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A47625 A systeme or body of divinity consisting of ten books : wherein the fundamentals and main grounds of religion are opened, the contrary errours refuted, most of the controversies between us, the papists, Arminians, and Socinians discussed and handled, several Scriptures explained and vindicated from corrupt glosses : a work seasonable for these times, wherein so many articles of our faith are questioned, and so many gross errours daily published / by Edward Leigh. Leigh, Edward, 1602-1671. 1654 (1654) Wing L1008; ESTC R25452 1,648,569 942

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of their salvation with him so they minister half a Sacrament of salvation Cartw. against the Rhem. on Iohn 6. Our practice and profession is the receiving the Communion in both kindes for which I joyn issue with all Papists living that it is the prime original institution of our Saviour which giveth birth and being to a Sacrament that it is sacriledge to alter it therefrom that it was never otherwise used in the Church of God for above two thousand years after Christ. Let all the Papists living prove the contrary and I will subscribe to all Popery B. Mountag Answer to the Gagger of Protest Sect. 36. This was the custom in all the Fathers times as I could deduce almost out of every one This is every where the custom in all the world unto this day but in the Romane exorbitant Church as Cassander saith and was not quite abolished in that Church till about thirteen hundred years after Christ and by much art colluding and fine forgery was retained from being cast out of that Church in the late Conventicle of Trent only kept in for a faction but mightily opposed by learned honest and conscionable Catholicks Id. ibid. First If none may drink of the consecrate wine but the Priests then none should eat of the bread but Priests for to whom Christ said Take and eat to those he gave the Cup and said Drink ye The signs being both equal all Communicants must drink of the one as well as eat of the other there being the same warrant for the one that there is for the other Secondly The Cup is a part of Christs Will and Testament Galat. 3. 15. Hebr. 9. 16 17. the dead mans Will may not be changed The Lords Supper is a Sacrament proper to the New Testament Luke 22. 20. Thirdly The bloud of Christ shed upon the Crosse belongeth not onely to the Pastors and Teachers but to all the faithfull that come to the Table of the Lord Matth. 26. 28. Luke 22. 20. why then should the Cup of the Lord be barred from them Fourthly All the faithful that come to the Lords Table must shew forth his death untill be come and this is done by them as well by drinking of the Cup as by eating of the bread therefore all the Communicants must receive the Sacrament under both kinds To which these reasons may be added 1. From the institution for Christ commanded them to drink the wine as well as to eat the bread therefore this is a violation of Gods command 2. The Apostle bids every one to try themselves and so to eat of that bread and drink of that wine so they did not only eat and drink then but they were commanded so to do 3. To celebrate the Sacrament otherwise is to make void Christs two main ends in appointing the Sacrament 1. To represent his death and bloud shed out of the veins 2. To shew that Christ is full nourishment to the soul as bread and drink to the body The bread and wine being the matter of the Sacrament may not be changed in the Lords Supper Reasons 1. The institution of the Supper and the example of Christ himself whom the Church is to imitate and follow 1 Cor. 11. 25. 2. No other signs are so significant and effectual as these are for this purpose to strengthen and comfort them that are in trouble and almost in the present estate of death Psal. 104. 14 15. Prov. 31. 6. 3. The matter and form of every thing do constitute its essence So it is in the Sacraments where the signes are the matter and the words of institution the form 4. If the bread and wine might be changed in the Supper and yet the Sacrament in substance remain then in like manner water in Baptism might be changed and yet be true Baptism but the Minister cannot baptize with any other liquour or element then with water as the matter of that Sacrament 5. If we grant a change in the signs at the pleasure of men why may we not also change other parts of the Sacrament why may we not in stead of the Minister appointed o● God and called by the Church admit private persons and receive other alterations inforced upon the Church by the Papists Bucan institut loc 48. Beza Epist. 2. think that where there is no store of bread and plenty of wine sufficient for this purpose some other thing may be taken in stead of them Thus it may come to passe saith Attersol that we shall have nothing which Christ commanded and sanctified by his example and yet boast that we have his Supper and do that which he appointed For whereas we make four outward parts of this Sacrament the Minister the Word the Signs and the Receiver There are which hold there is no necessity of the Minister Others that there is no necessity of the words of Institution Others that there is no necessity of the Signs Others that there is no necessity of the Receiver So if we once admit any alteration in any of the parts we open a gap to all innovation and being in great uncertainty in the Sacraments Whether the breaking of the bread be an indifferent Ceremony Some make the breaking of the bread to be simply necessary and an essential part of the Supper so that without it there can be no Sacrament 1. Because the Sacrament is called the breaking of bread and this breaking of bread is said to be the Communion of the body of Christ ● Cor 10. 16. 2. Others make this breaking to be meerly indifferent and not necessary accidental and not of the substance 3. Others hold a middle way between both extreams that it is necessary yet not as an essential but an integral part The Ceremony of breaking bread was continually observed by Christs first institution by the practice of the Apostles by the ancient and universal custom of the whole Church of Christ as well Greek as Latine This act of breaking of bread is such a principal act that the whole celebration of this Sacrament hath had from thence this appellation given to it by the Apostles to be called breaking of bread it is also a Symbolicall Ceremony betokening the crucifying of Christs body upon the Crosse 1 Corinth 11. 24. But the Papists yet doe not break it but g●ve it whole and this they pretend to doe for reverence sake least some crums of bread should fall to the ground Three Evangelists mention the breaking of the bread It is not material whether the bread be broken or cut but it is more probable that Christ broke it from the custom of the Jews saith Vossius but Balduinus the Lutheran saith they receive a perfect Sacrament who intermit this fraction in the use of the Supper because Christ broke the bread that he might distribute it therefore say Gerhard and he Perinde est sive in ipsa actione coenae sive antea ●rangatur Balduin quotes Beza
Body a pledge whereby whole Christ with all his merits and all that he is is made over to a believer 4. A means of exhibiting Christ to the soul. The Sacraments are Instrumenta quadantenus moralia they are accompanied with the power and vertue of the holy Ghost We must therefore receive the Sacrament To confirm our faith Communion with Christ and all saving graces in us to keep in remembrance the Lords death untill he come again and to testifie our love one towards another 1. Our Faith God is able and willing to save us 1. Able to save to the utmost look upon him 1. In his Natures God-man Man that he might suffer God that he might satisfie 2. In his Offices he is a Prophet Priest and King Mat. 8. 2. 2. Willing he died to save humble and penitent sinners Rom. 8. 34. Rom. 4. ult if he spared not his life for us he will spare nothing else There is merit and grace enough in him what ever my sins are or have been for pardon of them and salvation 2. Communion with Christ and all saving graces in us Gods end in instituting of Ordinances is that we might meet him there and have Communion with him Exod 20. 24. it should be our end in frequenting Ordinances Gods eye is specially on our end in all religious duties Matth. 11. 7 8. Hos. 7. 14. Zech. 7. 5. 1. He pondereth the heart 2. He judgeth of our actions by the end 3. The answer will be sutable to our end The Sacrament is the nearest and visiblest Communion with Christ on earth We come to God by Christ in prayer as our Intercessour in the Word as our Teacher in the Supper as the Master of the Feast Rom. 6. 11. 3. To keep in remembrance the Lords death until he come again 1 Cor. 11. 26. that is 1. The Doctrine of it the bread represents his body the wine his bloud we shew our belief of this Doctrine 2. The Necessity of his death we hereby testifie to God our consciences fellow-Christians the world our need of Christ as bread is necessary for our bodies 3. The Sufficiency of Christs death no two creatures are more universally sufficient for all sorts of men then bread and wine therefore God made choice of them for this purpose 4. The Application of Christs death it is the receiving of bread and wine into our stomacks that nourisheth us when the conscience beginneth to be oppressed with the hainousnesse of sinne and the fear of Gods vengeance we should consider Christ bare the curse for our sins upon his body that we might be delivered from them and made perfect satisfaction to his Fathers justice that we might be received into favour Rom. 8. 34 35. 4. To testifie our love one toward another that I shall speak of afterward Of du● Preparation for the Sacrament We must labour to perform all holy duties in a right manner God requires preparation to every service to the Sabbath Sacrament Some say the scope of the first Commandment is that Iehovah alone must be our God whom we must worship of the second that he must be worshipt alone with his own worship of the third that he must be worshipt after his own manner God is more delighted with Adverbs then Nouns None might approach to the holy things of God having his uncleannesse upon him Nadab and Abihu through carelesnesse or hast brought common kitchin fire whereas it should have been heavenly fire therefore God punisht them God makes admirable promises to prayer yet if we perform it not in that manner which God requires he abhors it Psal. 109. 8. The word is the power of God to convert and strengthen us 2 Cor. 2. 16. The Sacrament is a seal of the Covenant yet if it be received unworthily it is a seal to a blank Iudas took the Passeover at least and the devil entred into him See 1 Cor. 11. 18 20. so the great duty of fasting if not rightly performed is unacceptable Isa. 14. 12. See 2 Chro. 25. 2. and prayer Prov. 15. 8. Reasons 1. Because the Lord requires and orders the manner as well as the matter our obedience must have Gospel-perfection sincerity and integrity In the Passeover the Lamb must be perfect of the first year the man and the Lamb prepared and it offered in the appointed time See Exod. 12. 9. 2 Chron. 30. 18 19. There were four dayes preparation for the Passeover the Lords Supper both succeeds and exceeds it The Ark was to be carried on the Priests shoulders 1 Chron. 15. 13. God made a breach on them because they sought him not after the due order 2. The manner of performing the duty is the most spiritual part of it Non tantum considerandum est id quod agimus sed etiam quibus circumstantiis This shews the true cause why our attending upon God proves so unprofitable and uncomfortable to us because we rest in the work done Secondly We should labour to perform the Ordinances aright and that we may do so 1. The person must be accepted God had regard to Abel and his offering Cains Sacrifice for the matter was as good as Abels the person is onely accepted in Christ This is my beloved Son in whom I am well-pleased in him with us 2. Ever bring God the best thou hast in thy approaches to God bring the best devotion affection Cursed is the deceiver that hath a whole one and brings a blemished one Mal. be troubled thou canst bring no better 3. Come in faith rest upon the promise of Christ that thy services shall be accepted mingle faith with hearing prayer 4. Bring an humble Spirit Let thy soul be rightly possest with the majesty and holinesse of that God to whom the duty is tendred Revel 4. 3. The Lord is to be lookt on as a King in his Glory in his Throne we have a principle of envy in us whom we envy we undervalue 5. Bring a right estimation of the excellency and ends of the Ordinance Isa. 2. 3. Hear and thy soul shall live Take heed how you hear with what measure you mete it shall be measured to you again according to your diligence in the duty will God measure out his blessing 6. There must be a serious meditation before-hand of the spiritual manner of performing the duty Heb. 12. 28. Do not utter indigested prayers a Minister should speak as the Oracles of God 7. One should labour to stir up the graces sutable to the duty and keep down the sins opposite thereto 1 Pet. 2. 1 2. Iam. 1. 18 19. It is the duty of Christians in a special manner to examine themselves that they may come prepared to the Lords Supper 1 Cor. 11. 20. to the end the Apostle proves the necessity of preparation both from the nature of the Ordinance or the institution of it the benefit that we reap by coming prepared and the mischief that befals those that come
and blaspheming of it Mr. Bedford Of the sin unto death out of 1 Iohn 5. 16. Mr. Deering on Heb. 6. 4 5 6. saith It is a general Apostacy from God with wilfull malice and an unrepentant heart to persecute his truth to the end Mr. White in his Treatise of this sin thus describes it It is a wilfull malicious opposing persecuting and blaspheming the truths of God against knowledge and conscience without ever repenting and grieving for so doing but rather fretting and vexing that one can do no more It is a totall falling away from the Gospel of Christ Jesus formerly acknowledged and professed into a verball calumniating and a reall persecuting of that Gospel with a deliberate purpose to continue so to the end and actually to do so to persevere till then and so to passe away in that disposition It is a spitefull rejecting of the Gospel after that the Spirit hath supernaturally perswaded a mans heart of the truth and benefit thereof It is a sin committed against clear convincing tasting knowledge with despight and revenge Heb. 10. 29. 1. It must be a clear knowledge an ignorant man cannot commit it 2. Such a knowledge as le ts in a tast of the goodnesse as well as discovers the truth of the Gospel Heb. 6. 3. yet goes against this knowledge with despight opposeth the motions of Gods Spirit with rage this puts a man into the devils condition Compare Heb. 6. 4 5. with 10. 26 27. It is a voluntary way of sinning after one hath received not only the knowledge but the acknowledgement of the truth so much knowledge as subdues the understanding The will is chiefly in this sin he sins wilfully he trampleth under his foot the blood of the Son of God sins maliciously and with revenge The Jews put Christ to death with the greatest malice The conditions of that sin are 1. Hatred of the truth 2. A settled malice 3. An obstinate will 4. An accusing conscience Therefore this sin is distinguished from other sins by three degrees 1. That they all fall toti 2. à toto 3. In totum 1. Toti Because they fall from God and his gifts not out of infirmity or ignorance but out of knowledge will and certain purpose 2. A toto Because they cast away and oppose the whole doctrine his authority being contemned 3. In totum Because they are so obfirmed in their defection that they voluntarily oppose and seek to reproach the Majesty of God But the specificall difference of this sin is that they reproach those things which the holy Ghost hath revealed to them for true and of whose truth they are convinced in their minde This sin necessarily supposeth the knowledge of the Mediator wheresoever there is any mention of it in the new Testament there comes with it some intimation of the works of the Mediator In Matth. 12. they opposed Christ in his miracles in Heb. 6. Paul instanceth in their crucifying again of Christ Heb. 10. speaks of their trampling under foot the Son of God The devils sinned against light and with revenge but not against the light of the second Covenant this sin is purely against the Gospel Heb. 4. 10. 27 28 29. Objectum hujus peccati non est lex sed Evangelium Matth. 12. 32. He that commits this sin shall neither be pardoned in this world in foro conscientiae nor in the world to come in foro judicii neither in this world per solutionem ministerii by the Ministry of the word nor in the world to come per approbationem Christi When once the means of recovery by the Gospel are neglected contemned and despised then there is no place for remission see Heb. 1● 26. The sacrifices in the old Law were effectual in their time to the expiation of sin if joyned with faith The sacrifice of Christs death was alwaies effectuall but if this also be despised this being the last there is no more sacrifice for sin and yet without sacrifice no remission It is called the sin unto death not because it may kill for no sin but may kill if it be not repented of but because it must kill Divines observe two sorts subject to this sin Some have both known the truth and also professed it as Saul Iudas Alexander the Copper-smith all these made profession of the Gospel before they fell away Others have certain knowledge of the truth but yet have not given their names to professe it but do hate persecute and blaspheme it such were the Pharisees Matth. 13. All they who fall into this sin first do attain unto a certain and assured knowledge of the truth though all do not professe it Absolutely to determine of such a one is very difficult neither is there any sufficient mark but the event viz. finall impenitency But the grounds of suspition are such as these 1. Prophannenesse 2. Doubting of every saving truth and impugning it 3. Envying anothers grace and happinesse 4. Blasphemy 5. Want of good affections Many Christians are ready to suspect that they have sinned against the holy Ghost Some Divines give this as a rule If the Lord give you a heart to fear that you have sin'd against the holy Ghost then you have not Boasting A man boasts when he is full of that which he thinks excellent and to adde worth and excellency to him Psal. 34. 2. 44. 8. 64. 10. It is one of the sins of the tongue 1 Sam. 2. 3. a high degree of pride see Ezek. 28. 3 4. Rom. 2. 17. there is vera and vana gloriatio the highest act of faith is to glory in God we make our boast of God all the day long Psal. 44. but to boast of God when one hath no interest in him is vain Bribery A bribe is a gift given from him which hath or should have a cause in the Court of justice to them which have to intermeddle in the administration of justice Bribery or taking gifts is a sin Exod. 23. 8. the same is repeated Deut. 16. 19. Isa. 1. 23. Prov. 17. 23. Psal. 26. 10. Hos. 4. 18. Amos 2. 12. Micah 3. 11. Reasons 1. From the causes of it 1. Covetousnesse Samuels sons inclined after lucre and took gifts 2. Hollownesse and guile 3. A want of love of justice 4. A want of hatred of sin 2. The effects 1. In the parties self that offends 2. In others 1. In himself The bribe blindes the eyes of the wise 1 Sam. 12. 3. Exod. 23. 8. it makes him unable to see and finde out the truth in a Cause 2. It perverts the words of the righteous that is it makes them which otherwise would deal righteously and perhaps have had an intention of dealing righteously yet to speak otherwise then becomes it exposeth the offender to condigne punishment Solomon saith A gift prospers whither ever it goeth and it makes room for a man meaning that otherwise deserve h no
after the Law of a carnal Commandment but according to the power of an indissoluble life This Priesthood receiveth not any alteration in regard of the person sustaining it not in regard of it self for as there is one Priesthood so one Priest The Levitical Priests died and the son succeeded the Father so that though the Priesthood continued and was of long continuance yet the Priest did not continue but our Priest continues one as well as the Priesthood so it is an unchangeable Priesthood and therefore compared also to Melchisedech of whom we hear once for all and no more a shadow of the unchangeablenesse of the Priesthood of Christ who therefore is called of that order for Melchisedechs Priesthood was never derived but Christ was likened to it and he resembled Christ in it You have the Properties of the Priesthood consider its parts The Acts to be done by the Priest are parts of the Priesthood The parts of the Priesthood of Christ are two 1. To expiate or make propitiation for sin or to perform the work of our Redemption and to apply it for thus he doth expiate He performeth it by two things the offering of his own self once for all to his Father as in all the sufferings of his life so in the last and worst of all in the Garden and on the tree whereon he bare our sins and was made a curse for us according as it is written His Person was the Priest God and man The Sacrifice was the humanity the Lamb of God that sin-offering trespasse-offering burnt-offering of a sweet savour acceptable unto God and the Altar which consecrated the Sacrifice was the Godhead by vertue of which merit was added to the sufferings of the humanity so he purged our sins by himself and made his soul that is himself a Sacrifice for sin And besides this Offering of himself he first took upon him the form of a servant that is was made obedient to his Fathers will to keep the Law in all things as one of us should have done and that in our stead He was made under the Law for us and hath brought in eternal righteousnesse For we must not alone satisfie God for our unrighteousnesse but also perform perfect righteousnesse else we could not be admitted into his favour wherefore the Sacrifice of the Law was first washed and then the parts laid on the Altar in the burnt offering And though Christ considered as a creature his humanity must needs be subject to his Father yet in such sort and manner by being made under the Law given to Adam as the Prince must be subject to his Father but not in the quality of Groom or Squire that were an abasement to him and more then could be required of him but for some offence Now this work of Christ whereby he offered himself to his Father 1. Is perfect and exact obedience to the Law as if he had been a son of Adam alone not God and man 2. In suffering of his wrath and curse and just punishment as if he had not fully kept nay as if he had fully broken the Law I say this offering did satisfie his Justice and make as it were perfect recompence and amends for the sins of mankinde God was as much honoured and his Law as much magnified in that it was so performed and he so obeyed by this one Person so great and worthy as if all men had perfectly obeyed that Law in their kinde and the Justice of God in hating sin and perfection of his authority in binding to punishment those that would not obey was as abundantly demonstrated in that so admirable a Person suffered for it as if all mankinde had suffered to all eternity Socinus saith The dignity of the Person makes nothing to the value of the suffering Grotius replies Poenam hanc inde fuisse aestimandam quod is qui poenam ferebat erat Deus etsi eam non ferebat qua Deus citat Act. 20. 28. 1 Cor. 2. 8. The dignity of the whole Person saith he contributes much to this estimation therefore it is emphatically called in Scripture The bloud of the Lord 1 Cor. 11. 27. The bloud of Christ Heb. 9. 14. The bloud of Iesus Christ the Sonne of God 1 John 1. 7. Grot. de Satisf Christi c. 8. Now after the making of this satisfaction follows the application of it For the sin-offering was not alone killed but also the bloud of it sprinkled upon the offerer and no man was esteemed purged from his sinne till the bloud of the Sacrifice was sprinkled upon him Therefore David saith Wash me with hysop and I shall be cleaner then snow and we are said to be chosen to life through the sprinkling of the bloud of Christ that is to say the giving of the vertue and merit of Christs death unto us signified by that sprinkling Now this application of the sufferings and obedience of our Saviour to us is done in time and severally and particularly to and for each when he pleaseth to bestow himself upon him and it is inseparably and immediately joyned in time and nature with justifying faith which at what time he workethin us at that time he maketh all he hath ours and in present possession giveth us his flesh and bloud that is to say the merit of his Passion and the work of our Redemption which in that flesh and bloud he accomplished This is the first part of his Priesthood Redemption the second is Intercession whereby he pleadeth our cause in the presence of his Father partly having done it already in the day of his flesh he offered up prayers for us and partly for ever when sitting at Gods right hand he intercedeth for us that is presents himself with the merit of his life and obedience as ours done in our behalfe and imputed unto us to take away the stain of our sins and to cause the Lord to accept us and our prayers and services and passe by all our sinnes and offences Christ appeareth in Heaven for his people 1. As an agent a Lieger Embassadour so Paraeus interprets Heb. 9. 24. Christs agency in Heaven is a continual Intercession which should it cease but for a moment what should become of his people here upon Earth Should Christ cease to appear in Heaven for us as he must do if he should come and abide here upon earth a thousand years together for he cannot in his Humane Nature appear both in Heaven and Earth at the same time all that time Heaven must be without an Agent an Intercessour 2. As an Advocate 1 Ioh. 2. 1. appears for us 3. As an Attourney Revel 3. 4. As a Solicitour M. Brinsleys Christs Mediatorship Christs Intercession consists in these particulars 1. Christ represents our Persons to God the Father before the throne of grace Heb. 9. 24. He appears as an Attorney for his Client Exod. 28. 12 29. He tenders all his sufferings to God in our
to God 1. That God might manifest 1. His hatred of the corruptions of his elect 2. The truth of his threatnings In the day that thou eatest thou shalt die the death 3. The exactnesse of his Justice both in punishing those that are out of Christ when Christ himself suffered so much from his Father and in pardoning his people Rom. 3. 25 26. give Christ unto us but of Justice to pardon those that were in Christ. 4. His mercy mixt with justice to all men that are saved now justice is satisfied and mercy magnified that which is done by our Surety is counted as done by our own persons Secondly In reference to Christ 1. To declare the transcendency of his love rather then we should be forsaken for ever he would undergo for a while the losse of his Fathers love Mat. 27. 46. in his apprehension 2. To shew the reality of his Incarnation he had not only the excellency of our nature but all the common infirmities 3. To shew his great condescention he denied himself in all his glory for a time 4. To declare the compleatnesse of his satisfection he had all manner of calamities in sense and the losse of his Fathers love the Divine Vision was suspended 5. That he might by all this declare himself to be a perfect Mediator Thirdly In reference to Satan That he might answer all his objections he desired nothing more then the death of Christ he had his desire and his Kingdom was overthrown by it Fourthly In reference to his Children That they might have encouragement to come to God by him that they might have strong consolation our remission is more honourable to be forgiven on satisfaction sets the person offended in the same state of Innocency that before our happinesse is more sure being by the bloud of the Son of God Christs death is not only to merit but also to satisfie for there is a difference between merit and satisfaction merit properly respects the good to be obtained satisfaction the evil that is to be removed As a man merits a reward which is good but satisfieth for that fault which is committed 2. Merit properly respects the good of him that meriteth or him for whom he meriteth satisfaction respects the good of him for whom the satisfaction is made Three things make up satisfaction 1. Ordination of the Judge 2. Submission of the Surety 3. Acceptation of the sinner Satisfaction is nothing but that quo alicui plenè satissit This the Scripture expresseth by Redemption Expiation Reconciliation Satisfactionis vocabulum in hoc negotio Scriptura non usurpavit rem tamen ipsam docuit manifestissimé Rivet Disp. 13. de Satisf Christi The word satisfaction is not found in the Latine or English Bibles applied to the death of Christ In the New Testament it is not at all in the Old but twice Numb 35. 31 32. But the thing it it self intended by that word is every where ascribed to the death of our Saviour there being also other words in the original Languages equivalent to that whereby we expresse the thing in hand It is a term borrowed from the Law applied properly to things thence translated unto persons and it is a full compensation of the Creditor from the Debtor Hence from things real it was and is translated to things personal Isa. 53. 12. The word Nasa argueth a taking of the punishment of sin from us and translating it to himself and so signifieth satisfaction so doth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 used by Peter 1 Pet. 2. 24. in the room thereof Mr. Owen of Redemption l. 3. c. 7. Of Christs Priesthood you have heard now you shall hear of his Prophecy a work annexed to Priesthood for the same persons were to teach the people that were to offer up Sacrifice for them although some did teach that might not offer up Sacrifices These Titles are given to Christ in respect of this Office He is called Dan. 8. 13. Palmoni The revealer of secrets The Doctor Matth. 23. 28. Law-giver Jam. 4. 12. Counsellor Isa. 9. 6. Revel 3. 18. Chief Prophet of his Church Act. 3. 22. 3. 37. that Prophet by an excellency Mark 2. 6. John 1. 18. 15. 15. 3. 32. 14. 25. The Angel of the Covenant Mal. 3. 1. The Apostle of our profession Heb. 3. 1. A faithful witnesse Apoc. 1. 5. A witnesse Isa. 55. 4. The light of the Church and of the world Isa. 60. 1. Luk. 2. 32. and The author and finisher of our faith Heb. 12. 2. He is the great Prophet like unto Moses yea farre above Moses whom God hath raised up in his Church to teach them all truth The Prophets Office was to teach the people the things which pertained to their duty that they might please God and attain his promises Now Christ is also the teacher of the Church which taught the will and whole counsel of God concerning our salvation that Prophet whom Moses did foretell and whom the people expected for this end in that time that he lived as the words of the Samaritan woman shew See Deut. 18. 8. Iohn 15. 15. 17. 8. The matter or parts of this prophetical Office was teaching or revealing the will of God This teaching of Christ is double External and Internal externally he taught 1. By the Ministery of his Prophets in the times that went before his coming into the world whom he raised u● for that end that they might reveal so much of his will as was necessary for them to know Peter telleth us that he spake to the Spirits that were then in prison and that the Gospel was preached to them that were dead meaning his Prophets in former time whom Christ by his Spirit stirred up for that end 2. He taught himself in person when he had taken our flesh upon him for the space of three yeers and a half or as some think of four yeers going up and down and teaching the Doctrine of the Kingdom saying Repent and believe the Gospel and confirming his Doctrine with miracles and signs of all sorts to the astonishment of all that heard the report of them as the Story of the Gospel written by the four Evangelists doth plainly shew 3. He taught by his Apostles Evangelists and Prophets men which he stirred up with extraordinary gifts and power to preach every where sending them out first whilst himself lived into all the Countrey of Iudaea and then after into the whole world and not only so but moving some of them to write in books and leave to the Churches use those holy Scriptures which are the perfect rule of our Faith and Obedience and do sufficiently plainly and perfectly instruct the whole Church and each member of it to the saving knowledge of God and Christ so that if there were never another book extant in the world yet if a man had these writings for all substantial points truly translated into a tongue understood by him and had
Christ should have nothing to give 2. He would exercise his people in prayer and confessions His people ask for themselves in prayer the destroying of corruption and perfecting of grace 3. God loves to have his people nothing in themselves all Christs course on earth was an abased condition God would have his people like Christ low and base 4. The Lord hath appointed that this life should be to his people a warfare Iob 14. 14. Their great conflict is with their own lusts 5. Because he would have his people long to be in heaven 2 Cor. 5. 2. 6. That he might thereby magnifie the grace of the new Covenant above all that he gave in the old God gave perfect grace to Angels and to Adam and his posterity but that vanished away yet now a spark of graces lives in a Sea of corption 7. Hereby Gods patience and forbearance is much exalted to his own people Numb 14. 17 18. Therefore it is hard to discern whether the work of Sanctification be wrought in us or no because of the reliques of corruption Evidences of Sanctification 1. A heart truly sanctified stands in awe of the Word Sanctification is the Law written in the heart a principle put into the soul answerable to the duty the Law requires Iohn 14. 22 23. 2. The remainders of corruption and the imperfection of grace will be his continual burden Rom. 7. 24. 2 Cor. 11. 23. 3. There is a continual combate maintained betwixt sin and grace 4. Where there is true Sanctification it is of a growing nature living things will grow 2 Pet. 3. 18. Mal. 3. 3 4. 5. Where there is true grace you shall especially see it when God cals you to great trials Natura vexata seipsum prodit Gen. 22. 20. Means to get holinesse Only the Spirit of Christ bestowed upon thee by faith Ioh. 7. 38. the Apostles arguments to holinesse are taken from their interest in Christ. Titus The grace of God that brings Salvation Faith in the bloud of Christ Heb. 9. 14. See Act. 15. 9. The Word John 17. 17. 1 Pet. 1. 22. The Word read heard meditated in transformeth the soul into its likenesse The Sacrament is a sanctifying Ordinance the death and merits of Christ set before us prayer pray more for Gods sanctifying Spirit 1 Thess. 5. 23. CHAP. XII The Parts of Sanctification are two Mortification and Vivification I. Mortification VVHere Grace is truly wrought it will be the daily study and practise of those that are sanctified to subdue the body of corruption This is called a dying to sinne putting off the old man crucifying the flesh most usually the mortifying of it There is a twofold Mortification and so Vivification say the Schoolmen 1. Habitual and more Internal the work of Gods Spirit in our first Regeneration Gal. 5. 24. whereby the Dominion of sinne is subdued and brought under the power of Gods Spirit this and internal Vivification are the two parts of our Conversion 2. Actual Practical and External our own work the daily practice of a childe of God while he lives on earth this flows from the other Every godly man walking according to Christianity doth daily in his ordinary course mortifie the body of corruption that dwels in him Rom. 4. 8 9. Ephes. 4. 20 21 22. Col. 3. 5. Gal. 5. 24. Rom. 6. 6. Mortifie or make dead is a Metaphor taken from Chiturgeons whose practice is when they would cut off a member to apply such things as will eat out the life of it so our care must be to make the living body of corruption instar cadaveris Practical Mortification is the faithful endeavour of the soul to subdue all the lusts and motions which are prone to spring from our sinful flesh It stands in three things 1. A full purpose or bent of the heart the minde and will against sinne when my will doth nolle peccatum though it may be active 2. In shunning all the occasions that serve as fewel to it 3. In applying all such means as may subdue his corruptions The Practice of Mortification is 1. A necessary duty 2. One of the most spiritual duties in all Christianity 3. The hardest duty The Popish exercises of Mortification consisting in their kinde of Fasting Whipping Pilgrimage and wearing of Hair-cloth next their skin will never work true Mortification in the heart yet Baals Priests exceeded them in cruelty to themselves 1 King 18. 28. See Rom. 8. 13. Col. 2. 23 1 Tim. 4. 8. In these cases one doth not mortifie his corruptions 1. Such a one as lives in the voluntary practice of his sins Rom. 6. 2. The body of corruption may be wholly unmortified though it break not out in the ordinary and constant practice of any grosse sin the seat and throne of sin is in the soul the slavish fear of shame and punishment from men or eternal damnation from God may keep a man from grosse sins I shall lay down 1. Motives or several Meditations to quicken us to the study of this work every day 2. Means which God will blesse to one that is willing to have his lusts subdued I. Motives Consider 1. This is the great thing God requires at our hands as our gratitude for all the goodnesse he bestows on us that for his sake we should leave those wayes that are abominable in his sight Rom. 12. 1. Ephes. 4. 21 22. 1 Peter 2. begin Deut. 32. 6. Secondly How deeply we have obliged our hearts to it by Vow Oath Covenant in Baptism we have there covenanted to die to sinne put off the old man and so in the Lords Supper we shew forth the Lords death and when we have been in danger Thirdly The manifold evils of unmortified lusts abiding in the heart What makes thy soul loathsom and unclean in the eyes of God and Angels but sin What grieves God pierceth his Sonne fights against him but this What brings any evil upon thee but this What is the sting of any affliction but onely thy sins What strengthens death but it it is only thy sins that keep good things from thee thy unmortified sins Fourthly The absolute necessity of this work if we mean to escape hell and everlasting damnation De necessariis non est deliberandum Rom. 8. 13. 1 Cor. 6. 9. Grave Maurice at Newport battel sent away the boats and said to his men Either drink up this Sea or eat the Spaniards Fifthly The wonderful gain that will come to thy soul if the Lord teach thee this duty 1. In mortifying and destroying thy beloved lusts thou destroyest all other enemies with them they all receive their weapons from thy sins 2. All other mercies flow in a constant current if thou mortifie thy corruptions Gods favour the whole stream of the Covenant of Grace II. Means of Mortification Some use moral motives from the inconvenience of sinne death the fear of hell and judgement some carnal motives as esteem and advantage in
the Institution 2. The authority of these is not divine but meerly humane 3. It was an ancient custom in Tertullians time to give milk and honey in Baptism to the Infant yet the Papists themselves do not keep it So that unlesse we had Christs institution we cannot do it especially knowing that it is dangerous to add to any essential part of the Sacrament such as the wine is But then they are most ridiculous when they will make a mystical signification in this that the union of the water with the wine must signifie the union of the people which is denoted by waters Revel 17. with Christ Thus Bellarmine But it signifies not this union either naturally for then it would signifie so in common feasts nor by divine institution for then then the Scripture would have delivered it Besides Rev. 17. Great waters not a few drops signifie the people and that not of believers but Heathens and if it signifie the communion of the people with Christ why do they deny it them The drink then used being called the fruit of the vine Matth. 26. 29. it is evident that there was no mixture of water for then it had not been the fruit of the vine but another drink compounded of water and wine Some say this reason is not of force for he that drinks vinum dilutum drinks the fruit of the grape as well as he that drinks merum And therefore that our Saviour Christ and his Apostles ever mingled water with wine in the sacramental Cup cannot be shewed by any testimony out of the word of God As for the water gushing forth with the bloud out of our Saviour Christ it is frivolous the wine in the Cup is not a Sacrament of the bloud of Christ which was shed after that he was slain but of the bloud which he shed before his death This was an ancient custom Iustin Martyr makes mention of it and Cyprian pleads for it yet Iansenius doth ingeniously confesse that there are evident testimonies of Scripture for wine but none for water though Bellarmine impudently affirm That there is as much proof for the one as the other viz. Tradition for both Scriptures for neither and labours violently to wrest the plain places another way yet at length he doth not deny but it is Calix Domini though there be no water in it and he tels us that the greater part of Divines hold that water is not de necessitate Sacramenti Iansenius saith it appears by Scripture though not expresly yet implicitely that there was water in the Cup which Christ consecrated because there was wine in it and in those hot Countreys they used not to drink meer wine but allayed with water this is an uncertain conjecture The beginning of it was lawful because there were in the Church that could not beat the strength of the wines especially in the East and South Countreys where the wines are strong The Christians in the Primitive Church had a custom of mixing water with the wine as there came water and bloud out of Christs side which how ever it might have a natural reason because of the heat of the Countrey to correct the heat of the wine with water yet it was by them used for a mystical sense to expresse the mixture whereof this Sacrament is an effectual instrument of all the people who have faith to receive it with Christs bloud water being by the holy Ghost interpreted for people and Nations The Aquarii used onely water in the Eucharist in pretence of Sobriety which Cyprian confuted onely upon this ground viz. That this practice was not warranted by the Institution of Christ wherein Christ ordained wine and not water only In the Scripture we finde the fruit of the vine but not water therefore we account not that to be of any necessity in the celebration of the Lords Supper In the Primitive Church water was used first of Sobriety then of Ceremony at length it grew to be counted of necessity Dr Fulk against Martin Of the Consecration of the Elements Christs actions in the administration of the Sacrament were four First He took bread into his hand and so likewise wine which signifies the purpose of God decreeing to give Jesus Christ in the flesh to work out our Redemption Secondly Christ blessed it and gave thanks and sanctified it to that use by his own prayer to God which as it is effective to make the elements now fit for a spiritual use so it is significative representing the action of God wherein he fitted Christs manhood in the fulnesse of his Spirit and power to work out our Redemption Thirdly He brake the bread which signifies the action of God satisfying his justice in Christs manhood for the sins of all the Elect by breaking him in the Garden and on the Crosse especially besides other sufferings throughout his life and by rending his soul and body asunder Fourthly Christ gave it to every one signifying that God doth offer particularly to every one and give to the Elect the body and bloud of Christ with the merit of it and power of the same to blot out their sins and free them more and more from the same The Text saith of the Bread He blessed it and of the Cup When he had given thanks By the which word Blessing he implieth a consecration of this Sacrament The Papists attribute it to the repetition of these words Hoc est enim corpus meum For this is my body For this is my bloud Hence they call them Verba operatoria and say there is such a power and operation in them that by them the bread is turned into the body of Christ. The Elements of which the Sacrament is composed are natural the things having nothing of themselves whereby they may be Sacraments and therefore an institution is necessary whereby they may be made what they are not Now we say this is done by reciting the institution of Christ and by prayer The Papists order that the Priest should reade all the other words with a loud voice yet when he comes to this For this is my body he speaks it secretly so that none can hear him and this is one of their reasons because Christ prayed alone what is this to the consecration did he so at the Sacrament time 2. The Minister or Priest speaks it secretly because if he speak aloud he cannot be so intent to what is said why then do they command such loud noise by their Organs in singing How can they be attentive then 3. Least that form of words should be vilified Why not then in Baptism It is most expedient 1. For the receiver to receive the Bread and Cup into his hand This custome saith Vossius was long in the ancient Church It is unseemly to have the Bread put or the Wine poured into the mouth by the Minister this custom came from a superstitious worshipping of the signs 2. The receiver must
like Paracelsian Physick if it do not cure it will kill 4. None do lose such high services Matth. 7. 22 23. they do not the work of the Gospel with a Gospel-spirit and out of a Gospel principle 5. Satan will insult and triumph over none so much as Gospel-sinners Matth. 12. 43 44. 6. The worm of conscience will not feed so fiercely on any Mar. 9 43. when he compares his former hopes with his present irrecoverable condition because no sinners had those helps nor were raised to those hopes Ponder on your own sins what they are and what they have deserved Look on original corruption the foul sea of all wickednesse which is called a body of sinne Rom. 6. 6. A Law in our members Rom. 7. 23. Consider that thou hast a naughty nature whereby thou art averse from God and goodnesse and extreamly prone to all sin Psal. 51. 5. Isa. 48. 8. all men in every part are under the guilt and power of it Rom. 3. 16 23. 2. Humble thy self Labour to be base for this though thou hast not committed such foul sins as others yet if God should leave thee to thy self and thine own evil heart thou wouldst soon be as bad as the worst 3. Call to minde likewise the grosse actual sins thou hast committed before or since thy calling Wast not thou given to all manner of pollution before the Lord gave thee knowledge of him and since thy calling 4. Consider thy continual daily slips and infirmities thy sins of omission and commission how apt thou art to be angry impatient thy carnalnesse in good duties and distraction in the performance of them thy forgetfulnesse of God and thy later end 5. Consider also whether there be not some unknown secret fault that thou hast not yet repented of and pray to God to discover it to thee Lastly Call to minde what sins thou hast committed since the last Sacrament and bewail them Meditate also on the sufferings of Christ for these grosse sins and daily iniquities His great abasement Psal. 22. 6 7 14. to 19. v. Isa. 53. 3 4 5 6 7. to the 11. v. He was born like a beggar lived like a beggar the Devil tempted him he was falsly accused betrayed by one of his Disciples denied by another forsaken by the rest He was amazed with fear and incompassed with sorrow Mark 14. 34. Two of the most tormentful passions was in an agony and did sweat drops of cloddy bloud in such abundance as it fell to the ground was condemned mocked spit upon whipped with rods after the manner of the Romans crowned with thorns laden with the Crosse nailed on it stretched and retched in all his joynts He suffered much in his body but his chief sufferings were in his soul Isa. 53. 10 11 12. He took our soul as well as body and came to redeem it that being the chief part Quicquid induit Christus obtulit He suffered 1. As a publick person as the second Adam Rom. 5. 14. 2. For our sakes and benefit Isa. 53. he is said six times to bear our iniquities 3. Not only for our good but in our room Heb. 7. 22. not onely nostro bono but nostro loco 1 Tim. 2. 6. Mat. 20. 28. for otherwise he should have suffered no more then other men the Martyrs suffered for the good of the Church Col. 1. 24. 2 Tim. 2. 10. 4. He took upon him the burden of our sins by way of imputation 1 Pet. 2. 24. 2 Cor. 5. 21. Smite on your brests and say For my worldlinesse anger all these evils befell my Saviour Lord for thy mercy sake in Christ pardon and heal me Shall I pollute my body with uncleannesse when Christ suffered so bitter things Shall I ever be angry again O Lord by thy grace I will not Let me have thy power to kill these sins See the strictnesse of divine justice and the dreadfulnesse of Gods wrath God spared not his own Sonne and when his Fathers wrath lighted on his soul he was much troubled and the great evil of sinne it caused Christs humane nature to be ●●raid Matth. 26. 38. The desert of sinne is seen in Christs suffering 1. In respect of the person who suffered for it Gods only Son who never provoked him Iohn 3. 16. Rom. 8. 31. 2. In respect of the penalties he underwent for sinne it made him to cry sweat and pour out strong supplications Isa. 53. 10. The Law shewed the filthinesse and evil of sinne by the many Sacrifices and aspersions of bloud which it required but they were of beasts and their bloud but the Gospel shews the demerit of sinne more fully and how odious it is to God since Christ must die to expiate it and also the abundant love both of the Father in delivering his own Sonne to death for the salvation of sinners Iohn 3. 16. 1 Iohn 4. 9 10. Rom. 8 32. and of Christ in taking upon him our nature and in exposing himself to so much misery here on earth and at last to an accursed death for us Phil. 2. 7 8. We are to remember Christ in the Sacrament 1. Because the Lord will have in the Sacrament of the New Testament the great end of the Passeover to be accomplisht Exod. 12. 14. 2. That we may answer the goodnesse of Christ to us he hath us alwayes actually in remembrance Exod. 28. 21 29. 3. Because if we have any benefit by this Sacram nt God must remember Christ for us 4. Upon our actual and affectionate remembrance of Christ depends all our benefit by this Sacrament We have dispatched the examination of our sins in the next place our graces are to be examined The graces that must be tried and examined are our Knowledge Faith Re 〈…〉 Love and hungring after Christ the truth growth or wants of them 〈…〉 examined The truth of them 1. Knowledge The words examine shew forth discern and judge all betoken knowledge We must get Knowledge 1. Of the Law of God 2. Of the Doctrine of Redemption by Jesus Christ. 3. Of the Nature Necessity and Use of the Lords Supper We must know our estate by nature and by grace 1. Because otherwise we cannot be thankful to God for his benefits as we ought 2. In the Sacrament Christ is offered and the Covenant sealed By nature we are dead in sin and bondslaves of Satan by grace we come to be children of God and heirs of salvation We must know what the elements and actions in the Sacrament signifie That the bread signifies the body of Christ and the wine his bloud that the breaking of bread betokens the crucifying of Christ that the giving of the bread and wine notes the action of God the Father offering Christ to all and bestowing him effectually upon every worthy receiver the receiving of the bread and wine signifies our receiving and feeding upon Christ by faith 2. Faith is required in those that come worthily to the
of all that good they had by him or of all that they might have hoped to have enjoyed by his means if he had lived Furthermore publick persons are injured both the Magistrate in that the Laws and orders by him justly made are like mounds by an unruly beast troden down and broken and the whole Common-weal in that both the peace and quietnesse thereof is disturbed and seeds of discord and enmity sown among the members thereof for most times the murder of one breeds a quarrel amongst many that survive and also a member thereof is cut away to the hindring it of that service which his sufficiencies either for the present did or for the future might have afforded it And lastly A stain and blot is cast upon the face thereof and that such a stain as cannot be washed away but by the bloud of him that did cast it on It is also mischievous to the committer exposing him either to a violent death by the hand of the Magistrate or to fearfull punishments by Gods hand For the bloud-thirsty man shall not live out half his dayes and to everlasting damnation at last for murderers must be without unlesse repentance come betwixt Murder hath often been strangely discovered by Dogs Cranes Crows See the Theatre of Gods Judgement Chap. 11. Psal. 9. 12. Habakkuk 2. 11. and Camera Histor. Meditat. l. 2. c. 6. Luther reciteth a story of a certain Almaigne who in travelling fell among thieves which being about to cut his throat the poor man espied a flight of Crows and said O Crows I take you for witnesses and revengers of my death About two or three dayes after these murdering thieves drinking in an ●nne a company of Crows came and lighted upon the top of the house whereupon the thieves began to laugh and say one to another Look yonder are they which must revenge his death whom we dispatched the other day The Tapster over-hearing them told it to the Magistrate who presently caused them to be apprehended and upon their disagreeing in speeches and contrary answers urged them so farre that they confessed the truth and received their deserved punishment See Goularts memorable Histories p. 415 416. to 429. Self-murder is a great sinne and a manifest breaking of this Commandment For as in all the other Commandments the Lord doth forbid men to wrong themselves as well as their Brethren so likewise in this no man may sinne against his own honour and dignity no more then against the honour and dignity of another No man may defile his own body nor waste his own goods nor blemish his own name more then his neighbours therefore neither may he kill himself The killing of ones self is the highest degree of violating this Commandment because it crosseth the nearest of all bonds and observes not the rule of charity there where most charity is due for love should alwayes begin at home 2. This fact crosseth the strongest inclination of nature and clearest principles of reason for nature makes a man desirous of his own being and studious of his own preservation This is then contrary to the two strongest laws and rules of life the Law of God and nature 3. The causes of doing it are very naught First It comes from extremity of pride and impatiency He will not be at Gods command nor at his direction nor be at all unlesse he may be as he will himself and so it ariseth from an untoward mixture of high-mindednesse and base-mindednesse Base-mindednesse because he hath not strength enough of resolution to bear some evil which he feels or foresees high-mindednesse because he will not stoop unto the ruler of all things to bear the burden which he layes upon him 2. Another cause of this sin is horrible despair infidelity A third cause of it is an enraged conscience as in Saul Iudas Achitophel 4. The vehement temptation of Satan taking advantage either of a melancholick constitution of body or of the affrightments of conscience Thirdly The effects of it are bad for by this means a man wrongs God himself and the world He wrongs God first by breaking his Commandment 2. By defacing his Image 3. By leaving his standing wherein he was placed by him without and against his will Secondly He wrongs himself for he extreamly hazards himself to damnation if not certainly casts himself into hell for he runs upon a most palpable and fearfull crime and leaves himself no leisure at all to repent of it It is a hard thing to hope that he should be pardoned who willingly thrusts himself out of the way of repentance and doth commit such a fault that we never read of any in Scripture that did commit it but damned reprobates Lastly He doth great wrong to others also his friends and well-willers to whom he gives occasion of the greatest grief that can possibly befall them about the death of their friend in that the manner of dying is so uncomfortably wretched Besides to all the world it leaves a miserable scandal seeing all think and speak hardly of him that hath so done and it leaves a bad example to others Sauls murdering of himself made his own armour-bearer do it Iudg. 16. 30. Samson by publick calling as a Judge and singular divine calling as a Type of Christ and deliverer of the Church did pull the house down on himself and the Philistims that by his death he might deliver unto death the publick enemies of the Church Heb. 11. 32. Besides It cannot be said that Samson killed himself indeed he died with them but the end he propounded was not that he might die but he sought revenge upon the enemies of God which was the work of his calling and that which was like to bring and procure it As a zealous and diligent Preacher who by his pains and study in his Ministery impaireth and spendeth his health and strength cannot be said to be the procurer of his own untimely death for he hath spent his strength in his calling to which end God gave it him See Elton on this Command and M. Baxters Saints everl Rest par 1. Sect. 6. The Heathen Philosophers have adorned this fact as Cato is extolled for it see therein the vanity of mans reason and wit that can fall in love and liking yea admiration with such a monstrous wickednesse Amongst the Donatists there were the Circumcelliones who gloried in casting themselves down from rocks into the fire or by yielding themselves to death other wayes because it is written that the flesh is to be mortified and he that hates his life shall finde it With us the self-murderers are accustomed to be cast out in high-wayes or else in places where none else are usually buried and to have a stake knocked into them for the great horrour of the fact and to warn others Helps against this sinne 1. Maintain the peaceable and pure estate of your consciences this will make life sweet to him that
of judgement and of the everlasting torments of hell and this kept him from sin The third of the vilenesse and loathsomnesse of sin and of the excellency and beauty of grace and this made him abhorre sin The fourth of the everlasting rewards and pleasures providest for those that abstain from sin and this prevailed with him The fifth and last continually meditated of the Lord Jesus Christ and of his love and this made him not to sin against God This last is the greatest motive of all Mr Calamy on Ezek. 36. 32. If I were to preach one Sermon in all my life for the humbling of men for sin I would take a text that might shew the great price that was paid for it and therein open the breach that sin hath made between God and mans soul. Mr. Burroughes on Hos. 10. 12. A Christian woman was possessed at a Theater Satan giving this reason why at that time he entred into her Quia invenerat eam in suo Tertul. lib. de Spectac Vide August Confess l. 6. c. 8. 1 Sam. 22. 24. If the sinfulnesse of it make me forbear it I shall refrain 1. From secret sinnes which men cannot know nor see 2. From sins to my self very pleasing and beloved 3. From sins countenanced and favoured in the world 4. In the daies of prosperity and welfare when the rod is not upon me Unregenerate men may fly from sin for some evil that comes by it Peccare non metuunt sed ardere Aug. Bern. God hates all sin alwaies See Pro. 8. 12. We must hate sin odio aversationis inimicitiae not only with the hatred of flying from it but of enmity pursuing it Not being is the bounds of hatred where there is true grace it will seek the ruine of sin There is no sin simply little the least offence is committed against an infinite God and therefore deserves infinite punishment 2. The least sin cost the shedding of Christs blood 3. There is great disobedience desilement and unthankfulnesse in a little sin 4. The wages of sin as sin is death and therefore of every sin Mr. Calamy on Jer. 18. 7. Psal. 119. Rom. 7. 9. Tripliciter appetitum hominis contingit esse inordinatum Uno modo per hoc quod aliquis appetit testimonium de excellentia quam non habet quod est appetere honorem supra suan● proportionem Alio modo per hoc quod honorem sibi cupit non reserendo in Deum Tertiò per hoc quòd appetitus ejus in ipso bonore quiescit non referens honorem ad utilitatem aliorum Ambitio autem importat inordinatum appetitum honoris Aquin. 2 1 2ae Quaest. 131. Artic. 1. a Latini ambitiosum vocant utpote modum non tenentem in ambiendis honoribus Steph. Thes. Graec. b Alexandro in reg●o Macedo●●ae nato hoc est Graeciae angulo orbis hic non erat satis Illachrymasse dicitur ad mentionem plurium mundorum quum de hoc ipso Philosophi apud eum dispuut●rent Lod. Viv. de verit Fi● Christ. l. 1. c. 10. There are three qualifications of a holy greatness of minde 1. A holy independency 2. A holy magnanimity 3. A holy self-sufficiency Ille propriè est Apostat● qui fidem veram antea professus ab c● in totum recedit Apostata enim idem sonat quod desertor transfuga Talis fuit Iulianus qui cognomen habuit Apostatae talis sunt qui ex Christianis vel Iudaei vel Mahumeta●i sunt Ames de Consc. l. 4. c. 5. The first disturbers of this uniformity in doctrine were Barret and Baro in Cambridge and after them Thompson B. Carleton ch 2. Never was there any among us before Mr. Montague that published this errour of the Apostacy of the Saints in Print but only Thompson a Dutchman Fellow of Clare-Hall in Cambridge a man of an excellent memory and of great learning but of little grace and of a deboist loose and voluptuous life Mr. Prinne of the Perpetuity of a Regenerate mans estate p. 221. Petrus Bertius Cacotheologus Leydensis librum edere haud veritus est titulo certè ipso execrabilem de Apostasia sanctorum homo esse videtur ex Arminii Schola Abbo●us de Perseverantia Sanctorum See Deodate in loc See Joh. 15. 16 So Barlow in his Discourse of Spiritual stedfastnesse and others 1 Pet. ● 23. 1 Joh. 3. 9. See the Annotat on that place See B. Mount Appeal ch 4. Mr. Goo●w Redemption redeemed c. 12. Pestilentes sunt Magistri qui negant id fieri posse quòd Deus fieri posse realiter à s● puniri testatur Grotius in v. 24. Tanti hunc locum faciunt Bellarminus Bertius alii ferè omnes qui pro apostasia fidelium pugnant ut in prima acic primoque locum illum semper ostentent Ames Anti-Synod Script de Persev Sanct. c. 2. See M. Burgess of Justificat p. 237 238. Promissionum comminationum eadem non est per omnia ratio Comminationum ratio est in homine ex homine ipso ideo proponitur maxima ex parte ut homo mutetur ab co quod est ratio minitandi ex qua mutatione minitatio illa suum finem habet atque adeo cessat eodem planè modo quo mandatum illud quod tentandi causa proponitur mandati vim amittit post horam tentationis Promissionis alia est ratio alius finis Ames Cor●● Artic. 5. de Pers●v c. 2. Quaestio fuit utrum filii justi lu●r●nt paenas peccatorum patrum suorum id est utrum Israelit●e qui tunc temporis vivebant morte pl●ctebantur absque suo merito Deus hoc sensu negat se v●lle mortem peccatoris ita scilic●t ut velit mortem cuiquam infligere propter alienam culpam Haec est clar● cert● explicat●o ex an●lys● contextus fluens Ames Anti-Synod Script de Persev 2. Professa est Remonstrantium sententia nullam in v●t●r● 〈…〉 to ●●aram exstare promissionem vitae aeternae atqu● adeo nec comminationem mortis aeternae Se● norunt remonstrantes s●r●ire ●●●n●e Id. ibid. Fear is animae praefidium Superbia est haereticorum mater Luther See Doctor Willet on Lev. 24. quaest 11. Ridley of the Civil law p. 59. Foxes 3d vol. p. 222. Dr Gouge of the sin against the holy Ghost See more there and Alsted Theol. Cas. c. 15. c. 5. The Turks abhorre blasphemy not only against God and Mahomet but also against Christ and the Virgin Mary and other Saints and they punish blasphemers of whatsoever Sect. Purchase his Pilgrimage l. 3. c. 10. Secunda secundae quaest 13. Artic. 4. Recepta sapientum opinio est in inferno non peccari quae certissima ratione nititur Etenim disertè Paulus Qui mortuus est à peccato liber est Rom. 6. 7. quod Ambrosius non immeritò ad omnes naturaliter m●rtuos extendit Nec bonis voluntas nec malis facultas peccandi
esse potest Aug. Enchir. c. 6. Anima damnati hominis ita paenis obruitur ut ne cogitationem quidem ullam concipere possit quae ad peccatum vergat Apoc. 14. 11. Sanfordus de Descensu Christ● ad Inferos lib. 3. pag. 174. Non quivis homines sunt peccati illius subjectum sed ij tantum qui illuminati sunt à Spiritu Sancto 2. Qui ex deliberata malitia contra dictamen Spiritus bellum indicunt veritati cognitae 3. Qui ex odio id faciunt blasphemiam negationi addunt River in Exod. 20. 7. In Spiritum Sanctum blasphemi sunt qui agnitam per Spiritus illuminationem in conscientia approbatam Evangelicam veritatem destinato consilio abnegant cum pertinaci impugnatione addentes voluntariam blasphemiam atque adeo ejusdem hostes publici sunt Rivet in Exod. 30. 7. It is a wilfull malicious and obstinate denying of the foundation viz. That Jesus is the Mediator and Redeemer of the world It is a totall Apostafie from the faith when the whole man revolteth from the whole Christian Religion wholly with an obstinate resolution never to return to it any more Mr. Downe in a Letter Dr. Donne Dr. Gouge Some conceive the sin against the holy Ghost could not be committed under the law because the Spirit was not given but under the second Covenant Mr. Bedford This sinne is not pardoned 1. Because it is never repented of Heb. 6. 4 6. 2. The means of pardon are rejected Heb. 10. 29. Christ Jesus offered in the Gospel 3. God is utterly renounced 1 John 5. 16. Paul before his conversion walkt on the brink of the sin against the holy Ghost but because he sin'd ignorantly he was pardoned a Discant nostri homines quid sit peccare in Spiritum Sanctum ne se decipiant Cadit saepe in homines bonos metus ne hoc peccatum commiserint Dicunt enim Ego scivi hoc vel illud esse peccatum tamen feci Ergo commisi peccatum in Spiritum Sanctum Discite quaeso quid sit peccare in Spiritum Non est facere quod scimus malum esse sed est ideò aliquid facere quia scimus malum esse vel ideò aliquid persequi quia scimus bonum esse Stresom in Act. 3. 18. Conc. 39. A Lacedemonian Generall complained that he was driven out of Asia by a thousand Archers he meant by the King of Persia's mony an Archer was the stamp of the Persians coyn So in the late Civil warres in France many were said to have been pelted with Spanish Pistols a Pistol is an indifferent word both for a certain coyn and a small piece B. Smith See that Proverb Bos in lingua in Erasmus his Adagies And that story of Demosthenes is famous who was Fee'd one way and after receiving a Fee from the adverse part pretended he had the Squinancy and so could not speak but one said it was not the cold but gold which hindered him from speaking One trusts in that which he makes the argument of his obtaining good or escaping evil a Confidence must be withdrawn from all other things but God in respect of the principall and full worth of it Therefore we are forbidden to trust 1. In man Isa. 2. 22. Jer. 17. 5. Psal. 145. 3. 2. In riches Psal. 62. 10. Mark 10. 24. 1 Tim. 6. 17. 3. In chariots horses Psal. 20. 7. 44. 6. 4. In our own wits Prov. 3. 5. 28. 26. 5. In our own righteousnesse Ezek. 33. 13. Luke 18. 9. Phil. 3. 3 4. We may in some sense trust in man that is be perswaded that he will deal honestly with us and rely upon him for performance of his promises and for doing what in him lieth for our good but we may not in this sense trust in him that is stay upon him as a sufficient help to do us good but only we must look to him as an instrument and rely upon God as the chief cause because all men are changeable and all things weak and uncertain Philosophers make covetousnesse a vice in the defect not in the excesse it is the excessive carriage of the soul toward riches but this is easily reconciled take the excesse and defect as they stand in the habit to vertue then covetousnesse is a defect to liberality but take it according to the objec● so it is rather in the excesse then the defect Dr. Stoughton See Mr. Wheatlies Caveat for the Covetous on Luke 12. 15. Dr. Sclater on Rom. 1. 29. p. 127 128 c. Ames de Conscicu l. 5. c. 51. Capel of Tentat part 3. c. 3. Mr. Perkins Greenham Illa peccata dicuntur carualia quae perficiuntur in delectationibus carnalibus illa vero dicuntur spiritualia quae perficiuntur in spiritualibus delectationibus hujusmodi est avaritia Delectatur enim avarus in hoc quòd considerat se possessorem divitiarum Aquinas 2ª 2● quaest 118. Artic. 6. Aquinas makes it a greater sin then prodigality 2ª 2ae Q. 119. Art 3. 1 Tim. 6 9 10. Signes of it Mat. 6. 25 34. Meditate of the nature of earthly things 1. Their unprofitablenesse 2. Uncertainty 3. The dangerousnesse of them Riches are but the blessing of Gods left hand Prov. 3. 16. of his footstool earthly blessings under-ground blessings but bodily blessings thy soul is not the richer for all thy wealth such blessings as God gives to the worst of men those which he hates The Mines of gold and silver are among the Indians who worship the devil Agur praied against riches Prov. 30. 8. They are called thorns and thick clay deceitfull uncertain riches Psal. 119 36. Solius temporis honesta est avaritia Avarus nihil rectè facit nisi cum moritur Mimus Publianus Vide Aquin. 2ª 2ae Quaest. 159. Artic. 1. 2. 2 Sam. 21. 1 2 3. Isa. 1. 15. God often upbraids the Israelites with this That their City was full of bloud and that cruelty and oppression did lodge in it It is a will to do hurt to a creature further then it deserves There is scarce a vice but being entertained and served will end in bloud Superstition will breed such mad zeal as will account it self the more pious the more bloudy and will think it doth God service in killing others as Paul before his conversion The Duke of Medina said That his Sword could finde no difference betwixt an Heretick and a Catholick his businesse was to make a way for his Master which he meant to do Ambition careth not to kill the person and all his kindred in whose stead it hopeth to be advanced as the stories of the Kings of Israel and Heathen stories also testifie Envy will count no drink sweeter then bloud Lust will make way for its own satisfaction by the death of a husband wife or corrival Covetousnesse and revenge will provoke a man to cruelty Fear of shame hath made many a hatlot kill her own infant These vices make a
Treasury of the Church Luk. 22. 44. Divine justice would not let go the sinner without a ransome nor the Redeemer without full satisfaction I am loath to beleeve that either the Father was so prodigall of his Sons life or that the Son was so carelesse of his own bloud that he would have poured out all if one drop would have served the 〈…〉 n. D. Hampton on Rom. 10. 4. See M. Pinchins Meritorious price of Redempt part 2. p. 88 89 90 91. See Exod. 21. 32. Matth. 26. 15. Rectè hic ex More N●bo●him observavit Cl. Drusius in Praeter pretium servi fuisse triginta siclos arg●●tcos liberi verò sexaginta Servator ergo non liberi sed servi pretio ●stimatus est De Dieu in loc Iudas for love of mony was content to sell his Master it may be he thought not to death but that his Master might shift away and deliver himself by miracle and he get the mony for when he ●aw that the Lord must die he was grieved M. Richardson in his Manuscript They accuse him of blasphemy the highest sin against the first Table and sedition the highest sin against the second c Pilate was his proper name and he was called Pontius of Pontia an Iland the place where he was born that lay near to Italy Ille Pilatus qui tempore Christi praefidem egerat sub Caio in tantas incidisse calamitates fertur ut necessitate compulsus ultro sibi manum intulerit suique ipsius interemptor divina illa ultrone ut par erat non diu parcente factus est Eus. Hist. Eccles. l. 2. c. 7. d Christs bloud was shed seven times Circumcisione horto corona flagellatione manibus pedious corde Numb 19. 4. Levit. 8. 11. Isaiah calleth the torments preceding his death with an elegant word ●a●urah Isa. 53. 5. and Peter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Pet. 2. 24. Christs body was beat with scourges soedum supplicium as a Schoolman cals it a pain so base as might not be inflicted on a Burgesse of Rome He was whipt twice as is thought and that cruelly after the manner of the Romans to move the people to compassion by four as is gathered by the parting of his robes into four parts and those four all souldiers A Spanish Postiller writes that the Jews fearing Pilate would discharge him after stripes gave mony to the Officers to scourge him to death D. Clerke Christ was twice whipt with rods 1. Before the sentence of condemnation given for that end that he might have been set free and after condemnation ex instituto capitali He was whipt most grievously for so Psal. 128. 3. shews Montac Orig. Eccles. Tom. prior Part. post In crowning him with thorns the souldiers did not only wreath him a thick crown of thorns to stick his head full of them but after the putting it on to fasten it they did strike him on the head with their canes as Matth. 27. Mark 15. do plainly testifie So big were the nails with which they nailed him to the Crosse as the Ecclesiasticall History reporteth that Constantine made of them a bridle and helmet for his own use B Bils Full Redempt of mankinde by the death of Christ. pag. 5 6. Mortuus est in juventae vigore hoc est annos tres triginta natus ut magis charitatem erga nos ostenderet paternis jussibus obsequentiam tum enim posuit vitam quum erat vivere jucundissimum Lod. Viv. de verit Fid. Christ. l. 2. c. 15. The great misery that Christ underwent was in his soul when the Lord poured on him pure wrath Matth. 26. 38. The redemption of mankinde is called The travel of his soul Isa. 53. 10. Papists and Socinians say Christ suffered only in his body that his soul suffered but sympatheticè and secondarily but bodily sufferings could not make satisfaction for the sins of the soul lusts fight against the soul where the greatest debt was there must be the chiefest satisfaction Christ as our Surety must pay our whole debt the whole man is bound to the Law but principally the soul sin is primarily against that they sinned against their own souls Numb 16. See Micah 6. 9. The sufferings of the body will never make a man perfectly miserable It is not pure darknesse till the inward man be dark 2. The whole man was under the curse Gal. 3. 13. The body is but one part of the man therefore that could never pay the whole debt of the curse 3. Christ took soul and body and the infirmities of both that in them both he might make a sacrifice Isa. 53. 10. 4. Else many Martyrs suffered more then Christ for they suffered greater bodily torments some were cut in pieces some sawn as under yet they suffered with rejoycing because their spirits were filled with the consolations of God but the Lord withdrew the light of his countenance from Christ. 5. Christs sufferings in soul began before his bodily sufferings in the garden when he was in an agony Some say Christ was not silius irae because he was the Son of God but filius sub ira as a Surety Vide Grot. de satis Christ. c. 1. p. 11. Sandford de Descen Christ. ad Inferos p. 130 ad 152. Rivet Disput. 13. desatisf Christ. f It was usual with Pagans as Chrysostom writes to upbraid Christians with tu adoras crucifixū Heading stoning or burning is not so odious among any people as hanging is among us it is called in special reproach A dogs death Abeat in malam crucem Orat. ad Verrem tertia Mor● cousixorum in cruce est acerbissima quia configuntur in locis nervosis maximè sensibilibus scilicet in manibus pedibus ipsum pondus corporis pendentis continuè a●get dolorem cum hoc etiam est doleris diut●rnitas quia non statim in oriuntur ficut hi qui gladio interficiuntur Magnitudo doloris Christi potest considerari ex preceptibilitate patientis secundum animam secundum corpus Nam secundum corpus erat optimè complexionatus cum corpus ejus fuerit formatum miraculosè operatione Spiritus sancti sicut alia quae per miracula facta sunt fuerint aliis potiora ideo in eo maximè viguit sensus tactus ex cujus preceptione sequitur dolor Anima etiam secundum vires interiores efficacissimè apprehendit omnes causas tristitiae Aquin. part 3. Quaest. 46. Artic. 6. Vide Lactant. Div. Instit l. 4. p. 288 289 250. Quatuor causae sunt cur Christus crucis mortem sustinere voluerit Prima Quia accrbissima Secunda Quia ignominiosissima Tertia Quia gentilis non Iudaica erat Quarta Quia significabatur eam fieri pro salute omnium credentium ubicunque illi terrarum essent quod etiam representabatur expansione manuum Quo nimirum Christus allusit Joh. 12. 32. Mors crucifixio Christi in lege quoque
Apostolo Jacobo ipso die Pentecostes cantatam asserit Amama Antibarb Bibl. Patres Eucharistiam Sacrificii nomine appellarunt Primò Quia Eucharistia est gratiarum actio quae Sacrificium est Deo gratissimum Secundò Quoniam qui ad Eucharistiam rèctè accedunt se tot●s Deo in Sacrificium offerunt Tertiò Quia memoriam illius summi divinissimi Sacrificii recolit quod Christus in cruce fecit Whitak ad Sanderi Demonst. resp In such sort as the ancient Fathers did call this action a Sacrifice by a Metonymy because it is a remembrance of the only Sacrifice of Christs death and by a Synecdoche because the Sacrifice of praise is offered to God for the redemption of the world in the celebration of this action in this sort we do not deny the term of Sacrifice Fulk on Mat. 26. 6. Si quis dixerit non offerri verum proprium sacrificium aut non esse propitiatorium Anathema fit Concil Trident. Sess. 33. Can. 1. 3. Neque enim Patres Eucharistiam cum sacrificium appellant reale ac verum proprieque sic dictum sacrificium propitiatorium intelligunt sed ob alias causas victimam sacrificium oblationem appellant Vede● exercit in Ignat. Epist. ad Smyrnenfes c. 4. Ibi etiam septem causas assignat ob quas Eucharistiae sacrificium vocatur à Patribus Vide Cameron Myroth ad Heb. 9 16. D. Featley Si occisio sit de ratione sacrificii illud quod appellant incruenentum sacrificium nihil aliud erit quam repraesentatio veri realis sacrificii ac proinde haud reale sacrificium Nam si saepè offerat seipsum Christus oportet cum saepè pati cum ●blatio Christi à passione ejus fi●c morte distincta fit figmentum sibi ipsi contradictorium Episc. Daven Determ Quaest. 13. Hoc postrema sua ●voce inter ultimos Spiritus edita Christus significavit quum dixit Consummatum est Sol●mus extremas morientium voces pro oraculo observare Christus moriens testatur uno suo sacrificio perfectum esse impletum quicquid in salutem nostram er●t Calvin Instit lib. 4. cap. 18. L● Foy fondee sur l●s sainctes Escritures P●r Daille 3 partie Vide plura ibid. Cum in Scriptura sacra preces elecmosyne aerumnae piorum quaelibet sanctae actiones sacrificia appellentur facilè patimur sacram coenam vocari sacrificium Nec imus inficias quin hoc sensu sit sacrificium Quo sensu veteres eam vocaverint sacrificium hinc liquet quod passim sacram coenam vocant Eucharistiam Sacrificium Eucharisticum id est actionis gratiarum seu sacrificium landis ut habetur in C●none Missae Molinaei Hyperaspist lib. 2. c. 5. M. T Goodwins Christ the universal Peace-maker p●r 2. Sect. 2. Tolle traditiones incertas Apocryphas actum erit de missis solitariis angularibus de sacris ignotis precibus exoticis ignoratis corporali praesentia manducatione orali in Eucharistia illa monstrorum hydra puncto nimirum cum omnibus dimensionibus Transubstantiatione Montac Antidiat Certissimum est sacram coenam non nisi in Communi aliquo fidelium communicantium coetu ess● usurpandum quò spectant varia nomina quibus designatur tum in Scripturis tum in Patribus Appell tur euim Synaxis Coena Domini Communicatio Vide 1 Cor. 10. 17. 11. 18 20 22. Hinc jure merito improbatae nobis missae privatae absque Communicantibus quae sunt in usu apud Pontificios Quaest. aliquot Theol Decisio Authore Maresio q. 3. D. Featleys Stricturae in Lyndomastigem p. 43. See D. Willet on Exo. 29. 24 controvers See D Halls no peace with Rome p. 658. In Ecclesia Romana communi proverbio dicitur Campana bene pulsata dimidium missae esse peractum Domitius Calderinus ne missam quidem volebat audire quum ab amicis eò duceretur dixisse fertur camus ad communem errorem Lodov. Viv. de veritate fidei Christianae l. 2 c 7. Nobilissimus Cunradus à Rechenberg superstitionum osor missatici sacrificii non obscurus hostis qui aliquando visitatoribus ut missam celebraret hortantibus respondit Si vere Christus est in hostia indignus sum qui illum intuear indignior qui Patri offeram Si non est in hostia vae mihi si panem pro Deo populo adorandum propono Scultet A●nal Decas 1. p. 76. Aderant sed non ●dorarunt Pet. Mart. D. Featleys Vertumnus Romanus p. 18. Vide Grot. in Lu● 4. 27. See Down Sum of Div. on the 1. Com. M. Reynolds Meditat. on the Lords Supper Cartw. Rest of the 2d Reply against B. Whit. gift p. 116 119 He quotes there also P. Mart. on Rom. 6. Beza in his Questions of the Sac. 151. Augustinus de peccat merit remis l. ● c 24. 26. defendit infantes non posse vitam ac salutem aeternam consequi nisi Eucharistiam participent putans aequè obligari istis verbis Joh. 6. 35. ac istis nisi quis natus fuerit Augustini Innocentii primi sententia sexcentos circiter annos viguit in Eccle●●● Eucharistiam etiam infantibus esse necessariam Nunc apu● omnes qui Christianum nomen profitentur is mos obsolevit q●i ob●in●erat tempore Cyprian● Augustini Innocentii primi Romani Episcopi ut Euchar●●●icum panem in●●nctum ●●●berent infantibus ut ex eorum scriptis apparet Rivet Instruct. Praepar ad coenam Dom. c. 6. B. Morton of the Masse lib. 1. cap. 2. Sect. 11. Si quis dixerit parvulis antequam ad ann●s discretionis pervenerint necessariam esse Eucharistiae Communionem Anathema fit Concil Trident Sess. 3. Canon 4. * It must be a remembrance 1. Of Faith 1. In reference to remission of sins Mat. 26. 22. 2. To sanctification there is bread to strengthen the heart and wine to make it chearful Isa. 25. 6. 2 Of Love Cant. 1. 4. His love appeared in all his doings sufferings 3 Of Desire Psal. 6. 8. 4. Of Mourning Ps. 42. 4. We should consider we had a hand in Christs death 5 Of Thankfulnes 1 Cor. 10. 16. it is called the Cup of blessing and by the Ancients the Eucharist 6. Of Resolution to abhor those sins that formerly provoked God Hos. 14. 3. Ps●● 26. 6. I will wash my hands in innoc●● y and so will I compasse thine Al●●r 1 Cor. 11. 28 The bread must be eaten and the Cup drunk so Bonum ex causa integra malum ex quolibet defectu Exod. 12. 3 6. Joh. 19. 14. 31. 11. 55. * That which is good per se groweth evil per accidens if it be not duly circumstantionatum Cajet in Thom. 1. 2. Quaest. 9. An alms though good in it self ye● groweth to be evil if it be faulty in the circumstances of due time measure manner and of fit persons upon whom it is bestowed The second Covenant begins with