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

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naturall condition to a glorious fruition of the name of God and therefore in the Originall the Preposition rendered in hath the force of into as well as in Baptise them into the name of the Father Sonne and Holy Ghost 4. Words of consolation and so he comforts them by two arguments the one taken from the successe of their doctrine and the other from his own perpetuall presence with them The argument from the successe of their doctrine is recorded by Saint Marke and that is two-fold the one ordinary the other extraordinary The ordinary successe is either in the good or in the bad In the good so many as will beleeue and are baptised and will obserue all that Christ commands them which is to be supplied out of Saint Matthew they shall be as certainly saued in heauen as they are taught on earth And contrariwise such as will not beleeue and receiue their doctrine Christ wil reuenge it vpon them with the damnation of their soules nor shall their Baptisme helpe them if they will not beleeue and obey Mark 16. 16. The extraordinary successe should be in the signes should follow such as beleeue which are reckoned Mar. 16. 17 18. and these are attributed to all beleeuers though they were to be done but by some only because the end of those miracles was to glorifie the doctrine beleeued on by all Nor did these signes last vnto all times but onely in the first times of the Church for the more effectual confirmation of that doctrine which could not be demonstrated by naturall arguments Nor did euery beleeuer that shewed some of them shew all of them some spake with new tongues that yet could not heale the sicke for there were diuersities of gifts and operations and yet all from one Spirit 1 Cor. 12. 4 5. The second argument of consolation is taken from his perpetuall presence with them to the end of the world which must be vnderstood of his spirituall presence and must be extended to all the godly especially Ministers seeing the Apostles could not liue themselues to the end of the world Thus of the third Apparition after the day of the Resurrection We reade of the appearing of our Sauiour at three other times besides these as to more than fiue hundred brethren together 1 Cor. 15. 6. and to Iames the Apostle alone 1 Cor. 15. 6. And then lastly vpon the day of his Ascension he appeared to the Apostles on Mount Oliuet not far from Bethania Act. 1. 12. Of these three I haue nothing to say for concerning two of them we reade nothing in Scripture but the bare mention of them and for the last it belongs to the Article of his Ascension And thus of the Apparitions of Christ after his Resurrection The last part of my Diuision that concernes the Resurrection is about the fruit of the Resurrection or the good that comes to vs by our Sauiours rising from the dead and so 1. The Resurrection of our Sauiour serues exceedingly to confirme our faith and to assure vs that he was the Sonne of God Rom. 1. 4. and the promised Messias that could thus miraculously raise himselfe from the dead Ioh. 10. 17 18. and 2. 19. to 23. Matth. 12. 39 40. 2. The Resurrection of Christ assures vs of our Iustification from our sinnes Rom. 4. 25. The Father by deliuering Christ to death did actually condemne our sinnes in his flesh as our surety Rom. 8. 3. So by letting him out of the prison of the graue in his Resurrection he did actually absolue and acquit him from the obligation in which he was bound and so in discharging him doth acknowledge payment and satisfaction and so we are discharged too If he had not risen we had been still in our sinnes 1 Cor. 15. 17 18. Rom. 8. 34. Phil. 3. 8 9 10. 3. The Resurrection of Christ is the cause of a two-fold resurrection in vs. The first Resurrection is of the soule from the death of sinne to the life of grace Eph. 2. 4 5. Col. 2. 12 13. Rom. 6. 4 5. and this flowes from his Resurrection The second is of the body out of the graue which is to be accomplished at the last Iudgement of which the Resurrection of Christ is both the cause and the pledge 1 Cor 15. 20 21 22. Rom. 8. 11. 1 Thess 4. 14. And a taste of this Christ gaue in the resurrection of diuers Saints that appeared to many in Ierusalem immediately vpon his Resurrection Matth. 27. 52 53. 4. The Resurrection of Christ begets in vs a liuely hope of a most glorious inheritance in heauen As the Apostle shewes 1 Pet. 1. 3 4. and Rom. 5. 10. where we shall for euer triumph with him in the victory ouer Death and the Graue and Hell Hosea 13. 14. 1 Cor. 15. 54 c. 5. It warrants and effects our pers●uerance in life for he rose to life to die no more neither in himselfe nor in the spirituall life of his members as the Apostle reasons Rom. 6. 9 10. Now the reason of all this is because Christ sustained our person and rose againe as well as died in our stead He died and rose againe as a publike person and a root of a new mankinde and besides the same Spirit that raised Iesus Christ from the dead is in vs to worke all those things intended by his Resurrection Rom. 8. 11. The vse of this Article may be diuers 1. By way of Information and so it proues the Diuinitie of Christ the Apostle sayes he was mightily declared to be the Sonne of God by the Resurrection from the dead He that could ouercome so great Enemies as Sin Death the Graue and Hell and had power of himselfe to take vp his life must needs be God and so Saint Paul applies the words of the second Psalme Thou art my Sonne this day haue I begotten thee to the Resurrection of Christ which is true in respect of the manifestation of his Diuinitie Rom. 1. 4. Act. 13. 33. 2. By way of Instruction and so first Saint Paul 2 Tim. 2. 8. chargeth vs in a speciall manner to remember this Article and to lay fast hold vpon it for Iewes and Pagans can beleeue that Iesus died but a Christian must goe further to beleeue that he was raised from the dead Secondly wee should learne from Christs Resurrection to rise to newnesse of life A Christian should be ashamed to lye dead in the graues of sinne when his Sauiour is risen from the dead Nay if we be ingrafted into Christ aright wee are risen with him and are aliue from the dead and shew it by a spirituall liuelinesse in all parts of a renewed conuersation and therefore if thou wouldest haue comfort that thou art a true Christian thou must shew it by liuing in a new conuersation and by awaking from spirituall slumbring and securitie and standing vp from the dead Eph. 5. 14. If there be life in the Head there is life in all the
hate life for this very respect because it hinders the Lords presence from vs and keepes vs absent from him whom our soules loue 2. Thes 3. 5. 1. Iohn 3. 2. Psal 31. 19. 7. It should especially fire vs to a desire to imitate these sweet praises in God and to striue by all meanes to make our natures like to his we should from our hearts seriously constantly diligently endeuour to bee bountifull mercifull free patient and full of Loue as our God is Wee should neuer thinke we had a iot of good nature in vs till we could in some sound measure shew a constant disposition in these things 1. Iohn 4. 11. Luke 6. 36. Romanes 15. 4 5. Thirdly this Doctrine of Gods goodnesse is wonderfull comfortable if wee soundly consider our interest in the fauour of him that is so louing mercifull gratious and bountifull and especially against our sinnes and in the case of Afflictions for in both these Arguments of great consolation may bee drawne from the goodnesse of his nature as 1. Against the burthen and guilt of our sinnes it may greatly ease our hearts and quiet our consciences to know that he hath set vs vnder grace and freed vs from the hard conditions vnder the Law and so acknowledgeth satisfaction in his owne Sons death and passeth by without grieuance a world of infirmities in vs and is most ready to declare forgiuenesse of all our sins so as the Iustification of life by his grace shall exceed and ouercome the condemnation for our sins Rom. 5. 20. 21. Esay 55. 7. 2. In the case of afflictions as was partly shewed before for he is of so good nature 1. That he will not consume vs but onely try vs hee will not afflict vs for his pleasure but for our profit Heb. 12. 18. Lament 3. 21. Mal. 3. 17. Deut. 4. 31. 2. That he will not forsake vs nor chide for euer Nehemiah 9. 17. 31. Psal 103. 8 9. nothing shall separate vs from his loue Rom. 8. 38. Esay 54. 7. 10. 3. That he will heare vs gratiously when wee come to him in the day of trouble Zach. 13. 9. Psal 118. 5. Exod 22. 27. so as we may goe boldly to the Throne of grace to seeke help Heb. 4. 16. Nahum 1. 7. Yea he will shew himselfe to be a God of consolation 2. Cor. 1. 3. 4. That we shall neuer be oppressed by our Aduersaries though neuer so great and malicious Psal 1●8 6. if so good a God be on our side what can man doe against vs Psal 86. 14 15 16. and so in generall out of all affliction he will deliuer and giue a good end Psal 34. 17. Iames 5. 11. Hee will repent him of the euill Ioel 2. 13. Lastly heere is matter of great Humiliation 1. To all ill natured fierce vnmercifull froward and cruell minded persons for hence it appeares they are not of God they that are of God are like to his nature in some degree but these natures are of the diuell 3. Iohn 11. 1. Iohn 3. 6. 10. Iohn 8. 44. 2. To such as abuse this so great goodnesse of God as they doe that prophane the doctrine of it by taking liberty from thence to sinne the more securely and so turne the grace of God into wantonnesse wofull is the condition of such persons for thereby they heape vp wrath against the day of wrath and depriue themselues of all the benefits of Gods goodnesse Iude 3. Rom. 6. 1. Heb. 10. 29. Rom. 2. 5. 4. Deut. 29. 19. 3. To all wicked men that are in disgrace with God Oh what a miserie is it to want his fauour or suffer his displeasure that shewes so much goodnesse to all that serue him Exodus 34. 7. Iohn 3. 17. 19. 4. The best men in the Church may be most heartily grieued for their owne deficiencies that they cannot more admire loue and praise his infinite goodnesse Hitherto of the goodnesse of God His Iustice followes The Iustice of God comprehends his Truth and his Righteousnesse Gods Truth is diuersly magnified in Scripture partly as it is in himselfe and partly as it is declared towards the creatures God is Truth in himselfe three waies 1. In his Essence as he truely is and truely is such as he is said to be thus he is said to be the true God Ier. 10. 10. Ioh. 17. 3. and thus he winnes himselfe glory and triumphes ouer all the Idols of the Gentiles Ier. 10. 14. 1. Thes 1. 9. and thus God is truely infinite truely immutable truely immortall truely wise truely good truely iust c. 2. As he is that increated first and chiefe Truth and that immutable Archetype exemplar and Idea of all true things without himself as he is the frame of all things in his minde The true patternes of all things were in the minde of God from eternity and all created things are said to be true only as they answer these patternes 3. In his internall workes and so his decrees are all true not one of them mistaken or disappointed but haue their precise and punctuall accomplishment 2. God is true without himselfe towards the creatures and so 1. In his workes because all his workes he doth truely there is nothing counterfeit or dissembled or fained in them Reuel 15. 3. 16. 7. He did truely create and doth truely gouerne the world call iustifie sanctifie and will glorifie the Elect c. Psal 11● 7. 2. In his words all he saith is true This is called the iustice of his words and so 1. All his Commandements are true right Statutes and true iudgements and so they are as they containe an absolute platforme of Holinesse and haue no imperfection defect or wickednesse or iniquity in them Nehemiah 9. 13. Psal 19. 8 9. 119. 86. 142. 160. 2. All his promises are true and so the Couenant of grace is true the Gospell is the Word of Truth Not a Tittle of the good word of God shall faile Zach. 8. 8. Ephes 1. 13. 3. All his Threatnings are true and shall bee truly accomplished Rom. 2. 2. 4. All his Prophecies are true and faithfull sayings Reuel 22. 6. 7. The Truth of GOD is yet further magnified in Scripture 1. As it is the Fountaine of all Truth in the creature so God is called the God of Truth and the Light that inlightneth euery man in the world he is the Father of all light in the minds of the creatures Psal 31. 5. Iohn 1. 9. Iames 1. 17. 2. As it is eternall and immutable and inuincible no parcell of Gods Truth can faile Psal 117. 2. Mat. 5. 18. 24. 35. Rom. 3. 3 4. 2. Tim. 2. 13. great is the Truth and will preuaile It may bee ouerwhelmed with strong clouds and mountaines of darkenesse and error and yet it will so struggle and get ground that in the end it will destroy and consume what is exalted against it As we see in the consumption of the Kingdome of the man of sinne The
the Moone was then at the full whereas the Sunne is neuer eclipsed in the course of Nature but in the new Moone and besides Saint Luke seemes to import that there was a darknesse brought vpon the whole earth besides the darkning of the Sunne Luke 23. 44 45. And whereas Saint Luke saith it was ouer all the earth Interpreters are diuided in opinion about the meaning of all the earth Some thinke it was but ouer all the land viz. of Iudea other thinke it was ouer all the world About this latter opinion something seemes to make for it and something makes against it for it seemes to be the testimonie of Dionisius the Areopagite who is said to see it in Egypt and of the Philosopher at Athens that seeing it should say Now either the world is perishing or the God of Nature suffers and of Orosius that said it was at Rome and ioyned with great trembling of the Earth and of Eusebius who saith it was in Bithinia Against it seemes to be manifest reason for with the Antipodes it was at that houre midnight and it could not be at the sixth houre in all places It is very likely it was chiefly in Iudea but yet so as in the neighbouring Countries it might be obserued and a part of the darknesse might extend thither Now for the second point many things may be hereby signified as 1. It might signifie that the Sunne of Righteousnesse did now set That the true light and life of the world was now a dying 2. It might signifie the horrible blindnesse of the Iewes and foretell the spirituall darknesse should be confirmed vpon them that as heretofore the Egyptians had darknesse and in the Land of Goshen was light and by that darknesse was signified the imminent destruction of the Egyptians and by that light the liberty and saluation of the Israelites so now the Iewes should be left in horrible darknes and desolation and the light of the Gospell should shine in other Nations to bring saluation to them 3. It might import the detestation of that fact The great light of the world withdrawes his beames as abhorring to see so dreadfull a spectacle as the Sonne of God crucified or to vouchsafe light to so mischieuous creatures as the Iewes about such a worke and at that very time railing and blaspheming 4. It might signifie the vnspeakable vilenesse of our sinnes seeing that at the time they were opened and by imputation laid vpon our surety the very frame of Nature is turned vpside downe and it was vsuall in Scripture by the threatning of the darkning of the Sunne to set out the wrath of God against the sinne of man Ier. 15. 9. Ezech. 32. 7 8. Ioel 2. 10. 30. 31. A●●s 8. 9. 5. It did most euidently signifie the Diuinitie of Christ this and all other miracles which fell out at that time were therefore wrought that it might appeare hee was more than man that suffered If he had died without miracles he might haue beene thought to be but a meere man and that our faith might be strengthned by the greatnesse of the wonders that otherwise might be weakned by the ignominie of his suffering so vile a death as to be hanged on a Tree 6. Was it not to teach vs compassion Is Nature troubled at this sight and doth the Sunne mourne and couer it selfe with blacknesse as with a garment and cannot our hard hearts be melted to mourne for him who was pained for our sinnes Thus of the second Testimonie The third Testimonie was the conuersion of one of the Theeues vpon the Crosse and his conuersion did notably serue to demonstrate the glory of Christ both in respect of his Diuinitie that could conuert a soule without meanes he must needs be more than man that can immediatly make the heart of man new as also in respect of the vertue of his Passion and Death which so liuely shewes it selfe vpon the soule of the Theefe in killing his corrupt humours and kindling in him the life of true grace and both the more wonderfull in respect of the circumstance of the time that it was when Christ was on the Crosse derided of men and plagued of God and forsaken of his owne c. Now in particular concerning this conuersion I would make vse of three things By considering first who was conuerted 2. When he was conuerted 3. How he shewed the truth of his conuersion For the first The person conuerted was one of the two Theeues whence we may gather That notorious malefactors may repent and be saued for God is abundant in mercie and the bloud of Christ is of vnspeakable value which as it should teach vs to admire Gods goodnesse so it should keepe vs from despairing of any though their course be neuer so vile so long as God continues the day of his grace and prolongs his patience towards them For the second He was conuerted at his last end euen when he was ready to die vpon the Crosse I suppose diuers that heare but this point named will hence gather that men may repent them at their latter end euen at the last gaspe It is true that a man may be saued that repents not before his end This Theefe was saued and they that went into the Vineyard at the eleuenth houre and God hath promised to receiue the sinner in what day soeuer he shall returne and repent Mat. 20. Ezek. 18. But yet lest men should abuse this example to confirme themselues in that most dangerous procrastination consider with me foure things 1. That we here reade of one that repented at his latter end that no man might despaire and yet but one that no man might presume 2. That the conuersion of this Theefe was an immediate worke of the diuine power of Christ and so a dreadfull miracle and though this one man was saued so extraordinarily without meanes yet that doth not proue that God will doe so to other men if Christ doe conuert thee at thy latter end he doth as great a worke as to raise the dead or darken the Sunne and cleaue the rocks or the like And what warrant hast thou that thou shalt be saued by miracle 3. That men haue as much reason to be afraid they shall not repent because the other Theefe did not repent at his latter end as to thinke they shall because this Theefe did repent 4. That it is said by them that went into the Vineyard at the eleuenth houre that therefore they went not in sooner because no man hired them Matth. 20. which was like to be the case of this Theefe He neuer was called before he had not had the meanes of conuersion but this can be no ground for such as haue had the meanes from the third or sixth or ninth houre and will not be hired nor perswaded to enter into the Vineyard but put all off till the eleuenth houre Indeed if men had neuer had the meanes till their old age or sicknesse they
makes sufficient payment to Gods iustice and ouercomes death for vs and that by reason of the worthinesse of his person It is more for Christ to die one houre than for all the world to be dead for euer For it is in this as it is in a prison into which many debtors are cast It is an euerlasting prison to such as cannot pay their debts but it is but a temporarie prison to such as either by themselues or any other make full payment of what is owing 6. That by his death he might make a medicine to kill sinne in vs which might so eat downe the power of sinne that it should no more reigne in vs and so by degrees abolish sinne He died that we might die to sinne by the vertue of his death Rom. 6. 7. That thereby he might buy life for the world He gaue his flesh for the life of the world euen to purchase eternall life for the elect world Ioh. 6. 51. 8. That many sonnes might be borne to God Christ was like seed falling from heauen to the earth and there dying it quickned and brought forth many sonnes to God Esay 53. 10. Ioh. 12. 24. yea the doctrine of Christ dead for our sins is still like to diuine seed falling into our hearts which conuerts men and turnes them to God Thus of the Reasons Now what vse may we make of the consideration of the death of Christ Many things we may learne from hence 1. It should teach vs to be stedfast in the faith and to beleeue and trust vpon Gods mercies for Christ died for our sinnes and therefore wee are certainly reconciled vnto God 1 Cor. 15. 3. Rom. 5. 10. And God doth assure vs of so much in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper Matth. 26. 2. We should neuer be afraid of Death and Hell 1 Thess 5. 9 10. Christ by dying for vs hath deuoured and euen swallowed vp Death and Hell so as they shall neuer hurt vs. As the fire consumes the stubble so by wonderfull Art Christ by dying hath consumed all the forces and power of Death and the sting of it 1 Cor. 15. 54. Heb. 2. 15. 14. Death as a curse was laid vpon Christ that our death might be blessed to vs. 3. It should maruellously inflame our hearts with the admiration of the loue of Christ to vs 1 Ioh. 3. 16. 4. Henceforth we that liue should not liue to our selues but to him that died for vs and carry our selues as men that are dead to the world and the sinfull pleasures and lusts thereof and shew the proofe of the vertue of Christs death in vs by the mortification of our sinnes 2 Cor. 5. 15. Rom. 6. 2. 6. 5. It should breed in vs a holy resolution to suffer any thing for his sake euen to forsake Father Mother Wife Children Husband yea and Life it selfe for his sake and the Gospels Iohn 12. 24 25 26. yea it should make vs willing to lay downe our liues one for another if our life may doe seruice to the Church of God and our brethren 1 Ioh. 3. 16. 6 Seeing Christ in death falls to the ground like a dead carkas we should be like spirituall Eagles to flie to it wheresoeuer we finde it whether in the Word or Sacraments and our soules should feed heartily but spiritually vpon it Matth. 24. And seeing God in his ordinances presents vs still with the dead body of his Sonne it should be a meanes to draw all men to it and to gather into one all the children of God that were scattered abroad Iohn 11. 52. and 12. 32 33. 7. The meditation of the death of Christ should make vs in all estates to liue at rest and in a holy security as knowing that Christ died for vs that whether we wake or sleepe we might liue together with him 1 Thess 5. 10. If we liue we liue to the Lord and if we die we die to the Lord Whether we liue or die we are the Lords Rom. 14. 7 8. Thus of the generall proposition concerning the death of Christ and the Reasons and Vses of it In the Explication these things are to be confidered 1. Who died 2. Who were the speciall witnesses of his death 3. How he died 4. For whom he died 5. When he died 6. The consequents of his death For the first if we aske who died the Apostle Paul Rom. 8. 34. answers It is Christ which is dead Which is to be obserued the better to stirre vp our hearts to consider both the wonder of it and the reason of it That any other man should die is no wonder because all other men were sinfull and mortall but here Iesus Christ the Righteous who onely hath immortality dies and withall it leads vs to thinke of the reason of it for he did not die nay he could not die if he had beene considered as a priuate person because he deserued not death in his owne person but he died as our suretie and as a publike vndertaker for vs all hee died in our roome But yet we are further to inquire into this question and to consider whether this death belong to the person of Christ or only to his Natures or to each of them he being God and man in one person And in this we must take heed what our hearts answer for though it be true that Christ died in respect of the flesh so as it was only the flesh that suffered death in respect of the Nature that died yet his death belonged to the Word in respect of the Person for the Word the Lord of life and glory suffered and died not in respect of his Diuinitie which is immutable and altogether impassible but in respect of his Humanitie or in his flesh God did not die with the flesh but in the flesh and he died in his flesh that is in that flesh which was vnited to the diuine Nature If the flesh of Christ were the flesh of the Sonne of God then his dying in the flesh doth belong to him as the Sonne of God Thus his bloud is said to be the Bloud of God Act. 20. 28. and this we must needs beleeue for else his death as a bare man could not haue beene of sufficient merit for all our sinnes There is yet one thing more to be thought on about this Question and that is that the Humanitie that is the soule and flesh of Christ did in death and after death remaine in the Person of the Sonne of God firmely vnited Though the Soule was disvnited from the Body yet neither Body nor Soule were dis-vnited from the Person of the Sonne of God The parts of the Humane Nature were diuided in death one from another so as one was on earth and the other in heauen but yet both of them remained and subsisted in the Diuine Nature else if in death there had beene a new manner of subsisting Christ had had two Persons as well as two Natures which is Heresie to
beleeue Thus of the first Question For the second we shall finde in the Story of the Euangelists that the chiefe Witnesses of Christs death were women that followed Christ from Galile and ministered to him by name Mary Magdalen and Mary the mother of Iames and Ioses and Salome and the mother of Z●bedees children These a farre off beheld what was done Of all the Apostles and seuentie Disciples here is not one but onely Iohn the Euangelist who was by the Crosse with the Virgin Mary Thus will God exercise the faith of his seruants the Church must receiue the report of the things that concerne the death of Christ from women as the chiefe Witnesses and hereby did Christ honour the pietie of these women that followed him to the death when the Disciples fled and left him which is an euerlasting honour to their sex and shewes that God can make women glorious confessors of the Truth euen at such times as men hide their heads for feare What a shame is this for the Apostles to be absent from a spectacle vpon which the saluation of the whole world doth depend Besides hence we may gather that Christ can preserue vnto himselfe some number that professe his Truth and can arme them against the feare of danger euen in the most desperate persecutions Yea some such as will neither flie nor hide themselues Now for the third Question there are many things to be noted in the manner how Christ died for 1. Hee died truly It was not a putatiue death but a true death He died in deed and not in shew or appearance onely 2. He died a grieuous death for hee died a painfull death and he died a violent death and he died a cursed death There were certain in ancient times that held that Christ receiued many wounds was smitten whipped nailed and shed his bloud and died his Soule going out of his Body but yet neuer indeed felt any paine He had they said a body that could suffer but not a Nature that could grieue or feele paine But that he did feele paine is not only manifest by his owne words but is expresly affirmed by the Prophet Esay Chap. 53. He suffered also a violent death he did not die a naturall death and it must needs be so because Christ had nothing in him to cause him to die and besides he thereby answers to the Types in the Sacrifices of the old Testament which were not onely beasts dead but beasts slaine Thirdly he suffered a cursed death for such was the death of the Crosse and God had before pronounced it a cursed way of dying Galat. 3. 13. All which as it shewes the grieuousnesse of our sinnes by nature so doth it import the greatnesse of our blessednesse by grace for therefore did Christ die a cursed death that wee might liue a blessed life as the Apostle shewes Gal. 3. 13 14. Yea and besides hereby the Curse is remoued from our death so as it is a blessed thing for a Christian man to die and go out of the world when God calls for him 3. He died willingly not by compulsion he laid downe his life for no man could take it from him Ioh. 10. 18. and that may appeare by the Story for Christ cried with a loud voice and gaue vp the ghost Now men that lye a dying languish and their voice failes them or at least growes weake Againe it is said Christ laid his head aside and then gaue vp the ghost whereas other men first giue vp the ghost and then their heads fall aside and further to shew that he died when he listed he was found dead sooner than other men that died on the Crosse which Pilate himselfe wondered at Now this is for our great comfort that he died so willingly for it both addes to the sufficiencie of the propitiation in his death and shewes vs the greatnesse of his tender loue to vs and withall it should fire vs to a holy resolution with all willingnesse to doe any thing he would haue vs or suffer any thing for his sake 4. He died most religiously and his piety in his death is commended for his obedience to his Father and for his care for his Mother and for his loue to his enemies and for his deuotion in respect of himselfe His obedience to God his Father in his death is commended Phil. 2. 9. because hee did not onely obey all the Morall Law that all men were bound to but obeyed the singular commandement giuen by his Father euen that of dying for the people which as Man he was not bound to but as a Mediator Which should teach vs abnegation of our selues whatsoeuer it is God commands vs we should be willing to do how hard soeuer Gods work seemes to be This care for his Mother is recorded by Saint Iohn Chap. 19. 25 26. when he saw his Mother standing by with the beloued Disciple he said Woman behold thy Sonne and vnto him Behold thy Mother Thus is Christ a most perfect Patterne of righteousnesse in both Tables for as hee had before shewed his godlinesse in the first Table so doth he here shew his naturall affection and tender care of his Mother in the second Table Now was the time come when Simeons prophecie was accomplished vpon his poore Mother now did the sword of bitter sorrowes pierce thorow her righteous soule while shee beholds that dolefull spectacle of her matchlesse Childe suffering death vpon the Tree Luke 2. 35. And therefore now to comfort her doth he commit her to Iohn his beloued Disciple with charge that he should looke to her after his death taking this care for his Mother of whom he was made man and commending her to his Disciple with such humane affection he shewes himselfe to be that high Teacher sent of God The Tree to which the members of Christ dying were fastened was a chaire of a spirituall master teaching for hereby he teacheth children how they should honour their parents and continue a reuerent loue to them euen to their last gaspe and hereby he teacheth hearers how to performe gratefulnesse to their Teachers not only by releeuing their Teachers while they liue but by helping their parents or children when they are dead He calls her Woman not out of contempt but to tell her and all men that he that then was a dying was more than the Sonne of Mary Yea and thereby the comforts her for he intimated that being more than Man hee was able to ouercome death and could not be van quished by his enemies His loue to his enemies he shewes by praying for them when they most outragiously and blasphemously persecuted him to the death He said Father forgiue them they know not what they doe The crie of their blasphemies and his innocent bloud went vp to heauen against them but Iesus makes haste to send vp the crie of his prayers for them that they perish not for euer and therefore the first words he
be an excellent estate he brings vs to we are redeemed out of the earth we are first fruits to God and the Lambe Revel 14. 4. hee accounts of vs as a peculiar people and as his onely treasure in the world Tit. 2. 14. The fifth question is when Christ died And that is answered either by the season of his death or by the Chronologie of it For the season S. Paul saith he died in the due time Rom. 5. 6. Christ himselfe saith it was when he had finished the performance of what was shadowed in the types and ceremonies of the Old Testament when all things were accomplished hee gaue vp the ghost Ioh. 19. 28 30. The Author to the Hebrewes saith it was once in the end of the world Heb. 9. 26 27 28. The Angell told Daniel that the Messiah should be cut off after 62. weekes in propheticall account from the time of his prayer Dan. 9. 26. Saint Peter said it was at the time that God had appointed in his eternall counsell and foreknowledge Act. 2. 23. yea he died precisely at the very houre God had set so as he could not be killed either before or after Ioh. 7. 30. and 13. 1. and that houre was the ninth houre of the day euen at the time when the Euening Sacrifice was offered vp Matth. 27. 46. 50. For the Chronologie Scaliger saith he died in the yeare of the world 3982. and the common opinion is that hee died in the 34. yeare of his owne age and on the Friday as we terme the fifth day of our weeke which that yeare was the 15. day of their Moneth Nisan or as others thinke the 14. day which that yeare answered to the seuenth day of our Aprill Quest If Christ were slaine towards the end of the world how can it be said that he was the Lambe slaine from the beginning of the world Revel 13. ●8 Answ Both are true in diuers respects For in respect of the Storie of his death he died at the time before specified but for many other respects it may be truly said hee was slaine from the beginning of the world as 1. In respect of Gods counsell and foreknowledge He was dead in Gods counsell from euerlasting 2. In respect of the promise of his death giuen in Paradise Gen. 3. 15. 3. In respect of the efficacie of his death for the iustice of God was satisfied with that promise of his death knowing it should as certainly be as if it had beene then fulfilled Neither was the effect here before the cause for if a Suretie compound with the Creditor the Debtor is deliuered out of prison though the payment be made long after at the time the Suretie and the Creditor agree vpon so it was here 4. In respect of the Sacrifices which shadowed out his death which were slaine from the beginning of the world Christ was slaine typically in those Sacrifices Adam or Abel offered to God 5. In respect of his seruants that were martyred So Christ was slaine when Abel was slaine 6. In respect of the faith of the godly for it is the propertie of faith to make things to come to be present as giuing a substance or person to things hoped for and a present demonstrarion of things which yet are not seene Heb. 11. 1. 7. In respect of sinne which was the cause of his death which was committed by the Elect and was the cause of his death Their sinne was his death when they began to sinne death was in the pot for Christ and so their sinne was remitted them only for the respect of that satisfaction was to be made in the sacrifice of Christ Rom. 3. 21. to 27. The Vse wee may make of the time of Christs death may be 1. To leaue the times and seasons to God and not to exact an account of him why he doth not doe the things concerne the Church in the time we desire or looke after Though the death of Christ was deferred almost 4000. yeares yet we see God saith it was the due time though perhaps a full demonstration of the reason of it doe not appeare to vs. God is so wise and good as we must beleeue that is the best time for euery worke which he chuseth and therefore we should giue God the glory of the time of euery worke of his whether concerning the Church in generall or our selues in particular as beleeuing that God hath done in the very day that which was fittest for the day and so also in the things we desire either of deliuerance or blessings we should wait till the time appointed come and beleeue that all shall be done when it is most seasonable 2. We should hence be much established about the time of our owne death God hath set the houre and till that houre come no disease nor enemies shall euer be able to take away our life and therefore wee should follow our worke with diligence and a holy securitie and leaue it to God to take vs from our worke when he sees it to be the fittest time Thus of the time when he died The consequences of his death follow and they must be considered negatiuely or affirmatiuely Negatiuely It is obserued by the Euangelists That not a bone of Christ was broken which is worthy to be noted First because the Iewes had made a request to Pilate that the leggs of those which were crucified might be broken to hasten their death that they might not hang on their Crosses on the day of the great Sabbath Iohn 19. 31 32. But notwithstanding they were preuented for Christ was dead before they came backe to shew that he died when himselfe would not when they would to let them haue cause to guesse thereby that he was more than a bare man Secondly because of the excellent signification of this thing for it is said the Scripture had said that not a bone of him should be broken Iohn 19. 36. Now the Scripture had only said so of the Paschall Lambe that not a bone thereof should be broken Exod. 12. 46. which manifestly shewes that Christ was the true Passeouer the true Paschall Lambe which was sacrificed for vs 1 Cor. 5. 6. and withall it signifies that the mysticall bodie of Christ shall be preserued The Church may haue many enemies but yet a bone thereof shall not be broken The flesh of the Church may be wounded but not a bone of the Church shall be broken Affirmatiuely the consequents of his death bot the piercing of his side with a Speare and the testimonie giuen of his glory in his death The side of Christ after he was dead was pierced with a Speare by one of the Souldiers and forthwith came out water and bloud Iohn 19. 34. and this was a businesse of so high a nature that the Euangelist saith thus vpon it He that saw it bare record and his record is true and he knoweth that he saith true that he might beleeue Now the side of
Ghost yet that hinders not the truth of this assertiō for in the works ad extra all the Trinity work but yet in their order God the Father by the Son through the Holy Ghost raised the dead body of Christ Secondly he rose by a way that neuer man rose and not as other men haue risen or shall rise by a way peculiar to himselfe viz. as the Lord of Life as the first borne of the Dead as the first fruits of them that sleepe Rev. 1. 5. 1 Cor. 15. 20. 23. not as a priuate person but as a publike person as our head and surety He saw no corruption in the Graue as other dead bodies doe and he rose to immortall life neuer to dye againe whereas Lazarus and others that were raised were raised but to a mortall life they were to dye againe he was the first tha● euer rose to eternall life Thirdly hee rose in the same body that was dead and buried Luk. 24. 39. which was necessary for our comfort in the discharge of our debt that the same body that was imprisoned came out of prison and doth the better assure the hope of the resurrection of our bodies Fourthly he rose inuitis custodibus whether the Keepers of the Sepulchre would or not and smote them with great amazement to shew how easie it is for him to triumph ouer his enemies when they seeme to bee surest of victory He that could conquer them when they had nothing in appearance to oppose them but a dead body can as easily defeat all his enemies that onely differ from his people only in greatnesse of earthly power If the Church were as the dead body of Christ yet it may rise againe notwithstanding all their armed Troopes Fistly hee rose with an earthquake that thereby hee might signifie First that the earth did him homage and as it were sware fealty to him as her Lord and Proprietary Secondly that as the earth trembled at his death so now as it were is exalted for ioy that shee was to render him aliue from the dead Thirdly that Christ would shake the world and the heart of man by his Gospell Heb. 12. Fourthly that Christ by his power can and will make the earth giue vp her dead at the last day Lastly the Angels ministred vnto him by rolling away the stone c. to signifie that not onely he was Lord of Angels but that God was satisfied as Iudges that send some officer to fetch the prisoner out of prison and release him Fiftly but why was it necessary that Christ should rise againe Ans First that the Scripture might bee fulfilled that had foretold it Psal 16. 10. Ioh. 20. 9. Mat. 26. 54. Secondly if the Scripture had not foretold yet such was the dignity of his person that he must needs rise for it was impossible for him to be holden downe of Death Act. 2. 24. for first he was the onely Son of God and the Father loues his Sonne and cannot suffer him to be ouercome of death Besides he was God himselfe the Author and Prince of life and therefore it had beene absurd for him to abide in death that giues all others life Thirdly hee was a iust man and innocent and had fully satisfied for our sinnes and therefore God could not keepe him in prison for nothing and where sinne is not there death cannot reigne Thus of the second reason Thirdly such was the office of him that rose againe that he could not abide in death as was shewed before hee must declare Gods name to his brethren hee must make intercession hee must reigne as a King euerlasting all which he could not doe if he abide in death Fourthly because there was a Decree for his resurrection in Gods eternall Councell Psal 2. 7. commpared with Act. 13. 32. 33. Fiftly that the types and shadowes of it might bee fulfilled Ionas was a type of the Resurrection Mat. 12. 39. So was Adam waking out of the sleepe into which hee was cast when the Woman was made out of his side 〈◊〉 was Samson that brake asunder the barres and gates and was deliuered so was Dauid that was so often oppressed and yet exalted to the kingdome Psal 86. 13. Concerning the Apparitions of Christ after his resurrection the Scripture records that our Sauiour was on earth forty daies and in that time appeared to many at seuerall times shewing himselfe aliue from the dead and giuing order concerning his Kingdome as hee was forty daies in giuing the Law to Moses on the Mount so was he forty daies in giuing order about the new Law to the Apostles and hee that began to consecrate himselfe to the office appointed him by his Father in fasting forty daies doth now take forty daies both to lay downe that office and to consecrate the Ministery of his Disciples Now concerning these Apparitions diuers things are to be considered 1. The Reasons why he appeared 2. The Persons to whom he appeared For the first our Sauiour staied a while vpon earth and appeared at seuerall times for these Reasons 1. That he might confirme the infallible truth of his Resurrection that the Christian world might bee fully assured of it that God had raised him from the dead Act. 10. 40 41. and that he was raised in the same body that was crucified and buried for our sinnes 2. That he might giue order to his Disciples concerning all things that concerned his Kingdome ouer Iewes and Gentiles and might appoint all the alterations were to bee made in the manner of gouerning the Christian world Act. 1. 3. and thus hee instituted the seuerall orders of Ministers vnder the Gospell granting full Commission to the Apostles Act. 28. 18. Eph. 4. 11. and so we haue reason to beleeue that the translation of the day for the Christian Sabbath was by appointment from him while he was on earth with other things which the Apostles ordered afterwards 3. That he might giue gifts vnto the men that were to begin the worke of erecting the Christian world Ioh. 20. 21 22 23. Eph. 4. promising to giue the holy Ghost more fully Act. 1. 4. The persons to whom hee appeared are to be considered negatiuely and affirmatiuely 1. Negatiuely he appeared not to the world not to all the people not to the chiefe Priests Rulers of the people Act. 10. 41. that therby he might shew First that his Kingdome was not of this world Iob. 18. 36. Secondly that he did not need the helpe and patronage of the greatnesse of this world in businesses of his Kingdome Thirdly that his Kingdome comes not by externall obseruation and is not obiected to the eyes of the body but to the eyes of the minde and faith Luk. 17. 20 21. Ioh. 20. 29. Fourthly that the contempt of the meanes in the ordinances of Christ shall bee scourged with a priuation of all fellowship with Christ in his glory The chiefe Priests and Rulers and other despisers of the Doctrine and Miracles of Christ in
Creeds Ibid. The Word of God not handled in the Creed why page 41 Christs actiue obedience not mentioned in the Creed why page 303 Customes of the Country to bee obserued page 441 A fearefull example for such as curse page 377 D. DAmned in hell suffer 4. things page 530 Dangers of life sustained by Christ for diuers ends ●24 Darknesse vpon the whole earth how page 403 What this did signifie Ibid. Death of the godly more comfortable then the life of the wicked page 385 Death of Christ page 415 418 eight reasons of it page 416 Christ by his Death did abolish the power of death Ibid. How Christ frees vs from eternall Death seeing he suffred it not page 416 Christs Death teacheth vs seuen things page 417 Whether Christ Dyed in his humanity or diuinity page 419 The manner how Christ Dyed page 420 Death of Christ painfull Ibid. For whom he Dyed page 4●4 When he Dyed page 426 The Dead Body of Christ not forsaken page 437 Death not to be feared page 417 Christ Derided for three reasons page 393 How God departs from men page 99 Christs Descension our ascension page 431 Diuell workes strange mischiefs from small beginnings page 330 Diuels companions of wicked men page 528 Diuel policy to make men suspect Christs Diuinity page 238 Diuels cannot take vs out of Christs hand page 239 Disciples Fishers of men page 466 Disciples drousinesse page 343 Christ preserues his Disciples safe from the Souldiers page 349 Diues message is sent to vs. page 531 What Doctrine is vnwholsome page 4 True Doctrine vnwholsome how Ibid. Dreames offoure sorts page 374 Dreame of Pilats Wife page 375 Dreames how wee may giue heede to them Ibid. E. AS Eagles we must flye to the dead Carcase page 418 Earth trembles at Christs death to signifie three things page 432 Earth six things admirable in the making thereof page 182 Seuen vses from hence page 183 In the Earth foure things admirable Earth-quakes how they come page 173 Ecclesiasticall courts corruption and iniustice in them page 358 Elect Gods goodnesse to them in foure things page 68 Enemies Christ prayes for them page 422 Essence of God page 110 Diuers Essences Ibid. Eternall how so called page 101 Eternity described by Boetius Ibid. Eternity of God described and explaned page 102 Difference between eternity and time page 102 Eternity of God proued by Scripture page 103 Doctrine of Gods Eternity should teach vs six things Ibid. Comfortable in fiue respects page 104 Euidence against wicked men at the last day page 522 Exaltation of Christ page 452 His diuine nature how Exalted page 452 His humane nature how Exalted page 453 The benefit that comes to vs by Christs Exaltation Ibid. F. FAith diuersly taken page 18 Profession of Faith hath in it two things Ibid. Implicite Faith a policy of Antichrist page 19 That we may not be deceiued about a temporary Faith we must looke to three things page 22 Effects of Faith differ in the true beleeuer and wicked man how Ibid. Paucity of such as haue true Faith appeares in six things page 24 How farre a temporary Faith goeth and wherein it is sufficient page 25 Tryall of a temporary Faith by diuers questions Ibid. Try whether we be in the Faith or no. page 27. Nine things repugnant to Faith Ib. Some things like Faith which are not page 28 Faith 5. kinds of it page 29 5. Signes of an effectuall Faith page 30 10. Effects of Faith Ibid. Assurance of Faith comfortable page 32 Extraordinary effects of Faith page 33 Faith procureth admirable things for our selues Ibid. For others page 34 Faith is our life in diuers respects Ibid. A christians Faith opposed in many things Ibid. Godly men offend about Faith in eight things page 35 Three meanes to breed Faith page 36 Le ts of Faith page 37 They that haue Faith must looke to two things Ibid. Faith wrought by degrees page 39 Foure things considered about a weake Faith Ibid. Signes of a weake Faith page 39 Signes of a true though weake Faith page 40 Comforts against weaknesse of Faith Ibid. Labour for growth in Faith Ibid. Ground of Faith the Word of God page 41 Concerning this ground we must resolue of fiue things Ibid. Faith of the godly shall neuer faile page 355 A right Faith in Christ breeds adoration and worship of Christ page 469 Faith and hope not in Christ page 254 Faithfull rest vpon God three wayes page 114 Father How attributed to God page 128 God a Father six wayes Ibid. God the Father of Christ proued and opened page 129 This teacheth vs three things page 131 It is comfortable in eight particulars page 132 God our Father foure wayes page 133 Hee is our Father by way of resemblance page 133 Faith lookes vpon God as Father in Christ page 134 Six signes of these who haue God to their Father Ibid. God is our Father this teacheth vs twelue things page 135 Acknowledge God as a Father page 134 Goe vnto him in all wants page 135 This is comfortable in diuers things page 136 God more then an ordinary Father page 137 Want of Feare of God the cause of all disorder 407 Christ layed downe infirmities of the Flesh but not the Flesh it selfe page 453 Fishing of the Disciples teach vs diuers things page 467 Wicked men Foolish page 356 Christ Forsaken in two respects page 396 Two obiections answered Ibid. Forsaken by all for soure reasons page 350 Fiuerules to be obserued in if we would prosper in the Fruitfulnesse of these outward things page 188 Cost in Funerals of Saints not vnlawfull page 440 Fowl●s of the ayre page 168 Gods care for them in Fiue things Ibid. What vses they serue for Ibid. They teach vs three things page 169 G. CHrist chose the Garden to begin his Passion in of purpose page 336 He was buried in a Garden why page 435 He put off his Garments before his sufferings for seuen reasons page 389 God Doctrine concerning God to be knowne for fiue reasons page 42 True knowledge of God hindred in six things page 44 We are vnable to conceiue of God for nine reasons page 46 God makes himselfe knowne seuen waies page 47 God is knowne diuers waies by seuerall things page 49 God knowne to man foure wayes Ibid He is described Ibid. Seuen rules for the attaining to the knowledge of God page 51 Three things to bee auoided in inquirong after the nature of God page 53 Many things spoken of God by way of likenesse page 55 Gods properties of two rankes Ibid. Foure things in Gods Nature matchlesse Ibid. Life of God admirable in three respects Ibid. This teacheth vs eight things page 56 Knowledge of God to bee admired in eight respects page 57 God the Fountaine of all wisdome page 58 Gods knowledge infinite Ibid. And most perfect as appeares in foure things page 59 God knowes all things at one view page 60 Consideration of Gods knowledge is vsefull page 61
mercifull bountifull c. but GOD is loue it selfe mercie it selfe c. 3. Because their goodnesse began but yesterday a little while agoe whereas Gods goodnesse was from euerlasting 4. Because their goodnesse is mutable they may hate and loath whom they formerly loued and pi●tied vehemently and they may loue and pittie such persons as when they die may perish in hell for euer where they shall neuer enioy comfort by them more whereas Gods loue is immutable and euerlasting 5. Because they can shew no such fruits of their loue and mercie as God doth they cannot ransome the world nor quicken and raise the dead soules and bodies of men nor medicine the afflictions of them they loue to turne them to good nor subdue those mighty enemies diuells sin death and hell nor nourish soules nor giue an immortall inheritance Secondly the consideration of his glorious goodnes should compell vs 1. To magnifie him for his goodnesse and striue to set out his praises to mention the louing kindnesses of the Lord according to his great goodnesse shewed to vs Esay 63. 7. The Prophet Dauid in many places vrgeth this vse vehemently vsing this forme of exhortation in many places Oh praise the Lord for he is good for his mercy indureth for euer Psalme 106. 1. 107. 1. 118. 1 1●6 1. and though worlds of carnall people cannot bee inflamed to the admiration of this matchlesse goodnesse of his yet Israel the redeemed of the Lord all that feare him and haue experience of his mercy should bee vehemently affected with desire to magnifie his praises as these places shew Neither will it suffice after a dull or sullen manner to doe it but wee are bound to praise this goodnesse of God after a speciall manner for 1. We must studie his praises herein and striue to seeke out with delight the conceptions of his glorious praises Psal 111. ● ● 2. We must bee sure that Gods praises heere bee set out with affirmations and language aboue the praises of all other things in the world we must do it abundantly Psal 145. 7. and with our whole hearts Psalme 111. 1. our soules must blesse him not our tongues onely Psal 103. 1. 3. Wee must not rest satisfied to praise him for a fit but must striue to doe it for euer all our life should bee full of his praises Psal 104. 33. and good Reason seeing wee can neuer want matter and cause of praise because the earth is full of his goodnesse Psal 3● 5. and who can at once declare all his praise Psal 106. 2. 4. Nor will it suffice that wee praise him when wee worship him in the word Prayer or S●craments but we must talke of his praises one to another and labour mutually to heate our hearts by daily mentioning the glory of his Nature and Kingdome Psal 145. 11. 2. Gods goodnesse should force vs to repentance and so it should diuers waies It hath in it strong incitations to humiliation to cast downe to the care of a new life It should exceedingly humble vs and breake our hearts to think that wee haue so long and so grieuously transgressed against God that is so full of goodnesse towards vs. It should make vs teare our very hearts with weeping mourning and fasting Ioel. 2. 12. secondly It leades vs to repentance also as it giues vs incouragement to come to him to beg mercy and forgiuenesse because mercy pleaseth him Mich. 7. 18. and his Throne of grace is alwaies easie to come to and he freely shewes mercy and will multiply pardon There can be no such aggrauations of our sinnes but if wee repent all will be swallowed vp in the seas of his goodnesse Esay 55. 7. Ioel 2. 13. Heb. 4. 6. thirdly it should continually fire vs to the hatred of our sinnes and care to liue righteously and soberly and godly in this present world denying vngodlinesse and worldly lusts Titus 2. 12. who would not serue so good a Nature 3. It should set our affections all in a flame and make vs wonderfully in loue with God seeing beyond all comparison there is all that in Gods nature which should kindle affections Oh we should loue him with all our hearts and all our soules and all our might both because hee is so infinitely amiable in himselfe and shewes it to vs daily as also because he seekes to be ours and to vnite vs to himselfe The Doctrine is wholly lost if it will not make vs more in loue with God If such Loue Mercie Bounty Grace and Patience cannot allure vs then nothing that is good can The whole booke of the Canticles sets out the Loue should be in the Church to God Yea it shewes that the vehement passions of Loue should be in vs because all that can be Amiable is in him The desire of our soules should bee euer after him and the remembrance of him We should be much abashed that any louer should shew more affection to an earthly creature then we shew to God Our mindes should still runne vpon him And because we may finde a horrible vnto wardnesse in our nature and extreame dulnesse in our affections therefore wee should make conscience of it to circumcise our hearts that we might more be in loue with God both by afflicting our soules and iudging our selues for our defects and by cutting off and casting away all those delights that might steale away our affections from the Lord beseeching the Lord himselfe to direct our hearts into his loue 2. Thes 3. 5. Esay 26. 9. Psal 31. 19. 21. 23. Deut. 30. 6. 4. It should teach vs to make more account of his loue to vs and all the signes of it we should wonderfully ioy in all the pledges of his fauour esteeming his louing kindnesse better then life Our very soules should be satisfied as with marrow Psalme 63. shall the Lord reioyce ouer vs with ioy and take such delight in vs Zeph. 3. 17. and shall wee so lightly esteeme of his fauour presence and all his loue tokens Oh the Tidings that GOD loues vs should fill our hearts with indelible delights and admiration 5. It should fully perswade vs to rest vpon God and trust in him with all confidence in all estates euen wholly to commit our selues and our waies to his protection who would not trust so good so louing so pitifull so bountifull a Nature Blessed are they that are fauoured by him and can trust in his mercies and shew it both by their abundant contentation and by their continuall recourse to him to seeke all needfull good things from him that is the Fountaine of all goodnesse Psal 34. 9. 13. 6. 6. How should it make vs long for the comming of Iesus Christ and hast to that day how should wee desire to bee dissolued that we might be prefent with the Lord and see his beauty face to face and enioy that vnspeakeable sweetnesse of his Nature immediately Oh what hearts haue we that doe not euen
afflicted but onely in this life for he hath not appointed them vnto eternall wrath 1. Thessalonians 5. 9. 2. That he doth not take his mercy and his goodnes from them Psal 89. 34. 3. That he doth afflict them in measure with respect of their strength Esay 27. 8. Ier. 46. 28. 4. That hee deliuers them out of affliction in the best season Psal 31. 5. 36. 11. 2. To forgiue them as often as they come to him and acknowledge their sinnes 1. Iohn 1. 9. 3. To impute vnto them the Righteousnesse of his Sonne when they claime it by beleeuing Romanes 1. 17. 3. 25. 4. To direct them in his worke and set them in the steppes of his waies and to helpe them to doe his worke Psal 85. 13. 5. To countenance them while they doe his work all the daies of their life against the scornes and reproaches of the world Psal 11. 7. 6. To performe vnto them all hee hath promised them in any part of his word Esay 45. 19. 7. To Crowne them in Heauen and therefore is the Crowne called a Crowne of Righteousnesse which God giues as a Righteous Iudge 2. Tim. 4. 8. The Vses of this Iustice of God towards the godly may be either for instruction or for incouragement It should teach the godly three things First with Dauid to meditate of and to make mention of Gods Righteousnesse euen of his onely there being no Iustice in the world like to Gods Iustice executed with so much dislike of sinne and with so much grace too Psal 71. 15. vlt. Secondly it should breed in them a singular feare of offending seeing God is so Iust as to pursue sin euen in his owne Thirdly they should learne patiently to beare affliction and to indure the indignation of the Lord saying with the Church I will beare the indignation of the Lord because I haue sinned against him Mich. 7. 9. Daniel 9. 7. Againe the consideration of Gods Righteousnesse and Iustice may be a great incouragement to godly men for thence it will follow that he that doth righteousnesse is certainely of God 1. Iohn 2. 29. As they discerne righteousnesse to grow and increase in them so they may assure themselues that they grow more and more like God yea that God himselfe doth fashion them for himselfe and againe is God righteous then he will loue righteousnesse and make much of such as any way resemble him in true righteousnesse The righteous Lord loueth righteousnesse and his countenance doth behold the Iust saith the Psalmist Psal 11. 7. Lastly what can bee more comfortable then that God should acknowledge himselfe bound in his Iustice to doe such excellent things for vs as is before mentioned We should therefore studie these things and thinke on them all the day that our hearts may bee daily refreshed by them Thus of the Iustice of God towards godly men The Iustice of God towards wicked men now followes Gods Iustice towards wicked men is comprehended briefefly in two Heads The first is his Hatred of them their sinnes doe stirre vp in God an vnmeasurable loathing of them so as nothing can be so loathsome to vs as euery wicked man is to God His very soule doth abhorre him Psal 11. 5. The second is the Recompence he will giue him The vengeance of God shall light vpon the head of all the wicked and this Recompence comprehends no lesse then all the curses contained in the booke of God By the bitternesse whereof God will pursue the wicked man in his life and in his death and then for euer after torment him with vnspeakeable Horror in Hell Now that this doctrine of Gods Iustice may bee the more effectuall in stead of prouing it by testimonies I would especially vrge two things first I would giue certaine Reasons or demonstrations which may throughly confirme it That God will not bee a whit better affected towards the wicked and that his wrath is fully as great as it is said to be in the Word of God and rather more then any created words can vtter secondly I would take off their obiections First I would proue it to bee most Terrible and then most vnauoidable That God will bee exceeding Terrible in Iustice against wicked men may appeare to any reasonable minde by these Arguments and such like 1. If the wrath of Kings bee as the Roaring of Lyons and as messengers of death how fearefull then is the wrath of the King of Kings 3. It is one of Gods Titles hee is thus stiled The terrible God Nehemiah 9. 32. 33. 4. It may be gathered from the terror of his rebukes in this life in his word or prouidence his rebuks are called furious rebukes Ezek. 5. 13. and they are called sharpe arrowes shot into the hearts of the Kings enemies Psal 45. 5. Now if his rebukes bee so terrible what will the full declaration and execution of his whole displeasure be 4. The wonderfull wrath of God against sinners may appeare by his Iudgements abroad in the world whether wee consider the number of the effects of them Are there not Armies and changes of sorrowes with which the Lord doth vex euery part of the world And doth not the Lord by common Plagues sweepe away thousands of men by Warres Pestilence Famine c. and besides are not strange punishments euery day heere and there vpon the workers of iniquity What heart of man can stand before that fearefull wrath of God when he pursues the sinnes of the Fathers vpon the children But aboue all these temporall Plagues are those spirituall iudgements executed vpon worlds of men whose soules are smitten with worse then Aegyptian darkenesse shut out from the vision or sense of God possessed really by diuells c. 5. If we thinke seriously vpon the examples of men that haue felt the bitternesse of Gods displeasure and they that haue felt it can best tell how terrible it is 1. Looke vpon those wicked men mentioned Reuel 6. they were Captaines and Princes and mighty men of the earth and when they cry out to haue the Mountaines to fall vpon them onely to hide them from the face of the Lambe Let Christ come in the most amiable manner that he can onely let him tell the wicked of Gods Iustice and the stoutest hearted fall into those fearefull Agonies 2. Looke vpon godly men that otherwise are Gods people yet when God is angry with them for a season for their sins in what grieuous case haue they bin in Dauid said his meate was ashes and hee mingled his teares with his drinke because of the indignation of the Lord Psal 9. 10. and if iudgement begin at the house of God be so sharpe where shall the sinners and wicked appeare when the righteous doe not escape 1. Pet. 4. 18. reade but the Booke of Lamentations and you shall finde that the Church had searched all the world ouer to finde out fearefull and grieuous things to shadow out their sorrowes and distresses
2. What are the offices of Angels or what vses did God make them for Answ Angels serue for many vses They are Apparitors or seruants about God ready to receiue Commandements from him and they worship God by lauding and praising him in Heauen Psal 104. 4. 148. 2. Esay 6. 3. Luke 2. 14. Reuel 4. 8 9. 5. 13. and they are appointed as speciall attendants about CHRIST as the MESSIAH Mat. 4. 11. and they serue also as ministring spirits to keepe and attend vpon the Elect men Heb. 1. 14. and manifold are the seruices which Angels doe for men both in life and death In life they defend and keepe them as a strong guard about them Psal 34. 91. and plague their enemies 2 King 19. 35. besides the vnknowne seruice they doe about the soules of the godly by counselling or comforting them And in death they are about them and carry their soules to Heauen as they did Lazarus his soule and in the end of the world they will gather all the Elect from the foure winds of Heauen and bring them to Christ Quest 3. But why doe you not intreat of Deuills here also Answ There were no Deuills by creation GOD made them not as Deuills and therefore it belongs not to the Doctrine of Creation to speake of the euill angels because that belongs to the Doctrine of the fall of the reasonable Creatures Quest 4. But hath euery particular man a good Angell and a bad Answ It is probable that euery Elect man hath a good Angell as may be gathered Mat. 18. 10. Acts 12. 15. but yet God is not so tyed but that he sends them extraordinarily more Angels many times to helpe or attend vpon it may be one man Psal 34. 8. As for euill angels we reade that sometimes one Angell hath vexed one man Iob. 1. 12. sometimes one Angell hath haunted diuers men 2 Chron. 18. 21. sometimes many Angels haue haunted one man Luke 8. 30. But that euery man should haue a bad angell assigned him of God is no where to be found in Scripture The consideration of this Doctrine of the making of the Angels in such a nature and for such ends as before should serue for diuers vses 1 It should informe vs concerning the wonderfull loue of God to vs that hath made such excellent creatures to do vs such admirable seruice as to attend vpon vs and keepe vs Heb. 1. 14. 2 It should breed in vs a great longing after the world to come where wee shall not onely enioy the knowledge of and fellowship with such glorious Creatures but shall be made our selues in glory as the Angels in Heauen 3 It should teach vs diuers things as first not to worship Angels for they were all created by God God made the Angels and therefore worship is due to him and not to them that are but our fellow seruants Colos 1. 16. Reuel 19. Secondly we should therfore carry our selues orderly in all places especially in the Church because of the Angels who are about vs and marke what we doe 1 Cor. 11. 10. Thirdly we should therefore be patient and of good hope and full of faith in all afflictions arising from the oppositions of men or temptations of Satan as being satisfied with this comfort that they are more that are with vs then can be against vs and if our eyes were opened wee might see so much as was shewed to the seruant of Elisha 2 Kings 6. 16. Hitherto of the Heauen of the blessed and the Hoste thereof the Angels and so of the world that is now inuisible to vs we next come downe to consider of this visible world this world I say which is in our view or may bee seene and before I come to speake of the other two Heauens I would briefly consider of Gods glory in the generall in the making of this visible world not so much for the matter of the creatures or their naturall formes or properties or their next causes which belongs properly to the Philosophers but for such things as concerne their first cause which is God or their end which is Gods glory or their vse which is rather spirituall then corporall in demonstrating vnto the soule of man the praises of God The maker of this visible world was GOD as well as of that inuisible world as is manifestly proued Genesis 1. at large The end of making a world of bodies as well as of spirits was not the punishment of spirituall substances for their sinning against God as Origen dreamed but the setting out of Gods glory in shewing his wisdome goodnesse and power Psal 19. Rom. 1. and the furnishing of man for his happy being That our hearts may be affected with wondering at this great world which God hath made we may profitably consider of it either by thinking what it is like or by serious pondering what it is indeed This great world is like a great Garden throughly furnished euery creature being as a pleasant flower exquisitely ranked in most comely order the onely weedes that grow in this Garden are wicked men as it may be likened to a great Booke in which God hath written glorious things that concerne the praise of his goodnesse wisdome and power Euery creature is as it were a distinct lease of that Booke and the properties and vses of these creatures are as it were the seuerall lines and letters of that leafe and the more admirable because it is a Booke the writing whereof is indelible and the vses whereof are vniuersall the Booke so opened that all men in all parts of the world may see and read Againe this visible world may be likened to a great and faire house most exquisitely buil and contriued into seuerall roomes and euery roome richly furnished the Heauens are the Roofe the Earth the floore and the Elements the seuerall roomes and the hosts of creatures in each of them the rich furniture and this house is the more admirable for vs because it is a house that euery man dwels in out of this house no man can be put it is kept at the charge of the Land-lord and the Tenants pay no rent But to leaue similitudes there are in the generall consideration of this visible world diuers things may bee briefly touched which we ought to wonder at and to glorifie God for his making of things so as 1 The apt disposition of euery creature in his owne place which place is so fit as a fitter cannot bee inuented if the Starres were fixed in the Earth or the Trees in Heauen how disproportionable and vncomely would it be 2 The exactnesse of the Cteatures in their working in keeping their times and seasons how punctually doth the Sunne dispatch his race in 24. houres and so the Moone in her seasons the Plants keepe their seasons of the yeere for bearing fruit and the Starres for shining as they haue receiued commandement and order from their great Commander
Spider Of the Ant we should learne diligence and prouidence in times of plenty to prouide for dearth especially in spirituall things Of the Mountaine Rats we should learne vpon the experience of our owne weaknesse to prouide by Faith so as we may rest in the Rock of Gods Almighty protection Of the Locusts we should learne to doe our duties though we be not compelled and to be carefull to keepe our fellowship with the Saints Of the Spider that workes euen in Kings Palaces we should learne to hold forth the light of the Truth by either Doctrine or good example in all places and not to be daunted for the presence of any or the example of the multitude that are otherwise imployed Hitherto hath beene intreated of the Creatures of all sorts some of them being onely spirituall Creatures as the Angels some of them onely bodily creatures as all the rest in Heauen and earth Now followeth that we consider of man who is a creature both spirituall in respect of his soule and corporall in respect of the outward matter of which he consists A creature into whom enters the composition of all the world Nature as it is spirituall and bodily meeting in man for man is the Epitomie of all Gods works and a patterne of the great Vniuerse He is the world abridged or the little world into whose being enters the nature of euery thing without him being a creature partly terrestriall partly celestiall partly mortall partly immortall so as what God made a part in other creatures he makes perfect and ioyntly together in man He had made spirits by themselues and bodies by themselues and then he makes a Creature that should consist of spirit and body ioyned together and therefore as wee haue read in the great Booke of nature which is the world so now we must learne to read in the little Booke of Nature which is man else it will be a shame for vs to know other things and not know our selues He were a sencelesse man that did know curiously all the roomes in other mens Palaces and yet knowes not so much as a corner of his owne dwelling The excellency of Gods workmanship in creating man appeares if we consider his body apart or his soule apart or his body and soule iointly About the body of man God hath done many things more then he did to any other bodily creatures for 1 Whereas all other bodies were created only by saying let them be they were so God did take more special regard of mans body and therefore doth forme it as it were with his owne hands out of the dust of the earth Gen. 2. 7. 2 The body of man now since the Creation is not propagated by the Parents without the wonderfull workmanship of God and therefore all our bodies are said to bee made and fashioned by God as well as Adams Iob 10. 8. Yea it was the Spirit of the strong God that made vs and the breath of the Almighty that put life into vs Iob 33. 4. We are creatures now as well as Adam Marke 16. 15. and Dauid saith He was fearefully and wonderfully made it was a maruellous worke and he was curiously wrought in the wombe Psal 139. 14 15 16. Yea he saith there that God did it by the Booke hauing written it downe from eternity how all his members should be fashioned Euery part of our bodies if wee knew the forming of them would shew a speciall glory of working in God our bones would say Lord who is like to the● Psal 35. 10. And as we know not what is the way of the Spirit so we know not how the bones doe grow in the wombe of her that is with childe and so we may say of the rest we know not the workes of God who maketh all Eccles 11. 5. the hearing eare and the seeing eye the Lord hath made euen both of them Prou. 20. 12. It was God onely that clothed vs with skinne and fenced vs with bones and sinewes Iob 10. 11. and so it was God onely that formed the inward parts of mans body hee formed the heart Psalme 33. 15. and the workemanship within mans body was so great that he reserues it as a glory onely to himselfe to know and search the heart and reines of a man and this is the more admirable if we consider that no part of the body is superfluous or idle but euery part hath his function and some excellent worke to doe which function it exerciseth by it selfe for the good of the whole body without medling with the office of the other members which is the more wonderfull if we consider the innumerable parts and parcels of the body of a man Not the least threed or veine in a mans body but it doth some excellent office 1 Cor. 12. 3 God made the body of man in beauty and fairenesse excelling all other visible creatures for both his countenance is lifted vp to Heauen and the parts of his body are with more comlinesse proportioned and his colour is full of sweetnesse and louelinesse Thus it was with man in his Creation and thus and much better it shall bee with his body when hee shall shine as the Starres in the Firmament 4 The body of man had at the first no disposition to wearinesse or sicknesse or death which the bodies of all other liuing Creatures were subiect to This priuiledge mans body had not by nature but by the gift of GOD GOD hauing infused into the body a soule that did her worke in the body perfectly and allowing him such foode as was most effectuall for vegetation and giuing man skill and care to looke to himselfe and if the body in time would haue declined God would haue preuented that by tranflating man to Heauen without sicknesse and death 5. Language is an admirable indowment of the body of man onely who is able to expresse himselfe with infinite variety and distinctions of sound whence flowes all conuersation and delightfull or profitable society But the excellencie of Gods power and glory in the Creation of mans soule who can perfectly recount God hath done wonderfully for man in respect of his soule aboue all other visible creatures for 1. The soule was breathed into the body of man by God himself by speciall inspiration and singular Creation Gen. 2. and neuer was a soule in the body of man but was made of God by his speciall power our bodies may haue earthly fathers but our spirits haue no Father but God Heb. 12. It is God onely that creates and frames the spirit of man within him Zacharie 12. 1. and so man is the generation of God Acts 17. 2. The soule is indued with the light of reason and can discerne things by reasoning and inward discourse seeing things by a light that is Immateriall and with great variety contemplating of things that the senses cannot reach to and finding out strange things euen in those things are presented by the senses
He is horriblie infected with actuall sinnes In his minde hee may obserue a world of wickednesse swarmes of vile thoughts the frame of his Imaginations being onely euill continually Gen. 8. His heart is deceitfull and wicked aboue all things Ier. 17 9. Oh what strong lusts and passions are found in a mans heart from time to time how doth the diuell draw men along secretly as the fish is drawne with the baite and that with strange preuailings what worlds of wickednesse haue passed through the tongues of men Iames 3. and in their workes how fearefully doth man sinne in all he doth his workes are all abhominable Psal 14. for besides that he corrupts himselfe in his best actions he is guilty of diuers distinct sinnes and sometimes these very grosse and abominable who can stand neere it to thinke of it 1 How many sinnes of other men he is guilty of which he occasioned by his euill example euill counsell or consent c. 2 How innumerable his owne sinnes are of omission and commission of ignorance of knowledge in his infancy or riper age at home or abroad in his prosperity or aduersity against God other men or himselfe Psal 40. 2. Againe a mans estate by nature hath wonderfull neede of mending and alteration if we consider the misery to which it is exposed in respect of punishment for wee haue all lost Paradise 2. And all the creatures about vs are worse then they were at first for our sakes Rom. 8. 20. 3. God is horribly wroth with all of vs Ioh. 3. 36. 4. The glory of our vnderstandings is lost we are very beasts and haue not the vnderstandings of men in vs Prou. 30. 2. 5. The Deuill doth in a manner what he will with vs Ephes 2. 2. 2 Tim. 2. 26. 6. Our selues are senselesse and dead Ephes 2. 1. The life of God is a most strange thing to vs Ephes 4. 18. 7. Armies and changes of sorrowes assault vs in our bodies and estates Deut. 28. 8. Good things are restrained from vs euen blessings of all sorts Ierem. 5. 25. 9. And the good things we haue they doe not prosper with vs or they doe vs hurt Mal. 2. 2. Ier. 12. 13. 10. Horrible feares either of death or shame or judgement of men or God doe many times cruelly torment vs Esay 33. 14 65. 13 14. Heb. 2. 15. Besides all that which wee are in danger of for strange punishments may be to the workers of iniquity in this life Iob 31. 3. and we may dye miserably and who can recount the terror of the last Iudgement and the violent fire may deuoure vs in Hell for euer Heb. 10 27. Mat. 25. 41. Thus of our need of a Redeemer For the second point man becomes capable of happinesse by the Redeemer by vertue of a new Couenant which God tenders vnto man by the Redeemer The first Couenant was a Couenant of workes where perfect happinesse was promised to man vpon condition of perfect obedience to the Law to be performed by man in his owne person This condition man being fallen through his owne default was impossible to be performed and so the couenant being broken all mankinde was vndone for euer Now God is pleased to alter the first agreement and to offer new Articles in this Couenant of grace by which man might recouer out of the aforesaid misery and be saued Now concerning this new agreement we are to consider 1 Who procured it 2 Vpon what termes he obtained it 3 What he hath done to establish it 4 What good comes to vs by it 5 What cause we haue to bee wonderfully affected and comforted by it For the first this agreement and new Couenant was obtained from God only by the Mediatour who alone was Iesus Christ 1 Tim. 2. 5. The Sonne of God became a sutor for the sonnes of men and obtained of God these new Articles with Gods infinite good liking through his abundant mercy to man Mat. 3. For the second God yeelds to his motion for a new Couenant vpon two conditions The one that he should pay all mens debts and so make satisfaction to the Iustice of God Esay 53. 6. 1 Tim. 2. 6. The other was that hee should performe such an absolute obedience and righteousnesse as might serue to iustifie the vngodly 2 Cor. 5. 21. 1 Cor. 1. 30. Rom. 5. 18 19. Ier. 23. 6. For the third what Christ hath done to establish all this is reported in these Articles of the Creed conteined in the middle part of it describing both his Incarnation and Humiliation and Glorification For the fourth the good that wee shall haue by this new Couenant is reported in the last Articles of the Creed Holinesse Communion of Saints forgiuenesse of sinnes resurrection of the body and euerlasting life Now we ought greatly to reioyce in this new Couenant 1 Because it was vtterly impossible for vs to bee any way happy or escape eternall damnation if we had continued still vnder the old Couenant Gal. 3. 13. 2 Because this is a grace vouchsafed to the nature of man only for the Angels are lost and for euer forsaken and haue no grace offered to them 3 Because it is a grace vouchsafed only to certaine men chosen of God out of the whole heape and giuen to Christ to be deliuered and saued by him 4 Because if a man beleeue aright in Iesus Christ he shall be accounted as righteous as if he had perfectly fulfilled the whole Law Rom. 10. 5 Because this Couenant is euerlasting and vnchangeable there is no forfeiture Esay 54. 10. God hath sworne to keepe this Couenant for euer Heb. 6. 18. 6 Because God hath bound himselfe to put his Spirit into vs to make vs keepe the Couenant on our parts Ezech. 36. 27. Thus then we see how it comes to passe that these Articles are put into our Creed which had not beene if wee could haue beene saued by the first Couenant Now it remaines that in the third place we consider of the manner how we must beleeue these Articles concerning Iesus Christ where by the way we may obserue one point that is not vnprofitable viz. that to belieue aright in Christ is not a worke of nature nor a thing that the naturall man in himselfe is disposed to and that may appeare diuers wayes for first those things about Iesus Christ are Articles of the Christian Faith which they had not beene if they had beene such things as the naturall man did know or was disposed to seeke after 2. The light of Nature hath no principles at all concerning Christ or that way of redemption by him 3. Our Sauiour hath made it manifest that the world is so farre from beleeuing that it doth naturally hate such as doe beleeue aright 4. Because there are many things in the Doctrine of our Redemption which are scandals to hearts of the wicked Christ is a very Rocke of offence 1 Pet. 2. 8. We finde by experience that the
as the sailes are in the ship nor by affectiō as two friends are one nor in respect of ioynt worship as if onely the humane nature had the honour to be worshipped with the diuine nor in respect of Harmonie or consent as if onely the diuine and humane will of Christ did agree nor in respect of Title only as if the flesh of Christ had no more but the honour to be called by the same Title his Diuinity is as the Sonne of God or Christ or the like nor by mingling the humane nature with the diuine to make a certaine third thing but the humane nature is fastened to the diuine nature in the vnity of person after an vnconceiueable manner so as the diuine nature is not changed nor either nature altered nor separated by distance one from another The eight point is the effects of this personall vnion of the diuine and humane nature in this worke of Incarnation The effects I meane in Christ not in vs. Now many things flow from this vnion as 1. The communication of proprieties and that is the attributing of such things as are proper to either nature vnto the person of Christ because that these natures doe subsist in that person so as that is truely said of Christ which yet is to be vnderstood with a respect to that nature vnto which that property doth belong Thus the Sonne of Man is said to haue power to forgiue sinnes on earth which is the propriety of the diuine nature Mat. 9. 6. and to bee called the Sonne of the most High Luke 1. 32. Thus the Sonne of Man is said to ascend where hee was before Now he was not in heauen in his humane nature before Ioh. 6. 62. and so he saith hee was before Abraham was Ioh. 8. 58. and his bloud is called the bloud of God Acts 20. 28. The like speeches are found in other Scriptures as Colos 1. 17. Heb. 1. 2 c. 2. The pouring out of gifts vpon the humane nature which were as great as could be receiued by a created nature and these were giuen both to the body and soule of Christ His body obtained the highest degree of perfection could be fall a body which glory for our saluation was with-held from his body during his abode on earth in respect of his office and so his body was subiect to infirmities passions of diuers sorts and death and buriall but that worke being finished which he vndertooke for vs in his body it now shineth in Heauen in greater glory then any bodily creatures doe or shall attaine vnto Vpon the soule of Christ by vertue of this vnion with the diuine Nature were powred out gifts aboue the glory of the gifts which are in men or Angels and to make this a little better to appeare I will instance in his knowledge and in his Charity There were diuers kinds of knowledge in Christ Hee had an eternall and vncreated knowledge and wisdome which did belong onely vnto his diuine Nature but it is the created knowledge belongs to this place and that vnderstanding and knowledge is either from experience or from reuelation or from vision 1 There was in our Sauiour an experimentall knowledge by which our Sauiour knew all things could be knowne by the light of Nature and though hee had not expeperience of all things yet by reasoning from the like or the contrary or from the causes or effects he perceiued things hee had not experience of As by the infirmities he felt and by the things he suffered he knowes all the things we suffer in the full nature of them Heb. 2. 18. 4. 15. and in this kinde of wisdome it is that hee was said to grow vp in or profit and increase in and in this kinde of wisdome he was able to discerne more then any man in the world 2 There was in our Sauiour a knowledge infused which they call the knowledge of Reuelation by which heauenly things are vnderstood by a light they call the light of grace And by this knowledge our Sauiour did discerne in his soule spirituall things more exactly then euer man or Angell did of this is spoken Esay 11. 12. 3 The third kinde of knowledge in Christ is the knowledge by vision which is called the knowledge of the blessed in Heauen by which God is seene face to face and in this Christ excells all men and Angels for it is hee that brings all iust men to this happinesse of seeing God in Heauen Heb. 2. 10. And besides this personall vision his soule is neerer vnto God then men or Angels can bee and therefore sees GOD more cleerely then they can doe As a man that hath a good sight doth see a thing that is hard by him more exactly then another man that is farther off from it Yea this knowledge in the soule of Christ doth not fully comprehend God for that which is infinite cannot be comprehended by that which is finite he seeth God whole that is all t●at i● in God but not wholly that is not by an absolute comprehension of it And in as much as all iudgement is committed vnto Christ as the Sonne of man it is most probable that as man hee doth see the thoughts of all men that are to be iudged by him as man though not by any naturall efficacy in his vnderstanding as man yet by a supernaturall infusion of light from his diuine nature Ioh. 5. 27. Thus of the gift of knowledge Charity and loue was powred out vpon the soule of CHRIST aboue all the measures of Charity in men or Angels Iohn 13. 1. Romans 5. 6 7. Thus of the gifts were powred out vpon the humane nature of Christ Yet by the way it is not amisse to note that certaine gifts were not powred out vpon CHRIST or not till his glorification as faith and hope were not in CHRIST at all for in as much as the obiect of faith is things not seene faith it selfe could not be in CHRIST who did inioy the vision of GOD by vertue of the personall vnion with the diuine nature euen from the beginning of his Incarnation by that kind of knowledge which I called before his knowledge of vision or the knowledge of the blessed yet to want faith did not argue imperfection in CHRIST but rather remoued imperfection as hee that wants Spectacles when he needeth them not is no whit inferiour to him that vseth Spectacles because of the weaknesse of his sight The like is to bee said of hope for as Faith beholds things that are not seene so hope lookes to things which are not yet had or possessed Rom. 8. 24. and the cheife obiect of both is the chiefe good which is GOD now CHRIST enioyed GOD yea euen in the very instant of his death but if we looke to secondary obiects and by hope vnderstand an expectation of some kinde of helpe promised by GOD then such a kinde of hope may be granted to haue beene in
was his Father and the rather because in the Originall the proposition imports that this Conception was not onely by him but of him Answ The holy Ghost did worke this Conception not materially but effectually by causing it to be not by giuing matter out of himself to the Nature of Christ As Damascen said the holy Ghost begetteth not spermatically but operatiuely And Bernard saith that Christ was conceiued not of the substance but of the power not by any generation but by the appointment and benediction of the holy Ghost Rom. 11. vlt. all things are said to be of God Now it were senselesse therefore to conclude that God is the Father of all things for though he made all things yet hee did not make them out of his own substance for he is Father that makes a thing to be out of his owne substance so the holy Ghost did not make the humane Nature of Christ For the fourth there were two things done by the holy Ghost in this conception the first was the production of the humane Nature the other was the vniting of it to the second Person in the Trinity The first of these is most properly the worke of the holy Ghost the secōd but in som respects for the secōd Person in Trinity did assume the matter so prepared wrought by the holy Ghost The humane nature produced was both the body and soule of our Sauiour now in the production of the body of Christ there are two things to be considered first the preparation of the matter of his bodie secondly the sanctification of it The matter of the body of Christ prepared in the conception was the very substance of the flesh of the Virgin that is the seed or purest bloud of the Virgin separated by the holy Ghost and carried to the place of conception and therefore is Christ called the fruit of her wombe Luk. 1. 42 The sanctification of this matter containes in it two things first the washing of that substance from the staine of sin with which it was infected by nature so as now it should neuer more haue any spot or staine of sin in it and the stopping of the imputation of Adams sinne secondly the infusion of all purenesse and holinesse which belongs vnto the soule aswell as the body in that very moment it was ioyned to the body Now that Christ was conceiued without sinne of that there was no sin in that flesh when it became the flesh of Christ is manifest by these Scriptures he was made like vnto vs in all things sinne onely excepted Heb. 4. 15. and Rom. 8. 3. he was said to be made onely in the similitude of sinfull flesh Against this diuers things are obiected as Ob. 1. That the Scripture saith that Christ was made sinne for vs. Answ He was made sinne for vs as he was made a Sacrifice for sinne so the sinne offerings in the Old Testament were called sinne Againe he was made sinne for vs by imputation because our sinnes were charged vpon him but he had no sinne in his Nature 1. Pet. 2. 21. Ob. 2. Whosoeuer were in Adam sinned in Adam Rom 5. 12. But Christ was in Adam as appeareth by the Genealogie which is drawne vp euen to Adam Luke 3. Answ It is not true that all that were in Adam sinned in him for they onely sinned that were in him not onely in respect of the substance of the flesh but in respect of the carnal manner by which ordinarily man is begotten by man but Christ was in Adam in respect of the substance of his flesh but not in respect of the manner of propagation by him because he was conceiued without the seed of man and therefore sinned not in Adam or thus Originall sin is deriued vnto Adams Posterity by propagation only now Christ to preuent that came into the world by this wonderfull conception by the holy Ghost Paul saith not of one man but by one man sin entered into the world Christ is onely from Adam other men are from him in respect of substance and by him in respect of propagation Ob. 3. But the flesh of the Virgin Mary was sinfull and therefore his flesh must needs be so Answ That flesh of hers was first sanctified made cleane by the holy Ghost before it was the flesh of Christ Ob. 4. If it be granted corruption of nature was not in Christ yet there is another part of Originall sinne and that is guiltinesse of Adams sinne in Paradise for all his posterity being in him sinned in him as Leui paid Tythes in Abraham and therefore that flesh of Christ sinned in Adam and was guilty of Adams particular offence though it neuer was propagated for propagation caries downe onely corruption of nature or an euill disposition to sinne after conception Answ If Adams offence bee imputed to none but to such as come of him by propagation as the Apostle imports Rom. 5. 12. then this scruple is so auoided secondly doth not the sanctification of that flesh in the wombe of the Virgin clense it from Adams actuall offence aswell as from euill disposition thirdly what inconuenience will follow if we grant that Adams sin was imputed to Christ so as we vnderstand it in respect of the Malediction for Christ was a surety for all sinnes Adams sin and all the sin of his posterity Ob. 5. Vpon whomsoeuer death came he sinned but death came vpon Christ therefore it seemes he sinned Answ It is true that whomsoeuer death by his owne power doth preuaile against that party surely sinned because death is the wages of sinne But death did not exercise any power ouer Christ for hee was not compelled to die but laid downe his owne life voluntarily Iohn 10. 17. 18. besides death befell him not as a sinner but as a surety for sinne and so though death came vpon him for sinne yet it was not for his sinne but for other mens The Papists to auoid sinne in the flesh of Christ say that the Virgin Mary was conceiued without sinne and so it came to passe that Christ was without sinne But this is a senselesse do●age for first where doe they proue it by Scripture that shee was without sinne Secondly if shee were conceiued without sinne then her parents were so too and if her parents then theirs and so into an infinite thirdly then what needed Christ this conception by the holy Ghost Thus of the producing of the body of Christ His soule was produced as the soules of other men are that is It was immediately created by the holy Ghost and infused into his body onely there is difference amongst diuines about the time of the infusing of the soule of Christ for in the ordinarie course Nature proceeds in this manner first there is the masse of bloud or seed receiued in the wombe but there is no parts of a body framed at the first after a certaine number of weekes
27. and this priuation of glory he suffered that wee might be brought to perfect glory in heauen and that wee may see how hatefull the clouds of our sinnes were that could darken and hide from shining the beames of such glory and to teach vs to be content though our liues be also hid with Christ as his was when he liued in this world expecting the reuealing of our glory when he appeares in glory Col. 3. 3 4. Thus of his priuatiue Passion His Passion considered positiuely comprehends both the euill was imputed to him and the euill was inflicted vpon him His suffering by way of Imputation was very grieuous for the Lord Iesus standing before the Iustice of God as our Suretie all our sinnes were charged vpon him as if he had committed them himselfe and this was a most fearfull kinde of Passion which the Scripture takes expresse notice of Saint Paul saith he that knew no sinne was made sinne for vs 2 Cor. 5. 21. and the Apostle Peter saith hee bare our sinnes in his owne body on the trce 1 Pet. 2. 24. and this is a consideration of great necessitie and vse for hereby the hearts of the godly may be wonderfully setled in cōsolation so as to liue out of the feare of Gods wrath for our sins All our sinnes are charged already vpon Christ and therefore God in iustice cannot charge them vpon vs and it is an increase of comfort to know that therefore our sinnes were imputed to him that his righteousnesse might be imputed to vs 2 Cor. 5. 21. And withall we should hence learne seeing all our sinnes are taken off our shoulders and laid vpon him therefore to spend our daies in righteousnesse and holinesse of life 1 Pet. 2. 24. And thus also of his imputatiue Passion Concerning the Euill he endured for vs which was inflicted vpon him it is true that the Scripture doth most frequently mention his death and bloud-shedding but yet that must be vnderstood Synecdochically for into the Doctrine of the Passion ought to be taken all the things he suffered from his Conception to his Resurrection and that for these two Reasons First It is most manifest he suffered nothing for himselfe but for vs and if all he suffered were for vs then all his sufferings must be reckoned as concurring to the price of our Redemption Secondly Hee was to suffer the Curses and malediction of the Law which was due to vs for our sinnes Now by our breach of the Law wee deserued not only death but a miserable life also and though it is true that such punishments as are inflicted vpon men considered in their particular persons and not common to the Nature of man he was not bound to suffer as hee was not bound to suffer the paines of the stone or gout or other like diseases which are not the maledictions which belong to the whole Nature of Man but speciall iudgements God inflicts vpon some men yet the common Miseries of mans life which may stand with the Libertie and freedome of the execution of his office in the chiefe sorts of them he did sustaine to increase the merit of his Passion in some things he extends his sufferings further as will appeare afterwards Now the contemplation of the Miseries our blessed Sauiour suffered which were positiuely inflicted vpon him may bee diuided into these parts viz. 1. The Humiliation of his Incarnation 2. His abasement from his Birth to his Baptisme 3. His sufferings from his Baptisme to his last Supper 4. His Araignment 5. The miseries he endured after his araignment which are comprehended in the words of the Creed Crucified dead c. First for the Humility of his Incarnation He did not only take the Nature of Man but he tooke vpon him the forme of a seruant and was borne in a most meane and contemptible condition of a poore Mother not allowed the common entertainment of an lnne but thrust out to be borne in a stable amongst the beasts and laid in a very manger not looked after or regarded either by his own or by strangers Phil. 2. Luke 2. And thus he was abased for diuers reasons For first hereby the second Adam paies for the extreme arr●gancie of the first Adam The second Adam is thrust downe below the ordinary condition of a man because the first Adam affected a condition aboue the Angels euen to be like to God himself Secondly he thus hides the glorie of his eternall Natiuity in a meane and temporary birth that he might purchase for vs an heauenly and eternall birth Our Lord takes vpon him the forme of a seruant that we might enioy the states of sonnes Thirdly he refuseth the glory of greatnesse and pompe of entertainment at his birth to reach the great ones of the world not to be proud of their births in Nature but to seeke after the heauenly new birth as the only true glory And the poore of the world may be comforted against the meannesse of their prouisions for themselues and their children by remembring that the Sauiour of the world had not so good entertainment as vsually the poorest of their children haue For the second to wit his Abasement from his Birth to his Baptisme two things are to be reckoned as parts of his Passion namely his exile and his contemptible condition A little after the birth of our Sauiour wee reade that Ioseph and Mary were forced to flie out of Iury into Aegypt and in this suffering he beares the similitude of the first Adam As the first Adam shortly after he was created in Paradise was banished out from thence So Christ the second Adam shortly after he was borne in Iudaea is driuen out to goe into Aegypt And this also he suffered that the prophecie might be fulfilled that said long before Out of Aegypt haue I called my Sonne Hosea 11. And this part of his suffering had also comfort in it for he therefore lost his liberty in his owne Countrey that he might purchase for vs the right and libertie of our heauenly Countrey and that such godly men as suffer banishmēt might comfort themselues in his example Now for the other Branch we may obserue that for thirty yeares which was the greatest part of our Sauiours life on earth he liued in a most obscure condition reckoned euen in Israel but as the Carpenters sonne and made subiect to the authoritie of that poore man Ioseph In all which time no man regarded him or once acknowledged his glory either as the Sonne of God or King of the Iewes or Sauiour of the world and in this time was the old prophecie fulfilled He was as a Root growing vp out of a drie ground he hath no forme or comlinesse and when we shall see him there is no beautie that we should desire him he is despised and reiected of men and we hide our faces from him he was despised and we esteemed him not Esay 53. 2 3. And hence godly men may learne to
at the time of the Passeouer doth the Lambe of God passe out of this world Thus of the place and time The first thing we are to consider of that fell out before his Arraignment is the consultation of his Aduersaries which is recorded Matth. 26. 3 4. where obserue first what they did viz. they call a Counsell they doe not goe about the worke without aduice They gather a great assembly together to consult of the businesse They vnite their forces against Christ to let vs know that the authoritie of Councels is not infallible There haue beene Councels against Christ as well as for Christ and to teach Christian Rulers in Church and Common-wealth to lay their heads and hearts together how they may destroy Antichrist It is much to be lamented that Christians can no better agree together against Antichrist It is easier to get a Councell against Christ than against Antichrist Secondly note where they assemble viz. in the Hall of Caiaphas who was the man that before in another Councell had giuen his sentence for the killing of Christ and was the first that deliuered his opinion expresly for the death of Christ Ioh. 11. Thirdly consider who were of this wicked Councell viz. the chiefe Priests Scribes and Elders of the people euen the neerer men come to God by place and office the more desperately vile they are when they once fall to opposing the truth Christ had no enemies more malitious than the Priests and Scribes and therefore it is not safe to rest vpon men in the businesses of saluation Things are not therefore to be beleeued or done because they are graced with the authority of great men in Church or Common-wealth And it is not vnprofitable to note the causes of these mens proceedings against Christ First they enuied his glory and respect among the people which had so much eclipsed their glory then this Enuy begat the darknesse of affected Ignorance so as neither Scripture nor his teaching nor the often foyles he had giuen them nor his Miracles could conuince them Then their affected Ignorance begat hatted and loathing of the Truth and that hatred of the Truth made them fall into this mad and vnappeasable Rage and Malice against Christ which appeares by the last thing I note in their consultation which was the end why they assembled viz. to take him by subtletie and to kill him Note here that Malice in the enemies of Religion is very cruell Nothing but his bloud will satisfie them and they make no conscience to vse ill meanes to take him they professe to desire to take him by subtlety There is a world of wickednesse committed by such as sit in seats of Iustice and Iudgement and the Iudge of the world will haue it brought to light it shall bee knowne many times to their eternall shame amongst men I may adde one thing more about this consultation and that is about the time of it Now when they should haue beene preparing themselues for the Passeouer they are met here in a Councell to take Armes against the true Paschall Lambe and had it not beene for feare of the tumulting of the people they would haue as securely sought his destruction at that time as any other Quest But where was our Sauiour now Answ He was at Bethany and got himselfe of purpose out of the way that they might haue full scope to meet and consult about his death as knowing that his houre was come thereby declaring that he did willingly lay downe his life for vs. Thus of the consultation of his Aduersaries Concerning the Treason of Iudas diuers things are worthy the noting as 1. The parts of it and so his treason consisted of two deuillish practises The first was his compact with the Priests about betraying Christ of which reade Mat. 26. 14. c. The second was the villanous execution of the Treason according to that agreement of which reade Matth. 26. 47. c. where you shall finde that he betrayed him with a kisse 2. The qualitie of the Traytor He was a Minister a chosen Disciple of Christ yea preferred to the highest Calling in the Church viz. to bee an Apostle one of the Twelue that was called out of the rest of the Disciples and made one of Christs owne family and amongst the Twelue of some speciall reckoning for he was as it were the Steward and bare the Bagge 3. The cause of the Treason or what moued Iudas to this deuillish practise and that was his couetousnesse which is expressely noted by the Euangelist S. Iohn Chap. 12. 6. And his couetousnesse was the more vile and may be aggrauated against him diuers wayes As first because hee was an Apostle Couetousnesse is more hatefull in a Minister than in any other Secondly Because he would sell his Lord and Master at so meane a price that he should offer to sell the Lord of all things as if he had beene a vile bond-slaue and that he should reckon him to bee made for his owne priuate gaine that did vouchsafe to become a common price for the redeeming of all men was a grieuous offence but that hee should sell him for so meane a price as thirtie peeces of Siluer was extremely base Nay it was the more excessiuely vile that he vseth Christ worse than a Clowne would doe his hogge for if a country clowne were to sell his hogge hee would not leaue the price to the discretion of the buyers as Iudas did 4. The Patience of Christ towards the Traytor vsing so many wayes to warne him and reclaime him For first after the Treason began our Sauiour vouchsafeth to wash the very feer of the Traytor those feet that were ready to shed innocent bloud Ioh. 13. 2 5. Secondly He thence taketh occasion to say Yee are cleane but n●t all Ioh. 13. 10 11. Thirdly He comes nearer and by a prophecie tells them that one of them that did eat bread with him should file vp his heele against him vers 18. Fourthly-Heyet more plainly saith One of you shall betray mee not naming him Ioh. 13. 21. Fiftly To awaken him sie●hreatens him Woe vnto that man by whom the Sonne of Man is betrayed c. Mut. 26. 24. Sixtly When all this would not melt the heart of Iudas he falls into a grieuous Agony for very compassion and vexation at the sinne of Iudas so as be was troubled in Spirit as Saint Iohn shewes Chap. 13. 21. Seuenthly Though hee knew him to be a cursed Enemie and a Wolfe that wayted to prey vpon him though now in a sheepes skin yet he giues him a Sop He gaue vs a patterne how to practise that saying If thine enemie hunger feed him if he thirst giue him drinke 5. Why was it necessary Christ should be betrayd by Iudas Answ He suffered this betraying First that the Scripture might be fulfilled that had fore told this Treason Ioh. 13. 18. Secondly in abiding this Treason hee paid for our perfidiousnesse and ingratitude
became the Christ the Lords annointed King to carry himselfe Kings need not seeke protection or defence for themselues by words against the false accusations of their subiects 2. Hereby hee shewes his magnanimitie in contemning death If he had answered hee might seeme to doe it to preuent the sentence of death He that seekes not life feares not death He that saues all men betrayes his owne safetie that he might purchase our saluation 3. By his Silence hee satisfies Gods iustice for the sinnes of our words 4. He is silent on earth that he might merit to speake for vs in heauen by making intercession freely for vs at the right hand of God and that we might haue free accesse to God for our prayers in pleading for our liues through his merit 5. Hee hath thereby left vs an example to teach vs to beare false accusations patiently and imports that our innocencie shall not need defence when wicked men are vnreasonable He may well be silent that needs not defence Let them be eager to make Apologies that feare to be found guiltie the cause is the better that is not defended and yet is proued 6. Hereby he proues himselfe to be the Messias promised because he was as a sheepe dumbe before his Shearers according to the prophecie Esay 53. 7. And as he was silent in these accusations that touched his life so afterwards when they accused him for making himselfe the Sonne of God Ioh. 19. 7. he would giue no answer to Pilate that being much afraid asked him whence he was vers 8 9. both because Pilate was vncapable of the doctrine of the Trinitie and because there was no time to reueale his Deitie but rather to suffer and die according to his Humanitie Thus of our Sauiours examination Now follow the courses the Iudge tooke to auoid putting of him to death and so to saue his life and so in the story we shall finde that Pilate vsed foure policies to saue Christ or at least to put off the businesse from himselfe The first was that he perswades the Iewes to take him themselues and iudge him by their owne law Ioh. 18. 31. but this policie succeeds not and that for two Reasons First the Iewes plead they had not power to put any man to death because the Romans had taken that iurisdiction into their owne hands In which answer of theirs we see their horrible wickednesse and impudencie that professe to haue resolued vpon his death and to tell the Iudge so before the cause be opened and yet the prouidence of God was in this thing God had sent him to die for the people and by the people his death is called for with importunitie Secondly the Text saith That this was done that the saying of Iesus might be fulfilled signifying what death he should die for he had said that he should be deliuered vp into the hands of the Gentiles to be crucified and therefore this policie must be disappointed whence we may note that the Counsell and word of God concerning the sufferings of his people cannot be altered It shall not be with vs according to the will of men but Gods Counsell shall stand which should make vs with the more patience to beare what may befall vs seeing if God doe it it will be good for vs and no aduersaries can haue their wills of vs further than their plots and practises doe serue to accomplish Gods secret will The second policie vsed by Pilate was that he took occasion from the report that Christ was a Galilean to send him to Herod to be tried before him Luke 23. 6 7 c. This Herod was he that cut off Iohn Baptists head and was called to distinguish him from other Herods Herod Antipas Pilate though he dealt herein politickly yet he deales vniustly for he ought to haue defended the innocencie of our Sauiour and deliuered him from the hands of his violent and vnreasonable aduersaries and not send him to another In the Story of Christs appearing before Herod obserue 1. The disposition of Herod and how he stood affected towards our Sauiour the Text saith He was glad of his comming and had long desired to see him and hoped to see him work some miracle before him Luke 23. 8. There is a great difference betweene godly men and wicked men though they both meet in this that they desire Christ or to see Christ A wicked man desires more the miracles of Christ than his word A godly man especially desires to heare the voice of Christ My sheepe heare my voice saith our Sauiour Herod had beene so searched by the ministery of Iohn that he durst not aduenture to heare any effectuall ministerie afterwards He hath no desire to haue Christ to instruct him in the great mysteries of the kingdome of Heauen or to shew him how he might saue his soule To desire Christ for carnall ends as pleasure glory profit or the like is but an vnregenerat humour To desire Christ for his owne sake or for his word sake or for the holinesse we desire to get from him is proper only to the godly 2. The behauiour of our Sauiour who would not yeeld to worke any miracle before Herod because he knew Herod would abuse the power of God to make sport of such great works to feed his owne vanitie and besides our Sauiour constantly applies himselfe to the businesse he came about He knew then that was not a time of exercising his power but of suffering Secondly though Herod questioned with him in many words yet he answered him nothing Which he did first to abate the pride and vanity of Herod thereby intimating how little he esteemed his worldly greatnesse and how much he contemned his leuitie and vanitie of minde Secondly he would not cast Pearle before Swine He knew he should doe no good by talking to him that was a man giuen to so much viciousnesse of life and voluptuousnesse Thirdly because he knew that he must receiue his sentence not from Herod a Iew but from Pilate a Romane and Gen●●ie and be condemned and put to death after the Romane manner viz. by crucifying 3. The things our Sauiour suffered and so first from the Iewes then from Herod The Iewes viz. the chiefe Priests and Scribes stood and vehemently accused him which our Sauiour endured and came to passe by Gods prouidence that so thereby the innocencie of Christ might be the more manifest which was easily discerned by Herod obseruing the violent and tumultuous proceedings of the Priests and it may be gathered from Pilats speech that Herod did finde no fault in him Luk. 23. 15. From Herod our Sauiour suffred two things First he was extremely mocked by Herod and his men of warre and then hee was sent backe to Pilate arraied in a gorgeous robe For the first we see how great men that are giuen to pleasure and worldly pompe entertaine Christ and religion It is no strange thing that religion should be scorned by voluptuous
The great glory of Gods power in giuing testimonie to the innocence of his children When Iewes and Gentiles haue banded themselues against Christ and when his owne Disciples are now fled and dare not speake for him yea when all that professe religion were swallowed vp with amazement God herein raiseth vp a woman a stranger a Pagan to force a way for his testimony euen at this great Assises 2. Note that God keeps this testimonie till the very last moment for the Iudge is now set to giue Iudgement to shew vs that God can send comfort and succour to his seruants though he withhold it till almost all hope bee gone 3. Gods message must be deliuered though neuer so many obiections lie against it Shee might haue thought how vnfit it was for her to meddle being a woman and a stranger and her owne husband being Iudge but yet shee will send the message 4. The Diuinitie of Christ showes it selfe maruellously in this thing while Pilate is ready to condemne him hee miraculously conuerts his wife His Godhead breakes through the veile and their opinion that thinke this woman was truly conuerted is charitable and not improbable For what was in the confession of the Centurion or the Thiefe vpon the Crosse that is not in the confession of this woman Shee confesseth him when all the world refuseth him yea she vrgeth her Husband to saue him when it might proue his vtter ouerthrow considering the tumult of the Iewes and the displeasure Caesar might take seeing Christ was charged with Treason against Caesar and besides so peremptorily to acknowledge his goodnesse at such a time when it was so generally questioned imported a minde much affected to Iesus Howsoeuer we may learne of this great woman to stand for the truth how euill soeuer the times be or what danger soeuer it may bring vpon vs. Yea note that Iesus can doe great things in Prison as well as at Liberty No outward abasements or restraints can hinder Gods counsell or the successe of religion or Gods worke for the soules of his people 5. Concerning Dreames we must vnderstand that they are of foure sorts Naturall Morall Diuine or Diabolicall Naturall dreames arise from the constitution of the body according to the complexion or present estate of the bodie either as diseased or well Morall dreames arise from the studies and imployments that we are extraordinarily affected withall in the day time Diuine dreames arise either from the working of some Angell or by some other way vnknowne to vs and are vsed by God either to shew his power or foretell things to come or vnknowne or as an extraordinary entertainment he would giue vnto his seruants Diabolicall dreames are villanous conceptions wrought in the mindes of men in their sleeps either to torment them or to seduce them or to tempt them to some monstrous euill The question is what kinde of dreame Pilates wiues dreame was There is no colour of reason to thinke it was Naturall Some Diuines thinke that it was Diabolicall and giue this reason that the Deuill some way now perceiuing that the death of Christ would be the life of the world hee seekes to hinder it by this dreame But if that were so why had not Pilate the dreame or why did not the Deuill vse the Iewes that were his owne instruments and therefore it is more than likely that the dreame was from God Quest But may we now giue heed to dreames Answ By dreames we may guesse at the state of our bodies sometimes And by dreames wee may guesse at the corruption of our natures and finde what sinnes we are secretly prone to Yea no doubt but wee may haue Diabolicall dreames which we may discerne by the same signes we know the temptations of the Deuill from corruption of nature As when we are tempted to things contrary to our natures and prodigiously vile or when we feele that our nature doth abhorre the motion and giue no consent to it Nor doe I doubt but God may treat with his people also by dreames and we should be thankfull for holy dreames wherein God giues vs speciall comforts or doth in any speciall manner fire our hearts to the loue of goodnesse Only we must receiue no opinions by dreames which are not agreeable to the word nor must we trust vpon Predictions of things to come only when they are come to passe glory should be giuen to God with a resolution still to depend vpon the Law and the Testimonies only as the direction of our liues 6. We should all feare the great power and wrath of God we should be afraid to displease him for hee can finde strange wayes to make vs suffer If all the world were at firme peace with vs and all the Deuils in Hell would be quiet yet God can fight against our spirits with a very Armie he can raise in our very dreames Little doe we know how suddenly and how easily and yet how fearefully God can seaze vpon vs either body or soule 7. Note that shee saith I haue suffered many things and yet it was Pilate that offended whence we may gather that ill husbands may make all that belongs vnto them suffer for their faults They may be as a common plague to all that is about them or comes of them They sinne and their wiues may suffer many things for their sakes so may their children and their posterity Lastly obserue that she dreames in the day time It seemes she was no early riser but guilty of that fault which is still too common amongst great persons yea amongst them that are much inferiour to her to lye long in bed whereas the good woman described in the Prouerbs chap. 31. is commended for Rising while it was yet night Thus of the declaration of our Sauiours innocence by Pilates wife By Pilate himselfe he was declared to be innocent partly in words and partly in action In words Pilate came forth publikely three times and professed that he found no fault in him after he had heard out their accusations and examined him Luke 23. 14 22. Whence we may gather that wieked men in the Visible Church may be as vile yea more vile than those that are not in the Church at all The Iewes accuse him when a Gentile absolues him They wilfully pursue Christ to death when the Pagan for a good while striues as hard to saue him Pilate was afraid when his very accusers had charged him that he said that he was the Son of God and yet these cursed Iewes are not afraid though they had seene many signes that proued he was the Son of God And therefore it shall be easier for Pagans and Papists in the day of Iudgement than for these wicked men in the Church as our Sauiour said of the Cities of Galilea Mat. 11. 20. to 25. In Action Pilate pronounceth our Sauiour innocent by vsing solemnly the Ceremony of washing his hands and expoundeth his meaning thereby to signifie that he was
innocent and did not consent to our Sauiours death It seemes that he had borrowed this Ceremony from the Iewes who had an ancient vse of it in some cases as appears Deut. 21. 6. and did thereby think the more to affect them with remorse see Psal 26. 6. Though this Ceremony were not necessary yet Iudges and publike Officers of State should haue cleane hands hands I say cleane from bribes and corruption and hearts fearing God and hating couetousnesse and so all solemne seruice in Piety as well as Iustice requires the washing of the hands in innocencie Psal 26. 6. for if the Ciuill seat of Iustice must not be compassed but with integritie of heart and life much lesse should we dare to compasse Gods Altar vnlesse we haue washed our hands in true innocencie But further obserue what poore shifts a troubled and ill conscience flyes to What will it iustifie Pilate that he washeth his hands and yet by and by doe that which himselfe condemnes The basenesse of his minde cannot be scoured off with the water on his fingers An ill conscience is often attended with a senselesse minde To conclude Note one fearfull thing that fell out vpon this Action Pilate said I am innocent from the bloud of this man Immediatly the madde Iewes shout it out that for his bloud let it light vpon them and their children Matth. 27. 25. How suddenly did the Iudge of the world take vp this Imprecation He ratified it in heauen This direfull curse fell vpon them and yet lyeth vpon them to this day as a standing monument to warne all cursing Caitifes such as wish death and damnation or desperate diseases to themselues or others God may say Amen before they be aware Thus of the declaration of our Sauiours Innocencie The second thing about his condemnation is the cause why Pilate would not deliuer him knowing him to be innocent and so two causes are assigned the first was his willingnesse to content the people Marke 15. 15. And Luke saith the instancie and clamour of the Commons and the chiefe Priests preuailed Luke 23. 23. And a second cause is assigned by Saint Iohn Chap. 19. 13. And that was the feare of Caesar for they had charged him that if he did not condemne Iesus he was not Caesars friend and when he heard this saying he sate downe in the Iudgement seat to giue sentence Which shewes vs that it sometimes comes to passe that Christ and the sincerity of Religion may suffer very vniustly either to satisfie the stubborne humours of wicked people or vpon pretence that Christ and true Christians are enemies to Princes Many things are done in Caesars name and vpon pretence of Caesars right which yet Caesar knowes not of or if he did ought not to fauour such proceedings We see that of old these two things haue beene great motiues to iniustice The third thing was the manner of the Iudgement and so Saint Iohn reports that Pilate brought forth Iesus and sate downe in the Iudgement seat and after some reproachfull speeches to the people about Iesus as their King and after their last tumultuous crie to haue him crucified he deliuered him to be crucified Oh what heart can by faith see Iesus come out vpon the Pauement and so patiently set himselfe before the Tribunall of Pilate and not be dissolued into teares to see our sweet Sauiour after so many indignities to stand amongst such vile people to receiue iudgement of death that was the blessed Author of life But in this sentence of condemnation lieth one chiefe consolation for in that houre and in that sentence did God our heauenly Iudge giue sentence vpon our sinnes in him our Surety and condemned sinne in his flesh that had no sinne and therefore our faith should gather hence assurance of eternall comfort seeing he was condemned that we might be saued and in this sentence vpon him God hath fully satisfied his iustice so as we need not feare the day of Iudgement for Iesus hath beene already iudged for our sinnes Rom. 8. 3. and a part of the iudgement it is to be reckoned that he found no mercy in the Iewes when Pilate said Behold the Man but rather with greater rage they called for the sentence to haue him crucified and withall that he was reiected of the chiefe Priests and Scribes and Elders of the people He found no mercy in the Iewes that he might thereby procure for vs the eternall Mercy of his Father He found no mercy with Men that we might obtaine mercy with God And he was reiected of the chiefe Priests that the Scripture might be fulfilled that had said That the stone that the builders refused should be made the head of the corner Psal 118. 22. And that he might thereby satisfie for vs that had refused God and would not haue him raigne ouer vs but yeelded our selues to the Deuill to rule vs. The fourth thing in the Story is the consequent of the Iudgement or what followed immediatly vpon the sentence and that was most vile vsage by the Souldiers of the Gouernour for they tooke him into the common Hall and gathered vnto him the whole band and they stripped him and put on a Scarlet Robe and a Crowne of Thornes vpon his head and a Reed in his righthand and bowed the knee and mocked him saying Haile King of the Iewes and spit vp-vpon him and smote him on the head with the Reed and after they had mocked him they tooke off the Scarlet Robe and put his owne rayment on him Matth. 27. 27. to 32. Now whereas Saint Iohn Chap. 19. 1 2 3. mentioneth that diuers of these things were done before the sentence to moue the people to pitie we may suppose that they were twice done once by Pilates commandement before sentence and then by the prophane rage and storme of the Souldiers after sentence howsoeuer to vs it is sufficient to know they were done and why hee endured such things wee should chiefly inquire Now out of this part of the Story some things may be learned in generall and somethings from the signification of some speciall things here mentioned In generall wee must inquire after the Reason of two things 1. Why he is here shewed in the habit of a King and scorned by the representation of the ornaments reuerence of a King He is crowned and clothed with a Robe and a Reed put into his hand like a Scepter and saluted as a King all in scorne Consider first that God did by his speciall prouidence acknowledge the regall dignity of his Sonne euen in the middest of his greatest abasement that which Pilate and the Souldiers did in scorne God did in earnest for all these things are ensignes of his Kingdome Secondly hence we may gather how senselesly and scornefully the men of this world doe iudge of the Kingdome and glory of Iesus Christ It is so farre remoued out of their sense and iudgement that they account it but foolishnesse and scorne
that is in the world and be presented pure before God being washed in his bloud For the second point that is the things that fell out before his crucifying we haue three things noted in the storie The first is about his carrying of his Crosse The second is about his speech to the women that met him on the way The third is about a potion they gaue him when he was come to the place where he must suffer About the cariage of his Crosse it is noted in the storie both that they made him carry his owne Crosse and that when by reason of his former Agonie in the Garden and ill vsage by Pilate and the souldiers he was not able to carry it any further they compelled one Simon of Cyrene to carry it to the place of execution Our Sauiour carried his Crosse for diuers reasons First that thereby he might fulfill the figures of the Old Testament for Isaack who was a type of Christ carried the wood for the Sacrifice when Abraham would offer him vp to God Gen. 22. 6. Secondly that thereby he might signifie that he had taken vpon him the malediction of the Law due to vs and carried it vpon his owne shoulders About Simons carrying of the Crosse diuers things are thought to be signified in the storie First that when godly men faint vnder the burthen of their crosses God will send some helpe he will prouide one Simon of Cyrene or other to helpe vs. Secondly that there is a spirituall fellowship and consociation betweene Christ and the Saints in suffering The Martyrs carried Christs crosse their afflictions are Christs afflictions as Paul said of his sufferings Coloss 1. 24. Thirdly this Simon was a Cyrenian a stranger to Christ and not a Iew and is now made to beare his Crosse and in bearing it is first discouered to be a disciple of Christ which might signifie two things The one that the Gentiles should haue their part in Christ crucified and the other that men are strangers to Christ till they suffer for him if wee be at peace in the world and are not put to beare Christs crosse we are still strangers to Christ Some conceiue that the interest of the Gentiles in the Crosse of Christ was intimated by that that the Euangelist saith Simon came from the country Evilla s●●a now Pagos was the Greek terme for a village whence came vp the terme of Pagans which now noted the Gentiles Concerning our Sauiours speech to certaine women that met him by the way the Euangelist Saint Luke chap. 23. 27. to 32. notes both the occasion of it and the matter of it The occasion was that as he went to execution a great company of people followed him and women also which bewailed and lamented him Now it is noted of our Sauiour that passing ouer the forlorne multitude as men that were senslesse and not yet ripe for repentance for their late horrible crime in crying to haue him crucified he turnes his speech to the mournefull women and in that speech First he compassionately seekes to restraine their lamentation for him Secondly he foretels the horrible misery shall fall vpon that Citie which he describes both by intimation when hee bids them weepe for themselues and their children and by way of aggrauation expresses the horror of the destruction shall fall vpon the Iewes by telling how they shall be affected in that day wishing they neuer had had posteritie v. 29. and that they might speedily die before they felt it v. 30. Thirdly he giues a reason of it by an argument taken from the lesse to the greater If God suffer men to shew such seueritie vpon Christ that flourished in grace and good workes like a greene tree how can they escape Gods terrible vengeance that haue beene voide of all goodnesse and good works like a dry tree fit for nothing but the fire And out of all this I will obserue a few instructions 1. We may see what power teares haue ouer Christ Hee that for no words or terrors would speake to Pilate Herod or the Iewes now of himselfe with great compassion answers the teares of these women God is much moued with the teares of tender-hearted persons He must needs speake to a melting heart Howsoeuer these women were wrought vpon we know not but sure it is that God can deny nothing to a broken and contrite heart The teares of such persons are strong arguments with God The like to this we reade of Christ Iohn 11. 33. 2. The vniust death of godly persons hath more comfort in it than the life of wicked men They must not weepe for Christ dying that haue great cause to weepe for the Iewes liuing 3. Publike miseries vpon the Church and State where we liue are to bewailed And out of verse 29. and 30. we may obserue these things 1. That strange punishments shall be to the workers of iniquitie Notorious offenders shall be followed with notable iudgements Though God may spare for a time yet there daies are comming vpon them Eccles 8. 12. Iob 31. 3. 2. Wicked men are monstrous impatient when God visits them for their sinnes They blesse the barren and wish to die Iudgements when they come from God haue such a face of terror and a guilty conscience is so outragious and besides when outward things are taken from the wicked they are vtterly vndone in their owne sense and if they be no better able to beare temporall iudgements what will they doe when they come to suffer eternall torments And here is implied that a Christian that can stand in the euill day vndaunted is an excellent creature one of a thousand if godlinesse did neuer appeare to be of great worth yet in the euill day it is most remarkable for that it works vpon godly persons 3. To say It is good to be barren or to be dead only for temporall crosses is the saying not of God nor any godly but of wicked men only 4. Wicked men neuer begin to talke of their misery till it be vpon them And out of verse 31. we may ●ote 1. That Christ and so godly Christians are like a greene tree they alwaies flourish whether they be in prosperitie or aduersitie they are good and they doe good 2. That wicked men are like a dry tree and so to haue a heart void of gifts and the affections of godlinesse and a conuersation void of good works is a signe of a wicked man 3. That if iudgement begin at the house of God where shall the wicked and sinners appeare If profitable Christians suffer from men how shall vnprofitable people escape suffering from God 1 Pet. 4. 17. Thus of his speech to the women The third thing that befell our Sauiour before his crucifying was a Potion which they gaue him when he was come to the place of execution Concerning which Saint Marke saith They gaue him wine mingled with mirrhe Mark 15. 23. Saint Matthew saith They gaue him vineger mingled with
inflicted for their sinne 4. He vnapparrelled his body amongst men that our soules might be clothed with his Righteousnesse before God 5. That as the first Adam entred into the earthly Paradise naked so the second Adam might enter into the heauenly Paradise also naked in body but graced and apparelled with glory and innocencie and immortalitie and that we might likewise so enter into heauen 6. That we might be comforted in the example of his Passion if at any time we be vncloathed of earthly things and suffer the spoile of our goods by the hands of vnreasonable men 7. That he might teach vs that he that prepares for heauen as a man that hath vanquished the world and the Prince thereof must not seeke earthly things but rather forsake them as hinderances to his passage The world must be crucified to him and he to the world For the Second he was fastened to the Tree 1. That as by the Tree death entered into the world so vpon the Tree it might be conquered and driuen out of the world and life and immortality brought backe againe 2. That the old shadowes might be fulfilled Isaack was laid vpon the wood for sacrifice and the brazen Serpent was fastened to the tree and so the sacrifices were laid vpon the wood 3. He was fastened with nailes for foure reasons The one that the Scriptures might be fulfilled that said of him They haue digged into my hands and my feet Psal 22. 17. The other that he might thereby declare that the hand-writing that was against vs was cancelled and therefore he nailed it on high on the Crosse that it might appeare to be of no force and so that we might be deliuered from the Ordinances of Moses which were but as so many confessions or Bills of our hands against vs. Thirdly that by his wounds we might be cured of the spirituall wounds with which the old Serpent had wounded our Natures Iohn 3. 14. Fourthly that when we are wounded by the enemies of the Truth we might beare them as the markes of the Lord Iesus in our bodies Gal. 6. 17. For the Third point hee was lifted vp on high on the Crosse for three reasons First that thereby he might fulfill the figure of the old Law for the sacrifices were lifted vp vpon the Altar and there sacrificed And as Moses lifted vp the brazen Serpent so must the Sonne of Man be lift vp Iohn 3. 14. Secondly that he might thereby carry on high in his body our sinnes and so take them away and make it manifest he was sacrificed for vs 1 Pet. 2. 14. Ioh. 1. 29. Hebr. 9. 26. 28. Thirdly that being lifted vp into the Aire he might subdue and triumph ouer the spirits that rule in the Aire that is the Deuill Coloss 2. 15. For the fourth point hee was crucified with his hands spread abroad First that he might draw all men vnto him and vnite both Iewes and Gentiles among themselues This day of his crucifying was the day which the Prophet Zacharie spake of Chap. 3. 9 10. in which he should remoue and take vp the sinnes of the world and make peace amongst men so as men should call one another by the preaching of the Gospell into the communion of the Church which hee resembles to a Vine and Fig-tree see also Ioh. 12. 32. Ephes 2. 16. Secondly that thereby he might signifie his great loue to vs readie to imbrace vs and take vs into his armes and bestow vpon vs the benefits of his Passion and that his torments made him the more to long after vs. For the fift point our Sauiour shed his bloud on the crosse for diuers reasons First that he might fulfill the figures of the old Law for the bloud of the sacrifices shadowed out the effusion of Christs bloud Secondly that thereby he might make expiation for our sinnes and reconcile vs to God and so make peace betweene God and vs pacifying his displeasure Heb. 9. 28. Rom. 3. 25. Coloss 1. 20. and so get forgiuenesse of all our sinnes for vs for without effusion of bloud there could be no remission Heb. 9. 18 c. Matth. 26. 28. Thirdly that his bloud might be a fountaine and lauer in which our soules might be washed and purged from all our sinnes Zach. 13. 1. 1 Cor. 6. 11. Reuel 1. 5. 7. 14. Heb. 9. 14. 20. 22. Fourthly that the partition wall might be broken downe and Iewes and Gentiles be made one Ephes 2. 12 c. Fiftly that we might be deliuered from the Ceremoniall Law of Moses 1 Pet. 1. 18 19. Sixtly that his bloud might be our drinke to eternall life Ioh. 6. 55 56. Seuenthly that his bloud might be an vniuersall medicine for all the infirmities and languishings of our soules 1 Ioh. 1. 7. Lastly that thereby he might open heauen for vs and obtaine an eternall Redemption for vs. Hebr. 9. 12. 10. 19 20. For the sixt point he was crucified in the middest of two theeues for diuers reasons First that the Scripture might be fulfilled that said Hee was reckoned among the wicked in his death Esay 5. 3. 12. Secondly that he might sanctifie the death of malefactors that turne to God by repentance that they might know that their kinde of death shall be no hinderance to their Saluation Thirdly that hee might thereby shew that the fruit of his death should be diuided amongst sinners and that he came to die for them Mat. 9. 13. Fourthly that thereby he might shew that he should be the Iudge of the quicke and dead of good and bad hauing the good on his right hand and the bad on his left Thus of the fourth thing in the History of his crucifying The fifth point is the things he suffered while he hanged on the Crosse and those were 1. The diuision of his garments 2. Derision from the High Priests and people 3. Grieuous torment both of soule and body 4. Thirst of body Concerning the diuision of his garments the Euangelists say that the Souldiers diuided them into foure parts to each one a part and for his Coat without seame for it they cast Lots who should haue it and all this was done 1. That the Scriptures might be fulfilled that had foretold of so much as Psal 22. 1● 2. That thereby might bee signified that the goods of Christ and his grace should be diuided euen amongst his enemies and that he would inrich them that were sometimes enemies to him which we reade was fulfilled in the Story of the Acts of the Apostles and is still found to be true by experience 3. The diuision of his garments into foure parts signified that the grace of Christ should be caried into all the foure parts of the world and diuided amongst the Elect whose sinnes crucified Iesus 4. The not diuiding of his Coat without seame imported some Mystery as that the whole righteousnesse of Christ is giuen to the godly without parting of it 5. The casting of lots for it
speakes on the Crosse is the words of his intercession Luke 23. 34. which should be an admirable paterne to teach vs to goe and doe likewise Neuer was there a greater man on earth nor did euer man suffer such wrongs and yet you see how he is affected He that bids vs pray for our enemies doth it himselfe in a harder case than euer can be ours If we will be true disciples we must shew it by forgiuing men their trespasses and by praying for them especially when we are about to die if we would euer haue God forgiue vs we must forgiue men their trespasses against vs. This prayer of Christ was heard as appeares by the conuersion of many of those enemies of his after his death Yet obserue he prayes not for such as sinned of malitious wickednesse but for such as sinned out of ignorant zeale or generall prophanenesse of Nature many of the people were carried with blinde zeale and many of the Gentiles were ignorant of the true story of the life and cause of Christ for which he suffered those were curable and for those he prayes And this may be a comfort to vs he that can obserue this difference in his persecuting aduersaries will much more shew it in considering the frailties and ignorances of his owne seruants that desire to please him though they faile of that they desire to doe through strength of temptation or other weaknesse and ignorance Againe note it is not enough for the partie offending that the partie offended doe forgiue but God also must be sought vnto for forgiuenesse Lastly our Sauiour shewes his religiousnesse in his maner of dying by his deuout care for his owne soule shewed in his prayer when he said Father into thy hands I commend my Spirit Luke 23. 46. when he had be queathed all other things as Peace to his Disciples his body to the Iewes his garments to his Tormentors Paradise to the Theefe pardon to the penitent and his Mother to his Friend now only remained his Soule and that he commends to God Euen Iesus can carry nothing with him out of the world but his Soule and therefore he prouides for that Which should teach vs what we should doe our greatest care should be that our soules may be safe when we die and that they may be so we see here two things must be done while we liue First we must get assurance that God is our Father we are his children and then when we come to dye we must commit our soules by faithfull and heartie prayers into his hands and for feare of the worse wee should begin betimes to prepare for death and by daily prayer to put our soules into Gods hands Obserue that these words were first vsed by the Prophet Dauid Psal 31. 5. who committed his soule to God being horribly persecuted by Saul and in great danger and hauing no friend to trust to Now our Sauiour being in like but greater distresse doth make choice of Dauids words to expresse his prayer in which should teach vs to acquaint our selues with the Scriptures especially of this kinde for as it will be accepted if our prayers be made according to Gods will so is it a speciall aduantage and helpe to our faith and prayers to fashion them to the very paternes in Gods Booke and to say as the godly haue said to God in the like case Finally this practise of our Sauiour may be a great comfort to vs and that two waies for first we may gather from his example that if once we haue committed our soules to God he will keep them safe as Paul said 2 Tim. 12. And secondly it will be comfortable for vs in death or danger to flie to Iesus Christ to beseech him to helpe our soules with his Father who cannot forget that once himselfe on earth made the same moane to his Father that we doe now to him Thus Stephen doth Act. 7. The fourth question is for whom Christ died and the Answer is giuen distinctly in many places of Scripture First he died for men not for other creatures Heb. 2. 14. 18. Though the effect of his death reach to other creatures as to the Angels Phil. 2. 10 11. and to the creatures that suffered vanitie for mans sinne Rom. 8. 19 20 22. Secondly he died not for his friends but such as in the state of nature were his enemies and sinners not iust men Rom. 5. 8 10. Thirdly he died not for Iewes only but for the Gentiles also 1 Ioh. 2. 2. Fourthly hee died not for goats but for his sheepe Ioh. 10. 11 15. not for the world but for the Church Ioh. 17. 9. Eph. 5. 25. euen for such as should beleeue in his name Ioh. 3. 16. Fifthly he died not for some beleeuers but for all beleeuers Rom. 8. 32. and so not for learned men or great men but for all men of all sorts that beleeue 1 Tim. 2. 6. Sixthly he died not for those that did beleeue his words but for all that should beleeue the words of his seruants afterwards to the end of the world Ioh. 17. 21. And so he died for vs many hundred yeares before wee were borne Seuenthly not for all beleeuers in generall only but for euery particular by name Ioh. 10. 3. 14 15. And the knowledge hereof should serue for diuers Vses For first it should be very comfortable for all sorts of Christians to thinke that Christ died for them and did thinke of them in particular and by name Secondly it should much affect vs with admiration of the greatnesse of his loue that would die for such vile wretches as we were by nature wicked and enemies to him as the Apostle vrgeth it Rom. 5. 6. to 10. And thirdly in speciall it should much incourage such as are burthened with the greatnesse of their sinnes to know that he well vnderstood it that he was to die for the vngodly Fourthly it should teach Christians to restraine censure and iudging of them that are without The vertue of Christs death may reach to many more than we know and to such as for the present are vile enemies to the Christian name Fifthly wee should all labour to be such as Christ hath described to haue actually a part in his death And so Saint Paul tels vs we must be such as see and acknowledge how vile and wicked we are by nature whatsoeuer gifts or priuiledges we haue and how ciuill soeuer we haue liued in comparison of others Rom. 5. 6 c. and our Sauiour tels vs we must be beleeuers and sheepe such as will heare and be ruled by his voice and 2 Cor. 5. 15. the Apostle saith We must be such as will liue to him that died for vs and Saint Iohn saith Reuel 14. 3 4. we must not be defiled with women that is with Idolatry or spirituall whoredome that is with any beloued sinne and must follow the Lambe whithersoeuer he goeth Finally if Christ died for vs it must needs
Christ was pierced First that the Scripture might be fulfilled which said They shall looke vpon him whom they haue pierced Ioh. 19. 37. Zach. 12. 10. Secondly that great mysterie of the originall of the Church is here imported As Eue was formed out of the side of Adam when hee was asleepe so the Church was to bee formed out of that which flowed from the side of Christ when he was dead God opened the side of Adam when he would make the woman and so God opened the side of Christ the second Adam when he was to make the Christian Church Now that place of the Prophet shewes what vse wee should make of this part of the Passion of Christ namely to take occasion from thence to bewaile our sinnes that were the cause of his death and to acknowledge that we were the men that are spiritually guilty of that cruelty shewed vnto Christ And because our hearts by nature are barren and vnapt to this godly sorrow we must pray God to powre out vpon vs of his Spirit as it is a Spirit of compassion to melt our hearts and a Spirit of deprecation to make vs able by prayer to sue for pardon of our sins and to beseech God to accept of the propitiation made in Christs bloud that so his wrath may not fall vpon vs for our sinnes Now the water and bloud that came out of the side of Christ was both miraculous as is thought and wonderfully mysticall That it was miraculous is gathered from that extraordinary notice S. Iohn takes of it Iohn 19. 34. and 1 Iohn 5. 6. wherin the miracle should lye is not easie to tell There is a skin that incloseth the heart called Pericardium which holdeth water in it that cooleth the heart of man which is so essentiall to life that if it be consumed it is impossible the creature should liue Now I take it that the wonder lyes in this that whereas in death especially such a painefull death as Christs was that water is consumed and dried vp with the extreame heat of the heart striuing for life yet in Christ who died not only willingly but also before the time he needed to die with the paine the water was still in that bag or skin and therefore when the speare pierced the heart both water and bloud came forth Now for the Reasons why this fell out diuers are assigned For first hereby the truth of Christs death is infallibly proued For no creature can liue if the heart and that Pericardium be pierced And it concernes our saluation that Christ should die indeed and not in appearance Secondly the chiefe thing intended by this suffering was the discouery of a dreadfull mysterie concerning the vertue of the death of Christ for this is he that came by water and bloud euen Iesus Christ that brings with him for our saluauation both the water of Sanctification to wash vs from the staine of our sinnes and the bloud of expiation to make full atonement before God for the guilt of our sinnes Not by water only but by bloud also Moses when he deliuered the people of Israel in that bodily deliuerance came by water when he went thorow the Red-sea but he brought no bloud for atonement Iohn Baptist when he brought tidings of Spirituall deliuerance he came by water washing men to signifie repentance but there was no bloud that he could exhibite and his water was but Symbolicall and significatiue But Christ came by water and bloud which hee not onely powred out on the Crosse but hath left in the hearts of all beleeuers as witnesses not only to him but to them also 1 Ioh. 5. 7 8. For as there be Three in heauen that beare witnesse of Christ and the happinesse of Christians in him viz. the Father who testified by voice from heauen Mat. 3. and the Word who testified both by doctrine and miracles and the Holy Ghost who testified as at other times so on the day of Pentecost Act. 2. So there be Three on earth that testifie viz. the Spirit of Adoption that witnesseth to our spirits and the water of Mortification which washeth away and destroyeth the staine and power of sinne and the bloud of Iustification for a beleeuer relying vpon the bloud of Christ as the pacification for his sinnes is effectually deliuered from the guilt of them Now there would be no water to wash him from his sinnes nor bloud to make atonement if Christ had not shed both water and bloud vpon the Crosse Now all this is testified by the Spirit also in the Gospell and by water in Baptisme and by bloud in the Lords Supper and these also receiue all their life and force from the water and bloud that came out of the side of Christ on the Crosse Now the vse that we should make of this dreadfull Mystery should be to flie vnto this part of the Passion of Christ for our comfort against the power and guilt of our sinnes as beleeuing that out of the side of Christ at this time did runne that Fountain that was opened vnto the house of Dauid and to the inhabitants of Ierusalem for sinne and for vncleannesse Zach. 12. 1. Though our sinnes were neuer so many and loathsome yet in this Fountaine they may be cleane washed away but then withall wee must striue to get this Fountaine within vs this miraculous Fountaine I say that runnes water and bloud and to shew that we haue indeed a part in the death of Christ by the sound fruits of mortification and by the solide tran quilitie of our conscience beleeuing the expiation made in the bloud of Christ for vs as verily as if that bloud had beene really sprinkled vpon our hearts Some Diuines doe obserue another mystery in this water and bloud running out of the side of Christ for they obserue that as out of the side of the first Adam came the woman that deceiued all the world so out of the side of Christ came redemption and oblation from that deceiuing Thus of the piercing of Christs side after his death The testimonie giuen of his glory in his death was partly diuine and partly humane The diuine testimonies were three the Earthquake the rending of the Rockes and the opening of the Graues Matth. 27. 51 52. The trembling of the earth may signifie diuers things as First the immediate presence of the Diuine Nature for as the earth trembled when Christ came to giue the Law on Sinai Psal 67. 8 9. and as both heauen and earth shall melt and be in a manner consumed when Christ comes to Iudgement 2 Pet. 3. 10. So now that Christ is making atonement for the sinnes of the Elect and going out of the world hee makes the earth doe him homage and acknowledge his Diuinitie at that time when he seemed so despised amongst men Secondly the horrible indignitie of the fact of the Iewes in killing Christ the senselesse creatures tremble when the Lord of life dies and the Creator
is slaine by the creature which also vpbraids the stupiditie of men that cannot be moued with such an obiect especially the horrible wickednesse of the chiefe Priests and Rulers and people of the Iewes that are not stirred with remorse for so grieuous a sinne Thirdly this shaking of the earth is thought to signifie and foretell the shaking of the world by the Gospell afterwards so as all the world should be moued at the sound of the voice of Christ in the Gospell Heb. 12. 26 27. The rending of the Rockes 1. Did vpbraid the Iewes for the hardnesse of their hearts that were worse than the very Rockes The Rockes cleaue at the death of Christ and yet their hearts are vnmoued 2. It might signifie the same with the Earthquake viz. that the vertue of Christs death carried by the Gospell into the world would bee of force to teare and rent the hearts of wicked men though they were as hard as Rockes The opening of the graues signified that Christs death had vanquished Death and that it should not haue power to hold the body of the Saints in the graue long and withall it told the Iewes aforehand that it would be in vaine for them to roule great stones vpon Christs graue for he would rise againe doe they what they could It is said that the dead bodies arose after the Resurrection of Christ which hath made some Diuines thinke that the graues were not opened till after the Resurrection though Saint Matthew reckons this thing together with the rest of the Miracles that concerned Christs death Thus of the Testimony Diuine The Humane Testimony was the Testimony of the Roman Centurion and the Souldiers with him who feared and glorified God and said Of a truth this was the Sonne of God and the multitude that came to the execution beholding the things that were done smote their breasts and returned Matth. 27. 54. Mark 15. 19. Luke 23. 47 48. And this Testimonie shewes 1. The maruellous senselesnesse of the Priests and learned men and great men of the Iewes that these men that were Pagans and these poore Plebeians should be so affected with feare and wonder and giue such an honourable testimony to the innocencie and Diuinity of Christ when these great Pillars of the Church are so obstinately auerse and hostily minded it shewes that they were prodigiously sinfull and hard hearted and withall it shewes what a plague a hard heart is whereso euer it is found though in learned or great men Though God shake the earth teare the Rockes open the graues and though he make strangers to confesse his glory yet they are the same men still 2. That it is easie with Christ to defend his owne credit and cause euen in the hardest times though Iudas betray him Peter deny him and the rest of the Disciples flie from him yet he can make a Centurion a Souldier a Pagan to doe the worke his Disciples should haue done Hee can glorifie himselfe by the mouth of Babes and Sucklings if need be Psal 8. 2. Buried ACT. 13. 29. And when they had fulfilled all things that were written of him they tooke him downe from the tree and put him in a sepulchre THat Christ was buried is manifest by the Storie of the Euangelists and is a part of the Creed not doubted of by any amongst vs. Concerning his buriall I propound these things to be considered 1. The reasons why it was needfull Christ should be buried 2. The place where he was buried 3. The persons by whom he was buried 4. The manner how he was buried 5. The time how long he continued in the graue Our Sauiours bodie was buried for these Reasons 1. That the Scripture might be fulfilled that had prophecied of it see Esay 53. 9. 2. That it might appeare he was truly dead 3. That he might pursue and ouercome death in his owne cell or den 4. That he might burie our sins with him and for euer hide them from the sight of God 5. That we being made partakers of the fruit of his buriall might be buried with him in respect of our sins The immersion in the water of Baptisme is a signe of this spirituall buriall with Christ Rom. 6. 4. Col. 2. 12. 6. That he might sanctifie our buriall to vs and so expell from vs that horror and feare we might conceiue about our lying in the graue and so confirme vs in the hope of our Resurrection 7. That we might learne from thence to giue honour to the body of Christians in prouiding honest and decent buriall for them such as might answer the hope wee haue of our Resurrection Mens bodies shall rise and to signifie so much we should lay them in the graue as in a safe place to keepe them till the Resurrection For the place where he was buried that may be diuersly answered 1. He was buried in a noted place neere to Ierusalem and that for two causes The one that so all occasion of doubting of his death or truth of his buriall and so of his resurrection might be remoued The other that by the rest of Christ in the graue the vision of rest and peace which the name Ierusalem signified might be knowne to bee procured by Christ Rest I say spirituall and eternall 2. He was buried in a Garden thereby hauing relation to the first Adam for as our vnrest began at the sinne of the first Adam so here in a Garden doth the second Adam come to rest and so begins our spirituall rest And withall to giue vs hope that as from the sinne of the first Adam we were cast out of the garden of pleasure so by the suffering of the second Adam who lay buried in a Garden we might haue a happy returne to the heauenly Paradise And as Christ was carried from the Crosse to the garden of rest so shall we be taken from the calamities of life into heauenly rest 3. He was buried in a Sepulchre hewed out of a rocke that so his enemies might haue no occasion to cauill and say his Disciples stole him away by secret holes or passages vnder ground and withall to signifie what the state of our naturall hearts is when Christ comes spiritually to rest in our soules hee must hew him a place out of the rocks if he get roome in our hearts 4. He was buried in a Sepulchre that was new that thereby might be signified that the condition of death was by the merit of Christ made new and was altogether different from that which it was wont to be and withall to tell vs that Christ will rest in the heart of no man vnlesse it be new 5. He was buried in a Sepulchre in which neuer man was laid lest his aduersaries should cauill and say it was some other that was risen or that he rose from the dead by vertue of touching some other corps see 2 King 13. 21. 6. He was buried in another mans Sepulchre to signifie that he died and was
buried not for himselfe but for other men and that he might shew that graues properly belong to vs which haue sinned to warne vs of our mortalitie Ioseph caused his sepulchre to be made in his garden of pleasure that he might be thereby put in minde of his mortalitie in the middest of the delights of this life The persons by whom Christ was buried are diuersly described as by their names Ioseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus and by their worldly estate they were Senators and rich men and by their profession or religion they were disciples iust men such as waited for the kingdome of God but yet all was done secretly for feare of the Iewes and by the authoritie they had to doe it viz. the consent of Pilate Matth. 27. 57. Mark 15. 45. Ioh. 19. 38 39. For the first of these it is to be obserued that God hath giuen these men an honourable name in the Storie of the Gospell so as what they haue done shall alwaies be remembred where the Gospell is preached and this honourable mention they attained not till this seruice done to the dead bodie of Christ Whereby God would teach vs that such as honour Christ God will honour and the best way to get into the Catalogue of Gods Worthies is to imploy our selues in well-doing and in the seruice of Iesus Christ and then we can doe no good worke to Christ dead or liuing in himselfe or his members but it shall be had in honour yea it may be in euerlasting remembrance For the second Christ was buried by rich men First that the Scripture might be fulfilled that said He exposed his graue to the wicked and to the rich man in his death To the wicked because he could not be buried without Pilates consent and to the rich man because hee was buried by Ioseph of Arimatheas meanes Thus he was said to be buried and raised vp according to the Scriptures 1 Cor. 15. 4. Secondly he gaue his dead bodie to rich men to signifie that amongst rich men he had his elect and that the vertue of his death should reach euen to them for though it bee impossible in respect of men that a rich man should be saued yet it is not so vnto Christ who can effect wonderfull things and so can by the vertue of his death so vntwist the gable of a rich mans heart as to make it in true humilitie like a thread to goe thorow the eye of a needle Matth. 19. 24. Iam. 1. 10. 1 Cor. 1. 26. And hence rich men should learne of Ioseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus that they ought to professe their loue of Christ and sincere Religion not only when Christ is adorned with miracles and worldly applause but euen when he fals into the hands of wicked men and is buried in ignominie they must not feare danger or reproach They must honour Christ not onely in the peaceable times of the Church but in troubled times Euen when Christ in his members is betrayed persecuted oppressed forsaken of his owne condemned either in spirituall Courts or politicall pursued by warres or any other vexations And the poore seruants of God that suffer for the testimonie of Iesus may hence take comfort God that stirred vp rich men to doe this honour to the bodie of Iesus will not forsake the afflicted members of Iesus he can stirre vp men to prouide for them and honour them euen greatmen when it pleaseth him both in their life time and at their death and after their death also Now for the third point they were disciples of Christ but yet it was secretly for feare of the Iewes Whence we may obserue the great wonder of Gods power in these men When Christ was in prosperitie they were afraid to be seene to follow him or to professe respect to him Now that Christ is in extreme disgrace and the enemies of Christ fleshed in cruelty and malice now these fearfull men proue valiant and whatsoeuer comes of it Christ shall be honoured euen the dead bodie of Christ shall not be forsaken by them Which is the more wonderfull because the best disciples of Christ were so ouercome with feare that they had all forsaken Christ Which may serue for great vse to all of vs. They that stand should take heed lest they fall Those that now go for strong Christians if euill daies come may proue faint-hearted and by their fearefulnesse dishonour the Religion they professe And on the other side weake Christians should not be dismayed God is able to make them to stand Rom. 14. 4. Such as in dayes of prosperitie were afraid of the reproach of men may proue so full of courage in the euill day as not to feare though the foundations of the earth be moued Further we may hence gather a distinction of true Christians Some are so and seeme so they make a profession before men Some are so but seeme not so as here these Counsellors were iust men and disciples and waited for the kingdome of God and yet they were not taken for disciples nor knowne to be so commonly which should restraine censure in rash Christians some of those persons they despise as prophane may be true Christians in Gods sight But yet lest wicked men should be hence emboldned obserue that how weake or fearfull soeuer these men were yet they would not consent to the death of Christ Though the weake Christians I speake of doe not so much for the truth as others doe and they should yet they will doe nothing against the truth 2 Cor. 13. 8. and therefore such persons as not onely make no profession but withall doe scoffe at and oppose sinceritie in others cannot be reckoned in the catalogue of true Christians Pilates consent was had for the buriall of Christ 1. That there might be no doubt made of his death and buriall seeing so great a person is made priuy to the ordering of it 2. That we might know that the hearts of the greatest men are in Gods hands and he can turne them which way he will euen to execute his counsell when they thinke nothing of it He can make the very enemies of the Church become friendly and louing when please him And further in that Ioseph doth not take the dead body downe and burie it without leaue of the Magistrate it serues to teach men that they should doe all things with due respect not only of the warrant of the action but of all circumstances belonging to it especially great respect should be had to authoritie that by rash zeale the power of Magistrates be not prouoked against vs. Thus of the third point The manner of the buriall containes diuers things First they did it hastily towards the euening because of the preparation of the Iowes for the Sabbath Ioh. 19. vlt. Secondly they did it openly Thirdly they did it with great cost for Ioseph brought fine linnen to wrap it in and Nicodemus brought a mixture of Mirrhe and Aloes to the quantitie
of about an hundred pound weight Ioh. 19. 39. Mark 15. 46. but it was done without washing or embalming Lastly it is noted it was done after the manner of the Iewes buriall For the first in that Ioseph makes such haste in respect of the Sabbath approaching it shewes that all men that haue worke to doe towards the end of the weeke should order the matter so as they take vp not any part of the Lords day but vse the more haste and prouidence to haue all dispatched that they may wholly attend vnto Gods worke in that time which he hath consecrated to himselfe And by the way here seemes to be an intimation that burials are not so conuenient to be performed vpon the Sabbath day vnlesse it be in some case of necessitie when the bodie will not keepe till after the Lords day and cannot be prepared for buriall before it begin For the second Christ was buried openly that so there might be no colour of obiecting that there was any fraud vsed about his buriall and besides to testifie that the fruit of his death and buriall did belong to all men and withall it shewes the courage and strength of faith in these disciples that are now no more afraid of men and their terrors but giue glory to God in their hearts and will suffer what can come of it For the third point diuers things may be noted 1. From the cost they are at we may obserue that men that will follow Christ and be true disciples must not thinke much to be not only at labour but at cost also in what may be requisite for the seruice of Christ liuing or dead If rich men must be at cost with the dead bodie of Christ then must they also doe to the liuing members of Christ And further hence it is manifest that it is not vnlawfull to be at cost about the funerals of the dead Saints God makes great account of the dead bodies of his people that haue beene the Temples of the Holy Ghost and therefore it is no sinne according to mens estate to be at such cost as is requisite to comely and decent buriall according to their condition though vaine ostentation or idle ceremonies are not to be iustified 2. In that he was wrapped in pure linnen and with such costly spices it was 1. To proclaime the innocencie of Christ and to take away the ignominie of the Crosse and therefore they would not suffer his bodie to lye amongst the carkasses of theeues and malefactors They tell the world hereby that Christ was no such man 2. To signifie that the memoriall of the iust is blessed after they are dead Therefore they vsed things of such sweet smell in burying the dead that they might thereby signifie how sweet the memorie of the departed Saints is They are amiable euen when they are dead 3. It might in speciall signifie that from Christ dead and buried should arise a most sweet sauour in the he●rts of men brought vnto them by the efficacie of the Gospel causing Christ to dye and be buried in their soules 4. This cost about the bodies of the dead was vsed to signifie their assured hope of resurrection and therefore they bestow that cost as knowing that it is bestowed vpon bodies that shall liue againe Yet for all this cost Christs bodie was not embalmed which in respect of them came to passe by reason of the shortnesse of the time the Sabbath was so neere and therefore the women came the third day to annoint him after the Sabbath was ouer but he was rifen But in respect of God this embalming was not performed that thereby might be signified that Christs bodie needed no embalming because it could see no corruption in the graue Psal 16. 10. and that this incorruption might not be imputed to skill or medicines of men but only to the diuine power and withall to signifie that by Christ wee should be freed from that corruption which the sinne of the first Adam brought vpon vs all Lastly in that it is said that Christ was buried after the manner of the Iewes burying it shewes plainly that respect is to be had to the customes of any country or place where we liue and that Gods seruants haue beene carefull to obserue them and not willing to giue offence by crossing such customes This is true of all customes that are not sinfull and against the word of God though they be such vsages as are not commanded in Scripture for this manner of buriall was no where commanded in Gods word and yet the custome preuailes and good men obserue it Now in this place I may adde further two adiuncts of the buriall of Christ The first was the rowling of a great stone vpon the mouth of the Sepulchre which was not done so much out of any fashion as first that the bodie of Christ might not be exposed to any indignities or vile vsages by the enemies and further that thereby the glory of the power of Christ might the more appeare that could rise though a great stone were rolled vpon the mouth of the Sepulchre The second adiunct was the presence of certaine women that were witnesses of the buriall when the Apostles were fled Which also was done the better to shew the glory of Christ and his power and triumph that could make such weake ones strong and braue the enemies of mans saluation by setting weake women in the forefront of the battell that hold out the confession of Christ and giue not backe for all the furie of the aduersaries And thus of the manner of his buriall Now for the last point our Sauiour continued in the graue till the third day for he was buried the euening before the Iewish Sabbath and lay in the graue all the Sabbath day and rose about the beginning of the first day of the weeke Matth. 28. 1. and a little after his buriall his aduersaries desired of Pilate that the Sepulchre might bee watched lest his Disciples should steale him away by night Pilate grants them the Band of Souldiers who were appointed for the guard of the Temple and these they set to watch the Sepulchre and besides sealed the mouth of the Sepulchre now in all that time the bodie of Christ did suffer no putrifaction or corruption Now of all this foure questions may be demanded Quest 1. Why did our Sauiour continue in the graue three daies Answ That the type of Ionas might be fulfilled As Ionas was three daies and three nights in the Whales belly so must Christ be three daies in the belly of the earth Matth. 12. 40. Quest 2. Why did he rest in the graue on the Sabbath day Answ 1. Because as God when hee had finished the works of the Creation especially the making of man rested the seuenth day So Christ hauing finished our Redemption on the Crosse rested the seuenth day in the graue Answ 2. That this resting of his on the Sabbath might be a pledge of our
earth but to assume Earth when he tooke our nature and that too considered as the earth was vnder malediction for the first Adams sinne and exprest in that sentence Thou art earth and to earth thou shalt returne and that other The earth is cursed for thy sake thorns and briers shall it bring forth And that he descended both in respect of his body and soule and of both of them together In respect of his body as Adam made of the earth so was Christ borne of a Virgin who had her originall from the earth and the earth is vsually said to be the common mother of vs all and his soule descended into this earth when it was vnited to his most sacred body In both soule and body in his Incarnation he descended into the earth euen the earth as it was accursed both in respect of infirmitie and in respect of mortality The infirmities of our Nature which he tooke both in soule and in body what were they but so many thornes and briers to afflict and seratch and paine his most blessed Nature I meane by his infirmities such as were without sinne such as came from sinne but did not tend to sin such were in his soule sorrow and feare and in his body thirst hunger pouertie And besides our Infirmities he tooke our Nature as it was Mortall and so descended into that Infernum the Fathers call Infernum mortalitatis for though he died not so soone as hee was borne yet he liued alwaies vnder the sentence of death A prisoner in the Goale when he is condemned all the time he liues is reckoned but as a dead man So was Christ Now the Scripture seemes clearely to acknowledge the descension of Christ into the earth of mortalitie and infirmitie as when he descended to take vpon him the forme of a seruant Phil. 2. 7. So it is by some Interpreters conceiued to be meant Rom. 10. 7. and Ephes 4. 9. though it is not doubted but these places haue a further meaning Thus of the first sense as Hades signifies the earth and the rather because some Diuines make it a rule that Christ is neuer said to descend any whither but into Hell or Hades 2. Christ may be said to descend into Hades when by death he went among the dead both in his body and soule He descended when he went downe among the dead And thus he descended not only into the Infernum mortalitatis but into the Infernum mortis also Thus according to the Psalme he was free among the dead and this was the greater abasement because hee was detained so long among the dead kept downe as a Prisoner in the graue in respect of his body He descended then when he suffered the state of the dead both in body and soule I say his abasement was very great in this condition because both his friends thought all was lost in him Luke 24. 21. Marke 16. 10. and his enemies insulted ouer him as conquered and called him Deceiuer Matth. 27. 62 c. Luke 23. 43. See what God saith Dan. 9. 26. And death held him downe as his prisoner Rom. 6. 9. So as it was with him as Iob 17. 12 13. But yet it is true he was glorious in this estate both in that his soule was in Paradise and his body inioyed incorruption But yet all this was secret and not knowne to men therefore some Diuines call this a kinde of middle state betweene humiliation and exaltation because it was partly glorious and partly ignomious And his detention in the graue answer● fitly to the order of the Articles For as Resurrection answers to his death and crucifying so A scension answers to his going into the graue and Session at the right hand of God answers to his continuance in the graue 3. Christ may be said to descend into Hell in respect of efficacie because though neither soule nor body went into the Hell of the damned locally yet the vertue of what he suffered in soule and body penetrated into Hell it selfe This was an operatiue descension The merit and vertue of his Passion descended euen amongst the damned Angels to spoile them of their power and confirme them in the horror of their estates and to signifie the deliuerance of the Elect out of their hands 4. These words He descended into Hell may be taken as an effectuall Epitome and repetition of all his Passion described before with a generall intimation of the vnexpressablenesse of the things he suffered for our sinnes as if they that inserted the words into the Creed would say he suffered all things that might concerne our Redemption which were so many and so grieuous as the heart of man is not able to reckon them or to finde the bottome of them for when he came to suffer for vs he desended into a very Abissus or bottomlesse pit of misery not to bee sounded by any mortall heart This sense is taken too by some Diuines as the most proper sense of the words in this place And for mine owne part with submission to information of better iudgements if one particular sense must be taken to I best like this Thus of his descension in respect of the whole Man In respect of his body our Sauiour descended into Hades or Sheol when he descended into the graue and so it is the same in sense with his buriall and this interpretation is not to be slighted for first I haue quoted many places of Scripture before where the Translators themselues render the words by the terme of the graue So Iacob descended into Hell when he went downe into the graue Gen. 42. 38. And besides Athanasius in his Creed which is one of the most ancient that haue this Article in leaues out Buried and puts in He descended into Hell as if he signified thereby that he tooke that to be the meaning of the Article And Ruffinus saith in his Exposition of the Creed that the sense of these words seemes to be the same with the other word Buried Thirdly in respect of his soule our Sauiour may be said to descend into Hell in two senses First in that hee abased himselfe so farre as to let his soule to be in that condition which our soules are in betweene the time of our death and our resurrection which was a great abasement though the soule suffered no paine for his very soule herein endures the common condition of all mens soules in death though the soule die not in respect of the substance yet in a generall sense euery change from that being wee haue for the present is a kinde of death because it makes a not being of that which was before or makes something not to be which had a being before What is mutabilitie but a kinde of death which while it changeth any thing into another fashion that ceaseth to be what it was and beginneth to be what it was not Thus in the soule of Christ there was not only a change but a
priuation of what he had before for first the Body was taken from the soule and a diuorce made between that couple that had liued so louingly together See 2 Cor. 5. 2. Secondly the 〈…〉 part of the soule was abolished seeing hearing brea●●●ng speaking and the like all ceast in Christ all the vessels or instruments of the senses being taken away from the soule Thirdly all outward operations did cease in which the soule was wont to worke and now could worke no longer This is to be vnderstood of doing worke in the visible and corporeall world Fourthly there is in the soules euen of the godly and so in Christ a most earnest longing yet without paine or sorrow for the consummation of felicitie to be enioyed with the body resumed The soule departed is ioyned to the body still though not in life and sense yet in naturall affection so as it enioyes no happinesse which it doth not wish to the body The soules of the righteous crie vnder the Altar for though they rest saith one à labore yet they doe not rest à clamore and though they haue nothing that molest them yet they haue not yet what would more delight them viz. their bodies Thus of the first sense Secondly Christ in soule descended into Hell when as our furetie he submitted himselfe to beare those hellish so●rowes which we were bound by our sinnes to luffer for euer His descension is his proiection of himselfe into the sea of Gods wrath conceiued for our sinnes and his ingression into most vnspeakable straits and torments in his soule which we should else haue suffered for euer in Hell This way of Christ descending into Hell is expresly vttered in the person of Dauid as the type of Christ Psal 86. 13. and 116. 3. and 69. 3. Thus the Prophet Esay saith His soule was made an offering Esay 53. 10. And this I take it Dauid meanes when hee said of Christ Thou wilt not leaue my soule in Hell Psalm 16. Acts 2. And thus Christ descended into hell when hee was aliue not when he was dead Thus his soule was in Hell when in the Garden hee did sweat bloud and on the Crosse when hee cried out so lamentably My God my God why hast thou forsaken mee Matth. 26 38. And according to this sense is the Article fitly placed in the Creed for hauing reckoned before what hee suffered in bodie in this Article is expressed what hee suffered in soule and in the sixteenth Psalme it seemes hee first reckons what hee suffered in soule and his deliuery from it when hee said Thou wilt not leaue my soule in Hell and then speakes of the priuiledge of his body in the graue as a thing which followed the suffering and deliuerance of his soule out of Hell The vse of this Article may be 1. To informe vs againe of the hatefulnesse of sinne that hath thus abased the Sonne of God and withall to shew vs how great that surpassing loue of Christ to vs was that could bee content for our sakes to be thus abased 2. To instruct vs especially in two things Humility and Patience This is a matchlesse patterne for vs to learne by how should our hearts fall low and descend in vs when we heare how many wayes Christ hath descended and abased himselfe for vs this should destroy our pride and those high thoughts in vs that hinder true lowlinesse of heart Phil. 2. Matth. 11. 29. And for Patience what can wee suffer that is comparable to the descension of Christ into Hell in all those senses Such vnworthy creatures are we as whatsoeuer God doe with vs wee cannot descend lower than wee are or deserue to be and if God haue deliuered our Sauiour from this bottomlesse sea of misery into which he descended for our sakes why should wee doubt through vnbeleefe or despaire This should teach vs to trust vpon God and wait for deliuerance from whatsoeuer distresse we doe or can fall into 3. To comfort vs for his Descension is our Ascension He descended into Hell that we might ascend into heauen He hath endured vnspeakable sorrowes on earth that we might enioy riuers of pleasure in heauen The fifth Article 2 TIM 2. 8. The third day he rose againe from the Dead HItherto of the Articles of the Creed that describe the abasement and humiliation of of Christ the Mediator on earth Now it followes to consider of the Articles that concerne the exaltation of Christ as hee is the Mediator made glorious and so three things are entertained into the Christian faith as the three parts or degrees of the glorification of Christ viz. his Resurrection Ascension and Session at the right hand of God But before I handle these in particular I must consider of his exaltation in generall Concerning the exaltation of Christ in generall two things are to be considered both what in Christ was exalted and what good it is to vs that hee was so exalted For the first of these The person of Christ was exalted and that in respect of both Natures The Diuine Nature was exalted but in some respect the Humane Nature was exalted simply The Diuine Nature being immutable could receiue no increase of glory or essence in it selfe but yet was exalted in respect of the manifestation of the glory and Maiestie which in the estate of humiliation was hidden as it were vnder a vaile Rom. 1. 4. so that Christ was exalted in respect of Manifestation onely as he was God The Humane nature was exalted absolutely and simply and that two waies namely by the deposition or laying downe of Infirmities and by glorification or susception of most excelling gifts In the estate of exaltation Christ put off the infirmities of our nature which he assumed in his Incarnation such as were hunger thirst wearinesse in the body and negatiue ignorance and feare and sorrow in his soule The gifts he receiued were both in body and soule his body being rescued from corruption and death and all misery becomes incorruptible immortall impatible and was made to shine with all purity strength agility and brightnesse as became the body of God 1 Cor. 15. 42 43 44. His soule receiued all knowledge could befall a nature euen the knowledge perfect of all things that are and all vertues and gifts in their highest degree that can be in a glorified creature aboue all blessed Angels and men Yet by the way wee must know that Christ did receiue such glory as did not destroy the humane nature Christ laid downe all infirmities of the flesh but not the flesh it selfe for now hee is glorified hee hath the same flesh he had when he was borne and crucified He was not emptied of the substance of his humanity but in it glorified not deified for How can a finite thing equall that which is infinite And how can wee say wee beleeue in Christ God and Man if he be no more a man Wherefore we must constantly hold the difference between
the Maiestie vncreated the Maiestie created which is in Christ the one belongs to the Diuine nature the other to the humane The good that comes to vs by his exaltation is threefold the first is the confirmation of our faith and hope for his exaltation shewes plainly that hee hath fully satisfied for our sinnes and conquered all our enemies Sinne the Law Death the Deuill the Graue and Hell and that hee hath purchased Gods fauour and all that concernes our eternall saluation 1 Pet. 1. The second is the perpetuation of his office both as the Prophet and Apostle of our confession Psal 22. 23. Ioh. 17. vlt. as our Priest to make intercession for vs Psal 110. 4. Rom. 8. 33. and as our eternall King Psal 45. 4. 5. and 89. 36. Dan. 7. 27. Luk. 1. 33. Rom. 14. 9. and in all these by his glorification hee hath procured a larger donation and effusion of the Holy Ghost which makes the times vnder Christ more happy than those before Ioh. 7. 39. In all his gifts he giues now as he that is exalted aboue euery name that is named in heauen and earth The third is our owne exaltation he was therefore exalted that he might exalt vs to the glory of heauen Eph. 2. 6. 7. The consideration of the exaltation of Christ may serue greatly for our comfort for besides the former benefits it may raise vp in vs an assurance of hope of preferment by him seeing our Brother is so highly preferred and withall it may greatly encourage vs in all our suits to God seeing wee haue Christ with him that is so high in his fauour and further in all the straits and distresses of the Church here on earth this may ioy our hearts that Christ is so highly preferred that he is able to preserue and deliuer the Church when pleaseth him But yet we must remember two things if wee would haue benefit by Christs exaltation the one is that wee be true Christians for else his preferment will not reach to vs onely such as are bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh haue part in his glory and such are none but true beleeuers The other is that if wee will reigne with Christ wee must suffer with him wee see here how it was with him first he was abased and then exalted so it must be with vs Luk. 24. 26. Heb. 2. 9. 2 Tim. 2. 12. Thus of his exaltation in generall The first degree of his exaltation was his Resurrection from the dead Concerning the Resurrection of Christ diuers things are to be considered of 1. That he did rise from the dead 2. What of him did rise 3. When he rose 4. How he rose 5. Why he rose from the dead 6. His Apparitions after his Resurrection 7. What good comes to vs by his Resurrection That Christ did rise from the dead we beleeue against all Iewes Turkes and prophane Mockers and are enduced so to doe by testimony both diuine and humane The diuine testimonies are three first the Spirit of God which testifiech two waies first by the Apostles and Euangelists in the Euangelicall Story which wee ought to beleeue if the Apostles had neuer beene eye-witnesses for if the witnesse of men be receiued the witnesse of God is greater Secondly in the heart of euery beleeuer that relyes vpon the Gospell Ioh. 15. 26. The second testimony is the witnesse of Angels who were sent from heauen of purpose to signifie so much Luk. 24. 5. as by Angels the conception and birth of Christ was testified from heauen so was his resurrection The third was the Apparition of Christ shewing himselfe many times aliue from the dead The Humane testimonies were three first was the testimony of Mary Magdalen and the other women that came to annoint the body of Iesus Ioh. 20. 1. as a woman was the first that brought from the Deuill the tidings of sinne vnto the first Adam so a woman is the first that from the good Angels brings the tidings of the Resurrection of the second Adam by whom we are iustified from our sinnes The second was the testimony of the Apostles and fifty Disciples and S. Paul who all saw Christ after hee was risen 1 Cor. 15. 6. The third was the testimonies of the Souldiers that watched the Sepulchre wherein obserue the great prouidence of God that makes the high Priests against their wils from these men to know that Christ was risen from the dead who were set of purpose to hinder the report of the Resurrection by watching the Sepulchre lest his Disciples should steale away his body by night The second point is quickly opened If any aske What of Christ did rise The answer is That the body of Christ onely did rise his Deity could not and the sould did not For the time of the Resurrection Christ did rise the third day after the end of the Sabbath on the first day of the weeke about Sunne rising and concerning this answer diuers things are to be considered of First it was necessary Christ should not rise from the dead sooner or later than the third day from his death and buriall for so it was foretold Hos 6. 2. He shall restore vs to life after two daies viz. the Messiah shall doe it and the third day hee shall raise vs vp viz. in his owne person which was a pledge of our Resurrection and wee shall liue in his sight It is thought S. Paul had respect vnto this place when he said He rose againe the third day according to the Scriptures 1 Cor. 15. 4. and besides this was prefigured by the type Ionas the Prophet as our Sauiour himselfe shewed in his life time Mat. 12. 40. Thirdly he could haue risen as soone as hee was buried but he would not lest the truth of his death should haue beene questioned and beyond the third day hee would not tarry lest the faith of his Disciples should faile and lest any should haue cause to thinke that he brought not the same body was dead but some other Further obserue that as Christ died the same day Adam was created so he liued againe the same day the world began to be the same day God made heauen and earth the same day he filled the earth with the grace and heauen with the ioy of the Resurrection of Christ and therefore this day was called the Lords day Rev. 1. 10. Thirdly hee rose at the rising of the Sunne to shew that he was the true Sunne of righteousnesse that was now rising to enlighten the new and Christian world after the long night of darknesse and legall shadowes and that hee had brought life and immortality to light 2 Tim. 1. 10. For the fourth point to wit how Christ rose diuers things are to be answered first that he rose by his own power He raised himselfe vp from the dead Ioh. 2. 19. and 10. 18. and 5. 25. for though other Scriptures attribute resurrection to God the Father the Holy
cannot imagine any true praise of friendship that can be there wanting to any of that society The fourth is the actuall donation of power ouer all things euen the kingdome of the whole world God will then suffer them to enioy what their hearts can wish in heauen or earth they receiue then as their own all that euer God made Now from the possession of all these ariseth ioy vnspeakable and delight aboue imagination not only the heart of man but all his senses being taken vp with perpetuall admiration and refreshing being as it were continually in●●riated with those riuers of pleasures that are at the right hand of God The second part of the Execution containes the thrusting of all the wicked with the Diuell and his Angels into Hell where all the damned must suffer first abiection from the face of God and depriuation of the very sight of all that might comfort in heauen or earth Secondly the gnawing of conscience vpon the eternall remembrance of all their sinnes Thirdly vnutterable torments in fire vnquenchable Fourthly the horrid presence of the Deuill and his Angels all which are made more grieuous by the impossibilitie to find either ease or end The life they loath they must liue and the death they desire they shall neuer finde Oh that men could be warned in time to prouide that they neuer come into that place That message Diues would haue sent to his brethren is brought vnto men now by the Gospell and therefore let them awake to liue righteously that they perish not in this great damnation where shall be the Chaos of darknesse the horror of tribulation the feare of confusion the griefe of fearfull visions the voice of men lamenting the biting of wormes gnawing cold intollerable fire vnquenchable stinch intollerable darknesse palpable and an absolute despaire of all that is good The third thing is the creation of new heauens and new earth according to these Scriptures Esay 65. 17. and 66. 22. Reu. 21. 1. 2 Pet. 3. 13. Now about this Creation we are to consider of two things 1. The firing of the world 2. The libertie of the creatures For the first of these it is manifest that the world that it may be made new shall be cast into the fire as into a furnace The heauens and the earth are reserued vnto fire the heauens shall perish and shall all wax old as a garment and as a vesture God shall fold them vp and they shall be changed the heauens being on fire shall passe away and be dissolued with a noise and the elements shall melt with heat and the earth with the workes thereof shall be burnt vp Psal 102. 27 28. 2. Pet. 3. 5 7 10 11 12. The substance of the heauens and the earth shall not be annihilated but the qualities only shall be altered that is bettered The figure of this world shall passe away not the nature 1 Cor. 7. 31. For the second of these all things shall be so made new as all creatures that were brought into bondage shall then be set at libertie and receiue restitution as is manifest Acts 3. 21. Rom. 8. 23. That this point may be the more clearely vnderstood I must consider of two things First how the creatures are in bondage now and then how they shall be at liberty then The creatures be now in bondage many wayes First as any of them are corruptible so in bondage to corruption Secondly as they are subiect to mutations and confusions as in the case of the Aire and Seas Thirdly as they are forced to serue the turnes of wicked men and their vses Fourthly as they are teachers of the world and men will not learne the creatures are Gods great booke and it is a bondage to teach and lose their labour Fifthly as any of them are either the instrument or the subiect of mans punishment Sixthly as since the fall they haue lost their vigorous instincts as they are dulled and distempered in them Now for the second point they shall then be freed from all that vanitie or paine or misery or mutabilitie fell vpon them since the fall of man and withall they shall be restored into a glorious estate when the Elect are glorified and so they partake of the glorious libertie of the sonnes of God But this restitution shal not be made to each particular creature that hath beene but to each sort of creatures shall be then found aliue at the last day But what shall be their glorie or how long they shall continue cannot be determined without curiositie and rashnesse The fourth effect or consequent of the Iudgement is the deliuering of the kingdome of Christ into the hands of God the Father 1 Cor. 15. 24. which is to be vnderstood not of the glorious estate of Christ but of his temporall gouernment ouer the world and the Church as he ruled by means in this world for this kingdome ends when hee hath fully subdued the deuils and death and wicked men and hath fully deliuered the Elect from all sinne and misery Then there shall be no need to gouerne men by Magistrates or Preachers or Sacraments or discipline or of any of the helps of naturall or spirituall life Thus of the explication of this Article The vse that may be made of this Article in generall followes and so first it may extremely affright all men that lies in their sins without repentance for there are many things in this doctrine terrible as 1. That God hath set them a day wherein he will certainly bring them to account 2. That this day is most certaine and God will not alter his minde Act. 17. 31. Heb. 9. 27. 3. That this day will be a day of wrath to them and not of mercy The date of mercy vnto impenitent sinners will then be out Rom. 2. 5. 4. That all his sins shall then be discouered euen all his secret sins and none can be forgotten in as much as the euidence shall bee giuen out of so many bookes where all things are written as it were with a pen of iron and the point of a Diamond 1 Cor. 4. 5. Reuel 20. Ier. 17. 1. 5. That euen the longer hee liues the more hee heapes vp wrath against that day Rom. 2. 5. 6. That no meanes will then be auaileable to deliuer them Riches will not helpe them Iob 36. 18 19. nor multitude cannot shelter them Iude 15. 7. That though thou hast excelled in many gifts and done much good in the world yet if thou die in sinne without repentance thou shalt not escape Gods vengeance 1 Cor. 13. 3. 8. That it is but a little while thither 1 Pet. 4. 7. Iam. 5. 8. The signes of Christs comming are the most of them run out and we see that diuers of the last signes run together as if the Lord made haste to make an end of all things and if generall iudgement were yet further off yet death is at hand which giues a particular iudgement vpon thee
religion and were circumcised and withall religious or deuoute men that were Gentiles conuerted to the Iewish religion but were not circumcised such as were Cornelius and diuers others The speciall nature of the Church in which it differs from all other companies of men is exprest in the other wordes of the definition and so they shew vs three things 1. The efficient cause of the Church viz. her calling by the voice of Gods Cryer 2. The tearmes from which and to which she is called in the middle words of the definition 3. The fo●me of the Church which consists in her vnion with Christ and communion with her selfe among the members of that company For the first when I say she is called ordinarily by the voice of Gods Cryers I intimate diuers things thereby 1. That the Preachers of the Gospell are as publike Criers to call men to heare what God hath to say to them like those Cryers in Athens of whom I spake before Matth. 3. Esay 48. 1. 2. That I consider not of the Church as she is elect of God till shee be called because many of the Elect for a great part of their liues may lie scattered about and hidden in the heapes of the men of this world 3. That the preaching of the Gospell is the meanes to make men actually of the Church and members of Christ and so to haue right to saluation The Gospell is the power of God to saluation Rom. 1. 16. and 10. 14. 4. I adde effectually called to exclude Hypocrites and carnall men that enioy the meanes but obey it not and to include the worke of the Holy Ghost making the hearts of the Elect to answer to Gods call and obey his voice for by the Spirit God speakes also internally to their hearts 5. I adde the Word ordinarily to shew that though God is pleased to binde men to the vse of the meanes yet he himselfe is not tied but can worke without the meanes and so it may giue vs occasion to informe our selues in diuers cases as first in the case of such as liue in places where the meanes is not nor can be had It is possible that God extraordinarily may worke conuersion in some men in such places which was the case of Cornelius liuing in Caesarea Act. 10. Secondly in the case of Infants who do belong to the Church by vertue of Gods Couenant though they liue not to receiue conuersion by the preaching of the Gospell for Christ saith of Infants Theirs is the kingdome of God Thirdly in the case of such as liue in Paganish and idolatrous places as in the times of the darknesse of Popery or in the case where men are by violence carried away and brought vp in idolatrous places God may haue a remnant amongst them that belong to his election and are in time truly called as in the daies of Elias in the kingdome of the ten Tribes vnder the reigne of Ahab Fourthly in the case of such as are borne deafe or become so before they are capable of receiuing the Gospell they being borne of godly parents may belong to the Church as Infants do I say God that knowes his owne from eternitie may euen amongst them by the supply of the Spirit make members of the Church Besides seeing the Holy Ghost doth not need speciall instruments to worke withall sometimes he may worke that by the eyes of the deafe which he doth by the eares of others for by their eyes he may powre in an eternall light into their mindes Lastly the case of such as are destitute of vnderstanding by nature or disease is very hard because they want reason and so are incapable of faith and if we say that the Holy Ghost may infuse an inward light then it is cleare they cease to be fooles or mad-men In this case therefore we must religiously and charitably suspend and leaue Gods worke to himselfe The termes from which and to which the Church is called follow in these words from the prophanenesse of the world to enioy the supernaturall dignitie of the children of God The terme from which Terminus à quo is from the prophanenesse of the world in which words three things may be noted First that the true members of the Church were in their estate of Nature as prophane as the people of the world liuing in sin and being the children of wrath as well as others which shew the exceeding riches of Gods grace and Christs loue to them that could respect them being so vile and sinfull Secondly that our first parents before the fall could not properly be said to be the Church because they neither were called from an estate of corruption nor did they then need Christ nor had that faith in Christ being perfect by creation and so not wanting a Sauiour whereas the Church is properly the Spouse of Christ Thirdly by these words all men in visible Churches may trie themselues for only they that are conuerted from prophanenesse are true members of the Church and so Hypocrites are excluded and open prophane persons and such as are only changed in their opinions and not in their practise 2 Pet. 1. 4. Terminus ad quem or the terme to which they are called is to the supernaturall dignity of the sons of God which words expresse the grace of Adoption which comprehends the substance of all that felicity we haue from God in Christ after calling Eph. 1. 4. but of the priuiledges of the Church afterwards The last words of the definition describes the forme of the Church the essentiall inward forme which is that vnion with Christ by faith they are really members of the Church that are vnited to Christ as their head by faith without this faith it is impossible to please God and faith comprehends all that which essentially God requires of vs to iustification and adoption Ioh. 3. 16. I adde their vnion one with another by loue because brotherly loue is an inseparable fruit of faith for faith worketh by loue Gal. 5. 6. and is such a Characteristicall signe of a true member of the Church that the Apostle saith thereby we know we are translated from death to life because we loue the brethren 1 Ioh. 3. 14. and the same Apostle seemes to make Loue a kinde of forme of the true Christian Eph. 1. 4. Thus of the definition of the Church The originall of the Church followes next to be considered and so I consider of the Church as she is the Church not as these men were in their estate of Nature for so her father was an Amorite and her mother an Hittite in as much as she was sinfully borne she was basely borne but that company that I call the Church were not the Church when they were in that estate of Nature The Church then as shee is the Spouse of Christ hath many things in her originall that are very glorious and much to be admired And that if we consider her originall in respect of decree
be an Hypocrite page 365 I. I Dols are false Gods page 165 Christ suffered at Ierusalem page 325 He was buried neere to Ierusalem for two causes page 435 Iesus whence this word comes page 214 Why Christ was called Iesus page 215 The word Iesus is a short Gospel page 216 That Iesus may be our Sauiour wee must doe three things Ibid. The saued by Iesus must shew it in seuen things page 217 Diuers men know not Iesus Ibid. Calling of the Iewes page 414 Christ suffered Ignominie and disgrace in three things page 323 Hee bore this for foure reasons Ibid. Ignorance no plea. page 488 Immutability of God See God Gift of Illumination page 540 Humility of Christs Incarnation page 318 He sustained Infirmities of all sorts for foure reasons page 322 Christs Innocency page 37● 440 God can giue testimony to the Innocencie of his page 373 Insufficient Ministers page 487 Christs Intercession shadowed out in the Law page 484 Incarnation of Christ page 248 How one Person is Incarnate and not the other Ibid What Christ assumed in his Incarnation page 249 When he was Incarnate page 250 Why Christ was Incarnate page 251 Gods glory shineth in Christs Incarnation page 257 Christ makes a threefold Intercession for vs. page 248 His Incarnation teacheth vs diuers things page 258 It is comfortable to the godly Ibid. Doctrine of Christs Incarnation terrible page 259 Christ like vs in all Infirmities page 258 Day of Iudgement shall bee in the end of the w●rld page 505 Why it is deferred so long Ibid. The precise time of this Iudgement vnknowne and why page 506 Christ did not know the day and houre of it how it is meant page 507 Place where the Iudgement shall bee Ibid. Who shall be Iudged page 508 Signes of Christs comming to Iudgement page 513 Euents no signes page 112 Corruption of manners a signe of Christs comming to Iudgement how page 514 Preparation of the Iudge to Iudgement hath in it foure things page 416 Preparation of the Persons ' Iudged hath in it foure things Ibid. The world summoned to Iudgement Ibid. Wicked men shall be Iudged according to their workes page 519 Diuers obiections answered Ibid. Infants how Iudged page 520 By what lawmen shall be Iudged ●●0 Doctrine of the last Iudgement terrible to the wicked page 532 Comfortable to the godly page 534 Iudas his treason six things obseruable in it page 327 Why it was necessary that Iudas should betray Christ page 329 Iudas sin Informes vs of diuers things Ibid. Iudas meant not to haue Christ killed probable page 330 Good Iudges must learne expedition page 360 Christ Iudged in a polyticall court for foure reasons page 362 Church-men must abide the Iudgement of lay Iudges page 363 Why Christ Iudged by Pilate page 362 Iudges no accusers page 363 Iudges must haue cleane hands page 377 Needfull to vnderstand Christs comming to Iudgement page 496 Seuen properties of this Iudgement Ib. Particular Iudgement page 498 Last Iudgement manifest Ibid. It is sudden Ibid. Christs Iudgement a righteous Iudgement page 499 It is an eternall Iudgement how page 500 Christ shall be the Iudge page 501 This is comfortable to the godly Ibid. Terrible vnto the wicked page 502 How Saints and Apostles Iudge the world page 501 Whence Christ shall come to Iudgement page 502 When the day of Iudgement shall bee diuers opinions Ibid. Memoriall of the Iust blessed page 440 Iustice of God See God K. KIngdome of Christ page 229 Kingdome of Christ not of this world page 365 Christ clothed in habit of a King in way of scorne page 379 Christs Kingdome scorned page 380 Iesus that King by an excellency page 400 Kingdome of Christ deliuered to God page 532. 490 That Christ is a King appeares by seuen things page 229 Christ excells all other Kings in thirteene things page 230 Lawes of Christs Kingdome page 232 Christ our King what we learne from hence page 234 Diuers kinds of Knowledge in Christ page 253 Knowledge of God See God L. PVrge out the old Leauen page 310 Christs Legacy page 422 Lightnings Gods arrowes page 171 Liue not to our selues page 417 Iewes cast Lots vpon Christs garments for fiue reasons page 393 Beleeue that Iesus is our Lord. page 240 Christ is our Lord by a fiuefold right page 241 Excellency of Christs Lordship in six respects page 241 This teacheth vs diuers things page 243 Seuen Rules for the seruing of this Lord. page 244 Diuers vses of this point page 245 A threefold act in Loue. page 64 M. OBey Magistrates in the Lord. page 243 Malice in the wicked cruell page 327 372 Man the Epitome of all Gods workes page 194 Man miserable in respect of the euill of punishment diuers waies page 205 Christ the Son of Man page 268 Man hath eight prerogatiues aboue the creatures page 199 Notorious Malefactors may repent and be saued page 405 Christ appeared to Mary Magdalene page 460 Christ Manifested three waies page 270 Whether Mary may be called the Mother of Christ. page 267 Matter of Christs Body page 261 The sanctification of that Matter Ibid. God not tyed to the vse of Meanes in what cases page 559 Religion is vaine without Mercy page 528 How Mercy better then piety page 526 Ministers corrupt page 329 How Ministers betray Christ page 333 Qualifying of Ministers page 539 Publique Miseries to bee bewailed page 385 Christs care for his Mother page 421 He calls her woman Ibid. Mortality and Immortality in the same person page 256 Merit of workes confuted page 487 Meteors in the ayre page 169 Fiery Meteors page 170 Watery Meteors page 174 What vse God puts them to Ibid. N. Christs Natiuity HE was Borne three waies page 269 Bethlem the place of his Natiuity page 270 Time of his Natiuity Ibid. Christ borne poore why page 271 Borne of a Virgin why Ibid. Christ a first borne how page 272 Signes about the time of his Natiuity page 272 Three things haue relation to Christs Natiuity page 269 Diuers effects of Christs Natiuity page 271 Son of God tooke the Nature of Man page 248 He tooke it into vnion with his diuine Nature page 258 Mans estate by Nature hath need of mending page 205 No worke of Nature to beleeue in Christ page 207 Christ fastned to the Crosse with Nailes for foure reasons page 390 To destroy Niniuey a conditionall will in God page 108 O. CHrists Obedi n●e to his Father in death page 421 Auoid Occasions that leads to sinne page 353 Christs threefold Office page 226 Originall sinne page 204 A threefold Opposition page 120 P. PApists sin against Christs prophecie page 226 A twofold Paradice page 411 Paradice a Type of the glory of heauen page 412 Our life a continuall Passeouer page 310 Christ the true Passeouer page 428 Why Christ suffered at the Passeouer page 325 How Passion is in God page 107 Passions of two sorts Ibid. Christs primitiue Passion page 315 Extended to both Natures Ibid.
with eternal punishments why page 500 Sins remitted and retained how page 463 Sitting what it signifieth page 489 Christs Sessio at the right hand of God is comfortable in seuen respects page 492 Christs Soule how produced page 263 Excellency of mans Soule aboue other creatures appeares in seauen things page 197 Soule of man made in the Image of God page 197 Soule immortall page 198 What the Soule workes in the body Ibid. Soule resembles God in the Creation Ibid. Condition of our Soules in death page 449 Soule of Christ in his death indured a priuation of what it had before Ibid Soules of the righteous cry vnder the Alter Ibid. Our greatest care must be for our soules page 422 Christ the Sonne of God page 335 God hath many Sonnes page 336 Where the Spirit is there is liberty page 541 Spirit quenched by two sorts of men page 546 Happinesse of Christs subiects page 233 Christs subiects must doe seuen things page 234 Sufferings of Christ Suffering attributed to the diuine nature in respect of personall vnion page 305 Christs Sufferings full of wonder and amazement Ibid. They teach vs six things Ibid. He suffered not for all proued against the Arminians page 307 He Suffered from all sorts of enemies Ibid. To teach vs three things Ibid. Who haue part in Christs Sufferings page 308 Christs Sufferings a matchlesse patterne of his loue page 309 Iust Suffers for the vniust Ibid. Seuen reasons why he suffered page 310 Scriptures fulfilled in his Sufferings Ibid. His sufferings teach vs patience page 311 Two obiections against his Sufferings answered page 312 Difference betweene Christs Sufferings and Martyrs page 313 End of Christs Sufferings teach vs diuers things Ibid. Benefit of his Sufferings appeares in seuen things page 314 Hee suffered by waie of Imputation page 316 Hee Suffered from his conception to his resurrection page 317 What he Suffered from his Baptisme to his last Supper page 320 Where he Suffered page 325 When he Suffered Ibid. Hee Suffered Voluntarily page 326 348 421 Hee Suffered meane vsage why page 356 Christ suffers two things from Herod page 370 Christs Sufferings should make vs afraid of sinne page 397 We should Suffer any thing for Christs sake page 417 Superscription ouer Christs Head page 399 Pilates meaning in it Ibid. God by this giues testimonie to his Son Ibid. Superscription written in three Languages page 402 Deriuation of Symbolum with signification thereof T. ALL men need be Taught page 471 Teares haue power ouer Christ page 385 Christ Teacheth diuers waies page 221 Excellency of Christs manner of Teaching page 222 Christ Tempted for diuers reasons page 320 Christs Temptation teacheth vs fiue things page 321 Christ dwels not in Temples made with hands page 243 Thiefe conuerted page 404 Abuse not his example to procrastination page 405 Three fruits of his conuersion page 406 Thiefes confession page 408 Thiefes prayer hath in it three things obseruable page 409 Christs answer to the Thiefe page 411 How the Thiefe vnderstood what was meant by Paradise Ibid. Profitable to teach the people the whole body of Theology page 2 Thomas his vnbeleefe page 464 Thomas his confession page 465 Christ crowned with Thornes page 381 Thankefulnesse to God for the blessings of Heauen page 176 Thunder and lightning page 170 Times and seasons left to God page 427 Worldfull of Treachery page 334 Christs apparition to his Disciples the doores being shut no proofe for Transubstantiation page 462 Truth of God See God Christ beares witnesse to the Truth page 365 Truth will preuaile Ibid. Constancy for the Truth page 366 Christs subiects are of the Truth Ibid. Christ fastened to a Tree for three reasons page 390 Doctrine of the Trinity page 115 Proofes of the Trinity page 116 In handling the Trinity wee must bee wise to sobriety page 117 Trinity Essence Persons all brought in in the Primitiue Church page 123 Eleuen obiections against the Trinity answered page 124 Doctrine of the Trinity vsefull page 126 We must speake of the Trinity in vnity page 127 Vnsound speeches of the Trinity Ibid. What Heretikes haue assaulted it Ib. V. ORiginall of vegetable creatures page 185 Their variety and vse page 186 Vaile of the Temple rent page 413 What it was Ibid. What it signified page 414 Vbiquitaries confuted page 502 They gaue Christ Vinegar to drinke for three reasons page 398 Virgin Mary not conceiued without sinne page 265 Virgin ouer-shadowed page 265 Christ tooke his Body of a Virgin page 267 Wofull estate of vnbeleeuers page 35 240. Christ vpbraided his Disciples for vnbeliefe why page 470 Vnity of God See God W. GOds dearest seruants exposed to outward Wants page 466 Great Wants fore-runne extraordinary supplies Ibid. Christ speakes to Women page 285 Comfort for Women in Child-bearing page 269 Women chiefe witnesses of Christs death page 419 What wholsome words are page 3 Wicked men incorrigible page 348 Wicked desire Christs miracles not his Word page 369 Wicked men of more account then godly page 371 Wicked men within the Church may be as vile as they are without page 376 Wicked men are impatient vnder Gods hand page 386 Wicked men are like a dry Tree Ibid. Wicked men in a wofull case page 397 Wicked men how condemned already page 509 Wicked men are Goats page 418 Wicked men are cursed creatures page 527 Wicked men forget their sins page 528 Wicked men taste the Word of God without digestion page 540 Difference betweene godly and wicked men in their desire after Christ page 369 Great World a little Garden page 161 It is like a Booke Ibid. Like a faire House Ibid. Fiue things wonderfull in the making of the world page 162 Workes of God of two sorts page 144 Externall Workes of foure sorts page 145 When the world was made page 148 Giue God the Glory of his Workes page 149 Meditate on Gods Workes not delight in idle shewes Ibid. World fiered at the last day how page 531 Word doth not euer presently worke page 354 God Workes sometimes by vnlikely meanes Ibid. How the Word was made flesh page 251 Vnion of the Word and flesh differ from other vnions Ibid. Gods Wisdome moderates betweene his Iustice and mercy ●8 Three beare Witnesse of Christ in Heauen three on earth page 430 LONDON Printed by G. M. for R. R. P. Stephens and C. Meredith and are to be sold at their shop at the golden Lyon in Pauls Church-yard 1626. Pro. 335. * So much as now is published comes vnto thy hands as it was left fully perfected by the Author in his life time 2. Waies of Preaching 1. By Text. 2. Without Text. And both expedient The Apostles Patterne The method intended What the Creed is What wholesome words are Vnwholesome doctrines of two sorts 1. Corrupt doctrine Diuers sorts of corrupt doctrine How many waies true doctrine may be vnwholsome 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 How the Creed is a Patterne Note What great respect we should haue of the doctrines