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A09026 The grounds of diuinitie plainely discouering the mysteries of Christian religion, propounded familiarly in diuers questions and answeres: substantially proued by scriptures; expounded faithfully, according to the writings of the best diuines, and euidently applyed by profitable vses, for the helpe and benefite of the vnlearned which desire knowledge. To the which is prefixed a very profitable treatise, containing an exhortation to the study of the word, with singular directions for the hearing and reading of the same. By Elnathan Parr minister of the word, at Palgraue in Suffolke.; Grounds of divinitie. Parr, Elnathan, d. 1622. 1614 (1614) STC 19314; ESTC S103147 128,560 328

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also and sauour of our corruption as pure water is soyled by passing through a filthy channell and good Wine as it were tainted by the fustinesse of the Caske And further our actions are to be reputed such as are the next naturall beginnings in vs from whence they procéed which are an vnderstanding but in part inlightened and will and affections but in part sanctified by the Spirit Vse 1. Trust not in thine own works for though they may be in some respect good yet in other respect they haue euill mingled withall so that thou hast much cause or more when thou hast done thy best to aske pardon for that is wanting then to boast of that thou hast performed c. Vse 2. Perswade thy heart to endeuour to please him with thy best seruice who so graciously is content through Christ to accept of thy weake obedience c. Q. None then can keepe the law what doe they deserue which breake it Ans They which in the least manner breake that holy Law deserue the wrath and curse of God Deu. 27.26 Gal. 3.10 Rom. 2.9 6.23 that is all plagues and iudgements of body and soule in this world and in the world to come Vse 1. If one sinne deserue Hell then what hast thou iust cause to feare who art guilty of innumerable sinnes How shalt thou escape vnder many sinnes when the least sinne is so heauy and heynous that it cannot bee pardoned without the heart bloud of Iesus Christ c. Vse 2. Hate sin which bringeth with it the curse yea all curses and if thy vile nature taketh pleasure in any sinne lay the momentany pleasure thereof with the eternall paine that followeth it and consider wisely Is sinne swéet But Death and the Curse are bitter Couetousnesse Vsury Vncleannesse Drunkennesse Reuenge may please the flesh but knowest thou not that they will bee bitter in the end Wilt thou rather separate thy selfe foreuer from God and be accursed then leaue thy sinnes and walke in the commandements of God Who can dwell with continuall burnings and endure that fire c. Q. Wee are all sinners and deserue the curse what meanes is there to be freed from it Ans Whosoeuer are iustified in the sight of God by the obedience of Christ Rom. 5.1.2.3.4.5 Rom. 8.1 Gal. 3.13 through Faith are sure to escape the curse of the Law Q. What is iustification in the sight of God Ans Iustification is the sentence of God whereby as a Iudge for the righteousnesse of another that is of Christ he freely forgiueth the sins of the belieuing sinner Rom. 3.21.22.23.24.25.26 and imputeth the righteousnesse of Christ vnto him for his owne glory and the sinners eternall saluation Expl. For the vnderstanding of this wonderful point it must be very well obserued that Iustification or to Iustifie signifies not to make Iust by expelling the euill quality in vs and infusing that which is good but alwayes in this matter it is taken iudicially being a tearme or word taken from the bench of the Iudge and signifies by way of sentence to pronounce a person arraigned to be cleare quit and guiltlesse as appeares He that iustifies the wicked Pro. 17.15 and condemneth the iust both these are an abhominatiō to the Lord. Here by the opposition of Iustifying and Condemning Psal 14 3.2 Rom. 8.33 c. it is manifest that Iustification is iudicially taken for it is no abhomination to make an euill man good so also is the word taken For the vnderstanding then of the answeres to the two last questions conceiue thus Thou hast broken the Law and art a grieuous sinner Thou must answere it before the iudgement seate of God the sentence of the Law is Thou must bee damned for thy sinnes Thy Conscience askes how thou shalt escape The answer is There is no way vnlesse the Iudges fauour may bee obtained to iustifie thee that is to absolue thée by his sentence Which Iudge who is God from whose sentence there is no appeale if he shall iustifie thée that is pronounce thée to be guiltlesse and Iust and so acquite thée then thy Conscience hath Peace Vse 1 Diligently study this point which is the chiefe Tower as it were of Christian Religion against all Gentilisme and Superstitions Which if it be not rightly vnderstood it is not possible to preserue the purity of doctrine in other points Yea some Papists haue confessed and it is most true that this doctrine Pighius razeth the very foundation of all Popery their Idolatrous Sacrifice of the Masse their groundlesse Purgatory their superstitious praying to Saints and for the dead c. Being no more able to stand before this doctrine sincerely taught vnderstood then the Dagon of the Philistins was able to stand before the holy Arke of Israel This is the summe of the Bible the ground of our peace and assurance It were therefore a very grosse thing that any Christians of the yeares of discretion should be ignorant hereof Vse 2. It is the greatest and hardest matter in the world for a sinner to be iustified in the sight of God Many thinke it to be a slight and easie thing and therfore they neither feare him nor seriously séeke forgiuenesse But consider thou that thou must be arraigned and tried before the iudgement seat of that God who is a consuming fire in whose sight the Heauens are vncleane who will not fauour iniquity who cannot be deluded or deceiued who cannot retract and reuerse the sentence of condemnation manifest in the law without satisfaction for the law accusing sheweth that sentence already written with the finger of God thy conscience confesseth all Consider this and then tell me what it is to be Iustified How shalt thou escape Euen Dauid a man beloued of God and after his owne heart when hee considereth this crieth out Enter not into iudgement with thy seruant O Lord for in thy fight shall no flesh be iustified And againe If thou shalt marke iniquities who shall stand namely in iudgement What then canst thou say why thou shouldst not be damnned What shall thy conscience plead Guilty thou art and God must deale iustly To whom wilt thou go We will go euen to Iesus Christ our Lambe slaine from the beginning of the world Iehouah our righteousnesse our surety who hath perfectly fulfilled the Law for vs and fully paid and patiently suffered all things which can be exacted of vs or were to be suffered by vs. Whose righteousnesse is ours if we beléeue euen as effectually as if it had béene done in our owne persons and for this onely is a sinner iustified that is pronounced to be iust before God This if thou know it happy arte thou if thou féele it c. Quest You said that wee are instified by the righteousnesse of another How can that be Can I liue by another mans Soule or be learned by the learning that is in an other Ans I verely beleeue that
and of his Office Of his Person these thrée things must necessarily be beleeued according to the Scriptures First that he is that onely true God Secondly that he is very man partaking of our flesh and bloud with all generall not personall infirmities of our Nature being in all things like vnto vs yet without sinne Heb 2.14 and 4.15 1. Pet. 1.19 and 2.22 And therefore wee reade that he was hungry thirsty weary c. And if you aske how he could partake of our nature and yet haue no sinne you must remember that he was conceiued by the Holy-Ghost and borne of the virgin Mary The Holy-Ghost sanctifying a part of the substance of the Virgins Luk. 1. 2 Body to be the Body of Christ so that we beleeue he was not begotten by man by whom corruption and sinne is propagated and deriued vnto vs. Thirdly that he is God and Man in one Person figured by the Arke which was of Gold and precious Wood that would not rot noting by the Gold the Deity of Christ and by the precious Wood his Humanity without sinne This Personall vnion of these two Natures in Christ was thus The Sonne of God being from euerlasting a Person subsisting in the Holy and vndiuided Trinity did assume or take into the Vnty of his Person a Humane Nature consisting of Body and Soule so soone as euer it beganne to be hauing no Subsistence out of his Person but being destitute of all Personality in it selfe so that it becomes the very Body and Soule of the Sonne of God and whatsoeuer is proper to either Nature which are not by this meanes either in Essence or Operations confounded is indifferently and truely spoken of the Person As to make it plaine to the simple In our selues vnderstanding and knowledge are effects and workes of the Soule eating sleeping c. are workes proper to the Body Neither doth the Soule eate or sleepe or the Body vnderstand or know Yet wée say well and truely that Peter or Paul consisting of this body and soule vnderstand know eate stéepe c. because these two Natures the body and soule are vnited in their person And for this cause looke what is well or ill done by the body or any part of it or by the soule or any part of it is accounted to the whole Person making the Person guilty or not guilty good or bad As if the Tongue blasphemeth it is said the Person blasphemeth or if there be euill motions in the minde yet the whole Person is guilty So in some sort is it in this Personall Vnion of these two Natures of Christ As To know all things to be present euery where are Proprieties of his Diuine Nature To kéep the Law to die and to bléed are Proprieties of the Humane Nature of Christ Now wée may not say that the Humane Nature of Christ knoweth all things is omnipotent c. Nor that the Diuine Nature is obedient bléedeth dyeth c. And yet in regard of the Personall Vnion of these two Natures in Christ we say that the Person which hath these two Natures which is Christ the Sonne of God knoweth all things is present euery where bléedeth dyeth c. and looke what is done or suffered by either of the Natures is truely done and so accomited by the whole Person So that if you 〈◊〉 who fulfilled the Law who dyed for vs we may say the second Person in the Trinity euen God though not according to his Diuine but Humane Nature as speaketh the Holy Ghost notably Act. 20.28 God by his Owne Bloud purchased the Flocke of his Elect. Whereby I beleeue and that most infallibly and truly that whatsoeuer Christ did for my saluation is Gods own deed euen the immediate worke of the second Person in the Trinity Yet heere one thing must be remembred that though the body and soule of Peter make the person of Peter yet the Humane and Diuine Nature of Christ make not his Person for he was a Person from euerlasting and cannot bee a Humane Person but is still a Diuine Person though he could not be a Mediator or execute that Office without the Humane Nature so assumed This is that wonderfull Mystery of our Sauiour IESVS CHRISTS Incarnation Wherein concurred propounded to our Faith not to our Reason three the greatest Miracles that euer were First that a Virgine conceiued and brought forth a Child remainings Virgine Secondly that Adams flesh and Adams sin were parted Thirdly and principally this vnsearchable Mystery of the Personall Vnion of the God-head and Man-hood of Christ Quest But was it necessary that our Mediator should be God and Man and that in one Person as you haue declared Ans Yes verely for by this meanes he could die for vs and ouercome death and deserue for vs by his obedience the pardon of our sinnes and eternall life Expli Two things necessarily required that our Mediatour should be God First the greatnesse of the euill to the which we were subiect Secondly the greatnes of the good that we stood in néed of Our euill was foure-folde First the heinousnesse of sinne Secondly the anger of God Thirdly the power of death Fourthly the tyranny of the Diuell Our good which we wanted Foure folde also First the restoring of the Image of God Secondly the pardon of sinne Thirdly deliuerance from Death and Satan Fourthly eternall life But to take away the Euill Marke 2.7 Hos 13.14 Reuel 1.18 Zach 3.2 Ro. 16.20 Psal 51.10 Rom. 6.23 c. Ro. 5.17 18 Hebr. 2.14 and bestow the Good none is able to do but God Therfore it was necessary that our Mediatour should be God Two Reasons also there are why he must necessarily be man first the Iustice of God required that in that nature which offended satisfaction should be made secondly that he might haue somthing to offer which could not be his Godhead therefore he must be Man Euery high Priest must offer somewhat therefore a Body was ordained him Hebr. 8.3 Heb. 10.5 Hebr. 9.26 that he might offer himselfe Two reasons also may be alleaged why he must be God and Man in one person First that he might be a fit Mediator betwéene God and Man as it were indifferent and equally affected to either side for an Vmpiere or Wards-man may not be partiall If he had béene onely God wée might haue thought that he would not enough haue respected our misery If he had béene onely Man not enough the iustice of God Therefore he is to be God and Man deare vnto both and accounting both deare vnto him carefull that Gods iustice be not impeached and that our misery be relieued Secondly that the workes performed in the flesh of the Sonne of God might be of an infinite price to satisfie for our sinnes by which an infinite Maiesty was offended which could not be if the Person vndertaking our Redemption had not béene God and Man in one Person He was Man that he might haue
the obiect shewne by the vnderstanding yet so that we hold not this frée will to be independent but that as the wills of all creatures it dependeth on God to be inclined and moued either immediately by him or mediately by good or euill instruments as he please Neither doth this dependencie hurt or diminish the frée dome of the will because God inclineth the will so that the will doth by the Iudgement of its owne reason fréely and willingly moue it selfe so that to doe a thing fréely in the Creature is not to be frée from the gouernement of another but to doe that which it doth willingly voluntarily and deliberately though it be ruled by another Before the fall this was in Adam both to good and euill that he might if he would either stand or fall the dependencie before spoken of still reserued Since the fall the case is altered according to the saying of Augustine That man abusing his frée will lost both himselfe and that whereby as also when we say that man hath no free will we doe not vnderstand that the faculty is lost but the goodnesse whereby it was able freely and willingly to chuse that which is good For man lost no essentiall part or faculty of his nature by his fall euen the vnregenerate hauing a power freely to will or nill the obiect shewne by Reason though they haue not power to wil and chuse spiritual good things both because their wil is wholy depraued and turned from good and inclinable only to euill and also because Reason being blind doth not shew to the will the spirituall good or if it doe it is not vnder the likenesse of good but vnder the likenesse of euill For the naturall man vnderstandeth not the things of God 1. Cor. 2.14 but accounteth them foolishnes Wherefore we confesse that man hath stil free wil in ciuill and outward things and vnto euill but not vnto good And this freedome vnto ciuill things must bee so vnderstood that he hath power to chuse or refuse the obiect but to do this well he hath no power Also he hath free will vnto euill not that he can will or nill euill at his pleasure but that without any violence he onely chuseth euill so that as it may be called free will because it is free from coaction so also bond will because it freely willeth onely that which is euill And hence it is that the reprobate sinne necessarily and yet freely necessarily because they haue no power to goodnes freely because they chose euill without compulsion Yea by how much the more necessarily they sinne by so much the more voluntarily they doe it in as much as their will hath brought vpon them this necessity Now when this worke of Sanctification or Repentance or Conuersion is wrought then we haue free will both to good and euill to good as farre as we are regenerate by the Spirit to euill as far as we are vnregenerate and flesh And in the state of Glorification our will shall be free onely to good immutably as the will of the damned shal be immutably free vnto euill as Augustine saith The first Will was to haue power not to sinne the last shall be to haue no power to sinne Then for our purpose this is to be holden that till the spirit worke new grace we haue no power of our selues being vnto the worke of conuersion meere patients though in the worke when the Spirit hath changed and inclined vs we are co-workers with the Spirit Before conuersion we resist In conuersion the Spirit inclineth our wills and of vnwilling makes them willing to be conuerted and to repent God not working in vs as in stockes or stones but as in reasonable creatures Vse 1. If thou be truly conuerted ascribe al the glory of it to God for as soone can an Ethiop change his skinne Iere. 13.23 c. or a Leopard his spottes as we doe that is good till we be changed and enabled by the Spirit Vse 2. Beware thou neglect not the present meanes of grace offered to thee as though thou couldest repent and doe well when thou wouldest No no it is the meere gift of God For if thou canst not make one haire of thy head white or black much lesse canst thou change thy vile and corrupt heart But thou wilt say Doth not GOD promise that at what time soeuer a sinner doth repent he will be mercifull Yes the Lord most comfortably blessed be his name saieth so but he saith not that a sinner can repent when he list or that he will giue repentance whensoeuer a sinner shall but whistle for it As Augustine excellently He that hath promised to all repentants pardon hath not promised to all delinquents repentance c. Quest What are the parts of this Sanctification or Repentance Ans The parts are two First Mortification of the old man or Hatred of sin and turning from euill Secondly Viuification or Quickening of the new man or loue of goodnesse and Turning to God Quest What meane you by Mortification of the old man Ans I meane that grace wherby there is wrought in vs by little and little a detestation of sinne and an extinguishing and weakening of corruption in vs that it should not bring forth fruit vnto death Quest What meane you by the new man Ans I meane that Grace whereby by little and little we are raised to a new and spirituall life to be able in some measure to liue in knowledge holinesse and righteousnes Eph. 4.22 23 24. Col. 3.5.8 10 11. The summe of all these answers prooued by Rom. 6. from the first verse to the twelfth Explic. When we reade that the olde man or the body of sinne or our earthly members by which and the like names the corruption of our nature is called are are to be mortified that is made to die We are not to vnderstand it of the life of our bodies but of the life of sinne in our bodies So when our Sauiour saith If thine eie offend thee plucke it out c. he meaneth not that we should maime our bodies but that by all meanes wee should purge out corruption which manifests it selfe in such members yea then as wee estéeme our corrupt affections as deare as our eyes These two parts of repentance are also called putting off the olde man and putting on the new man c. whereby is signified that as willingly as a man puts off his old filthy ragges to bee clad in sweete and rich attire so should we willingly put away sin whereby we are deformed and labour to follow righteousnes which is a part of our Beauty in the sight of God Whereas some make thrée parts of repentance first Contrition secondly Confession thirdly Satisfaction they deceiue the simple For a man may haue all these and yet be damned as is manifest in Iudas who grieued confessed his sinne Matth. 27.3 3. and brought againe the thirty pieces of siluer and
deliuered foin the power of darknesse where the word signifieth by fine force to deliuer or plucke away Euen as Dauid pulled the Lambe out of the Beares mouth so hath Christ by his Almighty power reskued vs out of the mouth of the Roaring Lyon So also hée hath destroyed the deuill Heb. 2.14 not by abolishing his substance but by weakening his power as the word there importeth Christ then payeth his Bloud as a price to his Father and so forcibly deliuereth vs from the deuill Who hath the power of death as the Hang-man hath the power of the Gallowes not absolute but by commission from God for the tormenting of the wicked This Redemption wée speake of is so the worke of God that wée exclude all creatures from any power or possibility of redéeming vs. Psal 49.7 And wée acknowledge it to bée the worke of the whole Trinity deliuering vs in the person of the Sonne who redéemeth vs by his Merite and by his Efficacy by his Merite deseruing Redemption for vs by his Efficacy effectually applying it vnto vs by his Spirit through Faith Vse First héere wée may sée the wonderfull misery in the which wée are all till wée haue our part in the Eternall Redemption purchased for vs by Iesus Christ For first we are vnder the power of sinne and the tiranny of the deuill very Bond-slaues more miserable then euer were the poore Iraelites in Egypt or now are the poore Christians vnder the Turke for the bondage of these is onely bodily ours more bodily and spirituall also our bodies and very Spirits being subiect to obey his filthy will in all things Ephe. 2.2 Secondly we are all our life time in feare of death euen as is the case of one condemned to the Gallowes hee alwaies trembles and quakes at the approach and remembrance of the houre of his execution So wee if God make vs sensible of our estate in regard of sinne are alwaies haunted with the terrours of an euill conscience as with Furies and Fiends of hel as Caine Saul Iudas Thurdly wee are fire-brands of hell subiect to eternall condemnation for our sinnes c. This is our misery which who so vnderstandeth not nor considereth he neuer esteemeth this wonderfull mercy of God in redeeming of vs as he ought For as hee that supposeth himselfe to bee mortally sicke highly reckoneth of the Phisition which cureth him and he which is troubled but with some light infirmity not so Euen so to him to him onely is the tydings of the Gospell welcome the Promise sweete the Bloud of Christ vnualuable the Loue of God vnspeakeable yea without measure and passing all knowledge which seeth his misery and seeleth his heart wrung with the fetters and bolts of sinne and which considereth of those eternall torments due to the same Vse 2. Here we ought also to consider of the Price whereby wee are ransomed and of the exceeding Loue of God For the Price it was neither gold nor siluer nor any corruptible thing but the pretious Bloud of the Lambe vnspotted Iesus Christ Marke thou which readest 1. Pet. 1.18 19. It cost the very Heart Bloud of Iesus the Sonne of God who was without sinne to saue thee a vile wretch from eternall damnation which thou deseruest by thy sinnes The Loue of God herein appeared to be most wonderfull in that he spared not his owne Sonne but gaue him to death euen for vs and in our stead who were not his friends but his very enemies See what loue the Father hath shewed Rom. 6.7.8 that thou an Imp of the deuill by sinne shouldst haue the Bloud of Gods owne Sonne shed to make thee his son or daughter Let me speake vnto thee in the words of Ezra Ez. 9.13.14 which words he spake from the occasion of a meaner deliuerance Seeing God hath kept thee from being beneath for thine iniquities and hath granted thee such deliuerance shouldst thou continue in sinne shouldst thou rebell and returne to breake the Commandement of such so mercifull a God by drunkennesse blasphemy lying pride whoredome or any profanenesse Shouldest thou despise the Saboaths Word Sacraments Bloud of such a Sauiour Shouldest thou refuse to sacrifice thy Body and Soule to his glory that refused not to sacrifice his precious life for thy Saluation Shouldest thou be a Niggard of thy duty to him yea of thy best bloud who was prodigall to expend and shed his Bloud to redeeme thee Now God forbid Luk. 1.74.75 Tit. 2.14.15 c. Nay this inexcusably bindeth vs all to all thankefulnesse and true obedience Quest But you said that Man was created according to the Image of God in a most holy and happy estate how then comes bee to stand in need of a Redeemer Ans I beleeue that Adam and Eue being created by God according to his Image in singular happinesse and placed in Paradise did notwithstanding willingly and by the enticement of the diuell fall away transgressing Gods commandement giuen vnto them and so made themselues and their posteritie Gen. chap. 2. and 3. subiect both to sinne and death the wages of the same Expli Though it be farre better to indeuoure to come out of the misery we are in then curiously to inquire how wée came into the same yet because many necessary points depend on this and wee neuer séeke the heauenly Physition till we vnderstand and féele our disease and the danger Therefore it is necessary that wee should haue some good measure of knowledge hereof Which we shall attaine if we consider these two things First what Adams state was in his Innocency and vpon what conditions it did stand Secondly the manner of his fall We will héere intreate of his happinesse Genes 3. and the conditions thereof The happines of our first parents may bee referred to these heads First that they were created in the Image of God together with the manner of their creation but of this before Secondly that they were placed in the Garden of Eden translated by the Septuagint Paradise and commonly so called because it was a place of singular delight and pleasure Gene. 2.9 to 15. a most pleasant place in regarde both of the variety of all pleasant fruits the Trées also of knowledge and life in the middest thereof and also in regard of the pretious riuers watering the same Vnto this our Sauiour alludeth when he saith to the Thiefe This day thou shalt be with me in Paradise not that Paradise wherein Adam was put which was defaced in the flood but Heauen so called for the happinesse ioy and riuers of pleasure which are there for euermore Thirdly the happines of our first parents is set downe from their fréedome from all things which might hurt their bodies or disturbe their mindes They were both naked and were not ashamed Gen. 2.25 They were naked Hereby is signified that their bodies had a kinde of Impassibilitie so that though they were neither hairy nor woolly
thereof So then not the world that is not euery man and woman in the world haue interest in the blessing of Christ Rom. 11.7 but onely the Elect of God This Church is called Holy partly because it is cloathed with the righteousnes of Christ imputed and partly because it is gouerned by the Spirit of Christ by the which euery member thereof is quicknes and made able in some measure in truth to hate sinne and to loue and follow that which is good It is called Catholike that is Vniuersall because all the Saints and Elect of all times and places 〈…〉 vnto it as to one Body And this we professe to be One because there is the Head which is Christ one Body one Spirit one Faith one Hope Ephe. 4.4 one Loue c. Part whereof is now in heauen Triumphing which are the Soules of the Saints departed and part fighting and Militant here on earth in the Spirituall wee face against the world the flesh and the deuill Vse 1. All happy making promises are made onely to the Church All shall not be saued labour to be of that number whose are the promises if thou wouldst bee saued Vse 2. It 's a great comfort that of all sorts of men some are of this Church which is washed with the Blocd of Iesus the Geatile as well as the Iew the Seruant as well as the Maister the Poore as well as the Rich For there is no respect of persons with God but in all Nations such as feare him are accepted be they one or other Act. 10.34.35 As God respects none for their riches or great place so he reiects none because they are poore and base Indéed in this world the poore haue the least part but in Christ benefites the Beggar beléeuing hath as large and good right as the King For we are Cittizens of a Kingdome which is not of this world God is not onely the God of the Mountaines Ioh. 18.36 but of the Vallies also And the Spirit bloweth where it listeth Yea many times God breatheth Life and Grace on a pooer contemptible wretch as the world accounts as on Lazarus and passeth by such as go in veluet coates as Diues Memember Christ is not thine because thou art rich or great or beautifull but because thou Beléeuest It is faith makes the poore Beggar as rich in Christ as thy selfe For God hath chosen the poore also to make them rich in faith and pertakers of his Kingdome Art thou rich Iames 2.5 despise not the Beggar or poorest Beléeuer who if thou beleeuest not is better then thy selfe and though in the things of this life according to Gods ordinance thou hast the start of him yet in Christ he is thy equall for in Christ there is neither Circumsion nor Vncircumcision Bond nor Frée Col. 3.11 c. Art thou rich Labour to bée rich in faith rather then in gold for thou and thy money may perish but by faith thou shalt bée saued Art thou poore Comfort thy selfe Thou hast a right in a heauenly inheritance where thou shalt equally share with the greatest King and let it prouoke thee to so much the more care to please him in all things who hath chosen thée so base and called thée so vnworthy Vse 3. The Church of Christ is a Holy Church Marke then If thou béest not holy in heart and affections in life and conuersation but a profane wretch thou art also a damned wretch if thou so continuest thou art no part of this Church for Christ hath chosen vs that we should bée holy Ephe. 1.4 2. Tim. 1.9 and hee hath called vs with a holy making calling Examine therefore thy selfe Cant. 4.12.13 The Church by Salomon is called a Garden enclosed full of the sweetest Flowers and Plants Now if thou beest a Blasphemer a Lyer a Backe-biter c. If these bee the Flowers which grow in thy Garden thou art the Deuils Dunghill thou art none of the Church The Church is called a Doue vndefiled If thou beest filthy Cant. 5.2 vncleane a Fornicator a Strumpet an Vsurer an Oppressour Couetous Cruell Vnmercifull c. Thou maist be a member of the Kite Vulture or rauenous Cormorant but not of Christs spotlesse Doue which is his Church The Church is the Body of Christ If thou beest a Drunkard Ryotous a breaker of the Saboath a contemner of Religion and such as doe professe it c. thou art a limbe of the deuill not a Member of Christ vnlesse thou wouldst make the Body of Christ a monstrous body like the Image of Nebuchadonoser which was part of Gold and Siluer part of Iron and Clay Remember then Christ is the Head of his Church if thou receiuest not not Grace from him to Sanctification thou art none of his Christ is the King of his Church out of the Church the deuill raignes If thou obeyest not Christ but the deuill how art thou Christs Nay how art thou not the deuils Quest You say that the Church is a company of such which are Predestinated to Eternall Life What meane you by Predestination Ans By Predestination of men I meane the Eternall purpose of God concerning Man-kind fallen and corrupted whereby for the setting forth of his glory he appointed some to Saluation with the meanes whereby they should obtaine the same which is called Election and some to damnation 1. Thess 5.9 which is called Reprobation Rom. 9. throughout the chapter Quest What is Election Ans Election is the most free and Eternall Counsell of God Luk. 10.20 Rom. 8.30 9.11 11.5.2 Pet. 1.10 Eph. 1.2.3.4 whereby hee chooseth some which were falne in Adam and Predestinateth them to Grace and Glory by Iesus Christ Quest What is Reprobation Ans It is the most free Counsell of God whereby hee determined not to chuse Rom. 9.21.22.2 Pet. 2.8 Iude 4. but to passe by some fallen in Adam and to leaue them in their guiltinesse and corruption and in the end to condemne them for their sinnes Q Do you then thinke that men were ordained to life or death before they were borne Ans Yes verily that I do Quest Doth not this bring in a neglect of all godlinesse Rom. 9.11 and make for them which say If I be predestinated to life I shall be saued whatsoeuer I do if to death I shall bee damned in like manner therefore I will liue as I list Ans God forbid For wee teach that men are not onely predestinated to the end but also to the meanes They which are ordained to Life being also ordained to Grace whereby they obtaine it and they that are ordained to death being also ordained to be left in their corruption that they may be damned Ephe. 1.4 Expl. That there is Predestination which is an ordaining of a thing to this or that before it be extant appeares in the doctrine of the Prouidence of God And that it is to be referred to men in the
also best stoppeth the mouth of Reprobates and taketh away all reasoning from them as was said when they must acknowledge that there was matter in them 〈◊〉 reprobation by the fall of Adam So doth this best set forth the rich grace of God to the Elect the vessels of Mercy then they shall consider that there was 〈◊〉 in them deseruing Reprobation And me thinkes when I consider that 〈◊〉 are elected in Christ it must néedes follow that they are to be considered salin for Christ presupposeth sinne which Christ was to satisfie for the elect For the second Proposition that God considered not man good is plaine because all promises of Gods eternal fauour both before the fall and after the same are made in the Scriptures to them which are good either by Creation or Regeneration and which continue in the same To conclude Election and Reprobation may be considered eyther absolutely as that God elected or reprobated these or that he elected or reprobated these and not these If you aske why God elected these I answer that his sole will without any the least respect in the Creature was the cause of it If you aske why God elected these and not those as Iacob and not Esau I answere after the same manner If you aske why God reprobateth these rather then these I answer as before that there is no cause thereof in the Creature but onely in him which is his will If also you shall aske why did God reprobate these I answere that his will also is the onely cause thereof in this sense namely that it was in Gods frée power notwithstanding sinne to elect or not elect to reprobate or not reprobate For God was not compelled by the sinne he considered in man to reprobate him for he might haue elected the same man in Iesus Christ if he had pleased And yet this we adde that in reprobation of these God had respect to mans sinne not actuall infidelity or sinne but originall not as a principall efficient or as a cause first moouing for God might haue not reprobated if he had so pleased but as a cause deseruing reprobatiō or as a necessary condition in the obiect without which GOD will not reprobate any For neither doth God in time deny his grace to any but to those who deserue to be denied neither decrées he before time to deny it but vnto such And whereas some will say An vniuersall cause bringeth forth an vniuersall effect If then sinne be vniuersall why is not Reprobation I answer that an vniuersall cause bringeth forth such effect actually if it be not hindered by a superiour ouer-ruling cause And so I yéelde that it is the natrue of sinne to depriue all of Grace and Glorie Rom. 3.23 and would haue this effect vpon all mankind if God should shew no mercy and the reason it hath not is because God is pleased out of his botomlesse mercie to accept of some and to elect them in Christ Vse 1. Beware of searching too farre into this déepe without the light of the Word The plaine way is the safest and in as much as the Scripture hath more sparingly spoken of Reprobation then Election Doe thou labour more to make thy election sure vpon good grounds then to conceiue euery quiddity of men concerning Reprobation Vse 2. If thou findest vpon good grounds that thou arte elected for euer acknowledge the rich mercy of God vnto thée who wert déepe enough in Adams transgression to be damned if God had not of his frée loue discerned thée therefore let it bind thée to all humilitie séeing thou hast receiued all and all thankefulnesse to him that hath shewed thée such mercy Vse 3. Beware of that damnable speach of profane men who say If I be predestinated and Gods decrée must take effect then I may doe what I will for if I be appointed to saluation I shall be saued and if to damnation I shall be damned whatsoeuer I doe Which is all one as if one should say God hath decréed that I shall liue or die If he hath appoynted life I shall liue though I eate not at all or though I eate poyson if he hath appoynted death t is not eating or not eating will saue me therefore I will either not eate at all or I will eate poison then which collection there can bee nothing more sottish If a man be reprobate he shall certainly be damned doe what he can T is most true But yet remember such an one can nay will doe nothing but that which shall more and more bring his damnation vpon him For the horrible disease of finne not being healed by Christ as it is only in the Elect must néeds bring forth fruit vnto death Indéed if a Reprobate had power to doe good and to repent and yet for all that and doing so he should be damned by the necessitie of Gods will there might be some colour but to reprobate is to be left in originall sinne which is the fountaine of all transgressions and the persons so left are iustly so left because they are left guilty in Adam and can do no good vnlesse God did giue them new grace which he is not bound to doe and they haue deserued not to receiue Likewise if a man be elected hee must néedes be saued not that God hath elected to saue any absolutely without grace but whomsoeuer he hath elected to saue he hath elected also to beléeue and repent that they may be capable thereof For God did as well decrée the meanes whereby we should be saued as that we should be saued which meanes are the merite of Christ effectuall calling Iustification Faith Repentance c. which whosoeuer attaineth may certainely conclude that he is elected and shall be saued as he that wanteth them to the end may certainely conclude that he shall not be saued and therefore neuer was elected Wherefore by the workes of Sanctification make thy Election sure as Peter aduiseth thée 2. Pet. 1.10 Phil. 2.12 c. And make an end of thy Saluation with feare and trembling as Paul councelleth thée Qu. Are then all which are in the Church of God on Earth predestinated to life eternall and effectually sanctified Ans No onely those are predestinated to life Mat. 13.24 25. Mat. 22.10 and effectualy sanctified which are of th'inuisible church many are in the visible which are hypocrites and profane Quest Are there then two Churches one which can not be seene and an other visible which may be seene Ans No there is but one Church which in diuers respects is said to be Inuisible or Visible Mat. 22.18 Rom. 2.28 29. 9.7 Expli Whosoeuer are of the Inuisible Church are holy not all that are of the visible Church which two tearmes of Visible Inuisible are in diuers respects giuen to the Church which is but one euen as if you should say the same man to be inuisible in regard of his soule and visible in regard
the more abhominable for the abuse of the holy Vessells Euen as the holy water of triall was to the suspected wife if shée were faulty mortall and deadly but if not it was a blessing Num. 5.11 Euen so the holie water of Baptisme to such as kéepe their promise in sinceritie bringeth a blessing when to such as liue profanely and feare not God it is euen a water of bitternes vnto death Qu. What is the Sacrament af the Lords Supper Ans The Supper of the Lord is a Sacrament of the New Testament instituted by Christ wherein by the taking and eating of the bread blessed and broken and by drinking the wine being blessed is signified and sealed to vs the Communion of the body of Christ crucified Matth. 28.26 27 28. Luke 22.19 20. 1. Corint 10.16 11.24 25. and his bloud shed for vs vpon the Crosse for remission of sinnes and that being incorporated into Christ by his Spirite wee might be more and more strengthened in assurance of eternall life Explic. The Supper of the Lord is that other honourable Seale of Gods couenant in Christ by whom it was instituted wherein are as in all Sacraments two things First the visible Element or outward signe Second the word For as Augustine saith The Word being added to the Element makes a Sacrament The Element or Signe is Bread blessed broken distributed and eaten and the Wine blessed distributed and drunke of the Church or company present Both those are the outward signe which though they be two materially as they say yet in regarde of the end and forme they are but one Our Sauiour Christ intending the nouriture of the Soule by a similitude of the bodies nourishment which consïsteth in bread and drinke The word is the Promise added to the Signe in these words This is my Bodie which is giuen for you This is my blood which c. together with the commandement in these words Doe this c. The element doth represent the inuisible grace of the which the word speaketh and the Word declareth what the inuisible grace is which is represented and sealed by the Element The outward Signe then in this Sacrament is the Bread and Wine as I haue spoken The inward Grace is the Body and Bloud of Christ giuen and shead for our sinnes and the Spirituall eating and drinking of them whereby is signified our Vnion with Christ by faith by the which we drawe from him Righteousnesse Ioy and eternall life according to an excellent Analogie in this Sacrament Now these two the Signe and the thing signified are vnited by the Word in the lawfull vse of this Sacrament which Vnion is only Sacramentall and relatiue wherby the signe is not changed into the thing signified nor the thing signified contained in vnder or in the place of the Signe but by the Signe the thing signified is represented offered and sealed in the lawful vse to Beléeuers For Grace is not so tied to the Sacrament that whosoeuer partakes of the Signe should also of the thing signified or as none could partake of the thing signified without the Signe For the vnbeléeuers may haue the Lords Bread in their mouthes which neuer haue Christ in their hearts as Beléeuers may taste of the swéetnesse of the Lord in their soules which where it can not be had partake not of the Bread and Wine which are the outward Signe Quest What is required that wee may so partake of this Sacrament at the Lords Table that we may be partakers of the inward Grace of the Sacrament Ans Whosoeuer would come worthily to this Sacrament and to his benefite must first examine himselfe 1. Cor. 11.28 and so eate and drinke Explic. To be worthy and to come worthily to the Lords Table are two diuers things none are worthy of so great mercy yet we come worthily whē we try our selues Which triall is of our faith and repentance Concerning Faith first whether we haue a competent knowledge of the doctrine of the Sacrament and why it was instituted secondly whether we beléeue the pardon of our sinnes by Iesus Christ Concerning repentance whether we haue héeretofore or doe now vnfainedly repent of our sinnes purposing to leade a new life He which comes to the Lords Table without Faith and Repentance comes vnworthily and he which findes them in himselfe euen in their beginnings true Math. 9.12 and 11.28 though small and weake comes worthily for such Christ inuites Question How often would you aduise a Christian to receiue the holy Communion Ans So often as there is occasion offered and liberty granted lawfully to receiue the same 1. cor 11.25 Explic. Baptisme is but once administred as being the sacrament of our new Birth euen as we are but once borne But as being borne we often eate to be nourished and to grow so we are often to communicate and to come to the Lords Table first that we may grow in Faith secondly that we may haue occasion to stirre vp our dulnesse both to consider of and to be thankfull for the death of Christ thirdly that we may testifie our Remembrance of Christ fourthly that we may kéepe Vnity and nourish Charity fiftly that wee may immitate the Apostolicall church who seldome came together without the word prayer breaking of bread almesgiuing Neither will this holy Sacrament grow into contempt through the often vse to the godly Acts 2.42 as we sée in the frequent vse of the word and euen of our daily bread Vse 1. Prepare thy self often to come to the Lords Table if occasion fitly be offered that thou tempt not GOD by neglecting his ordinance appoynted for the confirmation of thy Faith And that thou maist performe his commandement who saith Do this often in remembrance of me And that thou maist shew foorth the Lords death till hee come Consider then is once or twice a yeare enough for thy discharge herein Canst thou so neglect the remembrance of his torments who was bruised for thy sins and which bore thine iniquities who hath deliuered thée from Hell and purchased Heauen for thée by his bloud Thy Sauiour passing out of this world by a most bitter passion for thée commends himselfe to thée and commands thée to remember him and to testifie this and thy thankfulnesse for his death to come often to his Table How then doest thou not shewe thy selfe vngratefull and forgetfull which when occasion is offered churlishly turnest thy backe c. Vse 2. He that eateth and drinketh vnworthily eateth and drinketh Iudgement to himselfe Beware therefore how thou presumest to come to the Lords Table without thy wedding garment without preparation Holy things require holy vsage first labour for faith both to vnderstand what the Mystery is that thou mayst discerne the Lords body and also to receiue the grace that is offered therein which without faith thou receiuest not He that beléeueth hath benefite vnspeakeable by the ordinances of God but without faith all is