Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n adam_n punishment_n sin_n 6,862 5 5.5451 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
B15559 A practicall catechisme: or, A view of those principall truths according to godlinesse, which are contayned in the catechisme diuided into three parts: and seruing for the vse, (as of all, so) especially of those that first heard them. By D.R. B. of Divin, minister of the Gospell. D. R. (Daniel Rogers), 1573-1652. 1632 (1632) STC 21166; ESTC S116040 309,840 430

There are 23 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

the●e o●e all these to some few heads A. I will in this Article lay downe the order of the point and leaue the further enlargement of it to his d●epl●ce in the fift Article following Conceaue then the point by the Apostles speech Rom. 5.12 Wherefore as by one man sinne entred into the world and ●eat● by sinne c. Where we see that the actuall sinne of Adam determined not the bound of misery but brought a second misery with it euen the misery of our whole nature While we stood in Adam his obedience kept his whole estate and nature entire but when he fell though the sinne were a limited thing in act of eating yet it was an unlimited excesse in respect of the committer and the frame of his reuolting heart And therefore it was iust wi h God to plague his whole nature for this sinfull act And the plague thereof was to inflict such a penalty vpon Adams nature of the Propagation I shall speake in Article 4. as made it truly miserable in stead of being before truly happy Note then Adam hauing actually disobeied the Iustice of God offended h●gh● by it doth punish whole nature for it As if hee had said thus Hast thou indeed freely chozen to leaue mee in plaine ground To embrace lust and Satan and pleasure of appetite before me To cast dirt vpon my pure Image Be it then so with thee as thou desirest Bee that in nature which thou chozest in thy free will to doe That Image of mine which thou caredst not to preserve bee stripped off that image of thine owne inuention which thou preferredst be satisfied with fill thy selfe with enioy and delight thy selfe with to the vttermost I will not suffer mine to harbour with thine light and darkenesse corruption and purenesse therefore depart my image from this sty of vncleannesse and let him who needes would bee filthy lye downe in his filth and hee that would forsake a reall fire of heat to compasse himselfe in his owne sparkes let him lye downe in sorrow As I threatned so I sentence thee In dying dye dye the death of thy sinne and find thy owne inuentions to thy selfe I vtterly cut thee off and excommunicate thee from my presence and in token of it from Paradise the place of thy former happinesse in one word Be miserable Note then whatsoeuer Adam brought himselfe vnto by his act of sinning was Penall because it was a stroke of iustice Not onely death and all other punishments before and after it but euen Originall sinne it selfe is a penalty it is a sln indeed but it s a penall one God iustly punishing actuall with originall and so wee must conceaue that although in vs it be truly sinne yet God inflicting it did not infuse it as sin into vs but onely as a iust penalty of that which Adam himselfe in the freedome of his wicked will had first forged in his owne heart against God Q. How many branches doe yee diuide this Misery into A. Into two The misery of sin and the misery of punishment eyther of which had beene misery alone but iustice would not suffer misery to bee within narrower bounds then these that he who by doing made himselfe might by suffring be made miserable The former viz. misery of sinne is either of the Roote originall or the branches Actuall sin both making the soule truly though not equally miserable Q. What is the former of these Shew in what the misery of Originall sin standeth A. In two things 1. Originall guilt 2. Originall staine or Pollution both being the fountaines of all Actuall guilt of conscience and pollution of conscience Originall guilt is that priuity and reflexion of conscience in Adam fallen whereby he told himselfe continually that he had fallen and therefore must dye the death in each kinde of it body and soule This perpetuall alarum of co●science in his nature was the first part of his sinfull misery A●d the Holy Ghost expresses it in those words They saw they were naked Gen. 3● and Adam when God called him hid himselfe in the bushes and gaue the reason because bee was naked The Lord askes him how hee knew it The meaning was his conscience in presenting to him his fault did gugge him also w●th feare and expectation of reuenge So that as in his inn●cency one excellent part of his welfare was that hee knew himselfe so so now one especiall part of his woe is that the conscience did ring his sin alway in his eares and made him obnoxious that is to feare God in point of that punishment which he looked for from his Iustice for his sinne And to say the truth what misery is like to this to be euer on the racke of a mans owne spirit suggesting and bo●ding to him sad things to come for his sin dogging him as the Taylor who will not suffer his prisoner to goe one inch from his custody how bitter doth it make all h●●gs when as a sword hanging by a twined threed over a mans head it doth threaten him perpetuall ruine and tye him ouer as a band and recognisance of great forfeit to the great assize of wrath and iudgement there to answer for himselfe yea and there without all bayle or mainprize vnescapeably to suffer eternall death of body and soule This the Author to the Heb. 2.15 toucheth saying who all their life time by the feare of death were subiect to bondage q. d. walked under the chayne of this guilt alway afrayd lest by death of body their soule should slide into hell to abide there till the body came thither True it is Adam dyed not at the first committing of the sinne but had he found no more fauour then Caine did lo all those 900. yeeres he had bin tossed and terrified with this guilt till it had seazed vpon him And whereas ye will say that those that liued without the law were better then wee because they were miserable and knew it not I answere they had law enough in them to hold them vnder a guilt of horror for such euils as they committed against the naturall light although ignorance had worne out the true dint of this conscience Besides although to know a mans misery onely increaseth it yet so to know it as we may preuent it is better then by not knowing it to escape the sent and bondage of that which yet lyeth vpon vs. Q. Wherein the misery of Originall staine of sinne consisteth A. We may eyther conceiue it in the whole or in the parts Touching the whole the best way will be to take the word which the holy Ghost vseth which is Death For death is the resolution of nature and so is this death of the soule a totall abolishment and corruption of that blessed frame of creation I meane in the point of her Purenesse in minde by light in will and heart by holinesse Now then looke how contrary a carcasse is to a liuely body so is this to the
a weight as I haue heere described could be carryed with ease especially through so many Sermons of conuiction as many heare Oh! that any should sleepe in such deepe debt so banquerupt as they bee short with such an intolerable weight crushing them Surely except there were a plague of insensinblenesse added to all other misery it could not but affect men otherwise But till sin begin to be out of her element and feele her misery Christ and the soule can neuer be reconciled in one Vse 4 Fourthly this should cause vs to wonder at the goodnesse of Gods dispensation of this misery That both in the sin and in the penalty it should be so mitigated by the prouidence of that God who for vniuersall ends restrayneth the force and violence of this misery why should God so order it that he in whom the fountaine of all sin abideth should yet bee in his particular nature stinted and shortened within the compasse of some ●ew foule sins what hinders in vs why not all as wel● any sin shou●d bee our beloued who much ●o appointed that in this plenty of Plagues the cause wherof of wee car●y about vs so few of these sho●ld light vpon vs H●th not sinne made vs a dunghill of sinne and a sea of sorrow why then see wee so few blinde deafe lame dumbe maymed out of their wits poore a●d miserable crea u●es as wee doe Sh●ll wee by this indulgence bee h●rd●ed to thinke our selues lesse wre●ched and miserable then wee are or rather admire that goodnesse that s●ffers vs not to bee so cursed as wee deserue Q What vse is to be made hereof A. First ●t may teach vs to acknowledge singu●ar patience in God to dispence so merci●ul●y and manifoldly with man huaing incurred this Promunire with the Lord that he did not quite destroy him but al●oweth him so many comforts enco●rag●ments and helpes of nature and life all which hee might b ue stript him of All saue hell being meere indulgence of m●rcy as the support of nature in heal h in strength with wits sences breath of ayre vse of Earth influ nce of Heauen marriage posterity weal●h credit gouernement c. more then hee ●ught to damned Rebels who might haue beene destroyed when borne Secondly to iudge aright of this sin not to sl●ght it as P●pists and prophane men doe To count our selues miserable by it to esteeme it aboue any actuall si●s to iudge of it not by the matter or act of it but by the villany of it against the Vnity of God his Crowre and dignity The little weigh ng of this hath caused men to make such small account of actuall sin to make it a merryment as Forn●cation they will say it is a tricke of youth c. And the truth is from the slender esteeme of sin comes that base esteeme of Christ with many Whereas except Christ had beene made sinne in the roote it selfe by imputation and satisfied for it all the imputation of actuall could not haue profited vs. I● to raze the picture of a Prince bee such a crime what is it to deface the Lords Oh woefull wretches who dare say baptisme doth abolish that which all the grace of Christ cannot wash off till death All other sinnes are committed in a corrupt estate this in a pure one and therefore CHRIST that immaculate Sonne of GOD was faine to lay aside all his holinesse that hee m ght clense the slaine and the guilt thereof as a double dye out of our nature One of the miseries of orignall sinne is that its vncapable of the due conceiuing its owne woe but thinkes it selfe in good case as a drunkard forgets the sentence of death and dreames of great wealth And therefore wee had not need adde thirst to this our drunkennesse by esteeming it slight but desire the LORD rather that hee would awaken vs out of this delusion But more shall bee sayde of the vse of this in the sixt Article Q What is all this misery to vs who neuer sinned his sinne Art 4 A. It is ouerspred as a leprozie of the whole body ouer the whole nature of mankind all sorts sexes states degrees Not one free as all misery is in euery one so ouer all without exception Psal 14.1 2.3 Pro. 20.9 1 King 8.46 Eccl 7 22. Rom. 3.9 Iam. 3.2 1 Ioh. 1.8 Iob 14.4 and 15.14 Psal 51.5 Examine the texts All both Iew and Gentile Barbarian Scythian bond and free noble simple learned and idiots yea all who are to be For as they are in our loines so we were in Adams Adam not beeing a single person but in the whole stead of mankind before hee had issue Q. How doth this trueth appeare more clearly A. Both by the Scriptu●e and reason Paul sayth Rom. 5. that by the disobedience of one sinne entred into the world and by sinne death What is that Sin and curse ceazed vpon all he whole world as well as Adam and Eue. And the like proofes f●llow in all the verses as verse 14. Death reigned from Adam to Moses ver 17. By one mans offence death reigned by one ver 18. By the off●nce of one iudgement came vpon all to condemnation and ver 19 As by one mans disobedience many were made sinners So that this Article remoues all conceite of any man whatsoeuer I say meere man to be exempted from this masse of corruption No Rom. 3.12 All are gone out of the way not one doth good no not one All the sinne all the penalties of sinne belonging to Adam himselfe belong to vs wee may vse Peters choise word 1 Pet. 1.18 By the tradition of the fathers All these are conueyd to vs by the tradition of Adam not example but propagation no one of all these tokens miscarryed but as hee sent them to vs for a cursed memoriall what he had done for vs so were they all and each of them deliuered to vs wee faile not in the receiuing of the whole summe to the vttermost farthing Q. But in what order is this masse of euill deryued to vs A. In this That first the actuall sinne of Adam and Eue eating the forbidden fruit is conueyed and made ouer to vs then originall then actuall then penalties all hanging each vpon other as the lesser boates tyed to the great ship But yee will obiect that Paul himselfe Rom. 5. sayth That others sinned not after the similitude of Adams transgression I answer True not against a set law as Adam did but yet they were held guilty before GOD of Adams sinne as if they had knowne it So then marke although wee did not indiuidually and personally see talke with the Serpent put forth our owne hands and put the fr●ite into our mouth yet wee did eate it as well as hee And why Because the sinne which Adam committed ere hee had be gotten a sonne or childe was the sinne of nature not of a Person As it is sayde Leui himselfe payde tithes in Abraham Heb. 7.9
God and it follows our forgiuenesse and absolution for then we returne to our former esteeme and beauty in the eyes of God our flesh returning as the flesh of a child and we stand before the Lord as fauourits finding accesse to him going in and out before him all former treachery being forgotten And this addeth to the other Princes oft pardon their Subiects as Dauid did Absalom and grant them their liues but because they suspect them they suffer them no more to see their face but the Lord hauing as great power to purge the heart as to pardon the offendor admits euery iustified one to bee his friend and to finde fauour in his sight clothing him with the robe of righteousnesse Hos 14.2 and calling her beloued which was not beloued Q. What is the fift Benefit A. Adoption which is a worke of the Spirit Eph. 1. following the former and is contrary to that taint of our blood and bastardy which sinne brought upon vs. Adam was the Sonne of God Luke 3 vlt. by fall hee lost it and became a bastard stript himselfe of his birthright of his royalties of the dignity of a Sonne of the Lordship ouer the Creation and of the inheritance of immortall life and so brought all his seed into the same Premunire or rather Outlawry Now Adoption is the enfranchisment of the soule into her former estate of Sonneship againe being deliuered from the spirit of bondage Gal. 4.6 for as a man takes one not his owne child to be his child changing the name into his owne and so setling vpon him the dignity and liuelihood of one descended from his loynes so doth the Lord heere hee restores a sinner to his blood and to his former right of Sonship his dominion ouer the creatures and coheireship with Christ the Sonne and Lord of all It is the fruit of the former For hauing receiued vs to fauour he doth as a Prince reconciled to a trayterous Son he restores him to the right and inheritance of his crowne and so the Lord not restores onely to an old but settles the inheritance of a Saint vpon him Ephe. 1.5 See also Gal. 4.5 Rom. 8.15 a farre better then Adam lost Eph. 1.20 Rom. 5.15 Q What is the sixt Benefit A. Redemption and its a worke of the Spirit opposite to the estate of thraldome and seruitude vnto sinne and by it to feare of conscience wrath death and iudgement Satan and his infernall crue for it buyes out and sets the soule in a new and sure state of libertie free to righteousnes and to serue him all our dayes without bondage beeing delyuered from the feare of all enemies Ghostly and bodily From hence issues an heart enlarged to God and so fearing and seruing him Rom. 7.6 Col. 3.14 as fearing nothing else nor yet seruing in the old letter deliuered from the ordinances of Moses the traditions of men the bonds imposed vpon conscience vniustly Hence issues also a right to the Protection of God and his Holy Hand ouer vs and ours against the treachery and violence of open or secret enemies begun in this life and ending at the resurrection the day of our full redemption when we shall fully enoy the fruit of that conquest of Christ who ouercame all enemies Deuill men sinne death and the graue neuer any more to be assaulted Hence also much more issueth the dutie of Seruice to God and renouncing of our owne abhorring our owne selues not speaking doing thinking our owne words 1. Cor. 6.20 worke thoughts but the Lords because wee are not our owne but bought with a price that all should bee at the Lordes command So that in two things viz. Deliuerance from enemies and Restoring vs to the place of seruants this Redemption consists See texts Eph. 1.7 Eph. 4.30 1. Cor. 1.30 Rom. 7.25 Q. What is the seuenth benefit A. Regeneration as it concernes the purging of our corrupt nature from the Image of old Adam and a renuing of it according to the Image of him who created vs in all light of mind and holines of heart And this is opposite to the former priuiledges which consist in the imputation of fayth and are wholy without vs B●t this is the worke of the Spirit of Christ 2. Pet. 1.3 wrought in all whom he hath begotten to God whereby also he puts into them the nature and properties of God 2 Pet. 1.2 and changes them from bad to good This is called in Scripture the new man Colos 3.10 the new creature 1. Cor. 5.17 the Renouation of the Holy Ghost Tit. 3.5 6. the workmanship of God made to good workes Eph. 2.10 the R●nuing of the Mynd and the spirit of it Eph. 4.24 Rom. 12.2 of the which in the third part of the Catechisme wee shall entreat Heere onely we point at the benefits in their distinct natures Q. What is the eighth benefit A. Sanctification not much differing from the other saue onely as the replenishing of a vessell with new precious liquor differs from the clensing of it from the old lust and vnsauorinesse and sweetening of it that it may be capable of better See text● 1 Thess 4.4 Rom. 8.30 Ezek. 36.26 27. 1. Cor. 3.30 Ezech. 37.28 In which we see it to be the worke of the Holy Ghost in all beleeuers making them partakers in each part mind soule and body of his holines It consisteth in 2 things the first the killing power of the Crosse of Christ The second the quickening power of his resurrection both sealed vp in the baptisme of the Spirit whereby we are ingrafted and implanted into the similitude of them both The former is vsually called Mortification which is the worke of the Spirit 1. Iob. 1.7 applying the second effect of the death of Christ to the soule For hauing in Iustificatiō applyed the condemning power of this death and thereby taken away the guilt and accusation of sin now it addeth the second which is the disabling power thereof and the vanquishing thereof both these are the effects of his crosse vpō which he both tooke away the guilt dominion of sin We know that if the Law haue once passed sentence vpon a malefactor it will easily send him to execution This killing power therefore is not onely a turning of the heart from sinne but a making sure worke with it that it returne no more than hee whose head is cut off can do any more hurt The latter is called V●uification or that power of CHRIST that quicking spirit 1. Cor. 15.45 whereby the Holy Gospell applyes the power of the Resurrection to the soule not onely giuing it a bare life of Grace but a liuely life thereof quickning vp the edge the spirit of the inner man to the power of godlines and to the life of GOD in all the powers of the soule in sincerity according to her measure See texts for these For the former See Rom. 6.7 8. Gal. 5.24 Gal. 6.14 Col. 3 5. For the latter Rom.
in sin where none was how much more increase it where he findes it Also to suspect him in his sweet enchantments and when hee attempts our Eue that is our sensuall part ouerthrowing our Adam and iudgement thereby then to handle him roughly knowing him by his messenger not to be far off Besides beware of an aspiring heart discontent with our portion and estate If Adam had argued thus To what a dignity hath my Creator raised me from the dust who am I poore earth earth earth he had stood firme but now looking about him and setting vp his bristles lo pride causes his ruine Oh! how safe are we while we are vnder And lastly from Eue and Adam Pro. 1● 18 Vlt. let us learne not to trust our selues too farre in our privations that we intend no euill but be we armed also aswell against euill of all sorts lest it be with vs as if we had nothing at all in vs. Let vs beware of dalliance and admitting parlee with temptations of sensuality lest we fare as Samson by Delila and would faine get off the hooke Iudg. 16.16 but cannot being snared Thus men thinke it cannot be dangerous to admire praise and accompany beautifull women to thrust themselues into the company of fine fellowes in their pleasures and to rush our selues upon snares of deep worldly businesse They purpose not to be catcht they say til their wings be singed with their venturing so neer the brinke and then they struggle in vaine Better had it beene for them to haue beene birds with wings and so in vaine should the not haue beene spred for them And to end this vse how should the description of Adams sinne for euer feare us from slighting it We esteeme it by the outward act but that which makes it so odious is the Attendant fearefull circumstance of it To let fall a piece of coine into the di●t●is little but to throw it and stampe it vnder our feet in scorne is treason Not to giue all to the vse of the Church being ou●s is nothing but to withdraw it being Gods with a lye to the holy Ghost is mortal Oh the sin of Adam is inexcusable I committed in the full strength of grace in the fulnes of all Paradise contentment needlesly for a trifle when there was no sinne to draw them and the like Vse 2 Secondly Let it bee instruction to shew vs what little wonder there is to bee made that now in our corrupt estate the abundance of gifts blessings encouragements good helpes of nature education art nay holy ordinances of God granted vs for the better do not profit 1000 shillings nay turne to cu●●upt Surely if Adam in all his excellency yet by meere absence of confirming grace could abuse his free will to so fearefull a fall we neede not wonder that in this state of his necessary misery hee profits so little by all helpes no wisedome or righteousnes of his could free him then and shall the want of both help him now Man is set vp by God and yet is a beast The Cat was once made a Queen but in her glory she hunts after a mouse Vse 3 Thirdly Blesse God that in his second grace by Christ he changed old Adams perfection into a better and surer from a selfe-subsistence in grace according to our owne freedome to a subsisting in another betrusting vs no more with our owne Treasure but keeping it vnder the locke and key of his owne power in Christ So yet looke what we come short of Adam in the measure of grace in this life wee go beyond him in the vnchangeablenesse for alas how little are we fit to be trusted with all but we would lauish it if vnder our owne keeping The Lord is fayne to humble vs rather vnder the burden of our infirmities and corruptions because we are not heere capable of any great matter Being so vnfaithfull in the smaller who should trust vs with the great treasure Lastly it teaches vs to esteeme highly of the grace of self-deniall as beeing the contrary grace to Adams corruption For he fell by too much trusting himselfe wee stand by the grace of selfe-renouncing And it s not amisse to consider how iustly the greatest penalty of man stands in the losse of his freewill and in the slauery of the will to sinne because this freedome abused caused his ruine So fearefull is the error of them that maintaine that man hath still free will in himselfe remayning to that which is good Art 3 Q. Was there no other thing to make vp his misery saue onely his fall A. Yes The effects of it caused him to be miserable● both the effects of sinne and punishment For sinne first his actuall brought forth originall his originall all actuall sins and both these procured all penalties And that thus God hauing threatned him death if hee sinned did iustly inflict sinne for sinne and gaue him ouer to his desire and concupiscence Seeing he would forfeit his Image for a trifle he left him to be as he desired a masse of corruption and rebellion As a pitcher dashing it selfe against a stone wall is iustly split to pieces So that by the wrath of God was inflicted vpon him the losse of Gods Image standing in righteousnes and true holines a depriuall of the Glory of God both in soule and body as if the LORD should say Seeing thou wouldst needes thus rebell fill thy selfe with it be so to the full Hence came that vtter impotencie of mind and members to purpose to wil or execute any good Nay an vtter auersnesse frō it an vtter incapablenesse of it a contrariety of spirit vnto it Ioh. 14.4 5.14 Psal 5.15 Rom. 7.23 24. many other For a taste take these originall darknes erroneousnes of iudgement captiuity thraldome of will insensiblenesse of heart impotency of the faculties enmity to al goodnes totall impurity of the whole spirit propension to any sin and vnaptnesse to any good occasioned seruilenesse of the will vnsubiectnesse of the outward man vnsauorinesse in a word the death of the grace of creation This for sinne So for the penalties a seed of vtter impenitency dedolency obstinacy apostacie and excommunication f●●m God Eph. 4.18 From this fountaine proceeded both actuall sinnes and act●all pe●alties sinnes of commission omission ignorance presumption inward habits as hypocrisie earthlinesse ignorance errours profanenesse vnthankfulnes hardnes of heart and outward acts as in both tables impiousnes vnrighteousnes intemperancy and the like of which see Rom. 1. and .3 2. Tim. 3.1 2 3 4 5. So penalties actuall as the impurity and curse of corc●p●ion and bi●ch the losse of the right and dominion of the Creatu●es the curse vpon Gods blessings hellish terrours diseases p●uerty discredit imprisonm●nt feare of death guiltynes of iudgement and vtter misery of losse and sence in hell Q. You haue laid many things together and I consent to all Yet I desire a little more distinct order of them being
life of creation as in these few things may appeare in the well framed constitution of body appeare First Vnion of parts Secondly Order Thirdly Sweetnesse and beauty Fourthly Strength and actiuity Aptnes at the end it serues for But in a dead carcasse together with the absence of the life and soule of reason what appeares saue contrary effects Impotency to all former Operations Genes 6.5 disorder stinch and putrifaction confusion and yerksomenesse The generall then is Destruction of the frame of Nature Rom. 3.23 corruption of the Image of God Touching the parts both faculties and powers of the soule and body it were endlesse to mention all In the minde there is a death of all pure light and knowledge Ephes 5.8 a nakednesse of Gods image in poynt of that ruling and ouerruling power by which shee conueyed direction to all the inferiour faculties will first and then affections and operations now she is both darknesse in her selfe and losse of her birthright to rule other parts vnto darkenesse adde death of iudgement easily receiued in matter of discerning of the natures and truths of things and so also impotency and languor of apprehe●sion dulnesse and inability to conceiue good things Esay 44. ●0 Rom. 7.14 21. and besides this priuatiue indispositio● also a positiue pronen●s and propensity to all eui●l of the mind● I conceits false hereticall erroneous opinions vaine prophane idolatrous vnsauoury imaginations discourses thoughts and iudgements Rom. 8.5 keeping in memory noysome and ●u●tfull obiects So secondly De●th of the will especially Rom. 7.14 in the matter of her subiection to the lore and leauing of the vnderstand●ng then also in her faculty of w●l●ing and nillin● or suspending corruptnesse in the freedome thereo● by meere bondage both vnto sin and by sin a deprauednesse of the chusing facul y and so of ●he rest yea a disposednesse to will onely and continu●lly euill to nill good to suspend onely from good and not euill Iames 4.1 Ecles 7.27 to cl●use euill before good So truely doth the Lord complaine That the whole frame of the soule is onely euill continually To these adde the death of afflictions in poynt of their due direction to the obiects and whole inclination of them to a prepostrous and disordered liking of ●uill dislike of good Ephe. 4.29 Iere. 2.25 a disposition thereof to extremities on either hand either to loue hope sorrow feare pity shame zeale and the rest more then ought to bee or vnder that should be and thereby to ouerthrow the course and order of the whole of the whole conuersation Esa 57. vlt. Ioyne to these the death of the conscience both in respect of her staruing death that she wants matter of excusing peace and conten hauing lost all welfare and the death of her pureness● ●o represent obiects to the soule aright eyther with comfort o● accusatio● not to speake of her pronenesse to be defiled di●abled feared senseless● and slauish according to the corruption of ●he mind both which goe together Tit. 1.15 Rom. 6.8 As to●ching the spirits and the sences and the members there is a de●t● in them of that hability soundnesse vigor and ser●iceablenesse to the soule in good things and a pronenesse and tickling to be vainely and frothily imployed except worse bee offred euen prophanely and vnholily And to conclude there is a death of the person in respect of that right and soueraignety ouer the creatur●s wi●h a sl u●sh pronenesse rather to Idolize them both in the worship of some and the loue or vse of others a declension from Go● and a reuolt to the base creature as Eue did to the forbidden fruit Q Now what is the misery of Actuall sinne A. The deprauednesse and death of all the operations flowing from the soule within or the body without for whereas these resembled the purenesse of the principle at the first lo now they bewray the contrary all confusion disorder ignorance and vnrighteousnesse being broken into them As appeares in this that in the first table the soule departing from God sets vp to her selfe other gods profit pleasure ease worldly lusts worships him after her owne deuices liues as seemeth best to herselfe in her conuersation abhorres his Sabbaths and the like In the second that forsaking the law of righteousnes and sobriety the soule defiles her selfe with disobedience and rebellion to man to vnnatu all cru●ll and vnmercifull carriage to vncleannesse Mat. 15.19 Gala. 5 19 2 Tim. 3.2 3 4 5. Psal 14.2 1 Kin. 8.46 Rom. 3 9 to reuenge to wrath to vniust oppressing defrauding wayes to lyes tricks and slanderous aspertions to a continuall lusting after vnrighteousnes And all these not onely in open acts which are not so vsuall but in the actuall thoughts desires proiects counsels of the heart yeelding consenting thereto and delighting to thinke of talke of to loue and commend sinfull practizes as swearing drunkennesse bebate wrong intemperancy and the like For these are but one of a thousand of those actu●ll sinnes which as sparkles flye vp from the former fornace Not all these in euery m●n but some in one and some in another See 1 Cor. 6.7 Such were yee some of yee c. Q And wherein stands the second generall part of misery to wit of punishment A. In the manifold penalties both of soule and body and those properly expresse that threat of God When thou eatest thou shalt dye the death In the soule first for of all other these are fearefullest because they are sinfull penalties of sinne first an auersenesse from God or from returning to God any more but going from him further and further infinitely Ephe. 4.14 15. Rom. 8.7 Rom. 7.23 2 Cor. 2.14 Cannot c. As a stone cannot melt an insensiblenesse of soule in this double misery a dedolency of heart vtterly and impenitently hardned in it an vncapeablenesse of admitting of any meanes to draw the soule out of misery to any better estate a spirit of resisting and opposition of any such an infinite peaceablenesse and content of heart in the present condition thinking this bondage and hell another liberty and heauen and if berest of it raging as the Beare robbed of her whelpes and so a pronenesse to bee riueted more and more deepely into this woe with lesse and lesse feeling or beleeuing it Now these we must know are of a deeper dye then the former as being cursed of God vpon and against a sinfull Rebell giuing him ouer to himselfe and sealing him to wrath and perdition which though the Lord doth not alwaies enlarge but rather suspend till the due season thereof yet they are all inherent in our corrupt nature Touching the body where shall I beginne or end What languors and diseases are there incident to the body what pouerty basenesse beggery and want to the estate Gene. 2.17 Esay 53.4 what reproch to the name and credit aspersions slaunders dishonour What misery in family in
Church Commonwealth What obnoxiousnesse to Satan to his instruments temptations mischiefe bondage to the vngodly suites seruices dependances with hard conditions crosses streights pursuites losses forfeits death of friends imprisonment accidents and shrewd turnes bad tydings confusion in the state famine warre pestilence and a 1000. waies for him to goe wofully out who came but one way into the world Besides griefe of minde melancholy passions and distempers of the spirit bad conscience ill marriage lewd children ill successe Ruine of estate and at last a miserable death And yet the vpshot of all is worst after viz. A finall separation ●rom God and losse of his eternall presence with the sence of vnutterable intolerable vnauoidable wrath of God in Hell vpon the whole man for euer without the least hope of helpe or redresse Q I partly conceaue this view and mappe of the misery of the fall now conclude the Article with some vse of it A. First heere is confutation of all Papists who flatly deny this Article and tell vs that our Nature is indeed shrewdly Vse 1 may med and wounded much like him who fell among theeues betweene Ierusalem and Iericho Luke 10.30 and left halfe dead But as for vs that maintaine this dying the death this quite and cleane deadnesse in sins and trespasses they cannot abide No say they there be left euen in the vnregenerate such abilities and devotions as may congruously dispose God to pardon them And by some helpe of grace merit also full f●rgiuenesse Yea they boast themselues of their performances and d●ties whereas Paul tels vs that all boasting is cut off And tels vs Rom. 3.27 Baptisme washeth away all originall sinne which yet Paul grones vnder the burden of bei●g regenerate Also all P l●gians or their adherents who affi●me that old Adam is as one in a darke dungeon who by reason of darknesse cannot see but if he haue a light put in hath his eyes very quicke and can see any thing and so wee want but light and then wee are able to discerne and apprehend any truth put into vs of our selues Also such as blanch the matter with the color of Grace added to our nature for by that say they nature being holpen can put on the cordes as Ieremy in the dungeon and addresse himselfe to come forth What hath a dead man with all the light and helpe in the World to addresse himselfe to liue Vse 2 This also reprooues all Naturall Papists that dote upon their ciuill morall or religious duties and deuotions and cannot abide to heare that those who so duly pay all debts all dues who giue so many almes to the poore heare so many sermons keep so many Sabbaths read so many good books keep so much good company commend the Ministers and welcome them and maintaine them should yet bee as the Publicanes and sinners I doe not say yee are but I say this Except ye also deny your selues and behold this misery of your Natures yee will fate wo●se in time euen by your righteousnesse then if yee had non● for ●hy doe ye not graffe upon a rotten stock and guild a rotten post So also such as commend mens natures in the point of religion saying Oh such are so sweetly natured courteous lo●ing mild and harmelesse that there is but little betweene them and Heauen Alas how many of these sweet creatures are as bitter enemies to Gods grace as friends to ciuility and faire carriage Also such as aime at religion onely thus far to colour their wings and tip their tongues or their outward dealings with some outside but as for that heart within and nature they suspect not And to conclude such as being told of their passions defend thē by their nature It 's my nature to be so hot I haue soone done why poore foole thinkst thou thy nature is more excusable then thy passion and yet what is so common with men to say then this If I were an adulterer or drunkard I were willing the Minister should thus sharply rebuke mee but to be so bitter for mens infirmities and against that which we cannot doe with nor heale and auoide and against vnbeleefe or the like me thinkes he might be wiser Oh God would faine draw thee from the open to the secret sins of thy heart lest thy freedome from the grosser should destroy thee He would euen weary and tyre thee by thy cursed nature when thou seest all thy other defences are but dawbings with vntempered morter Thirdly This should cause thee to look vpward and to gage the greatnesse of Christs loue which could finde in his heart to Vse 3 satisfie for such a misery and to fetch happinesse out of the depth of it Euen in this Article is layd the foundation of thy esteeme of Christ in the next p●rt of the Catechisme Christ will be little set by the height and depth of mercy cannot bee sounded till thou take measure of it by a Reede of thy misery Little sinne to forgiue will make Christ little loued As we see at the Assyses that base theefe that thinkes to conceale some of his robberies and is loth to haue all come out at once fearing the mercy of the Iudge when his inditements come to bee read the second time loses his life Let vs beware lest it bee so with vs. Let not vs lessen and minse our sinnes in hope of more easie pardon but if we would magnifie the grace of Christ let vs first magnifie and enlarge our sin to the vttermost if Christ see that we rather hope in our small sin then his great grace we are dead men The way to get pardon is to equall his price to all our misery Say thus If Lord my sin had beene onely a share in Adams eating and no more or in some actuall few euils or if in the meere priuation of some good things or in sin only and not in penalties or if in bodily only and not spirituall or if spirituall onely and not eternall somewhat might seeme to lessen thy loue but surely that loue that would satisfie for all rather then any should condemne me is of vnspeakeable dimensions Oh! learne by this how to esteeme the price of grace If each step of this first part if each of these Articles make thee not miserable● then other no Article of the second part shall be able to comfort thee Be confounded vnder the ruine of thy misery and vow with that good Iabez If the Lord will indeed rid me of all this great euill that it may not grieue me If he will enlarge my coast and bring me out of this heape of woe then he shall be my God and I will make songs of his mercy Oh! let all that haue beene sayd of this misery make thee goe as she Luke 13.11 bowed together vnder an intolerable burden Lay all together to make vp such a loade as may pinch thy shoulders and cry out Who shall deliuer me who could't thinke such
of sinne As concerning those notions which were left in them and were in stead of a law they were onely enough to condemne them not otherwise The most ignorant and vicious among them easily blew out that dimme sparke they had by the blast of their strong lusts and were giuen vp to a reprobate sence and horrible lusts Their most morall Philosophers although to the shame of Christians it may bee spoken hatcht vp their sparkles of dimme light to some measure yet as touching the true knowledge of sinne they had it not they thought some sins no sins some sins vertues and some vertues vices and the sinnes they saw they neuer saw them by a word or in the curse due to them they saw a dimme twilight of an vnknowne GOD vertue vice punishment or reward and therefore were farre from any true enlighting Q. But what doth the Law worke in particular A. Two distinct things Knowledge and conviction For the first reade Rom. 7. I had not knowne sinne if the Law had net said Thou shalt not lust In which respect sinne is said to raigne from Adam to Moses yea and vnder the old Law in respect of any conuincement But since the Ministery of the Word of reconciliation came the Lord hath enlarged the power of the Ministery of the Law as a preparatiue thereto in the hearts of men As Paul saith 1 Cor. 10. Those that heare the word plainly preached and by name the Law in the true spirit●all sence and sauor of it they fall downe and say that God is in you of a truth Not that the Ministery of Christ is properly Legall for we are Ministers of reconciliation but not excluding it Christ came not to destroy the Law in the doctrine of it for it leades to Christ saue in the rigour and dominion of it The Law then first searches the soule it s the candle of the Lord and pierces the bowels of the spirit those secret windings corners shifts and euasions of it bee they neuer so colourable and subtill It is as a great torch-light in the dead time of night in the hand of an Inquisitour which searches an house for Papists and Iesuites and finds them in their Masse and takes them with all their bookes and trinkets As the persecutors of the Saints searched all vaults and priuy doores barnes and mowes of hay and corne with speares sharp spits and swords so is the Law acted by that spirit of conuincement and search Ioh. 9. the discouerer of the thoughts and Heb. 4.12 pierceth between the ioynts and marrow The Lord hath giuen it authority ouer the conscience as his owne Bayliff to hunt out and discerne sinne in the colours in the kinds of it open secret thoughts affectiōs yea concupiscence not the bare letter of the Law but the spirit for Paul notwithstanding al Gamaliels teaching knew it not And the conscience of the vnregenerate being once thus stirred is as the light of the Law to bring God into ech priuy part Not a dimme twilight but a Sunne at noonetide which shines frō East to West all ouer the spheare of Heauen and makes euery soule come out as Adam from the bushes by the voyce of God so cleerly bewraying a man to himselfe that for the time hee thinkes all other men see him pointed at by the finger of GOD. Q. How is it that the Law of GOD is the reuealer of sinne A. That most Holy and wise God who first contriued and vttered it put the light of his owne pure Maiesty into it and enabled it to discouer sinne to the soule not as other Lawes to speake to the eare but to the conscience and although there is no commandement in the whole booke of God Psal 19 Psal 119. Heb. 4.12 Eph. 5.10 11. Ioh. 3.20 which comes not from the same Author and spirit of light and truth yet the Lord hath more peculiarly put this power of Enlightening into this his morall Law as conteyning a more full exact and cleer view of all sinne both in the Nature and penalties of the same and according to his ordinance so it worketh not by the bare ten words syllables but the effectuall Ministery thereof accompanyed with the Spirit And looke what I say of light the same I adde of co●uiction also and her worke both are put into the Law by the same GOD whose fingers wrote it Q. Is vnbeleefe of the Gospell discouered by it A. No The Law is a modell of the righteousnes of Creation in which there was no need of fayth therefore it onely reueales those sinnes which make vs guilty without a remedy that it might dryue vs to seeke a remedy Yet we must not thinke it an imperfect light for this cause For as no man calles the Rules of Grammar imperfect because the Rules of Rhetorique are not in it so none can call the discouery of the Law insufficient because it reueales not the sinnes against the Gospell Q What sinnes doth the Law discouer A. All sorts by name Actuall and originall Q. What need any more be sayd of thi● haue we not heard enough of the nature of Misery in the third A●ticle both in Sinne and death A. Euen that we spake there flowes from no other spring then the Law of God onely heere we adde this Article to that for this cause In that we onely bounded misery within her Compasse shewing wherein it lyes simply considered But when wee adde The Law reueales sinne wee meane as sinne and the curse lyes vpon vs as we are guilty of it and cursed by it the Law doth set the saddle vpon the right horse and so shewes sinne in her colours to the soule that it might apply the knowledge of it to thee and me in particular and this is a further worke Q. Well proceed to the enlightning worke of the Law about Actuall sinne what is it A. First the Law in the spirituall Ministery thereof do●h disperse those mysts and skales of the blindeye that suffer not light to enter Secondly It opens and giues light to the eyes to see sinne in her true colors For the first According to the sorts of sinners so doth the Law take away their lets of knowledge Take three or fore Instances Put case CHRIST had purpozed to enlighten a Pharise in the knowledge of sinne he would haue remmooued all the corruptions of the Law and darknes of the text They had establisht a Corban which might free a child from the fifth Commandement as their heires the Papists at this day dispence with any murthers or villanies if for their Catholique cause and ends They had curtolled the law in point of her extent confining her to some grosse crimes and taken away the key of light from the people about particulars They had set vp an exposition of their owne inuention they had made what they listed to bee sinne and what they pleased to be none they had soothed the people vp in this course and sowed pillows vnder
do fearfully lay forth this corruption to be that which men little thinke for For why What a tame still close and harmelesse thing seemes this sinne beeing yet if once stirred a raging Tyger and wild monster What do these termes imply ●●ue that this sinne is the Doe-all in the soule as she will so it must be and in a word she is al sinne both the length and depth of it all that is in sinne is in her And therefore except the Lord Iesus had bene made si●ne note the word 2 Cor. 5.21 for vs aswell as sinfull he had neuer satisfied his expiation beeing chiefly for sinne in her Nature and for the Acts by Consequence● in which respect he is truly called the second Adam made the sin of Nature by imputation that he might by his nature of Righteousnes suffring both satisfie for it the losse of God● Image and then restore it Looke vpon these texts and meditate of them Secondly by comparison For when the soule hath had the view of actuall sinnes be●ore as most yrkesome and now comes to see greater abomination then these as the Lord tells Ezekiel Chapter 8.15 Oh! how out of measure sinfull seemes it to the soule how doth she cry out miserable man for market thus she speakes Although actuall sins were enough to sinke me into misery yet I see they were but euill in respect of their part but now I see a body of all parts and members a King in his throne I see now my selfe cur●ed double and treble No sooner do I get out of one actuall sin or set good duties agai●st bad with some hope of ease that way but the Lord beates me downe by my inward nature of sinne yea when I would faine comfort my selfe in my duties and suffring and prayers Lo then my very clothes this venomed shirt vpō my skin Iob 9.31 defi●es me turnes al hony into the gall of aspes Indeed God hath freed mee from beeing a worldling whose hope is below from a covetous mizer Phil. 3.18 whose God is his Mammon I am free from open vncleanenesse and inward hypocrisy and profanenesse of heart but Oh LORD the nature of these things dogges mee sometimes the wolfe of my nature makes me feele small difference betweene my selfe and these vices The nature of louing pleasures more then God the nature sauor of a proud vaine heart of distrust of worshipping God vnsauourily and for forme of selfe-loue and ends doth so dogge me that its worse ten fold then the breaches themselues Yea and the more I seeme to affect the contrary the more Satan dogs me with them thoughts desires and endeauors after them if it be so be glad yea and selfe-loue with them so blindfoldes me that often they seeme to please me and make me be as I would be and by the suddainenesse of the darts and assaults preuent my armor and so foile mee and leade me captiue So that we see the sting of nature if duely weighed is farre greater then of actions Q. Proceed to the third How doth the Law present the properties of originall sin to the soule A. By ripping vp the body of this death and shewing it what is lust Rom. 7.7 c. First Shewing it to be sin in an eminency of being It s more sin then other sins whatsoeuer is in any of them is here more notoriously whatsoeuer filth and base quality may be spied in all sin or any as impudency vanity pride resolution disdaine is heere more singularly as light and heate is in our fire or the ayre or the Moone but eminently in the Sun the first subiect and seate of it That wherein a quality is first that is eminently worst As coldnesse in the earth drynesse in fire heate in the ayre and moysture in the water So when a Iudge is vniust in the place of equity hee is eminently vniust Euen so heere All ill qualities are first planted heere and its sinne in the Spirit in the place of excellency euen of Gods Image That whereby another thing is qualified so or so that it selfe is much more so qualified As we say Those wofull desperate Traytors in Gun-powder treason were so and so desperate rebellious cruell fierce but by whom were they made so by their father Garnet and grandfather the Pope Garnet and the Pope then must be much more so So all the poizon of actuall euils is seated in the originall after whose copy they write Secondly The predominancy of this sin both in matter of fulnesse and force for fulnesse it hath all sin vnder it and in it as the perfect body hath all the members so this dead rotten body containes fully all dead members of hypocrisie vncleannesse c. in it As the word vsed by Diuines prooves they call it the * Fomite●● Fewell meaning of the fire of sinnefull acts Great farmes haue and keep great fires because of the plenty of wood they haue to nourish them This is the fewell that maintaines all fires in the soule in hall kitchin and parlour sins of pride sins of common formality sins of base lust all are kept vpon the altar burning with this fewell which is set on fire it selfe by hell So of forciblenesse also therfore Paul cals it a Law Princes rule strongly by their lawes they are as a soule wholly in all and in each part Nothing so forcible there is a necessity in a law It breakes downe and carries before it all opposites word threats dangers all counsell perswasion cannot heare is incorrigible vnchangeable as the Law of Medes and Persians It carries the soule to her trade with courage force resolution and irresistiblenesse being the piller of Satans kingdome ruling as a strong man in sinners Luk. 11. ●1 and keeping all in deep peace Thirdly it is perpetuall Wee say The King hath a perpetuall patrimony that is not alienable so hath a sinner by his originall sin He may faile in his spending money as in his policy and strength and industry to oppresse to defile his body but his stocke and patrimony neuer failes If it bee so in the best of Gods seruants Luther himselfe little molested with couetousnesse yet he had this stock still within how much more is it true of each sinner Fourthly It s an ouerflowing and yet a cruell euill as necessary as it is as forcible Fyre water are ill masters but they burne and ouerflow naturally euen so here As in breaches of the Sea we see tops of Steeples and of Towers vnder water so this ouerflowes all the Image of God in vs This sinne goes in the haire and streame of nature and therefore it s called Concupiscence and Lust Iames 4.5 The spirit that is in vs lusts to enuy it pleases vs because it is natural● and hath a self-louing perswasion which carries it smoothly and vnsuspiciously and by priviledge It is my nature to smite when I am angry i●s my nature to be soone ho● it s therefore
voice and as much as our matter We should labour to be so honest in our way since●e louing faithfull tender to soules denying our selues and hauing a sensible stampe of conuiction in our selues that wee might not wrong the Word we teach It is not the rolling of speech our lowd words but sincerity and simplenesse of our scope that must preuaile as Paul saith 2 Cor. 4.2 3. Oh tell men 2 Cor. 4. ● Deut. 29. If any heare the Words of this Law and blesse themselues with peace Gods wrath shall smoke against such Doe not blanch doe not dawbe with bad morter sow no pi●lowes but rather pluck off mens mufflers and vizors and cry as those Boanorges did Awake oh dead slothfull suotill heart Bee not beaten off from this by the peoples vnthankfulnesse and repining plow we with Gods heifer and he shall teach our tongues this logique Study we our selues first then the Scriptures and the Spirit of conuincement shall follow vs wh ch the w●●ld shall not resist We shall be a sweet sauor to God in all Eze. 33.3 4 1 King ● 224 both who are saued and who perish if we doe thus else we shall pay for their blood Suffer no Sycophant to disswade vs as hee did offer to Michaiah Though the wicked will say Wee are informed and haue plowed with other mens heyfers and we ●e●er speake well to them yet in the end faithfull witnesses shal be honoured Secondly the people must bee warned to shake off their Branch 2 lets of conuiction Let the righteous smite you it shall bee as balme The poore man whose impostume was let out by an enemy fared better by him then by all his Physicians Hunt out those three enemies before and adde a fourth of selfe-loue It is an Adder which will not heare the voice of the charmer The sweetnesse of vsury pleasures lawfull liberties ease will be as a Delila to keep off the least conuiction of the Law How can I want such a sinne Who can prooue such a gainfull lost to be so sinfull Surely he will sting thee with it as Delila did Samson when the sweet is past who now so enchants thee and then most of all when thou cryest The bitternesse of death is past Againe thinke not cch p●ng or glimpse of light or holding of a truth to be conuiction For so the Deuill will betray thee if euer thou be called to suffer Nay in thy ordinary course thou wilt confesse a Christ but deny him before a Papist Thou wilt say Thy soule is more worth then the World but stake it for a groate Conviction is no opinion but the ouerpowring of the Conscience If the truth bee no stronger then the Soules resistance there is no Conuiction The Martyrs gaue their blood for Transubsta●tiation Which they had neuer done had they not seene and beene conuinced of the issue of it Thirdly Examine ●h●y selfe about this weighty worke of the Law that thou maist hope to go on more safely Try it by these markes First By the loue of a conuincing Ministery and loathing of the contrary Secondly A cleering of God and the righteousnesse of his Law call thy selfe the slaue sold under sin As he to Achan Giue glory to God! Hug the Chirurgion that lanced thee Thirdly Shame and confusion for sin Dan. 9. The Publicane durst not looke vp Peter bids Christ depart for he was vtterly confounded at the power of Christ Thus they in Ezra 10. vnder the raine of Heauen so thou vnder this showre Rom. 6 21. What fruit Fourthly By thy thanks to God 1 Cor. 14.25 God is in you of a truth Fifthly Vnder thy confusion till God raise thee vp Habac. 3. let rottennesse enter into bones that peace may be in the day of trouble Crust not ouer thy sore waxe not weary of this work of God as most doe A man once throughly shamed and confessing is hardly after defiled Lastly let it end in true consternation of soule and terror for thy sin of which we are to speake Q. What is the second worke of Conviction A. The second is of the whole soule call●d terror and bondage For when the former worke of conuiction hath prevailed it works thus that such a soule is as vnder an arrest and seeing it selfe this sinner this cursed one hee is thereby killed and the spirit brought into terror and bondage And this the Lord sees meet to adde to the former for else as a dog with his chayne loose so the conscience runs riot with the worke of bare knowledge of sinne But if the dogge be fastned to his chayne hee is vnder custody And this is that which is so oft spoken of in Rom. 7. when Paul saith When the Law came I dyed Meaning in spirit and conscience That selfe of iollity ease and security which sinne afforded was nipt and quasht and in stead of it a sad item giuen to the soule taking away the taste of her morsels mixing the gall of aspes with her drinke and stinging her as an Adder and stabbing her to the heart as a sword for her conuinced villanies yea and none more then this body of death which still dogges her and wounds her as fast as she licks her selfe whole with all her duties or abstinences and works and shifts proouing her a slaue sold vnder misery and shewing her a nature a world of sinne and woe to beare downe all her morality and hypocrisie An heart vnder this bondage cannot be stild with Rattles the Spring comes so fast that there is no stopping it by the wit of man till a stronger streame turne it backe The like speech is that Sinne by the Law slew mee Hee meanes not any mortification but hee touches vpon that point of the iol●inesse of a sinner who that sinne might bee out of measure sinfull prides himselfe in his estate This pride the law resists le ts out the rankenesse of it and abases it with terror of hel and wrath And that in so great measure of times that when God leaues them from hope they wickedly bereaue themselues of life And yet this is not grace but in the elect a seed of it without which the Lord were no more fit to treat with them about saluation then a Smith to meddle with a wild horse but when hee hath cast him hee can handle him at pleasure This worke in Scripture is called the Spirit of feare or Bondage not bondage to sinne but by it whereby as they who are prisoners vnder chaynes doe lye in sorrow and horror without escape or hope so doe these Their spirit is enslaued to feare their conscience to guilt accusation to the whip of wrath and iustice yea crusht downe to Hell by the torment of such a spirit as cannot sustaine it selfe for the restlesse anguish thereof Q. Seeing this point of legall terrour is one of the maine points of this first Part tell me how many things make for the vnderstand●ng of it A. Three things especially First
sit heere we are but dead men and wee can bee no worse by the Aramites then by famine So they made into their Campe. Thus doth a cast-downe troubled sinner resolue to doe If there bee a way of possible escape the matter is not now whether I shall find it but I know I shall surely perish without it and sure I cannot be worse then I am I may be better I will venture the triall The vse briefly is First To obserue how God preuents a sinner by this Wisedome For what is all the complaint of a poore soule when the promise is offred Oh it s true if I were loden I doubt not of ease Thou lyest against thy selfe thou dost doubt of ease by the promise for of the former thou canst not doubt hauing been enlightned cast downe and conuinced by the Law That then which is the more easie to grant the Lords workes first as part of the condition of Grace for euen legall bondage is the first part of it that is to be loden that when the harder comes to bee vrged that is Faith then the Condition already wrought might bee ready to comfort the poore soule Secondly Wonder therefore at this wisedome which by contraries most sitly to the soules condition doth euen worke by contraries life out of death and order out of confusion Thirdly and lastly in all the Ministery of the Word let the Minister and people of GOD still fixe their eye vpon the scope of GOD moouing onwardes with him and going euen pase with his ordinance for the effecting of his owne ends and the glory of his Grace in our saluation Let vs both so teach and so heare that still the Starre may guide vs and then our iourney shall not be tedious to vs. Q. Conclude with the extremities and abuses of this legall worke A. First for the extremities they are two legall presumption and finall despaire Touching the first I call it legall because there is another and more dangerous one by the Gospell Secondly this presumption is twofold One this when the sinner waxes bold and ventrous to shake off this yoke of the Law before his spirit be conuinced and cast downe And this is that solemne caueat Deut. 29. If any shall applaud himselfe hearing the curse and say I shall haue peace adding drunkennesse to thirst the wrath of GOD s●all smoke ag●●● 〈◊〉 man Such there are then yea surely bondage is of it se●fe yrkesome but when it meets with a bold heart and is not set home by the Law commonly it prouokes wearines and then seeing that GOD seconds not his Word alway with plagues and death and curses indeed the deferring of sentence sets the heart on gog to euill and perhaps worse then before Thus Psalm 50. the hypocrite growes to thinke God to be like himselfe This sinne made Adam and all vs cursed presumption against threats Oh when wee thus fall to our old trade the Deuill falls to his finding the soule thus swept returnes with seuen worse then himselfe Let vs tremble at it and learne to inure our selues to heare all threats with feare Learne to beleeue this doctrine which I haue at large described I speake not now of sauing faith but against presumptuous boldnesse against the Law To credit the Word to be Gods who cannot lye may fall into a supernaturall conuiction although not yet sauing The second presumption is When the consternation of the Law ceazing without the addition of the Gospell causes the soule to waxe confident of it owne welfare because it hath beene humbled and perhaps holds some impression of it still not daring to resist her light But this is rare and dangerous for its a signe that the heart is secretly false and vnpurged Rest in no checkes of conscience where conscience her selfe is not first purged both to check and also to excuse and comfort the soule in the Satisfaction of CHRIST Q. What is Desperation A. The other contrary offending as much on the left hand through the excesse of terror Thus Saul and Iudas And it commonly growes from the first Satan neuer seeking more to poizon with presumption and dallyance with the Law then where he meanes to snare with the contrary of despaire How oft was Saul conuinced of his malice and persecution But returinng to his vomit brought soule and body to a desperate end So Cain and Iudas by their hidious sinnes brought themselues to this that mercy and Christ were not able to doe them good their sinnes were growne beyond forgiuenes A wofull fruit of boldenesse And yet iust for he who will vndervalue grace in the worth thereof is iustly left to ouerualue sinne in the merit of it He that neuer can find season to beleeue the Word beeing offred is iustly left to seeke it with violence when the season is ouer And so eyther its neuer time with them as he spake of marriage or else past time Many compare these sinnes with great adoe but the wiser way is to preuent both and the latter in the former Doubtles it is the sinne of the damned to liue in the perpetuall despaire of release and in perswasion that Grace is vnable to do them good Let vs know farre worse sinnes then these may destroy let vs neuer presume to venture so farre as to dye by these Vse And for vse of the point learne wee dayly to roote this cursed Roote of bitternes out of vs by two ●hings e●suing First A spirit of humility and feare to keepe ou●selues vnder the bondage of ou● Schoole-master rather then to aff●ct the liberty of presumers and in so doing to beseech the LORD o proportion out our stripes according to ou● strength a●d to keepe our despaire within the compasse of our selu●s and any thing in vs but to bee farre from the least thought of inlarging our basenesse aboue the infinitenesse of mercy Secondly To nourish in our hearts aboue all those Meditations of Mercy and Grace in CHRIST which may set vs vpon a Rocke about our selues and all fearefull distrust and carry vs in the streame thereof with holy irresistiblenesse Frequent holy and louing thoughts of God are the surest remedies against this hidious monster Q. What lastly is the abuse of this worke of the Law A. Double ech contrary to the other First On the right hand many not of the worst abuse it when they nourish themselues in a needlesse bondage whereas they know that they are in case to hearken after the remedy and will not pretending they haue not yet beene cast downe or troubled enough What madnesse is this to nourish a disease against Physick or to thinke that our trouble pleaseth GOD or to thinke that to bee of substance of Grace which onely is for preparation vnto it And yet many sullen and Melancho●●que ones are thus abuzed by Satan to thinke their Babel and captiuity yea their Hell another Heauen Let them rather hast themselues out of it when God calles them and know the Lord
loues a cheerefull giuer So farre should they bee from censuring others who welter not as themselues vnder their bondage Hee is cast downe enough who is in case to heare of raising vp Secondly on the left hand those doe farre worse abuze this doctrine who being weary of terror and bondage as soone as they fall into it cast with themselues how they may shake it off pretending that this is no estate to serue GOD in And so they returne some to their sport and Pastimes some their Pleasures some their Profits some their old companions some prooue more desperate worldlings and others with Cain to build them Cityes and while out their time heere with singing sad thoughts away Let these know that the course they take is v●o●ent and much like to them who to stop the cry of their infants put into the brazen belly of Moloc did oppresse their eares with the noise of Pipes and Tabrets As their childrens cry preuayled to bring an heauy plague vpon them which no Pipes could still so when the sleepe of these Epicures is ouer they shall awake with such sad confuzion that all the noise of their Rattles shall not be able to still them And so much be spoken of this point of Consternation and of the three acts of the Law and the vses in speciall There is one generall vse to be added afterward Q. Before wee adde the vse of Terror in generall one obiection offers it selfe viz that Paul Rom 7.7 sayth When the Law came sinne reuiued how then is Terror the worke of the Law Paul doth in that place so affirme the former that he denyeth not the latter adding this But I dyed noting that both might stand together A. Both may be together in one vnregenerate man according to diuers parts For when the Law had slaine conscience then concupiscence reuiued And wee must distinguish betweene the naturall worke of the Law and the accidentall Terror is the proper worke of it and when it s wrought it is as it ought to be But when rebellion ariseth it s otherwise then ought to be When the Sunne reuiueth and sweetens the earth it workes properly when it drawes vp the noysome stench of a dunghill to poizon the ayre its accidentall comming from the loathsomnes of the dunghill So when sinne rebells she doth her kind for she doth as the deuill did when he went out he foamd raged and tyrannized first It proceedes from the fulnes of the stomacke of sin loth and disdayning to yeld to a new guest But howeuer sinne do her kind yet if the Law do set her selfe to do hers this rebellion shall not hinder the killing power of it It shall rather encrease it For when the soule comes to see how lothsome sinne hath made her that euen when the Law by her righteous good nature seeks to destroy sinne then shee most couets it cleaues to it and rushes her selfe vpon it to iustle it aside this makes her conclude her selfe out of measure wofull by sinne out of measure sinfull And when rebellion begins to bee tamed the heart growes more and more vnder feare Although nothing hinder why both may not at one time bee together Onely in the bad commonly it encreaseth till it haue cast out all terrour and so causes the soule to wax worse for the Lawes enlightning because the sweet of sinne hath so preuailed that with an high hand of rebellion it strengthens the iollity of sin and so reuiueth In the godly in whom God will vse the Law as a seed of regeneration and a way to a remedy the Lord will enlarge terror and conuictions so farre that rebellion shall not stand it out but stoop with confusion vnder the power of it It s certein many perish at this second rock of rebellion hauing shot the gulfe of ignorance Q. Cleere this obiection more fully A. To this end first we must cleere the Text. Secondly Lay downe the obiection and answere it First For cleering note That Paul by Sin meanes originall sin body and members By himself I died hee meanes the powers of soule and body these must bee well distinguished Secondly obserue that Paul compares Sinne and himselfe in this point viz The time before and the time after the lawes powerfull comming by conuiction and terror Before the comming of it thus Sinne was dead and Paul aliue What 's that Sinne was aliue in point of her stilnesse Peace and Q●ietnesse without any distemper why because either no Law came at all or else came not in her power Againe Paul was aliue What is that Merry iolly lusty secure without any feare Why Because there was none to oppose The death then of sin ere the Law was no true death for still her poizon remayned as the snakes in her cold hole The life also of Paul was no true life for hee was dead in poynt of misery a dead carrion to the life of God but alone onely in the matter or his ●o●lity and lustiness● Thirdly note Sinn●s death and Pauls li●e caused this deepe ●o●●e 〈◊〉 betweene them both I la● her quietnes and their ●●ll ty made them as c●ose as buckle and thong for why sinne was glad to see Paul lusty and Paul was as glad to ●e● her quiet Thus it was between them ere the Law ●ame But how since Oh quite contrary Sinner u ued Paul dyed How Sinne perceyuing the Law resolu●d not to giue ouer till it had diuided her and Paul who had so long liued at peace together and traded with gaine and pleasure ech by other and to scoure her house of her guest whom she so corrupted the mind the will affections conscience and members of Paul beeing the creation of GOD begins to reuiue to be no longer quiet as before when her trade prospered but to fret rage and be vnquiet On the other side Paul also seeing the Law resolued to gaster him out of his wicked haunt what doth hee dyes is all a-mort forsakes his old mistresse concupiscence and begins to be weary of his trade I cannot open it better then by a Similitude There is some lewd huswife in an end way of a Towne that keepes a base Suckling house and there bee many lewd drunkards companions that sucken her Markes Ere the Constable come shee is still and quiet vtters no distaste at all followes her trade at ease and puts vp her wicked gaynes and the more quiet she is the more merry her guests be throwing all out at windowes and so both consent most inwardly to get her yea and perhaps while this league lasts although the Officer come yet at first she keepes her quiet and they their iollity and both out-face the Law But marke The Officer comes the second tyme vpon them and they vnderstand he is fully bent to execute the Law to pull downe the Alehouse and to diuide the keeper and the guests from ech other how then Then the Guests all turne iollity into feare they are all a-mort
well is he that can betake him first to heeles out goes one at one posterne another at another and leaue their hostesse What doth she Alas she is the housekeeper she must bide by it she hath forgone her trade therefore she mutters and rages a●d giues threatning specches they will v●do● a poore woman c. And if she can by any meanes toll in her flayted guests she wil● and tels them She must not be so forsaken they must sticke to her better then so Howbe●t the Officer is diligent and tells these guests I am resolued to breake your knot yee shall no more r●ut here it shall cost ye all ye are worth to your skinne rather and if there be Law to be h●d I will breake your meetings As for this base huswife she doth her kind I neuer looke to see her honest I will wat●h her aswell as I can but a● for reforming her I ne●er looke for that I may bynd her to good behauior fine and yoke her and hold her downe as I can but her ill will I looke alway to haue and care not for it and I know as she can she will play her pranks But as for you of whom I haue more hope let me perswade ye to refray●e What comes of this The base woman frets still and malignes the Law but the guests beeing ouer powerd with authority leaue their trade the more the woman rages the more they are ashamed not onely by the feare of th● Officer but by the rebellion of their old hostesse they grow more to loa h their old trade This for the first to wit the clearing of the text Q. Now how cleere you the doubt A E●sily For what is it against Pauls dying that Sinne reuyu●th what is it against the Guests shame and dying to their t●d● that their old hostesse rages Rebellion is in her not i● them they are shamed and flayted thogh she will know no Law Q. ● vnderstand plainly but now because the point of sin● rebellion ●n the conscience terrified is somewhat vnusually taught speake a little of it shew what it is and so with a little vse conclude all A. Thus then we may conceaue what this sin-reuiuing in the soule cast down meaneth if we distinguish the sorts of Rebellion in generall It s three fold 1 Naturall or corrupt Second Penall and the third Mixt. The first kind is when the Word or law comes so to the corrupt soule that as yet it carries no power or authority ouer the soule with it but still the soule holds her owne for then so close is sin and the soule they so consent that to bee parted from their filthy fellowship is death to them both sin incorporating herselfe into the soule that she is as one with them though in truth there is as great oddes between them as betweene the creation of God and the confusion of the Deuill howbeit so it is by their neernesse and Inmateship the one so defiles another that it is as easy for Samson to part with his Delila as for these to be sundred Heere therefore as both band in euill so both do conspire in rebellion against all the lawes of God all his Knight-Marshals Constables and Officers it s as easy to rob a beare of her whelpes as these of their sinfull pleasures and when any thing is done by the law against Oh what a liuery do they giue it and Gods officer for it Oh he comes to make vproare and bring in confusion among neighbours that liued before at one Oh! say they its pity that euer such were suffred to breake the loue and liking that was before Oh how they combine to cast him out that they might roll backe to their old mire the Minister is to such as the Marshall in London is to harlots an ey-sore a reproch and common wonderment Their gaine their sweet trade their shrines for Diana are stopped therfore now they cry out more then euer Great is Diana their drinking their lusts pride and couetousnesse were neuer so sweet to them as now the opposition of the Word makes them The good and holy law of God makes them worse and worse they rush their crazy soules against the piller of Gods truth and split themselues at it and become more out of measure sinfull This is the first rebellion in the vnconuinced the most ordinary and common rebellion to be seene now a daies where the Word comes powerfully vpon ignorant consciences snorting in profanenesse This is not heere meant The second is Penall a fruit of this onely encreased by the iust wrath of God vpon the former rebels whose chaynes Lord makes stronger Esa 28.22 by how much the more they kicke against the pricks I say when the Lord penally smites them suffers them to encrease and fulfil the measure of their lusts to grow frozen in these dregs desperate in their lusts to scorne pursue deface the meanes and waxe impenitent in their rebellion so that they find no place of repenting See these texts Mat. 23.32 34 Act. 41.13 Act. 28.27 and the like neither is this meant heere The third is Mixt When rebellion is allayed with terror of conscience and not permitted to her selfe as we know a theefe in hold is one thing and at liberty is another Now this mixt terror is the accidentall worke of the law in a conui●ted and troubled conscience working corruption to a rebellion and resistance that sinne might bee odious and the soule more humbled So that by this appeares that this reuiuing or rebelling is no act of conscience or the soule for it s planted in another subiect to wit sin Conscience all this while is oppressed with thraldome by the law and held downe the rebellion which is comes from the principle of lust which cannot endure separation To apply then the distinction I answere This obiection hinders not this truth That the proper work of the law is to cast downe and embondage the guilty soule Q. The chieft doubt remaining is How a troubled Conscience priuy to much reuiuing of corruption may discerne that it commeth not from her selfe but from sinne A. This may be discerned easily by many markes First from the worke of the law that hath separated her from sin and that amity which once was between her and it This is no hard matter to prooue if once the soule can say her old lusts and she are diuided by the lawes of terror How can she then thinke that she should rebell against the good law for working that which she is glad of Secondly It will appeare by this that rebellion must come from a free will and principle of the agent but that cannot bee conscience nor her selfe because shee is conuinced by an ouerruling Law which hath killed her freedome Thirdly by this that rebellion where it is vnconuinced doth not onely fret in respect of somewhat she is denied but al●o at that which crosseth her for it selfe But in this legall rebellion when the
for if the sur●ty faile in any point his vndertaking is vneffectuall Greatmen must haue their Peeres to acquit them no common persons S●e Rom. 1.3 Eph. 1. vlt. Q What is the vse of it A. Briefly this to stay and comfort an heauy heart in the view o● the hainous circumstances of her sinne making it out of measure sinfull as depth of continuance odious greatnesse against knowledge meanes of grace with an high hand Bee not dismaid Hee that is thy surety made not thy peace for small and some but all and the greatest so that thy thought must be how to receaue this fulnesse Heb 9 14. not for the greatnesse of the sinne The Lord Iesus offred himselfe vp by his eternall Spirit that an eternall Maiesty might bee appeased for sin of an eternall guilt and curse and such is all sin but especially crying sin his merit is more out of measure deseruing then sinne is sinnefull and hath merited far more happinesse then Adams sinne forfeited Get humblenesse and faith and then thy great sins shall be as deaw to the sunne and as a spoonefull of water cast into the Ocean Q What is the third thing considerable A. Vnion of both natures into one person by the vnconceauable work of this Spirit of God It s much that a soule and a body but much more that flesh and the Word should be really one person I doe not say that the Diuinity of Christ was a nature as the humanity for Christ was so a nature that yet a distinct subsisting person of himselfe But the meaning is that this person of the Word tooke the nature of his flesh into his person therein to subsist The flesh of Christ was no person as Abraham or Dauid but a nature onely hauing no subsisting of it selfe at all but as it dwelt in the Godhead As Misleto is no plant of it selfe otherwise then it fastens and subsists in the appletree So that Iesus Emanuel God and man vnited was the third qualification of the surety Assistance could not haue caused identity or samenesse onely hypostaticall vnion could do that By vertue whereby not onely properties are communicated to ech other in forme o● speech as The Lord of life was slayne GOD dyed c. but in reall manner the efficacy of the one nature was imparted to the other Yet this vnion doth no more admit confuzion then separation no not in the lowest degree of eclipsing in death or the graue See text Ioh. 1.1 ●say 1.4 Call him Emanuel Mat. 1.23 Q. What is the vse heereof A. Most sweet lo all broken soules in their approch to the throne of grace What is so bottomles and vnsubsisting a thing in it selfe as a soule in the anguish of conscience Yet euen then looke vp to Emanuel and he will vnite thy poore empty bottomlesse spirit to his owne person that in him thou mayst haue a reall beeing and subsistence Oh poore soule who thinkest thy selfe meerely lost in this thy estate In time thou shalt see it was mercy brought thee to be out of hope in thy selfe that the hope of thy wel beeing might be in him for euen the flesh of Iesus himselfe had the like vnablenesse of subsisting except the second person had taken it to himselfe Q. What is the vnction of Christ A. It is a consequent vpon his personall vnion whereby the Godhead made the man-hood full of himselfe and of all gifts and graces of the Spirit meet to enable him to his worke of mediation and by name separated him from men to be excellent as to be the Prophet Priest and King of his Church That this was from the wombe appeares by sundrie glorious effects exceeding man as that in Luk. 2. at twelue yeeres old Yet especially his Baptisme was the anoynting of him to the entire and immediate execution of these Offices for therein hee did more fully receiue the anoynting with the Oyle of gladnes aboue his fellowes as was prophecied Psal 2. Esay 42.1 and Esay 61.1.2 He was Priest to satisfie and pray for Prophet to teach and King to rule and deliuer his people And these offices do mutually serue each other The vse is that wee his members might acknowledge him an eminent Mediator as hauing a calling from GOD as those three sorts of Men had vnder the old Testament And that we might be out of doubt that the acts and suffrings he performed were allowed according to that voice This is my well beloued Sonne in whome I am well pleased heare him And that wee knowing into what treasure the Lord hath put all his graces euen the flesh of Christ might there seeke and finde them all Therefore 1. Cor. 1.30 Paul sayth Of him are we who is made vnto vs of the Father wisedome as a Prophet righteousnes as a Priest sanctification and Redemption as a King Ioh. 1.17 Reuel 1.6 The Lord hath made him whatsoeuer his Church needes that of his fulnes we might receyue grace for feare And that we also in our measure together with vnion to him might receyue his vnction and become Prophets Kings and Priests to God and be conformed to our head in all his excellencies not in the poynt of his meritig but of his Graces Q. Proceed to the fourth the former part to wit the merit A. This is yet more essentiall then the former three The fourth then I say is Actiue obedience of Christ I do not separate the actiue from the passiue as if eyther alone could satisfie or as if I ascribed the effects of eyther to the one without the other but yet distinctly I speake of both for the vse of each of them to the soule Marke then what I haue noted The Lord Iesus became piacular for vs not onely by bearing our punishment but by translating vpon himselfe the reall imputation of our guilt with out the least measure of inherent guilt This latter would haue disabled his person for he must be separated from sinners Heb. 7.26 yet the want of the former would haue made his merit none of ours and his death vniustly inflicted Therefore he was made Sinne originall and actuall all the sins of the elect were charged vpon him that he by his perfect obedience might disanull them and bring in and settle vpon vs perfect righteousnes And as the mi●ery of a man stands in both sinne and guilt and staine aswell as in curse so must our Surety performe righteousnes aswell as beare the curse Now this righteousnes of Christ is both his Naturall and his actuall opposite to this naturall and actual vnrighteousnes of Adam I say both the purity of his humane nature infused by Vnion a●d also the obedience to the whole Morall Law to the vttermost extent thereof And this is as true a part of the material cause of our iustification as the other of the Passiue though not to be disioyned Q Whereof doth this Article obedience consists A. Of the whole conuersation of our Lord Iesus his
life and death but more specially of his later part from his Baptisme to his death In both which more or lesse hee performed the worke of his Father and fulfilled all both generall and personall righteousnes His whole conuersation toward GOD and man was Holy towards God frequent in his Temple worshipping submitting h●mselfe to both Circumcision and Baptisme eating the Sacrament of his owne Body oft in fasting yea whole nights and prayer to GOD most Holy in his Family Gouernment most frequent in doing good Acts 2.22 IESVS of Nazareth a man approoued by GOD in many signes and wonders c. preaching from City to Citie yea praying for his enemies so meeke that hee sets forth himselfe as an example Math. 11.19 30 hee would not breake a br●ised reed nor quench the smoking flax Esay 42.2 3. Hee would not lift vp his voice but as the sheepe which is dumbe before the shearer so opened he not his mouth In the iudgement of the worst hee did all things well Hee grew in Grace and fauor with GOD and men as hee grew in stature His meditations were Heauenly his wordes gracious euen to admiration Luke 4. The workes of mercy and compassion to the miserable were infinite towards all he was harmelesse vnblameable confuting them who would gaynsay stopping their mouthes In his outside of carriage very humble riding vpon an Asse farre from worldly pompe and poore without a pillow to leane his head yet very content neuer ate meate but gaue thankes so good to the poore that he taught his disciples It is better to giue then to receaue conscionable of the Sabbath obedient to parents content to stoop to a meane trade to liue vpon very kind to his kindred pious to his friends liuing and dying so lowly that he taught his disciples to be so by washing and wiping their feete and so of all the rest But especially for the maner measure end ground of all he did most sincere and entire adding thereto perfection both of parts and degrees so that there was nothing amisse he was a righteous Seruant no guile found in him and so at his death Iohn 17. Hee professeth hee had done all the worke of his Father and till he had fulfilled all the Law for which he came Mat. 5.17 he could by no meanes be disswaded but called him Deuill who sought it yea to the death and in the death of the Crosse hee was most obedient Phil. 2.5 6. for his Actiue and Passiue obedience were mixt inseparably but aboue all in this was his excellency that being both Glory and Holinesse he was not onely content to empty himselfe into shame but euen into the aspersion of sin that he might by obedience make a full expiation for it In a word Such an high Priest he was as not onely for his Nature but for his practize was vndefiled and separate from sinners And all these he was not for himselfe but for others that nothing might bee wanting to a full satisfaction and that they who beleeue in him might fetch from each part of his life and obedience comfort and stay in the infirmity of their youth age crosses duties worship of God graces in the wants of all their seruices both ordinary and priuate or publique and extraordinary Q. I would haue you open this point more fully A. I will endeauour it Consider then First Christs being vnder the Law and becomming a seruant vnto it was not for himselfe but for vs except then his obedience bee for our sakes it serues for nothing Secondly if our Lord Iesus had suffred for vs vpon the Crosse withou● any obedience to the Law hee might haue be●ne as harmelesse as high Priests by the purity of his nature as by obeying so that if there be no o●her vs● of his obedience then this to qualify the person of the Obeyer it had beene superfluous Thirdly some part of his actuall obedience was a direct part of his mediation as his praier Ioh. 17. Why not al● the rest as well Fourthly let it bee supposed t●ue which yet is not to bee granted that where sinne is pardoned by remoouall of curse thereof necessity righteousnesse and life is restored yet we must know that Christ restores not his elect to the meere righteousnesse and life that Adam had but to the righteousn●sse which is of faith and vnchangeable and to a life in the presence of God not of Paradise therefore it requires a price of a sutable righteousnesse in Christ more then a meere surety was bound to But as I said the former is doubtfull although each defect of righteousn●sse is a degree of sinne yet there is more in the staine or pollution of sinne then in the defect of righteousnesse When a Traitor is pardoned though he be in a possibility of restoring to fauour and dignities by his Prince yet they are two things and are oft seuerd and if both concurre the benefit is double And fifthly where it is obiected that if totall imputation of this righteousnes be granted there were no Vse of the passion I answer It s false for we are to be considered as liable to the cu●se o● d●ath for that which is already past When thou eates thou shal● dye Q. And wherein stood the Passiue Obedience of Chr●st A. It partly stood in the condition he vndertooke partly the antecedent suffrings of his life and most especially the passion it selfe For the first it was a willing putting of his necke into the collar or subiection forgetting yea empting himselfe or his glory so farre as being Lord of all to become in the fashion of a seruant chiefly to his Father also to men yea the balest of his sl●ues vpon earth but both for vs and our saluation in which respect he refused no termes but despised all shame Phil. 2.4.5 6. Heb. 12.2 3. Secondly hau●ng subiected himselfe to bee a meet obiect of suffring and sorrow he became indeed a man of sorrowes through his life inuring himselfe b●t●mes to the yoke which he yeelded to as to bee borne of meane parentage to fall to ●a●●●abor for his ●●uing to ●e in a ●●a●ch as 〈…〉 ●r vnable to hire a roome in the Inne to bee persecuted and fly into Egypt euen at a month old to vndergo the reproach of the tongue being called Demoniack Wine-biber Deceauer enemy to Caes●r Traitor friend of Publicanes to bee the obiect of tentation to the vilest and basest creature the Diuell himselfe to crouch in soule and body vnder the sentence of wrath ready to seaze vpon him not onely at the instant but long before wh ch dryed vp his moisture as a withered branch and made him bee thought fifty yeeres old ●r vpon being li●●le aboue thirty losing all his beauty and being as a man euer vnder strokes afflicted and humbled carrying our common penalties not personall of this or that disease of hunger thirst faintnesse wearines harborlesnesse and pouerty c. about him To haue the influence of
his deity alway in a manner restrained so that hee appeared not to bee that hee was to his dearest friends And therefore hee concealed his glory further then it made for the discharge of his Office of Mediator as a Prophet or a King for then hee stept out of his basenesse See Matth. 11.12 Luke 1● 3● Q. And what may bee said touching the Passion it selfe A. Somewhat touching the parcels of it and yet somewhat also touching the necessity of moderation For the parts first he endured the forsaking of his dearest Disciples to be taken by his owne seruant Iudas by his own special Officers at the hands of his own Deputies to suffer most intolerable indignities to be accused arraygned endited and sentenced as the vilest malefactor and that at the Gaole deliuery of felons and murtherers After that besides their barbarous spitting vpon buffeting mocking with a Robe Crowne of thornes and reeden Scepter to be put to that shamefull accursed death of the Crosse a death for such as not onely men compted villains but God himselfe in a sort held accursed To which adde the greatest of all both in the Garden and vpon the Crosse that most bitter Cup of wrath which hee dranke from the hand of his Father which made him in an agony of Spirit to sweat drops of blood to pray That the cup might passe from him from feare of drinking it and to cry out My God my God why hast thou forsaken mee And so in that deep anguish of his Spirit to giue vp the Ghost all the Diuels in Hel banding themselues in that houre of darknesse to pull him from his stedfast confidence Q. What meane you by the moderation of it A. That in all this abasement yet that measure was impozed and no more which suted to the dignity of the person suffring and to such a one as in suffring merited and could not be ouer come by suffring Hence was it that hee had intermissions of his agony and feares so that he could goe to and fro to his Disciples to admonish them was vpholden in his sences vnderstanding memory affections in the midst of his dolours shewed his power and God-head euen then in the consternation of his enemies conuersion of the theef his loue and prouidence for his Mother and Disciple rece●ved comfort by the Angels in the want of self-support was dispenced with as touching the measure of torments not being capable of those which reprobates in Hell suffer because they can neuer satisfie the Duration the Disorder and disguisement of these Hellish terrors being accidentall to his Passion and to dying the death onely infinite displeasure of GOD and true separation of Soule and Body which were essentials he endured So also it was impossible the graue should hold him Act. 2.24 Yea and the period of three daies nights of 72. houres were abridged to 40. Q. What did he effect heereby A. Hee being our surety in all this did for vs purchase a full satisfaction of which in the question after and withall first all those benefits Article fourth Then the ratification of his Legacies and Testament Heb. 9.16 17. Col. 2.14 Ephe. 2.16 Heb. 10 2● abolishing of enmity by Law Sinne Satan VVrath Hell and Death As wee know if a Court bee quite put downe all the Officers belonging to it are downe also So also liberty to enter Heauen by a liuing way not the blood of a beast with sundry others Q. Why doth the Scripture so much dwell vpon the Passiue and so little vpon the Actiue obedience in point of our satisfaction A. As I intimated before the Holy Ghost doth more vsually not alwaies See Phil. 2.7 8. Esa 53.11 Mat. 20.28 Rom. 5. ver 18 expresse it this way First because in this curse taken away all the whole satisfaction began to take effect as wee say that the effect of a Prisoners release is deliuery from prison not as if that were all his release yet thence it s denomin●ted because though the debt bee paid before yet this must follow Secondly because the end of a thing is better then the beginning and the consummation of a thing is from the end Perseuerance hath wee know the preeminence of all obedience not as if it were any more then a part of it but it● the finishing and making all out of question Each moment of a Glasses course is part of the houre though the last dust of it be the hou●es end B●t Thirdly and especially beca●se the P ssi●n wa● the greatest hardest and fullest part of the whole satisfaction As fortitude carrieth the name of vertue not ●x●●uding any Q. Well I am satisfied Proceed to the fifth branch and so to the vse of both ioyntly A. The fi●th ●s the Passiue obedience of the LORD Iesus not in other passions and penal ies of his who●e life onely but especially that one vpon the c●osse the most immediate ob●ation and sacrifice of himselfe ●or sinne and it consists in the free yeelding vp himselfe to the wrath of his Father in his soule and body in the one bearing the incomprehensible anger of GOD though according to the limitations requ●site for a person that was GOD and merited and in the other the exhaustion of his life-●lood and separation of body and soule by that accursed death that heereby sinne with all the penalties inward outward and eternall with all the power which the Law and enemies had against vs thereby death and Hell not excepted might perfectly be abolished a●d the iustice of God infini●ly satisfied R●ad Rom. 3.25 Heb. 9. ●3 14 1. Pet. 1.19.1 Ioh. 17. Heb. 12.24 Q What are the vses of the Actiue and Passiue obedience A. F●rst the doctrine heereof may affoord vs a swer● meditation which as there are few a●cient or godly writers ●uch aue obserued so it is pitty we should neglect viz. T●e excellency of the grace of the Gospell purchased by ●his Satisfaction which will appeare by a comparison of ●he wo●ke of Creation with this of Redemption The form●r I gra●t was a solemne worke when the Eternall Word made of Earth the body of Adam inspiring it with the the breath of GOD not onely to be a liuing Creature bu● to beare the Image of God in holinesse And the truth is Moses describes euen this worke more solemnely then the Creation of any of the other to shew the emi●ency thereof ●boue them But when the same eternall Word creates man the ●econd time Lo not a breath not a f●w words will serue himselfe rather must be made a worme and no man God himselfe must empty himselfe of his f●lues and glo●y his loue his teares his miracl●s his prayers the basenesse of his condition will not all serue the turne no other price will bee accpted for this saue both the actu●ll fulfilling of all righteousnes and the shedding not of drops or ounces of other blood but th● last heare and life blood that was in his Holy Body the blood of the
our iustification and that else God cannot in Iustice acquite vs. They say The elect doe sustaine one person with Christ in all his acts and suffrings and they are all made theirs But thus they make Christ serue to no other ends but to become our owne Mediator and to destroy his owne The error of this conceit arose from a confounding of the valor or worth of this righteousnesse with the substance of righteousnesse it selfe For although wee cannot be iustified without imputation of the fulnesse of the merit yet wee are not capable of that which merited except wee will become infinite Branch 3 Thirdly it confutes those Sectaries who affirme that God seeth no sin in any of his if hee haue once imputed Christs righteousnesse to them This error arizes from not distinguishing these two Imputation of perfect righteousnesse and perfect imputing or accepting of imputed righteousnesse No man is iustified without the former but our faith fayling in the acceptance must needs bee looked vpon by God I confesse hee sees no sinne but hee pardons it to his in Christ vpon Faith and Repentance but hee punishes it for their good in mercy Againe what if we grant God sees no sinne in them in respect of their iustification Is therefore their sanctification perfect Why then did Dauids adultery displease the Lord Or why doe we pray Forgiue vs our debts or why saith our Sauiour Say when all is done yee are vnprofitable Fourthly it confutes all such as cut off the Actiue obedience Branch 4 of Christ from the satisfaction 2 Sam. 10.4 as they cut the garments of Dauids seruants by the middle I blame them not as Papists for denying Christ to bee our price but for their curious diuiding of one member of it from another It may bee granted them that the Passiue is the more immediate cōsummation of the satisfaction but to conclude the Actiue is most audacious They say Christ was bound to the obeying of the Law as a man made vnder it I answere Yea but except hee had beene so made purposely for vs hee needed neuer to bee so at all therefore his willing being so made the merit the greater and although being a man he must obey yet seing his being a man was that hee might obey for vs it must bee of greater desert Againe as the Passiue is the neerer merit in respect of the estate in which we stood accursed So the Actiue is as essentiall in respect of recouering that Image of righteousnesse which makes vs like GOD and in which wee were created Neither was it Hell could haue hurt vs without sinne Besides to say truth if Adam after his sinne had not beene accursed yet in sinning onely he had beene miserable It is therefore as essentiall to Iustification that hee bee made iust as rid of guilt and brought to Heauen as rid of Hell But of this before Q. Bee there any other vses b●sides confutation Vse 3 A. Yea. And first to teach all Gods people to abhorre the slauery of hypocrites who if they could shun Hell would neuer care for righteousnesse Gods people although they could sinne vnseene and vnpunished yet would loath it They take as deep thought for God as for their owne welfare 2 Sam. 14.30 When Absalon was pardoned yet he set Ioabs corne on fire because hee might not bee admitted to the Kings presence chuzing rather to dye then to hang in such suspence And shall a beleeuer rest in his pardon more then in the righteousnesse of God which may make them accepted and beloued Eph. 1.5 No the liuery they weare is The Lord our righteousnesse Oh till I be restored to my blood to my dignities to stand before the Lord to please him to feele his Spirit of peace ioy and righteousnesse and my Conscience purged to serve God in holinesse I can feele no comfort Vse 4 Secondly let it raise the price of the Lord Iesus his loue in the hearts of all his children Should he that was glory and holinesse bee content not onely to become a worme base and vile to his enemies but to lose the repute of holinesse and become sinne rather then sinne should not become righteousnesse and glory how great is this loue then and how deare should he be in the taking of our imputed sinne and blemish vpon him Vse 5 Thirdly to touch his Passion a little how should it teach vs to abhorre all enemies of the Crosse Atheists Papists Iewes and Pagans to whom it is eyther a stumbling block or foolishnesse yea all such as hold vpon a Christ in profession but farre from an humbled suffring and crucified Christ carrying themselues rather so in their haire fashions and oathes the loftinesse of their stomacks as if their Christ were rather some great Epicure Libertine or Champion of the world Fourthly If this death of the Lord Iesus be our satisfaction Vse 6 and the freedome from sinne and curse our pardon peace and Heauen where is the dwelling of our hearts vpon it the delight of our soules in it Commonly wee will weare our choise Iewell neerest our heart and why is this Iewell which cost the blood of the Sonne of God so farre off it Surely except this be our soules crowne more then the crowne of the aged are their children or the Ministers crowne his people or the husbands his deare wife not to speake of gold pleasures or outward welfare how can it bee well with vs If the perfection of loue be ioy and the perfecter the obiect is the greater the loue How is it that each base shadow of ioy can affect vs when this can not If our hope were heere onely in Christ of all others 1 Cor. 15.19 we were most miserable Nothing heere can keepe thee from misery what is then thy happinesse This satisfaction onely Let it be all in all to thee the seasoning of thy blessings supply of all wants if thou wert left as an owle in the desart Hab. 3.17 if no calf were left in the stall yet let God be thy saluation Let thy life be bound vp in it as Iacobs in Beniamin Fifthly and especially let the chiefe streame of this points Vse 7 vse be this To all Ministers to teach it and the people to apply it to themselues in all their feares yea the greatest agony yea death it selfe whatsoeuer thou forgoest hold this For Ministers let them remember their office as hee to Archippus and fulfill it Paul presses it compare 2 Cor. 5.21 with 20. Him that knew no sinne hee made sinne that wee might bee his righteousnesse And what of this We being Embassadors of God as if Christ by vs did entreate you so we vrge Bee reconciled to God Be no Idols non Preachers bee no Preachers of any thing before this Preach not with a veile as Moses stand with open face and hold this mirror to poore sinners that they may behold The Lord their righteousnesse 2 Cor. 3 1● If the worth of a
soule were knowne by vs and the blood of soules prized and pitied hen the preaching declaring of this righteousnesse Iob 33. would bee the scope of our labours Wee are Ministers or the Law but onely so as seruing the Ministery of reconciliation Let vs mainly looke to this to saue our selues and them that heare vs if wee haue wrought the vse of the last Article of the former part vpon them learne the skill of this second and linne not with God till he say to vs Deliuer him Iob 33.24 Mat. 13.44 Gen. 29.20 I haue receaued a ransome If wee could find this veine and the treasure hid in this field all our worke would bee as Iacobs seuen yeeres for the loue of Rachel sweet and easie For people also secondly Consider yee who haue truly felt that Serpent of the Law sting ye mortally in the other part come apply the remedy in this looke vpon this brazen Serpent and liue and first I say feele the strength secondly take hold of it and make peace for the former know without a promise from God there is no peace vnto yee and promise there can bee none without this satisfaction This is the strength of an offer and a promise it s else as he spake of the Serpent Nehushtan and a piece of brasse As sinne is the strength of the Law so is this price of the blood of Christ the strength of the promise Thou hast to deale with the Father in the point of iustifying thee ponder well then this strength as thou wouldst try the waight of Gold in the ballance If thou canst feele this strenght so farre as to say Esay 27 4. or to heare the Lord say 2 Cor. 1.10 Anger is not in mee I am appeased thou beginst well Anger abides in God without this price and thou art but as the bushes and dry stubble before it Be assured then that no promise speakes to thy soule and to thy heart except it haue this strength of Christ in whom each one is yea Amen Looke vpon a promise if thou need it as it s furnished with this for hence comes all wrath to be turned to loue this will make God willing to offer faithful to performe els not That bottomlesse depth of mercy in thy Iudge enemy cannot be gaged without this bucket by this thou mayst reach it Againe as this is sufficient strength so it is that onely which can redeem thee Let that Mountebanke of Rome who would bring thee to the treasure of Saints merits be odious to thee Say thus Mica 6. What shall I giue the Lord for the sin of my soule My gold or pearles Oyle or wine or the first borne of my body No he hath shewed me the onely way to be his righteousnes He redeemed vs sayth Peter not with pearles but with the precious blood of his Lambe Wilt thou go to the holy ones in earth Alas they were as vile as thou but for this and they haue no more of it then will serue their turnes Wilt thou go to Heauen to Saints and Angels Alas Esay 63. Abraham knowes thee not What then Mat. 25.6 wilt thou go to thy duties performances grace Alas they haue no blood of expiation in them all these will say Satisfaction is not in vs. Where then Surely heere onely If so abandon all cling to this onely And that is the second branch Take hold of this sufficient onely sufficient strength as the Prophet bids thee Iob 9.15 1 Pet. 3.19 Carry it with thee to thy Iudge make supplication to him in this strength Peter calles it the answer of a conscience good in the resurrection of Christ What euer enemy pursue thee at the heeles this is thy refuge that heere thou mightst haue strong consolation in all feares against all enemies Fearest thou the sins of youth or age The Lord Iesus was conceaued in the wombe that the infant elect which neuer saw light might be saued by him youth notwithstanding her disobedience age for all her rebellion might be forgiuen Do thy morall sinnes of murther stealth vncleannes swearing distresse thee This Lord Iesus fulfilled all righteousnes for thee Do thy spirituall wickednesses oppresse thee and the penalties of them an vnbeleeuing secure hard heart by the contempt of the Gospell The Lord Iesus suffred the powring out of his blood to breake the heart of those that pierced him vpon the crosse Art thou poore Thy Satisfier was so Rich He was the Lord of all Are thy sinnes great He dyed for Noahs drunkennesse Lots incest Dauids adultery Small Lo euen thy least vaine word cost him his life-blood 2 Cor. 5. ●1 But perhaps not some sinnes but sinne it selfe and the body of death troubles thee He was made sinne that knew none Oh then whatsoeuer sinne can say yet go on to the throne of grace as Heb. 4.16 and looke to finde mercy in time of need Doth the Deuill the gates of Hell conscience or the iustice of GOD threaten thee They can not saue for sinne if they doe thy conscience hath her answere to God against all And so plead this thy pardon to the Lord. Say thus Oh Father euen thou cuttest off thy plea in giuing this price in accepting it in offring of it to mee I Lord am heere before thee pinched and damned by my sinne if thou do not reckon it vnto mee Oh Lord I put this blessed price betweene me and wrath LORD haue no power to deny it me Euen I if I were left with an orphans estate could not keepe it from him LORD I am fatherlesse my orphans stocke is in thy keeping thou tookest it to bestow it Lord let my soule haue strong consolation in her seeking refuge to thee because this price warrants mee If a debtor be in prison and be bid to come forth he will answer I am heere for debt I cannot but if vrged he will lay hold vpon this Strength Surely some Surety hath payd my debt and then his heart answers I will come out Oh! so let this strength be layd hold on by thee if thou looke for deliuerance In the end of this second part I shall adde somewhat touching faith Meane time let this be as the riuer leading to the Sea Q. But what is the word of Imputation so oft vsed by the Holy Ghost in the matter of Iustification A. I am glad you haue mentiond it in so good season I answer that as this whole righteousnes is the materiall so this act of God the Father is the forme and beeing of a sinners iustification And it s such an act of God as being satisfied takes this righteousnes and reckons it to the needing soule as her owne although not hers to put vpon her an estate of as full and perfect freedome acceptance as if she had neuer sinned or had fully satisfied For looke how he dealt with our Sur●ty made him sinne for vs th●t is imputed it which imputation
accompt the Lord Iesus found to be no trifle but reall so doth he take his righteousnes and compts it ours that it might really be ours Accomptants of summes of money if they differ and cannot set things straight fall to an esteeming of what is owing and so at length by not imputing a summe which yet may be due or by imputing a summe as payd which perhaps is doubtfull grow to a full end And that which moueth them heerto is Peace So heere the Lord inclining to make peace with the soule esteemes not a debt which yet is one and esteemes that payde which is not Peace makes him to impute that to vs which yet another payd and we could not S●e texts 2. Cor. 5.17 Psal 32.1 Rom. 5 c. And this imputation is a reall finall discharge neuer to be questioned no hole can be picked in it by any enemy Q. For shortnes sake proceed to the vse A. It is most weighty First to teach vs to renounce our Vse 1 selues for if we be iust by imputing of the Righteousnes of other what shall become of our owne As once a Philosopher handled a Gallant that boasted of his great Lands in Athens he shewed him a Map asked him where they lay so in this M●p of Gods iustification all our abilities must vanish we know full summe of debt payd needs no imputation t may plead acq●i●tance Come to the Lord for his roial worke his Fiat without any thing empty base that thou maist concurre with him in that he seeketh the Glory of his grace in his Son Come as Mephib●sheth a limping cripple to Dauid When I was a dead dog my Lord accepted me 2 Sam. 1● 2 Sam. 2● As poore Abigail sent for to be a Queene s●yd Let me be an handmayd to wash the feet of thy seruants Shee knew meere marriage to a King would make a Queene without bringing any thing And thus doing thy vnworthines shall not hurt thee but help on this robe vpon thy bare shoulders Come thus to the Lord say Here Lord is a naked wretch Put on the Lord Iesus vpō me I haue no clothing to hinder thee thou bidst me put him on Rom. 13. vlt. but Lord do thou fit him for me in particular for my soule for my sin against my curse● and ●hen take him Lord put him on me also reckon him to me accompt with me in him and make me his righteousnes as thou madest him my sinne and I shall compt it as reall as if I had it of my owne Vse 2 Secondly let it stablish and comfort euery beleeuer against all his feares Oh! it cannot sinke into a poore soule priuy to all her defilements that the Lord should euer pardon or accept her The daily and hourely obiects of her sinnes are before her But remember imputation is not a taking of all sin out of thee at once that must abase the heart as it abased thy Surety but a not imputing it vnto thee Latimer preaching to King Edward told him that once a King of England had a cupbearer who bringing him a cup of wine by error let it fall at his foot The King offended with his rashnes asked him if that were not ill done He suddenly answered No if it please your Grace if you thinke so Euen so in this our blessednes stands not in our want of sinne but in the Lord not imputing it The bush burnt but the wonder was that it was not consumed The Lord imputes not thy sinne couers it takes away the condemning power imputes not the actuall offences thereof to thee He lookes at his owne Image in thee in al thy duties prayers there is thy dunghill his pearle he beholds that which is his couers that which his thine not to make thee bold but thankful humble If thou haue a cup of precious wine thou sayst not to thy freind Pledge me in water though thou haue put more water then there is wine into it Thou esteemest it by the better part Hold this and thou mayst say with Paul Rom. 7. I my selfe delight in the Law of GOD and not I but sinne in mee though else he sayd Oh wretched man that I am who shall deliuer mee Thus much of this fifth branch or spring of saluation drinke of this brooke and thou shalt indeed Esay 12.3 draw water out of the wells of saluation I haue binne larger heere because it is the chiefe of the seuen more briefe of the rest Q What is the fifth branch of this Article and wherein stands it A. The Conquest of Christ For notwithstanding all this satisfaction of Christ thus performed yet if it had beene possible for any enemy to haue preuented him of the effect of it that he could not haue ouercome all enemies and death it selfe his whole worke had beene frustrate But this could not be for he rose againe from the dead and gaue a full being to the merit of his satisfaction Conceaue the point in three estates of Christ briefly First Before Secondly At. Thirdly After his death In the first respect though the Lord Iesus his flesh was not exempt from mortality and infirmity but subiect to all through our sinne yet euen vnder all these through his whole life hee conquered in suffring for hee endured no more then him pleased before the time of his death no enemy had power ouer him to surprize him by any casualty by any other death or at any other season then himselfe would In Luke 4. wee read that his owne citizens Led him vp to the brow of the Hill to haue brkeo his necke Oft were Officers sent to take him stones cast at him vpon the Sea hee was subiect to the violence of the waues none of these had power to fasten vpon him hee went thorow the midst of them and thorow a thousand deaths without casualty It was prophecied of him Esay 43. ● The fire should not burne him nor waters deuoure him till his houre was come to suffer that death and onely that which GOD had layd out for him And then nothing could hinder Secondly at death although as our Mediator he must needs drink that cup which his Father gaue him yet he was a conqueror euen then too and aboue any enemy Iudas Act. 2.24 the Priests and Pilate could doe no more then himselfe was willing to yeeld to his Father in No man takes away my life from me Ioh. 10.18 I lay it downe my selfe Hee yeelded to those that tooke him euen when hee had cast them to the ground as a Conqueror And therefore by the Vnion of his Godhead euen in that houre and power of darknesse when his life was taken from him and they looked to haue had all their will on him all the Infernall powers assaulting him at once by reason of the wi●hdrawing of his Diuine N●ture and the wrath of God yet euen then hee gaue them the greatest foile of all and in death ouercame him
as soone as he liveth for hee must be perfected in the wombe and brought forth and so is a childe of the world hee lived before the life of the wombe but now he lives another life in the light feedeth sleepeth cryeth suckes the breasts So is it here Faith giueth the generation and life to the soule at the first quickning but the birth is not obtained fully till it be brought forth as a new Creature by Renovation then it is declared to haue the true life of God when his image of holinesse declares it Q. Well the Similitude may serue let vs now come to the three heades and first what is the Author of this creation A. The holy Ghost As almost all the Scripture prooueth Two places may serue 1. Cor. 6.11 But ye are washed purged sanctified hy the spirit of our God So Titus 3.5.6 He saued vs by washing of Regeneration and the renuing of the holy Ghost Co● 2.12 And the reason is plaine For euen as it was in the vnion of Christ our head with our flesh the holy Ghost most miraculously did concurre with the matter of conception and did vnite it to God so that one person was made of two natures and by this meanes the Deity infused into the humanity the most excellent purenesse of God and the quallities of light and holinesse so this beeing for vs lo the same spirit takes the same matter of the Lord Iesus his nature and properties and vnites the one and infuses the other into the soules of his people by the worke of the Gospell Not that wee made Christ as some dreame but vnited wholly to his person and thence partake the influences of his graces wisedome and righteousnesse c both in the habite of renouation and in all the holy properties of humblenesse patience loue feare zeale c. As 2. Peter 1.3 most sweetly saith His diuine power ministring all things fit for life and godlinesse and making vs partakers of the diuine nature and gifts of the Spirit And looke how it was in the old Law that the next kinsman to the deceased was both to redeem his lost inheritance if embezeled and then to raise vp seed to him Ruth 4.5 as vnto the first borne euen so in the Gospel the Spirit of God doth not onely recouer vnto vs our lost title and inheritance of Gods fauour by forgiuenesse of our sinnes but also raise vp an holy seed vnto God by begetting in vs his Image againe so that not onely hee becomes our righteousnesse of iustificarion but sanctification also Moreover it 's cleere by this that the Spirit of God concurres with the offer of Christ vnto the soule according as it lyes and neuer seperates the things which God puts together Now as I noted in Part 2. Artic. 4. the Lord offers his Christ wholly and at once not onely adoption and reconcilation to bring vs into fauour but also sanctification to make vt the workemanship of God Yea and in truth the Spirit lookes at this chiefly For although in this life faith to iustifie a sinner is the maine gift because it giues vs the right of grace and heauen and holdes it for vs yet that which faith armes at is the renuing of the Image of God in vs. Onely bec●use we lost it by sin therefore faith in the first place brings and knits vs to God in pardon but the perfection of it is that our lost image in Adam might be restored Now therefore the Spirit doth come and vnite them both together in the soule at once because Christ is not nor cannot be deuided either wee haue him not all or else we enioy him wholly and at once as he is offered in the word Q. I would faine know what workes the Spirit doth for the soule in this new creation of nature and infusion of qualitiess A. He doth two things First perswadeth Secondly sealeth For the first he draweth the soule to be willing to take all Christ at he is offered and to reiect no part of him and succoureth the poore soule in her application of the offer and couenant of grace Hee presenteth to the soules view the meaning of God to keepe backe nothing of his Christ but hee will haue him wholly eaten as a passeouer no bone broken no part left Though perhaps the soule see not the extent of Christ at one view yet the Spirit attends the offer of God in the Word and ceazeth the soule with that gift which God giueth As if a man being to giue his seruant a bone doth not onely reach him a ring which the seruant thinkes enough but a ring with a rich pearle of price set in it The pearle is aboue the hope of the receiuer yet because it 's not aboue the Giuers loue both are taken at once So heere the Spirit shewes the soule what God beteemes wholy tels it there is nothing too much shee shall haue vse of all for one vse or other and therefore let none be refused And this i● doth by the tennor of Gods charter and couenant in the Word See that noted place Who is made of the Father all the 4 Wisedome Sanctification c. Marke the Lord offers not onely righteousnesse to accept but sanctification for image Take all therefore Secondly the Spirit sealeth these to the soule See Mat. 3.11 The Lord Iesus shall baptize with the holy Ghost and fire What is that the very diuine gifts of Christ which as fire do purge and clense our drosse Col. 2.12 and bring forth our mettall as pure and cleane So in Rom. 6.4.5 he tels vs we put on Christ in baptisme and that not onely to couer our nakednesse but to warme vs with holinesse We are not only partakers of the satisfaction of Christ to forgiue vs but of his death to mortifie vs and of his life to quicken vs in both to giue vs his image And by baptisme we are sayd to be ingrafted into the similitude of his death and resurrection This baptisme of the Spirit seales vp the substance of the couenant to al purposes as a seale to a writing confirmes the writing in all points Now marke the tenor of the couenant not onely to pardon our sinnes and to remember our sinnes no more but to wash vs with pure water to write his Law in our hearts and inward partes to cause vs to walke in his wayes and to put his feare into our soules that we neuer depart from him any more And from this spirit of Renuing proceedes the infusion of all diuine graces issuing from his holy nature as loue compassion meeknesse feare confidence doing and suffering for Christ and betokening our conformity Q. I rest in your answer touching the first of these three now proceed to the second what is the inward instrument on the soules part to apprehend this Creation A. Faith sauing and effectuall As appeares in those texts Act. 26.8 To giue them an inheritance among them that are sanctified
Paul ascribes mortification to the death viuification to the resurrection of Christ Not that they are to be sundred for both serue for each and each for both but as both cannot stand together but one in the destruction of the other so he would teach vs that the death and rising of Christ are no fables nor stories but things of exceeding merit Both for satisfaction and for efficacie or power When the Lord Iesus suffered his precious soule to part with his body hee gaue that death a power to diuide sin and the life thereof and when by his God-head hee resumed his body he gaue it also a power to put life of grace into the soule The death and life of Christ are a mystery of godlinesse as Paul in the 1. Tim. 3. end tels vs when Christ layd downe his life for the expiation of sinne withall hee entred into a most deadly fiend with sinne whch would haue robbed him of his life for euer and when hee tooke his life againe by his Godhead hee also conveyed an efficacy of a quickning spirit to raise vp all beleeuers to a renued life of holinesse and by his spirit bestowes both vpon them So that he who can bring sinne to the Crosse and graue of Christ by faith shall kill the life of it and he that can apply his soule to the Lord Iesus risen shall finde it no empty but an effectuall meane to quicken him to holinesse And these both all true beleeuers doe as they haue borne the image of the first so must they doe of the second Adam the first was a liuing soule but the second a quickning spirit Q. Now at length proceede to the vse and because the opening of the Art●cle is practicall of it selfe be the briefer A. First if all beleeuers bee new creatures such as neuer Vse 1 were seene to be so before new men what are they who are still old creatures and will take no other die Such as boast they are no changelings are the same men I say they are vnbeleeuers vpon whom as yet the wrath of God abides and besides such as shall be damned Dogs who shall bee without See 2. Cor. 4.4 Mark 16.16 Reu. 21.8 therefore small cause haue yee to boast If all that be happy by beleeuing must be holy by renuing how vnhappy ones are all vnholy ones Therefore let it be terror to al such as carry the old man written in their foreheads with great letters so that all that runne may reade it they proclaime the sinne of Sodom in open profannesse or in secret vnreformednesse they haue beene drunken breakers of Sabboths Athiests in their families and so they will be still Oh wofull wretch wilt thou bee as thou hast beene thou hast beene an old wretch an old fornicator wrathfull wretch subtill contentious worldly made the Gospella couer of thy rotten heart wilt thou bee so still Then I know thou art cursed for thou wert cursed and thou wilt be as thou hast beene Therefore heare what the truth saith if thou be no other then euer thou wert thou wert neuer good and if thou wilt be so still bee so thy penalty shall bee as thou chusest let him that is filthy be so still he that is profane let him be so still and he that will not come out of hell let him keepe there still No wrong is done to him that is willing to bee so But know this that if God haue concealed the vp to an hard heart it is one step further off from God then before it will be hard for an heart that cannot repent to be better then it wil be Ere God create the new man in thee thou shalt not onely not nill but both will and couet it and yet thou maiest will it to late when it shall be denyed Secondly All reuolters to the old man and returners to their owne vomit and myre when they seemed to haue the vncleane spirit cast out and to escape the pollution of the world through lust but still they carry about them the olde man still that lyes downe and rises vp and walkes with them although song hidden and at length as a crusted sore breakes out odiousely Oh bee scared by this If olde men neuer so much as in shew renewed are cursed what are they who hauing taken the liuery of the new man are now the second time waxen worse then euer and the old man hath watcht his time to recouer his possession and waxes seuen times stronger then before Oh the latter end of sueh is farre worse then the beginning Thirdly terror to all hypocrites who still maske ouer the old man with a new couer of Christ but put not off the olde The Apostle speakes of men 1. Cor. 15.19 whose hope in Christ is heere not hope onely here in their wealth and lusts but in Christ and he tels them of all other they are most miserable They are willing to haue Christ to saue them and to varnish ouer their rotten post to keepe them from the note of base and prophane ones but if they be pinched with this that beleeuers must bee new men the old cheating and cunning deceite wrath reuenge worldlinesse must also be cast off oh then then they winch as a galled iade and it seemes as an vncouth thought Lately I knew a man who vpon the change of his estate by marriage was so pensiue that no man could heale his melācholy so it is with these to heare of such a new creature and change as should turne all inside outward and ridde them of their old Adam all at once they are sullen and sicke vpon it it is as the going of a Cammell through the eye of a needle Iesus they know and the Doctrine of Iesus but not as the truth is in Iesus they will take no notice of such an instinct as to be new ones because beleeuing ones But oh yee wretches euen this truth of Iesus which your hollow hearts cannot brooke shall iudge ye and sentence ye such new Creatures such Iesus your Iesus is an Idoll because hee is no truth in Iesus no new creature in Iesus to put off the old man and put on the new Lastly all prophane ones who thinke themselues in very good case if they can carry their lusts and beloued corruptions closely and bleare the eye of the world thinking they haue forsaken them Sleidan reports of a Duke in Germany who liued in an vncleane eourse with one of his wi●es Gentle-women which the Dutchesse perceiuing and oppozing he deuises this shift to send her to a Castle and there to giue it out after a while that shee was sicke hiring some to visit her and at length that she was dead a painted Image is laid forth entombed carried to Church the bel rung funerall Sermon made dole giuen to the poore the Image buried but the harlot stil liuing and the lust of the Duke vnmortified brake out worse then euer This is the new creature of the prophane
daily to the shaming purging out and consuming of these lusts Gal. 5.24 Bring them as the heifer in sacrifice to the hornes of the altar and binde them thereto that they breake not loose And call vpon the Lord for his spirit that the arrowes of the Almighty may be in vs and the power of Christs death might be as venom to giue these lusts the deadly blow and bane and to drinke vp the sin of these affections in vs Let it seriously smite our hearts and let our affections take reuenge vpon vs forth Corruption of our affections Let vs not excuse our selues for our nature for that defends a lesser sinne by a greater for what can be more wofull then when sinne by custome hath hardned vs to a nature Remember wee how hideous effects these wild beastes haue wrought in our liues I say our wealth our inordinate loue our mirth our sorrow feare and indignation How might Dauid with sorrow haue recorded his distemper against innocent Mephibosheth 2 Sam. 19.29 Hezekiah his great ioy and iollity in the comming of those Embassadors Esay 39.2 and the truth is the greatest woe and repentance which euer betided vs in our life may well be fathered vpon our passions Some bringing themselues by them to needles suits of Law pursuits of enemies losse of their estates fines imprisonments a brand of reproach among men as not to be liued with and if not so yet a continuall bondage of spirit and vnfitnesse to any good either to calling prayer bearing of our crosses or family and marriage duties and all by our inordinate passions Fourthly let vs apply the merit and looke at the example of the Lord Iesus in all the whole conuersation of his affections how holy was his zeale against those defilers of the Temple Mat. 21.12 his loue to that young mans forwardnesse Mat. 23.13 hatred of those hipocrites the Scribes and Pharisees sorrow for our sinnes in the garden cheerefulnesse in conuerse withall sorts to winne theme weeping for Lazarus pity to the poore widdowes dead only sonne Luk. 7.13 Oh! the sauor of his example and merit of his affections who as hee abhorred all stupor of heart so neuer faulted in the euennes temper measure of them either in the defect or excesse should rauish vs and excite vs if true members to purchase the like we should euen conceiue holy heate of spirit before these rods Fifthly when we haue got these good affections learne wee to take a due marke of the right obiects of our affections and that will shame vs when by loosing or mistaking our right marke we doe fasten them basely and indirectly Our anger is to good to be set vpon carnall reuenge it will serue to be imployed about Gods dishonour Ephes 4.26 our loue is too good for base lusts mony and pleasures Psa 118.1 it is made for the Lord and for his Saints Psal 16.2 Our hope of a vaine Paradise heere is better set vpon heauen 1 Cor. 15.19 and so might I say of our sorrow that it best befits sinne our owne and the times If we would thus direct our affections they would start backe when other obiects lay clayme to them Lastly let our maine direction be to get our soules settled in peace in the sweete assurance of our Reconciliation with God and that we know the worst that can befall vs that no sinne sorrow or en●my can depriue vs of that crowne and this peace will calme vs and rule our spirits that neither feare nor hope shall much vnsettle vs but we shall possesse our soules in patience in the midst of all distempers As a wicked heart casts vp mire and dirt like the Sea so the affections of the godly are calme and quiet and the wheele of the Conuersation goes on in a most wel ordered manner And so much for these Q. What rules giue you for the third of actions A. Herein wee can giue no particuler rules because they are infinite but bring the generall rules to particular and incident occasions Therefore for the ordering of this conuersation let those foure vsuall golden rules direct vs that wee as neere as we can look to first our grounds secondly to the due manner Thirdly the true measure fourthly the right ends of our actions Touching which the lesse may serue because they trench vpon some former rules Q. Touching the first what is it to be grounded A. To be sure we haue a word to shew for our warrant either in doing or not doing or suspending for although the action may proue bad in the form which is good in the nature of it yet that which is bad in the ground and nature cannot be possibly well done For without knowledge the heart is naught Pro. 19.2 2 Pet. 1.19 Now the word will passe censure vpon it either directly or by consequent and therefore we must attend to this light especially in darke places And if wee cannot informe our selues alone through ignorance we must make it a booke case and aduise by all meanes with other for truth lyes deepe sometimes This is a maine ground and is exceedingly transgressed I wil not here insist vpon them as go against light because the godly abhorre it while they are themselues but euen of them many sorts faile 1. Some wil do many things vpon custome and taking your grounds for granted when yet they haue none These are to be informed that they may know themselues to do well as well as do that which is good without thank 2. Others do many things in the twi-light hit they misse they not vpon assured ground not considering that as well that which is done without faith is sin as that which is against it 3. Many take vp grounds onely in their generality and faile in the particular determining of the generall to their occasion and so sometime exceed sometime limit the word whereas they should go according to the word closely in the extent of it Thus many limit the 2. commandement to grosse idolatry of Pagans securely go on in your own idolatry wil-worship as the Papists Others take their own preiudice deuotion good meanings to be good grounds as blind people And lastly others corrupt the ground by false glosses these sundry waies 1. By adulterating the word both of rule and example in scripture and making it sound as they list This is to crooke the rule and then work by it thus those Pharisees 2. By corrupt error of mens traditions as in 1 Pet. 1.18 receaued from the father alledging Vox populi vox Dei but it is not a common cry can ground an action 2. By Satans cunning and dice-play as he dealt with Eue ye shall not dye Gen. 3.4 Thirdly the imposture of our owne hearts easily beleeuing it lawfull which we eagerly desire and so bribing the iudgement to giue in a false verduict to deceiue vs as the messenger that went for Micaia 1 King 22. and as a bribed iudge will
the way the seruants and Ordinances of Christ which being once giuen out proue irreuocable See Matth. cap. 28.12 The Priests gaue large mony to the Souldiers to giue it out that Christ was stollen away and this preuailed long after against the Resurrection So men speake of the godly Tush doe yee beleeue them I warrant yee they can breake their promises bee as hard and couetous as others This new learning neuer did good wee liued better ere it came there was better house-keeping love among neighbours your greatest Professors shutting their doores and liuing in some corner of London to spend all vpon new fashions or else to hoard vp for their Children And so they speake of the good Ministry they doe but driue men out of their wits they are factious and turbulent And in old times the world reported of the faithfull that they met in the night and after their deuotions put out their lights and fell to vncleannesse Q. What is Cosenage A. That Trade of which mainly that Text treats Eph. 4 18. whereby false Teachers schismatiks and Hereticks blanched their conceits wresting their wits to abuse the Scriptures to set false Colors vpon their opinions And so the subtill and cunning devices which drunkards and the like set vpon their sinne calling them good fellowship or the like So the che●ting chapman hath his glosing protestations colors and tricks that harlot Iezabel abused fasting to couer her murther the Strumpet in the Prouerbs saith shee hath payd her vowes when that woman came with her circumstances to Dauid he asked Is not the hand of Ioab here so may we say If the father of lyes and trickes were not in this world of cogging and cosenage how could it deceiue so as it doth Q. Proceed to the next branch of the liuing worlds defilements wherein doe they consist A. Partly in words partly in deedes The former are the open corrupt Counsels of sinners or their secret insinuations Of the former see Pro. 7.18 the harlot tempts her paramour Come let vs take our fill my husband is far off And the t●eefe Prou. 1.13 Cast thy lot in with vs we will haue one purse But more close ones are such whisperers as the Apostle calls priuie corrupters of mindes whose words fret like a cankar 2 Tim. 2.17 Thus some do whisper in secret against Magistracy and good Ministers and others against gouernment of parents entising their children seruants yea wiues from their loyalty So doe wicked preachers scatter their false tenents or principles of prophannesse to taint mens iudgments or manners Thus young nouices are beaten off from their zeale and hearing I would scorne saith one to be tyed to their girdles Q. What are the deeds of the liuing world Vse 1 A. All their wicked malitious cruell intents threats and pursuits of the godly to quash them and to vphold their own Kingdome As those Scribes and Pharisees had a Law to crucifie Christ though they made it for the nonce And Daniel 6. those enemies of his This trade were infinite to rip vp Popish machauillian plots and deuises to dismay to suppresse and destroy all puritie of Doctrine and power of religion Witnesse their inquisition prisons censures and torments both lying in waite for the precious soules and bodies of men and sacrificing them to their God Maazzim wherein they doe whatsoeuer the Deuill their father hath taught them with absurd unreasonable and implicable hearts to the Truth And thus I haue gone ouer this whole Doctrine of the Lets in the three parts thereof Q. What now is the use hereof A. Large and plentifull I will but touch the heads and Vse 1 first it should bee vse of Instruction to vs to be humbled Branch 2 to bee comforted and to long after a full redemption For the first It 's humiliation to the best of Gods children for their selfe-love and for this misery that lyes upon them For marke it what outcryes doe we make if any man wrong vs in our bodies goods or names liues or liberties and indeed it is true we have bitter enemies but oh poore soules who is such an enemy such a Traytor such a deuill to vs as our selues At home begins our sorrow and our woe in our bosomes are those euils of pride prophannesse hypocrisie and selfe-loue which bane vs and what they cannot doe of themselues they doe by others setting dore open and letting in Divell and world to rifle and rob vs of all without which no enemy could hurt vs. Learne wee truly and cordially to cry out upon our selues So also for all this misery which in this vale thereof lyes vpon vs. Paul Rom. 7. O miserable man Why this body of death and world of sinne creates a world of sorrow in us of annoiances feares doubts strength of lusts little groth errors of wicked deadly feud of Satan melancholly crosses bad times poverty bootlesse wrongs hardnesse of heart harshnesse to the yoke of Christ an vnbroken carnall pusillanimous froward impure heart Are not these sorrow our belly full to vs at the best If God alayed them not with inward supports who should endure them Oh! so it must bee yet let vs mourne vnder our bondage Such as are led into captiuity are no merry folke witnesse they who hung their harpes on the Willowes and were so full of anguish that they could not sing How shouldst thou Psal 137.2 poore soule in a strange land Secondly let yet this comfort them for the present that it is Branch 2 no otherwise with them in this their sorrow than that wise God their good Father hath allotted them so that if they feele their burden they may cheere themselues with this They are as God will haue them it 's their Pilgrimage their Baca their warfare the Lord will worke them triumph out of these battels and combats hee will purge them and conforme them to his deare sonne by them and euen the sin and penalties they here endure yet are conforming and moulding things to make their victories sweeter It is not well with them they may say but it shall be they see it a farre off if this were a life of perfection if any of the faithfull were exempt from the like 1 Ioh. 1.8 Pro 24.16 Esay 64.6 2 Cor. 12.9 then this were cause of all and only mourning But here the best of our perfection is the sight of our imperfection we are as well on it as our head while he was here in this strange land he could neither be rid of our sinnes nor of infirmities or enemies but afterward hee knew no more Very gladly therefore will I be glad euen of my desertions and tentations to me its a sure signe of consolation to them of confusion and that of God I only wait my time to be perfectly redeemed Branch 3 Thirdly wait for that with longing as Paul did Rom. 7. Who shall deliuer me Be not so well apaid in this smalnesse of thy grace measure because it must
thoughts and intents of the heart the Power of GOD is with his Law to search for the King all vaults and dungeons and nothing is hidden to the eye no more then the earth to the Sun Sinnes of great consequent euils or lesse small sinnes in mens esteeme and great still and crying hidden from man and open to his view granted or defended carrying color or condemned by the world Old ones or new in a word The Law inquires vpon sinne according to the Anomaly of it not onely the circumstances And this was our Sauiours chiefescope in that holy Sermon Math. 5.6 7. Chapters correcting those base limitations of the Law which the Pharises made tying men onely to a grosse literall sence Thirdly in her aggrauating power whereby she enlarges sinne by her Circumstances causing it thereby to seeme the more odious and setting the worse colours vpon it as because such a person committed it a publique man against such light when he needed not from meere malignity of spirit in the midst of blessings against mercy Gospell vowes couenant c. which I do not speake as if all sinnes were alike but because all are sins and culpable Fourthly in her Purity The Law doth not go to tell the soule of each sin but sets the Mirror of Gods purenesse before her that she may according thereto discerne and iudge of sin good and bad ●rue and euill Truth wee say is a Rule of her selfe and her contraries There is a secret purenes in the Law whereby the soule discernes an euill in things which the world sees none in and againe sees none in some wherein an hypocrite sees much For the former A soule that hath cleer and thorow light in himselfe is a Law to himselfe in some things of specialty and accuses it selfe for the departing from the pure manner ends ground and measure which GOD requires as sometime in the keeping of Sabbath in vse of liberties in speech or silence in doing or abstayning hath a Law within him not so much what this morall precept bids or forbids as what the purenesse of it imports So that looke what sorts most with will flesh case or the inclination of nature she suspects yea euen in doubtfull cases yet withdrawes for safety rather then ventures vpon termes of her owne abhorres appearances as well as substance of euill And as in matters of God so in matters of men this Purenesse Rules the case when perhaps no Law is at hand as Phil. 4. Finally brethren whatsoeuer is Holy whatsoeuer pure honest of good report c. An heart enlightned can better iudge by this Rule then any thing sooner espies what is honest sauoury then any other can d● yea and by this casts off al those base additions o● man which want a word and therefore although they carry a shew of holines yet are base copper coine both makers and creatures as Col. 2.23 beeing far from pleasing GOD for lacke of a word to carry his purenes into them This I thought good to speake of the l●ght of the Law to giue a taste of the rest for a wise Reader will guesse at the Lyon by the paw Onely one thing I would adde that ● of these latter things I would craue the Reader to make vse of in the fourth Article of the third part so far as it may serue for vse of Christian direction and so I shall there spare this labor Q But is all this light requisite for a soule which seekes conuiction or may lesse serue A. I answere I do name these as helpes to serue the worke of the Law in conuncing not to forestall the worke of the Spirit The more sound light the soule hath the better howbeit God is free to worke in what way and measure hee please It s one thing to say what light the Law can afford to some and doth toward conuiction another with what degree it may please the Lord to bee content to worke Hee can vse these helpes or perhaps the sight of originall sinne to abase a wretched heart with greater light or lesse may serue him as hee pleaseth But the truer the light the sounder the Conuiction The Lord doth in this case as the state of the soule best admits sometimes keeps away exceeding light in all these lest the sule should lye opprest vnder her burden culling out some sinne with due circumstances of vilenesse and shame to bring the soule vpon her knees in a most kindly manner Hee nis or bound heerein Q. How doth the Law present the Penalties with light to the soule A. To adde so much here as may make vp that of the third Article this I say That the Lord shewes the like power authority and efficacy of light in these as the other He takes away all distinctiō of veniall mortall from a man presents himselfe to him in his full iustice of reuenging al sin without exception remoues all cauills and subtill extenuations of punishment aswell as of sin makes all sin appeare mortall to the soule without Christ veniall with him Tells the soule Deferring of punishment is no remoouall of it That some sins go before some follow after but all meet earlyer or later in iudgement Eccles 12.1 2. 1. Tim. 5.24 That all sinnes deserue all punishments That the least cost the Lord Iesus his blood and he that beleeues it not shall pay for it in hell That God doth indifferently hate and punish all Tribulation and anguish is to ech soule that sinneth Cursed is euery one There is no lying hid from Gods eye no shift or euasion besides fayth and Repentance No amity or Combination of sinners no ioyning hand in hand no counsel can preuaile against God who hath all penalties and executions in his hand to worke by That the Court of God is not as the Popes no Relaxations Commutations of penance Dispensations to bee had there That the hauing our hell heere is no Release or Heauen for heereafter but if wee haue not had heere wee shall there haue all if we haue had heere we shall there haue the full summe of punishment without Christ And by this the Lord prepares the sinner for conuiction following in a far deeper measure as in the point of terror shall appeare Q. How doth the Lord reueale originall sinne to the soule A. To adde a little of this also to the third Article the Lord doth this many wayes First by the speciall termes of his Word Secondly by comparison of actuall sins Thirdly by the properties of this originall Touching the 1. the Lord is in no one thing so emphatical as in the names hee giues to this poyson He calls it The Old man Rom. 7.1 2 Rom. 7.7 Rom. 7.23 24 25. Gal. 5.17 Rom. 8. ● The flesh Lust Concupiscence The law of the members The Law of sin reigning in the members The Old husband who hath the wife in subiection The body of death and the like Which affectionate termes sought for the nonce