Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n dead_a life_n raise_v 9,308 5 6.9695 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

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

There are 4 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

the obiect shewne by the vnderstanding yet so that we hold not this frée will to be independent but that as the wills of all creatures it dependeth on God to be inclined and moued either immediately by him or mediately by good or euill instruments as he please Neither doth this dependencie hurt or diminish the frée dome of the will because God inclineth the will so that the will doth by the Iudgement of its owne reason fréely and willingly moue it selfe so that to doe a thing fréely in the Creature is not to be frée from the gouernement of another but to doe that which it doth willingly voluntarily and deliberately though it be ruled by another Before the fall this was in Adam both to good and euill that he might if he would either stand or fall the dependencie before spoken of still reserued Since the fall the case is altered according to the saying of Augustine That man abusing his frée will lost both himselfe and that whereby as also when we say that man hath no free will we doe not vnderstand that the faculty is lost but the goodnesse whereby it was able freely and willingly to chuse that which is good For man lost no essentiall part or faculty of his nature by his fall euen the vnregenerate hauing a power freely to will or nill the obiect shewne by Reason though they haue not power to wil and chuse spiritual good things both because their wil is wholy depraued and turned from good and inclinable only to euill and also because Reason being blind doth not shew to the will the spirituall good or if it doe it is not vnder the likenesse of good but vnder the likenesse of euill For the naturall man vnderstandeth not the things of God 1. Cor. 2.14 but accounteth them foolishnes Wherefore we confesse that man hath stil free wil in ciuill and outward things and vnto euill but not vnto good And this freedome vnto ciuill things must bee so vnderstood that he hath power to chuse or refuse the obiect but to do this well he hath no power Also he hath free will vnto euill not that he can will or nill euill at his pleasure but that without any violence he onely chuseth euill so that as it may be called free will because it is free from coaction so also bond will because it freely willeth onely that which is euill And hence it is that the reprobate sinne necessarily and yet freely necessarily because they haue no power to goodnes freely because they chose euill without compulsion Yea by how much the more necessarily they sinne by so much the more voluntarily they doe it in as much as their will hath brought vpon them this necessity Now when this worke of Sanctification or Repentance or Conuersion is wrought then we haue free will both to good and euill to good as farre as we are regenerate by the Spirit to euill as far as we are vnregenerate and flesh And in the state of Glorification our will shall be free onely to good immutably as the will of the damned shal be immutably free vnto euill as Augustine saith The first Will was to haue power not to sinne the last shall be to haue no power to sinne Then for our purpose this is to be holden that till the spirit worke new grace we haue no power of our selues being vnto the worke of conuersion meere patients though in the worke when the Spirit hath changed and inclined vs we are co-workers with the Spirit Before conuersion we resist In conuersion the Spirit inclineth our wills and of vnwilling makes them willing to be conuerted and to repent God not working in vs as in stockes or stones but as in reasonable creatures Vse 1. If thou be truly conuerted ascribe al the glory of it to God for as soone can an Ethiop change his skinne Iere. 13.23 c. or a Leopard his spottes as we doe that is good till we be changed and enabled by the Spirit Vse 2. Beware thou neglect not the present meanes of grace offered to thee as though thou couldest repent and doe well when thou wouldest No no it is the meere gift of God For if thou canst not make one haire of thy head white or black much lesse canst thou change thy vile and corrupt heart But thou wilt say Doth not GOD promise that at what time soeuer a sinner doth repent he will be mercifull Yes the Lord most comfortably blessed be his name saieth so but he saith not that a sinner can repent when he list or that he will giue repentance whensoeuer a sinner shall but whistle for it As Augustine excellently He that hath promised to all repentants pardon hath not promised to all delinquents repentance c. Quest What are the parts of this Sanctification or Repentance Ans The parts are two First Mortification of the old man or Hatred of sin and turning from euill Secondly Viuification or Quickening of the new man or loue of goodnesse and Turning to God Quest What meane you by Mortification of the old man Ans I meane that grace wherby there is wrought in vs by little and little a detestation of sinne and an extinguishing and weakening of corruption in vs that it should not bring forth fruit vnto death Quest What meane you by the new man Ans I meane that Grace whereby by little and little we are raised to a new and spirituall life to be able in some measure to liue in knowledge holinesse and righteousnes Eph. 4.22 23 24. Col. 3.5.8 10 11. The summe of all these answers prooued by Rom. 6. from the first verse to the twelfth Explic. When we reade that the olde man or the body of sinne or our earthly members by which and the like names the corruption of our nature is called are are to be mortified that is made to die We are not to vnderstand it of the life of our bodies but of the life of sinne in our bodies So when our Sauiour saith If thine eie offend thee plucke it out c. he meaneth not that we should maime our bodies but that by all meanes wee should purge out corruption which manifests it selfe in such members yea then as wee estéeme our corrupt affections as deare as our eyes These two parts of repentance are also called putting off the olde man and putting on the new man c. whereby is signified that as willingly as a man puts off his old filthy ragges to bee clad in sweete and rich attire so should we willingly put away sin whereby we are deformed and labour to follow righteousnes which is a part of our Beauty in the sight of God Whereas some make thrée parts of repentance first Contrition secondly Confession thirdly Satisfaction they deceiue the simple For a man may haue all these and yet be damned as is manifest in Iudas who grieued confessed his sinne Matth. 27.3 3. and brought againe the thirty pieces of siluer and
deserue it by our good workes no not by our faith but by reward is meant a frée gift or a gift due by couenant or promise For there is a double reward Due or vndue and frée the first properly the second improperly so called That which is due by order of iustice for the dignity of the worke is properly a debt or due Reward That also is so called which is due by fauour and by promise To our good workes is eternall life as a reward due not the first but the second way For God hath made himselfe our debter not by receiuing from vs but by promising to vs. So that if you take debt or reward properly we affirme that nothing is due to our best works for there are foure things necessary to make a worke meritorious in the first acception of debt First that the grace whereby we do it be our owne for if we receiue it from another it is against reason that he that giues should thereby be indebted to giue more 1. Cor. 4.7 But wee haue no grace but we haue receiued it Secondly it must not be due or duty to performe it for that is contrary to merit but all that we are able to doe if it were more is due in regard of Creation and Redemption Luk. 17.10 Thirdly it must be profitable to him to whom it is done But God is not benefited by vs. Psal 16.2 50.11.12 13. Rom. 8.18 Fourthly it must be proportionable to the reward but so are not our best workes Therefore it is well called of the Apostle A free gift of God Rom. 6.23 This further remember that we teach good workes to be necessary to saluation but not as causes thereof but as the way thereto as Bernard said Q. What is eternall life Ans Eternall life is that glorious and most happy estate Mat. 25.46 Ioh. 17.22.23.24 Rom. 2.10 1. Cor. 2.9 Ioh. 10.28 Heb. 13.14 1. Ioh. 2.25 in which the soules of the elect are in heauen after this life and in which their bodies and soules shall bee at the day of iudgement the contrary whereof is eternall death Q What is eternall death Ans Eternall death is the most horrible condition in which the Reprobate shall be for euer in Hell Luk. 16.22.23 Mat. 25.41 2. Tess 1.4 with the Diuell and his Angels in their soules presently after their bodily death and in body and soule together in the day of Iudgement Expli There are thrée kindes of life First Naturall of the body in the vnion of body and soule Secondly Spirituall of the soule in the vnion of it with God and Christ Gal. 2.20 Eph. 2.17 whereby Christ is said to liue in vs. Thirdly Eternall of body soule whereby the elect liue and reigne for euermore in the kingdome of Heauen The first is common to the Reprobates with the Elect the other two are proper to the Elect. Eternall death is also thrée-fold First naturall of the body in the separation of body and soule called naturall not that it doth properly procéed from nature for it is the effect of sinne but because it is according to corrupt nature by the iustice of God Secondly spirituall in the separation of the soule from God whereby sinne liues and reignes in the wicked being said also to be dead in sinne Thirdly Eternall whereby body and soule shall be for euer separated from God and Christ and liue with the Diuell in eternall torments which kinde of life is called death because it were ten thousand times better not to liue at all in respect of themselues then in such endlesse easlesse and remedilesse misery For eternall life may be considered either in respect of the creature as it is and continueth by the power of the Creator so the wicked shal liue eternally in hell or in respect of the adiuncts of life or the affection which the creature shal haue toward the Creator and the fauour of God in Christ and so the Elect shall only liue for euer In a word the happinesse of the one estate and the misery of the other is such as no tongue is able to expresse no heart able to conceiue Al the glory and splendor of this life being scarce a shadow of the glory to be reuealed the first fruits whereof are in this life in the peace and ioy of a good conscience Rom. 14.17 which though it be vnspeakeable and as a Heauen vpon Earth yet is no more nor so much to that which shall be then a handfull of corne is to a field of a thousand acres 1. Ioh. 3.1.2 So also the torments which we can any wayes deuise to bee inflicted vpon man in this world being but a flea-biting to Hell and a sparke of that flame which the damned there shall endure and yet when wicked men féele the flashings of it in their consciences in the middest of all their worldly pleasures they are horribly confounded as in the example of Caine Saul Balthasar Iudas Pro. 18.14 and as Salomon signifies As there are but two Estates so but two places Heauen and Hell As for a third place called Purgatory neither doth the Scripture mention it neither can the Deuisers and first Founders of it the Papists tell what to make of it and therefore wee acknowledge it not Vse 1. Séeing such torments remaine for them in Hell which repent not of their sins vse all possible care that thou come not there Helpe thy selfe against sin and all damnable security in it by thinking of the torment following In regard of thy selfe it had béene better thou hadst neuer béene borne then to haue thy abiding with those vgly Fiends in that same euerlasting Fire and Brimstone Let not therefore the bitter pleasures of sinne deceiue thée Knowest thou not it will be bitternesse in the end The end of thy Drunkennesse Whooredome Lying Pride Sabaoth-breaking Negligence in the seruice of God Contempt of the Gospell c. will be more bitter then Worme-wood or Gall when the very Dregges of the Wine of the fierce wrath of God shall be powred out against thée for those thy sinnes Is sinne swéete But death is bitter remember it Thy sinne and the pleasure of it is short but the shame and torment following is without end and that in Hell where one minute of torment shall swallow vp the very memory of all fore-past pleasures Labour to thinke often of Hell it will bée some meanes to kéepe thée from thence c. Vse 2. Is life Eternall such a happinesse then liue godly 1. Tim. 4.8 Rom. 2.7 for that is the way to it It is our duty to liue godly though no reward were propounded but when our endeuours which yet are weake shall bee so beyond all proportion rewarded with such an eternall weight of glory how should it whet on our care and spurre vs forward to please such a God who is so rich to them which feare him How should it prouoke
not onely giuing the outward shape and beautifull colour of the skinne and outwardly distinguishing compacting in singular order and comelinesse the parts and lineaments of the body but framing giuing within Bowels Veines Arteries Nerues Muskles and Bones c. most wonderfully Now whether Iesus Christ by whom we beléeue all things were made did in the shape of man as he often so appeared to the Fathers with his hands frame and fashion the body of man as some affirme I leaue it as vncertaine Vse Did not God make mans body of nothing nor of gold or some heauenly and pretious matter but of dust Remember then thy beginning and be humble in as much as thou nay Kings Quéenes are framed of no better stuffe then the dust and dirt of the earth which themselues nay euen bruite beasts tread vnder their féete yea wée are below the beasts in this that they were but brought out of the earth as out of their originall place Man made of the earth as of a base and brittle matter Why art the proud of a péece of dirt so prankest vp thy painted sheath Let thine owne bosome teach thée humility for thou art dust and let it also teach thée thy frailty that thou must die Gen. 3.19 for to dust thou shalt returne Quest What is the Soule of man which you spake of Ans The Soule of man is a Spirituall substance Ecc. 12.7 Heb. 12.7 Mat. 10.28 Psa 103.2 Zach. 12.1 Gen. 2.7 1. Cor. 15.45 Immortall endued with Vnderstanding Memory Conscience and Will Created in the Humane Body to make the Person of Man and to enable Man to know and worshippe his Creator Expl. Euery man hath a Soule the originall whereof is of nothing and it is the better part of man without the which the body is a dead lump of the earth the Immortality whereof is to be beléeued against all Epicures or else all Religion Piety vanisheth Though therefore the body die yet the Soule existeth being dissolued from the body being so farre from death that it neuer falleth a sléepe Mat. 10.28 Mat. 22.32.33 Luk. 16.29 Phil. 1.23 c. which is the image of death The immortality of the Soule might be made manifest by reason but Scriptures to proue it for I write to Christians are When Moses speaketh of the creation of the Soule and the infusing of it into the body hee saith God breathed into his face the breath of life Which must not bée vnderstood as though God had any mouth to breath but that God by his omnipotent power made the man to breath and yet héereby wée may perceiue that that which was thus created is a Spirit not drawne out of the matter but immediatly procéeding as out of the mouth of God Psa 33.15 Zach. 12.1 Iob. 33.4 Ezech. 12.7 Heb. 12.9 And if any shall aske how our soules are now created and whether wée receiue them as our bodies from our parents or no The answere is that we receiue onely our bodies from our parents our soules still immediately from God God is called the Father of the Spirits of men because though hee bée the Authour of their bodies also yet of these by meanes of them immediately And whereas some might thinke that héereby God might bée in danger to be made guilty of the sinne of man when hée putteth a soule into the body begotten by vnlawfull copulation It is answered that God is no more héereby guilty then hée is pertaker of the fault of the Théefe when hée causeth stollen corne to grow as well as that which is truely bought These things being to bée considered not Morally but Naturally in regard of their Being And because the guiltinesse wée receiued from Adam may séeme to approue that our Soules come from Adam also else how should they bée guilty Wée are to vnderstand that the sinne and guiltinesse is not in the Soule alone or in the Body alone but in the whole Man consisting of Body and Soule so the Soule is infused of God voide of sinne Though euen then when it is put into the Body it bée guilty of owing though not of doing euen as the debt of the Father is to bée paid by the Heire and hée lyable thereunto Thus is the Soule subiect to guilt so also is it faulty not as it is created of God for so it is pure nor as it is reasonable but as it is ioyned to the Body making the person of a Man who hath not the Image of GOD which hee should haue but the corrupt image of Adam which hée should not haue This Soule is the forme of Man by the which wee Vnderstand Remember Will Discourse by the which wée differ from the beasts being wonderfully ioyned to the body A Spirituall Essence to a Bodily without any thing to hold the same but the onely commandement of God Being not in one part of the body in regard of the Essence and in another in regard of the Faculties but being after a wonderfull manner wholy in euery part yea all the Faculties of the Soule being wholly in euery part in regard of their originall though not in regard of their proper subiect Vse 1. Thou hast a Soule which is endued with Vnderstanding and Will the proper obiect of thy Vnderstanding is Truth of thy Will Goodnesse If thou béest a man then all thy labour should bée to increase in the knowledge of the Truth and in the approbation election and practise of that which is Good Vse 2. Remember thou hast an immortall part which is thy Soule bée carefull then so to adorne it with grace and vertue that thou maist liue immortally in ioy and happinesse and not in misery and paine Many will say they haue Soules to saue so haue they Soules giuen them to know God and to worship him according to his Word But as the most part haue no care to glorifie God in and with their Soules so whatsoeuer they say they shew by their liues they haue Soules to bée damned rather then saued For as saluation is promised to them which beléeue and obey God so to them which do not is damnation denounced by the word of God Quest You said that Conscience is a Faculty of the Soule declare further what Conscience is Ans Conscience is a Faculty of the Soule taking notice of all that is in Man Eccl. 7.24 1. Cor. 2.11 Rom. 2.15 or that passeth through his whole life and so determining thereof accusing or excusing before God Ex. All men haue Conscience which is proper to euery reasonable creatures yea euery seuerall man or woman hath his or her owne seuerall Conscience within them which is a Naturall Faculty or Created Quality in the Minde borne with vs And whereas wée vse to say that some are men of no Conscience or haue no Conscience the meaning is not that they haue no conscience at all but no good Conscience Conscience is diuersly distinguished In regard of the
thou bé et sensible of those terrors and the hellish torments following make good vse of it Quest But if the Soules of the Elect goe presently after their death to heauen and the Soules of the Reprobate to hell what neede a generall Iudgement Ans There must be a general Iudgement notwithstanding both that the iustnesse of such particular Iudgement may bee made more manifest to the glorie of God and that the whole man consisting of body and soule may receiue the du reward 2. Cor. 5.10 Quest Doe you then thinke that the bodies of man shall be restored at the day of iudgement Ans Yes verely I beleeue the resurrection of the body according to the Scriptures Act. 24.15 1. Cori. 15.12 c. Expli We are firmely to hold the generall resurrection both of good and bad for the good shall not onely rise though they shall rise onely to eternall life in which regard they are saide to be the children of the Resurrection Luk. 20.36 The wicked shall also rise but because they shall rise to receiue their full torments they are not so called Both shall rise but in a double difference first of the efficient cause for the good shall rise by the power of Christ their head The wicked by the power of Christ as Iudge of quicke and dead and by the vertue of that Sentence Gene. 2.17 In the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt die the death secondly of the end for the righteous shall rise to glory the wicked to shame and perpetuall contempt And note this carefully that those very bodies in which both iust and vniust liued here Dan. 12.2 Ioh. 10.27 Iohn 5.28 Mar. 10.28 2. Cor. 5.10 1. Corin. 15 53. shall be raised and restored as appeareth by the Scripture This corruptible shall put on incorruption This that is This same in number as if he had clapt himselfe on the breast Now though this séeme vnpossible to reason yet it is not so to our Faith whereby considering the power of God we know that he is able to restore the body though burnt to ashes deuoured by wild beasts or turned to dust as he was able to create them and all the world of nothing in the beginning And this the Iustice of GOD requires namely that that body which sinned should be punished and not another and that that body which hath béen tortured héere for the profession of his Name should be crowned with glorie at the last day The bodies shall rise the same in substance but the bodies of the Iust shall bée Immortall Incorruptible Spirituall not in substance but in quality or condition not néeding meanes of bodily nouriture not subiect to infirmities but powerfull firme strong and impassible nimble to moue as well vp-wards as downe-wards voide of all deformity and vncomelinesse glorious of perfect stature without the vse though not without the difference of Sexe Mat. 13.43 Mat. 22.30 1. Cor. 15. The bodies of the vniust shall rise Immortall also and Incorruptible but passible to endure the due punishment inflicted vpon them The manner of the Resurrection conceiue to be thus On the last day Christ shall suddenly come in the clouds in that visible forme in which He Ascended and shall send his Angell with a Trumpet Mat. 24.31 1. Cor. 15.31 1. Thess 4.15.16 at the sound whereof first they which are dead shall be raised and then those which are liuing shall bée in the twinkling of an eye changed Vse 1. If in this life onely wee had hope we were of all men the most miserable but we looke for a day when our vile bodies shall gloriously rise and bee made like the Glorious Body of our Lord Iesus Christ 1. Cor. 15.19 Phil. 3.21 Iob 19.25.26.27 comfort thy selfe against thy calamities with this This vpheld Iob in the day of his sore trouble So in the troubles of the Iewes vnder Antiochus Epiphanes Many were racked and would not be deliuered because they looked for a better Resurrection Act. 11.35 Let this also comfort against the loathsomnesse of the graue in as much as though our bodies be laid downe for a time in the dust they shall yet after bee restored to Life and Glory Vse 2. Remember that euen that body which thou hast vsed as a Weapon and Instrument to Lying Murder Vncleannesse Theft Pride and all manner of vnrighteousnesse shall rise againe and as thou hast done in the same that which thou shouldst not so shalt thou receiue in the very same that which thou wouldst not And if thou béest a Beléeuer remember that that very body of thine which hath bene vnto thy soule an instrument of Righteousnesse which for righteousnesse sake hath endured Griefe Smart or Contempt c. as it hath taken part with the soule in Mortification and in the affliction so shall it also pertake in the blessed Consolation to bee reuealed in the last day Quest You said that God was the Redeemer and Sanctifier of his Church Do you not beleeue that the Redemption Iustification and Sanctification which you haue spoken of are vniuersall and belonging to all Ans No Eph. 5.25 c. I verely beleeue that those Graces belong onely to the Church Quest What is the Church Ans By Church I meane the Holy Catholique Church 1. Cor. 12.12.13 Eph. 3.15.16.17.18.19 Eph. 4.15.16 Reu. 21.27 Heb. 12.21 22. Cant. 6.8 which is the whole Company of them which are from euerlasting Predestinated to Eternall Life and which in time are called by the Word and sanctified by the Bloud and Spirit of IESVS and this is but one part whereof is Triumphant in heauen and part Militant on earth Expl. As in our vsuall Créed wée are taught to beleeue the Holy Catholique Church to bee the company of Saints which haue Communion or Fellowship in the grace of Remission of sinnes and Resurrection to Eternall life So it is manifest that such onely are the Catholique Church and that such graces are proper and peculiar vnto them As the Scriptures do euery where restraine these benefites to Beleeuers onely and to the Church To Beléeuers Ioh. 3.16 and 5.24 and 6.40.47 Act. 10.43 Ioh. 12.46 Rom. 3.22 Gal. 3.22 To the Church Mat. 1.21 Ioh. 10.15 and 15.13 and 17.9.19 Now whereas in diuers places the Scripture speaketh with a generall note That Christ dyed for all and that God loued the world and such like Such places must bee vnderstood some of the sufficiency of Christs death for all not of the Efficacy which is onely to Beléeuers Some of a Precept vniuersall whereby all are commanded to beléeue Some of the publique Ministery of the Word whereby grace is offered to all Some collectiuely to signifie that the benefite of Redemption extends it selfe to Gentiles as well as to Iewes or distributiuely signifying that some of all Nations Conditions Ages Sexes haue that benefite not that euery singular of all kinds but the kinds of all singulars are made partakers