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A15703 A nevve anatomie of vvhole man aswell of his body, as of his soule: declaring the condition and constitution of the same, in his first creation, corruption, regeneration, and glorification. Made by Iohn Woolton minister of the Gospell. Woolton, John, 1535?-1594. 1576 (1576) STC 25977; ESTC S120280 46,530 114

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of creatures whiche was created by him in his sonne in iustice holynes of truth wherin he taught mankinde that sinne and all the effects therof had his origin of the diuell and of man as it is written It irketh me that euer I made man. Agayne He that committeth sinne is of the Diuell For the diuell sinned from the beginning And also By one man sinne entered into the worlde and through sinne death Now albeit man receyued so greeuous a wound in his body and minde vvherevvith not onely the image of god in him vvas defiled and destroyed but also his povvers and ornamentes euerye vvaye vvere maruelously decayed besides the remouing of immortalitie whereof by worde sacrament god assured him before his transgression and in place therof a subiection to sicknesses death it selfe Yet the secōd death did not out of hand sease vpon Adam but God left him like a Pylgreme or banished man out of Paradise many yeeres in this animall or corporall lyfe after the acte and decree was published that god of his immence and infinite mercy woulde repayre his Image blotted defaced and his good pleasure was that man passing his time running his race prefixed here in this vvorld should in his body whiche vvas made so subiect and seruile vnto sinne be resolued into dust and earth but in soule he appoynted him to be immortal because the same was breathed into him by god whiche he also ordeyned to be a daily testimonie remēbrance vnto mā aswel of his estate before his fall as of his glorification after the day of iudgement Which bodily death al the children of Adam are subiect vnto by meanes of sinne abounding yea and raigning in them beeing nothing but dust poysoned which must returne into dust after which the second death to wit eternall condemnation both of body and soule followeth and is assuredly to be looked for of all those that doo contemne the sonne of God mans mediator and aduocate and doo not seeke to bee deliuered from Gods wrath and indignation by the effusion of hys moste precious blood vvhiche onely is able to purifie and vvashe men cleane from all their sinnes And to th ende that this great ruine and decay of man after hys fall maye bee more euidently perceyued I vvyll put dovvne the lamentable complayntes of diuers Writers concerning this matter vvhereby at the firste vevve the matter will moste playnely appeare and shewe it selfe And first that is a notable memorable saying of Cicero repeted by S. Augu. touching the corruption of mans nature Man is brought foorth and as it vvere expelled into this world by nature beeing rather his stepdame then a louing mother In body naked frayle and infyrme and in minde carefull in sorowes abashed in feare vveake in labors prone to pleasure hauing in him notwithstanding certayne sparkes and seedes of a diuine nature Wherin as sainct Augustine sayth he rightly deplored and bevvayled our miserable and pitifull case and savve the horrible euent Yet vvas he ignoraunt of the cause neither dyd he perceyue that a heauy yoke vvas layde vpon all the children of Adam from the time of their byrth vntill their death by meanes of originall sinne wherwith they are infected and corrupted Sainct Augustine him selfe writeth after this manner I doo omitte howe God created Man righte But touching our discente from our firste Parentes that wee are thereby a generation forlorne and caste awaye this very life of ours if it be to be called a life vvhich is so full of deadly miseries doth moste playne●y declare For what other thing can vve gather of that horrible and depe ignoraunce vvhereof all Error proceedeth vvhich possesseth and deteyneth the children of Adam in profounde darknes so violently that a man can not ridde him selfe thereof vvithout great labar sorrowe and feare What other thing doth that loue of vayne and deceitfull things import and therwithall such consuming cares perturbations sorrowes feares disceitfull ioyes discordes adulteries fornications incests rapes and vncleane commixtions agaynst nature vvhich may not bee vvell named and therewithall heresies blasphemies periuries oppressions of Innocentes slaunders false witnesses vniust iudgements and other suche like mischeefes vvhich we see incident to mans nature And to conclude as Viues writing in the same place sayth There vvoulde be founde no beast more sauage and vnbrideled then man if he vvere not chastised and amended vvith discipline and good education for if he might runne his owne race he would conuert all his force and power to satisfie his filthy lustes and appetites neither vvere it possible to finde any brute beastes more fierce and vvylde then manne And sainct Barnarde writeth very pleasantly of this matter in this sorte That blessed and eternall Trinitie the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost one God of cheefe power wisedome and goodnes did create another trinitie after his image and similitude vvhiche had certayne resembla●nces of that eternall Trinitie I meane the reasonable Soule vvhiche consisteth of Reason memorie vvill And he created the same in such sort that by participation of him he might be blesssed and beeing a●erted from him shoulde be most miserable And this created Trinitie did rather bende it selfe to followe the motion of his owne vvill then to stande in that libertie vvhiche vvas giuen vnto it And therfore it sell through suggestion delectation and consent frō that fayre beautifull trinitie that is to say ▪ frō power wisdome puritie into a contrarie and filthy trinitie verily into infirmitie bundnesse and vnclennesse For Memorie is become impotent and infirme Reason improuident and darke and the vvill impure More●●er Memorie falling as it were vpon harde Rockes was broken and rent into three partes namely into affectionate heauie and idle cogitations I call those affections vvherewithall man is encombred about cares of things necessarie as in eating drinking and suche like And those are to be accompted heauy vvhich we spende about the exercise of externall and harde busines And those are vayne and feeble vvherewith mans minde is neyther affected nor greatly molested and yet notwithstanding is drawen from the contemplation of heauenly thinges as to spende his time in beholding how byrdes doo flye or dogges doo runne The light of Reason also hath three manner of vvayes fallen into ruine For vvhereas it vvas his propertie to discerne betweene good and euill truth and falshood profite disprofite It is nowe couered with such darknes that it is caried most cōmonly into a peruers iudgement receyuing euill for good falshood for truth incōmoditie for commoditie Wherein it coulde neuer haue erred so miserably if it had not bene depriued of that light which it had in the first creation Whereby it is nowe commen to passe that man hath lefte that vsuall and necessarie instrumēt to vnderstand wisdome that is to say Ethicke Logike Phisike which we may otherwise call the science Morall Contemplatiue and Naturall For by
the hart or of any other member of man if they bee good affections they are certayne remnauntes of Gods image Man hath also almost lost that notable wisdome and absolute authoritie of rule and dominion ouer liuing creatures For albeit there remayneth in him vnto this day some povver ouer them yet the same is ioyned vvith greate perill and greefe not vvanting tyrannie and crueltie For the horse vvyll not obey man vvithoute bytte and brydle neyther vvyll the Oxe dravve the Plough vvithout he bee yoked The sheepe will not yeelde wooll and milke vnlesse she be bounde Byrdes are taken vvith pollicie and cunning And fishes vvith the hooke net other instrumentes As for Tygres Lyons Beares Woolfes Panthers and suche like they are not onely not obedient but extreme aduersaries to mankinde Nowe if any man aske vvhye God made vvilde beastes so disobedient and hurtful to man It is to be answered that this is commen to passe That disobedient children might be corrected For man vvell deserued suche a scourge after his transgression And therefore by meanes of sinne our seruants are armed against vs wild beasts suffred to tormēt afflict vs for so the scripture saith I wil sende amongst you famine and wilde beastes When man was in the state of innocency they were all tame and obedient vnto him And novve thoughe they rebell yet by Gods mercy fewe doe perishe by them And if anye miscarie there ariseth therof a double commodity First an example of gods seueritie as in the Samaritanes who were killed of Lyons In the children that for scorning at Elizeus were destroyed of Beares and in the disobedient prophet who perished with the Lyon. Secondly gods maiesty herein shevveth it selfe mightely in that he is able to cause the wilde and cruell beastes to reuenge his cause against disobedient persons And finally herein we may also consider gods great goodnesse tovvarde vs in secluding shutting them vp out of mennes societie into desertes wildernesses appoynting them the night to walke in and to seeke their pray whiles morning when man goeth about his busines they all auoyd his sight presence and lie hid in their dennes with trembling and feare Man hath also lost eternall felicitie and blessednesse and hath onely lefte vnto him in steede thereof this worldly and earthly lyfe which is short miserable painefull and is subiect to daungerous death euery moment For cruell death seasoneth vppon all men that are borne of corrupt parents assone as they are fashioned in their mothers wombe because they are infected with sinne And therfore all the dayes of their lyfe death is as it were mans hangman and tormētor First the imbecillity of mans substance and strength is the bitte of Satan Then the shortnes of mans lyfe the perils dangers in the same the cruell diseases the vntimely soden vnnatural deathes the resolution of our bodies into dust ashes do euidently expresse his force and malice against mankinde Whiche thinges I willingly note to admonishe men deepely to consider their miserable and wretched estate For man is not only a bubble of water during but a short time sodenly vanishing away but he is a thing much more miserable wherby it is most apparant that man is not now any longer the excellent image of God but the bondslaue of the diuell then the whiche there can bee nothing more lamentable or miserable But the vse of that which we haue vttered alreadie touching the remnantes of Gods image in man is to put vs in remembrance of those great things which we haue lost by sinne and those remnants are much like the rubble of a faire and beautifull citie destroyed And such as they be they ought not to be cōtemned beeing as it were notes remembraunces that god will in eternall life renew restore his image to man according to his holy worde Prouided always that by meanes of this doctrine no power at all be ascribed to man in spirituall matters before regeneration and not ouer much neither in carnall and earthly things For both these excesses are culpable Let vs therefore bewayle this great losse of ours and agayne let vs not forget to geue thanks that it hath pleased him to leaue in vs some print of his image and cheefly let vs reioyce that by Christe wee are regenerate and reconciled to God in this life and that his Image shall be perfectly restored vnto vs in the life to come And before I conclude this parte I thinke it not amisse to admonishe my Reader of certayne detestable and grosse Errors quite contrarie to this doctrine First certayne Athistes and Epicures hold that there is nothing corrupt in man after his first creation and condition vvhich opynion the Manichees doo also mayntayne And this Error seemeth too springe of meere Ignoraunce of mannes creation and fall The Pelagians and certayne Scholemen dreamed mannes nature to bee syncere and vncorrupte after hys Natiuitie euen as Adam vvas before his fall But that furor is directly agaynst the vvorde of God Beholde I am conceyued in iniquitie And agayne The sence of the fleshe is Enimitie agaynste the spirite And some also nowe a dayes vvrite that there is some povver in man before regeneration euen in spirituall thinges and that man is a cooperator or worker vvith God and that it is in mans power to take to folow to assent albeit faintly with God in spirituall thinges which is meere cōtrary to the holy scripture for the Apostle saith The naturall man perceiueth not thinges whiche be of Gods spirite for they are folishnesse vnto him speaking of man not regenerate Finally this extremitie is to be reprehended that there is no porcion at all of gods image left in man And that there is left vnto man no knovvledge of God at al that he hath no principles of arts or accions but that hee is muche like a cleane sheete of paper ot table into the vvhiche vvith education and study hee maye write thinges But saint Paule saith That the worke of the lawe is written in the Gentiles hartes And euen by the law of nature those that be not yet regenerate haue some knovvledge albeit obscure that there is a God and that he is a iuste god Albeit they vnderstande nothing of his essence and of his perfect wil conteyned in the lavve and gospell The fourth part of the Anatomie of the renouation or regeneration of the olde Man. OVT OF WHAT EXCELlent dignitie and honor man vvas deposed and caste by meanes of his transgression and vtterly drovvned in a deepe sea of all euill it hath bene already briefely and plainely declared It now remayneth that vve haue some due consideration of Gods greate mercy povver and goodnesse in the renouation and regeneration of the olde manne For after the fall of Adam God could not doe any thing eyther more mightely or mercifully then to sende
¶ A NEVVE ANAtomie of vvhole man aswell of his body as of his Soule Declaring the condition and constitution of the same in his first creation corruption regeneration and glorification ▿ Made by IOHN WOOLTON Minister of the Gospell Imprinted at London by Thomas Purfoote dwelling in Paules Churchyard at the signe of the Lucrece Anno Dom. 1576. To the right vvorshipfull William Moune Esquire Iohn Woolton wysheth prosperous successe in all vvorldly affayres and in the life to come Ioyes and Immortall felicitie THOSE THAT HAVE imployed their studies and labors in the diligent inquisition and description of Anatomie howe the partes of mans body are coupled knitte together vvhat properties and powers they haue vvhat things are healthfull or hurtfull vnto the same haue alwayes purchased great prayse cōmendation amōgst all honest vertuous men And although it be accompted of some an yrkesome and cruell thing to cut and mangle mans lymmes and members yet the ende and vse of the same is both necessarie and profitable in all the course and trade of mans life The cause vvhy those thinges are so studiously sought after is that salues and medicines may be more commodiously and skilfully applied and ministred vnto liuing bodies For how or to vvhat ende can they vse applications to any part if they knowe not the position constitution propertie and nature thereof Besides this commoditie the inspection of Anatomie as Galene diuinely writeth deduceth the creature to some knowledge of his Creator And euen so Iob Dauid Salomon many other in the holy Scripture after they haue moued vs to beholde the glory of God by his handy vvorkes vvhen they come to the vewe and consideration of mans body they so speake therof in vvay of admiration and vvondring that vve may vvell gather the straunge and almost diuine composition of the same very much to excell all other earthly creatures Nowe if men for the declaration of these corporall things haue bin always heretofore so well loued liked Then those can not be misliked that in a generall Anatomie of vvhole man aswell of his soule as of his body doo endeuer to describe mans excellencie before his fall and his miserable ruine together with the causes and consequences therof And then descende in order to Regeneration and restitution of Gods Image in man vvherby the Christian liueth eu● by death his body shall rise agayne and bee coupled vvith the soule and so at the last bee glorified eternally in the heauenly kingdome But vve can haue no helpe in the doctrine of these high mysteries neither of Hypocrates Galene nor any other bodily Phisition for they conteyne them selues vvithin the limits of their profession Those Scriptures then which be called and are in deede Holy doo playnly reuele this doctrine vnto vs fir those that haue excelled in vvitte learning and iudgement among the Heathen vewing the conposition of man vvere euen amased in considering principally two things First that amongst all corporall and visible creatures in this vvorlde there vvas none so fayre and beautifull in witte accions and stature of body Secondly that amongst all the sayde creatures there vvas none founde subiect to so many miseries and calamities For this noble and excellent nature of man decayeth muche more horribly then an Oxe or an asse and nature abhorreth mans carkas more then any other liuing creatures and if it be not interred and buried there will Serpentes and Todes quickly spring out of the same as experience hath often times declared But from whence man hath contracted such excellency on th one side and such deformitie destructiō on thother side these wise worldlings were not able with any wisedome to enquire and find out For as S. Aug. well sayth They felt the disease of our nature But the cause they knew not God therfore of his infinite and great mercy hath comprehended in the holy scripture the history and doctrine of these greate matters out of whome I haue drawen this briefe abstract of Anatomie And albeit I acknowledge willingly my owne imbecilitie and do confesse that many are fitter for this matter then my selfe yet because it is the duety of a minster of Gods worde to poynt as it were with the finger out of that riche store and treasure of the holy scripture what men ought to thinke and hold of such necessary matters I shall be accompted I trust neither arrogant nor presumptuous in handling those thinges which are within the precinct of my office and calling And for that by experience I right well knowe if any other howe busie disdayners will be with my phrase stile and methode yet because many of them haue ben long hatching their adled egges haue yet brought forth nothing Let them now finish their labors in ▪ karping other mens good endeuours surely they shall soner pyne away with their malice and enuy then feare me from honest labours to do good to my countrey Let them not spare their Christall eyes on Gods name to reprehend my wordes and matter my inuention definitions and diuisions yea if they will they may note the escapes in the impression c. It shall be sufficient vnto me if the Christian reader will conster well my good intent Being also of opinion for my owne parte that none can excuse his idlenes that may be profitable any wayes to others Now for that this weake and seely Anatomie was loth to go abroad without some especial pro ●ectiō I haue selected your worship to be a Patrō for the same Moued therevnto with that great curtesie and goodwill which from your first acquaintance with me you haue shewed towarde me Moreouer your ardent zeale and loue of the gospell somewhat emboldned me in this enterprise which amongst many other your commēdations cheefly commendeth you It is a greate matter to come of a greate parentage to haue large hereditamentes and possessions wherein none at all in Cornwayll doo passe you and very fewe are comparable with you But with those thinges to be the seruaunt of Christe a louer of his gospell and a foster nurce to his church as you and that vertuous gentlewoman your Wyfe are well knowen to be in your countrey is as Basilius Magnus sayth most laudable In the which and all other vertues I beseech God to continue you to your latter ende and to encrease you also in all vvorldly vvorship dignity From Exceter the .xij. of March. Your worshippes humblie Iohn Woolton The first part of the Anatomie declaring the state of man before his fall IT IS BOTH TRVly and excellently vvritten by Cicero not onely the best Orator but the best Philosopher amōgst the Latin vvriters If vve vvere borne brought foorth into this vvorlde suche persons that vve could vewe Nature vve should neede neither learning nor instructions because nature her selfe should abundantly suffice vs. But nowe there are lefte vnto vs certayne sedes or sparkes of vertue
money vve saye this is the image of the king or queene But that image hathe not the similitude neither doth it shew the liniaments and proportions In that Moses sayth therfore that man was made after Gods similitude he shevveth that man doth not onely represent god in that he hath reason and vnderstanding but also that he hath suche intelligence and vvill vvhereby he both perfectly knevv god and also had a will to execute gods commaundement Other some there be that saye that gods image resteth in mans substance and the similitude in the accidentes Let euery mā enioy his ovvne cogitations I am of this opiniō that bicause Moses describing this notable vvorke of god somtime vsed one vvord sometime another that both these wordes are vsed for better declaration playnely to expresse one thing This one thing I thinke more conuenient to be considered in the entry of this matter that the image of god in the holy scripture is attributed both to the onely begotten sonne of god Iesus Christ and to godly men his sonnes by adoption But in diuerse consideratiōs It is vvritten of the onely begotten son of god Who is the image of the inuisible god the first begotten before all creatures And in another place Christ is the image of God. In these places Christ is called the image of God in respect of his heauenly father And therfore he sayth Philip he that hath seene me hath seene the father shevving that his father is knovven in and onelye through him Our sauiour Iesus Christ then is the totall and coessentiall image of God his father of lyke maiestie and glory For so he pronounceth of hym selfe saying I and the father am one the Apostle who is the brightnesse of his glory and the image of hys substaunce bearing all thinges vvith the vvorde of his power But vvhen man is named the Image of God it is not ment that he is all one vvith the sonne of God but that he is his Image create Gratuite by grace or adoption muche inferior to the naturall image Iesus Christe And yet it is not to be accōpted any smal prerogatiue that man and Angels seuerally aboue all other creatures haue this title and dignitie giuen vnto them that they haue and beare the similitude and image of the liuing God of the which seconde Image I vvill only write at this present What this Image of God is in man there are diuers opinions amongest the auncient vvriters Theodoretus citeth sundry of them in his questions vppon Genesis First some sayd that the Image of God is that vvhich is inuisible in the soule Secondly some sayd that mannes body is that Image whiche opinion he ascribeth to one Milito Thirdly some sayde that whole man vvas the Image of God because he is placed as it were in the middle betvveene all creatures compact of body and soule Fourthly some affirmed the image of God in man to be nothing els but that power authoritie which he hath ouer al worldly creatures And finally he cōcludeth that this image of god is in the reasonable soule vanderstanding iudging and executing things iustly Saint Augustine sometime taketh this Image of God to be the very substance of the soule minde and wil sometime the qualities of the same Caluine acknowlegeth the image of God moste cleerely to shine in mannes soule and yet to shew it selfe in the whole body and in all powers of the same Luther that excellent writer defineth or rather describeth this image after this maner The image of god after the which Adam was created was a matter most noble excellent For as yet no leprosie of sinne had infected either the minde or will. But all the interior and exterior senses were pure and cleane For the vnderstanding was most pure memorie prompt and ready the will sincere resting in a diuine securitie without pensiue thought or dreadfull feare of death Herevnto was annexed a notable beauty and comelinesse of all the externall members of the body wherein man passed and surmounted all other inferior Creatures And albeit hee vvryteth that the Image of God is in the vvhole manne both in bodye and soule yet he vvas farre asvvell from the Arabyan heresie vvhich vvas Anno Dom. 230. as from the Anthropomorphites and other Monkes of Aegypt who affyrmed this image to be onely in the body because the scripture oftentimes maketh mention of the face eyes eares nose handes and feete of god Whiche phrases the Scripture vndoubtedly vseth onely for our capacitie and better vnderstanding for touching Goddes substance our Sauiour Chryste playnely affyrmeth him to bee a spirite And I knovve that some verye learned Writers haue acquited the Anthropomorphites from suche grosse opinions and that they had a farre other sence in those phrases The reason that maketh many men abhorre yea detest this positiō of Luthers that the image of God in man consisteth both in the body soule is this God is not any corporall substance therfore no part of his image cā be in any corporall substance But we must consider that whole man cōsisting of body soule was fashioned after the Image likenes of god Moreouer the perfection of mans corporal substance the proportion or apt cōueniency therof with the soule which was appoynted to expresse his powers to the organical or external instruments of the body and Immortalitie vvhiche vvas also giuen to this corporal matter did clerly expres represēt some portion of gods image Albeit therfore it can not be denied but that the cheefe principall degrees of this diuine Image is in mans soule as in the most noble and excellent part yet the body so diuinely vnited vnto the soule and indued with such notable ornamentes is not to be defrauded of that which of right ought to be yeelded vnto it So that as those doo offende in excesse that ascribe this image of God to mans body onely so doo they also erre in defect that place it only in the mind For that the holy scripture eftsones repeteth that God made not onely mannes Soule but whole man after his owne similitude and likenes It vvas the vvil and pleasure of almightie God that through this his Image tranfused into man he might both represent and expresse his maker and be obedient vnto him appoynting man as I sayde before to be as a glasse wherin he woulde shine and be seene and as a booke vvherein vvith his ovvne finger he would vvrite his vvisdome Teaching vs in this image vvhat God is to vvitte an eternall and euerlasting minde and what maner of God he is namely vvise and true louing chastistie and iustice of a free povver embracing men vvith a fatherly affection he beeing the creator and they his creatures requiring of vs that our minde and vvill should accorde vvith his vvill and commaundement And this is that vvonderfull vvisdome iustice goodnes and povver of his which his
euerlasting paynes and tormentes And this doctrine is setled vppon these groundes or places of scripture Of the Gospell of Iustification of the rewardes of newe obedience of the resurrection and of eternall life The glorification of man in the life eternall is Gods accion vvorke wherin hee restoreth vnto all beleeuers after their resurrection his image perfectly that is to saye he will purifie and clense whole man as well in body as in soule from sinne And beautifying him with al integritie wisedome iustice will translate him into his kingdome to be a felowe and companion of the angels and blessed spirites throughout all eternitie For we learne by Gods vvord that when the godly are remoued hence by corporal death they lay aside al their vveights and burdens of sinne which now so greuously preasseth them in this worlde to the ende that man should not be molested therewith after his resurrection For there is not onely a dissolution of the body and soule but the dregges remnants of sinne are also swallowed vp out of our nature In so much that this temporall death is an effectuall remedy against that puysant and mighty enemy which so dayly and violently assaulteth vs in this corruption mortality When our bodies therfore are laid in the graue they reste in sure and certen hope of the glorious resurrectiō neither are they reteyned there to ignomie and shame but that they may rise and spring vp againe with excellent properties and qualities Whereof P. Martyr that excellent light of our tyme hath vvritten largely and learnedly out of whome I vvill borrow so much as seemeth conuenient for this discourse The schoole mē saith he do call those properties conditions or indumentes neither can I mislyke those whiche they number because I see that they drawe them out of the holy scripture Albeit I thinke they haue not collected all neither can any man doe that because vve cannot see or perceiue exactly in this life the heauenly glory of the celestiall company But the first qualitie or indument accompted of them is immortalitie And in deed whersoeuer any mention is made in the scripture of the lyfe to come the same is said to be eternall and euerlasting The Apostle sayth This mortall must put on immortalitie and this corruptible must put on incorruption And for that both rewardes and punishments which shall be geuen according to the proportion of vvorkes are eternall the subiect or nature vvhich shall susteyne the same must needes be also eternall Moreouer seeing Christe hath ouercome sinne and death it must of necessitie folovve that the lyfe of holy menne shall be immortall The Apostle also speaketh after this manner Christ rysing frō the deade dieth not any more neither hath death power ouer him any more And agayne Fleshe and blood shall not possesse the kingdome of God Whiche vvordes are not to be misconstrued of the very nature and substance of fleshe and blood For those that shall rise to glorie shall be clothed vvith them But the Apostle meaneth of corruption vvherevnto flesh and blood are subiect in this lyfe And therefore it folovveth there And this corruption shall put on incorruption c. Of this qualitie aryseth another vvhiche is that the glorified menne shall not neede meate drinke or anye other corporall sustentation in the lyfe to comme Christe hymselfe hathe taughte vs that they shal be lyke angels For whereas mention is often tymes made in the scripture of eating and drinking in heauen as I will prepare for you as my father hath prepared for me a kingdome that yee may eate and drinke vppon my table in my kingdome This and suche lyke speeches are nothing els but metaphors or translations whereby the holy ghost admonisheth rude and simple men of the ioyes and pleasures of another lyfe In the lyfe immortall then there shal be no neede neither of foode nor of procreation of children Which thinges serue onely the vse of this mortal life The reason of this is because bodely substances are not then worne or consumed there shall be no neede of reparation by meate and drinke And because there shal be no mortality mariage shall not be then needefull by new procreation to preserue and continue natures and substances Shining brightnes is also ascribed by the schoole men to glorified bodyes wherof the Apostle speaketh thus Christ shall chaunge our vile bodies and make them like to his glorious body c. Some signe token hereof was giuen by Christ in hys transfiguration when his face did shine like the sun the Euangelist saith The iust shall shine as the sunne in the sight of God. Whereof the prophet Daniell also maketh mention They ascribe also to glorified bodies nimblenes and agility For the body and all the members shall be subiecte to the soule And hereof it is written in the booke of wisdome of the sainctes That they shall be like sparkes running amongst the stubble And the Apostle We that shall be found alyue and the dead who shall be raysed shal be rapt to meete Christ in the ayre The body of Christe walking vppon the watér was indued vvith this agility vvhiche he lent also for a tyme to Peter to do the same The force or efficacy of this agility as I sayde before is that the soule shall haue absolute dominion ouer the body in so much that the weight and burden of the flesh shall not in any wise hinder or lette the operation thereof And also for that this qualitie apperteyneth to locall motion it maketh many men to meruell why the Vbiquaries are content to guyse this property in bodyes glorified and yet will not graunt any place at all vnto them as thoughe there coulde be a motion from place to place without any place at all The glorified bodyes also are impassible that is to say they shall not be corrupt or diminished with any passions dolors or diseases according as the Apostle writeth It is sowen in corruption it riseth againe in incorruption And for that I haue sayde that the glorified bodies shal not be molested with passions we must consider that passions are of two sortes For some are noysome and hurtefull to nature afflicting and consuming the body as hunger thirst sickenesse paine and such like From these kindes of passions the saintes shall be deliuered Againe there are some other passions which rather helpe and perfect nature then hurt the same Such are the notices of the senses The eye is not hurt with beholding of fayre colours nor the eare with sweete harmony and musike Nor yet is smelling hurt with good odours These and suche like good passions shall not be wanting to our bodyes glorified vvhē vve shal rest in our desired coūtrey They adde also subtilty to glorified bodyes vvhiche is not so to be taken as though these bodies shoulde be turned into spirites become ayery much like the winde
loue of pietie and all other heauenly vertues vntill vve haue runne out our race in this life do come vnto the goale or garland of promised felicitie vvhich is so incomprehensible to all humaine speeche penne and cogitation that the Apostle in the declaration therof findeth in him selfe some defecte and vvante and therefore repeteth oute of the Prophet The eye hath not seene the eare hath not heard neither hath the hart of man conceyued those Ioyes vvhiche God hath prepared for those that loue him FINIS The knowledge of Anatomy profitable for mans lyfe The knowledge of anatomy doe induce vs to thinke y there is a god Galen vsu part alijs locis Iob. 10. 37 38. 39. Psa 19. 33 133. Wysd 7. The consideration of the spirituall anatomy and y fruite thereof The knowledge of the se thinges commeth out of gods word Man partly the fayrest partly y foulest of visible creatures The Ethniks know the disease of our nature but they know not y cause Aug. contra Iulia. lib. 4. ca. 14. Hom. in aliqu scrip tos locos Cicero his sentence of mans soule De finibu● liber 1. Tus quest li. 1. 3. 5. Nature yel deth to corrupt affections Mans nature before his fall Cic. tus 1. 4. Cicero hys speeche consonant to y scripture Cicero lib. de legibus Mans soule in the state of innocency a good captayne or guide to liue well Rom. 2. Man in the state of innocency a sufficiētscholemaster to him selfe A plaine explication of the premisses by a cōpa●●son of the nature of brute ●eastes Cic. tus 5. Nature the common parent of all thing Nature hath giuen to dyuers beastes dyuers inclinations A speciall disposition of some particuler liuing creatures Man instructed by a consideration of the nature of brute beastes Jere. 1. The excellencie of mans nature Melan. de anima in locis com Mans power before his fall Tert. contra Marcionem Luthe in Genesim The necessity of this doctrine Col. 1. 2. Co. 4. Heb. 1. Of y word Image or ●imilitude Gene. 1. Calu. Inst lib. 1. Gene. 1. Gene. 5. A differēce betweene image similitude Ex Augu. de quantit●te anim● Pet. Mar. in cap. 1. Gene. Luth. super 5. Ge. Two significations of y image of God. Colo. 1. 2. Co. 4. Ioh. 14. Now christ is y image of God how ●● is the image of God. Gene. 1. Colos 3. 1. Cor. 11. Theodret quest 20. in Gene. what this Image of God in man is Aug. li. 14 detrinitate ca. 8. Pet. Mar. in 1. cap. gen et in locis com lo. xij fol. 101. Cal. lib. 1. inst Luth. in gen ca. 1. whether man is the image of God in respect of his soule or bodye or of both Arabian heresie Anthropomorphites Ioh. 4. Doubtes answered resolued touching this matter The duetie of man in y consideratiō of these things Augu. lib. 14. de Tr. cap. 8. The excellent qualities of man before hys fall The excellencie of mans mind Mans wil. 〈◊〉 hart and affections Man had a lordship ouer al wiling creatures Psal. 91. Great beastes ruled by little children Mans beginning ende Sap. 2. Mans immortality Gen. 3. 5. If m●● had not sinned he shou●de haue b●ne translated ●ute et Paradise into heauen Immortality annexed to y outward Sacrament How man loste Gods Image The deadly wounds which man receiued by transgression Bonauentura woundes in mannes mind woundes in mannes will. Gen. 6. woundes in his whole nature Adam felte y greuous sores and smartes of these woūdes Howe Adā in these miseries was comforted Adan sawe some effects of hys sinne in his children Cayne God himselfe lamenteth mans fall Gene. ● The second death came not by and by after mans fall Man lefte as a pylgrime or exiled man vpon the earth All the children of Adam subiect to death A do●eful lamentable 〈◊〉 of mans 〈◊〉 by certayne auncient fathers Aug. cōtra Iulianū li. 4. cap. 14. repetit ex lib. 3. Cic. de repub De Ciuita ●● dei lib ▪ 22. ca. 22 Ludouicus Viues in 22 August ▪ de Ciui ca. 22 Barnar in sermone 1. paruorum sermonū what is reteyned in mans nature of gods image The Gentiles Ethnicks are ignorant of the fall of man. what know ledge remaineth in man touching y first table what knowledge he hath lefte vnto him in the second table ● differēce betweene mā brute beastes Psal. 49. August de peccat ori contr● Pelagia●●● Rom. 1. 2. Mannes knowledge in the properties of things altogether lost Adam before his fall an excellent Philosopher Man hath loste all holines of body soule Iob. 14. Reg. 3. What instice y Ethnicks haue Mans power and faculty in spiritual thinges lost 1. Cor. ● Medaea Man hath yet left som vnderstanding in worldly things All mans vnderstanding in worldly things is a portion of gods image yet remayuing Mans power dominia oncr liuing creatures much impayred Eze. 5. A duble cōmodity 2. Reg. 17. 1. Reg. 13. 2. Reg. 2. Man hath lost eternall felicitie ▪ and blessednesse Death the possessor of all men and the cause therof The sting● of death The vse of this doctrine Errors cotrary to this doctrine Psal. 51. Rom. 8. Synergistae 1. Cor. 2. Rom. 2. Gods mighty mercy Ethnickes 〈◊〉 at 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of regeneration The signification of the worde regeneration Ioh. 1. 3 Tit. 3. 1. Pet. 1. 2. The definition of regeneration Math. 28. ●ar 16. Iohn 3. Tit. 3. The work of regeneration appointed frō the beginning ●eparatiō of man by Iesus Christ Exhortations to repentaunce what kinde of iustice ●s restored in regeneration Phil. 2. Of y minde renewed Ephe. 4. Colos 3. 2. Cor. 3. Muche ignorance and blindnesse yet remayning in mās minde 1. Cor. 13. Gal. 5. why excellent lightes of Christes Church ●o e●●●●●all Of the will renued after regeneration Phil. 2. Rom. 7. The weaknes of the godly in the houre of death and the cause thereof Rom. 7. The principal cause of the patience and strēgth of martyrs ●n their ●assions 1. Cor. 10. The power of will regenerate in temporal thinges What men not regenerat cheefly respect in their accions Ioseph his accions and the ground thereof A great● diuersity of mans wyll both in those that be regenerate and not regenerate The spots in the godly Loth. Dauid Hely The thornes of thys world Of the hart of man regenerate Perfect nature onely perfectly fulfilleth y lawe Greate infirmityes remayne in mans hart after regeneration The effects of raging affections The harte is muche lyke a troubled sea of raging affections Of the good accions work of men regenerate The good workes of man regenerate are vn perfect in this lyfe The comfort of men regenerate Of the dominion of man regenerate ouer other liuing creatures Of the frut fulnes of y earth Psal. 3. 4. The mariage of men regenerate Ephe. 2. Ioseph Da●ell Plato Of the tyranny of y Deuil Autitheses or certen differences betweene man regenerate and not regenerate Why the vertues noble actes of the Gentiles are esteemed The cōmoditie of this doctrine Errors cōtrarie to this true doctrine The Papistes Saduces Libertines Gala. 5. Gnosticks Anabap. c. Th ende of all thinges is at hande Of the qualities properties or glorified bodies Ex Pet. Mart. in 2. Re. 4. The firste conditiō of glorified bodies is unmortality 1. Cor. 15. Rom. 6. 1. Cor. 15. Glorified bodies need no sustentation of corporal food Luk. 22. Glorified bodies indued with shining brightnes Phi. 3. Dan. 12. wise 3. 4. 5. Glorified bodies indued with agility wised 4. Vbiquistae Glorified bodyes impassible 1. Cor 15. Passions of two sor●●s What kind of passions y glorified bodies shal haue Glorified bodies thin and subtill A naturall body and a spirituall body 1. Cor. 15. Esa. 6. 4. 1. Cor. ● Agaynst vbiquitie Of what age bo●ies shal be in the resurrection Ephe. 4. The qualities of wicked mens bodies in the resurrection Iustice imp●tatiue Math. 22. 2. Pet. ● Esai 65. Translation into the kingdome of heauen Luke 23. Rom. 8. 2. Tim. 4. 1. Pet. 1. and ▪ 5. 1. Cor. 13. Perfect ●bedience in men glorified John. 3. The torments of hell The payne of losse Payne of sence Sap● ● 4 ●f y eq●●litie or inequalitie of ●oyes in ●ternall life Rog. Allaeus ex Pe. Mart. in 1. Cor. 14. The sicke-mans salue Drigans the Ch●lias●●s error touching y saluation of all men It were better for y wicked neuer to rise a gayne Pe. Mar. in 1. Cor. 15. Rom. 5. The state of man glorified excelleth y firste state of man after his creatiō Glorification is properly the worke and gift of Christ Rom. 5. Rom. 4. Joh. 14. 10 ●heworke of redemp●ion is only Christes Joh. 14. Jo. 16. 7● Athanasius Origines Ephe. 4. August libe de s●lut doc cap. 3. The effect and fruite which shoulde spring by the consideration of these thing●● Phi. 1. R●u 14. Phi. 3. Ecclsi 1. Godly men are satisfied onely in the fruition of heauenly thinges Reu. 21. A certen description of the ioyes of heauen out of the holy scripture Esa. 64. 1. Cor. 2.