead with Christ hee gathereth that wee are to mortifie our members that are vpon the Earth The latter is called Viuification or Quickening And here are two most precious linkes of the Golden Chaine of our Saluation the imputed Righteousnesse we haue in Christ and as in some sort it may be called n 1. Iohn 3. 7 renewed Righteousnesse in our selues But these two are distinguished the o 1. Cor 6. 1 1. Cor. 1. 30. one is wont to bee called Righteousnesse or in respect of the worke of Christs Spirit Iustification the other Holinesse or Sanctification which noble complement holds vp the whole frame of Christian building and are as it were the two posts of the house that Samson shooke whereupon all the building stood And as the Elme and Vine flourish and fall together so fareth it with these twaine that where the one is the other must needs be for this is one part of the Couenant which God hath made with vs not only to be our God but that wee should bee his people and not alone to be mercifull to our sinnes and to remember our iniquities no more but withall to write his Lawes in our hearts to doe them whereupon it is that the Apostle saith Follow p Heb. 12. 14. after Holinesse or Sanctification without which no man shall see God In the Doctrine of Sanctification these things I consider First We haue hereby he putteth a new life of Holinesse into vs. Pelagians that make grace naturall Semipelagians that make the first grace to concurre with nature and onely to be a helpe to weake and infirme nature The Papists in like sort call this worke of the Holy Ghost not the Creation of any new Creature which was not before but the stirring vp of some Goodnesse and Sanctitie lost in nature as they dreame after the Fall which they call also Freewill and say it was not lost in the Fall but weakened And therefore define Sanctification to bee Gods preuenting grace quickening the Freewill or an externall motion standing as it were without and beating at the doore of the heart a new life of Holinesse put into vs. A totall change from that which is naturall to that which is not onely supernaturall but euen opposite contrarie to our corrupt nature q Rom. 12. 2. Ephes 4. 23. Titus 3. 5. renewing vs vnto the state of our first Creation or vnto that former integritie which wee lost in Adam Whereupon wee are said to be r Ephes 4. 24. Created againe according to God vnto true Iustice and Holinesse and to be ſ Col. 3. 10. renewed vnto knowledge according to the Image of him that created vs. Hence it is that the worke of Sanctification is termed A t Psal 55. 20. change An after-mind or a change of the minde and that to the best which wee commonly translate Repentance A u Ier. 4. 1. and in diuers other places turning c. And in this respect also considering the qualities whereunto we are renewed as the worke it selfe of our renewing wee are said to bee new creatures 2. Cor. 5. 17. and Gal. 6. 15. Secondly From hence proceed the fruites of Righteousnesse to bring forth fruites of Righteousnes that very Righteousnesse prescribed in the Law Therefore x Ier. 31. 33. Ieremie calleth it The putting of his Law in the middest of vs. And Paul exhorting hereunto layeth downe both the parts of this Righteousnesse Holinesse and true Iustice Ephes 4. 24. so that whatsoeuer was said before of Righteousnesse in generall and all the notes and qualities thereof are to be referred hither being all of them such as ought to be in euery man that is sanctified Thirdly This Righteousnesse is inherent and in our selues wrought within vs by the Spirit of Christ for this y Ier. 31. 33. Ieremie reciteth to bee one part of Gods Couenant with his people I will put my Law in the middest of them and in their heart will
I write it Answerable hereunto is that of z Ezech. 36. 26 27. 1. Iohn 2. 8. EZECHIEL I will giue you a new heart and a new Spirit I will set in the middest of you and I will take away the heart of stone out of your flesh and I will giue vnto you a heart of flesh and my Spirit will I put in the middest of you and make that yee shall walke in mine Ordinances and obserue and doe my iudgements whereby this Holinesse is distinguished from imputed Righteousnes which is without vs and in another that is to say in Christ And from both these ariseth the third and last consideration of the Law of God as it is qualified and corrected and hath another nature set vpon it by Christ our Sauiour turned now into a 1. Iohn 2. 8. a new Commandement as the Apostle speaketh or a Law Euangelized and of another temper seruing no more for death and condemnation to those that are his but for helpe and direction for b Psal 119. 106 a Lanterne vnto our feet and a light vnto our steps to teach vs how to walke when we are in Christ Therefore c Luke 1. 6. Zacharie and Elizabeth are both commended as righteous before God because they went in all the Commandements of the Lord. d Iam. 1. 25. IAMES also calleth vs hither He that stoopeth downe into the perfect Law of Libertie and abideth in that hee not being a forgetfull hearer but a doer of workes shall be blessed by his doing And our Sauiour Matth. 5. 17. biddeth vs not to thinke that hee came to dissolue the Law and the Prophets I came not to dissolue them but to fulfill them for which cause also the right vnderstanding of the Law is needfull for vnlesse wee know our Masters will how shall we frame our selues to doe it Fourthly The new life put into vs which wee call Viuification or Quickning commeth from the power of Christs Spirit which rayseth vs vp from the sleepe and death of sinne to awake to liue righteously that e Rom. 4. 5. as Christ was raysed from the dead by the glorie of his Father so we might walke in newnesse of life for if wee bee ingraffed into the likenesse of his death verily so shall we also bee vnto the likenesse of his Resurrection Wherefore the f Coloss 3. 1 2. Apostle saith If yee bee risen together with Christ seeke the things which are aboue not the things which are vpon the earth Teaching that it is by the power of his rising that wee are renewed vnto righteousnesse as by his death we obtaine power to mortifie sinne Fiftly Touching the manner of the The Papists say that in Freewill there is a libertie or strength to receiue or reiect the grace that should quicken it which they call Preuenting Grace and so part the slakes betweene Grace and mans Freewill working there is a difference betweene the grace it selfe of Sanctification and the fruits that come from it In the grace it selfe as in the worke of our new birth man standeth meere passiue before God hauing no power or vertue in him to worke with Gods Spirit or to helpe the worke of Grace yet hee is not in this first renewing of his soule as a trunke or a dead stock for that he hath both reason and faculties or powers fit to receiue the Grace of God when his Spirit doth worke vpon them But in the fruits of Sanctification The Papists make not the Holie Ghost but their owne Free-will the principal agent in this second grace which Free-will they say goeth before and disposeth and prepareth vs to a Iustifying Grace in belieuing in hoping in repenting c. the principal Agent is indeed the verie Spirit of Christ who after the first grace and new Creation abideth and dwelleth in vs not idlely but euer working some good in vs and by vs as it is said Rom. 8. 26. The holy Ghost maketh intercession for vs with sighs which cannot be expressed But a second Agent working with Gods holy Spirit is the verie soule of man or rather the new man or new creature in the soule and all the faculties thereof So that in this second Grace which is the action or worke of faith wee stand not as meere passiue but beeing moued by the holie Ghost wee worke our selues by his Spirit working in vs. Whereupon we are called g 1. Cor. 3. 9. The fellow-workers with God 1. Cor. 3. Touching the distinct degrees of Sanctification In wherein there is no more now required but that sinne beare not the rule in vs and our workes of Righteousnesse though all mingled with sinne the estate we now are in there is a difference betweene it and legall Righteousnesse in that perfection is there required without fayling in any iote eyther in matter or manner Whereas our Sanctification in this life is euermore imperfect fayling much and hath alwaies sin mixed with it not as Chaffe or Darnell is mixed with Whear but as water is mingled with wine that there is no drop of wine but it is water also and that is by reason our new birth is imperfect So that Donatists and Nouatians and those heretikes that were wont to bee called Catharises or Puritanes dreame of puritie and perfection in this life albeit by the grace of Regeneration we desire in all things to liue righteously and well yet still we labour vnder the infirmitie of the flesh h Gal. 5. 17. that we cannot doe the things wee would Whereof the Apostle Paul one more then after an ordinarie sort regenerate giueth in his owne person a noble example Rom. 7. 15 c. I approue not that I worke for I doe not that I would but what I hate that doe I for I am delighted with the Law of God as touching the inner man but I see another Law in my members c. and in the end concludeth Therfore I my selfe in the Spirit indeed serue the Law of God but in my flesh the Law of sinne Wherefore in this estate it is enough if sinne i Rom. 6. 12. raigne not in our mortall bodies it is not required which is impossible that it should not at all dwell in vs. And where the Scripture in many places doth call vs perfect as when it saith k Matth. 5. 48. Yee shall therefore be perfect as your Father which is in Heauen is perfect l 1. Cor. 2. 6. We speake wisdome among those that are perfect m 1. Cor. 14. 20. In vnderstanding bee yee perfect n Eph. 4. 13. till wee come to a perfect man o Phil. 3. 12. As many therefore as be perfect let vs bee thus minded p 1. Iohn 2. 5. Whosoeuer keepeth his Word of a truth in him the loue of God is perfected q 1. Ioh. 4. 12. If we loue one another God abideth in vs and his loue is perfited in vs. r 1. Ioh. 4.
Touchstone of his Tryall And therefore this kinde of satisfaction is bla●phemous and derogatorie from the death of Christ who is our onely Sat 〈…〉 ction Ransome and Redemption therefore or practice of Repentance I call A continuall sorrow for our sinnes and a purpose to resist against them for sorrow a griefe for sinne committed is one speciall part of Repentance whereof the whole many times doth take the name 1. Cor. 10. 7. The sorrow which is according vnto God worketh a change of mind vnto saluation neuer to bee repented of where both these parts as you see are comprehended Six things are to be noted in true Repentance First The notes or signes of Repentance the Apostle 2. Cor. 7. 11. reckoneth these seuen First Studie or diligence to rouze our selues out of sleepe and securitie of sinne Secondly A defence excuse or cleering of our selues not by standing in it as if we had done well or making lesse of it then the qualitie of the offence deserueth but asking pardon for our fault in that we did it not wilfully and with malice but of frailty and infirmity and that so as none more then we are offended therewithall A notable example whereof wee haue in that Confession of the Church Cant. 5. 1. I slept but my heart waked Thirdly Indignation or an holy anger against our selues for it Fourthly A feare lest wee should fall againe into the like Fiftly A longing to bee deliuered from the bodie of sinne and to be made perfect Sixtly Zeale to God and to all goodnesse Seuenthly Reuenge by taming and chastizing the flesh and taking as it were our penniworths of it that we runne not into the like hereafter And therefore both forbearing lawfull things that wee may the better abstayne from vnlawfull and flying lesser sinnes lest wee fall into greater and all those things that haue beene the meanes to lead vs vnto sinne before The second is the fruit of this Repentance A restoring of vs vnto the former good estate from the which through frailtie wee are falne So saith ELIHV Iob 33. 25 26. His flesh is softened more then in his childhood he returneth to the dayes of his youth when hee doth humbly pray to God he doth accept him so as hee beholdeth his face with reioycing and he restroreth a man to his Righteousnesse And Dauid after his great fall prayeth t Psal 51. 14. Restore vnto mee the ioy of thy Saluation Thirdly What sinnes true Repentance doth free vs from All without exception how great soeuer and how many soeuer the same bee secret knowne wilfull or whatsoeuer else except that one sinne against the Holy Ghost which none of the faithfull can fall into nor can be repented of for the multitude of our sinnes is not to be compared with the Infinitenesse of GODS Merits but is infinitely surpassed and ouercome of it Esay 1. 18. If your sinne were as Scarlet double dyed they shall be as white as Snow if they were as red as Purple they shall be made like vnto the Wooll for my thoughts saith the Lord Esay 55. 8 9. are not as your thoughts nor my wayes as your wayes my thoughts and wayes of mercie and forgiuenesse as your thoughts and wayes of wickednesse they are too base and shallow to bee compared to them but as the Heauens are higher then the Earth so and infinitely more are my wayes higher then your wayes and my thoughts aboue your thoughts DAVID Psal 103. 10 11 hath the like comparison Hee dealeth not with vs according to our sinnes nor requiteth vs according to our iniquities but as high as the Heauens are aboue the Earth doth his kindnesse preuaile towards them that feare him Fourthly That Repentance is not in our owne power when wee are once renewed but it is the speciall worke and Grace of God to touch our hearts being falne as it was at the first to quicken our soules Therefore it is the Prayer of Ephraim that is of the Church of GOD u Ier. 31. 18. Conuert thou me that I may be conuerted And in the x Lam 5. 21. Lamentations Turne thou vs vnto thee O IEHOVAH and we shall be turned So Cant. 5. 1. it was the voyce of Christ that awakened and raysed vp the Church when she slept in her sinnes Fiftly That God in his time will rayse vp all that are his how long soeuer they sleepe in sinne as hee promiseth in y Hoshea 2. 14 Hoshea and as wee see in Dauid who lay in his sinne without Repentance some whole yeere as it is very like and that seemeth to bee the force of the Argument which the Church vseth Ierem. 31. 18. Conuert thou me that I may be conuerted for thou art IEHOVAH my God As if she should say For thou onely art able to doe it and wilt doe it for thy Couenant sake Howbeit this must not make vs the lesse to feare sin because the Children of God at one time or other repent them of it No not onely the vgly face of sinne contrarie to the Image of God who is Holinesse it selfe and the authour Satan from whom it commeth but the fruits and lamentable effects thereof shew how much it is to be detested First Wee offend God and make sad his holy Spirit Esay 63. 10. But they rebelled and grieued his holy Spirit Ephes 4. 30. Grieue not the holy Spirit of God by the which you are sealed vnto the day of Redemption Secondly We grieue and offend his Children So the Apostle z 2. Cor. 2. 5. to the Corinths declareth himselfe and all the Church to haue beene grieued with that fact of the incestuous person If any man haue grieued he hath not grieued me but in part that I doe not ouer-charge him you all Thirdly We cause his Gospell to be blasphemed and euill spoken of Rom. 2. 24. The Name of GOD for your sakes is blasphemed amongst the Nations Hereby is Dauids sinne made the fouler and more hatefull 2. Sam. 12. 14. Because in so doing thou hast caused the enemies of IEHOVAH to prouoke and contemne him Fourthly We make other to stumble and fall whereof we know what our Sauiour saith Mat. 18. 6. Whosoeuer offendeth one of these little ones that beleeue in me it were better for him that a Milstone were hanged about his necke and he drowned in the bottome of the Sea Fiftly Wee wound our owne soules with the conscience of our sinnes and the terror of Gods Iudgements As Dauid confesseth of himselfe a Psal 51. 10. Make mee to heare ioy and gladnesse that the bones which thou hast broken may reioyce Sixtly We bereaue our selues of the sweet comforts we haue felt and that are to be had in him as it followeth in that Psalme b Psal 51. 14. Restore vnto me the ioy of thy saluation and with thy free Spirit vphold me Seuenthly Wee bring manifold troubles and afflictions vpon our persons vpon our Wiues Children Families and those that belong
vpon him the sinnes of all the Elect to satisfie for them by his sufferings Whereof so holy and good it was as comming from God both in respect of the causes ends matter and manner of doing yet iustly doth the Holy p Acts 2. 23. Ghost call them wicked hands by whom hee was nayled to the Crosse And worthily did Iudas receiue strangling q Acts 1. 16. 17. and the sheading forth of his bowels as the reward of his iniquitie for being guide to those that apprehended Iesus They doing it to a wicked end after a sinfull manner not as an act of Iustice but of Treason and Rebellion against God out of the maliciousnes of their corrupt natures And that which is said of this may by the iudicious Reader be easily fitted and applyed to the Examples following So it was a singular worke of mercie to send Ioseph into the Land of Egypt to bee a Father to his Fathers house at that time the onely visible Church of God to prouide r Gen. 45. 5. ● things for their sustenance to keepe them aliue by a mightie deliuerance So did ſ Gen. 50. 20. God thinke it for good to preserue aliue a number of People yet this is no excuse to the Brethren of Ioseph who t Gen. 50. 20. thought it for ill against him moued thereto through extreme u Gen. 37. 4 5. hatred and x Gen 37. 11. Acts 7. 9. enuie The Lord in so many crosses and afflictions as he layeth vpon his Church hath a gracious end y Esay 27. 10. moderately to correct them and in measure not for their hurt but z Deut. 8. 16. that he may doe good vnto them in the end But a Zach. 1. 15. with an exceeding wrath saith he am I wroth against those Nations who when I am angrie but a little helpe forwards vnto euill that is aggrauate the affliction of his people with all their might and maine doing it with a reuenging minde b Ezech. 25. 12. 15. 25. 3. vaunting of the desolation of Gods People and onely setting before their eyes ruine and destruction As notably is set forth in that proud King of Assyria Esay 10. 5. 6 7. We to Ashur the rod of my wrath although my Staffe of indignation be in their hand and sending him against an hypocrite Nation I giue him commandement against the people with whom I am wroth that he might take the prey and spoile the spoile and make him to bee trodden downe as the clay of the streets But he doth not so imagine neither doth his heart think so but to destroy after his owne minde c. to cut off not a few Na 〈…〉 And the like doth the same c Esay 47. 6 7. Prophet in the person of God vpbrayde vnto the Babylonians I was wroth with my People I prophaned mine Inheritance and gaue it into thine hand thou shewedst no mercie vnto them against the old thou madest thy yoke exceeding heauie c. saidst For euer I shall bee a Ladie thou didst neuer minde these things thou remembredst not the end of it Secondly these euill actions as in regard of the worke of God are holy and righteous for that which is a point of Iustice and morall good he thereby punisheth former sinnes and one wickednesse with another deliuering them vp like a righteous Iudge to the lust and corruptions of their owne heart and to Satans power as to the Seriants and Executioners of his wrath that so they should be tempted and led into new sinnes for the punishment of their old and by both may aggrauate their condemnation This is it which he himselfe saith Psal 81. 13. Because my People harkened not to my voyce nor Israel would none of mee therefore dismissed I them to the fancie of their owne heart to walke after their owne counsell And the Apostle to the d Rom. 1. 24 25 26 27 28 29. Romanes Therefore God deliuered them vp vnto the lusts of their hearts vnto vncleannesse to defile their bodies among themselues as those which changed the Truth of God into a lye and worshipped and serued the Creature neglecting the Creator For this cause God deliuered them vnto vncleane affections for their women changed the naturall vse into that which is contrary to Nature Likewise also the male leauing the naturall vse of the woman burned in their lust one towards another Males with Males committing filthinesse and receiuing in themselues the recompence which was meete for their errour And as they regarded not to acknowledge God so God deliuered them vp vnto a minde voide of all iudgement to doe the things that were not seemely filled with all Vnrighteousnesse Malice Whoredome c. Againe 2. Thess 2. 11 12. For this cause because they imbraced not the loue of the Truth God will send vnto them effectuall errours that they should beleeue lyes that all might be condemned which beleeue not the Truth but take pleasure in vnrighteousnesse So doth the Lord our God in his most iust and prouident dispensation e Ezech. 3. 21. set a stumbling blocke before them for their ruine turning their iniquitie vpon themselues and f Psal 94. 23. cutting them off through their owne wickednesse These things confidered it will appeare that howsoeuer wee say with the Scriptures that God powerfully worketh in a sinfull action in such sence as before was shewed yet that nothing impeacheth the puritie and vncorruption of his most holy Nature neither doth the least staine or specke of vncleannesse cleaue vnto him nay his wonderfull Goodnesse and Wisdome come herein to bee admired who both worketh good things by euill instruments and maketh sinne it selfe to serue vnto his glorie So that albeit sinne bee euill of it selfe yet that there should bee sinne it becommeth exceeding good Not that we reiect the terme of suffering or permission which it pleaseth the Holy Ghost himselfe to vse as Rom. 9. 22 23. For what if God willing to declare his wrath and to make his Power knowne hath suffered with much long suffering the vessels of wrath and also to make knowne the riches of his glorie vpon the vessels of mercies And in the g Acts 14. 16. Acts In former Ages God suffered all Nations to walke in their owne wayes But so hee is also said to permit that which is good And this will we doe if God permit saith the Apostle to the Hebrewes Chap. 6. 3. The next thing to be considered Stoicks which imagine an absolute necessitie of things in Nature and tye God to the second causes in this Doctrine of Prouidence is the free dispensation of Almightie God who dealeth herein as a soueraigne Monarch by his owne absolute will and pleasure without any the least compulsion or necessitie h Psal 135. 6. Whatsoeuer pleaseth IEHOVAH he doth in Heauen and in the Earth in the Sea and in all Deepes Our i Psal 115. 3. God is in Heauen