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A36185 The nature of the two testaments, or, The disposition of the will and estate of God to mankind for holiness and happiness by Jesus Christ ... in two volumes : the first volume, of the will of God : the second volume, of the estate of God / by Robert Dixon. Dixon, Robert, d. 1688. 1676 (1676) Wing D1748; ESTC R12215 658,778 672

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a Manuduction unto Christ Observe it then that all this while there was no other way of life given either in whole or in part beside the Covenant of Grace And therefore there was no inconstancy either in God's Will or in his Acts only such was his Mercy that he subordinated the Covenant of Works and made it subservient to the Covenant of Grace and so to tend to Evangelical Perfection And he that truly understands and considers what the Covenant of Works requires and how unable he is to perform it it being though ordained for righteousness and life an occasion of sin and death must needs see just cause to flie from Mount Sinai unto Mount Sion or from the Covenant of Works made with Adam to the Covenant of Grace made with Christ and to admire the unspeakable Wisdom and Mercy of God in suffering the Law to enter in Rom. 5.20 21. that the offence might abound that where Sin aboundeth Grace might much more abound That as sin hath raigned unto death even so might Grace raign through Righteousness unto Eternal Life by Jesus Christ our Lord. The Law then which was good was not made Death unto me God forbid But Sin that it might appear sin working death in me by that which is good Rom. 7.13 that sin by the Commandment might become exceeding sinful Is the Law then against the Promises of God God forbid For if there had been a Law given which could have given life verily Righteousness should have been by the Law But the Scripture hath concluded all under sin Gal. 3.22 c. that the Promise by Faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them that believe But before Faith came we were kept under the Law shut up unto the Faith which should afterward be revealed Wherefore the Law was our School-master to bring us unto Christ that we might be justified by Faith But after that Faith is come we are no longer under a School-master For ye are the Children of God by Faith in Christ Jesus The obscurity of this Great Point of Theology which I am forced to be so long upon new Notions arising continually is chiefly occasioned as Origen imagineth by the indistinct Aequivocation of the Word Law in the Epistle to the Romans let that place be viewed where it is said The Law of the Spirit of Life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the Law of Sin and Death Rom. 6.2 3. The Aequivocal Word Law for what the Law could not do in that it was weak through the flesh God sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and for sin condemned sin in the flesh That the Righteousness of the Law might be fulfilled in us who walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit May we not modestly say that the Word Law ascribed to the Concupiscence of the Flesh is not properly but abusively given As it is also in another Place Rom. 7.21 23. where he saith I find a Law that when I would do good evil is present with me for I delight in the Law of God after the Inward Man But I see another Law in my members warring against the Law of my mind and bringing me into Captivity to the Law of sin which is in my Members For if Lust be a Law and do bind it hath no Right so to do because Lust is not of force by God's Prime Institution from whence Law hath its virtue but by the occasion of his Justice in punishing the Fall of our first Parents thereby And hence is this Original way of sinning from our Lusts which we are led away with and deceived by though in themselves they are not naturally sinful but became exorbitant against reason and peccant upon forbidden objects by our own consent of Will and God's just Punishment therefore But when the Law of the Spirit of life is clearly meant to be the Gospel preached and alone having the Promise of the Spirit The Law that is weak because of the Flesh that is condemned by the flesh of Christ must needs be understood to be a carnal Law from whence Salvation can never be hoped But that Law by which Justification is had by them which walk after the Spirit and not after the Flesh is Spiritual whether it be the same for the Law of Nature perfected by Christ for the Covenant of Grace or diverse as commanded by Moses for the Covenant of Works When these things are rightly distinguished the difficulty whereof St. Peter as well as Origen complains is taken off for when the Apostle saith Rom. 2.14 That the Gentiles which have not a Law are a Law unto themselves doing by Nature the things contained in the Law shew the Work of the Law written in their hearts It is manifest that although we usurp the Appellation of the Law of Nature indifferently St. Paul doth abstain from giving the Name of a Law to that Light that is in us when he says the Gentiles had no Law but were a Law to themselves because the usurping of the Name Law belongs to the solemn Imposition of that name in the Law of Moses and to the Law of Nature and of sin but by Trope and Figure The Law of Moses is carnal in all men the Covenant of Works The Law of Christ is Spiritual in the Faithful before under and after the Law the Covenant of Grace Therefore the Institutions of Nature in Moses's Law are Scriptures and the Word of God no less than the Gospel but not binding as delivered by Moses but by Christ by whom they were made perfect Neither doth a Believer receive the Moral Law at the hands of Moses but altogether at the hands of Christ Though it be the same Law for Matter and Substance yet in the lowest grounds that was delivered by Moses yet Believers are not to receive it as the Law of Moses but of Christ in the highest perfections thereof For when Christ the Son of God comes and speaks himself Moses the Servant of God must hold his peace as Moses himself foretold A Prophet shall the Lord your God raise up unto you of your Brethren like unto me Act. 3.22 Him shall you hear in all things whatsoever he shall say unto you And therefore in the Mount Tabor when Moses and Elias were departed and had given place the voice from Heaven came and said Math. 17.5 This is my Well-beloved Son in whom I am well pleased hear ye Him And though heretofore God hath spoken divers wayes and in sundry fashions to the World by his Servants the Prophets Heb. 1.2 yet now in these last dayes he hath spoken to us by his Son and this is he that we must trust to And they that believed in Moses must believe in Christ and they that believed before Moses did believe in Christ and they that believe after Moses must believe in Christ and so to the World's end For there never was nor will be
capital the Sinner became a Sacrifice for his own sin Numb 15.32 As he that gathered sticks upon the Sabbath-day This Servility to the Command must be understood to the Literal sense according to which many were blameless For Zechariah and Elizabeth were both righteous before God Luk. 1.6 walking in all the Commandments of the Lord blameless And the Apostle saith he was touching the Righteousness which was in the Law blameless Phil. 3.6 For if we construe Moses his Law so amply as some do 1. VVe make the Law and the Gospel all one 2. The Church of the Jews must have died in their Minority For the Murtherer and Adulterer was to be put to death If then wilful Anger and Lust had been so punished what Jew could have escaped with his life VVhen therefore this VVardship ceased then the Law expired as Tutors went off from Children when they were free Tutores qui dantur ad certum tempus finito Tempore deponunt Tutelam saith the Law J. Quibus modis c. § praeterea SECTION III. Time of Minority The time of this Minority was from the publishing of the Law by Moses till the publishing of the Gospel by Jesus Christ one thousand five hundred and thirty years Gal. 4.4 5. Then did God send his Son made of a Woman made under the Law to redeem them that were under the Law that we might receive the Adoption of Sons I. Made of a Woman ie a Mortal Man an Hebraism born Truly though singularly of a Virgin 1. To shew his great Compassion For Naturally men are Compassionate but especially Sufferers and such was he Is 53.3 Despised and rejected of men a Man of sorrows and acquainted with grief c. It behoved him to be made like unto his Brethren that he might be a merciful High Priest in things pertaining to God Heb. 2.17 to make Reconciliation for the sins of the People Redemption 2. To Redeem Mortals 1. Jews from the Law 2. Gentiles from Satan II. Made under the Law i. e. Born under the Jurisdiction of the Law Circumcised and being obedient to the Law III. To Redeem them that were under the Law i. e. To put an end to the Law During Christ's Privacy the Law was of force and Christ was under the Law but when he shewed himself a publick Person and entred upon his Ministry by Preaching then the Law began to expire and Men pressed into the Gospel to live by its rules For the Law and the Prophets were till John and since that time the Kingdom of heaven suffereth violence Luc. 16.16 and every man presseth into it Gal. 3.13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eximere signifies to Exempt he hath redeemed us i. e. exempted us from the Curse of the Law Exemption is a genus to Redemption Emancipation and Manumission Exemption is from God's Statute Law or Positive Law contained in Judgments and Ceremonies not from the Laws of Nature which were in force before Moses and shall be in force for ever for not the least tittle of the Law shall ever fail because Christ came not to destroy this Law but to fulfil it Adoption IV. That we might receive the Adoption of Sons 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies Emancipation really not Grammatically Because the Jews were the Adopted Sons of God before but not Emancipated because not of full Age therefore not free but in a middle estate betwixt two Extremes 1. Children compared to Servants are free 2. But compared to Free-men they are Servants even to their Servants as Tutors are though Lords of all SECTION IV. But when they are Adult and of Plenage they understand their Estate Plenage know their Father's Will and learn to manage his Affairs and are capable to enter upon the Inheritance and to be Sui Juris The Adult have a Right of Impunity from Servile fear 1. Of Correction for Ignorance or Neglect as Servants 2. Of Disinherison unless for Grand Crimes so are not Servants who have no Right to abide in the house for ever but Sons may abide for ever As in a Son adult it is an unworthy and shameful thing to commit a Malicious and Wilful offence against his Father so it is unseemly in the Father not to remit that sin to the Son humbling himself and repenting as the Prodigal did By the Laws of Nature Heirs adult are free from Tutors and Curators at man's Estate Toga donati The Jews though Sons and Heirs yet could not be emancipated till they had served an hard Apprenticeship under the Law as God would have it but the Gentiles immediately after their Faith are adopted and exempted without this Service who never were under the Law nor were to be under it as God would have it And because ye are Sons God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts whereby ye cry Abba Father SECTION V. The Gentiles were wholly excused and exempted from Bondage at the End of the Jews Childhood Their Law ended to them Gentiles exempted from Minority and to the Gentiles their state of Childhood is remitted and they presently upon their Conversion enjoy their Liberty As in a Society he that is elected Fellow is the same day admitted to the full Fellowship and the years of his Probation are remitted to him so the Gentiles being Elected were at the same time admitted to the full Priviledges of the Jews and the time of their Servitude was remitted unto them Thus the Believing Gentiles who all the time of the day stood idle in the Market and laboured not in the Vineyard till towards the Evening were made equal with the Believing Jews who bore the burthen and heat of the day And what is that to the Jews If God's eye be good why should their eye be evil He may do what he will with his own and he will give unto these last even as unto them The Jews had the Spirit of Servitude under the Law because they were Minors and after their Majority had the Spirit of Freedom but the Gentiles were delivered from a worse servitude under Satan and translated by Faith from the Power of Satan into the glorious Liberty of the Children of God To the Jews pertained the Adoption Ro. 9.4 and the Glory of the Ark and Temple and the Covenant and the giving of the Law and the the Service of God and the Promises But unto Christians belong better Promises better Precepts a greater Spirit a greater Liberty and a more glorious Worship and by degrees they aspire towards perfection till they come to a perfect Man Eph. 4. ●3 to the measure of the stature of the Fulness of Christ SECTION VI. This last and best Dispensation of the Gospel in the last times and Adult age of the Church being so highly Spiritual as it is flies in the face of all Superstition and Idolatry and laies them all dead at her foot with one blow Popery
Sisters husband Laevir 3. The Husbands brother Pro-frater 4. The Wives brother Glos. 5. The Husbands sister Pro-soror 6. The Wives sister In the degrees of Uncles and Aunts by the Fathers or Mothers side no Latin names of Affinity are extant therefore they are thus expressed Patrui vel Avunculi uxor Amitae vel Materterae Maritus The wife of the Fathers brother or of the Mothers brother The husband of the Fathers sister or of the Mothers sister Idem de Patruis Pro-avunculis Pro-amitis Pro-materteris coeterisque Superioribus intelligendum est SECT IV. The Church of England in case of Marriage forbids no more Degrees of Consanguinity or Affinity than are forbidden in the Civil Law Yet she numbers and computes the Degrees somewhat otherwise following therein the account of the Canon Law For she accounts Brothers and Sisters to be in the first degree of the side-line whereas the Civil Law accounts them in the second degree of the side-line and makes no first degree in that line at all But the matter comes all to one pass as some Players at Gleek reckon their games differently and yet accord well enough in the sum of the account For if we consider the Side-line alone by it self as there are several persons in it then some of those persons must needs make the First degree of the side-line in respect of the persons following therein But if we look upon the standard of the Pedigree or the person whose Consanguinity is required and from whom the degrees thereof are measured and numbred upward downward and sideward then the persons of the first degree in the side-line must needs make the second degree of Consanguinity in respect of the standard or person supposed whose Consanguinity is required and from whom the Degrees are to be measured according to the course whereby the blood is derived which doth constitute Consanguinity as before hath been intimated The Levitical Laws for Marriage do now bind us of the Church of England yet this truth is to be understood with some caution For albeit these Laws do bind us yet they bind us not by divine Authority because their obligation by divine Authority ceased expired and died at the death of Christ And thereupon all Christian Churches were left to their several liberties to follow such rules orders measures and degrees as by right Reason and Christian prudence should be established For the determination whereof the Church of England conceived it the most prudent course to make the Levitical Law her President and pattern and at last assumed them and adopted them into her own Canons and Statutes reviving unto them an obligation not of Divine authority as once they had from God but of Humane authority by the Secular and Ecclesiastical power of our Princes and Clergy after the Reformation Thus these very Levitical Laws for Marriage whose obligation by Divine authority was expired long since were afterwards revived unto a New obligation upon us by Humane authority In like manner divers of the Civil Laws do now oblige us here in England yet not by their original Constitution nor by the Imperial authority either of Justinian or any other Emperour but by the authority of our own State which hath assumed and confirmed them into Laws obligatory here in England as they were in the Roman Empire SECT V. Thus the Children of the Fee are to be lawful and pure Conclusion as genuine Sons of their heavenly Father and loving Brethren to each other to make up a holy Seed the true Church and kingdom of Christ Not to exclude Bastards from being the true Sons of God by Faith and Regeneration though they are not the true Sons of men by birth and lawful generation because God is no respecter of persons and they are innocent and shall not suffer for their Parents crimes Thus Whoremongers and Adulterers and all incestuous persons that defile the Marriage bed and all Fornicators Sodomites and unclean Persons cannot enter into the kingdom of God They never were admitted to the Fee and Homage of that kingdom or if they were admitted by Faith in Baptism they fell from it in not performing the Homage sworn to be performed by them As these men defile their own bodies and the bodies of others so they cannot be the Temples of the Holy Ghost As they pollute the World and the generations of Mankind so they pollute the Church and the generations of the Children of God As they confound and destroy the Successions and Inheritances of Temporal estates So they overthrew the estate of Heaven and cannot hold of Christ in God for the Heavenly Inheritance of eternal life They that will not be faithful in a little cannot be intrusted with much They that will not be faithful to their own wives and to their own house how shall they be faithful to their God and to the Church of God They that are unfaithful in the unrighteous Mammon who shall commit unto them the true Riches In a word without Faith it is impossible to please God and into the kingdom of heaven no unclean thing shall ever enter SECT VI. Tables of Consanguinity and Affinity The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Bar to keep of from Parents are Uncles and Aunts by Gods Law The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Bar to keep of from Brothers and Sisters are Nephews and Neeces or Cousin germans by Mans Law not General but Particular at some times to some Nations forbidden to restrain them from breaking in upon nearer Relations where they were more prone than other civil People were The Jews say Fac Legi Tuae Sepem Ascending Parents 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Great Grandfathers Great Grandmothers 3 Degree Grandfathers Grandmothers Fathers Mothers Quasi Parents Great Uncles Great Aunts Uncles Aunts Right Line 1 Degree Side-Line equal 2 Degree Brothers Sisters Side-Line unequal Descending Children Sons Daughters Grandson Grandaughters 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 4 Degree Great Grandson Great Grandaughters Quasi Children Nephews Neeces Grand Nephews Grand Neeces The first second and third Degrees 1. Parents and Children Brothers and Sisters Uncles and Aunts are propinquous or near and are forbidden to marry by Divine Law The fourth Degree and so forward Nephews and Neeces or Cousin Germans of the first Degree and so to the second third c. are all remote and are permitted to marry by Divine and Humane Law The Table of Consanguinity and Affinity A Man may not marry in the Right Line Upward in the First Degree Mothers Mother Cons Stepmother Aff. Wives Mother Aff. Second Deg. Grandmothers Grandmother Cons Grandfathers Wife Aff. Wives Grandmother Aff. Downward in the First Degree Daughters Daughters Cons Wives Daughter Aff. Sons Wife Aff. Second Deg. Grand-daughters Sons Daughter Cons Daughters Daugh. Cons Sons Sons Wife Aff. Daughters Sons Wife Aff. Wives Sons Daugh. Aff. Wives Daughters D. Aff. Side Line Forward in the Sisters Sister Cons Wives Sister Aff. Brothers Wife Aff. Upward Aunts
must suppose remission and grace a favourable and gracious acceptation which because it is voluntary and arbitrary in God less than his due and more than our merit no natural reason can teach us to appease God with Sacrifices It is indeed agreeable unto reason that blood should be poured forth when the life is to be paid because the blood is the life But that one life should redeem another that the blood of a Beast should be taken in exchange for the life of a man That no reason naturally can teach us Lev. 27.29 The life of the flesh is in the Blood and I have given it to you upon the Altar to make an atonement for poor souls for it is the Blood that maketh an atonement for the Soul according to which are those words of St. Paul Without shedding of blood there is no remission meaning that in the Law all expiation of sins was by Sacrifices to which Christ by the sacrifice of himself put a period But all this was by Gods appointment but no part of a Law of Nature 1. Because God confined it amongst the Jews to the family of Aaron and that only in the land of their own Inheritance the Land of promise which could no more be done in a natural Religion than the Sun can be confin'd to a Village Chappel 2. Because God did express oftentimes that he took no delight in the sacrifices of Beasts Psal 40 Ps 50 Ps 51. Is 1. Jer. 7. Hos 6. Mich. 6. 3. Because he tells us in opposition to Sacrifices and external Rites what that is which is the natural and essential Religion in which he does delight The sacrifice of Prayer and Thanksgiving a broken and a contrite heart that we should walk in the way which he hath appointed that we should do justice and love mercy and walk humbly with our God He desires Mercy and not Sacrifice and the knowledge of God more than burnt offerings 4. Because Gabriel the Arch-angel foretold that the Messias should make the daily sacrifice to cease 5. Because for above 1600 years God hath suffered that Nation to whom he gave the Law of Sacrifices to be without Temple or Priest or Altar and therefore without Sacrifice But then if we enquire why God gave the Law of Sacrifices and was so long pleased with it the Reasons are evident and confess 't 1. Sacrifices were types of that great oblation which was made upon the Altar of the Cross 2. It was an Expiation which was next in kind to the real forfeiture of our own lives it was blood for blood a life for a life a less for a greater it was that which might make us confess Gods severity against sin though not feel it It was enough to make us hate the sin but not to sink under it It was sufficient for a sine but so as to preserve the state It was a Manuduction to a great Sacrifice but suppletory of the great loss and forfeiture It was enough to glorifie God and by it to save our selves It was insufficient in it self but accepted in the great Sacrifice It was enough in shadow when the substance was so certainly to succeed 3. It was given the Jews 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Author of the Apostolical Constitutions affirms L. 6. c. 18. That being loaden with expence of sacrifices to one God they might not be greedy upon the same terms to run after many And therefore the same Author affirms Before their golden Calf and other Idolatries Sacrifices were not commanded to the Jews but perswaded only recommended and left unto their liberty By which we are at last brought to this Truth That it was taught by God to Adam and by him taught to his posterity that they should in their several manners worship God by giving to him something of all that he had given us And therefore something of our time and something of our goods And as that was to be spent in praises and celebration of his name so these were to be given in consumptive offerings but the manner and measure was left to choice and taught by superadded reasons and positive Laws c. Idem ib. l. 2. c. 2. p. 321. I know it is said very commonly and the Casuists do commonly use that method That the explication of the Decalogue is the sum of all their moral Theology but how insufficiently the foregoing Instances do sufficiently demonstrate I remember that Tertullian I suppose to try his wits finds all the Decalogue in the Commandment which God gave to Adam to abstain from the forbidden fruit In hâc enim lege Adae datâ omnia praecepta recondita recognoscimus L. adv Jud. quae posteà repullulaverunt data per Mosem And just so may all the Laws of Nature and of Christ be found in the Decalogue Decalogue as the Decalogue can be found in the Precept given to Adam But then also they might be found in the first Commandment of the Decalogue and then what need had their been of Ten It is therefore more than probable that this was intended as a digest of all those Moral Laws in which God would expect and exact their obedience leaving the perfection and consummation of all unto the time of the Gospel God intending by several portions of the eternal or natural Law to bring the world to that perfection from whence Mankind by sin did fall and by Christ to enlarge this Natural Law to a similitude and conformity to God himself as far as our Infirmities can bear Id. ib. l. 2. c. 3. p. 521. That which is true to day will be true to morrow and that which is in its own nature good or necessary is good or necessary every day and therefore there is no essential duty of the Religion but is to be the work of every day To confess Gods glory to be his subject to love God to be ready to do him service to live according to nature and to the Gospel to be chast to be temperate to be just these are the employments of all the periods of a Christians life For the moral law of Religion is nothing but the moral law of Nature Those who in the Primitive Church put off their Baptism to the time of their death knew that Baptism was a profession of holiness and an undertaking to keep the Faith and live according to the Commandments of Jesus Christ and that as soon as ever they were baptized that is as soon as ever they had made profession to be Christs Disciples they were bound to keep all the laws of Christ and therefore that they deferred their Baptism was so egregious a prevarication of their duty that as in all reason it might ruine their hopes so it proclaimed their folly to all the world For as soon as ever they were convinced in their understanding they were obliged in their Consciences And although Baptism does publish the Profession Baptism and is like the forms and solemnities of law yet
grievous in such cases The CONTENTS Writing Testimony Confirmation Execution Christ the Executor Executorship conditional Flesh and Blood Christ's Assention Spirit 's Mission TITLE VI. Of the Confirmation of the New Testament NOW the New Testament though it were not written as was the Old with the finger of God upon Tables of Stone but was Nuncupative yet this Nuncupation was by God himself not by any Angel and that unto Christ himself only to be published and accordingly was published by him in his own Person and by his Spirit in the persons of the Apostles and their Disciples through the whole World and afterwards committed to writing by the chief of the Apostles and not only so Writing but written again after a better manner by the spirit of God himself upon the Tables of Mens Hearts Testimony And as for the Testimony given thereunto to prove it to be the Will of God Christ himself did testifie thereof with such mighty miracles as never had been done before Besides the unquestionable Holiness of his life and the solemnity of his death Which things were not done in a corner but in the full view of a greater Congregation than was at Mount Sinai for he preached in their Temple and Synagogues and did wonders in all Judea and suffered death upon Mount Calvary Mat. 27.51 At which time the Vail of the Temple was rent in twain from the top to the bottom the Earth did quake and the Rocks rent and the graves were opened and many bodies of the Saints which slept arose The Sun also was darkned after an extraordinary manner when the Moon was at the Full. And after all this was added as the last and greatest Proof of all the glory of his Resurrection and Ascention into Heaven He saith therefore of himself John 18.37 To this end was I born and for this cause I came into the world that I should bear witness unto the truth And the Apostle said of him 1 Tim. 6.13 Rev. 3.14 that before Pontius Pilate he witnessed a good Confession Hence he is called the Amen the faithful and true Witness the Martyr of the New Testament to testifie it with his Blood His death was not only a Testimony Confirmation but a Confirmation of the New Testament because his death doth wholly and for ever extinguish in him all will or power to revoke it and evidence that immediately from that Death God's Testament was ipso facto in force and began to take effect for the Justification of Mankind to all the Rights in that Testament contained by the Access of their Faith Thus the immortal God came as near to Death as he could by the Death of his Son in his Divine Nature immortal but made a mortal man to dye in his Father's stead and to demonstrate his own and his Father 's unconceivable Love to lay down his Life for Sinners Which thing deserves a perpetual Commemoration so commanded by Christ in the Holy Eucharist instituted by him for that purpose And as Wills are to be proved and confirmed Execution so they are to be executed and performed or else the Will it self is as dead as he that made it and so was made to no purpose The publick Wills of Legislators are to be put in Execution by sworn Magistrates or else the Law is in vain and a dead Letter And the private Wills of Testators are to be put in Execution by their Heirs or Executors covenanting and swearing so to do else the Will or Law of the Testator is frustrated Now of this New Testament Christ is the Executor or Mediator Christ Executor between God the Testator and the Legataries in the Will expressed to convey unto them from God as a Priest the Expiation of their Sins by his Sacerdotal offering up of himself to God in the Temple of Heaven and the Mission of his Spirit to cleanse their hearts and as a King sitting in the Throne of Heaven to rule his Church and protect them from their Enemies and to raise them up from Death and set them at his Right hand and at his left in heavenly places and as a Prophet to lead them into all Truth And Christ as an Executor and Mediator received to himself this benefit to be the universal Heir of God who was so by Nature and was so appointed by Grace to be Heir of all things Heb. 1.2 And for this purpose had all Power given unto him both in Heaven and Earth Mat. 28.18 and universal honour also wherefore God also hath highly exalted him and given him a name which is above every name That at the name of Jesus Phil. 2.9 every knee should bow of Persons in Heaven and Earth and under the Earth For let all the Angels of God worship him Heb. 1.6 and he hath spoiled Principalities and Powers and triumphed over them openly 1 Cor. 15.27 and hath put all his Enemies under his feet The Reason is because Christ's Executorship was conditional Reason 1 Executorship Conditional that is charged upon the Condition of his own Death he must dye before he can enter upon it and therefore dye that he may perform it because every Testament is a Decree of things to be done after Death and this Testament of God hath this strange Prerogative above the Testaments of men that it is confirmed by the Death of a Man who was God and that the Executor not the Testator dyes and that the Disposition of things to be had or done is made after the Death of the Executor who for that purpose rose from the dead that he might justifie the faithful to the Inheritance of Heaven A Cause quite contrary to the Testaments of men wherin the Testator only dies to confirm his Testament and the Executor surviving performs it Therefore as Christ the principal Heir was fitted to receive his Inheritance ordained for him in that Testament whereof he was Executor So we that are Christ's Co-heirs must be fitted to receive the same Inheritance ordained for us in that Testament wherein we are Legataries Reas 2 Flesh and Blood 1 Cor. 15.5 Joh. ● 14 1 Cor. 15.45 Heb. 2.9 2. Because Flesh and Blood cannot inherit the Kingdom of heaven And CHRIST the Word was made Flesh but afterwards he was made Spirit For the last Adam was made a quickning Spirit And JESUS who was made a little lower than the Angels for or by they suffering of Death was crowned with glory and Honour And so Christ was made perfect For it became him for whom are all things and by whom are all things in bringing many Sons unto glory Heb. 2.10 to make the Captain of their salvation perfect through Sufferings And though he were a Son yet learned he obedience by the things which he suffered and being made perfect he became the Author of Eternal Salvation unto all them that obey him And so Christians they are first Flesh For that which is
proceeds only from Righteousness Wisd 1.15 for Righteousness is immortal Sin is mortal and mortalizeth the Body Righteousness is immortal and immortalizeth the Body Where sin rules death rules where sin is conquered death is conquered SECTION VI. The Reasons for Victory over Death are these 1. Because Sin is conquered which is the Sting and Curse of Death Sin conquered that else would hold us in everlasting Death For as long as sin is in death unpardoned by dying in sin there can be no recovery from Eternal death for sin As long as the Debt is not paid there can be no recovery out of Prison 2. Because the Law is conquered which stirred up sin Law conquered and accused sin unto death Christ hath fulfilled the Law and abolished the Types and Curses thereof 3. The Devil is conquered that lays the Law against us Devil conquered he came upon us as a strong man to bind us in death but Christ came upon him and bound him that had the Power of Death and cast him and Death both out of doors and brought life and immortality to light O Death I will be thy death O Grave I will be thy destruction Death is swallowed up in victory and Christ hath destroyed the works of the Devil and we shall bruise Satan under every one of our feet 4. Because Christ hath entred into the Holy of Holies in Heaven Christ entred into the Holy of Holies and is gone before to prepare a place for us therefore where he is there we shall also be Having hitherto shewed what are the great things which we have purchased for us by Christ and how we are to endeavour after them by the aids of his Spirit promised to be given to us for that purpose namely the Inward and Real Victory over sin and the Curse for sin that so we may obtain a victory over Death and Hell It will be very obvious to observe the Errours of those that pretend to high spirituality of Doctrine and walking with God and yet alledg an utter impossibility of ever conquering of sin in their hearts and therefore never go about the work of mortification or self-denial as there is no reason they should if it were true that all were done to their hands or if not that thing enjoyned were utterly beyond their Power The CONTENTS Nothing for us to do Trust to Outward Mortifications Superstition Natural Complexion for Divine Grace Rhetoricating Consequences of Christ's Death and Resurrection Material Cross Spiritual Cross Material Resurrection Spiritual Resurrection Material Ascension Spiritual Ascension No Oblation pleased God but Christ's Every one that comes to God must offer Christian Religion most Spiritual and Glorious No Mediator but Christ End of Christ's Mediation to bring us to God Cross to be gloried in Cross outward and inward Effect of Cross Crucifixion Procured by outward Cross Philosophy Christianity Christ the Sacrifice and Priest Christians true Sacrifices and Priests Decrees Christ's doing and suffering our doing and suffering Corollaries Christ a Priest Christ quickned by his Eternal Spirit Christ a Prophet Christ a King TITLE IX Of Mistakes of the Effects of Christ's Humiliation and Exaltation Nothing for us to do FIrst therefore some confidently believe That all things are already done for us and nothing remains to be done for our selves as if because Christ hath taken up his Cross for us we should not take up our Cross for our selves because he hath suffered we should not suffer with him and fill up that which is behind of the sufferings of Christ the Head as the Members of his Body which is the Church as if there were no Power of his Death nor vertue of his Resurrection nor Fellowship in his Sufferings nor any conformity with Christ wrought inwardly in our Souls by his holy Spirit turning all Righteousness into a bare accounting and being imputed Righteous by the Righteousness which is another's and no inherent Holiness or Sanctification of the Spirit which is our own without which no man shall see the Face of God This is an Idaea of Holiness and the Happiness will be accordingly .. A Shadow and no Substance This is to deny the Real Evil of Sin and the Real Holiness of the Spirit turning really from Darkness unto Light and from the power of Satan unto God Or else this is to make God to be bribed and corrupted by the Sacrifice and Oblation of Christ to indulge men in their own Sins by clothing them and hiding them with his Son's Righteousness though he knows well enough they are inwardly unrighteous and yet by vertue of that Imputed Righteousness they shall be excused from all Sin and the real Punishment of Eternal Death So there shall be an Impunity from God for Sin than which there cannot be a greater Evil nor more against the Mind of God who naturally hates Sin nor more against the mind of the Godly who more abhor the sin than they dread the vengeance So the Kingdom of Sin and Satan should be still unbattered and we partly under Satan and partly under Christ partly sinful that is inwardly and partly righteous that is outwardly by Imputation and being reckoned so to be not so indeed And so serve God and Mammon have fellowship with Christ and with Sin and Devils Overthrow all Reason and Religion of Justice or Mercy in God or Goodness or Vertue in us All the ground these men have for what they affirm is their strong belief that it is so without any Sense or Reason that it should be so or how it can be so that the undefiled Rewards of God should be enjoyed by impure and unregenerate men But the Pretense is that they speak only of Justification without any Condition of Sanctification as being no part of God's Covenant but Faith only But still let the shew of Humility and Modesty be what it will in them and the advancement of the free Grace of God by them it must needs exceedingly deceive men into hypocrisie and carnality which is very pleasing to Flesh and Blood For he that believes himself to be thus absolutely and compleatly justified by the Imputation of a mere External Righteousness through his Faith must needs believe that there lacketh no other Righteousness of his own for all such Holiness is perfectly supplied by the Holiness of another who is Christ And though it be yet pretended that Sanctification will naturally follow imputed Justification by way of Thankfulness yet this very Gratitude will easily be believed as all other Graces are by them supposed to be by the same Imputation reckoned and accounted so to be but not so indeed lest Grace should not be free and Works should prove Meritorious imagining that God makes a Covenant without any Condition or any other party to Covenant with him which is impossible Trust to outward Mortifications 2. Others there are of a contrary Spirit that trust to no Imputations of Righteousness external nor Holiness internal of
case and fit a Law for them before they come to pass Justice knows no bounds Many things of great justice and charity are extra publicas Tabulas are besides the publick Tables of the Law and contrary to them sometimes that is to the Letter of them Dolum malum facit qui verbis Legis adhaerens contra legis nititur voluntatem The mind of the Laws equity Honesty is more agreable to Nature than profit or pleasure and profit and honesty are not to be divided Sen. Ista duo facimus ex vno and pleasure comes into the bargain and the contrary is against Nature Besides Honesty is a virtue without variety Eadem est utilitas omnium singulorum The profit and pleasure of honesty is common to all If one member suffer 1. Cor. 12.26 all the members suffer with it and if one member thrive all the rest thrive with it If there were no positive Law an honest Man would do righteous things Aug. Si quod absit spes felicitatis nulla c. If which God forbid there were no hope of Heaven yet an honest Man would act justly for Justice sake if we were in the dark never so we are bound as much to do right as if the light shone round about us for every eye to stare upon us Cic. Si omnes deos hominesque celari possem justus essem If it were possible to lye undiscover'd from God and Man yet we are bound to be just Necessity lyes upon us not to go about to obscure the Dictates of Nature and woe be unto us if we go about it Further yet it is reason that what we do should have its cause Now what cause to move us to do wrong to desire or take that which is another Mans Omnino hominem de homine tollunt They that do such things do unman themselves Take not that which thou laydst not down What thou findest return to the right owner If thou sell declare the fault Pestilentem domum vendo say thou sellest an infectious or rotten house if it be so The Aedils or Clarks of the Market looked to the Market price and took care none should be cheated Hence the Romans provided restitution in integrum to those that were wronged and the Actio redhibitoria relieved the Buyer that was cheated in his Bargain Upon this account of Justice they sacrificed Deo termino to the God Bounds that every one might keep his own land Matth. 7.12 The general rule that takes in all equity is that of Christ Whatsoever ye would that others should do unto you even so do ye unto them for this is the Law and the Prophets This is the Doctrine of Athens and Rome as well as of Jerusalem Severus had it by the end This Law of Nature brought forth Regulus Sen. Cato Socrates Fabricius Seneca c. Angusta est innocentia ad Legem esse bonum And it is but a small business to act no farther than the Letter of a positive Law requires Humanity and conscience bind us where other Lawes are silent The hand of the Law is short and cannot reach to very many Cases but equity and conscience bind to every good thing SECT XXXVI Therefore there may be Tricks in the Law against Law Collect. 4. Tricks in Law In fraudem Legis ex Lege Multitude of Laws Antiquity of Laws find work for Lawyers to do against the righteousness of Law To work iniquity by a Law To make things good in conscience and equity not good in Law So comes Justice to fall in the street and Righteousness cannot enter in So Justice is turned into gall and wormwood So Justice cannot run down like water nor Judgment like a mighty stream So Justice lyes fair for us in the Law and a Judge ready to execute it but for the rugged thorny steepy Labyrinth of the practice and forms of Laws we can by no means come at it without greater wrongs by bribery to remove all obstacles than the cause can do us right when we have obtained it He is counted a good Lawyer that can find something in fraudem Legis something out of the Law to elude the Law and send the Client empty and sad and hopeless away If Equity be shut out from the Law Iniquity will have a fair passage A Man may be and is accounted an honest Man in Law that is no detected knave because the Law hath nothing against him although he be really and truly a knave But idem est non esse non apparere is a fine come off for him it is all one not to be as not to appear so to be But this will never do a Man's business so Unusquisque praesumitur esse honestus donec probetur in contrarium Every Man is presumed to be an honest Man till it be proved to the contrary for who can charge him or say Black is his eye but he may charge himself and God will charge him So the Law uncharitably sayes For there is no mercy in strict Law Qui semel malus est semper praesumitur esse malus He that is once wicked is alwaies presumed to be wicked or as we say Once a knave and ever a knave But God forbid it is not so neither should it be so but by the Law it must be so And so an offender is for ever infamous amongst Men of Law But Christians and Men of conscience both think and speak and do otherwise by the example and rule of God and of his Saints who because God giveth pardon freely and upbraideth no Man and rejoyceth over one sinner that repenteth more than over ninety and nine persons that need no repentance therefore they receive such as are fallen and restore them with the spirit of meekness considering their own weakness and quickly strive to raise them up lest they should be overwhelmed with overmuch sorrow and Satan should tempt such poor Souls to despair for they are not ignorant of his devices SECT XXXVII Therefore the Church was too hard in antient times Collect. 5. Severity of old in the Church so as the Novatians never to receive such as fell away after Baptism others to hold off the poor lapsed Souls that for fear of death prescription or confiscation threw a little Incense upon the Idols Altar 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 full sore against their wills God knows or those Libellatici that brought Tickets to certify they had sacrificed when they had not I say it was too hard of all conscience that these poor Creatures should be deny'd Communion with the rest of the Church though they sought it with tears and that they should never be reconciled till the last article of their death This was very hard dealing and if God should deal so with Men as they deal one with another our case would be very desperate But God be thanked it is far otherwise and God's waies are not like Man's waies but they are of
my poor wife and Children for I know my doom and accordingly am hastening as I am driven into Hell And I can expect no help from thee And this he expressed with a sedate mind as one that was earnestly going a journey The example of Francis Spira is fearful although there were not wanting some signs of hopes in him Alas the Church of Rome is a sad Mother leading her Children in a Maze affording them no assurance in Life or Death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for the most part her Teachers deny the certainty of Salvation unless it be to some choice and eminent Saints and that not without a special Revelation As for others they have but poor hopes Yet Ambrosius Catharinus and Martin Eisengenius incline to the orthodox judgment Catharinus and Sotus oppose one another and Vega both The sense of the Council of Trent is versatile like the Oracles of Apollo Some were for a revealed Assurance some for no Assurance at all Some confessed ingeniously their ignorance in the point SECT I. 1. Doctrines of Masses c. The subtilty of maintaining this Doctrine of the uncertainty of Faith is contrived to uphold the Doctrine of Masses Dirges Indulgences Purgatory visiting of Saints Shrines c. such filthy gains as they daily make by such delusions which otherwise would altogether come tumbling down headlong to the ruin of the Politick Church One of them saith I have many a time and often visited the sick M. Eisenc and them that have died and no Man can say of me but that after they had declared their repentance and Faith I exhorted them with all diligence to have an undanted and certain confidence He farther saith That all the chiefest Divines of the World taught the same Doctrine ever since the Apostles daies So say Fisher of Rochester Gropper the Divines of Colen Ruard Dean of Lovain Castalius Vega c. So forcible is the Truth that falls from the mouths and pens of those that unreasonably oppose it SECT II. Doctrine of no Salvation without the Pale of the Church 2. The subtilty of maintaining the Doctrine of the certainty of Faith and absolute Assurance of eternal Justification is invented to uphold as the Doctrine of the Romish Church no hope of salvation without the Pale of that Church so to maintain the Doctrine of other Selected Churches of no hope of salvation without the narrow precincts of their several Conventicles So that as the Great Vicar holds the Keyes of Heaven and Hell at his girdle and hath all his Children at his beck even so the Petty-Vicars pin their Election or Reprobation on their sleeves And make their Subjects admire or fear their favours or frowns and dare not stir or budge from them upon pain of eternal damnation This Great and Lordly one over God's free People and Inheritance makes them 1. Slaves in their Judgments to believe all that their Grand Superintendents magisterially dictate unto them though it be never so absurd painful and costly 2. Slaves in their Persons to ride go or row dig or torl in the Gallies or Mines like Beasts or any other slavish and foolish actions even to Planting and watering of a dry stick to try their obedience To marry into what Families they please to enrich the Church or State 3. Slaves in their Estates to give all they have at or before their death from their Parents Children or Kinsmen Friends to Strangers of their own Sect. SECT III. Doctrine of lying still in Sin 3. The subtilty of this Doctrine of maintaining the Certainty of Faith and absolute Assurance of Eternal Justification is invented by Satan as his greatest stratagem to make him who is his vassal and lives in sin to believe that he is the Child of God and in the state of Grace that he may commit sin and not be the servant of sin but have his share in Christ An Assurance without a Warrant from the Spirit subscribed with the hands of Flesh and Bloud Perfection we would learn and pretend to attain it without ever learning to attain it by working it out with fear and trembling and making our Calling and Election sure Freedom we like but not to be restrained by the Laws of Christ which makes perfect Freedom Assurance we build upon but never build up our Assurance SECT IV. Imputed Righteousness We dare to talk of the imputed Righteousness of Christ while we have no real Righteousness of our own Boast of God's Spirit and Grace while we grieve the one and turn the other into wantonness This we call appearing clothed in our Elder Brother's Robes or as Jacob did we may steal away his Blessing Thus the Adulterer may say I am chast with Christ's chastity the Drunkard I am sober with Christ's temperance the Covetous I am poor with Christ's poverty the Revenger I forgive with Christ's charity The irregenerate and voluptuous dead in trespasses and sins I am born again mortified crucified dead and buried in Christ and with Christ Sen. Calvisius Sabinus fancied that he did every good work which his Servants did If they were Poets Orators Artificers c. he was all this So we say what Christ did we do what he suffered we suffer though we never so much as do or suffer any thing like him Therefore as Seneca said of that Grand Opimator I never saw a Man whose happiness did less become him So may it well be said of these who like Men clothed in Lions Skins or Owls with the Feathers of other Birds Their borrow'd Graces and Vizards do full ill become them their gay apparel sits ill upon them We talk of applying the promises to our selves which they may do that as enemies to the Cross of Christ never perform any one of them The applying of the promises of Christ is not a speculative but a practical thing an act much rather of the Will than of the Understanding If we keep God's word the promises will apply themselves when the Will of Man is subject to the Will of God The Blessing of God will fall like dew from Heaven of it self If we walk according to God's Rule God's Grace Mercy and Peace shall be upon us and upon the Israel of God If we put on the Lord Jesus Christ by imitation of his Righteousness obedience and Love in this his likeness he will own us and approve of us SECT V. 1. We may not think uncharitably Collections Uncharitableness that every one that is not of our Sect though he be an honest Man and feareth God is a Reprobate by the same uncharitable Rule they may think the same of us who differ just as much from us as we do from them and are as confident of their being in the right as we are of our being in the right 2. We may not think that our judgment of our own Estate or our Enemies judgment of our Estate shall be the rule by which God will proceed to judg both
born but been like the untimely fruit of a Woman that never saw the Sun How shall God provoke us to Reason with him upon this point Whether his waies be not equal and our waies inequal We have reason from God though his Reason be infinitely above ours We may not reply against God but we may modestly plead for God We may not dispute with God but we may think honourably of him And though we cannot understand the Reasons of his workings yet we can understand That as his waies are often secret so they are alwaies just and that the Judg of the World must needs do right Well I have done upon this Point I may have leave to think still though I have promised to speak no more Yet I have not promised to forbear speaking reverently of God that he is infinitely gracious just and holy above all that I or all the World are ever able to imagine or express And let fierce Men say what they please I and all the World may safely trust to the Mercy of God which will never fail them if they do not abuse it and through the tender compassions of the Most High they shall be sure never to miscarry Let such miserable Comforters go whither they will O my Soul I charge thee never to enter into their secrets in this Thing and into their counsels let not mine Honour be united The CONTENTS Transition God covenanted with Christ conditionally Christ hath all Power Christ's new way of Conquest Covenant of Grace Christ shares with Christians Covenant of Grace with all men Parties of a Covenant must be certainly known Appellative Names in Covenants Publick stipulation Obligation free Conditions of Covenants must be certainly known All Covenants are conditional Absolute Decree Collections Power Sacred TITLE II. Of Christ's Feudal Kingdom Transition GOD the Father in the Scriptures is declared to be the absolute Lord of the kingdom of the whole World by right of Creation Christ the Son of God in the Scriptures is declared to be the conditional Lord of the kingdom of his Church and by right of Redemption SECT I. God covenanted with Christ conditionally God covenanted with Christ as Mediator of the New Testament that he should be the Heir of all things 1. The Condition on Christs part was his Humiliation by suffering of shame sorrow a Curse and death For so it was written of him in the Volume of the book that he should fulfil the will of God and Lo saith he I am content to do it So when the bitter Cup was given him to drink after a dispute he concludes nevertheless not my will but thy will be done Again his Condition was to glorifie God as Gods was to glorifie him Father glorifie thou me as I have glorified thee It behoved Christ to have suffered and so to enter into his glory For though he were a Son yet learned he obedience by the things which he suffered He saith elsewhere wist you not that I must go about my Fathers business I come not to do mine own will but the will of him that sent me It is my meat and drink to do my Fathers will Thus Christ in the daies of his flesh was in the condition of a Servant and had not where to lay his head though he was Heir of all things yet could not be seized on the Inheritance till the Condition was performed on his part 2. The Condition on Gods part was his Exaltation Being found in fashion as a man he humbled himself and became obedient unto death Phil. 2.8 c. even the death of the Cross wherefore God hath highly exalted him and given him a Name above every name that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow both of things in heaven and things in earth and things under the earth This is the mighty power which he wrought in Christ Eph. 1.10 c. when he raised him from the dead and set him at his own right hand in heavenly places c. When he had by himself purged our sins he sate down at the right hand of the Majesty on high being made so much better than the Angels as he hath by Inheritance obtained a more excellent name than they Heb. 1.3 c. For unto which of the Angels said he at any time Thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee And again I will be to him a Father and he shall be to me a Son And again When he bringeth in the First begotten into the World he saith And let all the Angels of God worship him But unto the Son he saith Thy Throne O God is for ever and ever a Scepter of Righteousness is the Scepter of thy kingdom Thou hast loved righteousness and hated iniquity Ro. 14.9 c. therefore God even thy God hath anointed thee with the oyl of gladness above thy fellows For to this end Christ both died and rose again that he might be Lord both of quick and dead The Father judgeth no man but hath committed all judgment to the Son Math. 28. All Power is given unto me both in heaven and earth Go ye therefore c. Before his Resurrection Christ had no authority to execute no not in Israel where he was born King of the Jews he was despised and rejected there but after his Resurrection God gave him the Heathen for his Inheritance and the utmost parts of the earth for his possession Before when they sought to make him a King he refused and hid himself When requested but to divide an Inheritance he refused saying Who made me a Judge or a Divider among you Then was he subject to the Powers of the Earth now a King of Kings and Lord of Lords whose kingdom ruleth over all And although most Kings do not submit their Powers unto him Christ hath all Power yet he hath power over them and will make them submit whether they will or no when he shall have brought down all Rule and all Authority and Power and shall put all things in subjection under his feet And this they shall know and feel in that day when they shall look upon him whom they have pierced and shall call to the Hills to cover them and to the Mountains to fall upon them to hide them from the wrath of him that sitteth upon the Throne And when he shall say Where are those mine enemies that would not that I should rule over them bring them hither and slay them before me Then shall he bruise them with a rod of iron and break them in pieces like a Potters vessel Psal 2. Be wise now therefore O ye Kings be ye learned ye that are Judges of the earth kiss the Son lest he be angry yea but a little but blessed are all they that put their trust in him Thus Christ by his Sufferings hath purchased Rule over all the World but more especially over his Church A Scepter of Righteousness he useth for
and Piety and ought to be tolerated till they may be amended 5. Who separate for corruptions not directly impious contrary to the express word of God but only by way of consequence which consequence the party defendant doth not acknowledg but if they could perceive it would be ready to forsake them 6. Who separate for matters in themselves indifferent and no waies determined by any word or Law of God either for the affirmative or negative but either are orders instituted by the Church or Customs insinuated by tacit consent 7. Who in a Synod super-determine Doctrines of Faith by a major part and expel the minor for dissenting for though matters of Manners Order and Policy may and ought to be determined by a major part yet matters of Doctrine seem to require an universal concurrence and joint-consent of the whole Synod or else with more safety are left undetermined Now if they seem hereticks or Sectaries who desert or expect those whose opinions and manners are but somewhat corrupt much more they are so who desert or expel those who in their Tenets and manners are the sounder party for these of all sorts of Hereticks are the most carnal and sinful It may appear therefore from what been said upon Heresy and the Name and Thing That no error in fundamentals is or can be meant thereby but only a separation for some Grand corruptions real or pretended in Doctrine or Manners The Name of Heretick is now become odious and a Nick-name to all that differ in opinions styl'd fundamentals which whether they be so or no is yet undetermined and God knows but that they shall ever so remain And those that hold these contrary opinions each party being alike confident of the Truth on their side do persecute one another not only to Excommunication but to confiscation imprisonment banishment and death But what course ought to be taken indeed with such Men SECT IV. Concerning those turbulent Persons that were amongst the Galatians How Hereticks are to be dealt with Gal. 5.12 who would subvert their state of Christian Liberty The wish of St. Paul was that they might be cut off i. e. not castrated for that is barbarous nor excommunicated for then he might have commanded it but destroy'd by the immediate hand of God Yet in this wish of the Apostle this must necessarily be supposed that he wished not positively the execution of it unless those persons continued incorrigible For who can possibly doubt but that S. Paul's velle went with a malle to have them rather reform'd than destroy'd And again if they would not be reform'd who sees not but that St. Paul might lawfully wish that some few turbulent deceivers should rather be cut off by the hand of God than that by them the whole Church of the Galatians should be seduced and their state of Christian Liberty subverted This fact of St. Paul in wishing the death of these impostors must not by us be drawn into example as if to us it were therefore lawful to wish a curse upon those whom we account Hereticks and troublers of the Church For 1. Christ hath given us a precept to the contrary That we should bless and not curse yea bless them that curse us and pray for them that persecute us Matth. 5.44 And our Rule is to practise by precept and not by any example from Men or an Angel from heaven Unless the precept admit exceptions and the cases of those exceptions be as manifest to us as to those Divine Persons who made use of them against the generality of the Precept 2. Where among us shall we find the Man in whom there resides that measure of wisdom which was in Paul who by help of the Spirit wherewith he abounded was a true discerner of Spirits and could exactly know who was a spreader of Error who a troubler of the Church who was refractory herein and whose repentance was either to be expected or to be despair'd 3. Where among us is the Man whose Soul is qualified with the affection of Paul to be led to the like wish with the like mind For without all doubt all the motive Paul had was a sincere zeal to God's glory and a true love to Man's Salvation But we in the like case what ever words we may pretend can hardly say We have purged our Souls from the leven of malice and hatred 4. Paul as we have seen wished not their death simply and absolutely but with a potiority of their repentance that they might rather be reclaimed and therefore he referres the issue wholly to the pleasure of God leaving his wish to depend on God's will If it be therefore unlawful it be to wish the death of one whom we call Heretick in that meaning we put upon it much less is it lawful to put him to death Nay this latter is unlawful though the former were supposed lawful For he that wisheth another Man's death doth commit the act ot the will of God as it shall stand with the pleasure of God that he live or die but he that attempts another's death by Mans hand hath already determined what is to be done without any farther discuss of the matter And it is lawful to wish many a thing were done which notwithstanding to do we have no lawful Power Although then to Paul it were lawful to wish the death of Hereticks yet it follows not therefore that it is lawful for the Magistrate to put them to death For hath God granted to the Magistrate power over the conscience or given him the Sword with such a large commission that thereby he must needs be armed not only against offending Hereticks but also against all true and innocent Christians which equally lye open to the stroke of his sword seeing the less Christian any Man is the more prone he is to condemn another for an heretick and the more carnal he is the more violent he grows to maintain an humane tradition against a Divine Verity because this latter suiteth less with his carnal waies and many Men in Authority do not embrace the sincerity of Religion but use it rather as an instrument for their worldly policy Or hath God given to the Magistrate the Judgment of the conscience or the discerning of Spirits to determine truly between the true and the false Seeing Men of Rule and power whose entrance into the Kingdom of Heaven is a thing of great difficulty and who are commonly imploy'd in other affairs than the care of Religion are not alwaies competent Judges in these cases especially seeing many such Persons are not studied in the cases of Heresy neither are their cases laid out by any Law either of God or Man How then can the Magistrate judge of that wherein by his calling he hath no judgment And for him to commit a matter of that moment to the arbitrement of another is hard adventure seeing he can with no safety execute the sentence but alwaies with danger of
Usufruct and all the profit argues greatness sufficiency nobleness and liberality God hath enough he keeps the Title to himself and gives the benefit to his Clients Fee-farm Rents Canons for Emphyteusis Pensions Homages are noble Tenures from Lords and Princes Ecclesiastical and Civil 3. To give this upon condition of Service and Love not to gratifie and enrich Rebels nor meer slavish service but loving duty and true fidelity This Christ learned For though he were a Son yet learned he obedience by the things which he suffered Salvation is from God though we serve for it as it is fit we should do To give to lazy rebellious unthankful Servants is not Royal nor Prince-like 'T is a wise as well as gracious way of Donation 1. It keeps the Donors honour and grace 2. It keeps the Donors duty subjection and love The Honour is great in the Benefactor Nor is the service ignoble and base in the Client For a Prince to give is honourable For a Subject to serve a Prince is honourable and for all our Lands and Honours we hold of him much more honourable To serve the King of Kings is honourable and for our Inheritance and Honours we hold of him much more honourable That all should be the Kings is noble That the King should give all excepting his Royalty is noble That the benefit should be the Subjects is noble That they should have them by faith and hold them by love and service to their Benefactor is noble That the King should give them in Fee both lands and honours and let them enjoy them though they love and serve him not for his grace is dishonourable and no wise Donation That the King should force them to accept and hold them whether they will or no is dishonourable That the King should force them to be faithful loving and obedient whether they will or no that they might hold them whether they will or no it is not in his power it is dishonourable and unwise So that all should be God's is noble So that God should give all but his Royalty is noble That the benefit of all things should be to his Creatures and Subjects is noble That they should have this benefit by their Faith and Acceptance only and Covenanting with him and hold it by their love and service to him is noble and stately That God should give his People such profits and honours to let them enjoy them though they love him not nor use what is given them nor serve him at all for all his grace and mercy to them is dishonourable and base That the King should have all power in himself is noble That the King should maintain his kingdom i. e. his lands honours and Subjects is noble That the Subjects should fight for their King that so maintains them is noble Christ is this King and he hath all power He maintains his kingdom His Subjects fight for him and under him against Satan and his Subjects under him Christs kingdom is a Military kingdom Christs kingdom holds of God in Fee owes love and homage therefore Christ having administred his kingdom shall deliver it up and all its profits honours and Subjects to God the Father That God may be all in all So Christ as Mediator holds in Fee So Christians under him hold of him As Nobles and inferiour Lords hold all of the King Christ is faithful in his office They that are Christs are faithful in their offices God is the King and supream Lord. SECT XIV 1. Thus we see where Supremacy lodges 1. who hath the Supreme propriety as Lord and owner of all things 2. Who hath the Supreme honour and Legislative power and Jurisdiction to give Laws and Rules and Titles of Renown 2. Thus we see where Subjection lodges 1. Who have the Revenues as Tenants and Usufructuaries 2. Who have the derived Honours and Jurisdictions to receive Laws and give them to others with Titles of Dignity 3. Thus swearing Fidelity and making Faith to their Lords justifies the Vassals or gives them right to the Fee 4. Thus doing the will of their Lord sanctifies them or keeps their right unto them and holds them in the Fee 5. Thus the Souldiers of Christ have a Feudal Right of Usufruct depending upon Grace not an Allodium of Absolute Dominion which ows no thanks or service to any 6. Thus in Feudal Rule there is no Jus publicum by Policy to do wrong to private Men for the publick good but a Paternal Government the Publick Father using the persons and possessions of his Children which are all under his power doing wrong to none for the publick good 7. Thus every Child hath his portion more or less given him of his Father according to which talent he expecteth improvement for their own enrichment and the publick well-fare and flourishing of the Kingdom So that there can be no idle loyterers nor unprofitable Servants in this Vine-yard For if so they forfeit what they had by breaking their Faith All are Children and therefore free living under the Law of a Father which is Love whose will is Righteousness and their wills agreeable to his deeds and they that are Faithful in a little he will reward with much SECT XV. This is the Corporation and Kingdom of Saints God is styl'd the King of Saints and Christ the King under God of whose fulness we all receive and Grace for Grace Here is nothing but free Grace in God and free Love to one another Fidelity to God and honesty to one another A Spiritual warfare victory and triumph Satan's Kingdom destroy'd and he bruised under every one of our feet and we more than Conquerors Thus the Feudataries of Spiritual and Eternal Blessedness do partake of the Common Rights of Creation and Providence in Temporals with other Men that are not of God's Kingdom And they learn to use the World as though they used it not Minding their Spiritual war-fare and service for the Kingdom of Heaven to which they have a present right and in which they shall be installed and enthroned by Christ Thus they are not frighted and cast down with dangers nor transported and elevated with prosperities as the unrighteous are because they seek another Countrey which is above Thus the Flesh is as weak in them as in others and as prone naturally to excess in carnal things but by the warfare of the Spirit the Flesh is mortified and crucified and the World and the Devil are overcome through Christ that strengthens them It is a sign therefore of a worldly Souldier to fight for the things of this World and doubtless they have their reward But the Souldier of Christ is abstemious in all those things and aims at higher matters The World is for temporals the Church for Eternals The weapons of our warfare are not carnal but mighty for the beating down of the strong holds of Sin and Satan The worldling is wholly busie in the matters of this World and toils himself
to death with pains and care in them But the Spiritual Souldier under Christs Banner aims at glorious things and goes on to perfection He looks beyond the gayeties and anxieties of this Life at the mark of the price of the high Calling which is laid up for him in Christ Jesus and having an eye to the recompense of the Reward and a hope of a glorious and blessed immortality he is contented to endure the Crosses and despise the shames of this World and purifies himself and is zealous of good works perfecting holiness in the fear of the Lord that he may obtain an inheritance among them that are sanctified by Faith which is in Christ Jesus To the King alone the faithful make all their Prayers not to the Saints their Brethren beneficiaries and fellow Servants under one Master and Benefactor They can merit nothing at their Lord's hands for they are Clients and Beneficiaries depending wholly upon his Grace and Favour They are all of the same Mind and of the same Spirit The Lord loves his Vassal and the Vassal his Lord. Thus all Feudal Rights are retained till there be a Desertio militiae a laying down Arms or unthankfulness and Rebellion in the case Thus Feudataries are all the Children of their Liege Lord not by Nature but by Grace they are all Filii-familias and heirs of his Estate Thus the Feudatary Brethren are all initiated into the Fee of their Lord by a Sacramental Oath and holy Covenant of Baptism Thus they commemorate the bounty of their Lord and Father by the Sacrament of the Holy Supper They eat the same Spiritual Bread and drink the same Spiritual Wine Thus they entertain one another not in rioting and drunkenness not in chambering and wantonness for Souldiers must be temperate in all things but in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in feasts of Love and Charity Thus they as Souldiers are not entangled with the affairs of this Life but use their Benefices as not abusing them being alwaies watchful and standing upon their guard to keep out Satan and to bruise him under every one of their feet Thus Christ hath purchased Blessedness by conquering Sin Law Satan so that all Salvation and Happiness is his who is the only Saviour of Mankind And therefore all that have right and do hold it to Blessedness have it and hold it of him who alone hath purchased it for them by the price of his precious Bloud by the Conquest of his death For there is no other name given under Heaven whereby we can be saved but only by the Name of Jesus Who is then the Lord Head of the Church but Christ What are Saints or Angels They have all from Christ as we and are our fellow Servants and Brethren partakers of the same Grace and therefore they have merited nothing for us nor can they help us nor may we seek to them for help but with them go to Christ for the participation of the common Salvation had and held by the same Right and Title of Faith and Love till we come to be perfect and receive the inheritance with them which is laid up for us eternal in the Heavens Though all Feudataries are alike usufructuaries only and have and hold of the same Liege Lord in the same Tenure yet some are Royal and Sacerdotal Dignitaries others inferior Titularies So Kings hold next and immediately under God of Christ their King by whom Kings reign and Princes decree justice And Priests hold from Christ the Great High Priest and Bishop of our Souls And Subjects hold under their Kings and Priests who rule them in Temporals and Spiri uals by Jurisdiction received from the Supreme Power of Christ who is the first born of God and higher than the Kings of the Earth and the Great High Priest by whom we are made both Kings and Priests He that is imploy'd in another Man's Estate must be called to an accompt so must we by Christ be called to an accompt at the last day for our Stewardship of the goods of God Conclusion Thus we know in part what God is Thus we know what we are Thus the Servant may not be above his Master Thus we are safe under God's Dominion Thus we shall want for nothing that is good That we may alwaies love serve honour and praise our Benefactor from whom we have our Being on whom we do depend by whom we shall be rewarded with an everlasting Well-Being to whom be all honour and glory World without end ☞ Note that Parables afford not correspondencies in every point the intent and scope of them only is argumentative Parables not on all four we may not strain the similitude to every period which runs not upon all four Object Some may rise up against this Doctrine in fury and say God's waies are not like new waies they are of another Fashion Answ By such general Notions many abuse the Scriptures and the mind of God deceiving themselves as here God's waies and the reasons of his workings are not so well known as Man's waies but yet they are alwaies just so are not Mens waies Yet God's waies may be like unto Mens waies and Mens waies may be like unto God's waies when they are just yet not for the exactness and degree of Justice or Mercy or for the Notoriety of the reasons of them both Justice and Mercy though infinitely more in God than in Man yet they are of the same species Justice is Justice and Mercy is Mercy more or less whether they be in God or Man and so Reason is Reason and Wisedom is Wisedom whether they be in God or Man And what hinders for all this disproportion but that there may be a form of Government amongst Men resembling though infinitely short the Government of God's Church and Kingdom SECT XVI Tenure of Fealty the best Take one impartial view more of this Tenure of Fealty obliging 1. The Lord to love and protect the Vassal in his Rights that is to be a Father and Patron unto him 2. The Vassal to love honour reverence and obey his Lord with all possible kindness as his Child Pupil Client and Beneficiary that hath all he hath from his goodness I say then that this Tenure of Fealty and love though invented by Heathens came by instinct from God and is the pattern of his Fatherly goodness And the obedience and love so exactly performed by them is the lively character of the obedience and love of the Church and a shame to us Christians that come so far short of Heathens in this particular And though originally by their customs derived to us we hold as they did from one Lord yet we have forgot the allegiance which by the same Laws we are sworn to perform as they did What more excellent way could be thought of than this to keep a Kingdom in peace plenty and love when Subjects shall be all Tenants to one Liege Lord and the inferior Lords as Petty-kings